Federal Deposit Insurance v. Brants ( 1993 )


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  •                                   United States Court of Appeals,
    Fifth Circuit.
    No. 91-1890.
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, In its corporate capacity, Plaintiff-
    Appellee,
    v.
    H. Clayton BRANTS, Jr. and Lee A. Smith, Defendants,
    H. Clayton Brants, Jr., Defendant-Appellant.*
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, In its corporate capacity, Plaintiff-
    Appellee,
    v.
    O.L. PITTS, Defendant-Appellant.
    Sept. 22, 1993.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas.
    Before GOLDBERG, SMITH, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.
    EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:
    Defendants, H. Clayton Brants, Jr. and O.L. Pitts ("Brants and Pitts" or "defendants"),
    executed separate notes in favor of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's ("FDIC")
    predecessor in interest, and later defaulted on those notes. When the FDIC sued to collect on the
    notes, Brants and Pitts contended that they had been released from their obligations by a settlement
    agreement signed by the FDIC in a lawsuit against other defendants in California. The magistrate
    disagreed with Brants and Pitts, and entered judgment in favor of the FDIC. Brants and Pitts appeal,
    arguing that the plain and unambiguous terms of the California settlement agreement released them
    from their obligations. Because we find that the parties to the California settlement agreement did
    not intend to release Brants and Pitts, we affirm.
    *
    This case began as two separate actions, styled Continental Illinois Bank & Trust Co. of
    Chicago v. H. Clayton Brants, Jr. and Lee A. Smith and Continental Illinois Bank & Trust Co. of
    Chicago v. O.L. Pitts. Prior to trial the FDIC was substituted for Continental as party plaintiff,
    and the two cases were consolidated. We dismissed the appeal filed by Lee A. Smith pursuant to
    his motion.
    I
    The facts of this case are undisputed. Brants and Pitts both borrowed money from Penn
    Square Bank and executed notes in the bank's favor. With the acquired funds, Brants purchased a
    limited partnership interest in an oil and gas drilling venture by the name of Calpetco III-1980. Pitts
    purchased a limited partnership interest in a similar venture known as Calpetco 80-B. Limited
    partnership interests in Calpetco III-1980 were also purchased by Allan Littman, William Edlund,
    Walter Hahne, and J.D. McPherson, who also executed notes in favor of Penn Square Bank. Penn
    Square held the aforementioned notes subject to a participation interest owned by Continental Illinois
    National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago ("Continental").                 When Penn Square failed,
    Continental succeeded to Penn Square's interest in the notes.
    Thereafter, all of the aforementioned debtors defaulted on their notes, and Continental sued
    to collect. One action was filed in the Northern District of California against Littman, Edlund, Hahne,
    and McPherson (also referred to as "the California defendants"). Separate suits were filed against
    Brants and Pitts (also referred to as "the Texas defendants") in the Northern District of Texas.
    Continental later conveyed its entire interest in the notes to the FDIC, and the FDIC was substituted
    for Continental as party plaintiff in the actions.
    Because the facts and legal issues in the California and Texas lawsuits were substantially
    similar, Brants, Pitts, and the FDIC agreed to stay the Texas actions pending a final judgment in the
    California litigation, and to be bound by the judgment entered in California. The court in California
    entered judgment in favor of the FDIC, holding the California defendants personally liable on their
    notes. While an appeal was pending in the California litigation, Edlund, Hahne, Littman, and the
    estate of McPherson entered into a Settlement Agreement and Mutual Release (also referred to as
    "the California settlement") with the FDIC. Paragraph two of the settlement agreement provides for
    a release of certain claims against the California defendants and related parties as follows:
    The FDIC-Corporate, the FDIC-Receiver, and Continental Bank, on behalf of
    themselves and their former, present and future joint ventures, partnerships, parent, subsidiary
    and affiliate corporations, partners, principals, agents, predecessors, successors, assigns, heirs,
    executors, administrators and representatives, hereby fully and forever waive, relinquish,
    release and discharge Edlund, Hahne, Littman and McPherson and their former, present and
    future joint ventures, partnerships, parent, subsidiary and affiliate corporations, partners,
    principals, agents, predecessors, successors, assigns, heirs, executors, administrators and
    representatives of and from, without limitation, any and all claims, demands, controversies,
    actions, causes of action, debts, liabilities, rights, contracts, damages, interest obligations,
    costs (including attorneys' fees and court and litigation cost s and expenses), expenses,
    indemnities, obligations and losses of every kind or nature whatsoever, whether at this time
    known or unknown, anticipated or unanticipated, direct or indirect, fixed or contingent, that
    may presently exist or may hereafter arise or become known, for or by reason of any act,
    omission, events, transaction, matter or cause whatsoever from the beginning of time to the
    date of this Agreement, directly or indirectly related to, arising from, or which could be
    inferred or implied by or included in connection with the Action and/or the Appeal, and the
    facts upon which the Action and the Appeal were brought and based, and any and all acts or
    omissions of Edlund, Hahne, Littman and McPherson whatsoever occurring or arising or in
    any way related to the Action, the Appeal, Calpetco III-1980, or any loan agreement or other
    document related thereto.
