MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b) & 2671-2680, and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 701 et seq., seeking to recover $820 million in damages arising out of the government’s allegedly negligent management and operation of Franklin Savings Association. The case comes before the court on defendants’ motion to dismiss (Doc. 59) 1 plaintiffs’ second amended complaint pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). For the reasons set forth below, defendants’ motion is granted.
I. Baclcground
The court need not provide an exhaustive explanation of the events culminating in this lawsuit. Several prior decisions have recounted the saga of Franklin Savings in thorough detail.
See Franklin Sav. Ass’n v. Office of Thrift Supervision,
Prior to its seizure and liquidation by federal regulators, Franklin Savings Association (“FSA”) functioned as a state chartered stock savings and loan association. Approximately 94% of FSA’s stock is owned by its holding company, Franklin Savings Corporation (“FSC”), a corporation organized and existing under Kansas law.
In 1990, the director of the Office of Thrift Supervision determined that FSA was in an unsafe and unsound condition to transact
*860
business and appointed the Resolution Trust Corporation (“RTC”) as conservator of the thrift. FSA and FSC subsequently filed a lawsuit under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”), 12 U.S.C. § 1461
et seq.,
seeking to remove the conservator. Although the district court ruled in favor of FSA and FSC, the Tenth Circuit reversed, holding that the administrative record supported the office of Thrift Supervision’s decision to appoint a conservator.
Franklin I,
In September 1992, the director of the Office of Thrift Supervision converted the RTC’s role with respect to FSA from conservator to receiver and ordered the RTC to liquidate the savings association. Once again, both FSA and FSC commenced a lawsuit challenging the agency’s actions. The Tenth Circuit, affirming the district court’s dismissal of the case, held that the Office of Thrift Supervision’s imposition of a receivership is not subject to judicial review.
Franklin II,
The instant action has its genesis in a complaint that FSA and FSC initiated in January 1993 in a bankruptcy court adversary proceeding. The matter arose there because FSC had filed for Chapter 11 relief in bankruptcy court eighteen months earlier. 2 In the original adversary complaint, plaintiffs sought damages under the FTCA for negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and conversion by the RTC while acting as conservator of FSA. In March 1995, this court approved the recommendation of the bankruptcy court that the bankruptcy reference be withdrawn and plaintiffs’ adversary complaint be transferred to the district court. 3
After the case was transferred to this court, plaintiffs made several amendments to their complaint. Specifically, they (1) named the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”), which is the successor-in-interest to the RTC, as a defendant; (2) asserted an APA claim alleging that the RTC, as conservator, had acted in excess of its statutory authority; and (3) added a breach of duty claim against defendants based on the RTC’s alleged nongovernmental activity in commerce while acting as FSA’s conservator.
Defendants have filed a series of motions to dismiss. The court now turns to those motions.
II. Standards Governing Motions to Dismiss
A. Generally
A party seeking to invoke the jurisdiction of a federal court must demonstrate that the case rests within the court’s jurisdiction.
United States v. Bustillos,
Defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction attacks the facial validity of plaintiffs’ complaint. Ordinarily, the court would analyze such a motion under Rule 12(b)(1). “However, a court is required to convert a Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss into a Rule 12(b)(6) motion or a Rule 56 summary judgment motion when resolution of the jurisdictional question is intertwined with the merits of the case.”
Holt v. United States,
In the instant action, defendants contend that explicit provisions contained in the APA and FTCA preclude the court from entertaining plaintiffs’ claims. Because plaintiffs predicate their suit on these two statutes, the jurisdictional question before the court is *861 intertwined with the merits of the case. The court, therefore, will analyze defendants’ motion pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). 4
B. Rule 12(b)(6)
A court may not grant a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim unless it appears that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts that would entitle it to relief.
Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs, Co. v. City of Lawrence,
III. Discussion
Before reaching the merits of plaintiffs’ claims, the court must address two procedural matters.
