Horizon Mutual Savings Bank v. Federal Savings & Loan Insurance

674 F.2d 1312
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 1982
DocketNo. 81-3029
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 674 F.2d 1312 (Horizon Mutual Savings Bank v. Federal Savings & Loan Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horizon Mutual Savings Bank v. Federal Savings & Loan Insurance, 674 F.2d 1312 (9th Cir. 1982).

Opinion

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

Horizon Mutual Savings Bank appeals from an order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant, the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC). Horizon terminated its insurance with FSLIC on November 9, 1979, but FSLIC did not return Horizon’s reserve account funds until January 10, 1980. Interpreting its own regulations, FSLIC concluded that Horizon was not entitled to “a return” on this money. The district court limited its review to determining whether or not FSLIC’s decision had a rational basis, and found that FSLIC’s interpretation was not demonstrably irrational. We affirm.

Horizon converted from a savings and loan association to a mutual savings bank and terminated its insurance with FSLIC on November 9, 1979. Institutions insured with FSLIC are required to pay annual premiums into FSLIC’s primary reserve account, and from 1962 until August 1973, additional payments of future premiums were paid into the secondary reserve fund. These reserves are the source of insurance payments to individuals should an institution fail. When insurance is terminated, FSLIC must refund an institution’s pro rata share of the secondary reserve. After normal processing, Horizon’s pro rata share of the secondary reserve fund was forwarded to it by FSLIC on January 10, 1980.

FSLIC is required by 12 U.S.C. § 1727(e) (1976) to credit the secondary reserve fund with “a return” on the outstanding balances in that account “as of the close of each calendar year,” at a rate determined by FSLIC.1 A “return” represents FSLIC’s earnings on funds held in the secondary reserve account. Horizon’s pro rata share of the secondary reserve fund was computed on the basis of its interest in the fund account as it stood at the time Horizon terminated its insurance on November 9, 1979. Thus, the return for 1979 had not been credited to the secondary reserve fund at the time the computation was made. Accordingly, the pro rata share Horizon received did not include any “return” for 1979.

Horizon maintains that 12 C.F.R. § 563.-16 2(a) (1981), a regulation adopted pursuant to section 1727(e), requires FSLIC to pay a return on funds not paid out to a terminated institution by December 31. This section provides as follows:

$ 563.16 2 Secondary reserve.
(a) Annual credit to secondary reserve—
(1) General provisions. The Corporation shall credit to the secondary reserve, [1314]*1314as of the close of each calendar year, a return on the outstanding balances of the secondary reserve, as determined by the Corporation, at a rate equal to the average annual rate of return to the Corporation during the year ending at the close of November 30 of such calendar year, as determined by the Corporation, on investments held by the Corporation in obligations of, or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the United States. The Corporation shall maintain records showing each insured institution’s pro rata share of the secondary reserve and shall apportion the credit mentioned in the next previous sentence among all insured institutions on the basis of the average of the daily balances of their respective pro rata shares of the secondary reserve during the calendar year just closed, except as otherwise provided in this section.
(2) Exhaustion of pro rata shares of secondary reserve. In the event that the remainder of an insured institution’s pro rata share of the secondary reserve is used to discharge a percentage of such insured institution’s annual insurance premium pursuant to § 563.15(b)(2), such insured institution shall be entitled to share in the credit apportioned pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section for the period between the date on which the remainder of such insured institution’s pro rata share was used to discharge a percentage of that insured institution’s annual insurance premium and the December 31 immediately preceding such date. Insured institutions entitled to credit pursuant to this paragraph (a)(2) shall be paid such credit in cash as soon as possible after the amount of such credit is determined by the Corporation.
(3) Termination of insurance. If, prior to the close of any calendar year, (i) an institution’s insurance is terminated, and (ii) such institution’s pro rata share of the secondary reserve is paid out of such reserve, such institution shall not receive a return on such pro rata share for such calendar year.

Subparagraph (1) provides for the crediting of returns, and their apportionment among insured institutions on an annual basis. It is the only part of the regulation which contains an affirmative provision for the crediting and apportionment of returns, except for a provision in subparagraph (2) which requires partial crediting and apportionment of the annual return in the case of institutions whose pro rata shares of the secondary reserve are exhausted during the calendar year as a result of the normal use of those shares for the payment of annual premiums. Horizon contends, however, that the subparagraph (1) clause “except as otherwise provided in this section,” refers to subparagraph (3), thus making the provisions in subparagraph (1) subordinate to subparagraph (3). According to Horizon, subparagraph (3) prohibits payment of a return only when an institution’s insurance is terminated and its pro rata share is paid out, both before the end of the year. Because Horizon terminated before year-end, but its money remained in the fund until after December 31, Horizon maintains that subparagraph (3), when read in light of the “except as otherwise provided” clause of subparagraph (1), requires the payment of a return on that money.

FSLIC interprets subparagraph (3) as only setting forth a prohibition, albeit a prohibition against paying a return in cases where an institution’s coverage is terminated before year-end and its share is paid out. It claims that the subparagraph does not impose an affirmative duty to pay a return under any circumstances, and that the only language requiring a return is in subpara-graph (1), which mandates year-end apportionment of returns only “among all insured institutions,” and in subparagraph (2) which is not applicable here. FSLIC contends that an “insured institution” is one whose accounts are insured by FSLIC, and argues that because Horizon cancelled its coverage in November, it ceased to be an “insured institution” before the end of the year. Thus, FSLIC says, Horizon was not an institution entitled to be credited with a return [1315]*1315at the time the returns for 1979 were required to be, and were, credited.

In response to Horizon’s argument that the subparagraph (1) clause “except as otherwise provided in this section” makes the provisions in subparagraph (1) subordinate to subparagraph (3), FSLIC points out that subparagraph (3) does not provide for any crediting of payments, and that, therefore, the subparagraph (1) clause does not refer to subparagraph (3) and is not subordinate to it. FSLIC contends that the “except as otherwise provided in this section” clause refers to subparagraph (2), and only to that subparagraph, since subparagraph (2), unlike subparagraph (3), contains an affirmative provision requiring the crediting of returns.2

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Bluebook (online)
674 F.2d 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horizon-mutual-savings-bank-v-federal-savings-loan-insurance-ca9-1982.