Noonan v. Rauh

                 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

No. 96-1845
                      IN RE DAVID C. RAUH,

                             Debtor,

                    DAVID J. NOONAN, TRUSTEE,

                      Plaintiff, Appellant,

                               v.

                         KUEI FONG RAUH,

                      Defendant, Appellee.

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]

                             Before

                     Boudin, Circuit Judge,

                   Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge,

                    and Lynch, Circuit Judge.

     Claudia  J. Reed,  with  whom  David J.  Noonan  and  Cohen,
Rosenthal P.C. were on brief for appellant.
     Joseph I.  Schindler, with  whom Jonathan  S. Schindler  and
Klieman, Lyons,  Schindler,  Gross &  Pabian  were on  brief  for
appellee.

                          July 18, 1997

          CYR, Senior Circuit Judge.  Appellant David J.  Noonan,

trustee in  bankruptcy of  David C.  Rauh ("Debtor"),  challenges

various 
                 bankruptcy court rulings    later affirmed by the district

court    declining to set aside certain prepetition transfers  to

Kuei Fong Rauh, the Debtor's wife, and disallowing the  Trustee's

postjudgment 
                      motion to amend the complaint, findings, and judgment

relating to three fraudulent-conveyance claims belatedly asserted

against Mrs. Rauh.  We affirm the judgment, as amended to reflect

an additional voidable transfer to Mrs. Rauh. 

                                I

                           BACKGROUND

          In  1976,  the Debtor,  Gary  Stahelski,  and  a  third

individual no longer involved in the case, founded a partnership,

Environmental
                       Water Systems ("E.W.S."), which was to engage in the

plumbing  and  heating  business.   Six  years  later,  the  same

individuals formed a corporation, E.W.S. Realty, Inc. ("Realty"),

which developed real property  for sale or lease.  The  principal

lenders 
                 for 
                     the 
                        various 
                                real estate development projects undertaken

by Realty  were Commerce Bank &  Trust Co. ("Commerce Bank")  and

Country Bank for Savings ("Country Savings").  The loans obtained

to finance the Realty  projects were secured by mortgages on  the

various 
                 properties 
                           under 
                                 development and were guaranteed by Realty,

as  well as  by  the Debtor  and  Stahelski in  their  individual

capacities.  During 1988, the Debtor, Stahelski, and Vincent  and

Ernest Osterman engaged  in a real estate development project  in

their individual capacities.   Around the  same time, these  four

                                2


individuals 
                     formed 
                           Pioneer Valley Partners No. 1, Inc. ("Pioneer"),

a 
           corporation 
                       which 
                            was 
                                to develop a shopping mall known as Pioneer

Plaza.   The Pioneer Plaza project  financing came from the  real

estate sellers  and Commerce  Bank.   The loans  were secured  by

mortgages on the Pioneer Plaza real estate and guaranteed by  the

various corporations, the Debtor, Stahelski, and the Ostermans. 

          For 
                       a 
                         time, 
                              E.W.S. 
                                     and 
                                         Realty were reasonably successful,

especially during 1986, 1987 and 1988.  As the Massachusetts real

estate market  slumped in 1989,  however, the Debtor's  financial

position 
                  deteriorated, 
                               due to difficulties in obtaining lessees for

space 
               in 
                  the 
                     Pioneer 
                             Mall, a slowdown in the construction business,

and the heavy indebtedness incurred with E.W.S. and/or Realty for

services performed in connection with the Pioneer Plaza  project.

E.W.S. 
                and 
                    Realty in turn became deeply indebted to third parties.

By May 1989, the Debtor  realized that he and Stahelski would  be

unable 
                to 
                   meet 
                       the 
                           $200,000 mortgage payment due the sellers of the

Pioneer Plaza real estate  in June and an additional payment  due

Country Savings around the same time.

