Capitol, In Re: v. 604 Columbus Ave RE , 968 F.2d 1332 ( 1992 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    July 1, 1992 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________
    No. 91-1976

    IN RE: 604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST,
    Debtor,

    _________

    CAPITOL BANK & TRUST COMPANY,
    Appellee,

    v.

    604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST,
    Appellant.

    __________
    No. 91-1977

    IN RE: 604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST,
    Debtor,

    _________

    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,
    AS RECEIVER/LIQUIDATING AGENT OF
    CAPITOL BANK & TRUST COMPANY,
    Appellant,

    v.

    604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST, ET AL.,
    Appellees.

    ____________


    ERRATA SHEET


    The opinion of this court issued on June 19, 1992, is

    amended as follows:

    On page 10, line 11 after block quote - add "and" after the

    word "taxes."

    On page 43, line 6 after block quote - "Court" should be

    lower case.June 19, 1992

















    ____________________

    No. 91-1976



    IN RE: 604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST,



    Debtor,



    __________



    CAPITOL BANK & TRUST COMPANY,



    Appellee,



    v.



    604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST,



    Appellant.



    __________



    No. 91-1977



    IN RE: 604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST,





















    Debtor,



    __________



    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,

    AS RECEIVER/LIQUIDATING AGENT OF

    CAPITOL BANK & TRUST COMPANY,



    Appellant,



    v.



    604 COLUMBUS AVENUE REALTY TRUST, ET AL.



    Appellees.



    ____________________



    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT



    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS



    [Hon. A. David Mazzone, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________



    ____________________



















    Before



    Torruella, Circuit Judge,
    _____________

    Weis* and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges,
    _____________________



    ____________________



    Robert Owen Resnick with whom John F. Cullen, George J. Nader,
    ____________________ _______________ _______________

    and Cullen & Resnick were on brief for 604 Columbus Avenue.
    ________________

    Michael H. Krimminger with whom Richard J. Osterman, Jr., Ann S.
    _____________________ _________________________ _______

    Duross, and Richard N. Gottlieb were on brief for Federal Deposit
    ______ ____________________

    Insurance Corporation.



    ____________________


    ____________________










































    _____________________

    *Of the Third Circuit, sitting by designation.



























































    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. This is a case involving
    ____________________

    a failed loan transaction that well illustrates Polonius'

    advice, "[n]either a borrower, nor a lender be."1 These

    appeals require us to determine, inter alia, the
    _____ ____

    applicability of certain federal defenses available to the

    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in its capacity

    as receiver when it seeks to enforce against a bankrupt

    borrower an obligation formerly held by a failed financial

    institution.

    PROCEDURAL PATH
    PROCEDURAL PATH

    This case arises from the default by the 604 Columbus

    Avenue Realty Trust ("the Trust") on payment of a loan from

    the Capitol Bank and Trust Company ("the Bank"). Following

    the Trust's default, the Bank commenced mortgage foreclosure

    proceedings on the properties securing its loan, among which

    were the property owned by the Trust itself and properties of

    the Trust's principal beneficiary, Millicent C. Young

    ("Young").2

    To forestall the foreclosures by the Bank, both the

    Trust and Young filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the



    ____________________

    1. W. Shakespeare, Hamlet, act I, sc. iii at 75.

    2. The Bank also had a mortgage on a property owned by the
    Young Family Trust, of which Millicent Young was sole
    beneficiary. The Young Family Trust was a named plaintiff in
    the adversary proceeding in the bankruptcy and district
    courts below. For purposes of convenience, we refer to Young
    and the Young Family Trust collectively as "Young."

    -6-















    Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the

    District of Massachusetts. In May 1988, the Trust, with

    Young as co-plaintiff, initiated an adversary proceeding

    against the Bank, its principal secured creditor. In

    September 1990, the bankruptcy court awarded the plaintiffs

    approximately $140,000 in damages on claims of fraud and

    deceit, conversion, and breach of contract, plus interest and

    attorney's fees. The bankruptcy court found that the Bank

    improperly applied loan proceeds to payment of "soft costs"

    incurred by the Trust financing fees, interest, taxes and

    similar expenses. It also found that an officer of the Bank

    extracted kickback payments from the loan proceeds in return

    for his assistance in securing approval of the loan. Under

    its power of equitable subordination pursuant to 11 U.S.C.

    510(c), the bankruptcy court subordinated the Bank's secured

    claim on the Trust's bankruptcy estate to the claims of the

    Trust's other creditors by an amount equal to the damages,

    plus interest and attorney's fees. It ordered the transfer

    from the Bank to the Trust of a security interest in the

    Trust's estate equivalent to the total of the damages,

    interest and attorney's fees.

    During the pendency of an appeal of this judgment to the

    district court, the Bank was declared unsound by

    Massachusetts banking officials. The FDIC was appointed





    -7-















    receiver, and in February 1991 was substituted as defendant-

    appellant in the district court.

    In August 1991, the district court affirmed in

    substantial part the bankruptcy court's rulings on the merits

    of the Trust's claims and equitable subordination of part of

    the Bank's secured claim. It ruled, however, that the FDIC

    was entitled to raise the defenses available to it under the

    doctrine of estoppel established in D'Oench, Duhme & Co. v.
    ________________________

    FDIC, 315 U.S. 447 (1942), and 12 U.S.C. 1823(e). Invoking
    ____

    the D'Oench doctrine, the district court vacated that part of
    _______

    the bankruptcy court's judgment that was premised on the

    secret agreement by one of the Trust's principals to provide

    kickbacks to a Bank officer.

    Both the Trust and the FDIC appeal various aspects of

    the judgments of both the bankruptcy and district courts. We

    affirm the judgment of the bankruptcy court, as modified by

    the district court.

    BACKGROUND AND FACTS
    BACKGROUND AND FACTS

    Before stating the facts, we think it useful to review

    the dual role of the FDIC in bank failures. Our recent

    decision in Timberland Design, Inc. v. First Service Bank For
    _________________________________________________

    Savings, 932 F.2d 46, 48 (1st Cir. 1991), provides an
    _______

    excellent summary of the FDIC's different functions:

    As receiver, the FDIC manages the assets of the
    failed bank on behalf of the bank's creditors and
    shareholders. In its corporate capacity, the FDIC
    is responsible for insuring the failed bank's


    -8-















    deposits. Although there are many options
    available to the FDIC when a bank fails, these
    options generally fall within two categories of
    approaches, either liquidation or purchase and
    assumption. The liquidation option is the easiest
    method, but carries with it two major
    disadvantages. First, the closing of the bank
    weakens confidence in the banking system. Second,
    there is often substantial delay in returning funds
    to depositors.

    The preferred option when a bank fails, therefore,
    is the purchase and assumption option. Under this
    arrangement, the FDIC, in its capacity as receiver,
    sells the bank's healthy assets to the purchasing
    bank in exchange for the purchasing bank's promise
    to pay the failed bank's depositors. In addition,
    as receiver, the FDIC sells the "bad" assets to
    itself acting in its corporate capacity. With the
    money it receives, the FDIC-receiver then pays the
    purchasing bank enough money to make up the
    difference between what it must pay out to the
    failed bank's depositors, and what the purchasing
    bank was willing to pay for the good assets that it
    purchased. The FDIC acting in its corporate
    capacity then tries to collect on the bad assets to
    minimize the loss to the insurance fund.
    Generally, the purchase and assumption must be
    executed in great haste, often overnight.

    Id. at 48 (citations omitted).
    ___

    Turning to the case at hand, we first summarize the

    extensive findings of fact of the bankruptcy court. See In
    ___ __

    re 604 Columbus Avenue Realty Trust, 119 B.R. 350 (Bankr. D.
    ____________________________________

    Mass. 1990) ("Bankruptcy Court Opinion"). The loan

    transaction at issue in these appeals originated in the

    efforts of Young and several business associates to purchase

    two buildings located at 604-610 Columbus Avenue in Boston,

    Massachusetts ("the Columbus Avenue properties"), and a

    restaurant operated on the premises known as "Bob the Chef."



    -9-















    Young was the owner of a contracting and construction

    company. Among her business partners was Carl Benjamin

    ("Benjamin"), who served as her financial adviser.

    In October 1985, Young and Benjamin learned of the

    availability for purchase of the Columbus Avenue properties.

    Young and Benjamin, along with two other partners, agreed to

    enter into a business relationship through which they would

    purchase the Columbus Avenue properties, renovate and resell

    the properties as condominiums, resell the restaurant, and

    share the profits from the condominium sales and sale of the

    restaurant. In November 1985, Young and Benjamin offered the

    owner of the Columbus Avenue properties $1.2 million for the

    buildings and the restaurant.

    Young's attorney, Steven Kunian ("Kunian"), suggested

    that she and her partners seek financing for the purchase and

    renovation of the Columbus Avenue properties from the Bank.

    Kunian had represented the Bank from time to time on loan

    transactions. In December 1985, Benjamin negotiated the

    terms of a loan from the Bank on behalf of Young and the

    other partners. The Bank was represented in these

    negotiations by a loan officer, Arthur Gauthier, and a member

    of the Bank's Board of Directors, Sidney Weiner ("Weiner").

    Weiner also served on the Bank's Executive Committee, which

    was responsible for the approval of loans. Although not a

    salaried employee of the Bank, Weiner was paid director's and



    -10-















    consultant's fees, and was regarded by Gauthier and other

    bank employees as having primary authority for negotiation of

    the loan to Young and her partners.

    Loans larger than $25,000 required the approval of the

    Bank's Executive Committee. Gauthier presented the proposal

    for the loan for the Columbus Avenue properties three times

    before the Executive Committee approved it on January 15,

    1986. Final approval by the Executive Committee was achieved

    when Young agreed to pledge her residence as additional

    collateral for the loan. Weiner was one of the Executive

    Committee members who voted to approve the loan.

    Some time before the Executive Committee voted to

    approve the loan, Weiner told Benjamin that the loan would

    only be approved on the condition that Benjamin agree to pay

    Weiner personally for his assistance in securing the Bank's

    approval of the loan. In exchange for this kickback, Weiner

    helped the loan proposal reach the Executive Committee, voted

    to approve the loan, and influenced other Committee members

    to vote in favor of the loan. There was no evidence that

    other members of the Executive Committee were aware of

    Weiner's kickback arrangement with Benjamin when they voted

    to approve the loan. The bankruptcy court found that $26,300

    was paid to Weiner.

    Attorney Kunian represented both the Bank and the

    borrowers at the closing on the loan on February 27, 1986.



    -11-















    Kunian suggested that Young and her associates hold the

    Columbus Avenue properties through a realty trust. At the

    closing the 604 Columbus Avenue Realty Trust was created,

    with Young as its trustee. Young was given 62.5% of the

    beneficial interest in the trust, while each of her three

    partners, including Benjamin, was made a 12.5% beneficiary.

    To secure the loan from the Bank, Young executed on behalf of

    the Trust a "Commercial Real Estate Promissory Note," a "Loan

    and Security Agreement" ("L&SA"), an "Addendum to Loan &

    Security Agreement ("L&SA Addendum"), and a "Construction

    Loan Agreement" (referred to collectively as the "First Loan

    Agreement"). The Bank, in turn, agreed to lend the Trust

    $1,500,000.

    The Bank used a standard-form L&SA, which contained the

    following provisions:

    SECTION 6. BANK'S RIGHT TO SET-OFF

    6.01 The Borrower agrees that any deposits or
    other sums at any time credited by or due from the
    Bank to the Borrower, or any obligor or guarantor
    of any liabilities of the Borrower in possession of
    the Bank, may at all times be held and treated as
    collateral for any liabilities of the Borrower or
    any such obligor or guarantor to the Bank. The
    Bank may apply or set-off such deposits or other
    sums against said liabilities at any time.

    . . . .

    SECTION 8. EXPENSES:

    8.01 The Borrower shall pay or reimburse the Bank
    on demand for all out-of-pocket expenses of every
    nature which the Bank may incur in connection with
    this Agreement and the preparation thereof, the


    -12-















    making of any loan provided for therein, or the
    collection of the Borrower's indebtedness under
    this Agreement . . . . [T]he Bank, if it chooses,
    may debit such expenses to the Borrower's Loan
    Account or charge any of the Borrower's funds on
    deposit with the Bank.

    The parties also executed an Addendum to this L&SA,

    which established the following schedule for the Bank's

    advancement of the proceeds of the loan to the Trust:

    $1,200,000 at the closing to pay for the Trust's acquisition

    of the Columbus Avenue properties and the restaurant; a

    further $200,000 for construction-related expenditures at the

    Columbus Avenue properties, but only upon itemized

    requisitions approved by the Trust, its architect, and the

    bank; and $100,000 for the "soft costs" incurred with respect

    to the loan. "Soft costs" covered the various non-

    construction costs of the renovation effort, and included

    closing fees, interest, taxes, and insurance. To secure its

    promissory note, the Trust gave the Bank, inter alia, a
    _____ ____

    mortgage on the Columbus Avenue properties and a conditional

    assignment of rents from the properties in favor of the bank.

    Young, in her individual capacity, also gave the Bank

    mortgages on her residence and two other properties owned or

    held on her behalf.

    At the closing, the Bank disbursed approximately

    $1,250,000, of which nearly $1,200,000 was paid to the owners

    of the Columbus Avenue properties, and the remaining amount

    was paid to the Bank itself for the costs of the loan. The


    -13-















    Bank also created a checking account through which it was to

    disburse the remaining amounts of the loan. A signature card

    was created for the account bearing the names of Young,

    Benjamin, and another partner of the Trust. Those listed on

    the signature card had access to loan proceeds upon their

    disbursement by the Bank. Young was apparently not aware

    that Benjamin's signature was on the card.

    The bankruptcy court found that the Trust's ability to

    repay the loan on the Columbus Avenue properties hinged on

    several assumptions that Young and her partners understood or

    reasonably should have understood at the closing. One of

    these assumptions was that $100,000 for soft costs

    anticipated in First Loan Agreement would not cover those

    costs completely and would have to be supplemented by funds

    of Young and her partners. Another assumption was that the

    Trust could generate the funds necessary to complete the

    condominium project by selling the restaurant.

    The Bank advanced the remainder of the proceeds of the

    loan approximately $250,000 within forty-seven days of

    the closing, in three large payment. Weiner personally

    directed Gauthier to pay these advances into the Trust's

    account, but did so without the approval of Young and in

    violation of the procedures specified in the First Loan

    agreement. The bankruptcy court found that the Bank paid

    itself a total of $102,305.54 out of loan proceeds to cover



    -14-















    soft costs, thereby exceeding by $2,305.54 the amount of soft

    costs contemplated in the First Loan Agreement. The sum of

    $26,300 was withdrawn by Benjamin from the loan account

    without Young's knowledge or authorization, which was then

    used to make kickback payments to Weiner. Sometime

    thereafter, Young learned of Benjamin's conduct, and

    attempted unsuccessfully to expel him from the Trust and to

    get him to give up his beneficial interest in it.

    When the six-month term of the First Loan Agreement

    expired in August 1986, the Trust could not repay the loan.

    It therefore negotiated a second six-month loan to refinance

    the first (the "Second Loan Agreement"). On September 12,

    1986, the Trust signed a promissory note to the Bank for

    $1,750,000, which was secured by the same mortgages and

    guarantees as the First Loan Agreement. Young, on behalf of

    the Trust, executed a new L&SA that contained provisions

    identical to those in the L&SA accompanying the previous

    loan. In addition, the Addendum to the L&SA in the Second

    Loan Agreement provided, inter alia, the following scheme for
    _____ ____

    disbursement:

    The Bank shall advance the loan proceeds
    approximately as follows: a. $1,500,000.00 at
    closing for acquisition of real estate and personal
    property[;] b. $190,000.00 for construction costs
    . . . [;] c. $60,000.00 for soft costs incurred
    with respect to the loan.

