EXCEL WILLOWBROOK, L.L.C.; Southside/3500, Ltd.; Ortb Wayside, Ltd.; MR/VM Partners, Ltd.; FL Westheimer Wilchrest, Ltd.; LSDSS Realty Group, L.L.C.; Excel Little York, Ltd.; 3300 Sage, Ltd. v. JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION; FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, as Receiver for Washington Mutual Bank
Nos. 12-20367, 12-20375, 12-20376, 12-20377, 12-20378, 12-20381, 12-20382, 12-10784
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
April 24, 2014
758 F.3d 592
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, CLEMENT, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
III.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we are satisfied to affirm the district court‘s Denial Order.
AFFIRMED
Roy Kemp Kasling, Kasling, Hemphill, Dolezal & Atwell, L.L.P., James Bruce Bennett Cardwell, Hart & Bennett, L.L.P., Austin, TX, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Allyson Newton Ho, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, L.L.P., Dallas, TX, Ira Claborn Rogers, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, L.L.P., Houston, TX, for Defendants-Appellants.
Joseph Brooks, Federal Deposit Insurance Coporation, Arlington, VA, Kell Corrigan Mercer, Attorney, Husch Blackwell, L.L.P., Austin, TX, Ira Claborn Rogers, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, L.L.P., Houston, TX, for Intervenors-Appellants
Treating Appellants’ Petition for Rehearing En Banc as a Petition for Panel Rehearing, the Petition for Panel Rehearing is DENIED, but we amend the prior opinion, 740 F.3d 972 (5th Cir.2014). As amended, the opinion is as follows:
Washington Mutual Bank failed in 2008. Acting as receiver, the FDIC conveyed substantially all of WaMu‘s assets and liabilities to JPMorgan Chase, including certain long-term real-estate leases. At issue in this case is whether the owners of the leased tracts can enforce the leases against Chase by virtue of the FDIC‘s conveyance. The district court awarded summary judgment to the landlords. We affirm.
I.
The facts of this case are straightforward and undisputed. In early 2008, Washington Mutual Bank (“WaMu“) entered into lease agreements (“the Leases“) with several landlords (“the Landlords“) for certain undeveloped tracts of land, which WaMu planned to use for future branch offices. However, WaMu failed on September 25, 2008, before it could complete any banking facilities on the tracts. Pursuant to its authority under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA“), the FDIC stepped into WaMu‘s shoes and assumed all of its assets and liabilities, including the Leases. The FDIC then solicited bids from private financial institutions for the purchase and assumption of those assets and liabilities, ultimately accepting a $1.8 billion bid by JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. (“Chase“).
After accepting Chase‘s bid, the FDIC and Chase executed the Purchase and Assumption Agreement (the “P & A Agreement” or “Agreement“). As relevant here, the Agreement split WaMu‘s real-estate assets into “Bank Premises” and “Other Real Estate,” giving Chase a 90-day option to either accept or reject assets that qualified as Bank Premises but assigning all Other Real Estate to Chase outright. The Agreement defined Bank Premises to include all banking facilities that WaMu owned or leased and actually occupied as of September 25, 2008, the date on which WaMu closed its doors.1 The Agreement defined Other Real Estate to include “all interests in real estate” that did not qualify as Banking Premises, including all “leasehold rights.”2 It is undisputed that WaMu had not yet completed or occupied banking facilities on any of the tracts subject to the Leases as of September 25, 2008. Hence, under the plain language of the Agreement, the Leases qualified as Other Real Estate assigned outright to
Even though the Agreement thus appeared to give Chase no option to reject the Leases or WaMu‘s obligations thereunder, the FDIC has maintained at all times that “both the FDIC and Chase ... understood that all of the Leases are Bank Premises leases and that Chase therefore had a 90-day option to accept assignment of each Lease.” Consistent with this “understanding,” Chase rejected the Leases within 90 days. The FDIC accepted Chase‘s purported exercise of its option and therefore continued to retain the Leases in its capacity as WaMu‘s receiver. Thereafter, the FDIC determined that compliance with the Leases would be burdensome to the WaMu receivership and, pursuant to its statutory authority under FIRREA, elected to repudiate the Leases.
