FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP., Plaintiff, v. Rory S. McFARLAND, et al., Defendants. Texaco, Inc., Defendant-Third Party Plaintiff, v. Premier Venture Capital Corp.; David L. Jump, Third Party Defendants-Appellees, v. Dennis Joslin Co., L.L.C., Movant-Appellant.
No. 99-30756.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Feb. 28, 2001.
243 F.3d 876
V.
For the above reasons, we AFFIRM McWaine‘s convictions, but VACATE his sentence and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Paul Mark Adkins, Blanchard, Walker, O‘Quin & Roberts, Shreveport, LA, for Premier Venture Capital Corp.
Scott C. Sinclair (argued), Hargrove, Pesnell & Wyatt, Shreveport, LA, for Jump.
Before JOLLY, HIGGINBOTHAM and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.
This appeal turns in part on whether the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver must abide by Louisiana reinscription rules to preserve its liens. The district court determined that the mortgage and assignment held by the assignee of the FDIC, the Dennis Joslin Company (“Joslin“), lost priority status because of the FDIC‘s failure to reinscribe the mortgage within the statutory period. The court found that two creditors, Bank One and David L. Jump, had valid liens that were senior to the FDIC‘s interest.
In addition to its assertions based on Louisiana law, Joslin argues that the FDIC is not bound by reinscription requirements. The argument is that either the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989, FIRREA, or federal common law insulates the FDIC from state-law reinscription requirements. We are not persuaded and affirm this holding of the district court. We also conclude that Jump‘s lien was based on a judgment that was not final when registered. We reverse the district court‘s contrary holding and remand.
I
On November 30, 1984, Rory S. McFarland pledged a note in the amount of $2.5 million to the Bank of Commerce оf Shreveport, Louisiana.1 McFarland secured this note with a mineral lease mortgage and assignment, an “assignment of runs,” of his interest in the oil, gas, and minerals produced from the mortgaged leasehold and mineral interests.2
A casualty of the misfortunes that befell banking in the 1980s, the Bank of Commerce failed in 1986. The FDIC was appointed receiver and took over the bank‘s assets, including the pledged 1984 note and the assignment.3
In August 1990, Bank One Equity Investment, Inc., formerly Premier Venture Capital Corporation, obtained judgment, “the Bank One judgment,” against McFarland in Louisiana state court. Bank One recorded this judgment in various Louisiana parishes between March and August of 1991.
On October 1, 1991, David L. Jump obtained a judgment against McFarland, “the Jump judgment,” in the United States District Court for the Western District of Colorado. Jump registered the judgment in the Western District of Louisiana on June 26, 1992. In June and July of 1992, Jump recordеd the judgment in various Louisiana parishes.
On October 31, 1991, the FDIC filed suit to collect the debt owed by McFarland to the Bank of Commerce, including the 1984 mortgage and assignment. Bank One and Jump intervened in the case4 seeking the proceeds from the mineral leases that had been paid into the court registry.5 They
In 1993, the district court ordered McFarland to pay the FDIC from the proceeds in the court registry and recognized the 1984 mortgage as the first lien. The court also held that the 1984 assignment did not include OCS-310 and ordered McFarland to pay the proceeds of that lease to Bank One and Jump.6 The FDIC recorded the 1993 judgment of the district court in various Louisiana parishes between November 2, 1993, and November 8, 1993. This Court subsequently affirmed the judgment in relevant part.7
The FDIC reinscribed the 1984 mortgаge and assignment in various Louisiana parishes in July 1995. In 1997, the FDIC assigned the mortgage and assignment to the Dennis Joslin Company.
In 1998, Joslin filed a motion for issuance of a writ of execution and for foreclosure of the property subject to the 1984 mortgage and assignment. Joslin also sought distribution of the funds that had accumulated in the court registry. The district court issued the requested writ of execution and the United States Marshal for the Western District of Louisiana seized the property. The marshal advertised the sale of the property and set October 28, 1998 as the date of sale.
Through successive filings on October 23 and 26, 1998, Jump objected to Joslin‘s actions. Jump contended that the FDIC‘s failure to reinscribe the 1984 mortgage and assignment within ten years of its execution resulted in a loss of ranking.8 Jump argued that the 1991 Jump judgment consequently had priority as to both the mineral interests and the proceeds deposited in the court registry. The court postponed the marshal‘s sale.
In June 1999, the district court entered another judgment holding that Louisiana law required the FDIC to reinscribe the 1984 mortgage and assignment by November 30, 1994. The FDIC‘s reinscription in 1995 was therefore untimely, depriving its assignee, Joslin, of priority rank. The court consequently ranked the Bank One judgment first, the Jump judgment second, and the FDIC‘s 1984 mortgage and assignment third. Joslin appeals this determination.