          Between  June  1  and  September  2,  1989,  Mrs.  Rauh

unilaterally  withdrew  $127,758  from  various  joint   accounts

maintained 
                    in the names of both spouses and deposited the proceeds

in 
            accounts 
                     she 
                        either 
                               held jointly with her daughter or in her own

name as trustee for  her son.    The bankruptcy court found  that

these 
               transfers 
                        were 
                             made by Mrs. Rauh with actual intent to remove

the monies in  the joint spousal accounts  from the reach of  the

Debtor's creditors.  

                                3


          On June  28, 1989, the  Debtor suddenly absconded  wit

$9,000 withdrawn from an unspecified joint spousal account.  Mrs.

 auh 
              sought 
                    an 
                       explanatio
                                                                          h
          R                      n from Stahelski, who described the dismal

financial 
                   picture 
                          confronting him and the Debtor and suggested that

the  Debtor might  have  left with  another  woman.   The  Debtor

resurfaced approximately two weeks later, however, and  Stahelski

terminated 
                    the Debtor's employment with Realty shortly thereafter.

At about the same time, the E.W.S. partnership was dissolved.

          The Debtor sued  Stahelski to recover the value of  his

interests  in E.W.S. and  Realty.  Mrs.  Rauh joined the  action,

claiming 
                  damages 
                         for 
                             emotional distress caused by her dealings with

Stahelski following  the Debtor's  disappearance.   The suit  was

settled on July  23, 1991 (the "Stahelski Settlement"), with  the

Debtor receiving vehicles and equipment of little value in return

for 
             relinquishing all interests in E.W.S. and Realty to Stahelski;

Mrs. Rauh received $15,000 in cash and a $40,000 promissory  note

payable 
                 to 
                    Realty.1  She continued to receive all payments made on

the $40,000  note until well after  the Debtor filed a  voluntary

chapter 7 petition on March 24, 1992.

          In  due course,  the  Trustee  commenced  an  adversary

proceeding  to  set  aside   several  transfers  to  Mrs.   Rauh,

individually and  as next friend  of the Rauh  children.  As  the

challenged transfers  all  occurred  more than  one  year  before

bankruptcy,  see  Bankruptcy Code  S  548,  the  Trustee  invoked

        1Meanwhile,  the Debtor  had deeded  his  tenancy-by-the-
entireties 
                    interest 
                            in 
                               the marital home to Mrs. Rauh on January 28,
1991, for nominal consideration.  

                                4


Bankruptcy Code S  544(b) and chapter  109A of the  Massachusetts

General Laws ("ch. 109A")    the Massachusetts Uniform Fraudulent

Conveyance Act ("UFCA")    as grounds for avoiding them.2

          At 
                      trial, 
                             the Trustee managed to persuade the bankruptcy

court 
               to 
                  set 
                     aside 
                           only 
                                the transfer of the Debtor's joint interest

in 
            the 
                marital 
                       home 
                            and 
                                the transfer of the $40,000 promissory note

to  Mrs.  Rauh  in  connection  with  the  Stahelski  Settlement.

Thereafter, 
                     the 
                        Trustee 
                                moved to amend the complaint, findings, and

judgment to  conform with the  evidence.  See  Fed. R. Bankr.  P.

7015(b), 7052(b), 9023(a);  Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b), 52(b),  59(a).

The proposed  amended  complaint  alleged  additional  fraudulent

transfers. 
                     
                     Nearly a year after trial, the bankruptcy court denied

the 
             postjudgment 
                         motion 
                                on the mistaken ground that the Trustee had

failed 
                to 
                   file a motion to amend the complaint to conform with the

evidence.  See infra Section II.B. 

          In addition to the ruling at  trial    refusing to  set

aside Mrs.  Rauh's withdrawals  from the joint  accounts      the

Trustee 
                 now 
                     challenges the bankruptcy court's postjudgment rulings

refusing 
                  to 
                     set 
                        aside: 
                                
                                the $15,000 cash payment Mrs. Rauh received

in the Stahelski  Settlement; a $6,565.31  deposit, on March  27,

1992, to Mrs. Rauh's own bank account, comprised of three  checks

dated two weeks prior to the Debtor's chapter 7 petition, payable

to the Debtor  and endorsed over to  Mrs. Rauh; and $3,786.76  in

     2The  Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act ("UFTA") did not  take
effect in Massachusetts until well after these transactions.  See
Mass. Gen.  Laws ch. 109A  (1997), amended by  St. 1996, ch.  157
(approved July 8, 1996) (replacing UFCA provisions with UFTA).

