The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) appeals the summary judgment dismissal of its legal malpractice action against the law firm of Shrader & York, its individual partners, and successor organizations (Shrader & York). We affirm.
I.
A.
The FDIC brought this legal malpractice action against Shrader & York in May of 1991. It alleges that Shrader & York negligently contributed to the failure of two of the law firm’s clients, City Savings & Loan Association (City), and Lamar Savings Association (Lamar). Specifically, the FDIC points to work Shrader & York did on the following five transactions: (1) City’s acquisition of Realty Development Corporation (RDC) in 1983; (2) Lamar’s merger with Brazos Savings Association (Brazos) in 1983; (3) the 1984 sale by a Lamar subsidiary of' property known as 8214 Westchester; (4) Lamar’s acquisition of CTC (USA) Corporation (CTC) in 1985; and (5) Lamar’s 1985 purchase of Stone Oak Corporation (Stone Oak).
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, relying on the following grounds: (1) the Texas two year statute of limitations for legal malpractice claims expired before the FDIC acquired City and Lamar; (2) the FDIC lacked standing to sue Shrader & York for legal malpractice; (3) the individually named defendants were not partners in the law firm at the time of the alleged acts of malpractice; and (4) the law firm’s alleged acts of malpractice could not have proximately caused the losses alleged by the FDIC,
B.
Stanley E. Adams, Jr. (Adams) and his wife, Christie Bell, purchased Lamar in 1969. In 1979 Adams formed Lamar Financial Corporation (LFC) as Lamar’s holding company. In 1983 LFC purchased City. Adams served as chairman of the board of directors and chief executive officer of Lamar from January of 1980 through December of 1985; as a director of LFC during the same time period, and as chairman of the board of directors of LFC from January of 1983 through December of 1985. Adams served as City’s vice president from January of 1983 until May of 1986, and as a director of City from December of 1985 to April of 1986. From December of 1985 until October of 1986, Adams owned 100% of City’s stock. In February of 1992, Adams pled guilty to conspiracy to defraud the United States, and false entries in savings association records, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 657, 1006, and 1001.
On May 18, 1988, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) determined that City and Lamar were insolvent, and appointed the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) as their receiver. The FSLIC-Receiver sold to the FSLIC, in its corporate capacity, City and Lamar’s claims against professionals providing services to these thrifts. The FDIC acquired these causes of action by operation of § 401 of the Financial Institutions, Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA).
The FDIC alleges that Shrader & York contributed to the collapse of City and Lamar by doing faulty legal work in the five transactions at issue. With respect to all five transactions the FDIC alleges that Shrader & York failed to give City and Lamar competent legal advice to the point that some transactions violated federal laws. The FDIC contends that Shrader & York allowed Adams to deceive the Lamar and City directors. According to the FDIC’s theory of the case, if Shrader & York had alerted the City and Lamar boards of the illegal nature of the five transactions, the . boards would have blocked the transactions, thereby averting huge losses. The FDIC describes the five transactions as follows:
1. City’s acquisition of RDC: In 1983 City paid $30 million for RDC, a troubled asset. RDC’s principals then purchased $10 million of LFC preferred stock. Thus LFC used the RDC acquisition to funnel
2. Lamar’s acquisition of Brazos: In July of 1982 Lamar agreed to acquire Brazos. The acquisition agreement provided that compensation to Brazos officers and directors would increase only in the ordinary course of business, and that Lamar and Brazos would bear their own merger expenses. In July of 1983 Shrader & York certified that the merger complied with the acquisition agreement and applicable laws. The FDIC claims that Shrader & York failed to report numerous violations of the merger agreement. For example, the FDIC alleges that Brazos paid $155 thousand of Lamar’s merger-related expenses. More significantly, the FDIC alleges that officers and directors of Lamar and Brazos wasted nearly $8 million in Brazos assets through conduct such as (1) paying nearly $1 million in bonuses to senior officers of Lamar and Brazos; (2) giving 71 automobiles to officers, directors and employees of Lamar, City, and Brazos; (3) giving Rolex watches to Brazos directors; (4) constructing a greenhouse at Adams’s house and an airstrip at Adams’s ranch; and (5) buying a $72 thousand diamond ring for Adams’s wife.