    Defendants' Exhibit 2 at 2-3. The FDIC also agreed to return the notes of the California defendants.
    In return for this settlement, the California defendants agreed to pay the FDIC $1,003,594.25. The
    settlement agreement does not mention Brants or Pitts by name, require them to pay consideration,
    or provide for the return of their notes.
    This case proceeded to trial.1 Brants and Pitts contended that they were not liable to the
    FDIC on their notes because they had been released from liability by the California settlement. The
    magistrate considered the language of the settlement and the circumstances surrounding its execution,
    and held that the FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts were not released. Judgment was entered
    in favor of the FDIC, and Brants and Pitts appeal.
    II
    Pitts and Brants contend that, according to the clear and unambiguous terms of the
    settlement, they are released from liability to the FDIC on their notes. "In the interpretation of
    contracts, the paramount consideration is the intention of the contracting parties as it existed at the
    time of contracting." Cedars-Sinai Medical Ctr. v. State Bd. of Equalization, 
    162 Cal. App. 3d 1182
    ,
    
    208 Cal. Rptr. 837
    , 839 (1984); see also Leo F. Piazza Paving Co. v. Foundation Constructors, Inc.,
    
    128 Cal. App. 3d 583
    , 
    177 Cal. Rptr. 268
    , 273 (1981) ("The paramount rule governing the
    interpretation of contracts is to give effect to the mutual intention of the parties as it existed at the
    1
    The actions against Brants and Pitts were consolidated prior to trial. The case was tried
    before a magistrate, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1) (1988).
    time of contracting....").2 "The language of a contract is to govern its interpretation, if the language
    is clear and explicit, and does not involve an absurdity." Cal.Civ.Code § 1638 (West 1993).
    However, in order to determine initially whether the terms of a contract are clear and unambiguous,
    "the court must examine the [contract] in the light of the circumstances surrounding its execution so
    as to ascertain what the parties meant by the words used." In re Estate of Russell, 
    69 Cal. 2d 200
    ,
    
    70 Cal. Rptr. 561
    , 567, 
    444 P.2d 353
    , 359 (1968). In examining the circumstances surrounding the
    making of the contract, the court may take into account "the object, nature, and subject matter of the
    writing." 
    Cedars-Sinai, 208 Cal. Rptr. at 839-40
    ; see also Piazza 
    Paving, 177 Cal. Rptr. at 273
    ("The
    words, phrases, and sentences employed are to be construed in light of the objectives and fundamental
    purposes of the parties to the agreement."). The court determines the meaning of contract terms by
    way of "a reading of the entire contract." Rodriguez v. Barnett, 
    52 Cal. 2d 154
    , 
    338 P.2d 907
    , 910
    (1959); see also 
    Cedars-Sinai, 208 Cal. Rptr. at 840
    ; Stewart Title Co. v. Herbert, 
    6 Cal. App. 3d 957
    , 
    96 Cal. Rptr. 631
    , 634 (1970). A court's interpretation of a contract, based on the circumstances
    surrounding its execution and the plain language of the agreement, is a conclusion of law which we
    review de novo. See Estate of 
    Russell, 70 Cal. Rptr. at 570
    , 444 P.2d at 362 ("[I]t is "solely a judicial
    function to interpret a written instrument unless the interpretation turns upon the credibility of
    extrinsic evidence.' Accordingly, "an appellate court is not bound by a construction of a document
    based solely upon the terms of the written instrument without the aid of extrinsic evidence, where
    there is no conflict in the evidence....' " (citation omitted)); 
    Cedars-Sinai, 208 Cal. Rptr. at 839
    ("Inasmuch as the case was submitted on a stipulation of facts with documents, we are confronted
    with purely a question of law and are not bound by the determination of the trial court.").
    The issue here is whether the FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts fall within the category
    of claims released by the agreement. The settlement releases claims of virtually any type,3 so long as
    2
    The parties agree that the interpretation of the California settlement is governed by California
    law.
