Case Information
*1 Before MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge, and BUTZNER and PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judges.
_________________________________________________________________ Reversed by published opinion. Senior Judge Phillips wrote the opin- ion, in which Judge Murnaghan and Senior Judge Butzner joined. *2 COUNSEL
ARGUED: George Frederick Obrecht, III, OBRECHT & OBRECHT, Severna Park, Maryland, for Appellant. Kathryn Ryan Norcross, FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, Washington, D.C., for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Ann S. DuRoss, Assistant General Counsel, Richard J. Osterman, Jr., Senior Counsel, FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, Washington, D.C.; Marcell Solomon, SOLOMON & GREEN, P.C., Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellees. OPINION
PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge:
Appellant Elmco Properties, Inc. sued Appellees Second National Federal Savings Association (FSA) and the Resolution Trust Corpora- tion (RTC)--acting in various capacities--seeking declaratory judg- ment that the RTC had misapplied certain of Elmco's funds to discharge an outstanding loan. Elmco further sought repayment of those funds. The RTC and FSA moved to dismiss, claiming that Elmco's failure to first present its claim to the RTC for resolution, as is required by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) (codified as amended in 12 U.S.C.), divested the district court of jurisdiction. Elmco responded, claiming that because it never received sufficient notice of the RTC's administrative claims process, extinguishing its claim without first allowing it an opportunity to present the claim to the RTC would vio- late due process. The district court agreed with the RTC and FSA and dismissed Elmco's claim. Finding that Elmco was denied sufficient notice of its opportunity to present its claim, hence was denied due process, we reverse.
I.
In 1986, Elmco executed a guaranty in favor of Second National Federal Savings Bank (FSB) securing the obligations of Joan and E. Lee Meadows, Elmco's principal shareholders, under a $500,000 line *3 of credit. This guaranty was further secured by an Indemnity Deed of Trust on real property Elmco owned. In 1988, FSB made two loans to Elmco totalling $1,625,196. These loans were guarantied by the Meadows and were secured by Elmco's real property. Later, Elmco established at FSB an escrow account, into which Elmco transferred its rights under certain letters of credit; this account further collateralized Elmco's obligations. In 1990, Elmco and FSB entered into a "letter agreement" regarding these two loans, but the terms of that agreement are not in the record.
In 1992, Elmco defaulted on the 1988 loans and the Meadows defaulted on their line of credit; Elmco and the Meadows also refused to honor their respective guaranties. Later that year, FSB failed and the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) appointed the RTC as FSB's receiver. It also chartered a new institution, FSA, which acquired sub- stantially all of FSB's assets and liabilities, including the 1988 loans to Elmco and Elmco's escrow account. OTS also appointed the RTC as FSA's conservator.
In June of 1993, Elmco and the Meadows entered into a settlement agreement with FSA and with the RTC in its capacity as FSA's con- servator. Under this agreement, Elmco and the Meadows confirmed their defaults on the two loans and the line of credit, agreed to a work- out of the amounts owed under those loans, and agreed to allow FSA to foreclose on some of Elmco's real property. The agreement also set up certain conditions that, if fulfilled by Elmco and the Meadows, would release those parties from their liabilities under the loans and guaranties. One of those conditions was that "No event of Bankruptcy or Avoidance Action shall have occurred." JA 21. In November of 1993, Lee Meadows filed for bankruptcy. Three months later, FSA notified Elmco that the escrow account had been closed and the $132,762.29 in the account had been"applied to prin- cipal on [Elmco's] non-performing loan[s]." JA 28. Elmco later wrote to request a refund of that money. By September of 1994, FSA had failed and the RTC was changed from its conservator to its receiver. In October, November, and December, the RTC published notices in the Baltimore Sun and *4 Washington Post announcing the receivership and explaining that all creditors should submit proof of their claims against FSA to the RTC by January 28, 1995.