                                5


deposits to Mrs.  Rauh's own bank account, between September  17,

1991 and February 12, 1992, consisting of several checks from the

Debtor's customers made payable to Mrs. Rauh.  

                               II 

                           DISCUSSION

A.   The Joint-Account Withdrawals 

          The 
                       threshold 
                                 matter 
                                       for 
                                           our consideration is whether the

Trustee adequately preserved  the claims asserted  on appeal.   A

thorough review of  the entire record  discloses that the  theory

advanced by the trustee on appeal in support of his claims to the

various amounts withdrawn from  the joint accounts is  altogether

different 
                   than 
                       that 
                            litigated below.  Accordingly, we conclude that

these claims were abandoned below.

          The  Trustee argued  before the  bankruptcy court  that

Massachusetts law establishes  a rebuttable presumption that  the

spouse whose  funds  are deposited  in  a joint  spousal  account

("contributing spouse")  is presumed to  have intended that  each

spouse 
                own 
                    a 
                     one-half 
                              interest in the deposited funds.  See Gibbons

v. Gibbons, 4 N.E.2d 1019, 1020 (Mass. 1936).  Thus, the  Trustee

contended 
                   throughout the proceedings below that the Debtor was the

contributing spouse; that  he owned one-half the monies in  these

joint  accounts;  that  Mrs.  Rauh,  the  party  challenging  the

aforementioned  presumption, had  not  carried  her  burden,  see

Blanchette v. Blanchette,  287 N.E.2d 459,  463 (Mass. 1972),  of

establishing  that the  contributing  spouse intended  to  retain

                                6


ownership of all monies  deposited;3 and, therefore, that  either

Mrs. 
              Rauh 
                   had converted the Debtor's one-half share, or the Debtor

had 
             conveyed 
                     his 
                         one-half share to Mrs. Rauh in fraud of creditors.

Accordingly, the Trustee  claimed, the Debtor's "transfers"  were

voidable under Bankruptcy Code S 544(b) and ch. 109A.

          The bankruptcy court instead ruled that a joint spousal

account creates  a very different  presumption; namely, that  the

contributing spouse intended to give the noncontributing spouse a

beneficial interest  in all  monies deposited  to their  account,

subject  only to  the contributing  spouse's coequal,  unilateral

right, at any time, to withdraw all monies on deposit, see Noonan

v. Rauh (In re  Rauh), 164 B.R. 419,  423 (Bankr. D. Mass.  1994)

(citing, e.g., Blanchette,  287 N.E.2d at  463).  The  bankruptcy

court also held that the party challenging the presumption (viz.,

the Trustee)  may rebut  it only  by adducing  evidence that  the

contributing  spouse intended  to  convey no  present  beneficial

interest to the  noncontributing spouse.  See id. (citing,  e.g.,

Ross v. Ross,  314 N.E.2d 888, 893  (Mass. App. Ct. 1974),  cert.

denied, 420 U.S. 947 (1975)).  The bankruptcy court further noted

that the  Trustee had neither  alleged nor  established that  the

Debtor 
                intended 
                        to 
                           convey no beneficial interest in these monies to

     3Mrs. Rauh contended at trial that the  funds in these joint
accounts 
                  derived from assets owned by her alone; she was therefore
the contributing spouse; and she had intended that all the  funds
remain her property.  The Trustee, on the other hand,  introduced
evidence 
                  that 
                       the 
                          funds 
                                in these accounts derived from the earnings
and 
             investments 
                         of 
                           the 
                               Debtor or represented proceeds from jointly-
held 
              assets. 
                       The bankruptcy court found, however, that the Debtor
was the sole contributing spouse. 

