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44 Procurement Law. 1 (2008-2009)

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The Strange Case of Long Island Savings Bank-

Or How a Contract Self-Destructed into Voidness

BY JOHN S. PACHTER


                          This article will discuss and
                          analyze the opinion of the
                          United States Court of Ap-
                          peals for the Federal Circuit
                          in Lo g Isla Savings Bank,
                          FSB v. United States, 503
                          E3d 1234 (Fed. Cir. 2007),
                          reh'g and reh'g en banc denied,
                          2007 U.S. App. LEXIS
                          30345 (2007), petition for
                          cert. filed, No. 07-1234
                          (U.S. Mar. 27, 2008). In an
unprecedented decision, the Federal Circuit sua sponte
declared void a fully performed contract from which the
government had obtained substantial benefit The court
issued this decision in the face of clear evidence that: (a)
the fraud was committed without the knowledge or con-
sent of the contractor; (b) the government's material
breach of contract preceded the contractor's discovery of
the fraudulent activity; (c) the contractor acted in good
faith to rectify the fraud once it was discovered; and (d)
the fraud did not result in hann to the government. This
decision not only departs substantially from the law re-
garding fraud in the formation of a contract, but also
gives the Department of Justice a powerful tool to defeat
legitimate claims by searching for erroneous certifications
to use as the basis for a fraud assertion.
   This Winstar' case involves the misdeeds of a single in-


John S. Pachter is a partner in Smith Pachter McWhorter PLC, Vienna,
Virginia. This article is adapted from a presentation on January 9, 2008,
to the Contract Claims and Disputes Resoutua Committee of the Sec-
tion of Public Contract Law of the American Bar Association. The
author acknowledges the assistance of Kathryn T. Muldoon, associate
attorney at Smith Pachter McWhorter, in the preparation of this article.


dividual, James J. Conway, Jr., chairman and CEO of the
Long Island Savings Bank (LISB). Conway, as we shall
see, was a resourceful person, but not in a helpful way.
   In 1983, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor-
poration (FSLIC) solicited bids for the takeover of a
failed thrift. Of the six bids received, LISB's bid was most
favorable. LISB proposed the least amount of financial as-
sistance from FSLIC, which was attracted by LISB's
proven record of sound financial management. LISB
acquired the failed thrift, received an infusion of $122
million from FSLIC, and entered into an assistance agree-
ment that subjected the thrift's officers and directors to
federal restrictions and imposed federal guidelines and
regulations on the new thrift.
   The assistance agreement provided that, as a result of
the acquisition of the failed thrift, LISB acquired supervi-
sory capital. The agreement further provided that LISB
could treat the supervisory capital as regulatory capital and
                                (continued on page 22)


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