Shortly after becoming FSA's receiver, the RTC also wrote to Elmco and denied its request to return the funds. It explained that it considered Meadows's filing for bankruptcy a default under the set- tlement agreement, and that, it believed, this default allowed the RTC to seize the escrow funds. This letter erroneously identified the RTC as receiver for FSB, instead of receiver for FSA. The letter also did not mention the administrative claims process or the January 28 dead- line. Elmco did not submit a claim to the RTC before this date.
In May of 1995, Elmco filed this suit in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, naming as defendants FSA, the RTC as Conservator for FSA, and the RTC as Receiver for FSB. This complaint sought declaratory judgment that (1) the settlement agree- ment was still in effect between FSA and Elmco, (2) the previous let- ter agreement regarding the escrow account was superseded by the settlement agreement, (3) the RTC was not entitled to apply the escrow funds to Elmco's debt, and (4) the RTC owed Elmco the amount it had seized. Elmco also sought an order requiring the RTC to refund the money. But the Defendants responded with Rule 12 motions, claiming that the district court lacked jurisdiction and that Elmco had failed to state a claim. The motions claimed that, under FIRREA's administrative exhaustion requirement, Elmco's failure to first file its claim with the RTC divested the district court of jurisdiction. Elmco then amended its complaint to add the RTC as Receiver for FSA as a defendant, and also to seek declaratory judgment that the time for it to file its com- plaint with the RTC had not yet expired. On the defendants' motions, the district court dismissed the claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, holding that, because Elmco had not first presented its claims to the RTC, FIRREA barred any court from taking jurisdiction over those claims. It also rejected Elmco's argument that the RTC's failure to mail it notice of the administrative claims process had deprived it of any opportunity to present its claim, thus had violated its due process rights.
Elmco now appeals, claiming primarily that lack of mailed notice did violate its due process rights.
II.
Elmco contends that the RTC's failure to mail it notice of FSA's receivership and the accompanying administrative claims process ren- dered the ensuing extinguishment of its claim unconstitutional under the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause. We conclude that failure to mail notice, when coupled with Elmco's lack of sufficient knowl- edge to charge it with a duty to inquire further into the claims process, did make discharge of Elmco's claim unconstitutional.
A.
A brief outline of FIRREA's relevant provisions is in order. FIR-
REA establishes an administrative process that allows the RTC, act-
ing as receiver for a failed institution, to settle claims against that
institution and liquidate its assets. See 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d); Tillman
v. Resolution Trust Corporation,
The RTC may allow any claim filed before the bar date that is
"proved to [its] satisfaction." § 1821(d)(5)(B). But, with one limited
exception, the RTC has no such discretion as to claims filed after the
bar date: "[C]laims filed after the [bar date] shall be disallowed and
such disallowance shall be final." § 1821(d)(5)(C)(i). The one excep-
tion is that the RTC may, in its discretion, hear late-filed claims when
the claimant "did not receive notice of the appointment of the receiver
in time to file such claim before [the bar date]." § 1821(d)(5)(C)(ii);
see F.D.I.C. v. diStefano,
Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, no court shall have jurisdiction over-- (i) any claim or action for payment from, or any action seeking a determination of rights with respect to, the assets of any depository institution for which the [RTC] has been appointed receiver, including assets which the [RTC] may acquire from itself as such receiver; or (ii) any claim relating to any act or omission of such insti- tution or [RTC] as receiver.
To prove its due process claim, Elmco must of course show that it
was deprived of a protected interest without due process of law.
Board of Regents v. Roth,
3
Of course, FIRREA does, as discussed above, make a partial excep-
tion for late claims filed by claimants who lacked timely notice of the
receivership. § 1821(d)(5)(C)(ii). But the fact that the receiver has discre-
tion to allow even these claims--and that review of those claims will be
jurisdictionally barred if the receiver denies them as untimely--strongly
suggests that Congress did not intend a full waiver of the exhaustion
requirement as to claimants who did not receive the required mailed
notice, regardless of whether they had independent knowledge of the
receivership. E.g., Freeman,
Accordingly, if Elmco had timely, actual knowledge that FSA had
entered receivership, its due process argument might be defeated by
its own failure to act on that knowledge to protect its rights. But noth-
ing in the record suggests that Elmco had such knowledge. The par-
7
Significantly, the Altoncourt acknowledged that, if a creditor had no
notice of the bankruptcy proceeding--formal or otherwise--Mullane
would prohibit discharge of its debts.