                                7


Mrs. Rauh.  See id.

          The bankruptcy court reasoned  as follows:  (1)  either

spouse has the unilateral  legal right to withdraw all monies  in

their 
               joint 
                     spousal account, thereby divesting the other spouse of

any  beneficial interest,  see id.  at 424  (citing Heffernan  v.

Wollaston 
                   Credit 
                         Union, 
                                567 N.E.2d 933, 937 (Mass. App. Ct. 1991));

thus, in 1989 Mrs.  Rauh simply withdrew her own 100%  beneficial

interest in the  funds; (2) consequently,  any "transfer" of  the

Debtor's beneficial interest in the deposited monies to Mrs. Rauh

had occurred not at the time  of the withdrawals by Mrs. Rauh  in

1989, 
               but 
                   much 
                       earlier 
                               (v
                                 iz., not later than the dates on which the

Debtor made the respective deposits to their accounts); (3) since

the 
             withdrawals by Mrs. Rauh in 1989 consisted entirely of her own

funds, no "transfer" of  property of the Debtor could have  taken

place; 
                and 
                    (4) a fortiori, no conversion or conveyance, fraudulent

or otherwise, occurred at that time.  See id.

          The position adopted by the Trustee on appeal bears  no

resemblance to his  litigation stance below,  as the Trustee  now

contends that he did  rebut the legal presumption posited by  the

bankruptcy 
                    court.
                         4
                           
                            
                            The 
                                Trustee relies for support upon Mrs. Rauh's

  
            
             
              
              4
               The 
                   Trustee 
                          also 
                               points out that the expert witness presented
by Mrs.  Rauh testified  that all monies  in these joint  spousal
accounts 
                  were 
                       assets 
                             of 
                                the Debtor.  However, this expert testimony
was offered to prove that  the Debtor was not "insolvent," as  of
1988, 
               for 
                   purposes of ch. 109A, S 4.  There has been no attempt by
the Trustee to explain  how this expert testimony bears upon  the
Debtor's donative intent in establishing the joint accounts.  See
United States  v. Zannino,  895 F.2d  1, 17  (1st Cir.)  ("issues
adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort
at 
            developed 
                      argumentation, are deemed waived"), cert. denied, 494
U.S. 1082 (1990).   

                                8


trial 
               testimony 
                         that 
                             the 
                                 Rauhs always paid their household expenses

from  their   joint  accounts  (i.e.   the  accounts  were   mere

"convenience" 
                       accounts), 
                                 and argues that her testimony conclusively

rebutted 
                  any 
                     presumption 
                                 that the Debtor intended to give Mrs. Rauh

a beneficial interest in the deposited funds.  

          Thus, 
                         the 
                             Trustee utterly abandons the interpretation of

Massachusetts law which formed the bulwark on which he based  his

claims before the bankruptcy court:   that (1) the creation of  a

joint spousal account by the Debtor triggered a legal presumption

that the Debtor intended to give Mrs. Rauh only a 50% interest in

the deposited funds; and (2) that Mrs. Rauh    not  the Trustee  

bore the burden of rebutting that presumption.  Indeed, on appeal

the 
             Trustee 
                     implicitly acknowledges the validity of the bankruptcy

court's divergent interpretation of Massachusetts law (viz.,  the

presumption that all deposited  funds were intended as a gift  to

Mrs.  Rauh),  simply  arguing  instead  that  he  did  rebut  the

presumption, 
                      as 
                        identified by the bankruptcy court, by establishing

that  the Rauhs  used  their  joint spousal  accounts  to  defray

household  expenses.   As  the  Trustee has  not  challenged  the

bankruptcy court's delineation  of the underlying presumption  on

appeal, we can only conclude that he has abandoned the original  

and 
             much 
                  broader 
                           
                           
                            
                            legal theory relied on below.  Consequently, we

express no  opinion on  the validity  vel non  of the  bankruptcy

court's ruling.5  See Baybank-Middlesex v. Ralar Distribs.,  Inc.

