American Bank & Trust of Coushatta v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

49 F.3d 1064
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 1995
Docket94-40377
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 49 F.3d 1064 (American Bank & Trust of Coushatta v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bank & Trust of Coushatta v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 49 F.3d 1064 (5th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit. Judge:

The issue in this case is the meaning of “good faith” under the Civil Code of Louisiana. Particcouipants in a loan participation argue that the FDIC breached the duty of a lead bank to act in good faith. They contend that the duty of good faith is breached by gross fault, by negligence, or even by violations of the Golden Rule. The district court rejected these definitions, and found a failure of proof of malice in the record and granted summary judgment for the FDIC.-

We agree with the reasoning of the distinguished district court, and affirm.

I.

In 1982, Bossier Bank & Trust loaned Retamco, Inc., $18 million secured by real estate called the Retama Property. BB & T *1066 then made four loans secured by- the Retama Property, all participated in by other banks. The first tier of $8.5 million was secured by a first Ken on the Retama Property and fifteen institutions, including BB & T, and the appellants were participants. A second Ken on the tract secured a second loan for about $8 milKon in which BB & T and three other institutions participated. A third Ken secured a, third loan shared by five institutions for $1 milKon. A fourth loan, shared by three institutions for about $470,000, was secured by a fourth Ken.

Retamco defaulted. BB & T failed. The FDIC was appointed as receiver and Kqui-dator. The FDIC assumed the role of lead lender, with the responsibility of Kquidating the Retama Property. The FDIC sold the property in 1991 for $1.2 milKon at pubKc auction. It had, however, rejected several multi-milKon doUar offers for the Retama Property and had spent more than $1.9 mil-Kon to maintain it.

Angry that the FDIC had sold the Retama Property for so Kttle, four of the participant banks filed this suit. They claim that the FDIC.violated its contractual and statutory duties by favoring FDIC interests over theirs and by mismanaging the Kquidation. The FDIC held a large interest in the “subordinate” loans, and the four banks’ sole interest was in the first tier loan. 1 The banks argue that the FDIC rejected offers that would have paid much of the debt owed to the first tier lenders, but not the subordinate loans in which the FDIC had a substantial interest.

The district court granted summary judgment for the FDIC on this claim. 2 The court based its ruling on the key clause of the participation agreements, providing that BB & T (and now the FDIC)

will exercise the same care with respect to the loan, and the eoUateral, if any, as it gives to loans and eoUateral in which it alone is interested; but BB & T shaU not be Kable for any action taken or omitted so long as it has acted in good faith.

Emphasizing its second half, the court ruled that the FDIC owed the banks only a duty to perform in “good faith,” and the court looked to the Louisiana CivU Code for the definition of that critical term. The Louisiana CivU Code does not define “good faith,” but' it does define “bad faith” as “an intentional and ma-Kcious faüure to perform.” La.Civ.Code Ann. art. 1997 cmt. c (West 1987). 3 Following Louisiana law, the district court then equated “good faith” with the lack of “bad faith.” See, e.g., Great Southwest Fire Ins. Co. v. CNA Ins. Cos., 557 So.2d 966, 969 (La.1990); Bond v. Broadway, 607 So.2d 865, 867 (La.Ct.App.1992), cert. denied, 612 So.2d 88 (La.1993); see also Commercial Nat'l Bank v. Audubon Meadow Partnership, 566 So.2d 1136, 1139 (La.Ct.App.1990) (analyzing bad faith as the mirror image of good faith); Heirs of Gremillion v. Rapides Parish Police Jury, 493 So.2d 584, 587 (La.1986) (implying that a party has acted in good faith unless he has acted in bad faith). The court held that the FDIC’s actions may have been negligent, imprudent, or bumbling, but because they were not intentionaUy maKcious, the banks could not state a claim.

On appeal, the banks ehaUenge the court’s definition of good faith. They argue that the duty to act in good faith is breached not only by acting in bad faith but by any of three other standards of care. They are, in descending order of stringency, (1) violations of the Golden Rule, (2) negKgence, or (3) gross fault. Alternatively, the banks argue that even under the district court’s bad faith standard — a standard more lenient to the FDIC *1067 than any of their three candidates — the court should have denied the FDIC’s summary judgment motion in light of the banks’ evidence of the FDIC’s self-dealing.

We reject the banks’ three definitions of breaches of good faith: the Golden Rule, negligence, and gross fault. We also agree with the district court that a trier of fact could not reasonably conclude on the facts of this record that the FDIC acted with malice.

II.

Louisiana no longer measures good faith by the Golden Rule. Apparently, it once did. In 1979, the Supreme Court of Louisiana observed that implied into every Louisiana contract was the equitable “ ‘Christian principle not to do unto ' others that which we would not wish others should do unto us.’ ” National Safe Corp. v. Benedict & Myrick, Inc., 371 So.2d 792, 795 (La.1979) (quoting La.Civ.Code Ann. art. 1965 (1977)). 4 Finding that National fell short of its implied contractual duty “to do to Benedict & Myrick that which it would wish Benedict & Myrick to do to it,” the court found National Safe liable. Id.

Five years later, the legislature revised the Civil Code 5 and reenacted the statute- that National Safe relied upon — Article 1965 — as Article 2055. Although the legislature stated in a comment that it intended new Article 2055 simply to reproduce the “substance” -of old Article 1965, the legislative revisions dropped the Golden Rule. Old Article -1965 provided that

The equity intended by this rule is founded in the Christian principle not to do unto others that which we would not wish others should do unto us; and on the moral maxim of the law that no one ought to enrich himself at the expense of another. When the law of the land, and that which the parties have made for themselves by their contract, are silent, courts must apply these principles to determine what ought to be incidents to a contract, which are required by equity.

La.Stat.Ann.. art. 1965 (West 1977) (emphasis in original.) The Golden Rule is absent from revised Article 2055:

Equity, as intended in the preceding articles, is based on the principles that no one is allowed to take unfair advantage of another and that no one is allowed to enrich himself unjustly at the expense of another.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.3d 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bank-trust-of-coushatta-v-federal-deposit-insurance-corporation-ca5-1995.