Seidman v. Office of Thrift Supervision, Department of the Treasury

37 F.3d 911
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 1994
Docket92-3722, 92-3729 and 92-5392
StatusUnknown
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 F.3d 911 (Seidman v. Office of Thrift Supervision, Department of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seidman v. Office of Thrift Supervision, Department of the Treasury, 37 F.3d 911 (3d Cir. 1994).

Opinions

[915]*915OPINION OF THE COURT

HUTCHINSON, Circuit Judge.

In these consolidated cases, Lawrence Seidman (“Seidman”) and John Bailey (“Bailey”) petition for review of the order of the Director (“Director”) of the Office of Thrift Supervision (“OTS”) subjecting them to administrative sanctions for their part in a loan transaction Crestmont Federal Savings and Loan (“Crestmont”) considered while Seid-man was Chairman of Crestmont’s Board of Directors (“Board”) and Bailey was one of its officers. Specifically, Bailey petitions for review of that portion of the Director’s order publicly directing him to cease and desist from participating in unsafe and unsound lending practices. Seidman’s petition seeks review of that portion of the Director’s order removing him from his office at Crestmont and banning him from further participation in the banking industry.

When the Director issued the order against Seidman and Bailey, he remanded the case to an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) to determine their ability to pay civil monetary penalties because the ALJ who had heard the case failed to assess a civil penalty against Bailey and to properly document Seidman’s ability to pay the $930,000 civil penalty the ALJ had recommended. The remand order raises a question of finality that we must consider before deciding whether we have jurisdiction to review Bailey’s and Seidman’s petitions. We conclude in Part II that we do have jurisdiction.1

In the administrative proceeding, the Director found Bailey approved a commitment for a purchase money mortgage to a real estate buyer who was buying property from a seller in which Seidman had an interest. The Director concluded that approval of this commitment was an unsafe and unsound lending practice justifying a cease and desist order against Bailey under section 1818(b) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (“FDIA”), 12 U.S.C.A. §§ 1811-1833 (West 1989 & Supp.1994), as amended by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”), P.L. No. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183 (1989).

The Director concluded that Seidman’s conduct required him to issue a prohibition and removal order in accord with 12 U.S.C.A. § 1818(e). To support this ultimate administrative sanction the Director found Seidman impermissibly used his position at Crestmont for his own benefit in order to obtain a release from his personal guarantee of a loan; this loan had been made by another lending institution to a real estate partnership from which Seidman was in the process of withdrawing; Seidman’s withdrawal from the partnership was being negotiated at the same time that Bailey made the loan commitment for a purchase from the partnership, resulting in the Director’s cease and desist order against him. As additional support for his order removing Seidman from Crest-mont’s Board of Directors and banning him from banking for life, the Director also found that Seidman failed to renotify Crestmont’s Board or Senior Loan Committee of his continuing interest in the real estate partnership he was withdrawing from while they were considering the loan OTS objected to and that Seidman later attempted to hinder the ensuing OTS investigation by covering up his part in preparing a memo in support of his request for the release. The Director concluded that each of these findings warranted Seidman’s removal as Chairman of Crest-mont’s Board and required him to be permanently barred from banking.

We believe the Director 'erred in concluding Bailey’s issuance of a purchase money loan commitment to a buyer from the real estate development partnership from which Seidman was in the final stages of withdrawing exposed Crestmont to the serious, abnormal risk that constitutes an unsafe or un[916]*916sound practice. Therefore, we will grant Bailey’s petition for review and vacate that part of the Director’s order commanding Bailey to cease and desist from such practices.

We reject Seidman’s preliminary argument that 12 U.S.C.A. § 1818(e) violates due process because it fails to afford him a trial before a fair and unbiased tribunal. We conclude, however, that the Director’s findings that Seidman violated 12 U.S.C.A. § 1818(e)(1) when he sought to utilize his position at Crestmont to obtain a release from his guarantee and when he failed to remind Crestmont’s Board or Senior Loan Committee of his interest in the real estate partnership are not supported by substantial evidence. Though the Director properly determined that Seidman engaged in an unsafe or unsound practice when he attempted to hinder the OTS investigation, we conclude that there is no evidence to support the Director’s finding that this act of Seidman resulted in his receipt of an actual benefit meeting section 1818(e)(l)(B)(iii)’s condition of an untoward or prohibited effect.2 Accordingly, we will grant Seidman’s petition for review and vacate that part of the Director’s order permanently removing him from his job at Crestmont and banning him from banking. Nevertheless, because of our conclusion that Seidman did commit an unsafe or unsound practice when he unsuccessfully attempted to hinder the OTS investigation in his dealings with his former partners and their lender, we will remand the case to OTS for the Director to consider entering a cease and desist order and civil monetary penalties against Seidman as authorized by section 1818(b).

Our disposition of the merits of Seidman’s petition requires us to vacate the OTS preliminary suspension order for the reasons given in Part VII of this opinion. Therefore, we find it unnecessary to consider Seidman’s appeal of the district court’s order dismissing, for lack of jurisdiction, his action to enjoin the preliminary suspension order.

I. Factual and Procedural History

A. Seidman’s Business Dealings

Lawrence Seidman is an attorney in his mid-forties who has been engaged in the practice of banking and securities law for twenty years. During the past decade he has specialized in real estate investments and begun to pursue a career in banking. In 1989, he headed a group of investors who purchased stock in Crestmont, a thrift institution in Edison, New Jersey.3 Seidman became a director of Crestmont and, in November 1989, was named Chairman of its Board of Directors.

In 1986, before he became a Crestmont director, Seidman formed a partnership, Fulton Street Associates (“FSA”), with James Zorlas (“Zorlas”) and Lawrence Rappaport (“Rappaport”) to purchase and develop industrial condominiums on a piece of commercial property (“Boonton Project”). FSA’s partners made substantial capital contributions to the Boonton Project and obtained additional financing from United Jersey Bank (“UJB”), secured in part by all the partners’ personal guarantees. Seidman listed his affiliation with FSA on conflict disclosure forms he filed with Crestmont when he became a director.

In mid-1990, Seidman decided to focus his business activities on Crestmont. Recognizing that his outside business ventures could create conflicts that would prevent Crest-mont from making otherwise desirable loans, Seidman advised the Board that he had begun to withdraw from his outside business ventures and started disposing of various business interests to his former partners. Rappaport agreed to acquire Seidman’s interest in FSA, promising to indemnify Seid-man against any continuing obligation on FSA’s loan from UJB without any further [917]

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37 F.3d 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seidman-v-office-of-thrift-supervision-department-of-the-treasury-ca3-1994.