Legal Research AI

Gens v. Resolution Trust Corp.

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1997-05-05
Citations: 112 F.3d 569
Copy Citations
46 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

No. 96-2009

                    IN RE HELEN D. GENS, d/b/a
                    HELEN GENS AND ASSOCIATES,

                            Appellant,

                                v.

                   RESOLUTION TRUST CORPORATION
             (FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION),

                            Appellee.

                                           
                                                     

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Reginald C. Lindsay, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                           
                                                     

                              Before

                      Selya, Circuit Judge,
                                                    

                    Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                       

                    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                           
                                                     

   Richard H. Gens for appellant.
                            
   Barbara  R.  Sarshik, Counsel,  FDIC,  with whom  Ann  S. DuRoss,
                                                                             
Assistant  General Counsel,  FDIC, Thomas  L. Hindes,  Senior Counsel,
                                                            
FDIC, Joseph  G.  Butler, and  Barron  & Stadfeld  were  on brief  for
                                                         
appellee.

                                           
                                                     

                           May 5, 1997
                                           
                                                     


          CYR,  Senior  Circuit  Judge.   Chapter  11  debtor-in-
                    CYR,  Senior  Circuit  Judge.
                                                

possession Helen  D. Gens ("Gens") challenges  a bankruptcy court

order  which  allowed the  Federal Deposit  Insurance Corporation

("FDIC") to amend its  proof of claim following the  bar date for

filing claims.  We affirm.

                                I
                                          I

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND
                                                

          In  July 1988,  Gens executed  a promissory  note ("the

Gens  Note")  payable to  U.S.  Funding  Inc. of  America  ("U.S.

Funding")  in the principal amount of $70,000, by signing it both

in her  "individual" capacity and in  her representative capacity

as trustee for  the Old Jail Trust ("Trust").   The Gens Note was

secured  by  a third  mortgage  on real  property  in Barnstable,

Massachusetts, owned  by the  Trust ("the Barnstable  Property").

Although  the  Barnstable  Property  was  subject  to  two  prior

mortgages, U.S.  Funding and Gens allegedly  arranged for $36,000

of  the $70,000  in  loan proceeds  to  be  used to  satisfy  the

preexisting second mortgage.   U.S. Funding promptly assigned the

Gens Note to Key Financial Services ("Key"), which assigned it to

Home Owners Savings Bank ("Home Owners"). 

          In October 1989, Home Owners commenced suit against Key

in  federal  district  court,  alleging  that  the  purchase-sale

agreement, whereby Home Owners acquired  the Gens Note from  Key,

had been induced  by fraud  or that Key  had breached its  title-
                                        

insurance provisions.  Home  Owners demanded either rescission or

damages for breach of contract. 

                                2


           The  Trust  defaulted on  the  Gens Note  in  or about

January 1990 and the first mortgagee foreclosed on the Barnstable

Property.   The  foreclosure  sale  resulted in  no  surplus  for

application  to any  junior  lien, including  the third  mortgage

securing  the  Gens Note.   In  September  1990, Home  Owners was

declared insolvent and  the Resolution Trust  Corporation ("RTC")

was  appointed  receiver.     RTC  designated  Knutson   Mortgage

Corporation  ("Knutson") as its servicing agent on the Gens Note,

and gave Knutson a limited power of attorney.   

          Meanwhile,  in  the ongoing  federal action  brought by

Home  Owners  against Key,  the  district  court entered  partial

summary  judgment for RTC and  Home Owners, finding  that Key had

breached the  purchase-sale agreement.    The attendant  district

court order  directing  Key to  repurchase  the Gens  Note  never

became final, however, apparently because RTC and Key were unable

to agree upon a repurchase price. 

          Gens  commenced  a voluntary  chapter 11  proceeding in

September  1993,  but  failed to  schedule  the  Gens  Note as  a

liability.    Knutson, as  RTC's agent,  filed  a proof  of claim

("POC")  in relation to the Gens Note in December 1993 ("original

POC"), well before the May 16,  1994 bar date for filing  claims.

The  original  POC  incorrectly  listed  Knutson  itself  as  the

creditor, failed to disclose that Knutson was  the authorized RTC

servicing  agent,  mischaracterized  the  claim as  secured,  and

mistakenly identified  February 24, 1989 (rather  than July 1988)

as the date Gens incurred the Gens Note obligation. 

                                3


          Almost seven  months after the bar  date, Knutson filed

an  amended POC in relation  to the Gens  Note, correctly listing

RTC  as  the creditor,  but still  (i)  failing to  disclose that

Knutson was RTC's agent,  and (ii) incorrectly characterizing the

claim  as "secured."    Knutson eventually  submitted  additional

amended POCs correcting these deficiencies.

          Gens  objected   to  the  original  and  amended  POCs,

asserting inter alia judicial estoppel and discharge of the note,
                              

see  Mass.  Gen.  Laws  Ann.  ch.  106,     3-606.   While  these
             

objections were pending, FDIC,  successor to RTC, was substituted

as the creditor  on all POCs filed  by Knutson.  Ultimately,  the

objections  to the original and amended POCs were rejected by the

bankruptcy court and the district court affirmed.