II
Joslin contends, first, that this case is moot.9 Joslin points to the 1993 judgment, in which the district court declared the
Joslin‘s position is meritless. There is a live case or controversy regarding the meaning of the 1993 judgment—the extent to which it encompasses future, as well as past, proceeds deposited in the registry. Moreover, we note that Louisiana law mandates the reinscription of mortgages and assignments within a ten-year period.11 As the Louisiana Supreme Court has held, “[a] litigation between the mortgage creditors does not dispense from reinscription. . . . The inscription must continue until the proceeds of the property mortgaged are reduced to possession.”12 The 1993 judgment did not then implicitly end the FDIC‘s continuing obligation to reinscribe the mortgage. Moreover, the FDIC‘s failure to reinscribe the mortgage did not occur until 1994, and the issue was not properly before the district court.13 Even if we were to interpret the 1993 judgment as declaring the FDIC to be owner of all future рroceeds deposited in the court registry, the judgment would still not exclude the possibility that other circumstances—e.g., failure to reinscribe—might deprive the FDIC of its lien. The instant appeal therefore presents a live controversy.14
III
The larger question posed by this case is whether Louisiana reinscription law applies to mortgages held by the FDIC. The parties urge three different means of resolving this question. First, Jump15 contends that the 1993 judgment disposed of the reinscription question and is the “law of the case.” Second, Joslin argues that the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 198916 frees the FDIC from state-law reinscription requirements. If FIRREA does not apply, Joslin asserts that federal common law governs the FDIC, thereby precluding the imposition of state reinscription obligations. We address each contention in turn.
A
Jump argues that the district court in the 1999 case was bound by the 1993 judgment, which provided the “law of
Jump notes that the 1993 judgment found a mortgage and аssignment issued by McFarland in 1981 to be “preempted.” He contends that the district court found the 1981 mortgage to be preempted because of the FDIC‘s failure to reinscribe the original mortgage within a ten-year period. Jump concludes that the district court thereby recognized that the FDIC must comply with Louisiana reinscription requirements. Jump concedes that the 1993 judgment did not and could not address the FDIC‘s subsequent failure to reinscribe the pledged 1984 mortgage. However, he asserts that the 1993 judgment enunciated a legal principle that was binding on the 1999 judgment.21 As we understand it, he contends that the 1993 case was merely a prior stage of the same litigation, and that the district court‘s prior judgment bound it in future phases of the same case.22
On the face of the matter it is doubtful whether the 1993 and 1999 proceedings constitute the same “case.” It is true that the same trial judge prеsided at both proceedings and that the two judgments had the same case number and caption. It is equally true, however, that the 1993 decision was a final judgment and the 1999 case was not decided on remand from our 1994 decision. By then, several facts had changed: Joslin became the holder of the FDIC‘s 1984 mortgage and assignment, and the FDIC failed to reinscribe the mortgage.23
Even if we assume that the two rulings were part of the same “case,” we do not read the 1993 judgment as advocated by Jump. The 1993 judgment does not explain its finding of preemption. In a pre-trial order adopted by the district court in 1993, the court recognized as a contested issue of law “[w]hether the 1981 FDIC mortgage is unenforceable because it was not reinscribed” (emphasis added). The court also noted two other objections to the 1981 mortgage: (1) whether the mortgage was “unenforceable” because it failed to comply with
The 1993 judgment failed to unambiguously affirm the FDIC‘s obligation to abide by Louisiana reinscription law. While
B
Joslin argues that FIRREA,
When acting as a receiver, the following provisions shall apply with respect to the Corporation:
. . . No property of the Corporation shall be subject to levy, attachment, garnishment, foreclosure, or sale without the consent of the Corporation, nor shall any involuntary lien attach to the property of the Corporation.27
Joslin asserts that the plain meaning of the statute compels the conclusion that Louisiana reinscription law would not apply to the FDIC.
