This is аn appeal of an order of summary judgment entered by the district court in favor of the Intervenor Plaintiff-Appellee, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”). Certain lands owned by the FDIC’s ancestor-in-title were sold at a tax *688 sale bеfore the FDIC was named receiver. The FDIC wished to set the sales aside. The district court found that the FDIC did not consent to foreclosure of its property as necessitated by 12 USC § 1825(b)(2) of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”). Therefore, the district court ruled that title to the property in question still rested with the FDIC. For the following reasons, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Various members of the D’Agostino family (“the D’Agostinos”) owned an 33.48 acre undeveloped tract of land (“the Property”) in the City of Gonzales, Asсension Parish, Louisiana. On April 18, 1985, the D’Agostinos granted a mortgage over the Property to the American Bank and Trust Company of Baton Rouge (“American Bank”). This mortgage was duly recorded in the official mortgage records of Ascension Parish. The D’Agosti-nоs did not pay their taxes to the City of Gonzales or Ascension Parish. The Plaintiff-Appellant, the Trembling Prairie Land Company (“TPLC”), acquired title to the Property as a result of a series of tax sales conduct-' ed by the city and parish which occurred between 1988 and 1990. Interests in the Property were sold at these sales, and TPLC acquired title either by direct purchase at the sales or by purchasing deeds from other individual purchasers. 1 The last of these tax sales occurred on June 8,1990.
On August 2, 1990, the Commissioner of Financial Institutions for the State of Louisiana declаred American Bank to be in an unsafe and unsound condition, and American Bank was closed. The FDIC was appointed to be receiver and liquidator of American Bank, and the FDIC gained possession and title to the assets, business, and property of American Bank, including the original D’Agostino mortgage on the Property. Some of American Bank’s assets were transferred to another bank, but the mortgage on the Property remained in the FDIC’s hands. By this time, the D’Agostinos did not own the Property, because of the various tax sales.
Whether or not the FDIC had adequate notice of these sales as a matter of law is a major point of dispute in this case, and each side describes the matter of notice differently. TPLC contends that the FDIC received written nоtice in January of 1991, five months before the end of the redemptive period for the first tax sale of the Property and over two years before the end of the annulment period for the Property. TPLC further asserts that the tax deed for the tax sale was recorded, and that an appraisal of the Property was made on January 16, 1991, which mentioned that the Property had been sold, and recommended that the outstanding taxes be paid and that the Property be redeemed as soon as possible. TPLC claims that this appraisal constituted notice. TPLC also claims that American Bank, the FDIC’s ancestor-in-title, had notice of these sales, as evidenced by American Bank’s intervention in an expropriation action between the D’Agostinos and United Gas Pipeline Company in 1989. Copies of the 1988 tax sales were included in the exhibits for this expropriation case. Finally, TPLC further argues that American Bank did nothing to pay the taxes on the Property.
The FDIC does not deny the aforementiоned matters. However, It does argue that American Bank was never given prior notice of the tax sales by either the Sheriff of Ascension Parish or the City of Gonzales’ tax collector. 2 Further, the FDIC denies that the appraisal or the evidence from the expropriation ease constituted legal notice.
On April 20, 1994, the United States District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana entered default judgment in favor of the FDIC for full amounts due and owed under the D’Agostinos’ mortgage. The debt secured by the mortgage has not been repaid, and the mortgage was reinscribed in 1995. *689 TPLC filed a Petition to Quiet Tax Title on March 10,1995 in Ascension Parish, after the period to redeem the Property expired. The FDIC intervened, claiming that it did not consent to foreclosure of its interest in the Property, and the action was removed to federal district court.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo. Guillory v. Domtar Industries, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
The FDIC makes the following arguments in favor of our affirming the decision of the district court: (1) that 12 U.S.C. § 1825(b)(2) protects the FDIC’s prоperty interest from being extinguished without its consent and (2) that the sales were void
ab initio
because the FDIC and American Bank did not receive proper notice of the tax sales and, thus their right to due process was violated
3
. “Where a party raises both statutory and constitutional arguments in support of a judgment, ordinarily we first address the statutory argument in order to avoid unnecessary resolution of the constitutional issue.”