                                II
                                          II

                            DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION
                                                

A.   Judicial Estoppel
          A.   Judicial Estoppel
                                

          The  companion  doctrines  of  judicial   estoppel  and

election of remedies1 essentially preclude a party from asserting

a legal or factual position "inconsistent" with its position in a

prior proceeding.   See Patriot  Cinemas, Inc. v.  General Cinema
                                                                           

Corp., 834 F.2d 208, 212 (1st  Cir. 1987).  The estoppel  defense
               

advanced  by  Gens  is   predicated  entirely  on  the  contract-

rescission claim Home Owners asserted in the federal court action
                    
                              

     1The "election  of remedies"  defense likewise derives  from
the  equitable  doctrine  of estoppel.    See  Butcher v.  Cessna
                                                                           
Aircraft  Co., 850 F.2d 247,  248 (5th Cir.  1988), cert. denied,
                                                                          
489 U.S. 1067 (1989); In re Leonardi's Int'l, Inc., 123 B.R. 668,
                                                            
669 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 1991).

                                4


against  Key,  alleging inter  alia  that Key  had  made material
                                             

misrepresentations  in  negotiating the  purchase-sale agreement.

Implicit  in Home Owners' demand for  rescission of the purchase-

sale agreement  was its  averment that  Key's fraud rendered  the

purchase-sale agreement  voidable ab initio,  and therefore  that
                                                     

Home Owners never became a "holder" of the Gens  Note. See, e.g.,
                                                                          

In re Southern  Indus. Banking  Corp., 46 B.R.  306, 313  (Bankr.
                                               

E.D. Tenn. 1985) ("A party to  a transaction induced by fraud may

elect  between two  remedies     he  may  treat the  contract  as

voidable and sue for the equitable remedy of rescission or he may

sue for damages at law under the tort theory of 'deceit.'").

          In  January 1992,  the  district court  awarded summary

judgment  to RTC  on  its contract  claim.   Gens  now  contends,

therefore, that FDIC is estopped from asserting a claim under the

Gens  Note in her bankruptcy proceeding, since its POC is legally

and factually  inconsistent with the litigation  position adopted

by  Home Owners in the  district court action,  namely, that Home

Owners  never  became  a holder  of  the  Gens  Note because  the

purchase-saleagreementwasrescindablefromitsinception.Wedisagree.2
                    
                              

     2Although  Gens  argues that  the bankruptcy  court decision
must  be reviewed  de novo,  we have  yet to determine  the exact
                                    
standard for  reviewing applications of the  doctrine of judicial
estoppel.  See Desjardins  v. Van Buren Community Hosp.,  37 F.3d
                                                                 
21,  23  (1st  Cir.  1994) (expressly  reserving  question);  cf.
                                                                           
McNemar v. Disney Store,  Inc., 91 F.3d  610, 613 (3d Cir.  1996)
                                        
(adopting "abuse  of discretion" standard), cert.  denied, 117 S.
                                                                   
Ct. 958 (1997); Data  Gen. Corp. v. Johnson,  78 F.3d 1556,  1565
                                                     
(Fed. Cir. 1996)  (same); Yanez  v. United States,  989 F.2d  323
                                                           
(9th  Cir. 1993) (same).   "In reality, judicial  estoppel is not
extrinsically a matter of fact or law;  the issues that arise may
turn out  to be ones of  raw fact, abstract law,  or something in
between, e.g., the   application of a general standard to a known

                                5


          Judicial estoppel  is not  implicated unless  the first

forum  accepted the legal or  factual assertion alleged  to be at
                         

odds with the position advanced in the current forum:

          [W]here a party assumes a certain position in
          a   legal   proceeding,   and   succeeds   in
                                                            
          maintaining   that   position,  he   may  not
          thereafter, simply because his interests have
          changed,   assume    a   contrary   position,
          especially if  it be to the  prejudice of the
          party  who has  acquiesced  in  the  position
          formerly  taken  by  him.  .  .   .  Judicial
          estoppel  should be employed  when a litigant
          is "playing fast and loose with the  courts,"
          and  when "intentional  self-contradiction is
          being used  as a  means  of obtaining  unfair
                                                         
          advantage  in  a forum  provided  for suitors
          seeking justice."

Patriot  Cinemas, 834  F.2d  at 212  (emphasis added)  (citations
                          

omitted).3    Similarly,  the   primary  purpose  served  by  the
                    
                              

set  of facts."  Desjardins, 37 F.3d  at 23.  It is not necessary
                                     
to  determine the  precise standard of  review at  this juncture,
however, since the bankruptcy court ruling would be affirmed even
on plenary review.  See id.
                                     

     3See  United States  v.  Levasseur, 846  F.2d 786,  793 (1st
                                                 
Cir.)  (estoppel  applies  where  party  previously  "obtained  a
litigation benefit"), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 894 (1988); see also
                                                                           
Continental Ill. Corp. v.   Commissioner, 998 F.2d 513,  518 (7th
                                                  
Cir. 1993), cert.   denied, 510 U.S. 1041 (1994) (party must have
                                    
"sold"  its position  to  prior  tribunal);  Wang Lab.,  Inc.  v.
                                                                       
Applied  Computer Sciences,  Inc., 958  F.2d 355, 358  (Fed. Cir.
                                           
1992); In  re A. Barletta & Sons, Inc., 185 B.R. 976, 980 (Bankr.
                                                
