Riсhard C. LA VAN, Carmen Lullo, Ronald S. Kraar, Donald Bialon, and James Skozek, Plaintiffs-Cross Appellants, and
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Plantiff,
v.
UNITED STATES, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 03-5140.
No. 03-5149.
United States Court of Appeals, Federal Circuit.
September 3, 2004.
Appeal from the United States Court of Federal Claims, Nancy B. Firestone, J. COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Bruce T. Logan, Ash, Anos, Freedman & Logan, L.L.C., of Chicago, IL, argued for plaintiffs-cross appellants.
Jeanne E. Davidson, Deputy Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellant. With her on the brief were Stuart E. Schiffer, Deputy Assistant Attorney General; and David M. Cohen, Director. Of counsel on the brief were Elizabeth M. Hosford and James R. Whitman, Trial Attorneys.
Before RADER, BRYSON, and LINN, Circuit Judges.
Concurring-in-part and dissenting-in-part opinion filed by Circuit Judge LINN.
RADER, Circuit Judge.
On summary judgment, the United States Court of Federal Claims held that the Government contracted with Richard C. LaVan, Carmen Lullo, and James Skozek during the сonversion of Century Savings & Loan Association (CSLA) into a federally chartered stock thrift called Century Federal Savings Bank (Century), that the Government breached that contract, that the Government had to pay restitution but not expectancy or reliance damages, and that the Government was not liable under a takings theory. LaVan v. United States,
I.
This case relates to another fact-specific dispute following the seminal decision of United States v. Winstar Corp.,
Before approving the conversion, the supervisory agent requested that the Illinois savings and loan commissioner review the transaction. Concerned about the apparent self-dealing that would preclude the use of push-down accounting under the FHLBB's Memorandum # R55, the Illinois commissioner wrote that this was not an arm's-length transaction. He summed up his concerns:
The transaction on which comment is sought would convert Century from a mutual form of ownership to a stock form of ownership. After the conversion from mutual to stock, the association will still be under the same management and direction. The proposed investors — Messrs. John W. Lence, Stanley Skozek, Richard C. LaVan and Carmen Lullo — are all current оfficers and directors of Century. They are the same parties who are proposing the conversion. The conversion will allow these individuals to receive dividend income in addition to salaries and directors' fees. Clearly, the benefits to these insiders from this supervisory conversion are potentially substantial.
These facts alone do not conform to the arms-length criteria of Memorandum R55 for the use of push-down accounting:
"1. the circumstances surrounding the acquisition assure that it was arms-length in nature;"
Three of the "proposed investors" are current and proposed officers. All of the "proposed investors" are now directors of Century and are also "proposed investors." The perpetuation of current officers and directоrs as the only stockholders, post-conversion, appears to be exactly what R55 prohibits.
It is this same group of key personnel (Lence, LaVan, Lullo, and Skozek) who have managed the association during the last several years, during which it has experienced steady losses.
* * *
I recommend against approval of changes in control whereby, as here, insiders (i.e., management and directors) propose, structure and survive the conversion as owners.
Despite these concerns, the FHLBB approved the conversion. The principal supervisory agent stated his reasons for approval in a letter to the FHLBB's regional director:
[T]here is no evidence that management has purposefully taken steps which contributed to the deterioration of the institution in order to qualify as a supervisory conversion, or that Century's deterioration was caused by self-dealing or negligence on the part of management. It is therefore recommended that the transaction not be interpreted as non-arm's-length in the sense prohibited by Memorandum # R-55.
Moreover, the FHLBB understood the transaction would occur at arm's length, as stated in an internal memo dated July 9, 1984:
In our opinion the arm's length condition is met as the supervisory group of the FHLBB and the purchasing group are dealing with each other in the negotiation of the transaction with their own best interests in mind. While the Commissioner may have a legitimate question about the decision to sell the converted stock to the prior management group, this does not, in our mind, preclude the use of push-down accounting by the purchasers.
