Lead Opinion
This аction was brought in state court against an official of the Veterans Administration, a federal agency, to recover on a loan guaranty certificate. The case was properly removed to federal court. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(a)(2) and 1361. After a non-jury trial the district court rejected the government defense of forgery and gave judgment for the plaintiff. We affirm.
In April, 1971, Oklahoma Mortgage Company loaned Percy and Zelma Durham $34,-000 on a residential property with the security of a note and mortgage. The loan was guaranteed by the Veterans Administration, VA, pursuant to 38 U.S.C. Chapter 37. The note, mortgage and guaranty were subsequently assigned to plaintiff-appellee, Home Savings and Loan Association. Because of defaults in payments, Home Savings, the assignee, brought foreclosure proceedings on July 12, 1974. Zelma Durham was personally served with process and made no claim that her signatures on the note and mortgage were forged. At the January 28, 1975, foreclosure sale, Home Savings bid in the property for $30,000, the amount VA had authorized it to bid. Pursuant to 38 C.F.R. § 36.4320(a)(1), Home Savings exercised its option to convey the property to VA which received a sheriff’s deed on February 24, 1975. On approximately the same date, Oklahoma Mortgage, the original lender, informed VA that Zelma’s signatures on the note and mortgage might be forgeries. VA began an investigation but did not inform Home Savings, the assignee, of the forgery possibility or of the investigation. Home Savings submitted to VA a claim for $6,739.68 under the loan guaranty certificate. On April 4, 1975, VA paid Home Savings $30,000, the purchase price of the property at the foreclosure sale. On April 16, VA sold the property for $31,-000. On October 16, VA paid Home Savings $6,733.19 undеr the guaranty. Twelve days later, VA demanded that Home Savings return the payment because the VA investigation had established that Zelma’s signatures were forged. VA also demanded that Home Savings pay it $1,055.44, as its loss because of expenses on the sale of the property. Home Savings paid VA the $6,733.19 which it had received under the loan guaranty but refused to pay the $1,055.44 claimed as a sale loss. VA then offset the latter amount against other amounts due Home Savings.
On this appeal VA contends that the district court improperly applied estoppel against the government. The VA guaranty is incontestable but the Administratоr may assert defenses based on fraud, 38 U.S.C. § 1821, or forgery, 38 C.F.R. § 36.4325(a). The forgeries of Zelma’s signatures were established at the trial and are not contested by Home Savings. VA learned of the possibility of forgeries from Oklahoma Mortgage Co., the original lender. No claim is made that Home Savings had any knowledge of the forgeries until advised by VA in October, 1975, long after the foreclosure sale, the VA reimbursement of Home Savings of the $30,000 paid at the sale, and the VA sale of the property for $31,000.
None of the Supreme Court decisions on estoppel against the government present facts having any similarity to those here. The most recent decision is Schweiker v. Hansen,
In Federal Crop Insurance Corp. v. Merrill,
INS v. Hibi,
Montana v. Kennedy,
Several Tеnth Circuit decisions discuss estoppel against the government. Atlantic Richfield Company v. Hickel, 10 Cir.,
Albrechtsen v. Andrus, 10 Cir.,
In Schweiker v. Hansen, supra,
In the situation before us, the government, through VA, engaged in a commercial transaction pursuant to 38 U.S.C. § 1810, authorizing guaranty of loans to veterans for the purchase of homes. Oklahoma Mortgage made the loan and received the VA guaranty. It then assigned the loan and the VA guaranty to Home Savings. After default, Home Savings admittedly complied with VA procedures for foreclosure. VA knew of the suspected forgery when it accepted the sheriff’s deed and paid Home Savings $30,000.
The parties agree that the district court correctly stated the tests for estoppel. They are:
(1) —The party to be estopped must know the facts.
(2) —-He must intend that his conduct will be acted on or must so act that the party asserting the estoppel has the right to believe that it was so intended.
(3) —-The latter must be ignorant of the true facts.
(4) —He must rely on the former’s conduct to his injury.