    At the closing of the Second Loan Agreement, $1,580,151.11 in

    loan proceeds were disbursed to pay the $1,524,516.11 balance


    -15-















    remaining on the First Loan agreement and $55,635 in

    origination and attorney's fees for the new loan.

    Four months later, in January 1987, the Trust sold the

    property at 610 Columbus Avenue for $692,400 and paid the

    Bank this amount in order to reduce the outstanding principal

    balance of the Second Loan Agreement. In March 1987,

    however, when the Second Loan Agreement came due, the Trust

    was unable to repay it. The Bank therefore entered into an

    "Agreement to Extend Mortgage and Note" with the Trust, in

    exchange for an extension fee.

    The bankruptcy court found that during the term of the

    Second Loan Agreement and its extension, the Bank withdrew

    from the loan proceeds $169,406.12 for various soft costs,

    including closing fees, interest, charges for the loan

    extension, taxes, and attorney's fees. This amount exceeded

    the "approximately" $60,000 in soft costs originally provided

    for in the second L&SA Addendum by $109,406.12.

    The Second Loan Agreement, as extended, came due on June

    10, 1987. The Trust was unable to make payment. In

    September 1987, the Bank began foreclosure of the various

    mortgages it held as security for the loan. The bankruptcy

    court found that the reasons for the Trust's default

    included, inter alia: the inability of the Trust to sell the
    _____ ____

    restaurant, and the attendant loss of cash needed to finance

    the condominium renovations originally planned; the further



    -16-















    deprivation of cash needed for the project as a result of the

    kickback payments; and the Bank's overapplication of

    $109,406.12 in proceeds from the second loan to payment of

    soft costs. The bankruptcy court also concluded that it was

    the Trust's failure to sell the restaurant, rather than the

    Bank's overapplication of loan proceeds for soft costs and

    the kickback payments, that was by far the single most

    important reason for the failure of the project.

    DECISIONS OF THE BANKRUPTCY AND DISTRICT COURTS
    DECISIONS OF THE BANKRUPTCY AND DISTRICT COURTS

    In bankruptcy court, the Trust and Young alleged that

    the Bank entered into and administered the loans for the

    improper purpose of extracting a kickback from loan proceeds.

    They also alleged that the Bank improperly applied proceeds

    from the two loans to the payment of soft costs. The

    plaintiffs alleged fraud and deceit, conversion, and breach

    of contract by the Bank. They also argued that the Bank's

    inequitable conduct warranted the subordination of the Bank's

    secured claim in the Trust's bankruptcy estate to those of

    all of the Trust's other creditors. In addition, the Trust

    and Young requested an order invalidating entirely the Bank's

    mortgages on their properties.

    The bankruptcy court conducted a seven-day trial. It

    awarded the Trust $138,011.66 in damages. Of this amount,

    $26,300 was assessed as damages for the kickback payments

    made to Weiner by Benjamin. The kickback damages were based



    -17-















    on claims of conversion, breach of contract and fraud under

    Massachusetts law. The remaining $111,711.66 in damages

    represented the total amount of soft costs that the

    bankruptcy court found to have been improperly removed from

    the loan proceeds by the Bank in violation of the limits set

    by the two loan agreements i.e., $2,305.54 on the First

    Loan Agreement and $109,406.12 on the Second Loan Agreement.

    This award was premised on claims of conversion and breach of

    contract. The bankruptcy court also ordered that the

    $138,011.66 damages award be supplemented by an award of

    reasonable attorney's fees, which it found were warranted as

    an element of the conversion damages under Massachusetts law,

    and also of post-judgment interest at the contract rate

    specified in the loan agreements.

    Invoking its powers of equitable subordination pursuant

    to 11 U.S.C. 510(c), the court entered an order

    subordinating the Bank's secured claim to the claims of

    priority and general unsecured claimants in an amount equal

    to the full amount of the damages, interest and attorney's

    fees. It further directed that the Bank transfer to the

    Trust's estate a portion of its security interest in an

    amount equal to the total damages. The bankruptcy court

    refused, however, to issue an order entirely invalidating the

    mortgages held by the Bank.





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    While the Bank's appeal of the bankruptcy court's

    judgment was pending, the FDIC was appointed receiver and

    liquidating agent of the Bank, and substituted for the Bank

    as defendant-appellant. The FDIC continued the Bank's appeal

    of the bankruptcy court's judgment as to the conversion,

    breach of contract, and fraud claims, as well as its

    challenge to the bankruptcy court's equitable subordination

    of its secured interest in an amount equal to the total

    damages. In addition, the FDIC raised two special federal

    defenses as to each aspect of the damages claims. The FDIC

    argued that the D'Oench doctrine or its statutory
    _______

    counterpart, 12 U.S.C. 1823(e) precluded the bankruptcy

    court's award of damages on the kickback arrangement, insofar

    as this claim was based on a secret agreement between Weiner

    and Benjamin. The FDIC also argued that the special holder

    in due course status accorded it under federal common law

    entirely barred the Trust's claims for damages and equitable

    subordination against it in its receivership capacity.

    The Trust and Young, on the other hand, challenged the

    applicability of the federal defenses urged by the FDIC, as

    well as the FDIC's right to raise these defenses for the

    first time on appeal. They also contested the bankruptcy

    court's refusal to grant them an order invalidating entirely

    the Bank's mortgages on their properties.





    -19-















    In August 1991, the district court affirmed the

    bankruptcy court's rulings on the merits of the plaintiffs'

    conversion and breach of contract claims with respect to the

    Bank's improper application of loan proceeds for payment of

    soft costs. Although the district court found that the FDIC

    was entitled to raise its federal defenses for the first time

    on appeal, it rejected the FDIC's argument that the federal

    common law holder in due course doctrine barred the Trust's

    claims against it in its capacity as the Bank's receiver.

    The district court also affirmed the equitable subordination

    of the FDIC's secured claim on the Trust's estate in an

    amount equal to the damages on the soft costs claims, i.e.,

    $111,711.66, plus post-judgment interest. It reversed,

    however, the bankruptcy court's inclusion of attorney's fees

    as part of the overall amount of the FDIC's claim subject to

    equitable subordination.

    The district court vacated the bankruptcy court's award

    of $26,300 of damages based on the kickback arrangement

    between Benjamin and Weiner. Finding that the FDIC was

    entitled to raise the D'Oench doctrine for the first time on
    _______

    appeal, the court held that the kickback arrangement was a

    secret agreement squarely within the coverage of the

    doctrine. It therefore reduced the equitable subordination

    against the FDIC by an amount equal to the kickback damages.

    Because it found that the fraud claims based on the kickback



    -20-















    arrangement could not stand against the FDIC, the court

    rejected the Trust and Young's arguments that it declare the

    loan agreements and the mortgages on the plaintiffs'

    properties void as illegal contracts in contravention of

    public policy.











































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    THE ISSUES ON APPEAL AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    THE ISSUES ON APPEAL AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

    In their appeals to this court,3 both the FDIC and the

    Trust press substantially the same arguments made in their

    appeals of the bankruptcy court's judgment to the district

    court.4 The FDIC argues that because it was the receiver of

    an insolvent bank, federal common law barred the plaintiffs'

    claims of conversion, breach of contract, and fraud, as well

    as the equitable subordination of the FDIC's secured interest

    in the Trust's estate. The FDIC maintains that any damages

    against it in its receivership capacity based on the soft

    costs claims were barred by the federal common law holder in

    due course doctrine, and that the equitable subordination

    against it in an amount equal to those damages is contrary to

    federal common law. The FDIC also attacks the rulings of the

    bankruptcy court, affirmed by the district court, that the

    Bank misappropriated soft costs monies, as well as the

    equitable subordination of its secured claim to reflect the

    damages caused by the Bank's misappropriation. It further

    challenges the district court's affirmance of an award of





    ____________________

    3. Following the district court's judgment, both the FDIC
    and the Trust docketed separate appeals with this court. The
    FDIC's appeal is No. 91-1977; the Trust's is No. 91-1976.

    4. Young is not a party to the Trust's appeal. Neither the
    Trust nor Young has challenged the district court's
    affirmance of the bankruptcy court's refusal to void the
    mortgages on their properties.

    -22-















    post-judgment interest on the $111,711.66 in damages on the

    soft costs claims.

    The Trust, on the other hand, argues that the district

    court erred by applying the D'Oench doctrine for the first
    _______

    time on appeal. The Trust insists that the D'Oench doctrine
    _______

    does not bar its recovery on its claims relating to the

    kickback scheme. The Trust also maintains that the district

    court erred when it held that the bankruptcy court

    incorrectly included attorney's fees as part of the overall

    amount of the FDIC's security interest subject to equitable

    subordination in favor of the Trust and other creditors.

    In an appeal from a district court's review of a

    bankruptcy court's decision, we "independently review[] the

    bankruptcy court's decision, applying the clearly erroneous

    standard to findings of fact and de novo review to

    conclusions of law." In re G.S.F. Corp., 938 F.2d 1467, 1474
    __________________

    (1st Cir. 1991). See also In re Navigation Technology Corp.,
    ________ _________________________________

    880 F.2d 1491, 1493 (1st Cir. 1989) (bankruptcy court's

    determinations of law subject to de novo review); Briden v.
    _________

    Foley, 776 F.2d 379, 381 (1st Cir. 1985) (clearly erroneous
    _____

    standard of review applied to bankruptcy court's factual

    findings).









    -23-















    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION

    I. DISTRICT COURT REVIEW OF THE FDIC'S FEDERAL DEFENSES FOR
    THE FIRST TIME ON APPEAL

    Before considering the Trust's state law claims

    underlying its damages award against the Bank, we first

    address the FDIC's arguments that two special defenses

    established under federal law the federal common law holder

    in due course and D'Oench doctrines barred all of the
    _______

    plaintiffs' claims and resulting equitable subordination

    against it as the Bank's receiver. In order to address the

    merits of these federal defenses, we must, as a threshold

    matter, determine whether the FDIC was entitled to raise them

    for the first time in the district court in its appeal of the

    bankruptcy court's judgment.

    The district court based its decision to permit the FDIC

    to assert its federal defenses exclusively on the Financial

    Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989

    ("FIRREA"), Pub. L. No. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183 (1989)

    (codified at 12 U.S.C. 1811-1833e), which provides in

    pertinent part:

    (13) Additional rights and duties

    (A) Prior final adjudication

    The Corporation shall abide by any final
    unappealable judgment of any court of
    competent jurisdiction which was rendered
    before the appointment of the Corporation as
    conservator or receiver.




    -24-















    (B) Rights and Remedies of conservator or
    receiver

    In the event of any appealable judgment,
    the Corporation as conservator or receiver
    shall

    (i) have all the rights and remedies
    available to the insured depository
    institution (before the appointment of
    such conservator or receiver) and the
    Corporation in its corporate capacity,
    including removal to Federal court and
    all appellate rights; and

    (ii) not be required to post any bond in
    order to pursue such remedies.

    12 U.S.C.A. 1821(d)(13)(A)-(B). The district court found

    that the bankruptcy court's judgment in favor of the Trust

    was "appealable" within the meaning of 1821(d)(13)(B). It

    reasoned that the federal defenses against the Trust's claim

    asserted by the FDIC in its receivership capacity were among

    "the rights and remedies available to . . . the [FDIC] in its

    corporate capacity." The district court concluded that the

    "rights and remedies" granted the FDIC in its receivership

    capacity included the right to raise its federal defenses for

    the first time on appeal. The district court based this

    analysis on its reading of FIRREA's text and legislative

    history.5


    ____________________

    5. As evidence of Congress' special solicitude for the
    preservation of the rights of the FDIC in its receivership
    capacity, the district court emphasized FIRREA's provision of
    an automatic stay in any litigation to which the FDIC becomes
    a party. See 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(12). It also highlighted
    ___
    language in FIRREA's legislative history explaining the need
    for the automatic stay: "The appointment of a conservator or

    -25-















    The district court acknowledged that this interpretation

    of 1821(d)(13)(B) conflicted with that of the Fifth and

    Eleventh Circuits, both of which have rejected this

    interpretation of FIRREA. In Olney Savings & Loan
    ________________________

    Association v. Trinity Banc Savings Association, 885 F.2d 266
    _______________________________________________

    (5th Cir. 1989), the Fifth Circuit ruled that

    1821(d)(13)(B) did not in any way modify the substantive

    rights of the FSLIC in its receivership capacity, but merely

    assured the FSLIC standing to pursue all appeals previously

    available to it only in its corporate capacity. Accordingly,

    it held that FIRREA did not entitle the FSLIC to raise the

    D'Oench doctrine for the first time on appeal. Id. at 275.
    _______ ___

    In Baumann v. Savers Federal Savings & Loan Assoc., 934 F.2d
    _______________________________________________

    1506 (11th Cir. 1991), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 1992 U.S.
    ____________

    LEXIS 2709, 60 U.S.L.W. 3780 (1992), the Eleventh Circuit

    followed Olney, and rejected the argument of the Resolution
    _____

    Trust Corporation ("RTC") that 1821(d)(13)(B) entitled it

    to raise the D'Oench doctrine. Id. at 1511. In Baumann, the
    _______ ___ _______

    Eleventh Circuit expressly rejected the interpretation of


    ____________________

    receiver can often change the character of the litigation;
    the stay gives the FDIC a chance to analyze pending matters
    and decide how best to proceed." H.R. Rep. No. 54(I), 101st
    Cong., 1st Sess. 331 (1989), reprinted in 1989 U.S.C.C.A.N.
    _____________
    86, 127. The district court further relied on two decisions
    of the Texas Court of Appeals holding that 1821(d)(13)(B)
    permits the FDIC to raise the D'Oench doctrine for the first
    _______
    time on appeal. See FDIC/Manager Fund v. Larsen, 793 S.W.2d
    ___ ___________________________
    37 (Tex. Ct. App.), writ granted, 34 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 91
    ____________
    (1990); FSLIC v. T.F. Stone-Liberty Land Assocs., 787 S.W.2d
    _________________________________________
    475 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

    -26-















    1821(d)(13)(B) advanced by the district court in this case.

    The Baumann court concluded that to read the statute
    _______

    otherwise would be to grant a federal receiver new

    substantive rights, because neither FIRREA nor previously

    existing statutes granted the RTC in its corporate capacity

    the power to raise arguments for the first time on appeal.

    Id.
    ___

    We think that the Olney and Baumann courts'
    _____ _______

    interpretation of 1821(d)(13)(B) is the proper one, and

    hold that the district court erred when it read FIRREA as

    allowing the FDIC in its receivership capacity to raise its

    federal defenses for the first time on appeal. We agree with

    the distinction drawn by Baumann: "the right at issue in this
    _______

    case is not the right of the [federal receiver] to argue [a

    federal defense], which is unquestioned, but rather the right

    of the [federal receiver] to raise an argument for the first

    time on appeal." Id. at 1512. Section 1821(d)(13)(B) merely
    ___

    accords the FDIC in its receivership capacity standing to

    raise the same defenses available to the FDIC in its

    corporate capacity. It does not establish that the FDIC as

    receiver is entitled to raise its federal defenses for the

    first time on appeal.

    Although FIRREA does not grant the FDIC as receiver the

    right to raise its special federal defenses to the Trust's

    claims for the first time on appeal, we must also consider



    -27-















    whether there is any alternative basis on which the district

    court could have permitted the FDIC to raise its federal

    defenses. The FDIC argues that even if 1821(d)(13)(B) does

    not grant it the right to raise its federal defenses, the

    district court nonetheless had the discretion, in its

    capacity as an appellate court, to address these defenses for

    the first time on appeal.

