The FDIC brought suit against Louise Zook on a guaranty executed in support of a loan to Zook Brothers Construction Company by Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago, which had assigned agreements relating to ZBCC to the FDIC. The district court decided after a bench trial that the Bank’s failure to obtain Zook’s consent to alterations in the credit arrangement released her from the guaranty, rendering it unenforceable under Illinois law. The FDIC argues that enforceability is a matter of federal law, and that the district court should have applied 12 U.S.C. § 1823 and the D’Oench doctrine in making its determination. We agree and, because Louise Zook never cancelled her guaranty, it should be enforced. Accordingly, we reverse.
I
This dispute arises out of Louise Zook’s participation and involvement in the ongoing credit relationship between Continental Illinois and ZBCC. Donald and Glenn Zook are ZBCC’s sole shareholders. Louise Zook is Donald’s wife. In April 1977, ZBCC obtained a $2,000,000 loan from the Bank. In October of that year, Donald and Louise co-signed a $500,000 guaranty on the amounts owed by ZBCC. 1 Through 1978 and 1979, the ZBCC loan was steadily increased and new guaranties issued. Louise Zook never signed these guaranties.
In June 1980, however, after Continental increased ZBCC’s loan to $3,500,000, Louise did co-sign another guaranty. The new guaranty read in part: “This guaranty shall in all respects be a continuing, absolute and unconditional guaranty, and shall remain in full force and effect ... subject to discontinuances as to any of the under *1450 signed only upon actual receipt by the Bank of written notice.... ”
At some point after the 1980 guaranty was signed, ZBCC began to fall behind in its loan payments. As a result, on July 7, 1981, the credit agreement was amended and new notes taken. Also, during 1981 and 1982, the Bank and ZBCC agreed to three auctions of ZBCC collateral and agreed to put the proceeds toward the loans, now considered in default. The Bank never sent Louise notice of these sales or sought her consent.
In December 1982, a new loan consolidation agreement was made. In connection with this, Donald Zook reaffirmed that his 1979 and 1980 guaranties remained in full force and effect. Louise Zook did not sign, and was not asked to sign, such a document, but her 1980 guaranty remained in the Bank’s active loan file.
In 1984, the Bank assigned the documents relating to the ZBCC debt to the FDIC, and in 1989, the FDIC won a judgment against ZBCC, Glenn Zook, and Donald Zook on the ZBCC loan, which had been declared in default.
The FDIC sought to hold Louise Zook personally liable for this judgment based on her 1980 guaranty. The district court referred Zook’s motion for summary judgment to a magistrate judge, and adopted his recommendation that it be denied because of material issues of fact on defenses to enforcement. The court then proceeded to trial on the merits. It found that Zook had not received notice of the Loan Consolidation Agreement and had not consented to it, and that the Bank’s records thereafter contain no references to the individual guaranty of Louise Zook. It concluded that the guaranty was to be construed in accordance with Illinois law, and that because Zook had not consented to material alterations of the 1979 Credit Agreement, she was released from her obligations under the 1980 guaranty. The court therefore declined to enforce it.
We review the district court’s conclusions of law de novo.
Sherman v. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co.,
II
The FDIC argues that enforceability of Zook’s guaranty should have been decided under federal law.
2
This is clearly correct. 12 U.S.C. § 1819 states that suits in which the FDIC is a party are deemed to arise under the laws of the United States, and we have so held.
FDIC v. First Nat’l Fin. Co.,
Section 1823(e) and
D’Oench, Duhme & Co. v. FDIC,
In 1942, the Supreme Court articulated a rule designed to implement a “federal policy to protect [the FDIC] and the public funds which it administers against misrepresentations as to the securities or other assets in the portfolios of the banks which [the FDIC] insures or to which it makes loans.” This policy is as sound today as it was in 1942, if not more so.
Id.
at 244 (quoting
D’Oench,
Focusing solely on documents in the bank’s files allows the FDIC to assess the value of assets held by banks it insures or acquires in its corporate capacity. For good reason this must be a uniform national rule, and we therefore hold that the enforceability of Zook’s guaranty is governed by federal law.
Ill
The FDIC contends that federal law compels enforcement because Zook’s 1980 guaranty is “continuing, absolute and unconditional,” and explicitly covers “any loan or other financial accommodation heretofore or hereafter at any time made or granted to [ZBCC].” It argues that none of the extrinsic materials considered by the district court shows a written discontinuance notice by Zook, or any written release by Continental. Therefore, the FDIC urges, § 1823(e) and D’Oench preclude Zook from asserting implied limitations.
Zook, on the other hand, argues that the
D!Oench
doctrine does not come into play where ordinary good faith transactions are involved and the liability of the parties to commercial paper will best be solved by applying local law. She relies on our early decision in
FDIC v. Meo,
We think it is beyond question that § 1823(e) and
D’Oench
allow the FDIC to rely on official bank records to the exclusion of extrinsic matters. Conversely, we have also held that a debtor may not rely on anything but “a clear and explicit written obligation.”
