Glendale Federal Bank, Fsb, Plaintiff-Cross v. United States

378 F.3d 1308, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 16380, 2004 WL 1768277
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedAugust 9, 2004
Docket03-5136, 03-5139
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 378 F.3d 1308 (Glendale Federal Bank, Fsb, Plaintiff-Cross v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glendale Federal Bank, Fsb, Plaintiff-Cross v. United States, 378 F.3d 1308, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 16380, 2004 WL 1768277 (Fed. Cir. 2004).

Opinion

PLAGER, Senior Circuit Judge.

In this Winstar-series case, the United States appeals the award by the Court of Federal Claims, Senior Judge Loren Smith, to Glendale Federal Bank, FSB (“Glendale”) of $381 million in “wounded bank” damages; Glendale cross-appeals the trial court’s denial of another $527.5 million in reliance damages. 1

1.

This is the second appeal on the damages question. The first appeal arose after a lengthy trial, which resulted in an award to Glendale of $909 million in restitution and “non-overlapping reliance damages.” That trial itself was the result of a remand from an earlier consolidated appeal to this court in which the United States challenged the trial court’s determinations regarding liability. The trial court had held that the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (“FSLIC”) had entered into regulatory capital contracts with three savings and loan “thrifts,” Glendale, Statesman Savings Holding Corp., and Winstar Corp., and that the enactment of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”), 2 and the regulations imposed thereafter, had breached those contracts. We affirmed the trial court’s liability judgment, Winstar Corp. v. United States, 64 F.3d 1531 (Fed.Cir.1995) (en banc), and the United States Supreme Court affirmed ours, United States v. Winstar Corp., 518 U.S. 839, 116 S.Ct. 2432, 135 L.Ed.2d 964 (1996).

Liability in favor of the plaintiff thrifts having been established, the case was returned to the trial court for determination of damages owed to plaintiffs. The trial *1310 court found for the plaintiff Glendale in the amount of $909 million. The Government again appealed. The appeal was viewed as a test of the difficult issues of measuring damages in what became known as the Winstar cases, of which there were some 120 in the queue. On appeal and after a thorough review of the record and the various damage theories propounded by the parties and employed by the trial court, we concluded that the award of $909 million was not supportable, and vacated the judgment. Glendale Fed. Bank, FSB v. United States, 239 F.3d 1374 (Fed.Cir.2001).

In the course of that first damages trial Glendale had sought “expectancy damages,” the kind of damages often associated with lost profits. The trial court rejected that theory, concluding that Glendale’s model for expectancy damages in the form of lost profits was implausible. We agreed. The theory did not fit comfortably with the history of these cases in the years following the breach; the problems of proof suggested that any award premised on expectancy damages would be too speculative to uphold.

Faced with a situation in which as a general proposition expectancy damages were ruled out, but with a legitimate claim by the thrift for a remedy, the trial court fashioned a restitution remedy based on the assumed risk that Glendale undertook when it acquired the salvaged bank (Bro-ward Savings and Loan, a Florida thrift). The crux of the restitution component was the market value of the liabilities assumed by Glendale at the time of the transaction, which the trial court viewed as the value of the benefit conferred on the Government by Glendale. Glendale placed the proper amount of restitution damages at $798 million; the Government argued the proper amount was zero. The trial court sided with Glendale, and after adjusting the amount for the net gains it calculated Glendale had received from the transaction, awarded $510 million.

In our review we concluded that the restitution theory was basically flawed, because it was based on an assumption that the non-breaching party was entitled to the supposed gains received by the breaching party, when those gains in the context of these cases were both speculative and indeterminate. Accordingly we vacated the trial court’s award of $510 million.

Recognizing that any damages award in these eases was necessarily a matter of post hoc reconstruction of a set of facts that may have never actually transpired, we did agree with the trial court that a viable theory on which damages could be based was a reliance theory. The trial court had considered reliance theory as a basis for an award, and had added specific reliance damages of $381 million to the total award granted plaintiff; these were denominated non-overlapping reliance damages, and identified as damages for post-breach events.

We noted that in reliance damages, the critical event is the breach itself. Consequently, damages resulting from that event may be the result of actions before or after the breach. But these damages had to be real, and reasonably ascertainable. We concluded that using reliance theory as the damages measure for the losses sustained by thrifts as a result of the Government’s breach in FIRREA would provide a firmer and more rational basis than the alternative theories argued by the parties. We ended our opinion noting the enormous effort and dedication to these cases by Judge Smith, and suggested that much of the extensive record before the court — compiled over 150 days in trial and constituting some 20,000 pages — might lend itself to re-evaluation consistent with the guidance provided. *1311 Which leads to the second appeal, now before us.

2.

Following the first appeal on damages and our remand to the trial court for further consideration of the issues, Glendale moved in the trial court for entry of judgment, asking the court to reinstate the post-breach “wounded bank” portion of its earlier opinion and judgment, based on the prior findings of the court. This was the $381 million. Glendale claimed an additional $527 million, which it alleged to be the actual out-of-pocket loss suffered by Glendale in its Florida division. The total, with certain adjustments, was something over $862 million. In response to Glendale’s motion, the Government did its numbers, and, surprise, came up with zero.

As noted at the beginning, Judge Smith awarded Glendale the $381 million, representing the previously-determined amount of Glendale’s “wounded bank” damages, and other incidental reliance damages. The trial court rejected Glendale’s claim for the additional $527 million, ruling that Glendale was not entitled to recover on the remainder of its claim because its reliance model failed to measure the actual losses sustained by it as a result of the Government’s breach. The Government appeals the $381 million award; Glendale cross-appeals the denial of its claim for the additional $527 million.

In response to the trial court’s award of $381 million in reliance damages, the Government notes that the Glendale-invented notion of “wounded bank” damages is basically ($335 million of the $381 million) the increase in the cost of funds Glendale allegedly incurred as a result of its having been wounded by the Government’s breach.

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Bluebook (online)
378 F.3d 1308, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 16380, 2004 WL 1768277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glendale-federal-bank-fsb-plaintiff-cross-v-united-states-cafc-2004.