    The FDIC relies principally on Baumann for this
    _______

    argument. There, the Eleventh Circuit held that its

    discretion as an appellate court permitted it to address the

    federal receiver's D'Oench doctrine argument for the first
    _______

    time on appeal. Id. at 1513. The court stressed the fact
    ___

    that the RTC had not had the opportunity to present its

    argument in the trial court because it had not become a party

    to the suit until after the entry of final judgment. Id. In
    ___

    order to prevent the RTC from being "penalized for not

    raising a defense it had no opportunity to present," the

    Baumann court concluded that it would be appropriate to
    _______

    exercise its discretion to exempt the RTC in its receivership

    capacity from its general rule precluding argument of issues

    for the first time of appeal. Id. The Fifth Circuit has
    ___

    also adopted Baumann's approach in similar circumstances in
    _______

    which the federal conservator or receiver becomes a party to

    an appeal after the final judgment of the trial court. See
    ___

    Resolution Trust Corp. v. McCrory, 951 F.2d 68, 71 (5th Cir.
    __________________________________



    -28-















    1992) (citing Baumann and Union Fed. Bank v. Minyard, 919
    _______ ____________________________

    F.2d 335, 336 (5th Cir. 1990)).

    It is the general rule in this circuit that arguments

    not raised in the trial court cannot be raised for the first

    time on appeal. See, e.g., Boston Celtics Ltd. Partnership
    ___ ____ ________________________________

    v. Shaw, 908 F.2d 1041, 1045 (1st Cir. 1990); Brown v.
    ________ _________

    Trustees of Boston Univ., 891 F.2d 337, 359 (1st Cir. 1989),
    _________________________

    cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 110 S. Ct. 3217 (1990). Like
    ____________

    other circuit courts of appeals, however, we have recognized

    that an appellate court has the discretion, in exceptional

    circumstances, to reach issues not raised below. See United
    ___ ______

    States v. La Guardia, 902 F.2d 1010, 1013 (1st Cir. 1990).
    _____________________

    In United States v. Krynicki, 689 F.2d 289, 291-92 (1st Cir.
    _________________________

    1982), we outlined the criteria for determining the

    appropriate exercise of our discretion to hear new issues.

    These criteria include, inter alia, whether the new issue is
    _____ ____

    purely legal, such that the record pertinent to the issue can

    be developed no further; whether the party's claim appears

    meritorious; whether reaching the issue would promote

    judicial economy because the same issue is likely to be

    presented in other cases; and whether declining to reach the

    argument would result in a miscarriage of justice. Id.
    ___

    The circumstances of this case were sufficiently

    exceptional to have permitted the district court to consider

    for the first time on appeal the merits of the federal



    -29-















    defenses raised by the FDIC in its receivership capacity.

    The question of whether various federal defenses barred the

    Trust's claims was purely legal and required no further

    development of the factual record; the FDIC's federal

    defenses were colorable, judged by the district court's

    acceptance of the FDIC's D'Oench argument to bar damages on
    _______

    the kickback claims; judicial economy would have been

    promoted by a ruling on the merits of the applicability of

    the FDIC's federal defenses, given the increasing volume of

    litigation involving federal receivers and/or conservators in

    this circuit; and finally, it would have been unfair to

    prevent the FDIC from raising its federal defenses when it

    had no such opportunity to assert them before the bankruptcy

    court. As Baumann and McCrory make clear, it is not uncommon
    _______ _______

    for a federal receiver or conservator to become a party to a

    litigation after the final judgment of the trial court. To

    prevent the FDIC from raising its federal defenses in such

    circumstances would vitiate much of the purpose of allowing

    these defenses in the first place.

    II. THE D'OENCH DOCTRINE AS A BAR TO THE TRUST'S RECOVERY ON
    _______
    THE KICKBACK CLAIMS

    We next review the question of whether the D'Oench
    _______

    doctrine, or its statutory counterpart, 12 U.S.C.








    -30-















    1823(e),6 bars the Trust's claims based on the kickback

    scheme and any equitable subordination against the FDIC as

    receiver.

    In D'Oench, the Supreme Court held that in a suit
    _______

    brought by the FDIC to collect on a borrower's promissory

    note, in which the FDIC was the successor in interest to the

    original lender, the borrower was not entitled to rely on

    agreements outside the documents contained in the lender

    bank's records to defeat the FDIC's claim. 315 U.S. at 460-

    61. The Supreme Court announced a federal common law

    doctrine of equitable estoppel preventing the borrower from

    using a "secret agreement" with the original lender as a



    ____________________

    6. As amended by FIRREA, 1823(e) provides:
    No agreement which tends to diminish or defeat the
    interest of the Corporation in any asset acquired
    by it under this section . . . , either as security
    for a loan or by purchase or as 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 committee, and
    (4) has been, continuously, from the time of
    its execution, an official record of the
    depository institution.
    We treat 1823(e) as the statutory codification of the
    D'Oench doctrine. See Capizzi v. FDIC, 937 F.2d 8, 9 (1st
    _______ ___ ________________
    Cir. 1991); FDIC v. P.L.M. Int'l, Inc., 834 F.2d 248, 253
    ____________________________
    (1st Cir. 1987).

    -31-















    defense to the FDIC's demand for payment. Id. D'Oench did
    ___ _______

    not require that the borrower have the intent to defraud:

    "The test is whether the note was designed to deceive

    creditors or the public authority, or would tend to have that

    effect. It would be sufficient in this type of case that the

    maker lent himself to a scheme or arrangement whereby the

    banking authority . . . was or was likely to be misled." Id.
    ___

    at 460.

    The contours of the D'Oench doctrine, which have
    _______

    expanded since the Court's original decision, are well-

    established in this circuit. See Timberland Design, 932 F.2d
    ___ _________________

    at 48-49; FDIC v. Caporale, 931 F.2d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 1991);
    ________________

    FDIC v. P.L.M. Int'l, Inc., 834 F.2d 248, 252-53 (1st Cir.
    ___________________________

    1987). Although the D'Oench decision involved the FDIC in
    _______

    its corporate capacity, "courts have consistently applied the

    doctrine to those situations where the FDIC was acting in its

    capacity as receiver." Timberland Design, 932 F.2d at 49
    _________________

    (citing cases). We have also adopted the position of the

    great majority of the circuits that D'Oench "operates to bar
    _______

    affirmative claims as well as defenses which are premised

    upon secret agreements." Id. In addition, D'Oench applies
    ___ _______

    to claims involving secret agreements that sound either in

    tort or in contract. Id. at 50 (citing Langley v. FDIC, 484
    ___ _______________

    U.S. 86 (1987)). And finally, the fact that the FDIC may

    have actual knowledge of the secret agreement is irrelevant:



    -32-















    "The proper focus under D'Oench is whether the agreement, at
    _______

    the time it was entered into, would tend to mislead the

    public authority." Id.
    ___

    Applying the principles enunciated in Timberland, the
    __________

    district court held that D'Oench estopped the Trust from
    _______

    raising against the FDIC its affirmative claims based on the

    kickback scheme. It found that the record established that

    the Trust, through its agent Benjamin, had "lent itself" to a

    kickback scheme with the Bank. The district court concluded

    that the unwritten agreement and subsequent kickback payments

    between Weiner and Benjamin were a "secret agreement"

    squarely within the coverage of D'Oench.
    _______

    The Trust contends that D'Oench should not have been
    _______

    applied for the district court for several reasons. It

    argues that its tort claims of conversion and fraud stand on

    a factual basis independent of the kickback arrangement, and

    that these claims therefore cannot be barred by D'Oench. For
    _______

    similar reasons the Trust argues that its breach of contract

    claim must also be upheld because the removal of $26,300 from

    the loan proceeds was a breach of the express terms of the

    written loan agreement, and not a breach of the unwritten

    kickback arrangement. In the alternative, the Trust invokes

    certain recognized exceptions to the D'Oench doctrine: it
    _______

    claims (1) that it is a non-negligent victim of "fraud in the

    factum," and (2), that the district court should have found



    -33-















    that it was innocent of any intentional or negligent

    deception because Benjamin was not acting as the Trust's

    agent at the time he removed loan proceeds for the kickback

    payments.

    A. The Scope of the Kickback Agreement
    ___________________________________

    We find little merit in the Trust's first argument,

    which counsel appears in part to have abandoned during oral

    argument.7 As we understand it, the Trust's contention is

    that because its fraud and conversion claims are "not

    premised upon" the kickback arrangement, D'Oench cannot
    _______

    apply. According to the Trust, "the kickback arrangement

    merely explains why Capitol Bank chose to misappropriate the

    [Trust's] assets, whereas the misappropriations themselves

    are the basis of the [Trust's claims]." Brief for Appellant

    604 Columbus Avenue Realty Trust at 27. The problem with the

    Trust's position is that the bankruptcy court's findings in

    respect to these claims, as well as its equitable



    ____________________

    7. When pressed to explain why the D'Oench doctrine did not
    _______
    apply to all the Trust's claims relating to the secret
    agreement between Benjamin and Weiner, counsel for the Trust
    placed exclusive reliance on the argument that the Trust was
    an innocent party that had not knowingly made itself a party
    to the kickback arrangement with Weiner. Counsel stated that
    "if the Trust had in fact entered into an oral agreement,
    then you would be right; D'Oench would clearly apply. But
    _______
    the bankruptcy court did not find that fact. The bankruptcy
    court found that Benjamin was liable to the Trust for the
    twenty-six thousand dollars as well as the Bank. . . . [I]t
    seems to me to be a very, very broad application of D'Oench
    _______
    where a borrower has not lent themselves [sic] in any fashion
    to this agreement."

    -34-















    subordination of $26,300 in lieu of damages, were in fact

    explicitly premised on the kickback arrangement. See
    ___

    Bankruptcy Court Opinion, 119 B.R. at 371 (conversion); id.
    ___

    at 374 (fraud); id. at 377 (equitable subordination). Nor
    ___

    does the Trust elaborate as to how other facts, independent

    of those relating to the kickback arrangement, provide an

    alternative basis for the bankruptcy court's findings in its

    favor.8 The Trust's tort claims fall squarely under

    D'Oench: "D'Oench bars . . . affirmative claims . . . as long
    _______ _______

    as those claims arise out of an alleged secret arrangement."
    ___________________________________________

    Timberland, 932 F.2d at 50 (emphasis added).
    __________

    The Trust next argues that D'Oench does not bar its
    _______

    breach of contract claim against the Bank for the $26,300

    misappropriated from the Trust's account because this breach

    was a violation of the written terms of the loan agreement.

    It relies on Howell v. Continental Credit Corp., 655 F.2d 743
    __________________________________

    (7th Cir. 1981), which held that the FDIC cannot invoke

    D'Oench "where the document the FDIC seeks to enforce is one
    _______

    . . . which facially manifests bilateral obligations and

    serves as the basis of the [promisor's] defense." Id. at 746
    ___

    (emphasis omitted). Seizing on the language of Howell, the
    ______


    ____________________

    8. The Trust's attempts to distinguish Weiner's conduct from
    the tortious conduct of the Bank are completely without
    merit. The Trust prevailed on its tort claims against the
    Bank in bankruptcy court on a respondeat superior theory, and
    cannot now evade the precepts of D'Oench by intimating that
    _______
    these tort claims against the Bank had nothing to do with the
    kickback arrangement masterminded by Weiner.

    -35-















    Trust advances much the same argument with respect to the

    breach of contract claim as asserted in its challenge to

    D'Oench's application to its tort claims, i.e., that the
    _______

    "bilateral obligations" of the loan agreement, and not the

    secret kickback agreement, are the basis for its breach of

    contract claim. Once again, the Trust's argument ignores the

    opinion of the bankruptcy court, which expressly stated that

    the $26,300 judgment for the Trust on the breach of contract

    claim was founded on the kickback arrangement. See
    ___

    Bankruptcy Court Opinion, 119 B.R. at 375.

    The Trust's reliance on Howell is also misplaced. The
    ______

    Trust's breach of contract claim required proof of the

    existence of a secret kickback arrangement. Howell, on the
    ______

    other hand, involved the FDIC's attempted enforcement of a

    lease that expressly imposed bilateral obligations on both

    the lessor and lessee. See Howell, 655 F.2d at 747. The
    ___ ______

    Seventh Circuit ruled that the FDIC, as successor to the

    lessor, could not assert D'Oench to bar the lessee's contract
    _______

    defenses. Id. In Howell, the lessee's contract defenses
    ___ ______

    were not premised on any secret agreement, but were based on

    the failure of the original lessor to fulfill the express

    conditions of the lease. Id. The limited exception to the
    ___









    -36-















    D'Oench doctrine crafted by Howell does not apply to the
    _______ ______

    Trust's breach of contract claim.9

    B. Fraud In The Factum
    ___________________

    The Trust further claims that two other recognized

    exceptions to the D'Oench doctrine apply to this case. The
    _______

    first exception is fraud in the factum. The Supreme Court's

    decision in Langley v. FDIC, 484 U.S. 86 (1987), while
    _________________

    addressed to the issue of the FDIC's right to invoke

    D'Oench's statutory counterpart, 12 U.S.C. 1823(e), is also
    _______

    applicable to analysis of fraud in the factum as a bar to the

    application of D'Oench. In Langley, the Court distinguished
    _______ _______

    between the real defense of fraud in the factum, which

    renders a loan agreement entirely void and takes the

    agreement out of 1823(e), and a defense of fraud in the

    inducement, which renders the loan agreement voidable but

    does not preclude the FDIC's assertion of 1823(e).

    Langley, 484 U.S. at 93-94. After reviewing the claim by the
    _______

    note makers that their participation in a land transaction

    had been procured by misrepresentations as to the size and

    character of the property involved, the Court concluded that



    ____________________

    9. Since Howell, the Seventh Circuit has cautioned note
    ______
    makers from the over-hasty invocation against the FDIC of the
    exception to D'Oench contemplated by that decision: "Lesson
    _______
    Number One in the study of law is that general language in an
    opinion must not be ripped from its context to make a rule
    far broader than the factual circumstances which called forth
    the language." FDIC v. O'Neil, 809 F.2d 350, 354 (7th Cir.
    _______________
    1987).

    -37-















    the note makers' argument was a claim of fraud in the

    inducement. Accordingly, the Court found that the FDIC could

    properly invoke 1823(e) to bar the assertion by the note

    makers of their fraud defense. Id. at 94.
    ___

    We think that the Langley Court's distinction for
    _______

    purposes of 1823(e) between fraud in the inducement and

    fraud in the factum applies with equal force in the context

    of D'Oench. We have characterized fraud in the factum as a
    _______

    real defense that may be asserted when the original lender

    fraudulently procures the borrower's signature to an

    instrument without that borrower's knowledge of its true

    nature or contents. See FDIC v. Caporale, 931 F.2d 1, 2 n.1
    ___ _________________

    (1st Cir. 1991) (noting that in the case of fraud in the

    factum, "the instruments would be void rather than voidable,

    leaving no title capable of transfer to the FDIC."). See
    ___

    also E. Allan Farnsworth, Contracts 4.10 (1982) (describing
    ____ _________

    fraud in the factum as arising in the rare situation in which

    the defrauded party "neither knows nor has reason to know of

    the character of the proposed agreement . . . .").

    The Trust analogizes its situation to that of the

    defendant in FDIC v. Turner, 869 F.2d 270 (6th Cir. 1989).
    ______________

    There, the defendant signed a blank guaranty form to which

    the name of the debtor and the amount of the guaranty were

    later added. In addition, the name of the lending bank on

    the original guaranty was subsequently obliterated with



    -38-















    correction fluid and substituted with that of another bank.

    Id. at 272. When the FDIC sued to enforce this altered
    ___

    version of the loan guaranty, the defendant raised the

    defense of fraud in the factum. The Sixth Circuit agreed

    that the defendant was defrauded as to the guaranty's

    essential terms, and held that the FDIC was therefore

    precluded from interposing D'Oench to bar the defense. Id.
    _______ ___

    at 275-76.

