To finance the purchase of land in Louisiana, petitioners
borrowed money from a bank insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) and, in consideration for the loan, executed a
note, a collateral mortgage, and personal guarantees. When
petitioners failed to pay an installment due on a renewal of the
note, the bank filed suit for principal and interest in a Louisiana
court, which suit was removed on diversity grounds to Federal
District Court. Petitioners alleged, as a defense against the
bank's claim, that the land purchase and their note had been
procured by the bank's misrepresentations overstating the amount of
land and mineral acres in the tract, and falsely stating that there
were no outstanding mineral leases on the property. No references
to the alleged representations appeared in the documents executed
by petitioners, in the bank's records, or in the minutes of the
bank's board of directors or loan committee. While the suit was
pending, a Louisiana official closed the bank because of its
unsound condition, and appointed the FDIC as receiver. The FDIC
ultimately acquired petitioners' note, and was substituted as a
plaintiff in this lawsuit. The District Court granted summary
judgment for the FDIC, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, holding
that the word "agreement" in a provision of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act of 1950, 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e), encompassed the
kinds of material terms or warranties asserted by petitioners in
their misrepresentation defense and, because § 1823(e)'s
requirements were not met, the defense was barred. Section 1823(e)
provides that no "agreement" tending to diminish or defeat the
FDIC's "right, title or interest" in any asset acquired by the FDIC
under the section shall be valid against the FDIC unless it shall
have been (1) in writing, (2) executed contemporaneously with the
bank's acquisition of the asset, (3) approved by the bank's board
of directors or loan committee and reflected in the minutes of the
board or committee, and (4) continuously, from the time of its
execution, an official record of the bank.
Held: A condition to payment of a note, including the
truth of an express warranty, is part of the "agreement" to which
the requirements of § 1823(e) attach. Because the
representations alleged by petitioners
Page 484 U. S. 87
constituted such a condition and did not meet the statute's
requirements, they cannot be asserted as a defense here. Pp.
484 U. S.
90-96.
(a) The word "agreement" in § 1823(e) is not limited to an
express promise to perform an act in the future. The essence of
petitioners' defense is that the bank made certain warranties
regarding the land, the truth of which was a condition to
performance of their obligation to repay the loan. As used in
commercial and contract law, the term "agreement" often has a wider
meaning than a promise, and embraces such a condition upon
performance. This common meaning of the word "agreement" must be
assigned to its usage in § 1823(e) if that section is to
fulfill its intended purposes of allowing federal and state bank
examiners to rely on a bank's records in evaluating the bank's
assets, ensuring mature consideration of unusual loan transactions
by senior bank officials, and preventing fraudulent insertion of
new terms, with the collusion of bank employees, when a bank
appears headed for failure.
Cf. D'Oench, Duhme & Co. v.
FDIC, 315 U. S. 447. Pp.
484 U. S.
90-93.
(b) There is no merit to petitioners' argument that, even if a
misrepresentation concerning an existing fact can sometimes
constitute an agreement covered by § 1823(e), it at least does
not do so when the misrepresentation was fraudulent and the FDIC
had knowledge of the asserted defense when it acquired the note.
Neither fraud in the inducement nor the FDIC's knowledge thereof is
relevant to the section's application. No conceivable reading of
the word "agreement" in § 1823(e) could cause it to cover a
representation or warranty that is bona fide, but to exclude one
that is fraudulent. The bank's alleged misrepresentations here did
not constitute fraud in the factum, which would render the note
void and take it out of § 1823(e), but instead constituted
only fraud in the inducement, which rendered the note voidable, but
not void. The bank therefore had and could transfer to the FDIC
voidable title, which was enough to constitute "title or interest"
in the note for the purpose of § 1823(e). Even if this Court
had the power to engraft an equitable exception upon the statute's
plain terms, the equities petitioners invoke are not the equities
the statute regards as predominant. Pp.
484 U. S.
93-96.
792 F.2d 541, affirmed.
SCALIA, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 484 U. S. 88
JUSTICE SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners W. T. and Maryanne Grimes Langley seek reversal of a
decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit granting the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
summary judgment on its claim for payment of a promissory note
signed by petitioners. 792 F.2d 541 (1986). The Fifth Circuit
rejected petitioners' contention that a defense of
misrepresentation of existing facts is not barred by 12 U.S.C.
§1823(e), because such a representation is not an "agreement"
under that section. We granted certiorari to resolve a conflict in
the Courts of Appeals. 479 U.S. 1028 (1987).
Compare Gunter v.
Hutcheson, 674 F.2d 862, 867 (CA11),
cert. denied,
459 U.S. 826 (1982);
FDIC v. Hatmaker, 756 F.2d 34, 37
(CA6 1985) (dictum).
