Salt Lick Bancorp. v. Federal Deposit Insurance

187 F. App'x 428
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 2006
Docket05-5291
StatusUnpublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 187 F. App'x 428 (Salt Lick Bancorp. v. Federal Deposit Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salt Lick Bancorp. v. Federal Deposit Insurance, 187 F. App'x 428 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

KATZ, District Judge.

Plaintiffs-Appellants (“Appellants”) are the former holding company and the former President and CEO of Salt Lick Deposit Bank (“the Bank”). Appellants brought suit against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”); four FDIC employees in their personal capacities (“the FDIC Employees”); the Kentucky Department of Financial Institutions (“KDFI”); four KDFI employees in their personal capacities (“the KDFI Employ *431 ees”); APS Financial Corporation; an APS employee named Ray Mastroleo; and David Scott, the Bank’s former Chief Financial Officer. The six-count complaint essentially alleges that the actions of the FDIC, the KDFI, and their individually sued employees caused Salt Lick Bancorp to sell the Bank for less than full value; that APS, Mastroleo, and Scott defrauded the Bank by arranging for it to buy nearly worthless industrial development bonds, causing it to become “critically undercapitalized”; and that the FDIC and the KDFI failed to spot the fraud and report it to the Bank in a timely fashion.

Appellants appeal from the district court’s final judgment dismissing the case. They seek review of a series of prior orders and opinions that dismissed claims and parties, eventually whittling their case down to nothing. We affirm the rulings and the judgment of the district court.

I. Factual Background

Salt Lick Bancorp, Inc., is the former holding-company parent of Salt Lick Deposit Bank, a small bank in Eastern Kentucky. John D. Hughes, Jr., a Salt Lick Bancorp shareholder, is the Bank’s former President and CEO. Hughes, an attorney, represents himself and Salt Lick Bancorp in this litigation.

The factual record in this case consists primarily of the sworn declarations of the individually sued government employees; Appellant Hughes’s “Sworn Verification of Factual Statement,” which is comprised solely of an incorporation by reference of the “Factual Statement” portion of Appellants’ December 28, 2001, “Memorandum Opposing Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss or for Summary Judgment”; and the Affidavit of John D. Hughes, Jr., which purports to adopt, under oath, again, the same factual “testimony” from the December 28, 2001 memorandum. Hughes’s deposition was taken; however, as Hughes himself asserts, under the mistaken apprehension that it helps his case, he never made the full deposition part of the record below. The content of Appellants’ “factual statement” will be discussed below. In the meantime, the sworn statements of the FDIC Employees provide some relevant background information.

Salt Lick Deposit Bank was formed in 1901. In 1999, Salt Lick Bancorp was formed as a one-bank holding company, with its primary asset being 100% of the Bank’s outstanding shares. John D. Hughes, Jr., owned eighty percent of Salt Lick Bancorp; Paula R. Hughes owned one percent; Naomi C. Shrout owned nineteen percent. When Salt Lick Bancorp was formed, Central Bank & Trust Company of Lexington, Kentucky, loaned it what Defendant-Appellee Cottrell Webster, the FDIC’s Regional Memphis Director, called a “substantial” sum of money.

On March 1, 2001, the FDIC and the KDFI began a joint “Safety and Soundness” examination of the Bank. According to Webster, the Bank had learned from independent consultants prior to this investigation that its bond portfolio had undergone significant losses. The FDIC and KDFI investigators made a similar finding. They concluded that the Bank’s capital level was below 2 percent of total assets, meaning it was “Critically Undercapitalized” under applicable federal regulations, which required the FDIC to appoint a receiver within ninety days.

After reviewing the findings with other FDIC officials, Webster, as FDIC Regional Director, issued a “Prompt Corrective Action Directive” on April 17, 2001, requiring the Bank to develop a plan to achieve a capital ratio of 4 percent within twenty-one days. The Bank appealed on April 30, 2001, and the FDIC began considering the *432 appeal. On April 27, 2001, the Bank held a board of directors meeting at the FDIC’s Lexington Field Office. According to Webster, during this meeting four directors, including John D. Hughes, Jr., approached the FDIC and the KDFI with a plan to sell the Bank to its largest creditor, Central Bancshares, the parent of Central Bank & Trust Company. On May 9, 2001, Salt Lick Bancorp sold the Bank to Central Bancshares. Thereafter, the Bank withdrew its appeal of the FDIC’s Prompt Corrective Action Directive.

In his “Factual Statement,” Hughes states that the Bank purchased the problematic bonds between 1998 and 2000 and disclosed them on its books and quarterly call reports as municipal revenue bonds, but that the Bank discovered in August of 2000 that they were in fact industrial development bonds. (Industrial development bonds are not backed by the credit of the issuing political entity, but generally by the credit of the industry for whose benefit they are issued). He claims the Bank’s estimates of its bond losses were far lower than the FDIC concluded. Further, the Bank estimated its tangible equity at over 4 percent, as opposed to below 2 percent, if both bond losses and loan losses were accounted for. The Bank had developed and filed with the FDIC on February 8, 2001, • its own Safety and Soundness Compliance Plan to remedy the problems with its bond portfolio. Although Hughes alleges the FDIC violated its own asset classification and securities appraisal policy when it reviewed the Bank’s bond holdings, and misrepresented facts about the bond portfolio, he does not explain in what ways the violations and misrepresentations occurred.

Hughes points out that the plan to sell the Bank to Central Bancshares was presented to the FDIC as a potential “last resort,” and that the Bank had hired a broker to find a buyer other than Central Bancshares. Hughes also describes a known “personality conflict” between himself and the FDIC’s Examiner-in-Charge, Defendant-Appellee Charles Vice. He claims the FDIC’s Prompt Corrective Action Directive would have required the Bank to maintain Tier I capital greater than 7.5 percent, but the FDIC has never required the Bank’s new owners to maintain more than 5.9 percent.

Finally, Hughes makes several unsupported allegations, including that the FDIC pressured Central Bancshares to “strong-arm” Salt Lick Bancorp into selling to Central Bancshares, that it precluded other potential bidders from conducting due diligence investigations, and that it led Central Bancshares to believe it would not allow Hughes “back into the banking industry as a competitor,” causing Central Bancshares to withdraw an offer of employment to Hughes.

The Complaint, which the district court described as “various legal conclusions supported by few specified facts,” sets forth six counts. Count I alleges the FDIC and the KDFI “unconstitutionally deprived the Plaintiffs herein of their property, namely Salt Lick Deposit Bank ... and their ability to remain involved in the banking industry, without due process of law, and effectively took same from them without fair and adequate compensation or a reasonable opportunity to obtain same.” Count II alleges the FDIC “improperly failed to perform the discretionary function of open-bank assistance as permitted under 12 U.S.C. § 1823

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Bluebook (online)
187 F. App'x 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salt-lick-bancorp-v-federal-deposit-insurance-ca6-2006.