    Review of these cases convinces us that the Trust's

    claim was one of fraud in the inducement, and not of fraud in

    the factum. The bankruptcy court found that the Bank, acting

    under Weiner's supervision, falsely represented to the Trust

    that the consideration for the first loan was limited to the

    consideration itemized in the original agreement.10 The

    Bank's misrepresentation did not go to the very character of

    the proposed loan agreement, but only to its underlying

    terms. Unlike the note maker in Turner, the Trust cannot
    ______

    claim that when it executed the promissory note to the Bank,

    it was "unaware of the nature of the documents [it] signed."

    Caporale, 931 F.2d at 2, n.1. The Bank, through Weiner,
    ________


    ____________________

    10. The bankruptcy court also found that the damages against
    the Bank for both the Trust's tort and contract claims were
    limited to the $26,300 in additional "consideration"
    extracted from the proceeds of the First Loan Agreement. It
    declined to declare the First Loan Agreement unenforceable
    because of the illegal consideration, reasoning that to do so
    would "penaliz[e] the Bank in the full amount of the loan, an
    amount . . . grossly disproportionate to the amount
    converted."

    -39-















    induced the Trust to execute the loan agreement by

    misrepresenting the consideration involved. There was,

    however, no fraud in the factum precluding application of

    D'Oench because there is no evidence to suggest that the
    _______

    Trust did not fully understand the basic nature of the

    obligation it assumed by entering the loan agreement. The

    Bank's extraction of additional $26,300 in consideration from

    the Trust did not fundamentally alter the nature of the

    instruments themselves.

    C. Innocence As A Defense to D'Oench
    _________________________________

    The second exception to D'Oench claimed by the Trust is
    _______

    that it was completely innocent of any intentional or

    negligent deception. The Trust contends that it could not

    have "lent [itself] to a scheme or arrangement" which misled

    the FDIC because Benjamin negotiated and transferred the

    kickback payments to Weiner without the knowledge of the

    other beneficiaries of the Trust. The Trust maintains that

    the district court improperly concluded that the record

    established that the Trust involved itself in the kickback

    scheme. Emphasizing that the bankruptcy court found that

    both Benjamin and the Bank were liable on the conversion
    ____

    count, the Trust claims that Benjamin could not have been

    acting as its agent or for its benefit when he removed

    $26,300 in loan proceeds from the Trust's accounts to make

    kickback payments.



    -40-















    As authority for its claim of innocence as an exception

    to D'Oench, the Trust cites a footnote to Vernon v.
    _______ __________

    Resolution Trust Corp., 907 F.2d 1101, 1106 n.4 (11th Cir.
    _______________________

    1990), which in turn relies on an earlier decision of the

    Ninth Circuit, FDIC v. Meo, 505 F.2d 790 (9th Cir. 1974).
    ____________

    Yet in Baumann, the Eleventh Circuit expressly rejected
    _______

    Vernon's suggestion of the continued viability of a "complete
    ______

    innocence" exception: "it is clear that this exception is no

    longer tenable because lack of bad faith, recklessness, or

    even negligence is not a defense in D'Oench cases." 934 F.2d
    _______

    at 1516. See also FSLIC v. Gordy, 928 F.2d 1558, 1567 n.14
    ___ ____ ______________

    (11th Cir. 1991) (observing that innocence doctrine of Meo,
    ___

    in light of Supreme Court decision in Langley, "is based on
    _______

    an outdated understanding" of D'Oench). Baumann emphasized
    _______ _______

    that such an exception would be contrary to the broad purpose

    of D'Oench to prevent a private party from enforcing against
    _______

    the federal authority "any obligation not specifically

    memorialized in a written document such that the agency would

    be aware of the obligation when conducting an examination of

    the institution's records." Baumann, 934 F.2d at 1515.
    _______

    In Timberland, this court also stressed the basic
    __________

    purpose of D'Oench to protect a federal receiver even "where
    _______

    the only element of fault on the part of the borrower was his

    or her failure to reduce the agreement to writing." 932 F.2d

    at 49 (citation omitted). We agree with the Baumann court
    _______



    -41-















    that the borrower's state of mind is irrelevant, because the

    "proper focus under D'Oench is whether the agreement, at the
    _______

    time it was entered into, would tend to mislead the public

    authority."

    Id. at 50. Our earlier cases have never recognized the
    ___

    "complete innocence" exception to D'Oench alluded to by the
    _______

    Trust, and we reject the invitation to adopt it now as the

    law of this circuit.

    Our conclusion that there is no "complete innocence"

    exception to D'Oench is not entirely dispositive of the
    _______

    Trust's argument. As we understand it, the "innocence"

    professed by the Trust is not the kind of paradigmatic

    "complete innocence" formerly recognized as an exception to

    D'Oench i.e., a borrower entering into an unrecorded side
    _______

    agreement innocent of any intentional or negligent deception.

    Rather, the Trust's claim of "innocence" is really an

    argument that the actions of Benjamin should not be

    attributed to the Trust and that the Trust did not actually

    lend itself to the kickback arrangement.

    The factual record belies the assertion that Benjamin

    did not act on behalf of the Trust. The bankruptcy court

    found that it was Benjamin alone who negotiated the terms of

    the First Loan Agreement on behalf of Young and her

    associates. It was Benjamin who at the same time agreed to

    the kickback arrangement that secured Weiner's assistance in



    -42-















    obtaining approval of the loan by the Executive Committee.

    At the closing of the First Loan Agreement at which time

    the Trust was formally created a signature card was

    executed authorizing Benjamin to withdraw funds from the

    Trust's loan proceeds account. The bankruptcy court further

    found that Benjamin was also given authority to access the

    Trust's funds in other accounts at the Bank, including one

    for the restaurant and another for rental income from the

    Columbus Avenue properties.

    It seems clear that Benjamin acted with the ostensible

    authority of the Trust and its principals throughout the

    negotiation and execution of the First Loan Agreement. The

    Trust, therefore, cannot disclaim all of Benjamin's actions

    with respect to the kickback agreement. Indeed, the Trust is

    willing to concede that "one could argue that Benjamin was

    acting as an agent of the [Trust] when he entered into the

    kickback scheme with Weiner." Brief for Appellant 604

    Columbus Avenue Realty Trust at 32. In these circumstances,

    the Trust "lent [itself] to a scheme or arrangement whereby

    the banking authority . . . was or was likely to be misled."

    D'Oench, 315 U.S. at 460.11
    _______


    ____________________

    11. Our ruling is consistent with the decision in FDIC v.
    ________
    Kasal, 913 F.2d 487 (8th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, ___ U.S.
    _____ _____ ______
    ___, 111 S. Ct. 1072 (1991). In its reply brief, the Trust
    draws on language from a dissenting opinion in Kasal for the
    _____
    general proposition that "it is a perversion of justice to
    hold the borrowers responsible for funds misappropriated by a
    bank officer." Id. at 496 (Heaney, J., dissenting). In
    ___

    -43-















    Because we find that the district court correctly

    applied the D'Oench doctrine to bar the Trust's claims and
    _______

    equitable subordination against the Bank based on the

    kickback agreement, we do not reach the FDIC's arguments

    under 1823(e).

    III. THE FEDERAL HOLDER IN DUE COURSE DOCTRINE AS A BAR TO
    THE TRUST'S CLAIMS AND EQUITABLE SUBORDINATION AGAINST THE
    FDIC IN ITS RECEIVERSHIP CAPACITY

    We turn next to the FDIC's principal argument on appeal:

    that the district court erred when it held that the federal

    common law holder in due course doctrine did not bar the

    Trust's claims against the FDIC in its receivership capacity

    and the equitable subordination of the FDIC's secured

    interest in the Trust's bankruptcy estate. The FDIC

    addresses this argument to the bankruptcy court's judgment

    against the Bank for $111,711.66 on the Trust's conversion

    and breach of contract claims for misapplication of loan

    proceeds for payment of interest, taxes and other soft

    costs.12 The FDIC has conceded in this case that D'Oench
    _______

    does not bar the Trust's claims based on breach of the soft


    ____________________

    Kasal, the borrower was totally unaware of a misappropriation
    _____
    from his accounts by a bank officer. In this case, Benjamin,
    a representative of the Trust, both negotiated and carried
    out the misappropriations from the Trust's account.

    12. The FDIC also argues that the federal holder in due
    course doctrine bars the Trust's fraud claim arising from the
    kickback agreement. Because we have already held that the
    Trust's claims based on the kickback agreement were barred by
    the D'Oench doctrine, we need not address this aspect of the
    _______
    FDIC's holder in due course argument.

    -44-















    costs provisions of the two loan agreements. Instead, the

    FDIC insists that policy concerns similar to those underlying

    the D'Oench doctrine militate in favor of expanding the
    _______

    federal holder in due course doctrine to the FDIC in its

    receivership capacity when, as here, there has been no

    purchase and assumption transaction by the FDIC in its

    corporate capacity.

    A. Origins of the Federal Holder in Due Course Doctrine
    ____________________________________________________

    In order to evaluate the strength of the policy concerns

    that the FDIC asserts as the basis for extending the federal

    holder in due course doctrine to the FDIC in the

    circumstances of this case, we first examine this doctrine as

    it has emerged in cases involving purchase and assumption

    transactions by the FDIC in its corporate capacity.

    The germinative opinion in the development of the

    federal holder in due course doctrine was Gunter v.
    __________

    Hutcheson, 674 F.2d 862 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 459 U.S.
    _________ ____________

    826 (1982). In Gunter, the FDIC in its corporate capacity
    ______

    acquired a promissory note after a purchase and assumption

    transaction involving a failed Tennessee bank. The note

    makers brought suit for rescission of the note held by the

    FDIC on the basis of, inter alia, fraudulent
    _____ ____

    misrepresentation by the directors of the failed bank. Id.
    ___

    at 866. The FDIC counterclaimed for payment of the note in

    the district court, asserting that 1823(e) barred the note



    -45-















    makers' claims, and arguing in the alternative that federal

    common law gave it a defense against claims of fraud of which

    it lacked knowledge. Id. at 866-67.
    ___

    Although the Gunter court rejected the application of
    ______

    1823(e) to bar the note maker's fraud claims,13 it accepted

    the FDIC's argument that a federal common law rule of non-

    liability against these claims was necessary in order for the

    FDIC to accomplish its statutory objectives. In reaching

    this conclusion, the Gunter court applied the Supreme Court's
    ______

    test for determining whether the implementation of a federal

    program would be frustrated without the adoption of a uniform

    federal rule. See United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440
    ___ ____________________________________

    U.S. 715 (1979). Applying Kimbell Foods, the Gunter court
    ______________ ______

    stressed the FDIC's duty to promote "the stability of and

    confidence in the nation's banking system," id. at 870, and
    ___

    the preferred status of the purchase and assumption

    transaction as a means of accomplishing this duty because "it

    avoids the specter of closed banks and the interruption of

    daily banking services." Id.
    ___






    ____________________

    13. The Gunter court found it necessary to reach the merits
    ______
    of the FDIC's federal common law argument because it found
    that the note maker's fraud defenses were not precluded by
    1823(e). Gunter, 674 F.2d at 867. This analysis of
    ______
    1823(e) as not barring a claim of fraud in the inducement was
    subsequently disapproved by the Supreme Court in Langley.
    _______
    See Langley, 484 U.S. at 93-94.
    ___ _______

    -46-















    The court noted that speed was of the essence in a

    purchase and assumption transaction because of the need to

    preserve the going concern value of the bank:

    [T]he FDIC must have some method to evaluate its
    potential liability in a purchase and assumption
    versus its potential liability from a liquidation.
    Because of the time constraints involved, the only
    method of evaluating potential loss open to the
    FDIC is relying on the books and records of the
    failed bank to estimate what assets would be
    returned by a purchasing bank and to estimate which
    of those assets ultimately would be collectible.

    Id. After considering the impact of the federal rule on
    ___

    settled commercial expectations ordinarily governed by state

    law, the court concluded that protection of the FDIC from

    unknown fraud claims "far outweighed" any potential damage to

    these expectations. Id. at 872.
    ___

    The court therefore announced a federal common law

    holder in due course rule applicable to the FDIC in its

    corporate capacity:

    [A]s a matter of federal common law, the FDIC has a
    complete defense to state and common law fraud
    claims on a note acquired by the FDIC in the
    execution of a purchase and assumption transaction,
    for value, in good faith, and without actual
    knowledge of the fraud at the time the FDIC entered
    into the purchase and assumption agreement.

    Id. at 873. Gunter thus expanded federal common law to bar
    ___ ______

    fraud claims by the note makers that would not otherwise have

    been barred by the D'Oench doctrine or 1823(e). See id. at
    _______ ___ ___

    872 & n.14 (noting that D'Oench doctrine and 1823(e) embody
    _______

    a "more limited" policy of protecting the FDIC).



    -47-















    This court has adopted the rule of Gunter. See Southern
    ______ ___ ________

    Indus. Realty, Inc. v. Noe, 814 F.2d 1 (1st Cir. 1987) (per
    __________________________

    curiam). See also FDIC v. Bracero & Rivera, Inc., 895 F.2d
    _________ _______________________________

    824, 828-29 (1st Cir. 1990) (dicta acknowledging holder in

    due course doctrine's availability to the FDIC in its

    corporate capacity). Other circuit courts have expanded the

    federal common law holder in due course doctrine to bar all

    personal defenses against the FDIC, and have looked to state

    law principles in order to distinguish between real and

    personal defenses. See Campbell Leasing Inc. v. FDIC, 901
    ___ ______________________________

    F.2d 1244, 1249 (5th Cir. 1990); FDIC v. Wood, 758 F.2d 156,
    ____________

    161 (6th Cir.) (the FDIC "takes the note free of all defenses

    that would not prevail against a holder in due course."),

    cert. denied, 474 U.S. 944 (1985). See also FDIC v. Bank of
    ____________ ________ _______________

    Boulder, 911 F.2d 1466, 1474-75 (10th Cir. 1990) (en banc)
    _______

    (adopting federal rule of transferability of letters of

    credit protecting FDIC in its corporate capacity during

    purchase and assumption), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 111 S.
    ____________

    Ct. 1103 (1991). In all of these cases, the underlying

    rationale for a federal holder in due course rule has been

    consistent with that articulated by Gunter: to promote
    ______

    purchase and assumption transactions. See Wood, 758 F.2d at
    ___ ____

    160-61 (federal holder in due course rule necessary because

    "the essence of a purchase and assumption transaction is

    speed"); Campbell Leasing, 901 F.2d at 1248-1249 (same
    _________________



    -48-















    analysis); Bank of Boulder, 911 F.2d at 1474-75 (uniform rule
    _______________

    of transferability necessary because of time constraints of

    purchase and assumption).

    B. Application Of The Federal Holder in Due Course
    ___________________________________________________
    Doctrine To The FDIC As Receiver
    ________________________________

    The FDIC argues that the federal holder in due course

    rule should be available to it in its capacity as the Bank's

    receiver. The FDIC insists that in order for it to decide

    whether a purchase and assumption or a liquidation is the

    least costly approach to disposing of the assets of a failed

    bank, it must be able to make that decision based on absolute

    reliance on the bank's records, unimpeded by personal

    defenses. The FDIC also asserts that if the federal holder

    in due course doctrine is limited exclusively to purchase and

    assumption transactions, it will be unable to employ a

    variety of newly-developed "hybrid" transactions for the

    resolution of bank failures that include elements drawn from

    both a liquidation and a purchase and assumption.

    Accordingly, the FDIC urges that we hold that the federal

    holder in due course doctrine applies to the FDIC in its

    receivership capacity, regardless of whether a purchase and

    assumption transaction is consummated.