Before discussing these elements we note that 38 C.F.R. § 36.4325(a), says that there is no liability on a loan guaranty when the loan papers are forged but its subsection (1) excepts a holder in due course without knowledge. Two decisions have held that forgery is a defense against a holder “even though that person is innocent of any wrong doing.” Century Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Roudebush, 2 Cir.,
At the time of the foreclosure proceedings, the acquisition of the property by VA, аnd the payment by VA to Home Savings of $30,000 for the property, VA knew, but did not disclose to Home Savings, the possibility of forgery. Failure to disclose is inaction. The VA acceptance of the sheriff’s deed and its payment of $30,000 to Home Savings are affirmative actions. Home Savings was entitled to rely on and to treat the transaction as an accomplished fact. VA now seeks to take advantage of its discovery, many months later, that Zelma’s signatures were forged. Then, it was too late to unravel the yam. VA had both acquired and sold the property.
No harm has occurred to the fiscal policies of the United States. The VA has recourse against the borrowing veteran. See United States v. Shimer,
By its affirmative acts, VA acquired and sold the propеrty without disclosure to Home Savings of the forgery possibility. Home Savings complied with the VA regulations and relied on its acts. We are convinced that the first three estoppel tests are satisfied. The question of injury remains for discussion.
Home Savings argues that, if it had known of the forgery possibility and the
The exact date of VA’s knowledge of the forgery of Zelma’s signatures does not appear in the record. On March 28, 1975, before the sale of the property by VA, Home Savings submitted its claim for reimbursement under the VA loаn guaranty in the amount of $6,739.68, later reduced to $6,733.19. On October 16,1975, VA issued a treasury check to Home Savings for that amount. The government brief says, p. 3: “Shortly before the Guaranty Claim was paid, the Veterans Administration determined that Mrs. Durham’s signature was in fact a forgery.” On October 28, VA demanded that Home Savings return the guaranty payment and it did so. The question then is whether the loss of the loan guaranty is an injury. By its affirmative acts from the inception of the foreclosure suit and until after the guaranty payment, VA led Home Savings to rely on its compliance with VA regulations. VA does not claim that Home Savings failed to comply with any applicable regulation. The acts of VA were inconsistent with denial of the validity of the original loan transaction. VA is estopped from denying that validity. Home Savings is entitled to payment of the loan guaranty.
The situation with regard to the $1,055 sale expense presents another problem. VA acted in violation of its own regulations in assessing the sale costs against Home Savings. With narrow exceptions, not here applicable, the responsibilities of Home Savings ceased upon acceptance of the property by VA. See 38 C.F.R. § 36.-4320(h)(6), (7), (8), (9), and (10). The collection of the $1,055 from Home Savings by exercise of a set off is a compensable injury. VA is estopped from asserting otherwise.
The trial court awarded pre-judgment interest to Home Savings. VA’s opening brief attacks that award. Its reply brief withdraws that attack.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
In a dispute over the payment of a home loan subsidy, the majority invokes equitable principles to estop the Veterans Administration from asserting a congressionally authorized forgery defense. Relying on factual dissimilarities, the majority attempts to distinguish past Supreme Court decisions that have consistently sheltered the government from equitable estoppel.
I.
The district court’s findings of fact are, in essence, as follows: In April 1971, the Vet
On the basis of these findings of fact, the district court ruled that, notwithstanding the forgery in the loan papers, the VA was obligated to Home Savings under the terms of the loan guaranty. The court held that the VA was equitably estopped from asserting the forgery defense, concluding that by accepting the sheriff’s deed to the mortgaged property, and by failing to notify Home Savings of the forgery allegations, the VA induced a justifiable reliance by Home Savings that the loan guaranty claim would be honored.
II.