Gemini Management,
D’Oench
applies in Zook’s ease just as it did in
Gemini Management.
In
Gemini Management,
the signed letter for a loan promised Gemini $1,100,000, but the first, unsigned version of the letter, also in the bank file, showed a promise to loan $1,545,-000. We noted that there was no “explicit statement” in the bank files obligating the bank to a $1,545,000 loan and that “[i]t was perfectly reasonable for the FSLIC to conclude that the terms of the First Letter were completely superseded by the Second Letter.”
Gemini Management,
*1452
Section 1823(e) requires this result as well. Its requirements are “categorical,”
Langley,
Meo
does not require a different result. In
Meo,
we held that a bona fide bank borrower who was neither a party to any deceptive scheme involving a claimed defense, nor negligent with respect to the circumstances giving rise to it, is not es-topped from asserting a defense against the FDIC.
We conclude that federal law requires Zook’s guaranty to be enforced.
IV
The FDIC argues for the same reasons that there are no exceptions to the D’Oench doctrine which permit Zook to rely on state law defenses. Zook, on the other hand, urges that she may assert material alteration, and novation, against the FDIC because, by operation of Illinois law, Zook was off the hook before her guaranty was acquired by the FDIC. On this view, the FDIC took “no asset” and neither § 1823(e) nor D’Oench applies. Because Zook’s defenses depend on proving an implied agreement between herself and Continental that is belied by the presence of the 1980 guaranty in the Bank’s file, we hold that there is no basis for invoking the “no asset” exception.
The seminal opinion on the “no asset” exception is the Eleventh Circuit’s in
FDIC v. Merchants National Bank,
We have never directly addressed the “no asset” exception, though other circuits *1453 have. 4 The FDIC does not suggest that the exception does not exist, at least so long as it is limited to instruments which are invalid for fraud or breach of obligations in the asset itself. We have no call in this case to define the exception more broadly than Merchants, for here, as in Merchants, the borrower’s case cannot be made out apart from evidence, independent of the guaranty itself, that fails to comply with § 1823(e). “Congress did not intend that Sec. 1823(e) be avoided in this manner; [the borrower’s] construction would drain substantial vitality from Sec. 1823(e), as applied to this case, by throwing into question the very records of the bank that the statute entitles FDIC to consider and rely upon.” Id.
Both the First Circuit in
FDIC v. P.L.M. International, Inc.,
In
Beighley,
the borrower contended that the bank agreed to finance a third party purchase of collateral property at the same time a renewal note was executed to consolidate and reduce Beighley’s total indebtedness, and that its failure to fund the purchase precluded the FDIC from enforcing the note. Beighley introduced numerous documents to show there was such an agreement. Affirming summary judgment in favor of the FDIC, the court emphasized that not a single document stated in writing that the bank agreed to finance purchase of the property, and that inferences which could be drawn from the bank’s cooperation in Beighley’s efforts to sell the property do not meet the requirements of § 1823(e).
See
We conclude that federal law governs this action by the FDIC on a continuing guaranty in the loan files of a bank whose assets were assigned to it. Federal law requires enforcement of the guaranty because the FDIC under D’Oench and § 1823(e) is entitled to rely on documents in a loan file, and there is no basis for Zook’s defenses based on state law as they depend on inferences contravening the guaranty which are raised, and may be proved, only by reference to documents which do not meet the requirements of § 1823(e).
*1454 REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the FDIC.
Notes
. This guaranty was returned to them, stamped cancelled, in March 1979.
. Zook argues that the FDIC waived any claim that Zook’s 1980 guaranty is governed exclusively by federal law, because the magistrate judge’s recommendation made no reference to § 1823(e) and the FDIC’s objections went only to the 1977 guaranty. The FDIC’s objections did note that § 1823(e) raises presumptions opposite to those of the magistrate judge. In any event, a failure to object to a magistrate judge’s conclusions of law does not automatically bar raising the objection on appeal,
Martinez v. Ylst,
. 12 U.S.C. 1823(e) provides:
No agreement which tends to diminish or defeat the interest of the Corporation [FDIC] in any asset acquired by it under this section *1451 or section 1821 of this title, either as security for a loan or by purchase or as receiver of any insured depository institution, shall be valid against the [FDIC] unless such agreement—
(1) is in writing,
(2) was executed by the depository institution and any person claiming an adverse interest thereunder, including the obligor, contemporaneously with the acquisition of the asset by the depository institution,
(3) was approved by the board of directors of the depository institution or its loan committee, which approval shall be reflected in the minutes of said board or committee, and
(4) has been, continuously, from the time of its execution, an official record of the depository institution.
.
See, e.g., Commerce Fed. Sav. Bank v. FDIC,
.
See also Gunter v. Hutcheson,