I
The Langleys purchased land in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana,
in 1980. To finance the purchase, they borrowed $450,000 from
Planters Trust & Savings Bank of Opelousas, Louisiana, a bank
insured by the FDIC. In consideration for the loan, they executed a
note, a collateral mortgage, and personal guarantees. The note was
renewed several times, the last renewal being in March 1982, for
the principal amount of $468,124.41.
In October, 1983, after the Langleys had failed to pay the first
installment due on the last renewal of the note, Planters brought
the present suit for principal and interest in a Louisiana state
trial court. The Langleys removed the suit, on grounds of
diversity, to the United States District Court for the Middle
District of Louisiana, where it was consolidated with a suit by the
Langleys seeking more than $5 million in damages from Planters and
others. The Langleys alleged as one of the grounds of complaint in
their own suit, and as a defense against Planters' claim in the
present suit, that the
Page 484 U. S. 89
1980 land purchase and the notes had been procured by
misrepresentations. In particular, they alleged that the notes had
been procured by the bank's misrepresentations that the property
conveyed in the land purchase consisted of 1,628.4 acres, when in
fact it consisted of only 1,522, that the property included 400
mineral acres, when in fact it contained only 75, and that there
were no outstanding mineral leases on the property, when in fact
there were. [
Footnote 1] No
reference to these representations appears in the documents
executed by the Langleys, in the bank's records, or in the minutes
of the bank's board of directors or loan committee.
In April, 1984, the FDIC conducted an examination of Planters
during which it learned of the substance of the lawsuits with the
Langleys, including the allegations of Planters'
misrepresentations. On May 18, 1984, the Commissioner of Financial
Institutions for the State of Louisiana closed Planters because of
its unsound condition and appointed the FDIC as receiver. The FDIC
thereupon undertook the financing of a purchase and assumption
transaction pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1823(c)(2), in which all
the deposit liabilities and most of the assets of Planters were
assumed by another FDIC-insured bank in the community. Because the
amount of the liabilities greatly exceeded the value of the assets,
the FDIC paid the assuming bank $36,992,000, in consideration for
which the FDIC received,
inter alia, the Langleys' March,
1982, note.
In October, 1984, the FDIC was substituted as a plaintiff in
this lawsuit, and moved for summary judgment on its claim. The
District Court granted the motion,
615 F.
Supp. 749
Page 484 U. S. 90
(WD La.1985), and was sustained on appeal. The Fifth Circuit
held that the word "agreement" in 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e)
encompassed the kinds of material terms or warranties asserted by
the Langleys in their misrepresentation defenses and, because the
requirements of § 1823(e) were not met, those defenses were
barred. 792 F.2d at 545-546. We granted the Langleys' petition for
certiorari on the issue whether, in an action brought by the FDIC
in its corporate capacity for payment of a note, § 1823(e)
bars the defense that the note was procured by fraud in the
inducement even when the fraud did not take the form of an express
promise.
II
The Federal Deposit Insurance Act of 1950, § 13(e), 64
Stat. 889, as amended, 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e), provides:
"No agreement which tends to diminish or defeat the right, title
or interest of the Corporation [FDIC] in any asset acquired by it
under this section, either as security for a loan or by purchase,
shall be valid against the Corporation unless such agreement (1)
shall be in writing, (2) shall have been executed by the bank and
the person or persons claiming an adverse interest thereunder,
including the obligor, contemporaneously with the acquisition of
the asset by the bank, (3) shall have been approved by the board of
directors of the bank or its loan committee, which approval shall
be reflected in the minutes of said board or committee, and (4)
shall have been, continuously, from the time of its execution, an
official record of the bank."
A
Petitioners' principal contention is that the word "agreement"
in the foregoing provision encompasses only an express promise to
perform an act in the future. We do not agree.
As a matter of contractual analysis, the essence of petitioners'
defense against the note is that the bank made certain
Page 484 U. S. 91
warranties regarding the land, the truthfulness of which was a
condition to performance of their obligation to repay the loan.
See 1 A. Corbin, Contracts § 14, p. 31 (1963)
("[T]ruth [of the warranty] is a condition precedent to the duty of
the other party");
accord, 5 S. Williston, Contracts
§ 673, pp. 168-171 (3d ed.1961); J. Murray, Contracts §
136, pp. 275-276 (2d rev. ed.1974). As used in commercial and
contract law, the term "agreement" often has "a wider meaning than
. . . promise," Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 3, Comment
a (1981), and embraces such a condition upon performance. The
Uniform Commercial Code, for example, defines agreement as "the
bargain of the parties in fact as found in their language or by
implication from other circumstances. . . ." U.C.C. §
1-201(3), 1 U.L.A. 44 (1976). Quite obviously, the parties' bargain
cannot be reflected without including the conditions upon their
performance, one of the two principal elements of which contracts
are constructed.
