In this Winstar-related case, the United States appeals a judgment of the Court of Federal Claims granting summary judgment of liability for breach of contract and awarding expectation damages to appellee National Australia Bank (“NAB”).
Nat’l Australia Bank v. United, States,
I. FACTS
This case is another of the many cases arising from the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s. One of this court’s recent Winstar decisions offered a brief summary of the events that precipitated the Winstar litigation:
In response to the large number of failing savings and loan institutions in the economic conditions of the 1980s, the United States, acting through the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) and related regulatory bodies, encouraged solvent banks to infuse capital and management resources into failing thrift institutions. The government offered various incentives for that purpose, including tax and accounting benefits, regulatory relief and for-bearances, and cash payments, as discussed in [United States v. Winstar Corp.,518 U.S. 839 , 847-56,116 S.Ct. 2432 ,135 L.Ed.2d 964 (1996) ].
NAB
1
entered into an “Assistance Agreement” with FSLIC in connection with NAB’s acquisition of a failing thrift, Beverly Hills Savings & Loan, on December 31, 1988. The Assistance Agreement provided for, among other things, “tax-sharing” between NAB and FSLIC, such that NAB was required to share with FSLIC a percentage of the tax benefits received for covered asset losses.
Summary Judgment Decision,
Shortly after the Assistance Agreement was executed, “Congress and the press began to inquire into the wisdom of the covered asset loss tax deductions.”
Id.
In 1993, Congress enacted the so-called Guar-ini legislation, Pub.L. 103-66, § 13224, 107 Stat. 312, 485 (1993), which eliminated the deduction for covered asset losses.
Id.; see also Centex Corp. v. United States,
The Court of Federal Claims granted NAB’s motion for partial summary judgment as to Count I of its complaint, which alleged breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing that attends all government contracts.
Summary Judgment Decision,
We review both the Court of Federal Claims’ grant of summary judgment and all questions of law
de novo. Cienega Gardens v. United States,
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, the government alleges that the Court of Federal Claims erred in four respects. First, it argues that the trial court incorrectly held that the United States was liable for any of the damages sought by NAB for breach of contract. Second, it claims that, assuming that liability was correctly imposed, NAB nevertheless failed to prove its expectation damages with “reasonable certainty.” Third, the government argues that, if expectation damages were properly awarded, the trial court erred in its calculation of the quantum of damages owed to NAB. Finally, the government argues that if the contracts with NAB cannot be construed to favor the government’s position on their face, then either the Assistance Agreement or the Termination Agreement, or both, should be reformed to reflect the parties’ true agreement as to the correct ratio applicable to the calculation of NAB’s damages claims.
A. Liability
The government withdrew its challenge to the trial court’s determination of liability shortly before oral argument in this case, conceding that such a challenge was untenable in view of this court’s decisions in
Centex Corp. v. United States,
B. Expectation Damages and “Reasonable Certainty”
The trial court granted NAB’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of damages, awarding NAB $27,101,530 in damages, plus costs.
Damages Decision,
It is axiomatic that expectancy damages must be proved with “reasonable certainty.”
Bluebonnet Sav. Bank v. United States,
We disagree. Contrary to the government’s assertions, the trial court did not “assume” that the tax basis of the covered assets was equal to the book basis. The use of book basis as a proxy for tax basis was simply an estimate based upon substantial evidence, including the analysis and testimony of outside tax experts. For example, the accounting firm then known as Deloitte, Haskins
&
Sells was hired to review the tax position of the failing thrift in the years preceding its acquisition. Regarding that review, a witness testified that “Based on the analysis that was done post and pre-acquisition ... the gross book value for book purposes and the tax basis of an asset are the same.” Other tax experts testified that they reached the same conclusion. It is clear from the trial court’s opinion that it carefully reviewed the evidence offered by NAB in support of its damage calculations and concluded that while “it is incumbent upon plaintiff to demonstrate that it is more likely than not that ... it would have been entitled to claim the $103 million in covered asset losses ... under the standard articulated
The government’s argument is reduced to a broad assertion that damages based on estimates are never sufficient to establish “reasonable certainty.” It cites no authority for that position, and we decline to declare such a sweeping rule.
2
In this connection, we note that in contract cases, “where responsibility for damage is clear, it is not essential that the amount thereof be ascertainable with absolute exactness or mathematical precision: It is enough if the evidence adduced is sufficient to enable a court or jury to make a fair and reasonable approximation.”
Bluebonnet Sav. Bank,
C. Quantum of Damages
The Court of Federal Claims concluded that, under the terms of the Assistance Agreement and Termination Agreement, NAB was required to share only 25% of its tax benefits with FSLIC.
Damages Decision,
It is undisputed that section 9(f) of the Assistance Agreement provided for a 75/25 tax-benefit split for each year in which “the Net Investment Account of the ACQUIRER is greater than zero” and for a 50/50 split for each year in which “the Net Investment Amount [sic] of the ACQUIRER is equal to or less than zero.” It is also undisputed that because of a flaw in the definition of “Net Investment Account of the ACQUIRER,” the amount in that account was unlikely ever to drop to zero. 4 Id. at 362 n. 23. Thus, under the Assistance Agreement, the tax-benefit split would have always been 75/25, because the trigger for changing the ratio to 50/50 would never have occurred.