    To support its argument, the FDIC relies on several

    cases in which the FDIC in its receivership capacity was

    allowed to invoke the federal holder in due course doctrine

    to bar the makers of promissory notes from asserting their


    -49-















    personal defenses. But these cases involved notes acquired

    by the FDIC as receiver after a purchase and assumption
    _____

    transaction.14 For example, in Campbell Leasing, the FDIC
    ________________

    was appointed receiver of a failed Texas bank and arranged

    for a purchase and assumption transaction with a federally-

    established bridge bank, NCNB. 901 F.2d at 1247. During the

    purchase and assumption, NCNB acquired a promissory note that

    had previously been the subject of a lawsuit by the note

    maker against the failed bank. As receiver of the failed

    bank, the FDIC, along with NCNB, moved for summary judgment

    on the note maker's claims and on a counterclaim for

    enforcement of the note, arguing that the D'Oench and federal
    _______

    holder in due course doctrines barred all the note maker's


    ____________________

    14. The cases cited by the FDIC either involved the
    application of the federal holder in due course doctrine to
    assets acquired by the FDIC as receiver following a purchase
    and assumption transaction, or were not directly decided
    under the holder in due course rule. See FDIC v. McCullough,
    ___ __________________
    911 F.2d 593 (11th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___,
    ____________
    111 S. Ct. 2235 (1991); In re CTS Truss, Inc. v. FDIC, 868
    _______________________________
    F.2d 146 (5th Cir. 1989); Firstsouth, F.A. v. Aqua Constr.
    __________________________________
    Inc., 858 F.2d 441 (8th Cir. 1988). In McCullough, the court
    ____ __________
    observed that both the FDIC and FSLIC as receiver are
    "clothed under federal common law with the same defenses that
    would be accorded a holder in due course under state law."
    911 F.2d at 603. Yet in McCullough, the note on which the
    __________
    federal receiver was seeking to recover had earlier been
    acquired by the failed savings institution in a purchase and
    assumption transaction. Id. at 596. CTS Truss involved the
    ___ _________
    enforcement by the FDIC as receiver of an asset acquired by
    it in its corporate capacity, 868 F.2d at 147, and was
    decided under 1823(e) rather than the federal holder in due
    course doctrine. Id. at 150. As for Firstsouth, the federal
    ___ __________
    common law rule at issue was the D'Oench doctrine, and not
    _______
    the more expansive holder in due course doctrine recognized
    by Gunter. Firstsouth, 858 F.2d at 443.
    ______ __________

    -50-















    claims and affirmative defenses. Id. The district court
    ___

    granted summary judgment for the FDIC and NCNB, and the Fifth

    Circuit affirmed the judgment on appeal. The court observed

    that it could find

    no logical reason to limit federal holder in due
    course protection to the FDIC in its corporate
    capacity, to the exclusion of its receivership
    function. In its corporate capacity, the FDIC is
    obligated to protect the depositors of a failed
    bank, while the FDIC as receiver must also protect
    the bank's creditors and shareholders. In both
    cases, the holder in due course doctrine enables
    the FDIC to efficiently fulfill its role, thus
    minimizing the harm to depositors, creditors, and
    shareholders. . . . We conclude that the FDIC
    enjoys holder in due course status as a matter of
    federal common law whether it is acting in its
    corporate or receivership capacity.

    Id. at 1249 (citations omitted).
    ___

    The FDIC argues that because the protections of the

    federal holder in due course doctrine have been available to

    it in its receivership capacity in cases like Campbell
    ________

    Leasing, the logical next step is to apply the doctrine to
    _______

    the FDIC in its receivership capacity regardless of whether a

    purchase and assumption transaction has occurred. According

    to the FDIC, this extension of the federal holder in due

    course rule is necessary to enable it to decide properly

    whether a liquidation or purchase and assumption is the least

    costly means of dealing with the failed bank.

    In its briefs in this appeal, however, the FDIC has

    neglected to mention the one decision that has directly

    addressed this argument. In FDIC v. Laguarta, 939 F.2d 1231
    ________________


    -51-















    (5th Cir. 1991), the FDIC argued that it was entitled to

    invoke the federal holder in due course doctrine to bar any

    defenses against enforcement of a promissory note acquired by

    it directly in its capacity as receiver. Id. at 1233-35.
    ___

    After observing that the FDIC's federal holder in due course

    argument had been raised in a "belated supplemental brief,"

    the Fifth Circuit dismissed it peremptorily in a footnote:

    Here the FDIC sues only in its capacity as receiver
    for the institution which made the loan and is
    payee in the note sued on, and the FDIC does not
    assert, nor does the record establish, that the
    loan or note has ever been transferred or was ever
    part of a purchase and assumption transaction. To
    the extent that it precludes defenses beyond those
    precluded by D'Oench, Duhme, the federal holder in
    ______________
    due course doctrine is inapplicable to such a
    situation. Gunter . . . . See Campbell Leasing .
    ______ ___ ________________
    . . . Indeed, a major policy goal underlying the
    federal common-law holder in due course doctrine is
    to facilitate purchase and assumption transactions
    of failed financial institutions in lieu of
    liquidations. Campbell Leasing; Gunter.
    ________________ ______

    Id. at 1239 n.19 (citations partly omitted).
    ___

    We likewise reject the FDIC's attempt to expand the

    federal holder in due course doctrine far beyond its original

    purpose of promoting purchase and assumption transactions

    that preserve the going concern value of the bank. None of

    the policy considerations that originally prompted the

    adoption of a federal holder in due course rule are present

    when, as in this case, the FDIC as receiver is seeking only

    to enforce an obligation in a liquidation. A liquidation

    does not further the federal policy of "bringing to



    -52-















    depositors sound, effective, and uninterrupted operation of

    the [nation's] banking system with resulting safety and

    liquidity of bank deposits." Campbell, 901 F.2d at 1248
    ________

    (quoting S. Rep. No. 1269, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in
    ____________

    1950 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3765, 3765-66). Likewise, there is no need

    for speedy evaluation of the assets of a failed institution,

    and therefore little justification for adoption of a broad

    federal rule that would displace settled commercial

    expectations controlled by state law. Cf. Gunter, 674 F.2d
    ___ ______

    at 872 (applying the Kimbell Foods test for adoption of
    ______________

    federal common law rule). Furthermore, the FDIC does not

    rely as heavily on the books and records of the failed bank

    to estimate its total loss in a liquidation as it must in a

    purchase and assumption.15


    ____________________

    15. This distinction between the cost estimate of a
    liquidation versus that in a purchase and assumption
    transaction was noted in Gunter:
    ______
    The maximum liability of the FDIC in a liquidation
    is fixed by the $100,000-per-depositor insurance
    limitation. In a purchase and assumption
    transaction, however, the FDIC agrees to repurchase
    any unacceptable assets from the purchasing bank
    and cannot rely on the statutory limitation of its
    liability. Hence to make the [cost test currently
    codified at 18 U.S.C. 1823(c)(4)(A)], the FDIC
    must have some method of estimating its potential
    liability under a purchase and assumption to
    compare it to the maximum liability in a
    liquidation.
    Gunter, 674 F.2d at 870 n.10. This analysis belies the
    ______
    FDIC's assertion that if the federal holder in due course
    doctrine were limited solely to assets sold through a
    purchase and assumption, the federal receiver could not
    reliably estimate the cost of a liquidation as compared to
    that of a purchase and assumption.

    -53-















    However desirable it may be for the FDIC in its

    receivership capacity to be able to bar counterclaims or

    affirmative defenses by the maker of a promissory note not

    already eliminated by D'Oench and 1823(e), such a broad
    _______

    principle of federal common law cannot find its justification

    in the federal holder in due course doctrine currently

    applied by the courts. The district court's well-reasoned

    analysis of the FDIC's federal holder in due course argument

    aptly summarizes some of its deficiencies:

    The holder in due course doctrine normally allows
    innocent purchasers of negotiable instruments to
    rely on such instruments when they are acquired for
    value. The FDIC is granted this status so it can
    quickly scan a bank's balance sheet to negotiate
    its sale. Thus, the FDIC is not held up to an
    obligation to scrutinize the assets of a failed
    bank before it agrees to execute a purchase and
    assumption. . . .

    The exigencies of a purchase and assumption
    transaction also differentiate the holder in due
    course doctrine from D'Oench. D'Oench is concerned
    _______ _______
    with the integrity of a bank's records the FDIC
    can only be charged for claims apparent from a
    search of the bank's files. The holder in due
    course doctrine, on the other hand, relieves the
    FDIC even from claims apparent on the face of the
    Bank's records. . . . The reach of the federal
    holder in due course doctrine being much wider than
    even the extraordinary remedy of D'Oench, the
    _______
    circumstances in which it is applied should be
    correspondingly limited.

    The FDIC nonetheless insists that the unavailability of

    the federal holder in due course rule in the absence of a

    purchase and assumption would "immeasurably delay and

    complicate the resolution of receiverships" and create



    -54-















    "delays and difficulties [that] could greatly impair the

    FDIC's ability to complete its statutory mission." In the

    same breath, however, the FDIC complains that the existing

    federal rule is problematic because it "substantively alters

    the receiver's evaluation of the alternative transactions in

    favor" of purchase and assumptions. The FDIC cannot have it

    both ways. The federal holder in due course doctrine was

    fashioned precisely for the purpose of expediting the

    purchase and assumption transaction. See Gunter, 674 F.2d at
    ___ ______

    869-71. It was never intended as a panacea intended to

    relieve the FDIC of all the "difficulties" arising from state

    law defenses and counterclaims during the liquidation of

    assets. We decline to address the FDIC's argument that a

    decision not to extend the federal holder in due course rule

    will impair its ability to conduct certain new "hybrid"

    transactions i.e., transactions that involve elements of

    both a liquidation and a purchase and assumption because

    this case does not involve such a "hybrid."

    We therefore hold that the FDIC was not entitled to

    invoke the federal common law holder in due course doctrine

    to bar the Trust's claims of breach of contract and

    conversion as to the soft costs damages.16



    ____________________

    16. Because the FDIC is not entitled to holder in due course
    status under the federal common law rule, we need not decide
    whether the Trust's soft costs claims would be barred by
    Massachusetts holder in due course law.

    -55-















    IV. FEDERAL COMMON LAW AS A BAR TO EQUITABLE SUBORDINATION
    OF THE FDIC'S SECURED CLAIM AGAINST THE TRUST

    The FDIC next argues that to allow equitable

    subordination of part of its secured claim would be contrary

    to federal common law. The FDIC asserts that the

    availability of the equitable subordination remedy against it

    would frustrate federal policies intended to assist it in

    fulfilling its statutory duty to recover the maximum amount

    from bankrupt borrowers during the liquidation of assets of

    failed banks. The FDIC also insists that to allow equitable

    subordination against it would be inappropriate where the

    misconduct leading to the equitable subordination was that of

    the Bank and its officers, and not of the innocent federal

    receiver.

    Section 510(c) of the Bankruptcy Code specifically

    authorizes a bankruptcy court to apply "principles of

    equitable subordination."17 The judicially-developed case

    law of equitable subordination is of long standing. See 3 L.
    ___

    King, Collier on Bankruptcy 510.01 (15th ed. 1992)
    _______________________


    ____________________

    17. 11 U.S.C. 510(c) provides:
    Notwithstanding subsections (a) and (b) of this section,
    after notice and a hearing, the court may
    (1) under principles of equitable
    subordination, subordinate for purposes of
    distribution all or part of an allowed claim
    to all or part of another allowed claim or all
    or part of an allowed interest to all or part
    of another allowed interest; or
    (2) order that any lien securing such a
    subordinated claim be transferred to the
    estate.

    -56-















    ("Collier"). The doctrine permits a bankruptcy court to

    rearrange the priorities of creditors' interests, and to

    place all or part of the wrongdoer's claim in an inferior

    status. The generally-recognized test for equitable

    subordination, adopted by this court, is set forth in In re
    _____

    Mobile Steel Co., 563 F.2d 692, 703 (5th Cir. 1977):
    ________________

    (i) The claimant must have engaged in some type of
    inequitable conduct.

    (ii) The misconduct must have resulted in injury
    to the creditors of the bankrupt or conferred an
    unfair advantage on the claimant.

    (iii) Equitable subordination of the claim must
    not be inconsistent with the provisions of the
    Bankruptcy Act.

    Id. at 699-700 (citations omitted). See also In re Giorgio,
    ___ ___ ____ _____________

    862 F.2d 933, 938-39 (1st Cir. 1988) (applying Mobile Steel
    _____________

    test); 3 Collier at 510.05[2]. Before reaching the issue

    of whether this test was properly applied by the bankruptcy

    court, we first determine whether equitable subordination

    against a federal receiver should be prohibited as a matter

    of federal common law.

    Only one decision in the federal courts of appeals has

    directly addressed the issue of equitable subordination

    against the FDIC. See In re CTS Truss, Inc., 868 F.2d 146
    ___ ______________________

    (1989), withdraw'g, 859 F.2d 357 (5th Cir. 1988). In CTS
    __________ ___

    Truss, the FDIC in its corporate capacity filed a proof of
    _____

    claim in bankruptcy court on certain notes and security

    documents made by the debtor. The debtor objected to the


    -57-















    proof of claim, arguing that the FDIC's claim should be

    equitably subordinated to the claims of all the other

    creditors because the failed bank had engaged in wrongful

    conduct against the debtor prior to the FDIC's intervention

    as receiver. Id. at 147. The bankruptcy and district courts
    ___

    held that the FDIC's claims could not be subordinated because

    the "FDIC was a transferee innocent of any misconduct against

    CTS." Id.
    ___

    The Fifth Circuit affirmed the bankruptcy court's

    decision, but on different grounds, holding that equitable

    subordination against the FDIC would have been improper for

    two distinct reasons. First, the court found that "[e]ven if

    the Bank's actions could be imputed to the FDIC, we do not

    believe that the unusual remedy of equitable subordination is

    appropriate to the facts alleged by the [debtor]." Id. at
    ___

    148. Applying the Mobile Steel test, the court held that the
    ____________

    debtor had failed to allege facts that demonstrated that the

    bank's conduct towards it would have justified the equitable

    subordination of a claim on the debtor's assets subsequently

    acquired by the FDIC. Id. at 148-49. The court disregarded
    ___

    the issue of the FDIC's "innocence" in assuming the assets of

    the failed bank, focussing instead on whether the failed

    bank's actions fit "within any of the classic patterns of







    -58-















    conduct that have led the courts to fashion the extraordinary

    remedy of equitable subordination." Id. at 148.18
    ___

    The other ground for the Fifth Circuit's holding in CTS
    ___

    Truss was the availability to the FDIC of 1823(e) and,
    _____

    implicitly, the D'Oench doctrine to bar the debtor's
    _______

    claims. Id. at 149-50 & n.8. The court thought it "likely"
    ___

    that the debtor had deliberately decided against raising its

    defenses to its indebtedness premised on the bank's conduct

    because it realized that the FDIC would be shielded from

    these claims. Id. at 149. It found that 1823(e)
    ___

    "squarely" covered the debtor's claims against the Bank, and

    that the debtor would therefore have been unable to raise

    these claims against the FDIC. Id. at 150. The court
    ___

    concluded that "[e]ven if principles of equitable

    subordination otherwise permitted the imputation of wrongful

    conduct to a transferee such as the FDIC, we would be

    constrained to hold that [ 1823(e)] forbids that result."

    Id.
    ___

    The Fifth Circuit's decision in CTS Truss establishes
    _________

    several principles that are useful to consideration of the


    ____________________

    18. The court also noted that to the extent the debtor's
    claims of fraud and breach of an oral promise were
    "allegations [that] would justify disallowance or an offset
    against the Bank's secured claim, they would prevent the
    assertion of a claim of equitable subordination." Id. at 149
    ___
    (citing Mobile Steel for the proposition that "claims should
    ____________
    be subordinated only to the extent necessary to offset the
    harm done by the inequitable conduct").