The majority of this panel agrees with the district court that the VA is equitably estopped from asserting the forgery defense. The majority opinion reviews cases from the Supreme Court
Initially, I state my belief that it is insufficient to distinguish Home Savings’ claim on the basis that it involves a commercial transaction, without offering some explanation of the relevance of this distinction. As Justice Marshall has noted, it only adds confusion to the already unsettled area of estoppel to delineate factual distinctions without elaborating why or how these distinctions affect the legal question involved. Schweiker v. Hansen,
I assume that the majority considers “commercial transaсtions” distinguishable from other government undertakings because such transactions are in some sense “proprietary” functions.
The majority’s “commercial transaction” distinction is untenable, given the nature of the YA’s loan guaranty program and the reasoning of Merrill. Furthermore, I anticipate that the distinction will be difficult to apply. I suspect that today’s adoption of this standard inaugurates a procession of future cases that will be distinguished on the basis of “finespun and capricious” characterizations. See Indian Towing Co. v. United States,
III.
A court exercises its power of equitable estoppel to prevent a litigant from asserting claims or defenses that arise as a result of the litigant’s own wrongdoing. The elements of equitable estoppel are described in various formulas,
Litigants persistently have attempted to invoke the doctrine of equitable estoppel against the government, and have generated confusion and controversy in the process. When faced with the issue, the Supreme Court has repeatedly refused to estop the government, but has declined to provide guidance beyond the facts presented in each case. See, e.g., INS v. Miranda,-U.S. -,
I believe that this search by the lower courts for a talismanic test has resulted in a departure from the fundamental inquiries that underlie the doctrine of equitable estoppel. Whether a case involves the government or whether it involves private parties, the same two general questions inevitably arise: (1) did misleading conduct induce reasonable detrimental reliance? and, (2) are there nevertheless circumstances that caution the court to withhold the exercise of its equitable powers? The various proposed tests for asserting equitable estoppel against the government, including the “commercial transaction” distinction used by the majority, have diverted attention from a reasoned analysis of these inquiries, blurring the distinctions between the two questions аnd confounding the identification of relevant factors.
The preliminary question, whether misleading conduct has induced reasonable reliance, must be answered in light of the duties and expectations between the parties. The question remains the same whether estoppel is asserted against the government or against a private actor. However, the underlying duties and expectations that inform the inquiry may depend on the identity of the parties. In particular, dealings with the government do not necessarily support the same duties and expectations as dealings between private parties.
By comparison, the question of whether a court should withhold the exercise of equitable powers implicates different concerns. The courts have defined limits to the use of equitable remedies based on considerations
I believe that the Supreme Court’s decisions regarding equitable estoppel of the government can be harmonized and understood by separating these two inquiries. The per curiam decisions in INS v. Miranda, -U.S.-,
Other Supreme Court decisions, Schweiker v. Hansen,
The Supreme Court cases thus reflect the follоwing state of the law with respect to equitable estoppel of the government. At a minimum, a party asserting estoppel must show misleading conduct that induced reasonable detrimental reliance, taking into account the duties, obligations, and expectations that flow from its relationship with the government. Where this reliance is based on an unauthorized act of a government agent, the court should withhold imposition of estoppel if it would result in charging the public treasury against the will of Congress. Furthermore, the separation of powers doctrine may require courts to withhold estoppel in other situations as well. Nevertheless, equitable estoppel of the government may be permissible, notwithstanding its threat to the goals of Congress, in exceptional circumstances, such as affirmative misconduct of the govеrnment.
This perspective on the state of the law informs my view of the proper resolution of the case now before this court.
IV.
Home Savings claims that the VA should be equitably estopped from asserting its forgery defense because the VA failed to notify Home Savings of the forgery allegations at the time that they arose. Home Savings claims that the failure to provide notification misled it into believing that its claim under a VA loan guaranty would be honored. Thus, the first inquiry, as discussed above, is whether the VA truly engaged in misleading conduct that induced reasonable detrimental reliance by Home Savings, given the duties and expectations between the parties.
Home Savings points to the VA’s silence in the face of suspicion of forgery as the source of misleading conduct. Indeed, courts have long held that silence can serve as the basis of misleading conduct justify
I would hesitate to rely on bare notions of good faith, compietely detached from constitutional and statutory requirements, to impose such a far-reaching duty on a government agency.