M.D.  Pa. 1995); In re  Pierce Packing Co.,  169 B.R. 421, 429-30
                                                    
(Bankr. D. Mont. 1994); In re UNR Indus., Inc., 143 B.R. 506, 526
                                                        
(Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1992),  vacated on other grounds, 173  B.R. 149
                                                            
(N.D. Ill. 1994);  Phillips v.  FDIC (In re  Phillips), 124  B.R.
                                                               
712, 719 (Bankr. W.D. Tex. 1991); In re Merritt  Logan, Inc., 109
                                                                      
B.R. 140, 147-48 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 1990); cf. also Crown Life Ins.
                                                                           
Co. v. American Nat'l Bank and Trust Co. of Chicago, 35 F.3d 296,
                                                             
299 (7th Cir. 1994)  ("An election of remedy  occurs only when  a
party  accepts the  benefit  of pursuing  the initial  remedy.");
Leonardi's Int'l,  Inc.,  123 B.R.  at 669  ("An election  . .  .
                                 
between legally  inconsistent remedies can  be made  at any  time
prior to the entry  of [final] judgment."); Collumb v.  Wyatt (In
                                                                           
re  Wyatt),  6 B.R.  947,  951-52 (Bankr.  E.D.N.Y.  1980) ("'The
                   

                                6


"election  of remedies"  doctrine  is "to  prevent double  [viz.,
                                                                          

sequential] recoveries  for the same  wrong."  Tavormina  v. Fir,
                                                                           

Inc. (In re Alchar Hardware Co.), 764 F.2d  1530, 1534 (11th Cir.
                                         

1985).  

          Contrary to Gens' contention, RTC permissibly displaced

its contract-rescission  claim  by  moving  for  partial  summary

judgment  on  its alternative  claim  that Key  had  breached the

purchase-sale agreement.  See  Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(e)(2)  ("A party
                                       

may also state  as many separate claims [in its  complaint] . . .

as the party has[,] regardless of consistency . . .  .").4  Under

an   express  provision  in   the  purchase-sale  agreement,  the

exclusive  remedy for its breach  was the repurchase  of the Gens

Note  by  Key  upon demand  by  Home  Owners.    Thus,  unlike  a

rescindment, which  necessarily presumes  a disaffirmance of  the

purchase-sale agreement by Home Owners ab ovo, the RTC breach-of-
                                                       

contract claim  implicitly acknowledged a valid  contract whereby

Home  Owners became  the  holder  of  the  Gens  Note  until  Key

repurchased the  Note.  Accordingly, the  current FDIC litigation
                    
                              

purpose of [the]  doctrine [of  election of remedies]  is not  to
prevent  recourse to any remedy,   but to  prevent double redress
for a single wrong.'") (citation omitted).

     4See, e.g.,  Desjardins,  37 F.3d  at  23 ("There  are  many
                                      
situations, especially at the outset of litigation, where a party
is free to assert a position from which it later withdraws     or
even to assert, in the alternative, two inconsistent positions of
its potential claims and  defenses."); Fort Vancouver Plywood Co.
                                                                           
v.  United States, 860 F.2d 409, 415  (Fed. Cir. 1988) ("With the
                           
enactment  of   the  Federal   Rules  of  Civil   Procedure,  the
traditional  election doctrine was  relaxed."); Grogan v. Garner,
                                                                          
806  F.2d 829, 838 (8th Cir. 1986) ("[T]he doctrine [of election]
is remedial, and  neither it  nor the federal  rules of  pleading
require an election of substantive theories.").  

                                7


position  is   not  inconsistent   with  that  advanced   by  its

predecessor, RTC,  since Home Owners  and RTC failed  to persuade

the district court that the purchase-sale agreement was voidable,

hence invalid from its inception.5  

B.   Validity of Knutson Authorization
          B.   Validity of Knutson Authorization
                                                

          Next, Gens contends that  the original and amended POCs

submitted by RTC are  invalid because Knutson was  not authorized

to act as agent for RTC.  See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3001(b) ("A proof
                                       

of  claim shall  be executed  by the  creditor or  the creditor's

authorized  agent  .  .  .  .");  see  also  Fed.  R.  Bankr.  P.
                                                     

9010(a)(2).   Gens asserts that it would have demonstrated, at an

evidentiary  hearing,  that  RTC  regulations, see  12  C.F.R.   
                                                            

1606.4;   see  also   12  U.S.C.      1441a(n)(6),  presumptively
                             

disqualified  Knutson from serving as an RTC agent because, as an

affiliate of Home Owners, presumably it was complicit in whatever

financial  misfeasance  or malfeasance  led  to  the Home  Owners

insolvency.  As  the bankruptcy court aptly noted,  however, Gens

lacked standing to challenge Knutson's agency status.

          The  RTC  regulation  pursuant  to  which  Knutson  was

                    
                              

     5Furthermore,  RTC had  a  legal obligation  to  file a  POC
against the Gens estate in order to preserve the position of Home
Owners,  which  then  held   an  unsecured  claim  against  Gens.
Finally, should Key repurchase the  Gens Note, FDIC would realize
no  double recovery, since Key  would become the  claim holder of
record.  See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3001(e)(2).
                      
     The "election  of remedies"  argument fails for  yet another
reason.   Since the  Trust and Gens  did not default  on the Gens
Note  until  January 1990,  Home Owners  had no  available remedy
against Gens in  1989 when  it filed its  complaint against  Key.
The 1990 default by  the Trust and Gens thus  constituted a legal
wrong distinct and severable from the breach of contract by Key. 