The government argues that the Termination Agreement altered that result, and that it was the intent of the parties in drafting that agreement to set a fixed 50/50 ratio for sharing benefits accruing after 1994. The relevant provision of that agreement states that if NAB sues for damages arising out of the Guarini legislation, “then the amount of damages or refunds sought in such Claims shall not include the amount that would have accrued to the benefit of the FDIC Manager under the Assistance Agreement or that would accrue to the benefit of the FDIC Manag
The government maintains that the trial court’s construction of section 8.4 of the Termination Agreement cannot stand. To construe the provision to incorporate the Assistance Agreement’s 75/25 split in all circumstances, the government argues, would effectively read the words “or that would accrue to the benefit of the FDIC Manager under this Agreement” out of the provision entirely. For that language to have meaning, the Termination Agreement itself must somewhere provide for a tax-sharing split with a ratio different than 75/25. The government claims that, read as a whole, the Termination Agreement unambiguously provides for a 50/50 split for all years after 1994. It also argues, in the alternative, that if the agreement is found to be ambiguous, the trial court should have admitted extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent, which would demonstrate that the government’s position is correct.
The trial court held that the agreement was not ambiguous, and in one sense we agree: the meaning of § 8.4, at least, is quite clear. It provides that in litigation arising from the Guarini legislation, the damages sought by NAB will not include the shared portion of tax benefits under the Assistance Agreement or the Termination Agreement. The question remains, however, whether any of the damages sought in this case include amounts that would have “accrue[d] to the benefit of the FDIC Manager under” the Termination Agreement, and if so, at what ratio those benefits were to be shared. The trial court concluded that the 75/25 ratio set forth in the Assistance Agreement was to apply in all circumstances. This was error. Although the Termination Agreement does contemplate use of the Assistance Agreement ratio in some circumstances, it also contemplates the use of a different, unidentified ratio in other circumstances. Intensive scrutiny of the provisions of the Termination Agreement, however, fails to conclusively establish what alternative ratio should be employed, or under what circumstances. The Termination Agreement provides for a 50/50 sharing ratio in several scenarios, but the government is unable to identify any provision of that agreement that requires such a ratio for benefits accruing from the losses at issue in NAB’s claim — covered asset losses. It admits that the provision on which it relies most heavily, § 2.5, applies by its terms to net operating loss carryovers and does not “explicitly mention[ ]” covered asset losses. NAB, for its part, eagerly embraces the portion of § 8.4 that incorporates the 75/25 ratio, but offers no plausible construction of the portion that expressly contemplates the use of some other ratio for amounts accruing to the benefit of the government under the Termination Agreement.
In these circumstances, it appears that the Termination Agreement is ambiguous and does not, on its face, support the trial court’s conclusion that the 75/25 split applies to all damages accruing to NAB. The Court of Federal Claims’ award of damages must therefore be reversed, and
D. Reformation
Reformation of a written agreement on the ground of mutual mistake is an extraordinary remedy, and is available only upon presentation of satisfactory proof of four elements:
(1) the parties to the contract were mistaken in their belief regarding a fact;
(2) that mistaken belief constituted a basic assumption underlying the contract;
(3) the mistake had a material effect on the bargain; and
(4) the contract did not put the risk of the mistake on the party seeking reformation.
Atlas Corp. v. United States,
We dispense, first, with the government’s argument that the Assistance Agreement should be reformed. The trial court considered this question
sua sponte
and concluded that reformation would be inappropriate because the parties’ intentions regarding the distribution of tax benefits received following litigation were accurately captured in the Termination Agreement. In addition, the trial court noted that the government’s claim would be barred by the equitable doctrine of laches, because “[t]he parties continued to operate under the formula in the Assistance Agreement even though they recognized the flaw” it contained.
Damages Decision,
We agree that reformation of the Assistance Agreement is inappropriate. As the government concedes in its brief, the flaw in the Assistance Agreement has already been remedied by the parties in the Termination Agreement, which, according to the government’s brief, “cured the flaw in the Assistance Agreement concerning the tax benefit sharing formula.” Whatever its other ambiguities, the Termination Agreement clearly contemplates the continued use of the known-to-be-flawed Assistance Agreement formula in at least some circumstances. To reform the Assistance Agreement would undermine the parties’ clear intent in drafting the Termination Agreement, and would deny NAB the benefit of its bargain. This we decline to do.
The Termination Agreement, however, requires a different result. We have already concluded that the Termination Agreement is ambiguous and that, on remand, the Court of Federal Claims must consider extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intent in drafting the agreement. Such evidence is always admissible, in any case, to determine the need for reformation of an instrument.
See, e.g., Walden v. Skinner,
CONCLUSION
We hereby affirm the Court of Federal Claims’ grant of NAB’s motion for summary judgment on the availability of expectancy damages. We reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on the quantum of damages, and remand the action to the Court of Federal Claims for further consideration in accordance with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
No costs.
Notes
. The contracting party was actually Michigan National Corporation, which was subsequently acquired by NAB. In the interest of simplicity, we will refer to Michigan National as NAB in this opinion.
. We note, however, that estimates may not be sufficient to establish reasonable certainty in every case.
. The figure $18,067,687 represents 50% of the claimed tax losses of $36,135,373. The government’s brief, for reasons that are not clear, consistently uses $17,054,381 as the correct damages figure.
.Neither the briefs nor the Court of Federal Claims’ opinion explains the precise nature of the flaw, but the existence of the flaw and its consequences are undisputed.
. Contracts with the United States entered into pursuant to federal law are governed by federal law in most circumstances, except where, for example, "the direct interests and obligations of the United States are not in question.”
Smith v. Cent. Arizona Water Conservation Dist.,
