W.H. Nimon, Bonnie K. Nimon, and W.H. Nimon, Trustee for Bonnie K. Nimon v. Resolution Trust Corporation

975 F.2d 240, 120 A.L.R. Fed. 775, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 26690, 1992 WL 252780
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 1992
Docket92-4361
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 975 F.2d 240 (W.H. Nimon, Bonnie K. Nimon, and W.H. Nimon, Trustee for Bonnie K. Nimon v. Resolution Trust Corporation) 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
W.H. Nimon, Bonnie K. Nimon, and W.H. Nimon, Trustee for Bonnie K. Nimon v. Resolution Trust Corporation, 975 F.2d 240, 120 A.L.R. Fed. 775, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 26690, 1992 WL 252780 (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

We visit again the plague of failures in the thrift industry. Petitioners W.H. Ni-mon and his wife, Bonnie K. Nimon, seek review of a decision of the Resolution Trust Corporation, denying federal deposit insurance coverage of funds deposited in the now-defunct Southwest Federal Savings and Loan Association. Because RTC’s determination was not arbitrary and capricious, we uphold its decision. We also find that the procedures followed in this case provided the process due under the Fifth Amendment.

I.

We are concerned with accounts and certificates of deposits petitioners maintained, in various capacities, in Southwest Federal Savings and Loan Association in Spring of 1991. The first two were certificates of deposit in the principal amount of $50,000 each. Certificate of deposit no. 14-120633-2, Certificate A, and certificate of deposit no. 14-120632-4, Certificate B, were both owned by Mr. and Mrs. Nimon, as joint tenants. Certificate A matured on May 14, 1991, with less than $200 accrued interest; Certificate B matured about June 3, 1991, with similar accrued interest. A third certificate of deposit, no. 14-138531-6, Certificate C, was in the name of W.H. Nimon, Trustee for Bonnie K. Nimon, and matured on May 14, 1991. The $98,000 from Certificate C were used to create a money market account on that date, with Mr. Nimon as trustee for Mrs. Nimon, the Trustee Account. Finally, there was another money market account, containing about $75,000, held in the name of Mr. Nimon, the Individual Account.

*243 When Certificates A and B matured in May and early June, respectively, their funds remained idle. On or about June 21, an employee of Southwest attempted to contact Mr. Nimon regarding the disposition of these funds. When Mr. Nimon replied by telephoning Southwest on June 24, 1991, he orally approved the transfer of the funds from Certificates A and B to a money market account. Those funds, totalling just more than $100,000, were deposited in the Trustee Account on that date. Mr. Nimon claims that it was his understanding that the transfers he authorized would be to an account with deposit insurance covering the face amounts of Certificates A and B. After these transfers, however, the Trustee Account contained more than $198,000.

On July 26, 1991, the Office of Thrift Supervision closed Southwest and appointed RTC as receiver. On that date, only the Individual Account with $75,085 and the Trustee Account with $199,940 remained open.

In October, 1991, RTC notified the Ni-mons that some of their funds in Southwest were excess and uninsured. RTC initially stated that insurance coverage extended to the entire Individual Account and to the first $100,000 of the Trustee Account. RTC also stated that coverage would be extended to an additional $24,915 of the Trustee Account, because that amount of Mr. Nimon’s individual coverage had not been exhausted by his individual account.

The Nimons requested RTC to reconsider this decision. They submitted a statement of facts for RTC’s consideration, which maintained that the funds of Certificates A and B had been transferred to an account without adequate insurance coverage without their authorization.

RTC did reconsider its decision, finding that the Nimons were entitled to even less coverage. On December 4,1991, RTC modified its decision and stated that only $100,-000 in the Trustee Account were insured, and that its initial allowance of an additional $24,915 as part of Mr. Nimon’s coverage had been mistaken. Once again, the Ni-mons sought to have RTC reconsider its decision. On February 6, 1992, RTC denied this application for reconsideration.. RTC’s letter of February 6 stated the reasons for its coverage decision, and stated that it was RTC’s “final determination.”

II.

Our jurisdiction, the first question, turns on the proper construction of 12 U.S.C. § 1821(f). This section was among those rewritten by FIRREA in 1989. The statute, governing the payment of deposit insurance by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or, as here, RTC, reads in pertinent part:

(3) Resolution of disputes
(A) Resolutions in accordance to corporation regulations
In the case of any disputed claim relating to any insured deposit or any determination of insurance coverage with respect to any deposit, the Corporation may resolve such disputed claim in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Corporation establishing procedures for resolving such claims.
(B) Adjudication of claims
If the Corporation has not prescribed regulations establishing procedures for resolving disputed claims, the Corporation may require the final determination of a court of competent jurisdiction before paying any such claim.
(4) Review of corporation’s determination
Final determination made by the Corporation shall be reviewable in accordance with chapter 7 of Title 5 by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia or the court of appeals for the Federal judicial circuit where the principal place of business of the depository institution is located.

FDIC and RTC have not prescribed regulations governing deposit insurance coverage disputes. RTC policy has been to resolve disputes on a informal basis.

RTC argues that this review of its decision should be in the federal district court, not the court of appeals. This has practical *244 merit but, unhappily relies upon a flawed reading of section 1821(f).

First; RTC correctly notes that subsection 1821(f)(3)(A) has no application, because no regulations governing coverage disputes have been prescribed. RTC then concludes that subsection (f)(3)(B) requires that a “final determination” reviewable by this court must be made by a court of competent jurisdiction, instead of by RTC. This ignores that by the statute RTC may require a court determination — it does not require RTC to do so. That is, the statute permits RTC to itself render a final determination, even though there are no regulations formalizing its procedures. In this case, although RTC followed informal procedures, its last pronouncement denying the Nimons' request for reconsideration is for all effects and purposes — and as its own terms state — the “final determination” of this dispute. See Abrams v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp., 938 F.2d 22, 25 (2d Cir.1991) (rejecting FDIC’s assertion same jurisdiction argument). 1

Once there has been a final determination of the coverage dispute by RTC, subsection 1821(f)(4) provides for review by the court of appeals. This provision controls, regardless of the fact, which RTC emphasizes, that the pre-FIRREA statutory scheme provided for initial review of FDIC and FSLIC insurance coverage determinations in federal district court. See e.g. Patrick A. Hymel, CLU, & Assoc. v. FDIC,

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975 F.2d 240, 120 A.L.R. Fed. 775, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 26690, 1992 WL 252780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wh-nimon-bonnie-k-nimon-and-wh-nimon-trustee-for-bonnie-k-nimon-v-ca5-1992.