Schweiker v. Hogan,
Section 1825(b)(2) states in pertinent part:
No property of the Corporation shall be subject to levy, attachment, garnishment, foreclosure, or sale without consent of the Corporation, nor shall any involuntary hen attach to the property of the Corporation.
The FDIC argues that this is a clear case in which their property is being sold under a tax hen. This circuit has clearly stated that, under § 1825, hens against property owned by the FDIC may not be foreclosed upon without the consent of the FDIC.
See Lee,
In our opinion in
Matagorda,
we held that “in the absence of Cоngressional consent the state or county is without authority to enforce the collection of the taxes thus assessed so as to destroy the pre-existing federal lien.”
Matagorda,
Louisiana law provides that a conventional mortgage is canceled only if the property is not redeemed during the three year redemption pеriod after a tax sale. La. Const. Art. VII, § 25; La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 9:2221
et seq.
A mortgagee, like the FDIC, succeeds to whatever rights the mortgagor had with respect to a tax sale.
Grieshaber v. Cannon,
Other jurisdictions have held that FDIC’s liens are protected from extinguishment by a tax sale through the operation of § 1825. For instance, the Third Circuit held that preexisting tax lien certificates could not be used to extinguish the FDIC’s mortgage.
See Simon v. Cebrick,
Similarly, in
FDIC v. Lowery,
TPLC contends that this authority is inap-posite because under Louisiana law the tax deed is issued prior to the end of the redemption period. However, we agree with the FDIC that this is a distinction without a difference. TPLC is still foreclosing on the property interests of the FDIC as a result of unpaid property taxes. Thus, the Louisiana tax sales are the functional equivalent of the fоreclosure procedures barred by this Court in Donna and Matagorda, and by the Third and Tenth Circuits in Simon and Lowery. 4
FIRREA was passed to address the massive problems in this country’s banking and S & L industries in the late 1980s. The shock-waves from this financial crisis have only recently begun to wane. Thus, in 1989, FIR-REA was drafted to help create stability and eсonomic recovery in the financial industry.
5
*691
See
Pub.L. No. 101-73 § 101, 103 Stat. 183, 186. While the term “quiet title” is not specifically mentioned in the § 1825, the end result is functionally the same as that of the actions that are specifically listed in the statute: the FDIC loses the Property. Thus, the language in § 1825 must be construed to cover petitions to quiet title as triggering events because “12 U.S.C. § 1825(b)(2) represents the express will of Congress that the FDIC must consent to any deprivation of property initiated by a state.”
Lee,
CONCLUSION
In deference to the will of Congress, we hold thаt the tax sale at issue was conducted without the consent of the FDIC. Accordingly, the tax .sale violated 12 U.S.C. § 1825(b)(2) and thus is null and void. Summary judgment in favor of FDIC is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. These other individual purchasers are the “Verspoor, et al." listed in the title of this case.
. The Sheriff's practice was to only give actual notice to mortgagees who had registered with his office. The Sheriff instituted this policy because he considered research of the property records to be overly burdensome on his office personnel.
. Despite vigorous arguments by all parties regarding the legal sufficiency of the tax sale notice accorded to the FDIC, the district court granted the FDIC's summary judgment motion based on statutory rather than constitutional grounds. The district court held that:
The cоurt finds that the FDIC does still have a valid interest in this property. Because of the court’s decision and reliance on section 1825(B)(2), the court need not and will not get into the issue regarding whether or not there was proper notice give to the FDIC as аrgued by the parties. Therefore, the court does not have to discuss the applicability of the Supreme Court’s decision in Mennonite Board of Missions v. Adams,462 U.S. 791 ,103 S.Ct. 2706 ,77 L.Ed.2d 180 (1983).
. Our conclusion on this point is analogous to our ruling in
United States v. FDIC,
. TPLC points out that cases such as
O’Melveny & Myers v. FDIC,