    -59-















    FDIC's argument in this case. CTS Truss stands for the
    __________

    proposition that equitable subordination against the FDIC is

    barred when the claims on which the request for subordination

    is premised cannot be asserted against the FDIC because of

    federal law. On the other hand, CTS Truss does not entirely
    _________

    preclude the possibility of equitable subordination of an

    interest acquired by the FDIC because of the conduct of the

    failed bank. The Fifth Circuit declined to adopt the

    reasoning of the bankruptcy court below that the FDIC could

    not be equitably subordinated because it was "a transferee

    innocent of any misconduct" against the debtor. Id. at 147.
    ___

    Instead, the court focussed on the issue of whether the

    conduct of the FDIC's predecessor in interest fit the

    "classic pattern[]" necessary for equitable subordination

    under the test in Mobile Steel. Because it found that the
    ____________

    bank's conduct in relation to the debtor in CTS Truss did not
    _________

    fit that pattern, the Fifth Circuit never directly reached

    the issue of whether it would be appropriate to impute the

    actions of the bank to the FDIC for purposes of equitable

    subordination.

    In this case, the FDIC asks that we adopt a rule of

    federal common law preventing the equitable subordination of

    the secured claim of a federal receiver as a result of

    misconduct by a failed bank. We reject this approach because

    we think that the analysis of the Fifth Circuit in CTS Truss
    _________



    -60-















    demonstrates that such a broad rule of federal common law is

    unnecessary to protect a federal receiver.

    As evidence of a federal policy to protect the value of

    assets acquired by the FDIC in its receivership capacity, the

    FDIC cites the developing federal common law embodied in the

    D'Oench and federal holder in due course doctrines. As an
    _______

    additional example of Congressional intent to protect it, the

    FDIC also points to the recent amendments in FIRREA extending

    the coverage of 1823(e) to the FDIC as receiver.19

    Drawing on these examples, the FDIC urges that the adoption

    of a federal rule barring equitable subordination is a

    logical extension of this policy to protect it in its

    receivership capacity. Otherwise, the FDIC warns, the

    "absence of a federal rule barring equitable subordination of

    the receiver's claims against bankrupt borrowers will

    materially and adversely restrict the receiver's ability to

    resolve bank receiverships at the lowest cost to the public."

    Brief for Appellant FDIC As Receiver for Capitol Bank and

    Trust Company at 32.





    ____________________

    19. FIRREA amended 1823(e) by extending its coverage to "any
    asset . . . acquired by [the FDIC] . . . either as security
    for a loan or by purchase or as receiver of any insured
    ________________________________
    depository institution . . . ." (Emphasis added). Before
    ______________________
    FIRREA, 1823(e) applied only to the FDIC in its corporate
    capacity, and it was only through decisions applying the
    D'Oench doctrine that the FDIC as receiver was protected from
    _______
    unrecorded agreements. See Timberland, 932 F.2d at 49.
    ___ __________

    -61-















    The problem with this argument, as CTS Truss
    __________

    demonstrates, is that the adoption of a federal common law

    rule precluding equitable subordination would be superfluous

    in those cases in which the debtor's claims against the

    receiver were already barred under D'Oench, 1823(e), or, if
    _______

    the asset was acquired by the receiver after a purchase and

    assumption, the federal holder in due course doctrine. Only

    if the debtor's request for equitable subordination were

    based on claims not already barred by the FDIC's federal

    defenses would a federal common law rule preventing equitable

    subordination be necessary to protect the value of assets

    acquired by the FDIC in its receivership capacity. The

    FDIC's suggestion that the absence of such a common law rule

    would "undercut the policy underlying the well-established

    federal common law D'Oench Duhme and federal holder in due
    _____________

    course doctrines" is plainly hyperbole. A rule precluding

    equitable subordination against the FDIC would in fact work a

    significant expansion of the protections already afforded it

    in its receivership capacity under D'Oench and 1823(e).
    _______

    Claims or defenses that a borrower might otherwise properly

    assert against the federal receiver would be rendered

    meaningless if the borrower entered bankruptcy because

    equitable subordination would be unavailable even if the

    borrower prevailed on these claims or defenses.





    -62-















    The FDIC maintains that such a result would be

    consistent with the policy of enhancing the federal

    receiver's ability to resolve bank failures at the lowest

    cost to the public. Yet if the maximization of the FDIC's

    recovery on the assets of a failed bank was the sole

    objective of federal statutory and common law in this area,

    then all claims or defenses against the FDIC's recovery on
    ___

    assets would by now have been barred by federal statutes or

    common law. As our discussion of D'Oench, 1823(e) and the
    _______

    federal holder in due course doctrine makes clear, while it

    is certainly true that federal law affords the FDIC broad

    protection against the claims and defenses of borrowers, that

    protection has never amounted to total immunity. Cf. FDIC v.
    ___ _______

    Jenkins, 888 F.2d 1537, 1546 (11th Cir. 1989) ("Of course, it
    _______

    would be convenient to the FDIC to have an arsenal of

    priorities, presumptions and defenses to maximize recovery to

    the insurance fund, but this does not require that courts

    must grant all of these tools to the FDIC in its effort to

    maximize deposit insurance fund recovery."). Nor are we

    convinced that the absence of a federal rule preventing

    equitable subordination would impair the operation of the

    FDIC as receiver to the same extent that, for example, the

    absence of a federal holder in due course doctrine would

    impair the FDIC's ability to conduct purchase and assumption

    transactions. Cf. Gunter, 674 F.2d at 870 (principal
    ___ ______



    -63-















    justification for federal common law rule was that its

    absence would "make the FDIC's task of executing its

    statutory mandate . . . nearly impossible"). Maximization of

    the FDIC's recovery alone has never been an adequate

    justification for the adoption of a rule of federal common

    law.

    The FDIC also argues that equitable subordination would

    never be appropriate when it was only the wrongful conduct of

    the failed bank and its officers, and not of the innocent

    federal receiver, that provided the bankruptcy court with the

    basis for subordination.20 This argument raises the issue

    left undecided by CTS Truss: whether it would be appropriate
    _________

    to impute the misconduct of officials of a failed bank to the

    federal receiver for purposes of equitable subordination.

    While the question is a close one, we think that any

    inequity that would result from imputing bank officials'

    misconduct to the federal receiver would be outweighed by

    adoption of a federal common law rule that would entirely

    prevent the debtor/borrower or its creditors from benefitting

    from the remedy of equitable subordination. The FDIC would



    ____________________

    20. The FDIC relies for this argument, inter alia, on the
    ___________
    reasoning of the lower courts' decisions in CTS Truss that
    _________
    there would be "no basis for equitably adjusting the
    distribution of the bankrupt's assets because the claimant
    ________
    never engaged in misconduct." Brief for Appellant FDIC at 34
    (citing district court decision in CTS Truss). As we have
    _________
    noted, the Fifth Circuit expressly declined to ground its
    decision on this rationale.

    -64-















    not necessarily be the only "innocent" creditor affected by

    the adoption of such a rule. Many of the debtor/borrower's

    other "innocent" creditors would be deprived of any

    possibility of recovery from the estate in bankruptcy if

    equitable subordination was barred against the federal

    receiver. The FDIC should also be subjected to the

    constraints of equity.

    CTS Truss prevents equitable subordination against a
    _________

    federal receiver based on claims or defenses of the

    debtor/borrower that are barred by the FDIC's established

    federal statutory and common law protections. The FDIC has

    not identified any additional policy considerations, beyond

    those already supporting its preexisting federal protections

    against borrowers' claims, that would favor the adoption of a

    new federal common law rule giving the federal receiver even

    greater protection in the event of the borrower's

    bankruptcy.21 Accordingly, we find that there is no basis



    ____________________

    21. The FDIC maintains that in this case the statutory
    limitation on its liability as a receiver justifies the
    denial of equitable subordination. See 12 U.S.C.
    ___
    1821(i)(2). This fact-specific argument is not pertinent to
    our consideration of whether it is necessary to adopt a rule
    of federal common law barring equitable subordination against
    the federal receiver. We also note that we doubt that the
    diminution of the secured claim of the federal receiver
    resulting from equitable subordination would be a "liability"
    against the FDIC within the meaning of this provision. Texas
    _____
    American Bancshares, Inc. v. Clarke, 954 F.2d 329 (5th Cir.
    ____________________________________
    1992), a case involving the priority of payments by the FDIC
    to creditors of a failed bank after a purchase and
    assumption, is not material to the issue before us.

    -65-















    for totally exempting the FDIC in its receivership capacity

    from the remedy of equitable subordination permitted under

    the Bankruptcy Code.

    We hold that equitable subordination may be sought

    against a federal receiver as long as this claim survives the

    test imposed by CTS Truss. The claim of equitable
    __________

    subordination is valid only if, (1) the claims or defenses on

    which the borrower's claim for subordination is premised are

    not already barred by the FDIC's recognized protections under

    federal law, and, (2) if the misconduct alleged in these

    claims or defenses against the receiver's predecessor in

    interest falls within "any of the classic patterns of conduct

    that have led courts to fashion the extraordinary remedy of

    equitable subordination." CTS Truss, 868 F.2d at 148.
    _________

    V. THE BANKRUPTCY COURT'S JUDGMENT ON THE MERITS OF THE
    TRUST'S SOFT COSTS CLAIMS

    The district court correctly determined that the federal

    holder in due course doctrine did not bar the Trust's

    conversion and breach of contract claims stemming from the

    misapplication of loan proceeds to soft costs payments.

    Having decided that equitable subordination is not barred as

    a matter of federal common law against a federal receiver, we

    must now consider the FDIC's challenge on the merits to the

    bankruptcy court's rulings in favor of the Trust on the






    -66-















    breach of contract, conversion and equitable subordination

    claims relating to the soft costs overages.22

    A. Breach of Contract and Conversion
    _________________________________

    The FDIC challenges the district court's affirmance of

    the ruling of the bankruptcy court that the Bank breached the

    loan agreements by removing from the loan proceeds amounts

    that exceeded the agreed-upon limits for soft costs by

    $111,711.66. It contends that the provisions of the

    standard-form L&SA used for each loan agreement required the

    Trust to pay all expenses incurred by the Bank, and

    authorized the Bank to withdraw from any of the Trust's

    account any monies necessary to repay those expenditures.

    The FDIC places particular emphasis on sections 6.01 and 8.01

    of the L&SA, which provide, inter alia, that "the Borrower
    _____ ____

    agrees that any deposits or other sums . . . may at all times

    be held and treated as collateral for any liabilities of the

    Borrower . . . ."; that "the Borrower shall pay or reimburse

    the Bank on demand for all out-of-pocket expenses of every

    nature . . . ."; and that "the Bank, if it chooses, may debit







    ____________________

    22. The merits of the Trust's claims arising from the
    kickback arrangement are not at issue because the district
    court properly applied D'Oench to vacate that part of the
    _______
    bankruptcy's court's judgment and equitable subordination
    award in favor of the Trust that was premised on the kickback
    claims.

    -67-















    such expenses to the Borrower's Loan Account or charge any of

    the Borrower's funds on deposit with the Bank."23

    The FDIC argues that both the district and bankruptcy

    court concluded erroneously that the allocations of soft

    costs provided in the addendum to the L&SA in each loan

    agreement prohibited the Bank from removing from the Trust's

    loan account additional amounts necessary to cover soft costs

    expenses once the original estimates were exceeded. It

    contends that both the Bank and the Trust knew that the soft

    costs allowances in both loan agreements $100,000 in the

    First Loan Agreement and "approximately" $60,000 in the

    Second Loan Agreement would be inadequate to pay all the

    soft costs expenses. According to the FDIC, by withdrawing

    payments for soft costs in excess of these amounts, the Bank

    was within its rights under the express terms of both L&SAs.

    More importantly, the FDIC argues, the Bank never intended to

    relinquish its rights under the L&SAs to complete recovery of

    unpaid expenses by limiting itself to the soft costs

    allowances included in the addenda to the L&SAs.

    Following the lead of the parties and both courts below,

    we treat Massachusetts law as controlling in this case. This

    circuit has recognized that when interpreting contracts under

    Massachusetts law, "[i]n the search for plain meaning, a



    ____________________

    23. The FDIC also relies on several similar provisions of
    the construction loan agreements.

    -68-















    court should consider 'every phrase and clause . . . [in

    light of] all the other phraseology contained in the

    instrument, which must be considered as a workable and

    harmonious means for carrying out and effectuating the intent

    of the parties.'" Boston Edison Co. v. FERC, 856 F.2d 361
    __________________________

    (1st Cir. 1988) (quoting J.A. Sullivan Corp. v. Commonwealth,
    ___________________________________

    494 N.E.2d 374, 378 (Mass. 1986)). The principles of

    interpretation applied by the Massachusetts courts conform to

    those of the leading commentators. Specific terms are given

    greater weight than general language. See Lembo v. Waters,
    ___ ________________

    294 N.E.2d 566, 569 (Mass. App. Ct. 1973) ("'If the apparent

    inconsistency is between a clause that is general and broadly

    inclusive in character and one that is more limited and

    specific in its coverage, the latter should generally be held

    to operate as a modification and pro tanto nullification of

    the former.'") (quoting 3 A. Corbin, Contracts 547, at 176
    _________

    (1960)). Separately negotiated or added terms are given

    greater weight than standardized terms or other terms not

    specifically negotiated. See Carrigg v. Cordeiro, 530 N.E.2d
    ___ ___________________

    809, 813 (Mass. App. Ct. 1988) ("If . . . there is conflict

    and inconsistency between a printed provision and one that

    was inserted by the parties especially for the contract that

    they are then making, the latter should prevail over the

    former.") (citations omitted).





    -69-















    Applying these principles to the Bank's conduct in this

    case, we conclude that the courts below were correct in

    holding that the Bank breached both loan agreements by

    withdrawing from the Trust's accounts payments for soft costs

    that exceeded the agreed-upon allocations. Although the

    provisions of the standard form L&SA used in both loan

    agreements gave the Bank broad authority to recover its out-

    of-pocket expenses, each L&SA was supplemented by an addendum

    prepared by the parties that specifically limited the amount

    of loan proceeds recoverable by the Bank as soft costs. The

    L&SA Addendum to the First Loan Agreement provided that only

    $100,000 of the loan proceeds were to be applied to soft

    costs and the remaining $200,000 in proceeds would be used

    for construction funding. The Bank's withdrawals of soft

    costs exceeded that $100,000 allocation by $2,305.54. The

    L&SA Addendum to the Second Loan Agreement provided that the

    Bank would "advance the loan proceeds approximately as

    follows: . . . $60,000 for soft costs incurred with respect

    to the loan." The Bank's withdrawals of soft costs exceeded

    this "approximate" allocation by $109,406.12.

    We reject the FDIC's arguments that the soft cost limits

    were merely estimates. The loan agreements clearly

    contemplated that while a portion of the loan proceeds would

    be used for the soft costs, the balance of the proceeds were

    to be applied by the Trust to the costs of the construction



    -70-















    project that was the objective of the entire transaction. A

    finding that the Bank breached these provisions does not, as

    the FDIC maintains, necessarily conflict with the bankruptcy

    court's determination that both parties understood that the

    $100,000 soft costs allocation in the First Loan Agreement

    would have to be supplemented by payments from the Trust's

    funds.

    The FDIC correctly points out that when the Trust failed

    to cover the entirety of soft costs expenses incurred by the

    Bank, the Bank had the authority to recover these expenses

    from any of the Trust's accounts under the general provisions

    of the L&SAs used in each loan. Yet the means by which the

    Bank chose to exercise that authority that is, by

    immediately recovering all its excess expenses directly from

    the loan proceeds otherwise earmarked for construction

    costs countermanded the specifically-agreed upon allocation

    of loan proceeds between soft costs and construction costs.

    As the district court correctly noted, while the general

    provisions of the L&SAs and the construction loan agreements

    gave the Bank discretion to apply the Trust's payments on the
    ________

    loan as it saw fit, these provisions did not "give the Bank

    the untrammelled right to advance and apply loan proceeds

    willy-nilly." We therefore affirm the bankruptcy court's

    judgment for an amount equivalent to the total of the excess

    withdrawals made by the Bank towards soft costs payments for



    -71-















    both loans i.e., $2,305.54 for the First Loan Agreement and

    $109,406.12 for the Second, for a total of $111,711.66.

