Today we decline to extend the federal holder in due course doctrine to protect the FDIC or its successors from the personal defenses of makers of non-negotiable promissory notes, holding that as a matter of federal common law the doctrine does not apply to non-negotiable instruments. Having announced this rule, we go on to conclude that the defendant did submit sufficient evidence to avoid summary judgment on his prevention of performance claim. We also conclude that a summary judgment ruling on defеndant’s other affirmative defenses would be premature. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for consistent proceedings.
Background
On March 18, 1986, George Montross executed a $1.1 million variable interest promissory note in favor of Sunbelt Savings (Old Sunbelt). Mr. Montross defaulted on the notе. Old Sunbelt foreclosed, purchased the security at foreclosure sale, and, on May 24, 1988, filed suit against Mr. Mon-tross for the deficiency. Shortly after filing suit, Old Sunbelt failed. The FSLIC (now FDIC) assumed control and established Sunbelt Savings, FSB (New Sunbelt). Mr. Montross defended against the deficiency suit on two grounds: (1) Old Sunbеlt prevented him from transferring the note to a new debtor as allowed by the deed of trust, thus, excusing his performance; and (2) as an affirmative defense, he satisfied the conditions in the deed of trust, thus, absolving him of personal liability for the note. New Sunbelt, having intervened as plаintiff, moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the federal holder in due course doctrine barred all of Mr. Montross’ defenses and that Mr. Montross had failed to produce evidence to establish a genuine dispute over a material fact. Mr. Montross countered that the federal holder in due course doctrine should not apply to the non-negotiable instrument at issue in this case and that he had either presented sufficient evidence to avoid summary judgment or had been denied the opportunity for effective discovery so as tо do so. The district court granted New Sunbelt’s motion, ruling that the federal holder in due course doctrine applies to non-negotiable instruments, and bars all Mr. Montross’ defenses as a matter of law. The district court, however, did not evaluate the summary judgment evidence and dismissed the *355 discovery dispute as moot. Mr. Montross appeals.
Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate only if, after adequate discovery, there is no genuine dispute over any material fact.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317,
The Federal Holder in Due Course Doctrine and Non-Negotiable Instruments
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of New Sunbelt after concluding that the federal holder in due course doctrine applies to nоn-negotiable instruments and, thus, bars all of Mr. Mon-tross’ defenses. This conclusion presents us with an issue of first impression: whether the federal holder in due course doctrine protects the FDIC and its successors from personal defenses to the enforcement of non-negotiable instruments.
The federal holder in due course doctrine bars makers of promissory notes from asserting personal
1
defenses against the FDIC and its successors in connection with purchase and assumption transactions involving troubled financial institutions.
See FSLIC v. Murray,
To date, our holdings have been limited. In
Murray,
we held that the “FSLIC has at least the rights of a holder in due course when it acquires a negotiable instrument in a purchase and assumption transaction.”
Murray,
In
Campbell Leasing,
we extended the ambit of federal holder in due course doctrine by holding that the FDIC and its successors may be federal holders in due course without meeting the technical stаte-law requirements for holder in due course status.
Campbell Leasing,
The FDIC also directs our attention to
In re CTS Truss, Inc.,
After carefully reviewing our decisions and the policy underlying them, we decline to extend federal holder in due course status to the FDIC or its successor in cases in which it acquires non-negotiable instruments through purchase and assumption transactions. Respecting our decisions, Murray’s holding was expressly limited to negotiable instruments acquired by purchase and assumption. Campbell Leasing did not deal with negotiability at all. It merely excused the FDIC from compliance with the bulk transfer exclusion of Texas holder in due course law. CTS, being off point, carries little weight.
Turning to the policy analysis, we conclude that a judicial extension of the federal holder in due course doctrine to non-negotiable instruments is unwarranted. We recognize the vital role of the FDIC in ensuring the sound, effective, and uninterrupted operation of our banks. We also recognize that the FDIC requires some special protections to enable it to perform this function effectively. For example, the FDIC must be protected from the effect of secret agreements.
See D’Oench, Duhme & Co., Inc. v. FDIC,
At first blush, these policy justifications seem to apply with equal force to non-negotiable instruments. On closer examination, however, we conclude that applying the doctrine to non-negotiable instruments is fundamentally different from the earlier protections that we have afforded the FDIC. Murray, Campbell Leasing, D’Oench, and section 1823(e) all act to prevent the FDIC from being disadvantaged when it is forced to assume control of a troubled financial institution. Under these decisions, the FDIC is protected from the disadvantages attendant upon its role, but the nature of the assets the FDIC receives from the institutions remains unchanged. Conversely, extending federal holder in due course protection to non-negotiable instruments would bestow a benefit on the FDIC by changing the assets’ nature — actually enhancing their value.