The Landlords brought eight separate cases against Chase, alleging breach of the Leases. Seven of the cases were either filed in or removed to the Southern District of Texas, where they were eventually consolidated. The eighth case was filed in the Northern District of Texas. The FDIC intervened on behalf of Chase in all eight cases and moved for summary judgment. It contended that the Landlords lacked “standing” to interpret or enforce the P & A Agreement, as they were neither parties nor intended beneficiaries to the Agreement. Hence, the FDIC reasoned, they lacked a legal basis to assert the Leases against Chase.
The Landlords cross-moved for summary judgment, rejoining that they were quintessential creditor beneficiaries to the P & A Agreement and thus had a contractual right to enforce Chase‘s promise to assume WaMu‘s obligations under the Leases. In the alternative, the Landlords urged that the P & A Agreement unambiguously assigned the Leases to Chase, that the Agreement thus brought Chase into “privity of estate” with the Landlords, and that under elementary principles of Texas landlord-tenant law, the Landlords therefore had a right to hold Chase liable for breach of the Leases even if the Landlords lacked contractual authority to enforce the P & A Agreement.
The district courts granted partial summary judgment to the Landlords in all eight cases, reserving only the question of damages. The parties then stipulated to damages, and the district courts entered final judgments. Although the Southern District agreed with the FDIC that the Landlords were not third-party beneficiaries to the P & A Agreement, both district courts concluded that the Agreement unambiguously assigned the Leases to Chase without giving Chase any option to repudiate, thereby bringing Chase into privity of estate with the Landlords and giving the Landlords a right to hold Chase liable for breach of the Leases. The FDIC appeals on behalf of Chase in its capacity as intervenor. All eight cases are consolidated on appeal.
II.
The threshold issue on appeal is whether the Landlords qualify as intended beneficiaries to the P & A Agreement, in which case they have a contractual right to enforce Chase‘s promise to assume WaMu‘s obligations under the Leases. As the FDIC observes, the Eleventh Circuit and the Ninth Circuit have both recently addressed this question, declining to afford
The interpretation and effect of the P & A Agreement is governed by the federal common law of contracts,6 which draws on the “the core principles of the common law of contracts that are in force in most states.”7 One of those principles is that a promisor who agrees to satisfy an obligation that the promisee owes to a third party thereby confers enforcement rights to the third party, who qualifies as a creditor beneficiary to the contract.8 In the landlord-tenant context, it is thus well established that a landlord is a creditor beneficiary to an assignment of a lease by the original tenant to a subsequent tenant—at least if the subsequent tenant expressly agrees to perform the original tenant‘s obligations under the lease.9 Here,
True, the P & A Agreement contains a clause disclaiming any intention to create third-party beneficiaries. However, as the Landlords observe, the no-beneficiaries clause is qualified by the modifying phrase “except as otherwise specifically provided in this Agreement.” And under settled rules of contract construction, Chase‘s unqualified promise to “expressly assume[] and agree[] to pay, perform, and discharge” all of WaMu‘s obligations, under the Leases and otherwise, is arguably tantamount to “specifically” designating the Landlords as creditor beneficiaries. Though Chase and the FDIC now urge that they always understood the Agreement to give Chase an option to reject the Leases, they have made no effort to reform the Agreement to reflect their late-arriving and atextual “understanding.”10
The Ninth Circuit expressed concern that granting the landlords third-party beneficiary status to enforce the P & A Agreement would “open[] the door to suits from any number of third parties who might claim a benefit from the Agreement‘s terms.”11 But this fear is exaggerated. The FDIC made an affirmative decision to assign the Leases to Chase. Chase not only accepted the assignment but expressly covenanted to “pay, perform, and discharge” all of WaMu‘s liabilities—including WaMu‘s obligations under the Leases. Had the FDIC not assigned the Leases to Chase, or assigned its interest in the Leases without having Chase expressly assume WaMu‘s liabilities, the Landlords would not qualify as creditor beneficiaries.12 In our view, affording the Landlords enforcement rights on the narrow facts of this case would not open the floodgates, as the class of persons entitled to third-party beneficiary status would remain exceedingly narrow and subject to the FDIC‘s control.
Were we writing on a blank slate, we would conclude that the Landlords are creditor beneficiaries to the P & A Agreement and therefore have a contractual right to enforce Chase‘s promise to assume the Leases. However, we cannot ignore that two of our sister circuits have reached a contrary conclusion on virtually identical facts. In the interest of maintaining uniformity in the construction and enforcement of federal contracts—an area where
III.