                                8


designated is designed (i) to "ensure that contractors [hired  by

RTC] meet  minimum standards  of competence,  integrity, fitness,

and experience and are  held to the highest standards  of ethical

conduct in  performing services  for RTC,"  (ii) to prevent  "the

direct or indirect use  of information gained through performance

of a  contract . .  . for personal  gain not contemplated  by the

contract,"   and  (iii)   to  preclude   "the  use   of  personal

relationships or  improper influence  to gain  unfair competitive

advantage  in obtaining  contracts  with the  RTC."  12 C.F.R.   

1606.1.    The RTC  regulation  thus  identifies two  conceivable

classes of  intended  beneficiaries:   (1) competing  contractors
                                                                           

which  are  unfairly  denied  RTC  contract  bids;  and  (2)  the
                                                                           

taxpaying  public,  which may  be  harmed by  RTC  revenue losses
                           

resulting from "insider" conflicts of interest.

          Gens   plainly   cannot   qualify   under   the   first

classification, as she is not a competing contractor.  See, e.g.,
                                                                          

New Hampshire Right to Life Political Action Comm. v. Gardner, 99
                                                                       

F.3d 8, 15 (1st Cir. 1996) ("[U]nder the principle of jus tertii,
                                                                          

the plaintiff  ordinarily 'must assert [her] own legal rights and

interests, and cannot  rest [her]  claim to relief  on the  legal

rights  or  interests  of third  parties.'")  (citation omitted).

Moreover, no  standing is  conferred upon Gens,  individually, by

the generalized taxpayer benefit  theme which actuates the second

classification.  See  Libertad v.  Welch, 53 F.3d  428, 436  (1st
                                                  

Cir.  1995) (noting  that  claimant normally  may not  adjudicate

"abstract questions  of wide public significance  which amount to

                                9


generalized   grievances  more  appropriately  addressed  by  the

legislature").  Nothing in the statute, the RTC regulation or the

attendant case law remotely suggests that Congress or  the agency

itself  intended  to confer  standing  on chapter  11  debtors to

enforce  the RTC regulation.6  See, e.g., Dubois v. United States
                                                                           

Dep't  of Agric.,  102  F.3d  1273,  1281  (1st  Cir.  1996)  (to
                          

demonstrate "standing," complainant  must establish, inter  alia,
                                                                          

that  her  claim does  not fall  "outside  the zone  of interests

protected by the specific law invoked") (quoting Allen v. Wright,
                                                                          

468 U.S. 737, 751 (1984)); Benjamin v. Aroostook Med. Ctr., Inc.,
                                                                          

57 F.3d 101, 104 (1st Cir. 1995).7  

C.   Amendments to Original POC
          C.   Amendments to Original POC
                                         

          Gens next  contends that the bankruptcy  court erred in

permitting RTC to amend its  original POC (i.e., December  1993),
                                                         

which  incorrectly  stated that  Knutson  was  the claim  holder,

without  disclosing  that it  was acting  as  RTC's agent.   Gens

represents  that she  reasonably believed  Knutson held  no valid

                    
                              

     6Furthermore,  even  assuming  she  had  standing,  Gens has
alleged no  facts suggesting  that Knutson contributed  either to
Home Owners'  insolvency or to any  "substantial loss" occasioned
RTC.

     7Gens argues  that the  POCs filed by  Knutson were  invalid
because they were  not signed  by RTC's  attorney.   See Fed.  R.
                                                                  
Bankr. P.  9010(a); 9011(a).   But see Fed. R.  Bankr. P. 3001(b)
                                                
(POC may be signed by creditor or its authorized agent); compare,
                                                                          
e.g., Official  Bankruptcy Form  1 (providing space  for attorney
              
signature) with  Official Bankruptcy Form 10  (POC form providing
                         
no attorney-signature  line).   We need  not resolve  the present
claim, however, since Gens  concededly failed to raise it  in the
bankruptcy  court.   See  Juniper  Dev. Group  v.  Kahn   (In  re
                                                                           
Hemingway Transp.,  Inc.), 993  F.2d 915, 935  (1st Cir.),  cert.
                                                                           
denied, 510 U.S. 914 (1993).
                

                                10


claim in its own right.  Further, she argues, since RTC failed to

file a POC  in its own name  prior to the bar date,  there was no

timely POC to be amended.

          A bankruptcy  court ruling  allowing an amendment  to a

POC is reviewed for abuse of discretion, under three criteria:

          First, the proposed  amendment must not  be a
                         
          veiled attempt  to  assert a  distinctly  new
          right  to payment  as  to  which  the  debtor
          estate was not fairly alerted by the original
          proof of  claim.  Second, the  amendment must
                                            
          not  result  in  unfair  prejudice  to  other
          holders  of  unsecured  claims   against  the
          estate.  Third, the need to amend must not be
                                  
          the product of bad faith  or dilatory tactics
          on the part of the claimant.   

Juniper Dev. Group v.  Kahn (In re Hemingway Transp.,  Inc.), 954
                                                                     

F.2d  1, 10 (1st Cir. 1992) (citations omitted) (emphasis added).

Leave to  amend a  POC should  be "freely  given when  justice so

requires."  See  Fed. R. Bankr.  P. 7015.8  The  bankruptcy court
                         

did not abuse its discretion.