The pleadings further suggest that, at the relevant times, Elmco did not know that the RTC was FSA's receiver. In its complaint, Elmco admits it knew that, in 1992, the RTC had been appointed receiver for FSB and conservator of FSA; but the complaint mentions nothing of the RTC's receivership of FSA. Indeed, Elmco did not originally sue the RTC as receiver for FSA, but only as receiver for FSB and conser- vator of FSA. It did not add the RTC as receiver for FSA to its list of defendants until it filed its amended complaint, by which time the RTC had put its receivership of FSA on record. Nor could Elmco's knowledge that the RTC was FSA's conserva- tor be held to put it on inquiry notice. Unlike its role as receiver, the RTC as conservator cannot initiate the administrative claims process or liquidate a failed bank. Instead, the conservator's function is to restore the bank's solvency and preserve its assets. Compare § 1821(d)(2)(D) (setting forth conservator's powers) with § 1821(d) (2)(E) (authorizing receiver to liquidate bank's assets) and § 1821(d) (3)(A) (authorizing RTC or FDIC "as receiver" to determine claims against failed bank).
Because nothing in the record suggests that Elmco had actual knowledge that FSA had entered receivership, nor that it had actual knowledge of the administrative claims process or bar date, Elmco was never placed on inquiry notice of the claims process. The RTC's failure to mail the required notice to Elmco thus is not excused by any actual knowledge Elmco had, and, under such circumstances, it would *12 violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to allow the RTC to treat Elmco's claim as untimely, hence permanently denied. Put another way, Congress has established FIRREA's administra- tive claims process as the sole door through which a claimant against a failed bank may enter. The RTC may not constitutionally close that door and shut off the exclusive opportunities for review to which it leads without giving the claimant appropriate notice of its closing. Here, no such notice was given and the district court erred in rejecting Elmco's due process objection to dismissal of its action.
III.
There remains the question of the appropriate remedy for the dis-
trict court's error. We approach it by asking what the district court
should have done had it recognized the due process violation we have
found. Had it done so, it should have rejected the RTC's jurisdictional
defense, declined to dismiss the action, and entered a decree entitling
Elmco to process its claim with the RTC free of the bar of
§ 1821(d)(5)(C)(i). That is the remedy most suited to correcting the
specific constitutional violation, see Freeman
The RTC points out that the necessary effect of such a remedy is to enjoin action by the RTC, and it contends that this is forbidden by FIRREA's anti-injunction provision, § 1821(j). We disagree.
That subsection does generally bar courts from enjoining the RTC's exercise of its statutory "powers or functions . . . as a conser- vator or receiver." § 1821(j); see In re Landmark Land Co., 973 F.2d 283, 290 (4th Cir. 1992) (Congress gave RTC "full rein to exercise its statutory authority without injunctive restraints"). But § 1821(j) does not immunize the RTC from all injunctions:
By its terms, § 1821(j) shields only "the exercise of powers
or functions" Congress gave to the FDIC; the provision does
not bar injunctive relief when the FDIC has acted or pro-
*13
poses to act beyond, or contrary to, its statutorily prescribed,
constitutionally permitted, powers or functions.
National Trust for Historic Preservation v. FDIC ,
IV.
For the reasons above stated, we vacate the district court's grant of summary judgment dismissing the action for lack of jurisdiction and remand to that court for entry of a decree in accordance with this opinion. In doing so, the court may in its discretion require Elmco to process its claim in accordance with applicable RTC procedures and may impose a reasonable time limit for filing of the claim.
SO ORDERED