  
            
             
              
              5
               Nor 
                   do 
                     we 
                        consider 
                                 a quite different argument never raised by
the 
             Trustee 
                      
                        that even if Mrs. Rauh had a right to withdraw 100%
of these funds, a voidable transfer of a property interest of the

                                9


(In re Ralar Distribs., Inc.),  69 F.3d 1200, 1204 n.5 (1st  Cir

1995) (noting that theories neither briefed nor argued on  appeal

are deemed waived);  Executive Leasing Corp. v. Banco Popular  de

Puerto Rico, 48 F.3d 66, 68 (1st Cir.) (On appeal, "[w]e will not

rely 
              upon 
                   arguments and allegations that are developed only in the

[trial] court pleadings."), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 171  (1995);

          Taglienti
                                                                          .
          Nelson v.           (In re Nelson), 994 F.2d 42, 45 n.6 (1st Cir.

1993); see also Carducci v.  Regan, 714 F.2d 171, 177 (D.C.  Cir.

1983) (judicial system assumes  assistance of counsel in  framing

arguments and citing authority). 

          Nor need we decide the only claim actually presented by

the Trustee on appeal; viz., that Mrs. Rauh's "household expense"

or "convenience  account"  testimony  conclusively  rebutted  any

presumption that the Debtor intended to donate all monies in  the

joint spousal accounts to  her.6  As the bankruptcy court  itself

correctly 
                   noted, the Trustee never contended below that the Debtor

had  created  these  accounts with  intent  to  pass  no  present

beneficial interest to Mrs. Rauh.

          A 
                     party 
                           may 
                              not 
                                  raise 
                                        new arguments for the first time on

Debtor (i.e. his putative  coequal, unilateral right to  withdraw
100% 
              of 
                 these 
                      funds, 
                             or 
                                his ownership interest in 50% of the funds)
nonetheless occurred at  the time Mrs.  Rauh exercised her  legal
right to withdraw the funds. 

  
            
             
              
              6
               For 
                   one thing, Mrs. Rauh's trial testimony was not as clear,
in 
            context, 
                     as the Trustee suggests.  When asked from what account
the Rauhs' household expenses were paid, she responded:  "We only
have [sic] one checking account at  that time.  So it [sic]  paid
from 
              the 
                  checking account."  The record reveals, however, that the
Rauhs 
               had 
                   many joint accounts in 1989.  Consequently, it cannot be
ascertained from the record which was the checking account.

                               10


appeal.  See, e.g., Juniper  Dev. Group v. Kahn (In re  Hemingway

Transp., Inc.), 993 F.2d  915, 935 (1st Cir.), cert. denied,  510

U.S. 914 (1993).7  The Trustee's waiver cannot be excused  simply

because the  raw  facts he  now  considers determinative  of  his

newfound legal theory may have been before the bankruptcy  court.

See Un ited States  v. Slade,  980 F.2d  27, 31  (1st Cir.  1992)

(irrelevant that party  is debuting only "new arguments" and  not

"new  facts" on appeal).   Nor was  the newfound theory  properly

preserved below merely by the Trustee's generalized argumentation

as 
            to 
               the 
                  ownership 
                            of 
                               the Rauhs' joint accounts.  See id. at 30-31

(noting 
                 that 
                     appellant 
                               must have articulated the specific arguments

below); 
                 McCoy
                       
                      v. 
                         Massachu
                                 setts Inst. of Tech., 950 F.2d 13, 22 (1st

Cir. 1991) ("Overburdened  trial judges cannot be expected to  be

mind 
              readers. 
                        
                       If 
                          claims 
                                 are merely insinuated rather than actually

articulated in the trial court, we will ordinarily refuse to deem

them 
              preserved for appellate review."), cert. denied, 504 U.S. 910

(1992). 
                  