          First, in order to "fairly alert" the debtor  estate, a

POC  need  only  "provide[]  adequate notice  of  the  existence,

nature, and amount of  the claim as well as the creditor's intent

to hold the estate liable."   Unioil, Inc. v. H.E. Elledge (In re
                                                                           

Unioil,  Inc.), 962 F.2d 988, 992 (10th Cir. 1992).  The original
                       

POC, accompanied by a copy  of the Gens Note, see Fed.  R. Bankr.
                                                           

P. 3001(c), met the  general notice requirement.  As  Knutson was
                    
                              

     8Bankruptcy Rule  7015 makes Fed.  R. Civ. P.  15 (governing
amendments  to complaints)  applicable in  adversary proceedings.
Although  this case arose as  a contested matter,  rather than an
adversary proceeding,  Fed. R. Bankr. P.  9014 permits Bankruptcy
Rule  7015 to be applied in contested matters.  In re Stavriotis,
                                                                          
977 F.2d 1202, 1204 (7th Cir. 1992).

                                11


duly  authorized  to file  the original  POC  for RTC,  see supra
                                                                           

Section  II.B,  the mere  failure  to  disclose Knutson's  agency

status in no sense affected the validity of the claim itself.  As

the  Tenth  Circuit  correctly  recognized in  Unioil,  a  simple
                                                               

substitution  of the  real party  in interest  (viz., RTC)  for a
                                                              

related  party  mistakenly  listed  in the  original  POC  (viz.,
                                                                          

Knutson qua agent) represents a proper ground for amendment.  See
                                                                           

Unioil, 962  F.2d at  992 (permitting amendment  where a  trustee
                

(rather than the trust) was incorrectly listed as creditor).9

          Second,  Gens points  to no  unfair prejudice  from any

deficiency  in the original POC.  See Hemingway Transp., 954 F.2d
                                                                 

at 10;  see  also Unioil,  962  F.2d at  993  (noting that  party
                                  

opposing  amendment must  show actual  prejudice).   Instead, she

suggests  simply  that  allowing  the  RTC  amendment  prejudices

unsecured   creditors,   who   may   receive   less   under   any

reorganization plan than would  have been received were  the FDIC

claim not allowed.  But the standard Gens proposes would preclude

virtually any amendment, since  it dispenses with the requirement

that  the debtor  or  trustee  show  "unfair" prejudice.    Thus,

something more  than mere creditor disappointment  is required to

preclude amendment.  See In re  Stoecker, 5 F.3d 1022, 1028  (7th
                                                  

                    
                              

     9Nor would the two remaining defects in the original POC bar
amendment.   First, as trustee for  the Old Jail  Trust, Gens had
every reason  to know that  the original characterization  of the
POC,  as  "secured,"  was  mistaken, since  the  first  mortgagee
already had  foreclosed on  the Barnstable Property  securing the
Gens  Note.  Second, the mistaken date assigned to the underlying
debt  instrument was  a minor  defect, given  that the  Gens Note
itself was attached to the POC. 

                                12


Cir.  1993); In  re Outdoor Sports  Headquarters, Inc.,  161 B.R.
                                                                

414, 422  (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 1993); In re Brown, 159 B.R. 710, 716
                                                        

n.5  (Bankr.  D.N.J. 1993);  In re  Dietz,  136 B.R.  459, 468-69
                                                   

(Bankr. E.D. Mich. 1992). 

          Gens neither alleged nor demonstrated that any creditor

acted in  detrimental reliance on any  representation or omission

in  the original  POC.    See,  e.g.,  Brown,  159  B.R.  at  716
                                                      

(permitting POC  amendment from unsecured to  secured, given that

"no  evidence  has  been  offered that  anyone  relied  to  their

detriment  upon the claims as  originally filed").   Nor did Gens

allege  either bad faith or dilatory motive.  Moreover, these RTC

amendments  occurred long before the formulation  of a chapter 11

plan.  See Holstein v. Brill, 987 F.2d 1268, 1270 (7th Cir. 1993)
                                      

(characterizing  confirmation   of   debtor  plan   as   "passing

milestone"  that makes  it  more  likely  POC  amendment  may  be

prejudicial).  

          To be sure, Knutson demonstrated considerable laxity in

executing its agency responsibilities, especially its seven-month

delay in submitting  amended proofs  of claim.   Were there  some

showing  in  these  circumstances  that RTC  gained  a  strategic

advantage  or  that  other  parties  in  interest  were  unfairly

prejudiced,  the case for disallowance  of the amended POCs would

have been much stronger.   Absent any such showing,  however, the

court did not abuse its discretion in permitting RTC to amend its

original POC.  "It is well accepted that  the bankruptcy court is

guided by the principles  of equity, and that the  court will act

                                13


to assure that ' . . . substance will not give way to form, [and]

that  technical  considerations  will  not   prevent  substantial

justice from being done.'"   Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295,  305
                                                       

(1939) (citation omitted). 