A. Administrative Remedies
Defendants first contend that FSA may not pursue this lawsuit in-as-mueh as it has not exhausted its administrative remedies. The court agrees. Although Congress waived the government’s sovereign immunity for certain tort-based actions when it enacted the FTCA, Congress imposed certain conditions on that waiver. One such condition ithat litigants wishing to bring a tort claim against the United States first must file an administrative claim with the appropriate federal agency. 28 U.S.C. § 2675(a). The administrative claim is a jurisdictional prerequisite that the court has no power to waive.
Nero v. Cherokee Nation,
FSA argues that it filed no administrative claim because such a claim would have been futile. The fact that pursuing an administrative remedy would be a futile endeavor, however, is irrelevant.
Nero,
B. Standing
Defendants next argue that although FSC filed an administrative claim, it has no standing to sue for harm allegedly inflicted upon FSA. In support of this assertion, defendants cite the general principle that shareholders do not have standing to redress injuries to the corporation in which they hold stock.
See K-B Trucking Co. v. Riss Int’l Corp.,
1. Derivative Action
As an owner of approximately 94% of FSA’s stock, FSC may maintain a derivative action on the theory that FSA has
*862
sustained a direct injury and is unable to ameliorate the wrong. The derivative action developed in equity to enable shareholders to sue in the corporation’s name if individuals or entities controlling the corporation refuse or are unable to sue on its behalf.
Kaufman v. Kansas Gas & Elec. Co.,
The only potential impediment to FSC’s suit is the derivative action’s demand requirement. This requirement mandates that shareholders attempt to obtain relief directly from the corporation before initiating a derivative lawsuit.
5
The rule essentially serves as a form of “alternative dispute resolution,” giving the corporation the opportunity to pursue alternative remedies, thereby resolving grievances without burdensome and expensive litigation.
Kaufman,
Despite the strong policy and practical advantages favoring exhaustion of intracorporate remedies, Rule 23.1’s demand prerequisite is not without exceptions. As the court in Kaufman noted:
A shareholder may be allowed to assume control of litigation without first affording the directors the opportunity to occupy their normal status by making demand, if the shareholder can show his case is exceptional or, in other words, that demand would be a futile, useless exercise. Thus, the shareholder must demonstrate a degree of antagonism between the directors and the corporate interest such that the directors would be incapable of doing their duty.
Kaufman,
2. Direct Action
Citing
Boyle v. Harries,
FSA is not a close corporation under Kansas law. Although FSC owns approximately 94% of FSA’s outstanding shares, the *863 remaining 6% is owned by FSA’s employees under an employee stock ownership plan or is publicly traded on the NASDAQ. K.S.A. § 17-7202(a)(3) states that a corporation cannot be considered “closely held” if any of its stock has been subject to a public offering. Furthermore, FSC’s alleged injuries are neither distinct from those of other FSA shareholders nor predicated upon independent contractual rights. Accordingly, the Boyle/Richards exception to direct shareholder actions is not applicable in the instant action. FSC may prosecute this ease only in a derivative capacity.
C. APA Claim
Turning to the merits of the case, the court first examines plaintiffs’ APA claim. In this claim, plaintiffs allege that the PTC exceeded its statutory authority in seizing FSA and in acting as FSA’s conservator. Plaintiffs seek both monetary relief and a declaration that the RTC’s actions are void.
1. Monetary Relief
The court has no jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claim for monetary relief because the APA’s waiver of sovereign immunity, 5 U.S.C. § 702, does not apply to actions seeking “money damages.”
See Hamilton Stores, Inc. v. Hodel,
In
Bowen v. Massachusetts,
The Court observed initially that the mere fact that a judicial remedy may require the payment of money by one party to another is not a sufficient reason to characterize the relief as money damages.
Id.
at 893,
Applying the Bowen principles to the instant action, the court concludes that plaintiffs’ request for “the return of the money and money equivalents of FSA’s business” is nothing more than a surreptitious attempt to claim money damages in contravention of the APA. What plaintiffs seek is compensation for the diminished value of FSA’s assets after being seized by government regulators. Under any definition, such relief is legal — not equitable — in nature.
