Dear Associates:
Over the past several years, many of the assets of insolvent lending institutions
have been disposed of by the FDIC and the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC)
in an attempt to resolve the financial crisis that gripped the banking industry
in the late 80's and early 90's. The transfer of these assets is
winding down and the title insurance community has, for the most part, established
underwriting guidelines for such transfers. But a recent New York Supreme Court
case, FDIC vs. DeGuardiola, which appeared in the New York Law Journal on January
5, 1995, reemphasizes the concerns that the title industry has when dealing
with the FDIC or RTC.
One of those concerns involves what is known as the D'Oench Duhme Doctrine.
In 1942, in a case entitled D'Oench Duhme and Company vs. FDIC 325 US
447 (1942), the United States Supreme Court held that secret agreements designed
to deceive creditors or the public authority or which would tend to have such
an effect could not be asserted as a defense against the FDIC suing in its
corporate capacity to enforce a note. The decision in D'Oench Duhme was
subsequently codified into law. The resulting statute, 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1823(e)
provides as follows:
"No agreement which tends to diminish or defeat the interest of the
Corporation in any asset acquired by it under this Section or under Section
1821 of this title, either as security for a loan or as a receiver of any insured
depository institution, shall be valid against the Corporation unless such
agreement -
1. is in writing;
2. was executed by the depository institution and any person claiming an adverse
interest thereunder, including the obligor, contemporaneously with the acquisition
of the asset by the depository institution;
3. was approved by the board of directors of the depository institution or
its loan committee, which approval shall be reflected in the Minutes of said
board
or committee; and
4. has been, continuously, from the time of its execution, an official
record of the depository institution."
All four of the above requirements must be met in order to defeat the rights
of the FDIC.
In DeGuardiola, a banking institution known as Goldome entered into an equity
line of credit agreement in 1988 ("the 1988 note") with the defendant,
Robert DeGuardiola and his wife, Joanne, in which it loaned them $180,000.00,
and took back a security interest in the shares of stock and proprietary leases
covering three (3) cooperative apartment units. Under the note which the defendants
signed, the lender had the right to accelerate payment upon a default and to
declare the full amount of principal and interest immediately due and payable.
Goldome already held a first lien on these shares resulting from a $210,000.00
loan it made to the defendants in 1984 ("the 1984 note"). Subsequently,
in 1990, the defendants defaulted on the 1988 note. An officer of Goldome wrote
to the defendants and advised that the bank would forego its rights to foreclose,
if, among other things, the proceeds of sale of one of the units (hereafter
referred to as Unit 10C) were used to pay off the 1984 note and one-third of
the 1988 note. The letter further indicated that the bank would agree not to
seek a deficiency judgment on the 1988 note.
The bank's agreement was confirmed in an affidavit that was submitted
by one of its officers in a separate action (Davenport vs. DeGuardiola, N.Y.
Supreme Ct., N.Y. County, Index No. 63297/85) which resulted in an order directing
the sale of Unit 10C free and clear of a lien placed on the unit by the ex-wife
of defendant Robert DeGuardiola.
At the closing of the court ordered sale of Unit 10C in February 1991, the
proceeds of sale were dispersed in accordance with Goldome's request,
and the bank delivered UCC-3 termination statements, extinguishing its security
interest in the shares and the proprietary leases to the three units, and effectively
waiving its rights to the remaining balance due on the 1988 note.
Thereafter, in May 1991, the Superintendent of Banking took over possession
of Goldome's assets and the FDIC was appointed as Receiver of the property
of Goldome. In 1994, the FDIC sent a notice of default to the defendants contending
that there remained a balance due on the 1988 note, and moved for summary judgment
in lieu of a complaint on the note. It relied upon the provisions of 12 U.S.C.
Sec. 1823(e), and it took the position that the bank's agreement was
not reflected in the Minutes of the meetings of the bank's board of directors,
nor did they reflect an agreement to satisfy the note. Consequently, such agreement(s)
could not be used to defeat its claims for payment on the 1988 note.
The defendants argued to the contrary, saying that the note was satisfied
as part of the sale of Unit 10C, that Goldome had agreed, in a sworn affidavit
and in earlier written correspondence, to release defendants from liability,
and that since the agreement that FDIC was attempting to set aside was a matter
of public record, Sec. 1823(c) did not apply.
The Court found the defendants' arguments to be unpersuasive. It said
that in the Davenport case, all that was decided was that Unit 10C could be
sold free of any lien of the ex-wife of Robert DeGuardiola. It did not address
the propriety of the bank's agreement with the defendants. The Court
further stated that "even if the agreement is part of the public record
or FDIC has knowledge of the side agreement", it cannot defeat the claim
of the FDIC, since if the agreement would diminish the interest of the FDIC,
it must be part of the official record of the bank and be reflected in the
Minutes of its board of directors. Finally, the Court held that the bank officer's
affidavit did not meet the strict requirement of Section 1823(e) that the agreement
be reflected in the Minutes of the Board.
Although the Court denied FDIC's motion for summary judgment, it did
so without prejudice to renewal of the motion pending completion of limited
discovery granted to the defendants to require FDIC to review all the records
of Goldome's board of directors to determine if there was any reference
to the note at issue in the case.
From a title perspective, there are instances that arise in dealing with lending
institutions in which we should exercise great care. For example, where the
lender, as in DeGuardiola, has agreed to settle or reduce the amount to be
paid on a mortgage note, or has subordinated its mortgage to another mortgage
or lien which would otherwise be junior in priority, and that lender later
becomes insolvent, its prior actions may not suffice to defeat a claim made
by the FDIC or RTC, unless such agreement complies with 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1823(e).
Should you have any questions regarding the DeGuardiola decision, or wish
to discuss the applicability of D'Oench Duhme to a particular situation,
please contact Company Counsel.