We do not view negotiability as a technical requirement. Negotiability is the foundation underlying all of Article Three and of holder in due course status in particular. Under Article Three of the Uniform Commercial Code, negotiable instruments enjoy various protections, including the possibility that they will come into the possession of a holder in due course. When thе negotiable note is in the hands of a holder in due course, the maker is left with few defenses, thus, the instrument’s value is enhanced. Non-negotiable instruments, however, are contractual obligations, which do not enjoy holder in due course protections. The makers of vаriable interest rate notes sign only a contractual obligation to repay their debt; they had no expectation that holder in due course doctrine would strip them of their defenses.
*357 Extending holder in due course status to the FDIC and its successors respecting non-nеgotiable instruments is both unnecessary and undesirable. When the FDIC assumes control of an institution, the assets are what they are — negotiable instruments, contracts, real property, and so on. We agree that the FDIC should not be disadvantaged by the circumstances of its assumption of control, but this policy does not require giving the FDIC the ability to transmute lead into gold. Allowing the FDIC to transform contracts into negotiable instruments would defeat the reasonable commercial expectations of the variable interest note makers. Carried only a little further, this transformation would affect all contracts and even the title to real property. Alchemy is the province of Congress; therefore, we decline to extend Murray and Campbell Leasing to non-negotiable instruments.
Summary Judgment Evidence
Having concluded that there is no legal barrier to his defenses, we now considеr whether Mr. Montross submitted sufficient evidence to avoid summary judgment. Mr. Montross contends that he has submitted sufficient evidence or, in the alternative, that he has been denied sufficient discovery to be able to do so. First, Mr. Montross contends that he should be excused from the requirеment of supplying a creditworthy debtor to assume his note because Old Sunbelt prevented him from fulfilling this condition.
See, e.g., O’Shea v. International Business Machs. Corp.,
Mr. Montross also contends, as an affirmative defense, that he satisfied the conditions in the deed of trust, thus absolving himself of personal liability for any deficiency. The deed of trust required Mr. Montross to provide a transferee that met Old Sunbelt’s customary underwriting standаrds, creditworthiness criteria, management ability criteria, and loans-to-one-borrower limits. The record does not contain evidence sufficient to avoid summary judgment on this defense, but Mr. Mon-tross argues that he has been denied discovery.
At argument, the FDIC maintained that Mr. Montrоss has had two years to gather his evidence, but failed to do so. Yet, we conclude that Mr. Montross was not dilatory in his discovery efforts. On June 24, 1988, shortly after Old Sunbelt filed its deficiency suit, Mr. Montross requested production of all documents relating to Old Sunbelt’s underwriting standards, creditworthiness standards, and loan limits for the period March 1986 through December 1987. All of these documents relate directly to Mr. Montross’ affirmative defense. The only such document Old Sunbelt produced was its credit policy, which became effective December 15, 1987. Mr. Montross again sought doсuments pertaining to his affirmative defenses from New Sunbelt when he deposed Mr. Leggett, the Old Sunbelt employee who dealt most closely with Mr. Montross’ loan; but again Mr. Montross received no documents pertinent to the March 1986 through December 1987 time frame. In March 1989, Mr. Montross turnеd to the FSLIC (now FDIC) to obtain the necessary documents, and again no documents were produced. Likewise, both Old Sunbelt’s and New Sunbelt’s answers to interrogatories failed to provide the necessary information. In response to his discovery difficulties, Mr. Montross filed a *358 motiоn to compel production on June 7, 1989, which was denied by the magistrate in charge. Mr. Montross then sought district court review of the magistrate’s decision, but the district court — ruling that the federal holder in due course doctrine barred all defenses in this case — dismissed review of the magistrates order as moot. The history of the discovery dispute, as well as the ground on which the district court based its summary judgment ruling convinces us that the summary judgment on Mr. Montross’ affirmative defense is premature.
Conclusion
We hold that the federal holder in due course doctrine does not protect the FDIC or its successors from personal defenses asserted by the makers of non-negotiable instruments. We also conclude that Mr. Montross presented sufficient evidence to avoid summary judgment on the issue whether Old Sunbelt prevented his performance under the non-negotiable note. Finally, respecting Mr. Montross’ affirmative defenses to New Sunbelt’s deficiency action, we conclude that a summary judgment ruling is premature. Accordingly, we REVERSE and REMAND for consistent proceedings.
Notes
. We have differentiated personal and real defenses by reference to state law.
See Campbell Leasing, Inc. v. FDIC,
. Murray sets out and correctly summarizes the relevant authority from other circuits. We will not repeat that analysis here.