    3
    The FDIC agreed to relinquish "claims, demands, controversies, actions, causes of action,
    debts, liabilities, rights, contracts, damages, interest obligations, costs (including attorneys' fees
    and court and litigation costs and expenses), expenses, indemnities, obligations and losses of
    every kind or nature whatsoever."
    they satisfy certain conditions. Specifically, a claim must
    exist or ... arise or become known, for or by reason of any act, omission, events, transaction,
    matter or cause whatsoever from the beginning of time to the date of this Agreement, directly
    or indirectly related to, arising from, or which could be inferred or implied by or included in
    connection with the Action and/or the Appeal, and the facts upon which the Action and the
    Appeal were brought and based, and any and all acts or omissions of Edlund, Hahne, Littman
    and McPherson whatsoever occurring or arising or in any way related to the Action, the
    Appeal, Calpetco III-1980, or any loan agreement or other document related thereto.
    Defendants' Exhibit 2 at 3. It is the operation of these conditions which is in dispute in this case.4
    Brants and Pitts argue that the foregoing provision releases two categories of claims. The
    first category consists of "claims that exist or arise by reason of any acts and omissions whatsoever
    related to the action or appeal, and the facts." Reply Brief for Brants and Pitts at 7. The second
    category consists of "claims that exist or arise by reason of any acts and omissions of Edlund, et al.,
    whatsoever related to the action, appeal, Calpetco or documents." 
    Id. Brants and
    Pitts argue that
    the FDIC's claims against them fall within the first category.
    We reject this bifurcated construction of the release, because it is unsupported by the language
    of the contract. The release provision is a single sentence, the subject of which is the group of
    parties, including the FDIC, who are releasing other parties from their obligations. The predicate of
    the sentence is the phrase "hereby fully and forever waive, relinquish, release and discharge." The
    sentence has several direct objects, which are the parties, including the California defendants, being
    released "of and from" certain claims. The claims from which those parties are released—"claims,
    demands, controversies, actions, causes of action, debts, [etc.]"—make up the indirect objects of the
    sentence. The language which follows is a series of phrases and clauses which describe the indirect
    objects.
    The interpretation advocated by Brants and Pitts is inconsistent with the structure of the
    release provision. Brants and Pitts describe the agreement as releasing them of and from (1) "claims
    that exist or arise by reason of any acts and omissions whatsoever related to the action or appeal, and
    4
    There is also a dispute as to whether or not Pitts falls within the category of persons whose
    claims are released—partners, principals, agents, predecessors, successors, etc. However,
    because we conclude that the FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts do not satisfy the conditions
    for release under the settlement agreement, see infra, neither defendant is entitled to relief, and we
    need not decide whether Pitts falls within the category of persons whose claims are released.
    the facts," and (2) "claims that exist or arise by reason of any acts and omissions of Edlund, et al.,
    whatsoever related to the action, appeal, Calpetco or documents." However, the release language
    does not have that structure. In the release the word "claims," accompanied by its many variations,
    appears only once. In the defendants' paraphrase of the release, the word "claims" appears twice,
    duplicating the indirect objects as they appear in the release. Because the release does not have the
    structure suggested by Brants and Pitts, it also does not have the meaning that they would give to it.
    Had the parties to the agreement wished to provide for two categories of claims such as
    Brants and Pitts describe—one set connected to the Action and its underlying facts, the other
    connected only to the conduct of the California defendants—the parties also could have done so
    simply by describing the criteria for a released claim disjunctively. Two categories of claims would
    have been created if the parties had used the word "or" rather than the word "and" between the clause
    "facts upon which the Action and the Appeal were brought and based" and the clause "any and all
    acts or omissions of Edlund, Hahne, Littman and McPherson." Then the agreement would have
    released a claim whether it was connected with the Action and its underlying facts or the conduct of
    the California defendants. Instead, however, the parties chose to list the conditions conjunctively,
    creating a single category of claims described by all three conditions. Although it may not be a model
    of clarity, the release clearly does not say what Brants and Pitts say it does.
    We therefore construe the settlement to release claims which exist or arise for or by reason
    of acts related to (1) the Action and/or the Appeal, (2) the facts underlying the Action and the
    Appeal, and (3) the conduct of the California defendants. If a claim against Brants or Pitts fails to
    conform to any one of these conditions, that claim is not released by the settlement, and the judgment
    in favor of the FDIC must be affirmed. We will first consider the third condition—that in order for
    the claims against Brants and Pitts to be released, those claims must "exist or ... arise or become
    known, for or by reason of any act, omission, events, transaction, matter or cause whatsoever ...,
    directly or indirectly related to, arising from, or which could be inferred or implied by or included in
    connection with ... any and all acts or omissions of Edlund, Hahne, Littman and McPherson
    whatsoever occurring or arising or in any way related to the Action, the Appeal, Calpetco III-1980,
    or any loan agreement or other document related thereto."
