ORDER
Currently pending is the plaintiff’s motion to strike the defendant’s affirmative defense of contributory negligence and the statute of limitations. Based on the submitted memoranda and oral argument of counsel, the court finds as follows:
Background
This action brought by the FDIC alleges that the former officers and directors of The Chokio State Bank were negligent in the performance of their duties. The Chok-io State Bank was closed in 1986 and the FDIC was appointed as receiver. As receiver, the FDIC sold the Bank’s claims against its officers and directors to the FDIC in its corporate capacity. It is in this corporate capacity that the current suit is brought.
Discussion
While motions to strike are not generally favored in the law, they are properly granted when a defense is insufficient as a matter of law.
Fabrica Italiana Lavorazione v. Kaiser Aluminum,
A. Contributory Negligence
The defendants allege in their answer contributory negligence on the part of the FDIC. As explained in the defendants’ responsive memorandum, the essence of their claim is that the FDIC as receiver of the Bank failed to maximize the recovery available on a number of bad loans after the Bank’s failure. They claim that the FDIC cannot equitably be allowed to recover for any negligence of the Bank’s directors without some consideration of the FDIC’s potential negligence for the losses on the failed loans.
The plaintiff asserts that, as a matter of law, this defense cannot be maintained. In support of its argument, plaintiff cites a line of cases which hold that the FDIC has no duty to warn banks of improprieties its examinations reveal in order to protect the bank from losses.
See e.g., First State Bank of Hudson County v. United States,
The plaintiff cites one decision in which the reasoning of these cases has been adopted to hold specifically that the actions of the FSLIC (the sister agency to the FDIC) after appointment as a receiver cannot be asserted by former directors as an affirmative defense.
Federal Savings and Loan Corp. v. Roy,
Civ. No. JFM-87-1227 (D.Md. June 28, 1988) [available on WEST-LAW,
At oral argument, defendants urged the court not to follow
Roy
and suggested that recent changes in the interpretation of the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and the “discretionary function” exception to the broad waiver of immunity contained in the Act would allow them to claim contributory negligence of the FDIC in their defense. Essentially, defendants argue that because recent Supreme Court authority, namely
Berkovitz by Berkovitz v. United States,
— U.S. —,
This argument has a critical flaw: the FTCA creates only a procedural mechanism and does not itself provide an independent basis for recovery. See generally, 28 U.S.C. § 1346 et seq. Defendants must establish that the FDIC as receiver owed a duty to the officers to collect bad loans without negligence. The authority cited by plaintiff, and even that cited by defendants, specifically holds that the statutory authority under which the FDIC acts creates no duty of care toward bank officers and directors.
The court finds that the reasoning of Roy is sound notwithstanding defendants’ arguments to the contrary. The defense of contributory negligence is ordered DISMISSED.
B. Statute of Limitations
The plaintiff argues that the statute of limitations defense asserted by defendants cannot be sustained as a matter of law. Plaintiff argues and defendants agree that the applicable statute is 28 U.S.C. § 2415 which provides a three year limitation on tort claims and a six year limitation on contract claims.
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Plaintiff argues that these three and six year periods began to run when the FDIC acquired the Bank’s causes of action rather than when the action accrued under state law.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation v. Buttram,
Both parties agree, however, that the FDIC as assignee of the Bank’s claims can only assert claims which were viable on the date of acquisition. In other words, the FDIC cannot assert claims for which the state statute of limitations had run before their acquisition. Defendants argue that many of the purported claims were extinguished by state limitations periods before they had been acquired by the FDIC. The plaintiff argues that none of the claims should be considered extinguished. Rather, argues plaintiff, the court should invoke a tolling principle known as “adverse domination.” Under this principle the applicable limitations period is tolled as long as the officers and directors against whom the claims are brought controlled the bank. The principle has been neither accepted nor rejected in Minnesota but is widely accepted in other states.
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Berry,
The court finds the reasoning of these recent cases persuasive and grants the motion to dismiss the statute of limitations defense with respect to each defendant except Roxann G. Dorweiler. Ms. Dorweiler resigned as director of the Bank on or about February 1, 1983; thus it is possible that her control of the bank may have ended long enough before the filing of this suit to provide her a statute of limitations defense. The issue of her control of the Bank and when it ended raises factual questions which should not be decided at this stage.
Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. Barbara Carlson, Paul S. Dorweiler and Roxann Dorweiler’s affirmative defenses of contributory negligence be STRICKEN; and
2. Barbara Carlson and Paul S. Dorweiler’s statute of limitations defenses be STRICKEN.