3. Lamar’s sale of 8214 Westchester: Lamar loaned $10.5 million to Drew Mortgage Company, an entity owned by Lamar and City, for development and construction of 8214 Westchester, Lamar’s Dallas headquarters. The FDIC alleges that in 1984 Shrader and York formed a limited partnership, 8214 Westchester Ltd., to purchase the property. The limited partnership borrowed $15 million in purchase financing from Mainland Savings (Mainland). Mainland participated $8.8 million of the loan back to Lamar. Later, Lamar purchased the remaining $6.2 million of the loan. The FDIC claims that the sale was a scheme to avoid classifying the loan as a non-performing depreciable asset for 1984. It also alleges that Lamar lost $4 million on this transaction.
4. Lamar’s acquisition of CTC: In 1985 Lamar made a direct investment in CTC, a software development corporation. The FDIC alleges that Lamar’s regulatory capital was below the minimum level necessary to make direct investments unsupervised by federal regulators. The FDIC further alleges that Shrader & York prepared the documentation for the investment, but failed to advise Lamar’s board of directors of the need to obtain regulatory approval for the investment. The FDIC alleges that Lamar lost over $1 million on the transaction.
5. Lamar’s purchase of Stone Oak: In 1985 Lamar and LFC acquired Stone Oak, a real estate development corporation, for $84.2 million. Again, the FDIC alleges that Lamar had insufficient regulatory capital to make unsupervised direct investments. It alleges that Shrader & York failed to advise Lamar’s board of the need to obtain prior approval of the investment. The FDIC alleges that Lamar lost $25 million on the investment.
II.
Because the FDIC’s standing to sue is a threshold inquiry, we deal with it first. The district court concluded that the FDIC’s standing to sue Shrader & York was based on Lamar and City’s shareholders’ right to sue. Because the shareholders lacked standing, the district court concluded that the FDIC also lacked standing.
The FSLIC-Receiver, as successor to Lamar and City, acquired all of the two thrifts’ assets, including their claims against Shrader & York. 12 C.F.R. §§ 548.2(f), 549.3 (FSLIC regulations in effect at the time the FSLIC was appointed receiver of City & Lamar). The FSLIC-Receiver then assigned these to the FSLIC-Corporate. See 12 U.S.C. § 1729(f)(2)(A) (1989). By operation of
III.
The district court concluded that City and Lamar’s legal malpractice claims against Shrader & York were time barred before the FSLIC acquired them on May 18, 1988. FIRREA’s statute of limitations, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14), does not revive stale state law claims acquired by the FSLIC or FDIC.
F.D.I.C. v. Belli,
The Texas limitation period for legal malpractice claims is two years. Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.003 (Vernon 1986);
Willis v. Maverick,
The FDIC argues that two equitable doctrines should extend the limitation period. First, it argues, Texas’s discovery rule kept the statute of limitations from running before May of 1988. Second, it argues, the doctrine of adverse domination tolled the running of the statute of limitations.
Summary judgment is appropriate if, after discovery, there is no genuine dispute over any material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In Texas, the party seeking to benefit from the discovery rule “bear[s] the burden of proving and securing favorable findings thereon.”
Woods v. William M. Mercer, Inc.,
In its first response to Shrader & York’s limitations defense, the FDIC asserts that Texas’s discovery rule kept the statute of limitations from expiring before May of 1988. Under Texas’s discovery rule, the statute of limitations for legal malpractice actions does not begin to run until “the claimant discovers or should have discovered through the exercise of reasonable care and diligence the facts establishing the elements of his cause of action.”
Willis,
In Texas, a legal malpractice claim, which is based on negligence, requires proof of four legal malpractice elements: (1) the existence of a duty on the part of one party to another; (2) breach of that duty; and (8) injury (4) proximately caused by the breach.
Lucas v. Texas Industries, Inc.,
1.
Texas’s discovery rule does not operate to extend the time limitation on the RDC acquisition, the 8214 Westchester transaction, the CTC acquisition, or the Stone Oak acquisition past May of 1988. The summary judgment record demonstrates that Adams was intimately familiar with these four transactions and knew the facts that the FDIC contends Shrader & York should have cautioned City and Lamar about. We conclude that Adams’s knowledge should be imputed to City and Lamar. The FDIC vigorously challenges both conclusions, particularly the second.