D.   Impairment of Collateral 
          D.   Impairment of Collateral
                                       

          Lastly,  Gens challenges  the  bankruptcy court  ruling

dismissing her "impairment of  collateral" defense without  first

affording her an evidentiary  hearing.  She claimed that  a prior

holder  of the  Gens  Note     presumably  U.S. Funding      used

$36,000  of the loan proceeds  to pay off  the preexisting second

mortgage on  the Barnstable  Property, but  failed to  obtain and

record  the mortgage discharge.  Thus,  the mortgage securing the

Gens Note  remained third  in priority,  rather than climbing  to

second priority.

          Pursuant  to Mass.  Gen.  Laws.  Ann.  ch.  106,     3-

606(1)(b), "[t]he holder discharges any party to the [negotiable]

instrument  to the extent  that without such  party's consent the

holder  .  .  .  unjustifiably impairs  any  collateral  for  the

instrument  given by  or on  behalf of  the party  or any  person

against whom  he has  a  right of  recourse."   An impairment  of

collateral  may  result  if  the  conduct  of  the  holder  of  a

collateralized negotiable instrument unjustifiably diminishes the

physical value of the collateral, releases the  collateral to the

principal  obligor before the loan is repaid, or fails to perfect

its security interest in the collateral.  See Rose v. Homsey, 197
                                                                      

N.E.2d  603, 605-06 (Mass. 1964);  see also Hawaii  Broad. Co. v.
                                                                        

                                14


Hawaii Radio, Inc.,  919 P.2d  1018, 1029 (Haw.  Ct. App.  1996);
                            

White v. Household Fin. Corp., 302 N.E.2d 828, 835 (Ind. Ct. App.
                                       

1973).  Nevertheless, in most jurisdictions a party  asserting an

"impairment  of collateral"  defense  must prove  she signed  the

negotiable  instrument  (viz.,  promissory  note)  merely  as  an
                                       

accommodation party  for the principal  debtor, rather than  as a

borrower.   See  James  A. White  &  Robert S.  Summers,  Uniform
                                                                           

Commercial Code    13-16 (3d ed. 1988).10  
                         

          An   accommodation  maker   is  one   "who  signs   the

[negotiable]  instrument  in  any  capacity for  the  purpose  of

lending [her] name  to another party  to it,"   Mass. Gen.  Laws.

Ann. ch. 106,   3-415(1).  Frequently, accommodation parties sign

debt instruments to enable the principal obligor to obtain a loan

which  would  not have  been  granted  absent the  accommodation.

Although an accommodation party is liable to the lender under the

debt instrument,  her liability is  that of  a surety only.   Id.
                                                                           

cmt. 1.  Thus, the accommodation maker reasonably expects that if

called  upon  for  payment  following  the   principal  obligor's

default, she will  be subrogated to  the lender's rights  against

the principal  obligor, including  the right of  recourse against
                    
                              

     10The latent confusion  in this regard stems from  the broad
language in U.C.C.    3-606, which  refers to  "any party to  the
                                                                   
[negotiable] instrument."   See FDIC v. Blue  Rock Shopping Ctr.,
                                                                           
Inc., 766 F.2d 744, 749 (3d Cir. 1985) (outlining caselaw split).
              
We have found  no Massachusetts case  which determines whether  a
nonaccommodation obligor on a promissory note may also invoke the
U.C.C.    3-606  defense.   Since Gens  and the  bankruptcy court
implicitly accepted the majority rule    that Gens must establish
accommodation  status    and because we  affirm on an alternative
ground,  we need  not  address the  unresolved  Massachusetts-law
question. 

                                15


any collateral securing the underlying debt instrument.  See  id.
                                                                           

cmt. 5;  see also FDIC v. Blue Rock Shopping Ctr., Inc., 766 F.2d
                                                                 

744, 749 (3d Cir.  1985); accord Restatement of Security     104,
                                          

141  (1941).   Therefore, to  the extent the  holder of  the debt

instrument unjustifiably devalues or releases the collateral,  or

fails  to perfect  its  rights in  the  collateral against  third

parties,  the  right  of  recourse  may  be  diminished,  thereby

entitling  the accommodation  maker to  a commensurate  discharge

from liability under the debt instrument.  See Blue Rock Shopping
                                                                           

Ctr., 766 F.2d at 751.
              

          The bankruptcy court considered Gens'  second signature

conclusive  evidence that  she had  signed the  Gens Note  in her

"individual" capacity, that is,  as a principal coborrower rather

than  an accommodation maker.  It also concluded that the purport

of  Gens'  second signature  on the  Gens  Note was  not rendered

ambiguous, either by the anterior designation of the Trust as the

sole "Borrower" or the failure to designate a "Co-borrower."

          Citing considerable case authority, Gens maintains that

all accommodation makers necessarily sign promissory notes either

in   their   "individual"    or   "representative"    capacities.

Consequently, she argues,  these designations cannot conclusively

resolve  a signatory's  accommodation status.11   Since  the Gens

Note must therefore be considered facially ambiguous, Gens argues
                    
                              

     11See, e.g., FDIC v. Trans Pacific Indus., Inc., 14 F.3d 10,
                                                              
12 (5th Cir.  1994) (rejecting  FDIC's "attempts  to nullify  the
import"  of the  "borrower"  identification  block in  promissory
note,  which reflected corporation  as sole borrower  and did not
designate corporate officer as coborrower). 