Plaintiffs place great reliance on
MCorp v. Clarke,
2. Declaratory Relief
Plaintiffs also seek a declaration that the RTC’s actions as conservator of FSA are void. 7 It appears, however, that plaintiffs’ request for declaratory relief under the APA is little more than an attempt to make an end-run around the FTCA’s exclusive remedy provisions by nominally characterizing their requested relief as equitable in nature. Indeed, the APA and tort claims are inextricably intertwined; the declaratory relief that plaintiffs seek is not independent from the tort claim, but is merely a means by which to satisfy the tort claim’s prima facie elements.
Moreover, even if the APA and FTCA claims were independent and the court declared the RTC’s actions void, the only relief available to plaintiffs would be money damages. As noted above, such damages may not be sought under the APA. The case is analogous to
Golden Pacific Bancorp v. Clarke,
[Plaintiff] would have us entertain its challenge to the reasonableness of the Comptroller’s actions, but neither the APA nor the FTCA permits us. Appellant asserts that a careful review of all the documentation should have led the Comptroller to conclude that the Bank was in fact solvent and that it had sufficient liquidity to meet depositors’ demands. But ... the only relief appellant seeks is money damages; no specific relief under the APA is any longer — if it ever was — at issue. [Plaintiffs] claim under the APA ... serves only as a device upon which to predicate damages for alleged arbitrary and capricious actions of the Comptroller. This, however, appellant cannot do.
Id. at 511 (footnote omitted). Because plaintiffs may not seek money damages and because their request for declaratory relief is improper, the court dismisses plaintiffs’ APA claim.
D. FTCA Claim
The FTCA generally waives the sovereign immunity of the United States for negligence to the same extent that a private person would be hable in identical circumstances under state law. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Thus, if a negligence claim is based merely on the violation of a federal statute or regulation, no claim will he under the FTCA unless a similar duty exists under state law.
Klepper v. City of Milford,
The FTCA’s sovereign immunity waiver is limited exphcitly by the discretionary function exception, which prohibits claims against the United States “based upon
*865
the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency or an employee of the Government, whether or not the discretion involved [was] abused.” 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). Application of the discretionary function, therefore, is a threshold determination — “a jurisdictional issue which precedes any negligence analysis.”
Johnson v. United States,
In determining whether particular government conduct falls within the discretionary function exception, the court applies a two-pronged test. First, the court examines whether the act at issue “involves an element of judgment or choice.”
Berkovitz v. United States,
In the second step, the court looks at whether the judgment involved “is of the kind that the discretionary function was designed to shield.”
Id.
The basis for the exception “was Congress’ desire to prevent judicial ‘second guessing’ of legislative and administrative decisions grounded in social, economic, and political policy through the medium of an action in tort.”
Id.
at 536-37,
The seminal case applying the discretionary function in the thrift industry is
United States v. Gaubert,
The Court first noted that decisions made at the operational or management level of a bank are encompassed within the exception:
A discretionary act is one that involves choice or judgment; there is nothing in that description that refers exclusively to policymaking or planning functions. Day-to-day management of banking affairs, like the management of other businesses, regularly requires judgment as to which of a range of permissible courses is the wisest. Discretionary conduct is not confined to the policy or planning level.
Id.
at 325,
In the case at bar, plaintiffs claim that the discretionary function does not apply because the RTC violated numerous mandatory procedures set out in its regulatory manuals and policy directives. (Second Am. Compl. at 14-17.) The court *866 finds plaintiffs’ argument unpersuasive. First, none of the manuals or directives that plaintiffs cite require bank regulators to pursue any specific course of action. The materials simply contain definitions, general educational guidelines, and broad objectives for asset management and disposition. The manuals are highlighted by language of a predominantly precatory nature, implicitly and explicitly vesting RTC officials with wide discretion in determining how to proceed on various subjects. Regulations requiring that agency employees “comprehensively and objectively weigh alternative actions,” and “ensure that asset integrity and value are maintained,” hardly constitute the type of “specifically prescribed courses of action” necessary to invoke the court’s jurisdiction under the FTCA.