The Louisiana reinscription statute may effect a re-ranking of liens. Failure to reinscribe a mortgage within the ten-year period specified in Article 3369 of the Louisiana Civil Code does not invalidate the mortgage as between the contracting parties.28 Untimely reinscription does, however, render the initial inscription of the mortgage ineffective against third parties. Third-party creditors thеn have priority over the mortgage that was not timely reinscribed. Any attempt to reinscribe after the ten-year period can not alter this change in seniority. Late reinscription merely crystallizes the ranking in effect at the time of the reinscription.29
Although failure to reinscribe a mortgage may result in the application of an “involuntary lien” to FDIC property, FIRREA does not provide relief. We read the provisions of FIRREA in context, cognizant of the statute‘s structure and purpose.30 Passed in the wake of a national crisis in the banking and savings-and-loan industries, FIRREA was intended to promote stability, economic recovery, and increased public confidence.31 To this end, the FDIC was empowered to serve as receiver for failed financial institutions.32 Section 1825 was enacted to facilitate the FDIC‘s efforts as receiver and was intendеd to “protect assets involuntarily acquired by the FDIC from losing value because of its lack of knowledge about local and state tax liens.”33
[Section 1825(b)(2)] clarifies the existing provision specifying that the only kind of non-Federal tax to which the FDIC, in its corporate capacity or as receiver, is subject is a tax on real property. The exemption from taxаtion extends to the [FDIC‘s] property and operations in whatever capacity it is functioning, and particularly as receiver for a national bank, a branch of a foreign bank, or a savings association (but not as a receiver for a State bank under State law).36
The title to section 1825 confirms the arrangement established by FIRREA.37 Section 1825 is labeled, “Exemption from taxation; limitations on borrowing.” FIRREA added the heading, “General rule,” to subsection (a).38 The heading which FIRREA designated for subsection (b), “Other exemptions,” confirms that section 1825(b)(2) was intended to address other exemptions from taxation than those stipulated in the “general rule.” The “other exemption” at issue in this case is the rule precluding the attachment of an involuntary tax lien to FDIC property. The structure, title, and purpose of the statute compel this conclusion.
This Court has consistently interpreted section 1825(b)(2) in this fashion. We have found that this section prohibits state and local taxing authorities from foreclosing on property subject to an FDIC lien without its consent.39 This Court has not applied the exemption of section 1825(b)(2) to liens not attached by state and local taxing authorities.40 Indeed, we have repeatedly found that section 1825(b)(2) “represents the express will of Congress that the FDIC must consent to any deprivation of property initiated by a state.”41
Joslin attempts to apply this exemption to the intervention initiated by Jump and Bank One. As Jump and Bank One are private entities possessing normal judgment liens, however, their claims are not barred by section 1825(b)(2). We therefore find that FIRREA does not preclude the application of Louisiana reinscription law to the FDIC‘s property. Nothing in FIRREA prevents Louisiana law from reсognizing either the FDIC‘s obligation to reinscribe mortgages or the loss of ranking suffered by the FDIC if it fails to meet this obligation. FIRREA only prohibits state and local entities from taking advantage of the FDIC‘s failure to reinscribe by attaching liens and other instruments to satisfy tax judgments. As these circum
C
Joslin argues, in the alternative, that federal common law—and not Louisiana reinscription law—governs the status of FDIC liens. In United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440 U.S. 715, 99 S.Ct. 1448, 59 L.Ed.2d 711 (1979),43 the Supreme Court articulated the general framework for determining whether to apply federal common law or state law. The Kimbell Foods case addressed the question of whether liens arising from federal loan programs take precedence over private liens. The Court noted that, in the absence of a federal statutory provision setting priorities, it must first decide whether federal or state law provides the “rule of decision” for the controversy.44 If a federal rule of decision is appropriate, the court must determine whether to fashion a uniform federal standard or to incorporate state commercial law.45 The Court‘s inquiry was guided by consideration of three factors: (1) the federal interest in uniform federal rules; (2) whether application of state law would frustrate the specific objectives of the federal program at issue; and (3) to what extent application of a federal rule would
We find that state law provides the rule of decision in this case. FIRREA is a comprehensive and detailed statutory scheme.49 The Supreme Court has stated that we are not to “adopt a court-made rule to supplement federal statutory regulation that is comprehensive and detailed; matters left unaddressed in such a scheme are presumably left subject to the disposition provided by state law.”50 Joslin does not articulate a valid basis for overcoming this presumption.
Moreover, the FDIC in this case acts not in its corporate capacity, but as receiver for a private bank. This Court has followed the Supreme Court in recognizing that “the capacity in which the FDIC acts may have a determinative impact on whether a state or federal rule should control.”51 As recеiver for the Bank of Commerce, the FDIC‘s rights and liabilities derive from a private lien held by a private bank. Precedent confirms that the FDIC‘s actions as receiver do not implicate the concerns articulated in cases such as Kimbell Foods.52 As the FDIC‘s actions as a receiver do not concern the “rights of the United States in a nationwide federal program,”53 state law normally supplies the rule of decision.54
We also do not find that application of state law would create a “significant conflict” with the FDIC‘s putative interest in the application of a uniform national standard.55 Joslin points to provisions in FIRREA which protect the FDIC from the effects of state law,56 yet offers no reason why these protections—none of which is relevant to the reinscription issue at hand—imply the need for a uniform national standard.57 While uniformity of law would free the FDIC from the obli-
Joslin articulates no significant federal policy or interest that would be jeopardized by exposure to reinscription requirements. There is a candidate. FIRREA was “designed in part to facilitate the efficient and speedy recovery of the assets of . . . failed [finаncial institutions].”61 Given the need to market occasionally large quantities of assets, the FDIC prefers to sell assets without the risk of losing its priority position. While we are not unsympathetic to the bureaucratic limitations of the FDIC, we fail to see how the state-law requirements at issue pose a “significant conflict” with the federal interest in effectively disposing of the assets at the FDIC‘s disposal.
