This appeal presents a question of first impression' and potentially broad significance concerning the powers of the Resolution Trust Corporation, the federal agency that administers failed savings and loan associations.
As amended by section 212(e) of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (P.L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183), section 182l(e)(ll) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act provides that “No provision of this subsection [i.e., subsection (e) of section 1821] shall be construed as permitting the avoidance of any legally enforceable or perfected security interest in any of the assets of any depository institution,” provided the security interest was not obtained in contemplation of insolvency or with the intention of hindering, delaying, or defrauding creditors. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(ll). In 1987 Unisys Finance Corporation, the plaintiff, made a five-year, level-payments lease of computer equipment to Concordia Federal Bank for Savings. To secure its obligations under the lease, Concordia pledged certain securities; and there is no doubt that Unisys obtained a perfected security interest in them. Con-cordia went bust, and in 1990 the Resolution Trust Corporation was appointed receiver. Acting under the express and unquestioned power granted it by subsection (e)(4) of 12 U.S.C. § 1821, the RTC repudiated the lease. At the time, Concordia was current in its rental payments, but had the lease remained in effect until termination it would have owed Unisys another $308,000 in rent. In this court Unisys concedes that it cannot sue Concordia, or the RTC, or the bank that holds the pledged securities in escrow, for the rent it lost as a result of the premature termination of the lease, or for any other damages that it may have suffered as a consequence of that event. The statute is explicit in cutting off the lessor’s right to obtain damages for the receiver’s repudiation or disaffirmance of a lease. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(4)(A). But Uni-sys contends that it has an entitlement to satisfy any such claim out of the pledged securities. The RTC concedes that Unisys has a perfected security interest in rent that had not yet come due at the time that the RTC repudiated the lease, but argues that the interest is unenforceable because Unisys has no claim to that rent.- That claim is dead by operation of the statute, *611 and when it died the securities pledged to its satisfaction became the unencumbered assets of the receivered savings bank. .
The district court, which has jurisdiction under 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6) to review the denial of claims against assets under the RTC’s control, agreed with the RTC and denied Unisys relief, precipitating this appeal.
Federally insured banks, savings ' and loan associations, credit unions, and similar financial institutions are not subject to bankruptcy law. 11 U.S.C. § 109(b)(2). But the receivership provisions of federal banking law, 12 U.S.C. §§ 1821(c)-(r), create a parallel regime for those institutions. Under bankruptcy law, a trustee in bankruptcy (or debtor in possession), the equivalent of the RTC as receiver in this case, can terminate the unexecuted portion of' any contract or lease signed by the bankrupt. 11 U.S.C. § 365(a). If this happens, the promisee or lessor, to the extent that he sustains damages as a result of the termination, can claim them as a general creditor in the bankruptcy proceeding, except that the amount a lessor can claim is truncated. 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(6). In the parallel provision for financial institutions, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(4), the lessor’s damages claim is completely extinguished except for back rent. With the claim gone, any basis for enforcing a security interest is gone with it.
The bankruptcy parallel is instructive. If a secured creditor is oversecured, in the sense that the value of the security pledged to repay the debt owed him exceeds any plausible estimate of the debt, the bankruptcy court can take away the excess security and give it to another creditor.
In re James Wilson Associates,
Unisys muddies these rather clear waters by telling us that if we reject its interpretation of the statute we shall be creating a grave constitutional question, since for purposes of the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment a lien (which is just another name for a security interest, 11 U.S.C. § 101(37)) is property and cannot be confiscated without just compensation. See
United States v. Security Industrial Bank,
Unisys’s real gripe thus is not the loss of its security interest; it is the loss of the claim that the security interest secured. But it does not argue that the application of the 1989 amendment of section 1821(e) to a lease that had been entered into before the amendment was enacted violated any provision of the Constitution by cutting down on Unisys’s contractual rights. Not wanting to decide constitutional issues unnecessarily, we express no view on the merits of such an argument.
Affirmed.