As a practical matter, the accounting that will be used for the transaction is designed to facilitate the acquisition of Century by the purchasers. The purchasers are requesting a 35-year write-off period for the goodwill that arises in the transaction. This does not conform to GAAP [Generally Accepted Accounting Principles] but will conform to RAP [Regulatory Accounting Practices] should the Board decide to approve the transaction as structured.
In conclusion, it is our opinion that push-down accounting would be permissible for this transaction and that the Board and FSLIC may approve accounting for the transaction which, although not GAAP, may be necessary to resolve the supervisory case.
On August 24, 1984, the FHLBB approved the conversion with two Board Resolutions. Two clauses in Board Resolution No. 84-448 state:
WHEREAS, Century Savings and Loan Association, Chicago, Illinois ("Century") as authorized by its board of directors by at least a majority vote, filed on July 25, 1983, with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ("Corporation"), an application, as last amended on June 25, 1984 ("Application"), pursuant to Subpart C of Part 563b of the Rules and Regulations for Insurance of Accounts ("Insurance Regulations"), for permission to convert from a state-chartered mutual association to a federally chartered stock association, Century Federal Savings Bank, to be controlled by John W. Lence, Stanley Skozek, Carmen Lullo and Richard C. LaVan ("Acquirors"); and
* * *
WHEREAS, The Acquirors have filed with the Corporation for review pursuant to Section 407(q) of the NHA and Section 563b.18-2(c) of the Insurance Regulations prior written notice of the proposed change in control of Century[.]
That resolution also specifies the accounting and the change in control for the conversion:
ACCOUNTING FOR THE TRANSACTION
RESOVLVED [sic] FURTHER, That for purposes of reporting to the Board the use of push-down accounting is approved, and Century may amortize the value of any intangible asset resulting from the accounting for the purchase over a period not to exceed 35 years by the straight-line method; and
* * *
CHANGE IN CONTROL
RESOLVED FURTHER, That the proposed acquisition of control of Century resulting from the acquisition of its conversion stock by the Acquirors is hereby not disapproved pursuant to the provisions of Section 407(q) of the NHA and Section 563.18-2(g)(2) of the Insurance Regulations, provided that the proposed acquisition of the conversion stock is consummated before August 15, 1984, unless written approval of an extension of time has been obtained from the General Counsel, Deputy General Counsel for Policy and Corporate Structure, or the Director of the Corporate and Securities Division of the Office of General Counsel, and provided that there is no material change in circumstances[.]
Moreover, the last clause of the second resolution, Board Resolution No. 84-449, states:
RESOLVED, That the supervisory conversion of Century Savings and Loan Association, Chicago, Illinois ("Century"), from a state mutual savings and loan association to a federal stock savings bank pursuant to Subpart C of the Rules and Regulations for the Insurance of Accounts, and the acquisition of all of Century's conversion stock by John W. Lence, Stanley Skozek, Carmen Lullo, and Richard C. LaVan is hereby approved, subject to any conditions that may be imposed by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board in any concurrent resolution or action issued as of the date of this resolution.
On the same day of the resolutions, Century sold 52,441 shares of stock at $10 per share to Messrs. LaVan, Lence, Lullo, and Skozek, which the two Board Resolutions collectively designated as the Acquirors. Mr. LaVan acquired 39,941 shares in exchange for $399,410; Mr. Lence acquired 9,000 shares in exchange for $90,000; Mr. Lullo acquired 1,000 shares for $10,000; and Mr. Skozek acquired 2,500 shares for $25,000. After the conversion but bеfore the enactment of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989, Pub.L. No. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183 (FIRREA), Mr. Lence sold all his shares in Century.1
Also before the enactment of FIRREA, all shareholders of Century, including the Acquirors, entered into an agreement to sell their stock for $14.31 per share to a third-party holding company, Century Savings Bankcorp, Inc. Before the deal was consummated, however, the holding company invoked the change in circumstance provision of the contract and terminated the transaction. Following the passage of FIRREA, Century fell out of capital compliance and was placed into receivership on May 3, 1991.