Precedent also leaves little doubt that a federal agency‘s interest in preserving priority lien status is insufficient to render state law inapplicable. Although Kimbell Foods applied a federal rule of decision, it incorporated state law for purposes of determining the relative priority of competing federal and private liens.62 In Magnolia Federal Bank v. United States, 42 F.3d 968 (5th Cir. 1995),63 our Court similarly found that, “[i]nsofar as Magnolia‘s claim would subordinate rather than bar enforcement of SBA‘s liens for untimeliness, state law is properly invoked against the federal agency.”64 Failure to reinscribe a lien in Louisiana does not extinguish the mortgage. The mortgage merely loses priority status vis-a-vis other creditors.65 The prohibition against applying state statutes of limitations to the activities of federal agencies consequently does not govern this case.66 The Louisiana law at issue presents no significant conflict with the FDIC‘s interests.
We further note that the application of federal law would disrupt commercial relationships predicated on state law.67 As Joslin concedes, Louisiana has a strong public records doctrine.68 The public records doctrine serves important reliance in-
Case law affirms the importance of respecting this state policy. The Supreme Court has recognized that state laws of this kind provide private commercial entities with “the stability essential for reliable evaluation of the risks involved.”72 The Supreme Court also has noted that if federal law were to displace state law regulating lien priority, “[c]reditors who justifiably rely on state law to obtain superior liens would have their expectations thwarted whenever a federal contractual security interest suddenly appeared and took precedence.”73 Moreover, this Court‘s jurisprudence affirms that we are to defer to state property regimes when considering whether to apply a federal common law rule.74 We have found that the “strong local interest in state regulation of land
IV
Assuming that Louisiana reinscription law applies to the FDIC, Joslin contends that the 1993 judgment satisfied these requirements. We disagree. Article 3333 of the Louisiana Civil Code requires that the holder of the mortgage file a signed, written notice of reinscription which, inter alia, “shall declare that the document is reinscribed.”78 Article 3336 of the Civil Code affirms that this method is exclusive of all others.79 The Act creating the reinscription method currently in effect states that “[t]he procedure for reinscription of mortgages and privileges as set forth in Civil Code Articles 3328 through 3331 shall be effective as to all requests for reinscription filed on or after [January 1, 1993].”80 Assuming that the 1993 judgment constitutes a “request for reinscription,” the method outlined in Article 3333 applies. Not only was the 1993 judgment not signed by an FDIC representаtive, but it also does not declare that the document is to be reinscribed. Consequently, the 1993 judgment did not reinscribe the 1984 mortgage and assignment.
Even under prior law, the 1993 judgment would not constitute an effective reinscription of the mortgage and assignment. Although a recorded judgment could effectively reinscribe a mortgage, it had to include each of the “substantial particulars” of the mortgage.81 A reinscription had to contain “notice to the world that the mortgagor continue[s] to admit his indebtedness, and that the mortgagee continue[s] to maintain its mortgage on the property described.”82 The 1993 judgment does not include a copy of the 1984 mortgage and assignment. It only refers to “the oil and gas leases, royalty interests, overriding royalty interests and other property described” in the mortgage. This description fails to provide third-parties with the notice required under Louisiana reinscription law.83 The judgment also was deficient in other respects, as it failed to include, inter alia, “the name of
V
Joslin contends that the Jump judgment was not a “final” judgment and therefore improperly registered.
Rule 54 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure affirms that a judgment is not final for purposes of appeal where it disposes of fewer than all of the claims or parties involved in a case.
The Jump judgment only disposed of Jump‘s claims. Litigation involving other parties to the Colorado litigation did not conclude until August 25, 1997—long after the FDIC‘s reinscription of the mortgage and assignment. As Jump concedes that no
In light of the preceding, we hereby AFFIRM the judgment of the district court finding that Louisiana reinscription law operates to striр the FDIC of priority lien status. We further REVERSE the district court‘s holding that the Jump judgment was an executable, final judgment and its finding that the Jump judgment was senior to Joslin‘s lien. We REMAND for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED and REMANDED in part.