                  As 
                     the bankruptcy court was never afforded an opportunity

to  consider the  theory  and  authorities now  advanced  by  the

Trustee,8 nor to make any predicate factual findings, we  decline

the invitation to do so on appeal.  See In re Mark Bell Furniture

     7We  consider arguments raised for the first time on  appeal
only 
              in 
                 exceptional circumstances threatening a "clear miscarriage
of justice."  See Playboy Enter., Inc. v. Public Serv. Comm'n  of
Puerto 
                Rico, 
                     906 
                         F.2d 
                              25, 40 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 959
(1990).   We  discern no  such exceptional  circumstances in  the
present case. 

       8Even in  the Trustee's postjudgment  motion to amend  the
findings and  judgment,  there is  no  mention of  the  perceived
relevance of Mrs. Rauh's testimony regarding the Rauhs' household
expenditures.

                               11


Warehouse, Inc.

little

531 (1st Cir. 1993)).

          After the bankruptcy  court entered  final judgment  in

Febr
                          v.                                              e
                                 d 7, 9 (1st Cir. 1993) ("'If lawyers could
           ursue 
                on 
                   appeal issues not properly raised below,  there would be
                 incentive to  get it right  the first time  and no end  of
          retrials.'") (quoting Poliquin v. Garden Way, Inc., 989 F.2d 527,
                               9
          B.   Amendments to Complaint
                          
              uary 1994,  see       p.  5, the Trustee  moved to amend  the

complaint to conform to the  evidence at trial, and to amend  the

judgment, to set aside, inter alia, a $15,000 cash transfer  Mrs.

Rauh received in the Stahelski Settlement, and transfers to  Mrs.

Rauh of several checks from the Debtor's customers.10 

          Rule 
                        7015(b) 
                                of 
                                  the 
                                      Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure

          Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b) to adversary proceedings)  state
                             D.M.  Reid Assocs. (In re Mark Bell  Furnitur
          Warehouse, 
                    Inc.
                       ), 
                          992 
                              F.2
          p
          (applying                                                       s

       We  
                              supra                                       e
au          the Trustee cites on appeal do not appear to  support
    newfound  theory.       Levy v. 
                9    note in passing,  however, without deciding, that  th
            thorities
          the                    See          Levy,  35 N.E.2d 659,  661-62
(Mass.  1941); Zak v.  Zak, 25 N.E.2d  169, 170-71 (Mass.  1940);
Rosman
                
                v. 
                   Ros
                      man, 19 N.E.2d 41, 42 (Mass. 1939); Cram v. Cram, 160
N.E. 337, 339-40 (Mass. 1928); Moore v. Mansfield, 142 N.E.  792,
793-94 (Mass. 1924); Hutchinson v. Hutchinson, 383 N.E.2d 82,  87
(Mass. App. Ct. 1978).  In each instance, the contributing spouse
either averred or testified that he never intended to donate  any
beneficial interest  in the  account to  the other  spouse.   The
Trustee alludes  to no comparable  averment or  testimony in  the
present 
                 record.  Moreover, we have found no Massachusetts decision
holding that mere evidence that household expenses were paid from
joint 
               accounts was necessarily relevant to, let alone conclusively
rebutted, a presumption of donative intent.  Finally, the Trustee
adduced no competent evidence that the Rauhs used all their joint
accounts to pay household expenses.  See supra note 6.

     10 We review the bankruptcy court's denial of the motion  to
amend the complaint only for  abuse of discretion.  See Lynch  v.
Dukakis, 719 F.2d 504, 509 (1st Cir. 1983).

                               12


that

          When issues not  raised by the pleadings  are
          tried by express  or implied  consent of  the
          parties, 
                            they shall be treated in all respects
          as if they had been raised in the  pleadings.
          Such  amendment of  the pleadings  as may  be
          necessary  to cause  them to  conform to  the
          evidence 
                            and 
                                to raise these issues may be made
          upon motion  of any party  at any time,  even
          after judgment; but failure so to amend  does
          not affect the result  of the trial of  these
          issues. . . .

