Peoples Bank for Savings brought this diversity suit against Douglas Thompson to recover the unpaid balance of а business loan that it had made to Thompson. After the bank became insolvent, the Resolution Trust Corporatiоn was appointed receiver and substituted as the plaintiff. In response to the RTC’s motion for summary judgment, Thompson alleged that the RTC had orally agreed to forgive the unpaid balance of the loan in exchаnge for his contributing his time and money to a real estate project with which the bank had been involved, and thаt he had done so. The RTC replied that the agreement, not being in writing, was unenforceable. The district judge agreed, granted summary judgment for the RTC, and later entered a final judgment in its favor from which Thompson appeals.
The judge based his decision on 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e), which provides, so far as pertinent here, that “no agreement which tends to diminish or defeat the interest of the Corporation in any asset acquired by it ... as receiver of any insured dеpository institution, shall be valid against the Corporation unless such agreement — (1) is in writing, [and] (2) was executed by the depository institution.” (The “Corporation” referred to is the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatiоn, but the provision is made applicable to the Resolution Trust Corporation as well by 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(b)(4)(A).) The RTC has declined to defend the decision on the district judge’s ground, apparently persuaded by Thompson’s argument that thе statute is inapplicable to an oral agreement with the RTC itself, as distinct from an oral agreement with thе financial institution that the RTC has taken over. Thompson’s argument is supported not only by the statute’s language — the RTC is not an “insured depository institution”— but by its purposes, which are to “prevent fraudulent insertion of new terms [in loan agreements], with the collusion of bank employees, when a bank appears headed for failure,”
Langley v. FDIC,
Instead the RTC defends the decision on the basis of the Illinois Credit Agreement Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 17, MT 7100-7103. It is entitled to defend on this ground, though not addressed by the district judge, because the ground was asserted in the district сourt and never waived.
United States v. Rockford Memorial Corp.,
The Act requires a “credit agreement,” defined as “an agreement or commitment by a creditor to lend mоney or extend credit or delay or forbear repayment of money not primarily for personal, family or household purposes, and not in connection with the issuance of credit cards,” to be in writing, and signed by both the creditor and the debtor. 11117101(1), 7102. A “creditor” is defined as “a person engaged in the business of lending money or extending credit.” ¶ 7101(2). The parties agree that, provided the RTC is a creditor within the meaning' of the Act, it is subject to it, nоtwithstanding *944 its status as a federal agency. We can find no cases on the point.
A recent statute — it took effect in September 1989 — the Illinois Credit Agreement Act has not been judicially interpreted, and it has no usable lеgislative history; nor can we find parallel statutes in other states. Nevertheless it is apparent that the оral agreement alleged by Thompson is a “credit agreement” within the meaning of the Act — if the RTC is a “creditоr” within the meaning of the Act. We think it is. The statute is evidently designed to impose a strong form of the Statute of Frauds— strong because, unlike the usual Statute of Frauds,
Callaghan v. Miller,
If the statute in question applied to lаndlords rather than to lending institutions, a "receiver who took over a building, collected rents, paid maintenance, etc., on an interim basis because of the owner’s insolvency, as in
In re James Wilson Associates,
AFFIRMED.