    In order to determine whether the claims against Brants and Pitts satisfy this condition, we
    must first determine which "act, omission, events, transaction, matter or cause" underlies the claims
    against Brants and Pitts. We are of the opinion that the FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts
    "exist[ed] or ... ar[o]se or bec[a]me known, for or by reason of" Brants's and Pitts's failure to pay the
    amounts due under their notes. The defendants suggest that a more extensive set of circumstances
    gave rise to the claims against them, including their investment in the Calpetco partnerships, and
    certain representations made to them by Penn Square Bank and the promoter of the Calpetco
    partnerships. However, the claims against Brants and Pitts did not "exist or ... arise or become
    known, for or by reason of" those event s. Neither the defendants' investments in the Calpetco
    partnerships, nor any of the other circumstances which Brants and Pitts mention, formed the basis for
    the claims against them. Those claims are for nonpayment of notes, and it is because of Brants's and
    Pitts's default that those claims arose and now exist.
    Because the FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts "exist[ed] or ... ar[o]se or bec[a]me
    known, for or by reason of" Brants's and Pitts's failure to pay to the FDIC the amounts due under
    their notes, it is that conduct by the defendants which must be "directly or indirectly related to, arising
    from, or which could be inferred or implied by or included in connection with ... any and all acts or
    omissions of Edlund, Hahne, Littman and McPherson whatsoever occurring or arising or in any way
    related to the Action, the Appeal, Calpetco III-1980, or any loan agreement or other document
    related thereto."5 Although counsel for Brants and Pitts devote large segments of their briefs to
    discussing the facts of this case and the California litigation, and to arguing that a relationship existed
    between the two cases, they have not pointed to any particular acts or omissions of the California
    defendants which bear any relationship to Pitts's and Brants's defaults. Pitts and Brants have
    5
    The language "any and all acts or omissions of Edlund, Hahne, Littman and McPherson
    whatsoever occurring or arising or in any way related to the Action, the Appeal, Calpetco III-
    1980, or any loan agreement or other document related thereto" appears to encompass virtually
    any conduct of the California defendants which is at all connected with Calpetco III-1980 or with
    the California litigation, including the California defendants' investment in Calpetco III-1980 and
    their subsequent default on their notes.
    established that the California action and the instant litigation are highly similar, in that the two cases
    involve the same legal questions and similar facts. However, legal and factual similarities between
    this action and the California litigation do not amount to a relationship or connection between the
    defaults of Pitts and Brants and particular acts or omissions of the California defendants. Pitts and
    Brants repeatedly point out that the notes which they executed and the notes executed by the
    California defendants, "are interrelated to the investment which funded the Calpetco partnerships."
    Although that statement is correct, it does not establish that the notes executed by Pitts and Brants
    (much less their defaults on those notes) are related or connected to the notes executed by the
    California defendants. It merely establishes that both sets of notes are related to a third entity,
    Calpetco III-1980.6 Pitts and Brants have not shown what the release requires—a relationship
    between their defaults and the acts or omissions of the California defendants.
    Even if, however, some broad notion of relationship or connection were satisfied by the
    factual and legal similarities between the California and Texas lawsuits, or by the interrelationship
    between the various notes and the Calpetco partnerships, an examination of other provisions of the
    settlement agreement, as well as the circumstances surrounding its execution, reveals that the parties
    to the agreement did not intend to release claims demonstrating only that degree of connection to the
    conduct of the California defendants. All of the FDIC's claims against any parties connected to the
    Calpetco partnerships would have been relinquished by such a release, and it is apparent that such a
    sweeping abandonment of the FDIC's claims was not intended.
    As the magistrate noted, the settlement agreement explicitly provided for the return to the
    6
    Even this would not be accurate with respect to the note executed by Pitts, since it is
    undisputed that Pitts was a partner in Calpetco 80-B, and consequently he shared no partnership
    interest with Brants or the California defendants, all of whom were partners in Calpetco III-1980.
    Furthermore, we do not believe that the notes executed by the California defendants and the note
    executed by Brants are "indirectly related to" each other because they "are inter-related to the
    investment which funded" Calpetco III-1980. Two things are not necessarily related to each other
    merely because they are both related to something else. An indirect relationship would be
    present, for instance, where event A causes event B, which in turn causes event C. The
    relationship between A and C is indirect, but it is still a real, identifiable relationship. In our
    opinion, the same cannot be said of the notes executed respectively by Brants and the California
    defendants. It certainly is not true of Brants's and Pitts's defaults and the acts or omissions of the
    California defendants.