The trial court held on summary judgment that the Government contracted with the Acquirors for the use of push-down acсounting and the amortization of the goodwill resulting from the transaction over thirty-five years. LaVan,
II.
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment without deference. Castle v. United States,
A.
The exchanges between the Government and the Acquirors constitute a contract only if three elements are met: "mutual intent to contract including an offer and acceptance, consideratiоn, and a Government representative who had actual authority to bind the Government." Cal. Fed. Bank v. United States,
The Government argues that this transaction lacked a mutual intent to contract. In particular, the Government argues that it was merely performing the regulatory function of approving a conversion from a state-chаrtered mutual association to a federally chartered stock association, citing D & N Bank v. United States,
This document, however, only shows the Bank Board's approval of the merger. Mere approval of the merger does not amount to intent to contract. The Bank Board, in its regulatory capacity, must approve all mergers. An agency's performance of its regulatory or sovereign functions does not create contractual obligations. Something more is necessary. The Bank Board Resolution says nothing about goodwill and there was no negotiation between D & N and the Bank Board that resulted in approval of the merger. D & N and First Federal simply submitted an application for approval of the merger, and the Bank Board accepted it.
Id. at 1378-79 (сitations omitted) (emphasis added). The Government correctly notes in the present case that the application for conversion was required by and submitted in accordance with regulations then in force. While those allegations are true, this transaction evinces "something more."
Specifically, Board Resolution No. 84-448 clearly approves the use of push-down accounting and the amortization of goodwill resulting from the conversion over a period of thirty-five years. As evidenced by an internal memorandum, the treatment of goodwill was at the epicenter of the conversion process. In discussing whether the transaction would occur at arm's length, the memo reflects that "the supervisory group of the FHLBB and the purchasing group are dealing with each other in the negotiation of the transaction with their own best interests in mind" and that "[t]he purchasers are requesting a 35-year write-off period for the goodwill that arises in the transaction." That memorandum clearly reflects the "something more," that is, the recognition that the government was engaged in negotiations about the terms of the conversion as well as the subsequent manifest assent to abide by the Resolution required under D & N Bank. Indeed, Anderson, which carefully evaluated this court's precedent on contract formation in the context of Winstar litigation, recognized that the "something more" requires, in succinct terms, that "the offeree must give in return for the offeror's promise exactly the consideration which the offeror requests and the acceptance must bе made absolutely and unqualifiedly."
Rather than being similar to the regulatory transactions in D & N Bank and Anderson, the trial court rightly analogized the present case to California Federal (Cal Fed). In Cal Fed, this court examined all the contemporaneous documents and determined that "the government bargained with Cal Fed to assume the net liabilities of the acquired thrifts in exchange for favorable regulatory consideration allowing goodwill to be counted as an asset for regulatory capital purposes and to be amortized over 35 to 40 years."
B.
Anticipating the possibility that this court would uphold the contract found by the trial court, the Government argues that the Acquirors, as post-conversion shareholders of Century, have no standing to sue for breach of contract. See Erickson Air Crane Co. v. United States,
To be sure, the regulators undoubtedly were aware that the Lees were supplying the money that would be used to rehabilitate Karnes. Neither that knowledge, the supplying of the new capital, or the Lees' position as stockholders in Karnes, made them parties to those arrangements. A shareholder generally does not have standing to assert a breach of contract claim on behalf of the corporation.
Karnes,
In Cain, a mutual association, Security Federal, applied for conversion to a stock association. Under the conversion plan, the directors of the mutual association provided the extra capital necessary to form the new association by purchasing the new institutiоn's stock. Cain,
We have also completed our review of the Notices of Change in Control of the Association filed by Messrs. Hardee, Harrison, Haney and Dantzler (collectively, the "Acquirors") for authority to acquire control of the Association pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1730(q) and 12 C.F.R. Part 574 upon consummation of its conversion to stock form.