The FDIC contends that the district court erroneously presumed that because Adams had knowledge of City and Lamar’s activities he knew of Shrader & York’s malpractice. The FDIC’s argument assumes that Texas’s discovery rule requires actual knowledge. In fact, the limitations period on a legal malpractice claim begins to run when “the claimant discovers or should have discovered through the exercise of reasonable care and diligence the facts establishing the elements of his cause of action.”
Willis,
As the majority owner of LFC, the chairman of LFC’s board of directors from January of 1983 through December of 1985, chairman of the board of directors, chief executive officer and a director of Lamar from January of 1980 through December of 1985, and sole shareholder of City from October of 1984 to December of 1985, Adams was intimately involved with the transactions at issue. In a related action, Lamar Financial Corporation v. Adams, No. Civ. A. A-88-CA-183 (W.D.Tex.), the FDIC’s second amended complaint pled that Adams and his family were the majority shareholders of LFC during the periods relevant to this suit. It further alleges that “Adams was in control of the affairs of LFC, Lamar and City.”
In
Lamar Financial Corporation v. Adams,
the FDIC accused Adams of “deliberately ... entering into unsafe and unsound transactions” that “generated no new cash to Lamar,” but “dramatically increased [Lamar’s] exposure to risk,” and caused Lamar to sustain losses. Moreover, the FDIC pled that Adams and others “carried out a scheme” to “disguis[e] and hid[e], from regulatory authorities, depositors, creditors and others, the negative impact of these risky loans and investments upon [Lamar’s] regulatory worth.” According to the FDIC’s second amended complaint, one of Adams’s schemes was to sell real estate securing delinquent loans and real estate acquired through foreclosure to third party “strawmen” to boost Lamar’s regulatory net worth. This pattern matches the FDIC’s description of the 8214 Westchester transaction. The second
The FDIC claims, in one breath, that Adams engaged in elaborate schemes to circumvent banking regulations. It cannot claim in the next breath that Adams was not aware that Shrader & York negligently facilitated those schemes. Thus the summary judgment evidence establishes that Adams should have discovered, through the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, the losses caused by the schemes and the other facts establishing City and Lamar’s legal malpractice claims against Shrader & York. We also conclude, as a matter of law, that Adams’s knowledge should be imputed to City and Lamar. This is consistent with the generally accepted rule that a bank officer or director’s knowledge is imputed to the bank.
F.D.I.C. v. Ernst & Young,
Texas has applied imputation principles to determine when the statute of limitations begins to run on a corporation’s cause of action.
Alice Roofing & Sheet Metal Works, Inc. v. Halleman,
The FDIC strenuously urges that several exceptions preclude us from applying this general rule of imputation. The FDIC first argues that we should consider its special status as successor to the FSLIC as receiver of City and Lamar and not hold it to the general rule of imputation. Next, the FDIC contends that Adams’s knowledge cannot be imputed to City or Lamar because he acted adversely to their interests. Relatedly, the FDIC maintains that Adams was not disinterested. Finally, the FDIC agues that we should not apply the general rule of imputation in favor of Shrader & York because it is not an “innocent party” and had a duty to protect the thrifts from Adams's misconduct. We will consider each argument in turn.
The FDIC argues first that, as statutory representative of the insolvent institutions’ creditors, it is not an ordinary assignee. Therefore, it argues, even if imputation might have been appropriate against City and Lamar, it is not appropriate against the FDIC. We rejected this argument in
Ernst & Young,
The FDIC attempts to distinguish
Ernst & Young,
arguing that, in this case, it is suing on behalf of depositors and other creditors, not just on behalf of the failed institutions.
Ernst & Young
is indistinguishable. There, as here, the FSLIC was appointed receiver of a failed institution and transferred the institution’s claims against professionals to the FSLIC-Corporate. In both cases, the FDIC acquired the claims pursuant to FIRREA. See
F.D.I. C. v. Ernst & Young,
We now turn to the FDIC’s argument that Adams acted adversely to City and Lamar. As the FDIC contends, courts will generally not impute a bank officer or director’s knowledge to the- bank if the officer or director acts with an interest adverse to the bank.
