Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. United States

33 Fed. Cl. 233, 1995 U.S. Claims LEXIS 71, 1995 WL 223266
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedApril 11, 1995
DocketNo. 51-88C
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 33 Fed. Cl. 233 (Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. United States, 33 Fed. Cl. 233, 1995 U.S. Claims LEXIS 71, 1995 WL 223266 (uscfc 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

SMITH, Chief Judge.

This ease comes before the court to determine damages for breach of contract. The court has previously found liability against the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) for breaching its contract with Wells Fargo Bank to issue a loan note guarantee pursuant to the government’s ethanol loan guarantee program. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. United States, 26 Cl.Ct. 805 (1992). The government’s ethanol loan guarantee program sought to achieve various policy goals, including the development of alternative, renewable energy sources, the creation of an enlarged grain market, and the promotion of increased employment in rural areas. The highly uncertain economic viability of ethanol caused private lenders to deny loans for the construction of ethanol plants. Accordingly, the ethanol loan guarantee program was designed to provide incentives to lending institutions by guaranteeing 90% of the financing needed to construct ethanol plants. In this case, the program succeeded in inducing Wells’ to finance the construction of an ethanol plant. The company constructing the ethanol plant was High Plains Corporation.

The contract breached in this case was a unilateral contract that consisted of documents entitled “Conditional Commitment for Guarantee” and “Intercreditor Agreement.” These documents contained conditions to be met by Wells in return for the FmHA’s issuance of the guarantee. The existence of these documents induced Wells to perform by lending High Plains the necessary funds to construct an ethanol plant. The plant was constructed and was operating, apparently profitably, at the time of the trial. In this court’s previous opinion on liability the court found that a valid contract existed and that the FmHA breached its obligation to issue the guarantee.

Trial on damages presented the court with the unique task of determining what the absence of a guarantee cost the plaintiff, even though the loan never defaulted. The basic issues presented were whether Wells suffered any damage because of the breach, whether the damages claimed were foreseeable by FmHA, and whether the damages claimed have been quantified to a reasonable degree of certainty. For the reasons stated in this opinion the court awards Wells Fargo damages in the amount of $10,885,423.86.

FACTS

A. The Banking Industry.

The liability, or non-asset, side of a bank’s balance sheet primarily consists of deposits and equity. Deposits comprise a large liability item on a bank’s balance sheet, and come in a variety of forms. A significant portion of a bank’s deposits are insured by the federal government, and it is deposits that banks use to conduct their lending business. A bank’s lending activity is accomplished by leveraging its capital. The amount of capital determines how much lending a bank can do. For example, if a bank is operating at a 5% capital to asset ratio, it can hold 20 dollars of assets (i.e., loans to customers) for every dollar of capital invested by its shareholders. Banks do not lend out their capital, but instead use their capital to support a highly leveraged liability structure. Therefore, when a bank has a dollar of capital it can go out and raise deposits from the public, both insured and uninsured. It is by managing this liability structure, or “sources of funding” as banks call it, that a bank can build its balance sheet, and build its asset base. See Tran. 399. Wells’ highly credible expert, Nevins D. Baxter, testified that typically 50-85% of a bank’s assets are loans, with the remainder constituting risk-free government securities or cash. This is true in part because national banks are generally prohibited from owning stock, except when acquired as part of a loan restructuring. Accordingly, the asset side of a bank’s balance sheet consists mostly of loans, with comparatively few assets derived from fee generating businesses.

The banking industry is highly regulated. Mr. Baxter testified that the focus of the federal regulators’ attention is on capital levels and asset quality. The “legal lending [237]*237limit” regulates the amount a bank can loan relative to its capital. Tran. 391. Bank examiners rate banks on a scale of 1 to 5; 1 denotes a healthy bank and 5 denotes a bank that has gone out of business. Larger banks typically have resident regulators that monitor their capital levels and asset quality year round. Banks also have internal procedures that monitor asset quality. When these procedures are sound, and followed, the regulators have more confidence in the objectivity of the bank’s internal system. This leads to less scrutiny, and less over the shoulder regulation. Most important these procedures are in the best interest of depositors, stockholders, and consistent with sound banking practices.

Banks are required to maintain certain minimum capital to asset ratios. However, regulators insist, and bank management certainly wants, a capital to asset ratio higher than the regulatory minimum. Regulators are not comfortable having banks approach the regulatory minimum, and bank management wants to present the bank to the marketplace as a safe institution. Accordingly, the regulatory minimum is in actuality a danger level. If a bank is even close to the regulatory minimum there is usually a problem. When a bank gets in trouble it begins to liquidate its assets to avoid approaching the regulatory minimum. Baxter testified that Wells Fargo has historically been well above the regulatory minimum, but that Wells Fargo has been more heavily leveraged than other large banks. See Plaintiffs Exhibit 20x.

The quality of loans (the bank’s principal assets) are also monitored by a rating system. Loans are classified on a 9-point scale; 1 signifies an excellent trouble-free loan, and 9 signifies a total loss. The majority of loans are actually somewhere on the continuum between 1 and 9, depending on the quality of collateral, the timeliness of payments, and the general risks associated with the borrower’s business. For example, a loan rated as 5 or 6 may go on a “watch list” or “special mention list” which triggers certain internal policies and procedures the bank uses to work with the borrower to cure any deficiencies. If a loan is rated 7 or 8 it would probably be classified as “substandard" or “doubtful.” As the classification reaches 7 or 8 the likelihood that bank regulators will require specific “loan loss reserves,” or in the extreme case a partial or total “charge-off,” dramatically increases.

A charge-off is the writing off of a portion of a loan believed to be no longer collectible. Charge-offs reflect the bank’s and the regulator’s view about the current value of the loan as an asset. A charge-off corresponds to a decrease in the bank’s capital, and reduces the bank’s income in the period taken. This capital loss prevents the bank from growing its business by leveraging the lost capital in accordance with its capital to asset ratio. In extreme cases charge-offs may even cause the bank to liquidate assets if its capital to asset ratio reaches a danger level.

The quality rating of a particular loan also affects the accounting treatment of payments received from the borrower. As a loan moves down the continuum from 1 to 9 it will eventually be classified as a non-performing loan for accounting purposes. Loans are classified as non-performing if there are serious or constant delinquencies by the debtor in scheduled payments, or if there is a substantial decrease in the value of collateral, regardless of whether the debtor is current on payments.

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33 Fed. Cl. 233, 1995 U.S. Claims LEXIS 71, 1995 WL 223266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-bank-na-v-united-states-uscfc-1995.