Since the VA did not engage in misleading conduct, there is no reason to determine the two remaining components of the first inquiry; namely, whether Home Savings’ reliance was reasonable, and whether it resulted in a detriment.
V.
Home Savings has failed to demonstrate a basic requisite for equitable estoppel and, accordingly, its claim to estoppel should be denied. The majority simply overlooks this fact, and in the process determines that the government is subject to equitable estoppel because it engaged in a “commercial transaction.” The commercial transaction distinction is untenable under the facts of this case, is inconsistent with Supreme Court precedent, and introduces a troublesome concept into our law. Under these circumstances, I am compelled to respectfully dissent.
Notes
. See Schweiker v. Hansen,
. As Justice Marshall recently noted, the question of when the government may be equitably estopped has been the subject of “considerable ferment,” dividing panels and generating inconsistencies throughout the courts of appeals. Schweiker v. Hansen,
. The pertinent regulation of the Veterans Administration provides in part as follows:
Upon receipt by the Administrator of notice of a judicial or statutory sale, or other public sale under power of sale contained in the loan instruments, to liquidate any security for a guaranteed or insured loan, he may specify in advance of such sale the minimum amount which shall be credited to the indebtedness of the borrower on account of the value of the security to be sold, subject to the provisions of paragraphs (a)(1), (2), (3) and (4) of this section ....
38 C.F.R. § 36.4320(a) (1981). The relevant portions of the VA regulations have remained unchanged since 1975. See 36 Fed.Reg. 320 (1971); 40 Fed.Reg. 34591 (1975).
. If the holder of a VA guaranteed home loan purchases the mortgaged property at a price not in excess of the amount the VA has specified as credited toward indebtedness, then the holder may convey the property to the VA. The pertinent regulation provides as follows:
If a minimum amount for credit to the indebtedness has been specified in relation to a sale of real property and the holder is the successful bidder at the sale for an amount not in excess of such specified amount the holder shall credit to the indebtedness the amount so specified. The holder thereupon may retain the property or not later than 15 days after the date of sale advise the Administrator of his election to convey or transfer the property, or the rights thereto derived through the sale, to the Administrator.
38 C.F.R. § 36.4320(a)(1) (1981). The amount paid by the Administrator will generally be the amount he previously specified as creditеd toward indebtedness. See 38 C.F.R. § 36.4320(g) (1981).
. In the Veterans’ Benefits Act, Pub.L. No. 85-857, 72 Stat. 1105 (1958) (as amended), Congress provided as follows:
Any evidence of guaranty or insurance issued by the Administrator shall be conclusive evidence of the eligibility of the loan for guaranty or insurance under the provisions of this chapter and of the amount of such guaranty or insurance. Nothing in this section shall preclude the Administrator from establishing, as against the original lender, defenses based on fraud or material misrepresentation. The Administrator shall not, by reason of anything contained in this section, be barred from establishing, by regulations in force at the date of such issuance or disbursement, whichever is the earlier, partial defenses to the amount payable on the guaranty or insurance.
38 U.S.C. § 1821 (1976). Pursuant to this authorization, the Administrator retained loan guarantee regulations originally promulgated under similar statutory authority in the Serviceman’s Readjustment Act of 1944, 58 Stat. 284. The pertinent regulation provides as follows:
Subject to the incontestable provisions of 38 U.S.C. 1821 as to loans guaranteed or insured on or subsequent to July 1, 1948, there shall be no liability on account of a guaranty or insurance, or any certificate or other evidence thereof, with respect to a transaction in which a signature to the note, the mortgage, or any other loan papers, or the application for guaranty or insurance is a forgery; or in which the certificate of discharge or the certificate of eligibility is counterfeited, or falsified, or is not issued by the Government.