The next question is whether the district courts erred in concluding that the Landlords have a right to enforce the Leases against Chase by virtue of their “privity of estate” with Chase. The Landlords contend that the P & A Agreement accomplished a complete, present conveyance of the Leases that, under longstanding principles of real-property law, creates privity of estate with Chase and gives the Landlords the legal right to enforce the Leases against Chase—even in the absence of contractual privity. The FDIC rejoins that the Landlords’ power to assert the Leases against Chase, if any, must derive from a contractual right to enforce the P & A Agreement, and that privity of estate does not furnish an independent, non-contractual, state-law basis for holding Chase liable. Because the Landlords are neither parties nor third-party beneficiaries to the Agreement, the FDIC reasons, they lack “standing” to interpret the P & A Agreement and conclude that it accomplishes a complete assignment. The FDIC‘s circular reasoning ignores eight centuries of legal history.
To be sure, in medieval England, a landlord had no right to enforce the covenants in a lease against an assignee of the original tenant: courts reasoned that while the original tenant remained contractually liable for his obligations under the lease (e.g., rent), there was no enforceable contract running between the landlord and the assignee.13 However, as noted in the original Restatement of Property, “the inconveniences resulting from such a rule [were] manifest,” preventing both the landlord and the ultimate tenant from relying on covenants in the original lease.14 Hence, English courts developed the concept of “real covenants,”15 a concept that has carried over into American law and the laws of Texas. Real covenants are covenants that “run with the land” and can be enforced by the landlord against an assignee tenant by virtue of their “privity of estate“—notwithstanding the absence of contractual privity.16 However, the content of the conveyance by the original tenant to the subsequent tenant remains critical, as the subsequent tenant only comes into “privity of estate” with the landlord if the landlord can prove that the original tenant assigned away his entire interest in the lease (as opposed to a lesser-included
Accepting that the Landlords have “standing” to prove the content of the P & A Agreement, the next question is whether the Agreement, properly construed, is a complete “assignment” sufficient to create privity of estate under Texas law. The answer to this question is clearly yes. It is undisputed that the Agreement assigned all of WaMu‘s “Other Real Estate” to Chase outright, and that the FDIC did not retain any interest in such real estate. It is also undisputed that the Leases unambiguously fall within the definition of Other Real Estate set forth in the Agreement. While the FDIC claims that it and Chase intended for the Leases to qualify as “Bank Premises,” and that Chase therefore had an option to reject them, it offers this Court no reason to depart from the parol evidence rule, which rests on recognition that the best evidence of the parties’ intent at the time of execution is the language of the contract itself. Whether the parol evidence rule applies is a question of federal common law, which is informed “by the core principles of the common law of contracts that are in force in most states.”18 Accordingly, we see no reason to depart from the general principle of the common law of contracts that a non-party in privity to an agreement may assert the parol evidence rule.19 Because the plain language of the Agreement indicates that the FDIC assigned away its entire interest in the Leases and that Chase had no option to reject them, the Landlords have established privity of estate with Chase.20
However, the Landlords are not necessarily entitled to enforce all of the terms of the Leases against Chase merely because they have established privity of estate; rather, such privity only gives them the right to enforce “covenants that run with the land,” i.e., “real covenants.”25 A covenant “runs with the land” if it “touches and concerns” the land.26 While
We are well aware of the Eleventh Circuit‘s recent decision in Interface Kanner, LLC v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, 704 F.3d 927 (11th Cir. 2013), which held that a landlord lacked “standing” to assert a privity-of-estate-based theory of lease liability on facts virtually identical to this case.30 But our interest in uniformity, though powerful, does not require us to adopt legal conclusions we believe to be in error. The Kanner court devoted the vast majority of its opinion to explaining why the landlord was not an intended beneficiary to the P & A Agreement and thus lacked “standing” to interpret or enforce it.31 While not fully persuaded, we can abide by this conclusion, the critical point for present purposes is that the Kanner court also concluded, in a two-sentence paragraph at the end of its opinion, that the landlord could not enforce his lease against Chase by virtue of his privity of estate with Chase.32 The court reasoned that the landlord‘s privity-based theory of liability “is dependent on [the landlord‘s] ability to enforce its interpretation of the P & A Agreement, which, as discussed above, [the landlord] lacks standing to
In our view, the Kanner decision was—like the Ninth Circuit‘s decision in GECCMC and the Second Circuit‘s decision in Hillside Metro—driven by a fear that holding Chase to the terms of leases it assumed under the P & A Agreement would somehow interfere with the FDIC‘s ability to administer failed banks.35 With all respect, we do not share this concern. We do not doubt that the FDIC requires sweeping authority to manage a failed bank‘s affairs—authority that includes the power to repudiate leases if the FDIC determines that they would be burdensome and that repudiation would promote the orderly administration of the conservatorship.36 Here, however, the FDIC chose not to exercise that authority, instead assigning the Leases outright to Chase in the P & A Agreement. And, as aforementioned, Chase not only agreed to the assignment, but expressly assumed all of WaMu‘s liabilities. The FDIC can avoid its present plight in future cases by drafting contractual provisions for the right it seeks to claim.37
IV.