Id. at 1314-15. This court, however, noted that that "letter doеs not contain or provide any contractual commitment by the Bank Board to the [seven] Shareholders." Id. at 1315. In particular, this court found the letter was sent to only four of the seven shareholders — a dead giveaway that the Government was merely performing its regulatory functions:
The Bank Board's addressing of the notice of approval to the thrift's four largest shareholders can not be viewed as manifesting intent to enter into a contract with them. The obvious reason for the Board doing so was because the Board's approval letter also authorized them to acquire control of the new association. Since those four had filed the applications to acquire control, the Bank Board naturally sent them its letter approving such aсquisition. Indeed, if the Bank Board intended to enter into a contract with the Shareholders, why would it have sent the letter only to four of the seven of them? Id. After dismissing the import of the approval letter, this court further examined affidavits of the shareholders explaining the criticality of the thrift's treatment to their investment and other documentary evidence purporting to evince a direct contract with the Government. While acknowledging that "whether the government entered into a contract with a thrift's shareholders necessarily turns on the facts of the particular case," id. at 1317, this court held that the thrift's shareholders were not direct parties to the contract. As explained above in distinguishing Karnes, however, the facts of this particular case compel a different сonclusion.
In this case, the Government directly contracted with the Acquirors. The Government approved the transaction only on condition that the Acquirors would provide the capital necessary to convert CSLA into Century. At every step along the process, the Government knew of the sources of the capital (even to the point of soliciting additional capital from them). Indeed, the Acquirors' identities caused internal deliberations about push-down accounting and the arm's-length nature of the conversion. Furthermore, the first Board Resolution states that "the proposed acquisition of control of Century resulting from the acquisition of its conversion stock by the Acquirors is hereby not disapproved...." And the second Board Resolution reiteratеs that "the acquisition of all of Century's conversion stock by John W. Lence, Stanley Skozek, Carmen Lullo, and Richard C. LaVan is hereby approved." Thus, this court concurs with the trial court, which summarized: "[T]he undisputed facts plainly establish that Messrs. LaVan, Lullo, and Skozek were, as individuals, `the acquirors' who negotiated with the FHLBB to purchase the converted federally-insured institution. These individuals were the direct purchasers who then became `shareholders' in the new institution." LaVan,
C.
Because the Acquirors contracted with the Government and FIRREA breached that contract, the trial court awarded restitution totaling the amount of the Acquirors' initial investment. LaVan,
This court agrees that the trial court erroneously conflated the issues of damages and standing in holding that the increased value of the Acquirors' stock belongs to the thrift, not the Acquirors. Undoubtedly, "[a] suit for damages arising from an injury to the corporation cаn only be brought by the corporation itself or by a shareholder derivatively if the corporation fails to act, since only the corporation has an action for wrongs committed against it." Gaff v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp.,
In addition to ruling that the trial court erred in denying them the opрortunity to present a case for expectancy damages, the Acquirors would have this court go further and award those damages outright. This court, however, sits as a court of review and is ill-suited for making factual determinations in issues not faced initially by a trial court. Smithkline Beecham Corp. v. Excel Pharms., Inc.,
Even though expectancy damages are not before this court, "the interest of judicial economy makes it apрropriate for us to state our views on this issue for the benefit of the parties and the trial court." Hansen Bancorp, Inc. v. United States,
In this case, the Acquirors seek lost profits from the unconsummated sale, which are "a recognized measure of damages, where their loss is the proximate result of the breach and the fact that there would have been a profit is definitely established, and there is some basis on which a reasonable estimate of the amount of the profit can be made." Neely v. United States,
Therefore, the Acquirors may recover lost profits only if thеy
establish by a preponderance of the evidence that: (1) the loss was the proximate result of the breach; (2) the loss of profits caused by the breach was within the contemplation of the parties because the loss was foreseeable or because the defaulting party had knowledge of special circumstances at the time of contracting; and (3) a sufficient basis exists for estimating the amount of lost profits with reasonable certainty.
Energy Capital Corp. v. United States,
D.