Cf. E. Farnsworth, Contracts § 8.2,
p. 537 (1982) ("[P]romises, which impose duties, and conditions,
which make duties conditional, are the main components of
agreements"). It seems to us that this common meaning of the word
"agreement" must be assigned to its usage in § 1823(e) if that
section is to fulfill its intended purposes.
One purpose of § 1823(e) is to allow federal and state bank
examiners to rely on a bank's records in evaluating the worth of
the bank's assets. Such evaluations are necessary when a bank is
examined for fiscal soundness by state or federal authorities,
see 12 U.S.C. §§ 1817(a)(2), 1820(b), and when
the FDIC is deciding whether to liquidate a failed bank,
see § 1821(d), or to provide financing for purchase
of its assets (and assumption of its liabilities) by another bank,
see §§ 1823(c)(2), (c)(4)(A). The last kind of
evaluation, in particular, must be made
"with great speed, usually overnight, in order to preserve the
going concern value of the failed bank and avoid an interruption in
banking services."
Gunter v. Hutcheson, 674 F.2d at 865. Neither the FDIC
nor
Page 484 U. S. 92
state banking authorities would be able to make reliable
evaluations if bank records contained seemingly unqualified notes
that are in fact subject to undisclosed conditions.
A second purpose of § 1823(e) is implicit in its
requirement that the "agreement" not merely be on file in the
bank's records at the time of an examination, but also have been
executed and become a bank record "contemporaneously" with the
making of the note, and have been approved by officially recorded
action of the bank's board or loan committee. These latter
requirements ensure mature consideration of unusual loan
transactions by senior bank officials, and prevent fraudulent
insertion of new terms, with the collusion of bank employees, when
a bank appears headed for failure. Neither purpose can be
adequately fulfilled if an element of a loan agreement so
fundamental as a condition upon the obligation to repay is excluded
from the meaning of "agreement."
That "agreement" in § 1823(e) covers more than promises to
perform acts in the future is confirmed by examination of the
leading case in this area prior to enactment of § 1823(e) in
1950. In
D'Oench, Duhme & Co. v. FDIC, 315 U.
S. 447 (1942), the FDIC acquired a note in a purchase
and assumption transaction. The maker asserted a defense of failure
of consideration (that is, the failure to perform a promise that
was a condition precedent to the maker's performance), based on an
undisclosed agreement between it and the failed bank that the note
would not be called for payment. The Court held that this "secret
agreement" could not be a defense to suit by the FDIC, because it
would tend to deceive the banking authorities.
Id. at
315 U. S. 460.
The Court stated that, when the maker "lent himself to a
scheme
or arrangement whereby the banking authority . . . was likely
to be misled," that scheme or arrangement could not be the basis
for a defense against the FDIC.
Ibid. (emphasis added). We
can safely assume that Congress did not mean "agreement" in §
1823(e) to be interpreted so much more narrowly than its
Page 484 U. S. 93
permissible meaning as to disserve the principle of the leading
case applying that term to FDIC-acquired notes. Certainly, one who
signs a facially unqualified note subject to an unwritten and
unrecorded condition upon its repayment has lent himself to a
scheme or arrangement that is likely to mislead the banking
authorities, whether the condition consists of performance of a
counterpromise (as in
D'Oench., Duhme) or of the
truthfulness of a warranted fact.
B
Petitioners' fallback position is that, even if a
misrepresentation concerning an existing fact can sometimes
constitute an agreement covered by § 1823(e), it at least does
not do so when the misrepresentation was fraudulent and the FDIC
had knowledge of the asserted defense at the time it acquired the
note. We conclude, however, that neither fraud in the inducement
nor knowledge by the FDIC is relevant to the section's
application.
No conceivable reading of the word "agreement" in § 1823(e)
could cause it to cover a representation or warranty that is bona
fide, but to exclude one that is fraudulent. Petitioners
effectively acknowledge this when they concede that the fraudulent
nature of a
promise would not cause it to lose its status
as an "agreement."
See supra at
484 U. S. 89, n.
1. The presence of fraud could be relevant, however, to another
requirement of § 1823(e), namely, the requirement that the
agreement in question "ten[d] to diminish or defeat the right,
title or interest" of the FDIC in the asset.
Respondent conceded at oral argument that the real defense of
fraud in the factum -- that is, the sort of fraud that procures a
party's signature to an instrument without knowledge of its true
nature or contents,
see U.C.C. § 3-305(2)(c), Comment
7, 2 U.L.A. 241 (1977) -- would take the instrument out of §
1823(e), because it would render the instrument entirely void,
see Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 163 and
Comments a, c; Farnsworth § 4.10, at 235, thus leaving
Page 484 U. S. 94
no "right, title or interest" that could be "diminish[ed] or
defeat[ed]."
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 24-25, 27-30.