F.D.I.C. v. Lott,
Our understanding of this exception is further guided by three cases. The first,
Goldstein v. Union Nat. Bank,
the agent’s interests are so incompatible with the interests of his principal as practically to destroy the agency or to render it reasonably probable that an ordinary person, in the agent’s position, under such circumstances, will neither act in behalf of his principal upon his so acquired knowledge, nor disclose that knowledge to his principal, but, becauseof such incompatibility in interests, will withhold knowledge from the principal.
Goldstein,
Second, we look to our recent decision in
Ernst & Young,
In
Ernst & Young,
we explained that facts acquired by the officer committing fraud against the corporation are not imputed to the corporation. We applied an explanation of “fraud against the corporation” given in
Cenco Inc. v. Seidman & Seidman,
In
Cenco,
insiders of a corporation were “deeply involved” in a “massive fraud” that consisted mainly of “inflating inventories in the Medical/Health Division far above their actual value.”
Cenco,
At trial, to successfully establish that Adam’s knowledge of the fraudulent activity was not imputed to the corporation under the discovery rule, the FDIC would have to prove that Adams acted adversely to or committed fraud against City and/or Lamar. Therefore, to avoid summary judgment dismissal, it bore the burden of producing some summary judgment evidence in support of this argument.
The summary judgment evidence indicates that Adams misappropriated funds in connection with the Brazos merger.
3
How-evér the FDIC did not offer summary judg
The FDIC urges us to infer that Adams breached his fiduciary duty to the institutions’ depositors and creditors. Creditors were injured when Adams’s frauds were uncovered. However,
Cenco
and
Ernst & Young
teach that fraud on behalf of a corporation, as opposed to fraud against the corporation, almost always injures a corporation’s creditors.
Ernst & Young,
The FDIC also argues from the summary judgment evidence that Adams fraudulently inflated Lamar’s regulatory net worth, and that he concocted sham transactions to deceive federal regulators so that he could retain his control over the institutions. However, the summary judgment evidence indicates that any fraudulently inflated profits went on the books of Lamar and City, not into Adams’s personal account. Adams’s desire to maintain control over City and Lamar, by itself, does not bring Adams’s conduct within the adverse interest exception, under any of the formulations we have discussed.
An examination of the individual transactions reveals the inadequacy of the FDIC’s summary judgment evidence on this issue. Concerning the RDC transaction, the FDIC alleges that City paid too much for a worthless asset in order to bypass regulations forbidding City from “upstreaming” capital to LFC. The FDIC’s complaint can be broken down into two elements: that City paid too much for RDC, and that City gave $10 million to its sole shareholder, LFC.
4
The FDIC does not present evidence raising a fact question of whether Adams personally profited from City getting a bad deal on RDC. The FDIC’s pleadings suggest that Adams, as majority owner of LFC, might have personally benefited from City’s capital contribution to LFC. However the upstreaming violation did not change the value of LFC’s total assets. So the value of Adams’s LFC stock presumably did not increase either. If the upstreaming violation rendered City under-capitalized, it may have given Adams an advantage over City’s creditors. But the FDIC has not produced summary judgment evidence that the transaction left City un-dercapitalized. Moreover, as we have explained, an advantage over, creditors does not come within the adverse interest exception.
Ernst & Young,
Concerning the 8214 Westchester transaction, the FDIC alleges that Lamar lost $4.5 million trying to hide a bad loan from federal regulators through a series of sham transactions. This attempt to make it appear that Lamar had a positive net worth resembles the frauds in
Ernst & Young
and
Cenco. Ernst & Young,
The FDIC also fails to meet its burden with respect to Lamar’s direct investments into CTC and Stone Oak. The FDIC alleges that Lamar directly invested in CTC and Stone Oak when its capital was too low to lawfully do so. If these ventures had succeeded, Lamar, not Adams, would have reaped the profits. Although hindsight reveals that Lamar paid too much for its investments, the summary judgment evidence does not allow an inference that
Moreover, the record shows that federal regulatory officials made Lamar’s board aware of the regulatory violations. In June of 1985, LFC received a letter from the FHLBB expressing “concern with [Lamar’s] financial condition.” The letter explained that Lamar had a current negative net worth and was losing “approximately $1,000,000” per month. The FHLBB explained that it would request a supervisory agreement if LFC did not infuse Lamar with new capital or take other steps to correct the problem.