Second, the vast majority of plaintiffs’ allegations amount to claims that federal regulators, in carrying on the business of FSA, failed to take into account pertinent fiscal information. These averments do not state a claim upon which relief can be granted. “The failure to consider some or all critical aspects of a discretionary judgment does not make that judgment less discretionary and does not make the judgment subject to liability.”
Kiehn v. United States,
Finally, even if some of the policies that plaintiffs cite could be construed as mandatory, their claims still would not escape the discretionary function exception. For example, plaintiffs contend that the RTC neglected to prepare case memoranda, secure legal opinions, or obtain knowledge of FSA’s assets in the manner agency regulations prescribe. There is no allegation, however, that use of such procedures would have changed the outcome of any agency decision.
See Fisher Bros. Sales, Inc. v. United States,
Having determined that the RTC’s actions involved elements of choice and judgment, the court now must examine whether the discretionary function exception shields that type of judgment. The Supreme Court has stated:
When established governmental policy, as expressed or implied by statute, regulation, or agency guidelines, allows a Government agent to exercise discretion, it must be presumed that the agent’s acts are grounded in policy when exercising that discretion. For a complaint to survive a motion to dismiss, it must allege facts which would support a finding that the challenged actions are not the kind of conduct that can be said to be grounded in the policy of the regulatory scheme.
Gaubert,
The objectives of governmental agencies overseeing the thrift industry are often in direct conflict with the officers and directors of financial institutions. While private officials maintain a loyalty and fiduciary duty to shareholders, federal regulators owe their allegiance to depositors and the general public. If private financial institutions could sue regulatory agencies for negligently performing discretionary functions, the ability of those agencies to act in the public’s best interest would be compromised. Sanctioning such suits also would put courts in the diffi *867 cult, if not impossible, position of judging the propriety of the policymaking acts of a coordinate branch.
The RTC’s actions while serving as conservator and receiver of FSA were related directly to public policy considerations regarding federal oversight of the thrift industry.
See Gaubert,
E. Nongovernmental Activity Claim
Perhaps anticipating that their tort claims might fall to the discretionary function exception, plaintiffs invite the court to open a gaping hole in FTCA jurisprudence by excluding from the Act’s coverage all “nongovernmental activity in commerce.” The court declines this invitation.
Plaintiffs predicate their “nongovernmental activity’ claim on last year’s landmark Supreme Court decision,
United States v. Winstar Corp.,
— U.S. -,
Winstar
has no applicability to the instant action. That case focuses exclusively on
contractual
obligations that the United States incurred through individualized negotiations with thrifts.
Id.
at ----,
Furthermore, the government’s actions in the ease at bar cannot be considered “nongovernmental activities.” Federal regulators did not “step in the shoes” of FSA’s officers and directors; they supplanted them. Although some of the tasks that the RTC undertook in its roles as conservator and receiver of FSA may have been proprietary in nature, the agency ultimately acted in a regulatory capacity pursuant to a regulatory scheme. The agencys objectives were not to maximize profits for the thrift’s shareholders, but to protect depositors and replenish the federal depository insurance fund. These objectives, which entail significant policy considerations, could not be accomplished if regulators owed a concomitant duty to the officers and directors of the seized institution.
This holding does not mean that the United States always escapes liability in the thrift industry context. FTCA actions still may be maintained against the government for federal regulators’ negligence in performing ministerial and non-policy oriented discretionary activities. The discretionary function exception, however, cannot be avoided simply by characterizing government employees’ actions as “nongovernmental” in nature.
F. Tort Claim Against FDIC
As a final effort at imposing liability on the government, plaintiffs assert common-law tort claims directly against the FDIC. Plaintiffs predicate these claims on 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(b)(9)(E), which empowers the FDIC “[t]o sue and be sued in its corporate capaci *868 ty in any court of competent jurisdiction.” This statute, however, is inapplicable here.