    The FDIC also challenges the finding of the courts below

    that the Bank was also liable for conversion of the extra

    $111,711.66 removed from the loan proceeds for soft costs.

    Conversion consists of the wrongful exercise of dominion or

    control over the personal property of another. See 14A D.
    ___

    Simpson & H. Alperin, Massachusetts Practice: Summary of the
    ______________________________________

    Law 1771 (1974). In order to recover for conversion,
    ___

    plaintiffs must show that at the time of the alleged

    conversion they had either actual possession or the right to

    immediate possession or control of the property in question.

    Id. See also Mechanics Nat'l Bank of Worcester v. Killeen,
    ___ ___ ____ _____________________________________________

    384 N.E.2d 1231, 1240 (Mass. 1979).

    The FDIC argues that the Bank's withdrawal of excess

    soft costs payments did not constitute conversion because the

    Trust never had an immediate right to possession or control

    over the loan proceeds. It contends that the Trust failed to

    satisfy the conditions of the loan agreement that required

    the Trust, inter alia, to provide itemized requisitions of
    _____ ____

    its construction expenses prior to the Bank's disbursement of

    any proceeds. Because of its failure to satisfy these

    conditions precedent, the FDIC reasons, the Trust never

    acquired a right to control or possession of any loan

    proceeds disbursed for construction purposes. Thus, the FDIC



    -72-















    concludes, when the Bank disbursed loan proceeds for payment

    of construction costs and then applied these payments to soft

    costs payments, the Bank could not have converted those

    funds.

    The problem with the FDIC's reasoning is that it

    misstates the factual circumstances of this case that explain

    why the Bank chose to disburse loan proceeds for
    ___

    construction. The FDIC ignores the finding by the bankruptcy

    court that Bank officers, under Weiner's orders, deliberately

    violated the conditions precedent of the First Loan Agreement

    in order to expedite the advancement of loan proceeds. See
    ___

    Bankruptcy Court Opinion, 119 B.R. at 360-61. The bankruptcy

    court also found that portions of those proceeds were then

    removed by Benjamin to make kickback payments to Weiner. As

    for the Second Loan Agreement, the bankruptcy court found

    that the conditions precedent for construction fund

    disbursement were in fact complied with by the Trust. Id. at
    ___

    367. The record demonstrates that the Bank advanced monies

    to the Trust's loan account after the completion of

    construction work, only to apply these loan proceeds to the

    payments of soft costs.

    We reject the FDIC's argument that the Trust had no

    right to possess and control the proceeds of both loan

    agreements once they were deposited to the Trust's account.

    There is no basis in the record for the claim that violations



    -73-















    by the Trust of the conditions precedent entitled the Bank to

    disburse funds for construction costs, begin to charge the

    Trust interest, and at the same time withdraw portions of

    these proceeds for soft costs payments. Both courts below

    correctly concluded that the Bank, by withdrawing amounts for

    soft costs beyond the agreed-upon limits of both loan

    agreements, thereby converted funds belonging to the Trust.

    B. Equitable Subordination
    _______________________

    Because we have determined that the district court

    correctly found that the Trust's soft costs claims were not

    barred against the FDIC by federal law, we focus on the

    second element of the CTS Truss analysis: whether the
    __________

    misconduct of the Bank fit "within any of the classic

    patterns of conduct that have led the courts to fashion the

    extraordinary remedy of equitable subordination." CTS Truss,
    _________

    868 F.2d at 148.24

    The FDIC argues that even if the district court properly

    upheld the Trust's breach of contract and conversion claims,

    equitable subordination was nonetheless erroneous because the

    Trust failed to establish two of the elements of the Mobile
    ______

    Steel test: that the Bank's overapplication of loan proceeds
    _____

    to soft costs was misconduct sufficient to support an award

    of equitable subordination, or that this misconduct resulted


    ____________________

    24. We disregard the FDIC's arguments that it is an
    "innocent" receiver, having rejected this line of reasoning
    in Part IV, supra.
    _____

    -74-















    in injury to the Trust's other creditors. See Giorgio, 862
    ___ _______

    F.2d at 938-39; Mobile Steel, 563 F.2d at 692. It also
    ____________

    claims that to permit equitable subordination of its secured

    claim would result in a double recovery by the Trust.

    Although the remedy of equitable subordination has been

    applied relatively infrequently, it is usually directed

    towards misconduct arising in three situations: when a

    fiduciary of the debtor misuses his position to the

    disadvantage of other creditors; when a third party dominates

    or controls the debtor to the disadvantage of others; or when

    a third party defrauds the other creditors. Id. at 148-49
    ___

    (citing 3 Collier at 510.05). See also A. DeNatale and P.
    ___ ____

    Abram, The Doctrine of Equitable Subordination as Applied to
    ______________________________________________________

    Nonmanagement Creditors, 40 Bus. Law. 417, 430-45 (1985)
    ________________________

    ("DeNatale & Abram"). This court has summarized briefly the

    purpose of the remedy:

    The case law does not suggest that the doctrine of
    equitable subordination gives the bankruptcy court
    a general license to weigh the moral quality of
    _______
    each debt or to compare creditors in terms of moral
    worth; rather it indicates that the bankruptcy
    court may equitably subordinate those debts, the
    creation of which was inequitable vis-a-vis other
    _______________
    creditors. It permits a bankruptcy court to take
    _________
    account of misconduct of one creditor towards
    another, just as that court often can take account
    of a creditor's misconduct towards the debtor when
    ______
    considering whether to allow, or to disallow, a
    claim.

    Thus, most cases involving "equitable
    subordination" also involve corporate insiders or
    fiduciaries who have obtained unfair advantages
    over other creditors through, for example, fraud.


    -75-















    Where a bankruptcy court has subordinated the debt
    of a creditor who was not an insider, it has done
    so on the ground that that conduct was egregious
    and severely unfair in relation to other creditors.

    Giorgio, 862 F.2d at 939 (citations omitted and emphasis in
    _______

    original).

    Whether the creditor is an insider or fiduciary of the

    debtor is fundamentally important to the level of scrutiny

    that courts apply to allegations of misconduct against a

    creditor. See In re Fabricators, Inc., 926 F.2d 1458, 1465
    ___ ________________________

    (5th Cir. 1991). See also DeNatale & Abram at 424 ("The
    ___ ____

    creditor's duty of fair dealing is increased in the precise

    degree that the creditor has power and control over the

    debtor's affairs."). Claims arising from dealings between a

    debtor and an insider are rigorously scrutinized by the

    courts. Fabricators, 926 F.2d at 1465. On the other hand,
    ___________

    if the claimant is not an insider, "then evidence of more

    egregious misconduct such as fraud, spoliation or

    overreaching is necessary." Id. (citing In re N&D
    ___ ____________

    Properties, Inc., 799 F.2d 726 (11th Cir. 1986)). See also
    ________________ ___ ____

    In re Friedman, 126 B.R. 63, 71-72 (Bankr. 9th Cir. 1991)
    ______________

    (same principle).

    Rather than decide the question of whether the Bank was

    a fiduciary or insider of the Trust, the bankruptcy court

    based its decision to award equitable subordination on its

    finding that the Bank's conduct was "illegal, egregious and

    severely unfair to other creditors" within the meaning of


    -76-















    Giorgio. Bankruptcy Court Opinion, 119 B.R. at 377. The
    _______

    bankruptcy court's equitable subordination of the Bank was

    grounded on the Trust's claims of fraud, breach of contract

    and conversion claims relating to the kickback scheme and its
    ___

    claims of breach of contract and conversion premised on the

    soft costs overages. The court specifically cited the Bank's

    "fraud and illegality," which the bankruptcy court found

    "together constitute one of the three general categories of

    misconduct recognized by the courts as warranting equitable

    subordination." Id.
    ___

    The district court upheld the equitable subordination

    against the FDIC's challenge on appeal, but at the same time

    vacated that portion of the original judgment that was based

    on the kickback claims, which it properly determined were

    barred by D'Oench. Accordingly, the district court removed
    _______

    from the judgment of equitable subordination the $26,300 in

    damages attributable to the kickback scheme. The district

    court otherwise affirmed in its entirety the bankruptcy

    court's determination that the Bank's misconduct justified

    equitable subordination with respect to the soft costs

    claims.

    The FDIC argues that the Bank's misconduct in relation

    to the breach of contract and conversion claims was

    insufficient to support equitable subordination. This

    argument raises an issue that was not fully addressed by the



    -77-















    district court when it reviewed the Trust's equitable

    subordination claim against the FDIC as the successor to the

    Bank: whether the bar under D'Oench to the Trust's kickback
    _______

    claims, and in particular its fraud claim, affected the

    validity of the bankruptcy court's original judgment of

    equitable subordination.

    The bankruptcy court specifically premised the equitable

    subordination on the Bank's "fraud and illegality," and the

    Trust has never argued in this case that the Bank was an

    insider or fiduciary of the Trust. Nor has the Trust ever

    asserted that the Bank dominated or controlled its

    affairs.25 Accordingly, the issue is whether equitable

    subordination can be based solely on the Bank's misconduct in

    relation to the excess withdrawals of soft costs.

    Courts have struggled to define precisely the misconduct

    necessary to support equitable subordination against a

    creditor who is not an insider. Fraud or misrepresentation


    ____________________

    25. We add that such allegations, if made in this case,
    would not have been sufficient to satisfy the rigorous
    standard necessary to prove control or domination of the
    Trust's affairs by the Bank. See, e.g., In re Burner, 109
    ___ ____ _____________
    B.R. 216, 228 (Bankr. W.D. Texas 1989) ("A non-insider
    creditor will be held to a fiduciary standard only where his
    ability to control the debtor is so overwhelming that there
    has been a merger of identities."); In re Beverages Int'l
    ______________________
    Ltd., 50 B.R. 273, 282 (Bankr. D. Mass. 1985) ("[m]ore than
    ____
    mere pressure or influence on a debtor must be shown"). We
    also note that "[a]s a general rule lenders are not
    fiduciaries when it comes to collection on their claims." In
    __
    re Kelton Motors, Inc., 121 B.R. 166, 191 (Bankr. D. Vt.
    ________________________
    1990) (citing In re W.T. Grant Co., 699 F.2d 599, 609 (2d
    _____________________
    Cir.), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 822 (1983)).
    ____________

    -78-















    are the most frequent justifications for equitable

    subordination of the non-insider.26 They are not, however,

    required:

    Something less than actual fraud . . . will
    suffice. The fixing of the lower limit is the
    elusive boundary which cannot be clearly defined.
    Although the courts have used general terms such as
    injustice or unfairness to fix this lower limit,
    the minimum level of offending conduct appears to
    be conduct that shocks the conscience of the court.
    . . .

    DeNatale & Abram at 423-24. Types of misconduct sufficient

    to warrant equitable subordination against non-insiders have

    included instances of "[v]ery substantial misconduct

    involving moral turpitude or some breach or some

    misrepresentation where other creditors were deceived to

    their damage . . . or gross misconduct amounting to

    overreaching . . . ." In re Mayo, 112 B.R. 607, 650 (Bankr.
    __________

    D. Vt. 1990) (citations omitted). For the most part, courts








    ____________________

    26. See, e.g., In re Bowman Hardware & Elec. Co., 67 F.2d
    ___ ____ ___________________________________
    792, 795 (7th Cir. 1933) (where creditor participated with
    debtor in scheme to misrepresent debtor's financial state,
    creditor's claim subordinated to that of other creditor
    injured by that misrepresentation); In re Osborne, 42 B.R.
    _____________
    988, 1000 (W.D. Wis. 1984) (equitable subordination
    appropriate against lender based on its misrepresentations to
    another creditor about that creditor's prospects for
    payment); In re Slefco, 107 B.R. 628, 644 (Bankr. D. Minn.
    ____________
    1989) (equitable subordination of bank's claim predicated on
    bank's misrepresentation of amounts it intended to loan
    debtor).

    -79-















    have been reluctant to find the requisite level of misconduct

    in arms-length dealings between borrowers and lenders.27

    In Kham & Nate's Shoes No. 2, Inc. v. First Bank of
    _____________________________________________________

    Whiting, 908 F.2d 1351 (7th Cir. 1990), the Seventh Circuit
    _______

    reversed the equitable subordination of a bank's priority

    claim to a borrower's estate. Id. at 1356-1359. The
    ___

    bankruptcy court had justified the equitable subordination on

    the basis of, inter alia, the hardship caused to the
    _____ ____

    borrower/debtor by the bank's suspension of a new line of

    credit.28 Finding that the bank was not an insider or

    fiduciary of the borrower, and that the suspension of the

    borrower's line of credit was permitted under the loan

    contract, the Seventh Circuit rejected the reasoning of the

    bankruptcy court. Id. at 1356-58. During the course of its
    ___

    opinion, the court stated:


    ____________________

    27. See In re Pacific Express, Inc., 69 B.R. 112, 117-18
    ___ _____________________________
    (Bankr. 9th Cir. 1986) (creditors' loan agreement with
    debtor, which effectively shifted risk of loss to other
    creditors, was not "the type of overreaching, fraud or other
    conduct which would justify subordination of a non-insider's
    claim"); In re Dry Wall Supply, Inc., 111 B.R. 933, 937-39
    ____________________________
    (D. Colo. 1990) (rejecting equitable subordination based on
    allegations that creditor knew that loan transaction would
    render borrower insolvent); In re Pinetree Partners, Ltd., 87
    _____________________________
    B.R. 481, 490 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1988) (lender's refusal to
    provide additional credit and threatened foreclosure of
    debtor's mortgage not sufficiently egregious to warrant
    equitable subordination).

    28. The other basis for the district court's equitable
    subordination was its finding that the bank had induced the
    borrower's suppliers to draw on letters of credit issued
    prior to the bank's provision of the new line of credit. Id.
    ___
    at 1354.

    -80-















    [W]e are not willing to embrace a rule that
    requires participants in commercial transactions
    not only to keep their contracts but also do
    "more" just how much more resting in the
    discretion of a bankruptcy judge assessing the
    situation years later. . . . Unless pacts are
    enforced according to their terms, the institution
    of contract, with all the advantages private
    negotiation and agreement brings, is jeopardized.

    "Inequitable conduct" in commercial life means
    breach plus some advantage-taking, such as the star
    ____
    who agrees to act in a motion picture and then,
    after $20 million has been spent, sulks in his
    dressing room until the contract has been
    renegotiated. Firms that have negotiated contracts
    are entitled to enforce them to the letter, even to
    the great discomfort of their trading partners,
    without being mulcted for lack of "good faith."

    Id. at 1356-57 (citations omitted). The Seventh Circuit also
    ___

    rebutted the debtor's arguments that equitable subordination

    could be based on a breach of contract arising from the

    bank's failure to provide it telephonic as well as written

    notice of the suspension of the line of credit, noting that

    "[e]quitable subordination . . . is not a device to magnify

    the damages available for inconsequential breaches of

    contract." Id. at 1359.
    ___

    Applying the somewhat amorphous case law standards for

    equitable subordination to the facts of this case, we find

    that the Bank's excess withdrawals of soft costs was conduct

    sufficiently egregious to justify equitable subordination.