We AFFIRM the judgments of the district courts.
EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment.
This result has more to do with the arguments that the FDIC did not raise than the innate correctness of the Landlords’ position.
The FDIC argues that the Landlords lack standing because they cannot, as a non-third-party beneficiary to the contract, show that the properties were transferred to Chase. The Landlords have no such issue. To demonstrate standing, the Landlords need to show (1) “an injury in fact—an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical,” (2) “a causal
The FDIC‘s counterargument that non-third-party beneficiaries cannot interpret and enforce a contract against the understanding of the contracting parties improperly tries to stretch a question of contract law into a dubious principle of constitutional law. Non-third-party beneficiaries to contracts usually cannot show that they have suffered an injury to a legally protected interest because contract law does not recognize and compensate non-third-party beneficiaries for the injuries that they often suffer when a contracting party fails to comply with a contract. But when jurisdiction is otherwise proper, there is no inherent bar prohibiting a stranger to a contract from asking the court to interpret a contract that has bearing on its case.1 Texas law vests the Landlords with the legitimate protected interest needed to assert their claim for unpaid rent in federal court. This is enough to create standing.
Rather than having an inherent standing problem, the Landlords should have difficulty demonstrating that the Purchase and Assumption Agreement actually transferred the leases outright to Chase. The Landlords’ position is almost certainly inconsistent with the actual intent of the contracting parties; they provide no persuasive reason why Chase would want its option to refuse certain properties to extend only to constructed and operating bank branches, and not also to properties for future bank premises. The vacant lots are of little value to Chase if not used as bank premises. And the parties’ course of performance—which “is often the strongest evidence” of a contract‘s meaning2—also supports that conclusion. From the beginning, both parties’ behavior has reflected a belief that the contract grants Chase the option to refuse the leases, regardless of whether a branch had yet been constructed.
Accordingly, though the district courts had the power to consider the cases, Chase should have been able to prevent the Landlords from proving that the leases
All of those strategies would have been preferable to attacking courts’ ability to hear cases brought by landlords against assignees—a question on which the FDIC is on the wrong side of (1) hundreds of years of legal history, (2) previous legal positions adopted by the federal government when it itself is a landlord, see, e.g., Alaska Statebank, 111 IBLA 300, 308-09 (IBLA 1989), and (3) circuit precedent rejecting attempts by contracting parties to have contracts interpreted “according to the[ir] wishes ... rather than [the meaning] attributable to it by law” when the parties neither claim mistake nor omission in drafting the contract, nor seek reformation. Great Am. Ins. Co., 302 F.2d at 334-35. The FDIC would have been better served by arguing that this contract did not transfer these leases.
But Chase should not expect to win on arguments that it does not pursue. The district courts—based upon the arguments raised and the evidence before them—properly entered judgments for the Landlords. The plain text of the contract indicates the leases at issue were transferred outright and the covenant to pay rent runs with the land. On appeal, the only real error that the FDIC successfully highlights is the district courts’ choice to apply Texas law to interpret the Purchase and Assumption Agreement. Though Texas state law provides the Landlords’ cause of action, federal common law should have been used to interpret the Purchase and Assumption Agreement.3 However, the FDIC does not point out any consequence from the district courts’ error, and concedes that “the outcome is likely the same” under either body of law. In light of the FDIC‘s concessions and the plain text of the Purchase and Assumption Agreement, it appears that any error was harmless, and that the district courts’ judgments should be affirmed.
