First Nationwide Bank v. United States

48 Fed. Cl. 248, 86 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7064, 2000 U.S. Claims LEXIS 243, 2000 WL 1745297
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedNovember 28, 2000
DocketNo. 96-590C
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 48 Fed. Cl. 248 (First Nationwide Bank v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nationwide Bank v. United States, 48 Fed. Cl. 248, 86 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7064, 2000 U.S. Claims LEXIS 243, 2000 WL 1745297 (uscfc 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

BRUGGINK, Judge.

Pending in this Winstar-related1 case are defendant’s motion for leave to file an amended answer; plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment; defendant’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment or, in the alternative, request for discovery; plaintiffs’ motion to strike certain testimony; and defendant’s motion for leave to file reply to plaintiffs’ supplemental brief. Oral argument was held on September 28, 2000. At oral argument, the court allowed the parties to file supplemental briefs. For the reasons set forth below, defendant’s motion to file an amended answer is granted, plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment is denied, defendant’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part, defendant’s request for discovery is denied, plaintiffs’ motion to strike is denied, and defendant’s motion for leave to file reply to plaintiffs’ supplemental brief is granted.

BACKGROUND2

This ease is one of a group of five pending “tax benefit” cases that arise out of a series of agreements entered into by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (“FSLIC”) with various financial institutions in late 1988. Pursuant to these agreements, the FSLIC promised certain assistance to these financial institutions in regard to their acquisition from the FSLIC of the assets and liabilities of failing thrifts. In the pending tax benefit cases, the plaintiff financial institutions allege that their agreements with the FSLIC contained the promise of tax deductions for losses incurred as the result of the subsequent sale of certain thrift assets purchased by the plaintiffs from the FSLIC (“covered asset losses”), even though the agreements also provided that the FSLIC would reimburse the plaintiffs for the losses. The plaintiffs in these five cases have sued the government for breach of their agreements with the FSLIC, claiming that the government, through Congress’s enactment of § 13224 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 (popularly referred to as the “Guarini legislation”), has broken its promise of tax deductions for covered asset losses by making those deductions unavailable.3

[251]*251As damages for this alleged breach of contract, the plaintiffs in the other four tax benefit cases seek the amount that would have been saved in taxes had the Guarini legislation not been enacted. However, the plaintiffs in this case, First Nationwide Bank, First Gibraltar Holdings, Inc., and MacAn-drews & Forbes Holdings, Inc., without abandoning other claims they have in common with the other tax benefit plaintiffs, seek an additional remedy because of the unique assistance agreement they entered into with the FSLIC. The issues associated with that unique assistance agreement have been brought before the court in plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment.

The assistance agreement in question (“Assistance Agreement”) provided for only ninety percent reimbursement by the FSLIC of the covered asset losses, rather than for full reimbursement as was the ease with the assistance agreements at issue in the other tax benefit cases. Plaintiffs allege that the FSLIC’s right to reimburse them for only ninety percent of their covered asset losses was contingent upon the continued availability of the tax deductions that were eliminated by the Guarini legislation. This allegation is based on plaintiffs’ assertion that the ten percent of the reimbursement retained by the FSLIC represented the FSLIC’s share of the benefits derived from those tax deductions. Without the availability of the deductions, plaintiffs aver, the basis for anything less than full reimbursement vanishes. Consequently, the unique remedy sought by plaintiffs in this case is return of the ten percent of the full reimbursement amount4 retained by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) after enactment of the Guarini legislation.5

In their initial brief in support of their motion, plaintiffs set forth several theories they claim entitle them to the additional ten percent.6 In plaintiffs’ supplemental brief, a new theory is presented. The theories presented in the initial brief are as follows:

1. “Contemporaneous Government Documents!,] Incorporated by the Assistance Agreement’s Integration Clause!,] Confirm that the Parties’ Tax Benefit Sharing Arrangement Was Contingent on the Availability of a Tax Benefit to Share.” Pis.’ Mot. Part. Summ. J. at 36. Therefore, under the Assistance Agreement, the FDIC is not entitled to retain ten percent of the full reimbursement amount;

2. “The Most Reasonable Interpretation of the Assistance Agreement is that FSLIC’s Right to Reimburse Only the ‘After-Tax’ Portion of Covered Asset Losses Did not Apply Unless a Tax Deduction Was Available.” Id. at 37. Plaintiffs here aver that the Assistance Agreement is ambiguous regarding the level of reimbursement for covered asset losses should the covered asset loss deduction become unavailable. That ambiguity, for a number of reasons presented, should be resolved in plaintiffs’ favor. After the ambiguity has been properly resolved, the FDIC is not entitled to retain ten percent of the full reimbursement amount;

3. “To the Extent the Language of the Assistance Agreement Cannot Be Construed to Reflect the Parties’ True Agreement Regarding the Scope of Their Tax Benefit Sharing Arrangement, It Should be Reformed to Do So.” Id. at 41. Here, plaintiffs argue [252]*252that the parties to the Assistance Agreement made a material mistake of fact in believing that the written memorial of the Assistance Agreement accurately reflected the parties’ agreement. That material mistake provides a basis for reforming the contract in plaintiffs’ favor. Therefore, under the reformed Assistance Agreement, the FDIC is not entitled to retain ten percent of the full reimbursement amount;

4. “Should the Court Find Insufficient Evidence that the Parties Actually Reached Agreement With Regard to the Sharing of Unavailable Tax Benefits, the Court Should Imply a Contractual Term In Order to Preserve the Essence of the Parties’ Transaction.” Id. at 43. That term should require full reimbursement of the plaintiffs in the event the deduction becomes unavailable. “The government therefore breached the Assistance Agreement by continuing to withhold full assistance payments even after the Guarini legislation retroactively repealed the tax benefit that had existed since 1981.” Id. at 47; and

5. “The Government’s Actions Breached its Obligation of Good Faith and Fair Dealing under the Assistance Agreement.” Id. at 47. Plaintiffs’ argument here is that the enactment of the Guarini legislation itself constituted a breach of the obligation of good faith and fair dealing under the Assistance Agreement. See id. at 48. Therefore, as a result of that breach, the FDIC is not entitled to retain ten percent of the full reimbursement amount.

Common to all five of these initial theories is the unique provision of the Assistance Agreement permitting the FSLIC to reimburse only ninety percent of covered asset losses. It is noteworthy, moreover, that a common denominator in the first four theories is that the event of breach is the failure of the FDIC to pay one hundred percent reimbursement for the covered asset losses upon failure of the deduction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Fed. Cl. 248, 86 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7064, 2000 U.S. Claims LEXIS 243, 2000 WL 1745297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nationwide-bank-v-united-states-uscfc-2000.