Resolution Trust Corp. v. Ocotillo West Joint Venture

840 F. Supp. 1463, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19630, 1993 WL 572897
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedNovember 10, 1993
DocketCIV 92-67 JC/JHG
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 840 F. Supp. 1463 (Resolution Trust Corp. v. Ocotillo West Joint Venture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Ocotillo West Joint Venture, 840 F. Supp. 1463, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19630, 1993 WL 572897 (D.N.M. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CONWAY, District Judge.

THIS MATTER came on for consideration of the Defendant Bogle Farms, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment, filed December 16, 1992 and Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment, filed January 25, 1993. The Court has reviewed the motions and memoranda submitted by the parties, and finds that Defendant’s Motion is well-taken and will be GRANTED. The Court further finds that Plaintiffs Motion is not well-taken and will be denied. Also pending before this Court are Defendant’s Motions to Strike Affidavits of the RTC Submitted with its Reply Memorandum, filed April 15, 1993 and to Strike the Affidavit of Gini Armstrong, also filed April 15, 1993. The Court finds that the documentary evidence submitted by the parties provides a sufficient basis for this Court’s ruling on the pending motions, the Court therefore need not consider the affidavits in question. Defendant’s Motions shall therefore be denied as moot. All remaining motions pending in this action shall be denied as moot.

I. OVERVIEW

The case at bar is troubling because it presents this Court with a difficult situation *1467 in which there is no decisive answer. On the one hand, the Court is faced with the opportunistic use of regulatory power by an agency of the United States Government, namely the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC). On the other hand, the Court is addressed by a private party who gambled and lost, and now asks this Court to release it from the consequences of its misfortune.

The Resolution Trust Corporation, in its capacity as Receiver for the defunct ABQ Bank (Old ABQ), 1 came into the picture holding itself out to the world as the managing general partner of the Ocotillo West Joint Venture (Ocotillo). RTC/ABQ managed Ocotillo, sold property as the managing general partner of Ocotillo, held itself out to numerous individuals and entities as general partner of Ocotillo and, in fact, RTC/ABQ’s attorney in this matter wrote a letter dated March 8, 1991, stating specifically that his firm represented “Ocotillo West Joint Venture and its general partner, ABQ Federal Savings Bank, under receivership of the Resolution Trust Corporation.” See Defendants Exhibit # JpS.

RTC/ABQ’s fair weather management of Ocotillo ran aground in December of 1990 when Bogle Farms, one of the Defendants in this action, forced Ocotillo into involuntary Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. When the wind shifted, and RTC/ABQ found that it was no longer expeditious to act as the general partner of Ocotillo, RTC/ABQ repudiated all of its previous representations, and declared that it was not, and had never been the general partner of Ocotillo. RTC/ABQ filed this declaratory judgment action seeking to use its super-regulatory powers to avoid the consequences of its prior acts and representations, and has even gone so far as to ask the same attorney who had some two years previously represented RTC/ABQ to be the general partner of Ocotillo, to come into this Court, and, with a straight face, argue that RTC/ABQ had never been the general partner of Ocotillo.

One can just imagine RTC officials sitting around a conference table with their attorneys and examining Ocotillo’s situation. They were presented with a serious problem because sometime in the spring of 1991 someone had figured out that if RTC/ABQ was really the general partner of Ocotillo, it was going to have creditor priority problems in the bankruptcy action. Someone, at this point, probably said something to the effect of “well, if we switch around a few ledger entries, repudiate all of our previous representations and then scream D’Oench, Duhme and 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e) very loudly, we might be able to come out on top.” At this point, I imagine that what followed was much back slapping and rejoicing, with everyone leaving the conference room arm-in-arm singing the RTC fight song [to the tune of “Onward Christian Soldiers”],

Onward Banking Soldiers,

Marching as if to war,

With D’Oench, Duhme and Congress

We’ll prevail for sure.

We needn’t worry,

We will win the fight

Since we lack accountability,

We are always right ...

Neither is Bogle Farms without responsibility for its own misfortune. Bogle Farms entered into a land sale transaction with Ocotillo Joint Venture in July of 1984 wherein Bogle apparently decided that rather than receive payment in full for the property it transferred to Ocotillo, that it would take a gamble on the possibility of greater profits in the future. Bogle’s gamble failed, but, while lamenting its bad luck with weeping and gnashing of teeth, Bogle fortuitously spotted a glimmer of light coming from the end of its proverbial tunnel. With the aid of its lawyers it developed a defense theory based on RTC/ABQ’s on-again/off-again general part *1468 nership in Ocotillo. Under this theory, Bogle claims, despite its status as an unsecured creditor of Ocotillo, that it should be paid out of Ocotillo’s assets before RTC/ABQ.

The Court’s disposition of this action is largely based on the factual background presented by the parties, with a smattering of equity mixed in for good measure. While the Court finds that neither party is particularly deserving of an equitable disposition in this matter, equity and law slightly favor a grant of summary judgment in favor of the Defendant, Bogle Farms. RTC’s regulatory power may be awesome, but it does not empower nor authorize the RTC to alter its status, in chameleon-like fashion, to make the most of the prevailing environment.

II. BACKGROUND

The matter presently before this Court is a declaratory judgment action filed by RTC/ ABQ against Bogle Farms and Ocotillo West Joint Venture. RTC/ABQ and Bogle have each filed summary judgment motions, and both agree that summary judgment is the appropriate disposition of this matter. The material factual allegations underlying this matter are either not in dispute, or have been stipulated for purposes of these motions.

RTC/ABQ filed this declaratory judgment action in an effort to resolve certain issues, relating to creditor priority, which arose in the Ocotillo Title 11 action currently pending in the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Arizona. The Judge in that action lifted the bankruptcy stay to permit this action to be filed.

A. Ocotillo’s Relationship with Bogle

Ocotillo is a joint venture formed under the laws of the state of Arizona. At present, the primary assets of Ocotillo are approximately 523 acres of real property, an adjoining 27-hole golf course and approximately 70 acres of lakes in a “master planned community” located in Chandler, Arizona.

On or about January 22,1988, ABQ Development Corporation (ABQD) and Amrock Enterprises, Inc. (Amrock), 2

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840 F. Supp. 1463, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19630, 1993 WL 572897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/resolution-trust-corp-v-ocotillo-west-joint-venture-nmd-1993.