Petitioners have never contended, however, nor could they have
successfully, that the alleged misrepresentations about acreage or
mineral interests constituted fraud in the factum. It is clear that
they would constitute only fraud in the inducement, which renders
the note voidable but not void.
See U.C.C. §
3-201(1), 2 U.L.A. 127; Restatement (Second) of Contracts §
163, Comment c; Farnsworth § 4.10, at 235-236. The bank
therefore had and could transfer to the FDIC voidable title, which
is enough to constitute "title or interest" in the note. This
conclusion is not only textually compelled, but produces the only
result in accord with the purposes of the statute. If voidable
title were not an "interest" under § 1823(e), the FDIC would
be subject not only to undisclosed fraud defenses, but also to a
wide range of other undisclosed defenses that make a contract
voidable, such as certain kinds of mistakes and innocent but
material misrepresentations.
See Restatement (Second) of
Contracts §§ 152-153, 164.
Finally, knowledge of the misrepresentation by the FDIC prior to
its acquisition of the note is not relevant to whether §
1823(e) applies. Nothing in the text would support the suggestion
that it is: an agreement is an agreement whether or not the FDIC
knows of it, and a voidable interest is transferable whether or not
the transferee knows of the misrepresentation or fraud that
produces the voidability.
See Farnsworth § 11.8, at
780-781;
cf. U.C.C. § 3-201(1), 2 U.L.A. 127.
Petitioners are really urging us to engraft an equitable exception
upon the plain terms of the statute. Even if we had the power to do
so, the equities petitioners invoke are not the equities the
statute regards as predominant. While the borrower who has relied
upon an erroneous or even fraudulent unrecorded representation has
some claim to consideration, so do those who are harmed by his
failure to protect himself by assuring that his agreement is
approved and recorded in accordance with the statute. Harm to
the
Page 484 U. S. 95
FDIC (and those who rely upon the solvency of its fund) is not
avoided by knowledge at the time of acquiring the note. The FDIC is
an insurer of the bank, and is liable for the depositors' insured
losses whether or not it decides to acquire the note.
Cf.
12 U.S.C. § 1821(f). The harm to the FDIC caused by the
failure to record occurs no later than the time at which it
conducts its first bank examination that is unable to detect the
unrecorded agreement and to prompt the invocation of available
protective measures, including termination of the bank's deposit
insurance.
See § 1818 (1982 ed. and Supp. IV). Thus,
insofar as the recording provision is concerned, the state of the
FDIC's knowledge at that time is what is crucial. But as we
discussed earlier,
see supra, at
484 U. S. 92,
§ 1823(e) is meant to ensure more than just the FDIC's ability
to rely on bank records at the time of an examination or
acquisition. The statutory requirements that an agreement be
approved by the bank's board or loan committee and filed
contemporaneously in the bank's records assure prudent
consideration of the loan before it is made, and protect against
collusive reconstruction of loan terms by bank officials and
borrowers (whose interests may well coincide when a bank is about
to fail). Knowledge by the FDIC could substitute for the latter
protection only if it existed at the very moment the agreement was
concluded, and could substitute for the former assurance not at
all.
The short of the matter is that Congress opted for the certainty
of the requirements set forth in § 1823(e). An agreement that
meets them prevails even if the FDIC did not know of it; and an
agreement that does not meet them fails even if the FDIC knew. It
would be rewriting the statute to hold otherwise. Such a
categorical recording scheme is, of course, not unusual. Under
Article 9 of the U.C.C., for example, a filing secured creditor
prevails even over those unrecorded security interests of which he
was aware.
See, e.g., Rockwell Int'l Credit Corp. v. Valley
Bank, 109 Idaho 406, 408-409, 707 P.2d 517, 519-520
(Ct.App.1985);
Bloom
Page 484 U. S. 96
v. Hilty, 427 Pa. 463, 471, 234 A.2d 860, 863-864
(1967); 9 R. Anderson, Uniform Commercial Code § 9-312:74, p.
298 (3d ed.1985); J. White & R. Summers, Uniform Commercial
Code § 25-4, p. 1037 (2d ed.1980).
"
* * * *"
A condition to payment of a note, including the truth of an
express warranty, is part of the "agreement" to which the writing,
approval, and filing requirements of 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e)
attach. Because the representations alleged by petitioners
constitute such a condition, and did not meet the requirements of
the statute, they cannot be asserted as defenses here. The judgment
of the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The Langleys also alleged certain other misrepresentations by
Planters, including that the Langleys would have no personal
liability on the notes, that Planters would provide another
purchaser for the land as soon as the sale to the Langleys was
closed, and that no payments would be due until the property was
resold. The Langleys concede that 12 U.S.C. § 1823(e) bars
these other misrepresentations from being asserted as defenses to
FDIC's suit on the note, because they were promissory in nature.
Brief for Petitioners 12.