                                16


that  a  hearing should  have  been conducted  to  consider parol

evidence that the parties  to the Gens Note (viz.,  U.S. Funding,
                                                           

the  Trust, and Gens) all understood  that Gen's second signature

was intended only  as an accommodation  endorsement.  See,  e.g.,
                                                                          

Mass.  Gen. Laws. Ann.  ch. 106,    3-415(3)  (expressly allowing

parol evidence  of accommodation status except  as to holders-in-

due-course); United Beef Co. v. Childs, 27 N.E.2d 962, 964 (Mass.
                                                

1940)  (same); see also Butler v. Nationsbank, 58 F.3d 1022, 1027
                                                       

(4th Cir. 1995) (outlining multi-factored, intent-based "purpose"

and "proceeds" tests for determining accommodation status); First
                                                                           

Dakota  Nat'l Bank  v. Maxon,  534 N.W.2d  37, 41-42  (S.D. 1995)
                                      

(same).12
                    
                              

     12FDIC counters  that 12  U.S.C.   1823(e)  (codification of
D'Oench   Duhme  doctrine)   barred  parol   evidence   of  Gens'
                         
accommodation status, or that FDIC's status as a federal or state
holder in due course barred Gens from invoking the U.C.C.   3-606
defense.   See  Mass. Gen.  Laws. Ann.  ch. 106,    3-415(3) ("As
                        
against  a holder  in  due  course  and  without  notice  of  the
accommodation oral  proof of the accommodation  is not admissible
to  give  the  accommodation  party  the  benefit  of  discharges
dependent on his  character as  such.").  Since  FDIC's right  to
invoke  either doctrine in this case is open to serious question,
we express no opinion on its contentions.  See, e.g., O'Melveny &
                                                                           
Myers  v.  FDIC,  512  U.S.  79  (1994)  (generally  discouraging
                         
adoption  of federal  common-law rules  especially protective  of
FDIC);  Varel v. Banc One  Capital Partners, Inc.,  55 F.3d 1016,
                                                           
1021 (5th Cir. 1995) (D'Oench inapplicable where issue is not the
                                       
enforceability of a secret, unwritten side agreement, but whether
to allow parol evidence concerning the intendment of an ambiguous
written contract provision);  Capitol Bank and  Trust Co. v.  604
                                                                           
Columbus  Ave.  Realty Trust  (In  re  604 Columbus  Ave.  Realty
                                                                           
Trust), 968 F.2d 1332, 1350-51 (1st Cir. 1992) (holding that FDIC
               
is not  entitled  to  federal  holder-in-due-course  status  when
acting  in its  capacity as  receiver); Calaska Partners  Ltd. v.
                                                                        
Corson, 672 A.2d 1099, 1104 (Me.  1996) (FDIC as receiver of bulk
                
purchaser not a holder in due course under state law); Mass. Gen.
Laws.  Ann. ch.  106,     3-302(3) (denying  holder-in-due-course
status   to  party  who  acquired   note  "as  part   of  a  bulk
transaction").

                                17


          Even were we to assume arguendo that Gens was  entitled
                                                   

to an  evidentiary hearing  to determine  whether she  signed the

Gens  Note as  an accommodation  maker, she  failed to  set forth

allegations which would establish the second essential element in

her  affirmative  defense     a  cognizable  "impairment" of  the

collateral.   See RTC  v. Feldman,  3 F.3d 5,  9 (1st  Cir. 1993)
                                           

(appellate court may affirm  on any ground supported  by record),

cert. denied, 510 U.S. 1163 (1994).  As her section 3-606 defense
                      

is founded exclusively  on the claim that  her subrogation rights

were frustrated, supra, Gens  was required to do more  than prove
                                

that U.S. Funding or another holder failed to obtain and record a

mortgage discharge.13

          Section   3-606  plainly  requires  evidence  that  the

holder's  dereliction   actually  resulted  in  a   loss  to  the

accommodation  party.  See Mass. Gen. Laws. Ann. ch. 106,   3-606
                                    

("The holder discharges any party to the instrument to the extent
                                                                           

. . . the holder . . . unjustifiably impairs [the] collateral . .

                    
                              

     13Citing Providence,  Fall River & Newport  Steamboat Co. v.
                                                                        
Massachusetts Bay S.S. Corp.,  38 F.2d 674 (D. Mass.  1930), Gens
                                      
contends  that the  holder's mere  failure to  record a  mortgage
discharge warrants  her total release from  liability because the
Barnstable Property obviously was  of sufficient value to satisfy
the Gens Note  in July 1988, and the holder's  failure to perfect
its security  interest unquestionably increased her  risk of loss
                                                                   
without her consent, even if no actual loss occurred.   Since the
                                                
cited  case predates  the adoption  of the  Massachusetts Uniform
Commercial  Code  in  1958,  it  is  both  legally  and factually
inapposite.   See id. at 675 (noting  that the court was "dealing
                               
not with  the question how  far a  surety who has  guaranteed the
performance of  a contract is released  by subsequent alterations
in it by  the contracting parties, but with a  change made by the
creditor in the state  of facts on which an  independent contract
of guaranty rests"); cf. infra note 14.
                                        

                                18


.  .").14   Gens  alleged no  facts  which would  demonstrate any

actual diminution of her subrogation rights. See FDIC v. Blanton,
                                                                          

918 F.2d  524, 530 (5th Cir.  1990) (burden of proof  is on party

alleging discharge).