In November of 1985 Lamar received another letter from the FHLBB. That letter explained that Lamar had “failed to meet its net worth requirements.” In the letter, the FHLBB made clear that it considered unauthorized direct investments during the quarter following June 80, 1985 a “direct violation of the Insurance Regulations.” It further explained that Lamar’s “failure to maintain an adequate level of net worth” was “exacerbated by investment in acquisition, development, and construction loans and real estate that is substantially higher than the national average for such investments.” The FHLBB prohibited direct investments made without prior written approval of the Supervisory Agent. These letters bolster our conclusion that Lamar should have discovered the facts establishing any possible malpractice claims against Shrader and York arising out of the CTC and Stone Oak investments.
We next consider the FDIC’s argument that Shrader & York is not entitled to the benefit of the general rule of imputation because it is not an innocent party and had a duty to protect City and Lamar from Adams’s misconduct. Application of such an exception would require a shov/ing that Shrader & York colluded with Adams to defraud City and Lamar.
See, e.g., Crisp v. Southwest Bancshares Leasing Co.,
2.
We also affirm the district court’s ruling as to the malpractice claims arising out of the Brazos merger. The FDIC claims that Adams used the Brazos merger to waste millions of dollars of Lamar assets. So Adams’s knowledge with respect to this transaction might not be imputable to Lamar. Still, the record reveals that Lamar’s Board of Directors had a considerable amount of concrete information about the Brazos merger that should have put it on notice of potential legal malpractice claims arising out of Shrader & York’s work on that merger. In November of 1983 Lamar’s board received a letter from Peat Marwick, the accounting firm that represented Brazos in the merger. The letter pointed out that “[G]eneral and administrative expenses for the [April 1, 1983-June 30, 1983] period were approximately $9.2 million (unaudited), as compared to approximately $1.2 million (unaudited) for the prior three-month period.” Commenting on the unusual nature of the expenses, the letter noted that some of the “$9.2 million was expended on automobiles for the benefit of certain directors, officers, or employees of Lamar and Brazos.” The letter drew attention to fact that the merger agreement between Lamar and Brazos forbade salary increases outside the ordinary course of business. Peat Marwick considered this activity so serious that its earlier report of July 5, 1983 could “no longer be relied on.”
The FDIC argues that a subsequent investigation of the expenses, conducted by the outside law firm of McKenna, Connor & Cuneo, did not accuse Shrader and York of any wrongdoing. The scope of the investigation included “the records” of Lamar and Brazos relating to the acquisition of Brazos by Lamar, and the “related public disclosures and filings with the Bank Board.” The outside law firm was to “pre
B.
The FDIC argues that Adams adversely dominated City and Lamar, and that, therefore, City and Lamar’s causes of action against Shrader and York did not begin to run until Adams lost his grip on City and Lamar. Because the FDIC is suing the corporations’ outside counsel, and not their officers or directors, the district court declined to apply the adverse domination doctrine.
This very narrow doctrine has been applied to suits by a corporation against the officers or directors of that company. In appropriate cases, it tolls the statute of limitations for claims against wrongdoing officers and directors of a corporation until they relinquish control of the institution.
F.D.I.C. v. Howse,
The FDIC contends that the adverse domination doctrine is not limited to suits against a corporation’s officers and directors. In the FDIC’s view, the policy rationale for the doctrine applies in this case because Adams prevented City and Lamar from suing Shrader & York in order to avoid exposure of his own wrongdoing.
The FDIC has not produced any cases from Texas or this Court that extend the adverse domination doctrine beyond corporate officers and directors. Moreover, the FDIC does not allege that Shrader and York committed intentional torts, or conspired with Adams to defraud City or Lamar. Thus we agree with the district court that, in this particular case, Texas’s discovery rule adequately addresses the FDIC’s policy concern.
IV.
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the district court’s order.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We discuss the FDIC’s standing in further detail in section III of this opinion.
. Because the Brazos merger was unusual in this respect, we discuss it in the next section of this opinion.
. The number is closer to |8.5 million. The FDIC’s second amended complaint in Lamar Financial Corporation v. Adams claimed that, by the Fall of 1983, LFC had repurchased the stock held by RDC’s principals for approximately $1.5 million.
