9-18-Cornerstone-Research.pngThis is the sixth in a series of reports that analyzes the characteristics of professional liability lawsuits filed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) against directors and officers of failed financial institutions (D&O lawsuits). *

  • At least 32 FDIC D&O lawsuits have been filed in 2013: 10 in the first quarter, 15 in the second quarter, and seven so far in the current quarter. The pace of filings in the second and third quarters of 2013 has exceeded the rate of new filings compared with any equivalent period in the previous three years. If the filing of new lawsuits in 2013 continues at the pace observed through August, 53 lawsuits will be filed this year—more than double the 26 filed in 2012. Since 2010, the FDIC has filed 76 lawsuits against the directors and officers of failed institutions.
  • Financial institution failures were most common between the third quarter of 2009 and the third quarter of 2010. Given the three-year statute of limitations for tort lawsuits and the likely existence of tolling agreements allowing the FDIC additional time to determine if it will file a lawsuit, this year has seen, as expected, an increased amount of filing activity. Of the 32 lawsuits filed so far in 2013, nine were against institutions that failed in 2009 and the remaining 23 were against institutions that failed in 2010.
  • Of the 76 filed lawsuits, 10 have settled and one has resulted in a jury verdict. Three settlements have occurred this year, with four in 2012, and three in 2011.
  • Chief executive officers continue to be the most commonly named defendants. They have been named in 88 percent of all filed complaints and 28 of the 32 lawsuits in 2013. Chief financial officers, chief credit officers, chief loan officers, chief operating officers, and chief banking officers are also commonly named defendants. Outside directors have been named, frequently along with inside directors, in 75 percent of all filed complaints and 24 of the 32 lawsuits filed in 2013.
  • To date, the FDIC has claimed damages of $3.6 billion in the 69 lawsuits that have specified a damages amount. The average damages amount has been $53 million, with a median value of $27 million. Lawsuits filed in 2013 have had a lower average claim than lawsuits filed in 2011 and 2012. In the aggregate, the largest claims have related to the failure of California institutions, while the largest number of D&O lawsuits have targeted failed institutions in Georgia.
  • Of the failed financial institutions in 2009, the directors and officers of 57, or 41 percent, either have been the subject of an FDIC lawsuit or have settled claims with the FDIC prior to the filing of a lawsuit. For institutions failing in 2010, the comparable figure is 39, or 25 percent.
  • FDIC seizures of financial institutions continued to decline in 2013 compared with 2012. After only four seizures in the first quarter of 2013, there were 12 in the second quarter and four in the third quarter through August 27, 2013. In total, 20 institutions have been seized so far in 2013 compared with 51 in 2012. Since 2007, 488 financial institutions have failed.

For a full report, click here.

*The FDIC may also file lawsuits against other related parties, such as accounting firms, law firms, appraisal firms, or mortgage brokers, but we generally do not address such lawsuits here.

Cornerstone Research Group