    California defendants of their notes. Certainly the same could have been done for Brants and Pitts
    and others in their po sition, if it had been the intention of the parties to provide for the release of
    claims against them. However, the agreement did not provide for the notes executed by Brants and
    Pitts to be returned. Brants and Pitts point out that Bill Edlund, who acted on behalf of the other
    California defendants in settling the California lawsuit, was not acting on behalf of Brants and Pitts.
    Brants and Pitts therefore contend that "[i]t is unreasonable to suggest that Mr. Edlund was required
    to collect the notes and loan agreements for all of the Calpetco partners." We do not suggest that
    Edlund or the other California defendants had a duty to collect all of the notes. However, Edlund's
    failure to negotiate the return of the defendants' notes calls into question a fundamental premise of
    the defendants' argument—that Edlund and the other California defendants were sufficiently
    concerned about the interests of Brants and Pitts and others similarly situated to deliberately bargain
    for, and even pay consideration for the release of the claims against them. In plain terms, if Edlund
    was willing to pay a considerable sum of money for the release of claims against Brants and Pitts, it
    makes no sense that he was unwilling to arrange for their notes to be returned. Therefore, the failure
    of the agreement to provide for the return of Brants's and Pitts's notes militates in favor of the
    conclusion that the FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts were not intended to be released.
    The circumstances surrounding the execution of the settlement agreement also indicate that
    the parties to the agreement did not intend to release the claims against Brants and Pitts. After
    judgment was entered for the FDIC in the California litigation, the FDIC obtained a considerable
    settlement from the California defendants; and, because Brants and Pitts agreed to be bound by the
    California judgment, they stood in the same disadvantageous posture vis a vis the FDIC as did the
    California defendants. The magistrate noted, and we agree, that under those circumstances it is
    "incredible that the FDIC ... simply determined not to pursue the Texas Defendants as to their notes."
    We agree with the magistrate's conclusion that the FDIC did not intend to do so.
    Brants and Pitts suggest, however, that the FDIC released its claims against them because the
    California defendants paid consideration to the FDIC on their behalf. Brants and Pitts rely on the
    testimony of William Edlund, one of the California defendants, who testified that he had a "motive
    or interest for securing releases for" Brants and Pitts on their notes to Penn Square Bank. Edlund
    testified that "the litigation both in San Francisco and [in] Texas had been going on a long time," and
    that he had "been put through an enormous amount of personal burden, cost, and expense." Edlund
    testified that the California litigation was "awkward" and "embarrassing" for him, and that it appeared
    "unprofessional before the courts in California as well as other courts in which [he] practiced [law]."
    Finally, Edlund testified that Brants had become the general partner of Calpetco III-1980, and that
    he hoped that a release of the claims against Brants would enable him to "devote his resources" to
    "making [Calpetco III-1980] a more profitable [investment]." For all of these reasons, Edlund
    testified, he "wanted all of the litigation brought to an end."
    The district court apparently was not persuaded by Edlund's testimony, and neither are we.
    Presumably the California settlement alleviated any expense or embarrassment suffered by Edlund
    simply by releasing the claims against him. There is no reason why Edlund should have been
    embarrassed or inconvenienced by the Texas lawsuits, to which he was not a party. Consequently,
    Edlund's alleged expense and embarrassment do not explain why he would endeavor to bring the
    litigation in Texas to an end. We also find unconvincing Edlund's claim that he sought a release for
    Brants in order to enable Brants to devote more of his resources to the management of Calpetco III-
    1980. Had that been Edlund's goal, he might have accomplished it by bargaining for a release of the
    claims against Brants alone. However, Edlund claimed that he negotiated "a release of all of the
    partners in the Calpetco partnership." There is no reason why Edlund would have purchased a release
    for all of the Calpetco partners if he was only interested in obtaining a release for Brants. Because
    Edlund's testimony is inconsistent and implausible, it does not persuade us t hat the California
    defendants had a vested interest in obtaining a release of the claims against Brants and Pitts and
    others similarly situated.
    In light of the language of the entire settlement agreement, as well as the circumstances
    surrounding its execution, we conclude that the parties to that agreement did not intend that the
    FDIC's claims against Brants and Pitts be released. Consequently, the magistrate correctly held that
    Brants and Pitts were not released by the settlement agreement, and the magistrate did not err by
    entering judgment in favor of the FDIC.
    III
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 91-1890

Judges: Goldberg, Smith, Garza

Filed Date: 9/15/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024