38 C.F.R. § 36.4325(a) (1981). The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has held that this regulation precludes liability under a VA loan guarantee to assignees of the mortgage, as well as original lenders, if a mortgagor’s signature is forged. Century Federal Savings & Loan Association v. Roudebush,
. See Schweiker v. Hansen,
. See Sweeten v. Department of Agriculture Forest Service,
. Lower federal courts have occasionally applied equitable estoppel against the government in situations where the government acts in a “proprietary capacity.” See United States v. Georgia-Pacific Co.,
. The Court specifically stаted that “[glovernment is not partly public or partly private, depending upon the governmental pedigree of the type of a particular activity or the manner in which the Government conducts it.”
. In particular, I believe that it is irrelevant that the holder of the note, rather than the veteran, asserts estoppel. Both are participants in the government’s loan guaranty program. The broad reach of Merrill precludes the possibility that a program can have a sovereign character with respect to some participants, and a proprietary character with respect to others. See supra note 9.
. For example, in Sweeten v. Department of Agriculture Forest Service,
(1) The party to be estopped must know the facts; (2) He must intend that his conduct shall be acted on or must so act that the party asserting the estoppel has a right to believe it is so intended; (3) The lattеr must be ignorant of the true facts; and (4) He must rely on the former’s conduct to his injury.
. For example, recent tests have included distinctions between reliance on misrepresentations of procedural rather than substantive rules, Hansen v. Harris,
. The government typically acts through congressionally created agencies whose conduct is governed by statutes and regulations and, at the outer perimeter, by the Constitution. The content of the governing law shapes the duties of the agency in its dealings with private parties and the expectations of the parties in their dealings with the government. Although the governing law may subject the agencies to the same burdens as private parties, see, e.g., Federal Torts Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2674 (1976) (subjecting United States to tort liability “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances .... ”), there is no inherent requirement that it do so. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680 (1976) (exempting various governmental agencies from the Federal Torts Claims Act).
. I specifically note that the issue of whether the government engaged in “affirmative misconduct” is not relevant to this inquiry, since this characterization of the government’s conduct does not relate to whether the conduct was misleading, or whether the conduct induced reliance. Instead, I believe the “affirmative misconduct” сharacterization is relevant to the second inquiry, whether the court should exercise its equitable powers. See infra note 17.
. In Miranda, an alien who married a citizen claimed that the INS was estopped from denying his application for permanent residence status because of “unreasonable delay” by the INS in processing his application. During the processing period his marriage dissolved, and his eligibility for a change in status ended. The Court declined to conclude that the delay was unwarranted, given the responsibility of the INS to fully investigate applications. -U.S. at-& n. 4,
. In Montana, an alien claimed that the United States was estopped to deny him citizenship because the American Consular Office refused to issue his mother a passport to the United States before his birth. The Court noted that the United States did not require his mother to have a passport to return to the country at that time.
. Although the Supreme Court has cited affirmative misconduct as providing a potential ground for imposing equitable estoppel against the government, it has not explained the relevance of this factor. In my understanding, affirmative misconduct is relevant because the executive branch has a responsibility to prevent government agents from engaging in intentional, reckless, or grossly negligent misconduct. The failure of the executive branch to prevent such misconduct provides grounds for the courts to surmount the separation of pow-' ers barrier and impose equitable estoppel. It is in that light that I understand this court’s adoption of the affirmative misconduct standard in Sweeten v. Department of Agriculture Forest Service,
. Cf. Columbia Broadcast System, Inc., v. Stokely-Van Camp, Inc.,
. The Supreme Court has suggested in dicta that the government is subject to general principles of “good faith,” saying, “[a] citizen has the right to expect fair dealing from his government.” S & E Contractors, Inc. v. United States,
. Thе scant record in this case does not indicate on what date the election to convey was actually made. As the party asserting estoppel, Home Savings bore the burden of showing misleading conduct and reasonable reliance. See, e.g., Tom W. Carpenter Equip. Co. v. General Elec. Credit Corp.,
. I note in passing that Home Savings’ claim of detriment seems purely speculative. As the majority notes, Home Savings introduced no evidence that if it retained the property it could have sold it for more than it received from the VA.