    The Bank's actions could fairly be characterized as "gross

    misconduct amounting to overreaching." Mayo, 112 B.R. at
    ____

    650. Unlike the insubstantial breach of contract alleged in



    -81-















    Kham & Nate's Shoes, the Bank's withdrawal of over $100,000
    ___________________

    in excess of the agreed-upon soft costs limits was a

    substantial breach of the loan agreements. Moreover, the

    fact that the Bank advanced and withdrew loan proceeds

    arbitrarily, and at the same time caused interest to run on

    misappropriated proceeds, in our view rises to the level of

    "advantage-taking" within the meaning of Kham & Nate's Shoes.
    ___________________

    As the bankruptcy court also found, the conversion of

    the soft costs monies handicapped the renovation effort and

    resulted in the Bank's recovering for its own benefit funds

    that the Trust had bargained with the Bank to set aside for

    construction creditors. Bankruptcy Court Opinion, 119 B.R.

    at 377. While the Bank was entitled to enforce the loan

    agreements without regard to the hardship imposed on the

    Trust, Kham & Nate's Shoes, 908 F.2d at 1357, those loan
    ____________________

    agreements did not authorize the Bank to seek reimbursement

    for unpaid soft costs from the Trust's construction funds.

    In this case, the hardship imposed on the Trust and its

    construction creditors flowed from the Bank's improper and

    unauthorized administration of the loans, and could therefore

    properly have been considered an element of the equitable

    subordination inquiry. We conclude that the Bank's

    misconduct in relation to the soft costs claims was

    sufficient evidence of misconduct on which to predicate the

    equitable subordination of the FDIC's secured claim.



    -82-















    The FDIC nonetheless argues that equitable subordination

    would be not appropriate under the second prong of Mobile
    ______

    Steel because the Bank's misconduct did not result in injury
    _____

    to the Trust's other creditors. The FDIC bases this argument

    on the bankruptcy court's determination that the

    misappropriation of loan proceeds by the Bank was not the

    principal cause of the failure of the Trust's construction

    project and failure to repay the loan. The FDIC maintains

    that the bankruptcy would have resulted even if the

    misapplication of loan proceeds had not occurred, and that

    any harm to the Trust's other creditors thus cannot be

    attributed to the Bank's conduct.

    The FDIC's argument boils down to the assertion that

    equitable subordination is inappropriate unless the

    misconduct at issue is a major cause of the debtor's

    bankruptcy. This argument is without support in the case

    law. The second prong of Mobile Steel establishes only that
    ____________

    equitable subordination is appropriate when the misconduct

    results in actual harm to the debtor or the other creditors,

    "or conferred an unfair advantage on the claimant":

    In examining the effect of the conduct on
    creditors, the court should consider the effect on
    the then-known creditors, as well as future
    creditors. In this analysis, the question to be
    answered is whether or not the offending conduct
    had an impact on the bankruptcy results, that is,
    the bottom line, in the proceeding before the
    court. . . . This would encompass all the effects
    of fraud and inequitable conduct that would have an



    -83-















    impact upon [other creditors' legal or equitable
    rights in the bankruptcy results]. . . .

    In demonstrating the harm, the objecting party
    usually need not identify specifically each
    particular creditor who was harmed and quantify the
    injury suffered by each. If the misconduct results
    in harm to the entire creditor body, the objecting
    party need demonstrate only that the misconduct
    harmed the creditor body in some general, albeit
    concrete, manner.

    DeNatale & Abram at 426 (footnotes omitted). The bankruptcy

    court found, inter alia, that the Bank's misconduct damaged
    _____ ____

    other creditors by depleting the Trust's assets and,

    consequently, its bankruptcy estate, and by substantially

    handicapping the renovation effort, on which many creditors

    ultimately had to rely for compensation. Bankruptcy Court

    Opinion, 119 B.R. at 377. We find that this depletion of the

    funds available for construction, and its attendant impact on

    the success of the Trust's renovation efforts, was a

    sufficiently concrete harm to the Trust's other creditors to

    warrant equitable subordination of the Bank. Cf. In re
    ___ ______

    Beverages Int'l Ltd., 50 B.R. 273, 283 (Bankr. D. Mass. 1985)
    ____________________

    ("the misconduct may result in harm to the entire creditor

    body, [or] a particular class of creditors") (citing DeNatale

    & Abram).

    There is no merit to the FDIC's argument that the Bank's

    conduct did not reduce the money present in the bankruptcy

    estate available to the other creditors. The FDIC points out

    that the Bank's overages of soft costs payments merely



    -84-















    reduced the overall amounts due the Bank (and FDIC) as the

    Trust's principal secured creditor. It reasons that there

    could be no harm to the Trust's other creditors because the

    FDIC's secured claim exceeds the value of the Trust's assets.

    Such an argument ignores the very nature of the equitable

    subordination remedy, whose precise purpose is to permit

    recovery by other creditors with lower priority claims

    because of misconduct of a particular creditor whose claim

    would otherwise enjoy priority.

    We also reject the FDIC's assertion that equitable

    subordination of its secured claim would grant the Trust a

    windfall double recovery. It is clear that it is the Trust's

    unsecured creditors who will benefit from the partial

    subordination of the FDIC's claim, not the Trust. The FDIC's

    contention that damages are an adequate remedy at law is

    equally spurious. The FDIC asserts that its secured claim

    far exceeds the value of the Trust's estate or its

    properties. Payment of damages by the FDIC on the soft costs

    claim, rather than equitable subordination of an equivalent

    amount, would simply increase the value of the estate that

    the FDIC would recover. Without equitable subordination, the

    FDIC would recoup from the Trust's estate any damages

    attributable to the Bank's misconduct. Equitable

    subordination is necessary in order to permit recovery by the





    -85-















    Trust's other creditors to reflect the injury caused by the

    Bank's misappropriation of loan proceeds for soft costs.

    Accordingly, we affirm the equitable subordination of

    the FDIC's secured claim, as reduced by the district court to

    an amount equivalent to the damages attributable to the

    excess soft costs monies withdrawn by the Bank.

    VI. INTEREST

    The FDIC next attacks the inclusion of interest on the

    soft costs overages as part of the total amount of its

    secured claim subject to equitable subordination. It

    contends that the district court's affirmance of the

    bankruptcy's court award of post-judgment interest "at the

    contract rate from the dates on which they were

    misappropriated" was contrary to law. The FDIC argues that:

    (1) federal law forbids a post-judgment award of interest to

    the extent that it provides for interest after appointment of

    a receiver; and (2) the district court erred by setting post-

    judgment interest at the rate found in the Loan Agreements.

    Because the FDIC did not raise its first argument in the

    district court below, we will not consider it. The district

    court's opinion makes no mention of the federal law bar to

    post-judgment interest claimed by the FDIC. The Trust

    asserts in its brief that the issue was never raised in the

    district court, and the FDIC has not refuted this contention

    in its reply brief. There is also nothing in the record



    -86-















    before us that indicates that the issue was raised below.

    We, therefore, deem the argument waived. See Boston Celtics,
    ___ ______________

    908 F.2d at 1045.

    The FDIC relies for its second argument on section 6C of

    chapter 231 of the General Laws of Massachusetts, which

    provides in pertinent part:

    In all actions based on contractual obligations,
    upon a verdict, finding or order for judgment for
    pecuniary damages, interest shall be added by the
    clerk of the court to the amount of damages, at the
    contract rate, if established, or at the rate of
    twelve per cent per annum from the date of the
    breach or demand.

    Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 231, 6C. The FDIC argues that

    this statute requires a twelve percent rate of interest on a

    judgment on a contract unless the contract obligated the

    judgment debtor in this case the Bank to pay interest at

    a different rate. The FDIC contends that because the Loan

    Agreements imposed no obligation on the Bank to pay any

    interest to the Trust, Massachusetts' default judgment

    interest rate of twelve percent must be applied.

    To our knowledge, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial

    Court has never addressed the issue of whether rates of

    interest in a promissory note should be treated as the

    "contract rate" for purpose of post-judgment interest against

    the lender. See Mechanics Nat'l Bank, 384 N.E.2d at 1240
    ___ _____________________

    n.14 (declining to address issue). After review of the

    bankruptcy court's interpretation of section 6C, we are



    -87-















    persuaded that the court correctly decided to apply interest

    at the contract rate specified in the loan agreements:

    The contract rate is appropriate here . . . because
    the Bank charged interest at the contract rate for
    the misappropriated proceeds. Some of the interest
    charged has been paid, and the remainder is part of
    the Bank's secured claim[]. . . .

    Bankruptcy Court Opinion, 119 B.R at 371 n.17. Application

    of the contract rate of interest was necessary in order to

    assure that the equitable subordination award fully reflected

    the damages to the Trust resulting from the Bank's excess

    withdrawal of soft costs. We affirm the district court's

    rejection of the FDIC's challenge on this issue.

    VII. ATTORNEY'S FEES

    The district court affirmed equitable subordination

    against the FDIC's secured claim in an amount equivalent to

    the damages incurred by the Trust from the soft costs

    overages plus interest. It reversed, however, the bankruptcy

    court's determination that Massachusetts law permitted

    attorney's fees as an element of the damages for conversion.

    The district court held:

    The Bankruptcy Code permits equitable subordination
    of "all or part of an allowed claim to all or part
    of another allowed claim." 11 U.S.C. 510(c)(1).
    As I have previously held that it was improper to
    award attorney's fees as an element of conversion
    damages, the attorney's fees can no longer be
    considered part of appellees' allowed claim against
    the estate. Thus, the plain language of the
    statute precludes the subordination of the Bank's
    claim to the fee award.




    -88-















    While the district court rejected subordination of attorney's

    fees on the grounds identified by the bankruptcy court, it

    also observed in a footnote that "[a]ttorney's fees [could] .

    . . still be allowed, of course, as an administrative

    expense, see 11 U.S.C. 503(b)(3), accorded the priority
    ___

    specified in the Bankruptcy Code."

    The Trust challenges the district court's reversal of

    the bankruptcy court's inclusion of attorney's fees in the

    equitable subordination. The Trust does not, however,

    contest the district court's interpretation of Massachusetts

    conversion law. Rather, the Trust or more precisely, the

    Trust's attorneys argue that attorney's fees are a valid

    administrative expense claim against the bankruptcy estate

    within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. 330(a)(1) and

    503(b)(2).29 The Trust's attorneys contend that because



    ____________________

    29. Section 503(b) of the Bankruptcy Code governs the
    allowance of administrative expenses. Among the
    administrative expenses permitted, after notice and a
    hearing, are claims for "compensation and reimbursement
    awarded under section 330(a) of this title." 11 U.S.C.
    503(b)(2). Section 330(a) provides in pertinent part:
    (a) After notice to any parties in interest and to
    the United States trustee and a hearing . . . the
    court may award to a trustee, to an examiner, to a
    professional person employed under section 327 or
    1103 of this title, or to the debtor's attorney
    (1) reasonable compensation for actual,
    necessary services rendered by such trustee,
    examiner, professional person, or attorney,
    . . . based on the nature, the extent, and the
    value of such services, the time spent on such
    services, and the cost of comparable services
    other than in a case under this title . . . .

    -89-















    their fees are in fact a valid "claim" under these

    provisions, the bankruptcy court's decision to include

    attorney's fees in the equitable subordination against the

    Bank was proper. See 11 U.S.C. 510(c)(1) (bankruptcy court
    ___

    may, "under principles of equitable subordination,

    subordinate for purposes of distribution all or part of an

    allowed claim to all or part of another allowed claim . . .

    .").

    This argument puts the cart before the horse. Although

    both the bankruptcy and district courts acknowledged, in

    dicta, that a request by the Trust for attorney's fees might
    _____

    be an allowable administrative expense under the Bankruptcy

    Code, neither court expressly made such a determination. In

    fact, the Trust's attorneys acknowledge in their reply brief

    that they have not, as yet, asked the bankruptcy court to

    award them attorney's fees as an administrative expense

    claim. See Reply Brief for Appellant 604 Columbus Avenue
    ___

    Realty Trust at 2-3. Any such award of attorney's fees as an

    administrative expense under sections 330(a)(1) and 503(b)(2)

    would require notice and a hearing. See 11 U.S.C. 330(a)
    ___

    and 503(b).





    ____________________

    11 U.S.C. 330(a). Administrative expenses allowable under
    503(b), which include expenses under 330(a), are given
    first priority of payment under the Bankruptcy Code. See 11
    ___
    U.S.C. 507(a)(1).

    -90-















    In these circumstances, we need not address the argument

    that the bankruptcy court should properly have subordinated

    the Bank's secured claim to an administrative expense claim

    of the Trust's attorneys. Such a claim had neither been made

    nor allowed by the bankruptcy court at the time of its

    equitable subordination of the Bank. We, therefore, affirm

    the district court's reversal of the bankruptcy court's

    inclusion of attorney's fees in the equitable subordination

    against the Bank, insofar as that decision reversed the award

    of attorney's fees as an element of the conversion

    damages.30

    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION

    To summarize, we find that:

    (1) the FDIC was entitled to raise its defenses under

    federal law for the first time on appeal in the district

    court;

    (2) the D'Oench doctrine barred the Trust's claims for
    _______

    fraud, conversion, and breach of contract arising from

    the kickback scheme;

    (3) the federal holder in due course doctrine did not

    apply to the FDIC in its receivership capacity in the

    absence of a purchase and assumption transaction, and




    ____________________

    30. We express no opinion on the merits of the Trust's claim
    that its attorney's fees are administrative expenses within
    the meaning of sections 330(a)(1) and 503(b)(2).

    -91-















    therefore did not bar the Trust's claims for conversion

    and breach of contract based on the soft costs overages;

    (4) federal common law did not preclude equitable

    subordination against the FDIC in its receivership

    capacity;

    (5) the bankruptcy and district courts properly found

    for the Trust on its breach of contract and conversion

    claims based on the soft costs overages;

    (6) equitable subordination of the FDIC's secured claim

    in an amount equivalent to the soft costs damages was

    proper;

    (7) the bankruptcy court properly included as part of

    the overall amount of the FDIC's claim subject to

    equitable subordination an award of post-judgment

    interest on the soft costs damages at the contract rate;

    and

    (8) attorney's fees were not an element of conversion

    damages, and could not properly have been included in

    the amount equitably subordinated.

    AFFIRMED.
    ________













    -92-







Document Info

Docket Number: 91-1976

Citation Numbers: 968 F.2d 1332

Filed Date: 7/1/1992

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2023

Authorities (41)

Slefco v. First National Bank of Stuttgart (In Re Slefco) , 107 B.R. 628 ( 1989 )

Unsecured Creditors' Committees of Pacific Express, Inc. v. ... , 69 B.R. 112 ( 1986 )

Michael J. Capizzi v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,... , 937 F.2d 8 ( 1991 )

In Re G.S.F. CORPORATION, Debtor, Chase Commercial ... , 938 F.2d 1467 ( 1991 )

In Re Friedman , 126 B.R. 63 ( 1991 )

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Etc. v. Leonard ... , 931 F.2d 1 ( 1991 )

In Re Frank Giorgio and Pauline Giorgio, Debtors. John ... , 862 F.2d 933 ( 1988 )

Richard J. BRIDEN, Appellant, v. Anne FOLEY, Trustee in ... , 776 F.2d 379 ( 1985 )

Timberland Design, Inc. And William C. Barnsley v. First ... , 932 F.2d 46 ( 1991 )

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation v. P.L.M. ... , 834 F.2d 248 ( 1987 )

United States v. Judith Ann Krynicki , 689 F.2d 289 ( 1982 )

In Re Navigation Technology Corporation, Debtor. Victor W. ... , 880 F.2d 1491 ( 1989 )

United States v. Julio La Guardia, United States of America ... , 902 F.2d 1010 ( 1990 )

Boston Celtics Limited Partnership v. Brian Shaw , 908 F.2d 1041 ( 1990 )

in-re-n-d-properties-inc-debtor-julia-schou-estes-v-n-d , 799 F.2d 726 ( 1986 )

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, a United States ... , 911 F.2d 1466 ( 1990 )

the-federal-savings-loan-insurance-corp-as-receiver-for-vernon-savings , 928 F.2d 1558 ( 1991 )

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as Receiver of Twin ... , 911 F.2d 593 ( 1990 )

Boston Edison Company v. Federal Energy Regulatory ... , 856 F.2d 361 ( 1988 )

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, in Its Corporate ... , 888 F.2d 1537 ( 1989 )

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