Ward v. Resolution Trust Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 1993
Docket92-2443
StatusPublished

This text of Ward v. Resolution Trust Corp. (Ward v. Resolution Trust Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Resolution Trust Corp., (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 92-2443.

Terry S. WARD, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

RESOLUTION TRUST CORPORATION, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

July 22, 1993.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

Before GOLDBERG, GARWOOD and WIENER, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

In this appeal we review the continued efforts of Plaintiff-Appellant Terry S. Ward to

purchase the Katy Plaza Office Building (the "Building") in Houston, Texas, from Defendants-

Appellees Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) which had acquired the Building as a result of the

failure of a thrift. Despite Ward's earlier efforts to buy the Building, it had been sold by the RTC to

Defendant-Appellee Patriot American Investors, L.P. (PAI). The Building was just one of a number

of properties included in a nationwide assemblage conveyed by RTC to PAI in a so-called "portfolio"

sale. Ward had sought unsuccessfully to enjoin that transaction to the extent the Building was

included among the properties to be sold in globo to PAI. Despite that fait accompli, Ward now

seeks rescission of the sale of the Building to PAI; he does not seek monetary damages or other

relief.

Concluding that the district court reached the right result in dismissing Ward's action, we

affirm. Moreover, given our consideration of the briefs of counsel and their oral arguments, and our

review of the record in this case, we would be inclined to affirm the district court without writing an

opinion, much less publishing it, but for the need we perceive to disabuse Ward and others "out there"

who might be similarly situated and similarly inclined to instigate and prosecute litigation grounded

on the same flawed theories. We refer to Ward's legal conclusion that the RTC's proposed disposition

of property may be enjoined, or its actual disposition rescinded, on allegations of inadequate price, inadequate competition, unequal treatment of potential offerors, or failure of the RTC to make a

determination that the proposed sale will "maximize" the net present value return on the property in

question.

More specifically we are constrained to refute Ward's contentions that the RTC's final orders

awarding the sale of the Building to PAI exceeded that agency's statutorily authorized powers and

functions, in violation of Congressional restrictions set forth in subsections (3)(C) and (11)(D)(ii) of

12 U.S.C. § 1441a(b). In so positing, Ward insists that neither his initial action for an injunction nor

his post-sale action for rescission was barred by the anti-injunction provision of FIRREA.1 Like the

district court before us, however, we find that Ward's theory was conceived in flawed logic and

therefore dies aborning.

I

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Background

The Building was previously owned by a now-failed thrift institution which operated under

RTC conservatorship from June 15, 1990, until July 26, 1991, when the RTC-Receiver was appointed

to serve as receiver for that institution, thereby succeeding to ownership of the Building. Prior to

being placed in conservatorship and later in receivership, the subject thrift had negotiated with a

number of prospective purchasers of the Building, including Ward. In December 1990, he submitted

a purchase offer, co ntingent on acquiring some adjacent property. That offer was rejected by the

RTC, but Ward and others were subsequently notified that the Building would be re-offered.

In June 1991, Ward again offered to buy the Building and the same adjacent land, but the

RTC rejected this offer too. Nevertheless, Ward was invited to submit yet another, higher offer for

the seller to consider. Although Ward ultimately did so, it was not until well after the RTC and PAI

had contracted for the portfolio sale in question. The contract between the RTC and PAI ("Master

Agreement of Sale") contemplated the sale of numerous properties scattered throughout the United

1 The Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989, 12 U.S.C. § 1811 et seq. See, in particular, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(j). States and having an aggregate value between $300 and $500 million. Both the Building and the

adjoining land were included among the properties constituting the portfolio assemblage.

The Master Agreement of Sale was the product of extensive negotiations between PAI and

the RTC, which began in February 1991. Independent experts were retained to evaluate the

economic viability and structure of such a transaction, the qualifications of PAI, and the

recommended controls and protections. In May 1991, the Board of Directors of the RTC approved

such a portfolio sale in principle. In August 1991, the Master Agreement of Sale was executed by

the RTC. That agreement provided for the affected properties to be sold to PAI at 100% of current

market value, as determined by expert appraisers. It also provided that the aggregate sales proceeds

of all properties (as distinguished from the individual sales proceeds of each separate property) should

not be less than the total for which the individual properties could be sold under pre-existing,

applicable policies of the RTC. Following initial negotiations, a package of five properties, including

the Building, was agreed upon by the RTC and PAI. A closing was tentatively scheduled for June

1992, at an aggregate price of approximately $30 million.

B. Litigation

Ward instituted the instant action on May 12, 1992, after the RTC failed to agree to his

amicable demand for rescission of the Master Agreement of Sale to the extent it covered the Building.

In the district court Ward sought review under the Administrative Procedure Act.2 Specifically, he

sought to enjoin PAI, Defendant-Appellee Albert V. Casey, and the RTC in its corporate capacity,

from consummating the sale of the Building and transferring its title during the pendency of the

litigation. As noted, he sought no monetary damages. On June 2, 1992, the district court denied the

injunction and dismissed Ward's complaint.3 In so doing, the court found numerous problems of

substance and procedure in Ward's litigation, including principally the one we address today: the

anti-injunction provisions of FIRREA, specifically § 1821(j), which provides that "[N]o court may

take any action ... to restrain or affect the exercise of powers or functions of [the RTC] as a

2 5 U.S.C. § 701-706. 3 Ward v. RTC, 796 F.Supp. 256 (S.D.Tex.1992). conservator or receiver."4

C. Subsequent Occurrences

After Ward was unsuccessful in the district court in his attempt to block the RTC's disposition

of the Building as part of the subject portfolio sale to PAI, he sought supervisory relief from this

court pending appeal. We denied such relief, and the sale of the Building was closed on August 20,

1992. That is the transaction which Ward now seeks to rescind.

II

ANALYSIS

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