“In order to place torts of ‘suable’ agencies ... upon precisely the same footing as torts of ‘nonsuable’ agencies, Congress, through the FTCA, limited the scope of sue-and-be-sued waivers such as that contained in [the FDIC’s] organic statute.”
FDIC v. Meyer,
The authority of any federal agency to sue and be sued in its own name shall not be construed to authorize suits against such federal agency on claims which are cognizable under [28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) ], and the remedies provided by this title in such eases shall be exclusive.
28 U.S.C. § 2679(a). “Thus, if a suit is ‘cognizable’ under § 1346(b) of the FTCA, the FTCA remedy is ‘exclusive’ and the federal agency cannot be sued ‘in its own name,’ despite the existence of a sue-and-be-sued clause.”
Meyer,
A claim is “cognizable”
(i.e.,
actionable) under section 1346(b) if it alleges each of the requisite elements outlined in the statute’s jurisdictional grant.
Id.
at 476-77,
The court finds that plaintiffs’ claims are cognizable under section 1346(b). The thrust of plaintiffs’ action is that government regulators negligently seized, operated, and liquidated FSA, thereby breaching their fiduciary duty to conserve and operate the savings association. Such negligence claims against bank receivers are well recognized under Kansas law,
see In re Cedar Vale State Bank,
Plaintiffs contend that if, as the court held above, the discretionary function exception serves as a jurisdictional bar to their FTCA claims, their common law tort claims against the FDIC cannot be considered cognizable under section 1346(b). The court rejects this argument as it would transform the discretionary function exception into a meaningless provision. Litigants could avoid the force of the statute merely by suing an agency directly. As the Seventh Circuit has observed, “the waiver of sovereign immunity from tort liability of a federal agency or governmental corporation is defined in the Federal Tort Claims Act, and ... sue-and-be-sued authority does not permit suit outside that Act for torts excepted from coverage of that Act.”
FDIC v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.,
IT IS, THEREFORE, BY THE COURT ORDERED that defendants’ motion to dismiss (Doc. 59) plaintiffs’ second amended complaint is granted.
The case is now closed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants’ motion to dismiss (Doc. 59) plaintiffs' second amended complaint incorporates and supersedes their prior motions to dismiss (Docs. 11 and 28).
. FSC remains in control of its estate property as a debtor-in-possession.
. FSC also filed a separate adversary counterclaim complaint in bankruptcy court in October 1992 against the Office of Thrift Supervision and the United States. In that action, FSC seeks damages under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491, for alleged misconduct in imposing a conservatorship and receivership upon FSA, and in disposing of FSA's assets under color of FIR-REA. This court subsequently ordered the case transferred to the district court, where the matter is now pending as Civ. No. 95-2039-GTV.
. In support of their motion to dismiss, defendants attach the affidavits of Kevin Carver and Ann Richards, two RTC officials. (Doc. 11, Ex. I & Doc. 22, Ex. A). The court, however, has not considered those affidavits or any other material extraneous to the complaint in ruling on defendants' motion.
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1 stales that "[t]he complaint shall also allege with particularity the efforts, if any, made by the plaintiff to obtain the action the plaintiff desires from the directors or comparable authority and, if necessary, from the shareholders or members, and the reasons for the plaintiff’s failure to obtain the action or for not making the effort.”
. The Fifth Circuit later reversed
Clarke
without reaching the "equitable remedy" issue.
See Texas Am. Bancshares, Inc. v. Clarke,
. The Tenth Circuit previously rejected plaintiffs’ attacks on the Office of Thrift Supervision’s decisions to appoint a conservator for FSA and later replace the conservator with a receiver. See
Franklin I,
. Specifically, the Supreme Court held in Wins-tar that the United States, with the passage of FIRREA, had breached its contracts to allow purchased savings and loans to count regulatory goodwill as an asset.