The Acquirors argue that, if this court were to determine that the Government did not contract with them, they are entitled to just compensation under a takings theory. In other words, FIRREA took their investment in Century. This court rejected a similar argument in Castle: "The breach-of-contract based takings claim fails because even assuming it was breached, the alleged contract did not create a reasonable expectation that the government would cease regulating the thrift industry, or any particular thrift therein." Castle,
III.
This court affirms the trial court's decisions that the Government formed a contract, that the Acquirors were direct parties to that contract, and that the Acquirors cannot recover under a takings theory. This court, however, vacates the trial court's decision with respect to expectancy damages and remands for further factual development of the record in light оf the proper legal framework.
COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, VACATED-IN-PART, and REMANDED.
Notes:
Notes
Because Mr. Lence is not a party to this litigation, this court uses the term "Acquirors" to mean Messrs. LaVan, Lullo, and Skozek. Additionally, two of the purchasers of Mr. Lence's shares, Ronald Kraar and Donald Bialon, were originally co-plaintiffs in this action. The trial court dismissed their claims against the Government because they acquired their shares in Century after the conversionLaVan v. United States,
Whether Century can in fact recover for the Government's breach is not presently at issue; therefore, this court does not opine on Century's entitlement to damages
LINN, Circuit Judge, concurring-in-part and dissenting-in-part.
I join the court's opinion with respect to Parts I, II.A, and II.B. However, I cannot agree thаt the plaintiffs in this case are entitled to pursue their claim for expectation damages as the majority holds in Part II.C. With respect to this issue, I think the Court of Federal Claims correctly concluded that the Acquirors were precluded from pursuing their claim because their injury was not distinct from that of the corporation, Century Federal Savings Bank ("Century"). See La Van v. United States,
The majority holds that the Acquirors are entitled to proceed with their claim for expectation damages because the Court of Federal Claims erroneously conflated the issues of damages and standing. Ante at 1350. The majority notes that the entity, Century, may have a claim as well against the government but concludes that the Acquirors' injury in this case is separate and distinct from that of Century. Ante at 1350 n. 2. With all due respect, I believе that the majority does not provide support for its holding that the injury is separate and distinct. Moreover, it is my view that such holding is contrary to the two cases it cites, Gaff v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.,
In Gaff, the Sixth Circuit recognized that a federal statute expressly authorized a direct action by shareholders against a former bank officer where the claim was one for breach of a fiduciary duty owed to both the bank and the shareholders.
The standard set forth in Strougo would similarly preclude the Acquirors' claim for expectation damages in this case because Strougo adopts the standard set forth in Gaff, albeit under Maryland law. The majority cites Strougo for the proposition that shareholders of a corporation may bring a direct suit based upon injuries that are distinct from those suffered by the corporation. However, the majority fails to examine the specific holdings in that case. Strougo recognized that shareholders are owed a separate fiduciary duty by corporate officers under Maryland law. Id. at 172-74. However, the court rejected a breach of fiduciary duty claim for loss in share value based on underwriting fees because such fees "incurred by a corporation decrease share price primarily because they deplete the corporation's assets, precisely the type of injury to the corporation that can be redressed under Maryland law only through a suit brought on behalf of the corporation." Id. at 174. The court did allow claims directed to dilution of share value to proceed because "it would appear that the alleged injuries were to the shareholders alone and not to the Fund." Id. at 175. Although in this case the government was contractually obligated to the Acquirors separately from Century, the situation is indistinguishable from that in Strougo because the corporate officials in Strougo owed independent fiduciary duties to both the shareholders and the corporation. Id. at 172-74. Strougo does not support allowing the plaintiffs in this case to proceed because they are merely claiming damages based on diminution in share value, which is not distinct from the injury to the corporation.
A contrary position was reached by the Ninth Circuit in Harmsen v. Smith,
Because I consider the weight of authority to be against the Acquirors' claim for expectation damages in this case, I would affirm the Court of Federal Claims' decision that the Acquirors lacked standing to pursue such a claim.