          First, she did not allege that any  creditor obtained a

                    
                              

     14Although we have found  no Massachusetts case precisely in
point, the clear majority trend among U.C.C. jurisdictions  is to
require the  accommodation maker  to prove actual  loss from  the
impairment.   See,  e.g., Alcock  v. Small  Bus. Admin.,  50 F.3d
                                                                 
1456, 1462 (9th  Cir. 1995)  ("A clear majority  of state  courts
place the burden on  the guarantor to prove actual  prejudice and
                                                                       
limit   the   discharge  to   the   extent   of  the   impairment
demonstrated.") (emphasis added);   Myers v. First State Bank  of
                                                                           
Sherwood, 732  S.W.2d 459, 461  (Ark.) ("[T]he surety  must prove
                  
two elements in order to be entitled to a discharge     'that the
holder of the note was responsible for the loss or impairment  of
the collateral, and the extent to which the impairment results in
                                                                           
loss.'") (emphasis added)  (quoting Van Balen  v. Peoples Bank  &
                                                                           
Trust Co., 626 S.W.2d 205, 209-10 (Ark. Ct. App. 1981)), modified
                                                                           
on  other  grounds, 741  S.W.2d 624  (Ark.  1987); Bank  South v.
                                                                        
Jones, 364  S.E.2d 281, 285 (Ga. Ct.  App. 1987) ("[A] failure to
               
perfect a lien  on pledged  corporate stock [does  not] effect  a
discharge where it was shown  that the stock had no value  at the
time the action [to  collect on the debt] was  commenced."); Hurt
                                                                           
v. Citizens Trust  Co., 196 S.E.2d 349,  351 (Ga. Ct. App.  1973)
                                
(noting that appellant has  "not shown how the failure  to record
the leases and  assignments resulted in  any damage")); Rempa  v.
                                                                       
LaPorte  Prod. Credit Ass'n, 444  N.E.2d 308, 313  (Ind. Ct. App.
                                     
1983) (see  infra); T.O. Stanley Boot Co. v. Bank of El Paso, 847
                                                                      
S.W.2d  218, 223 (Tex. 1992) ("If the creditor breaches his duty,
the surety  is  discharged on  the  note  to the  extent  of  his
loss."); Century 21 Prods., Inc. v. Glacier Sales, 875 P.2d 1238,
                                                           
1242  (Wash.  Ct.  App.  1994)  ("Should a  creditor  impair  the
collateral, the surety  will be  discharged to the  extent he  is
harmed by the impairment."), rev'd on other grounds, 918 P.2d 168
                                                             
(Wash.  1996);  see  generally  Carolyn  Edwards,  Impairment  of
                                                                           
Collateral Under Section 3-606 of the Uniform Commercial Code, 12
                                                                       
U. Dayton  L. Rev. 509, 522 n.81 (1987) ("A number of courts have
concluded that an unjustifiable impairment of collateral includes
a  failure to perfect a security interest if such failure results
in a loss  to the surety as subrogee."); cf.  also Revised U.C.C.
                                                            
3-605(f)  (discharge for  impairment of  collateral only  "to the
extent the impairment causes the party asserting discharge to pay
more than  that party  would have been  obliged to pay  . .  . if
impairment had not occurred.").

                                19


superior right of recourse against the Barnstable Property due to

the  fact   that  the  preexisting  second   mortgage  was  never

discharged  of  record.   In addition,  the  auction sale  of the

Barnstable  Property conducted  pursuant  to  the  first-mortgage

foreclosure resulted in no surplus for application  to any junior

lien, including the second mortgage.  Accordingly, the record can

support   no  finding   that  any   junior  lien   was  impaired.

Consequently, Gens'  liability would not have  been affected even

if she had  been able to establish that she  signed the Gens Note

as an accommodation  maker.   See, e.g., Rempa  v. LaPorte  Prod.
                                                                           

Credit  Ass'n, 444 N.E.2d 308,  313 (Ind. Ct.  App. 1983) ("Thus,
                       

where  the party  asserting the  impairment establishes  that the

creditor  did not  perfect its  lien but  fails to  establish the

extent  to which  that failure  resulted in  loss, the  party has

failed  to  establish  its   affirmative  defense  of  pro  tanto
                                                                           

release.").15

                               III
                                         III

                            CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION
                                                

                    
                              

     15Moreover, Gens merely  alleged that no  mortgage discharge
was recorded.  She did not allege that the $36,000,  see supra p.
                                                                        
2,  was  never  applied   to  the  preexisting  second  mortgage.
Therefore, assuming the  underlying debt was in fact  fully paid,
it would seem extremely unlikely that the mortgagee or any of its
assignees could have asserted a  viable right to recourse against
the  Barnstable Property.  See,  e.g., Beaton v.  Land Court, 326
                                                                      
N.E.2d  302, 307  (Mass.)  (noting  that  "a court  acting  under
general  principles of  equity jurisprudence  has broad  power to
reform,   rescind,  or  cancel   written  instruments,  including
mortgages,"  and that  the  discharging party  could simply  have
brought  suit  to compel  the mortgagee  to  cancel the  note and
"issue  a  discharge  of  mortgage  in  a  form  appropriate  for
recording"), appeal dismissed, 423 U.S. 806 (1975).
                                       

                                20


          Accordingly,  the district  court judgment  is affirmed

and costs are awarded to the appellee.

          SO ORDERED.
                    SO ORDERED.
                              

                                21