Fed. 
              R. 
                 Bankr. P. 7015(b).  Under Rule 7015(b), motions to amend a

complaint  to conform  to  the  evidence admitted  at  trial  are

liberally allowed.  See, e.g., Brandon v. Holt, 469 U.S. 464, 471

& n.19  (1985)  (permitting amendment  to pleadings  pursuant  to

Federal Rule of  Civil Procedure 15(b)  even after Supreme  Court

mandated remand).

          A post-trial  motion  to conform  the judgment  to  the

evidence 
                  should not be allowed, however, unless the opposing party

expressly or impliedly agreed to try the matter in question.  See

Luria Bros. & Co. v. Alliance Assurance Co., 780 F.2d 1082,  1089

(2d Cir. 1986).  Even so, amendment should not be allowed if  the

opposing 
                  party demonstrates "unfair prejudice."  See DCPB, Inc. v.

City of  Lebanon, 957  F.2d 913, 917  (1st Cir.  1992); Lynch  v.

Dukakis, 719 F.2d 504, 509 (1st Cir. 1983); Scully Signal Co.  v.

Electronics  Corp. of Amer.,  570 F.2d 355,  362 (1st Cir.  1977)

("Although  Rule 15(b)  by its  terms requires  amendment of  the

pleadings whenever an issue has been tried by express or  implied

consent, courts have  refused to grant such motions if  amendment

would prejudice  one of  the parties,  such as  by requiring  the

                               13


presentation 
                      of additional evidence."), cert. denied, 436 U.S. 945

(1978); 
                 see
                     
                     a
                      lso Morgan and Culpepper, Inc. v. Occupational Safety

& Health Review Comm'n, 676 F.2d 1065, 1066 (5th Cir. 1982).  The

term  "unfair prejudice" refers  to whether a  party "had a  fair

opportunity to defend  and whether he could offer any  additional

evidence if the case were  to be retried on a different  theory."

See
             
             Browning 
                     Debenture 
                               Holders' Comm. v. DASA Corp., 560 F.2d 1078,

1086 (2d Cir.  1977) (quoting 3 James  Wm. Moore et al.,  Moore's

Federal Practice q 15.13[2], at 993 (2d ed. 1966)).

     1.   The Stahelski Settlement Transfer

          The stated  basis for denying  the Trustee's motion  to

amend the  judgment to conform  with the  evidence introduced  at

trial, 
                in 
                   relation 
                           to 
                              certain cash transfers from Stahelski to Mrs.

Rauh, was the mistaken understanding by the bankruptcy judge that

the Trustee had never filed such a motion and that any  amendment

therefore would have been unfair because Mrs. Rauh had not had an

opportunity to present  a defense.   The bankruptcy court  docket

sheet 
               reveals, however, that the Trustee did file such a motion on

April 19,  1994, and that Mrs. Rauh later filed a reply.  As  the

denial 
                therefore 
                         constituted an "abuse of discretion," the judgment

must be amended provided the motion was meritorious.  See Webb v.

Hiykel, 713  F.2d 405, 407-08  (8th Cir.  1983) (appellate  court

reverses trial  court  and orders  judgment where  plaintiff  was

entitled  to relief  on unpled  theory and  defendants would  not

experience undue prejudice). 

          At trial,  without  objection, the  Trustee  introduced

                               14


competent evidence of the $15,000 cash payment Mrs. Rauh received

from Stahelski.   See Conjugal Partnership  of Jones v.  Conjugal

Partnership of Pineda, 22 F.3d 391, 400-01 (1st Cir. 1994)  ("One

sign 
              of 
                 implied consent is that issues not raised by the pleadings

are presented  and argued  without proper  objection by  opposing

counsel. . . . Under Rule 15(b), lack of consent is manifested by

an objection on  the ground that the  evidence is not within  the

issues 
                raised by the pleadings.") (citation and internal quotation

marks omitted).  Mrs. Rauh contends on appeal, however, that  she

did 
             not 
                 object at trial because the Trustee introduced the $15,000

cash 
              payment 
                      only to prove that her receipt of the promissory note

had 
             been 
                  fraudulent.  See DCPB, Inc., 957 F.2d at 917 ("Consent to

the 
             trial 
                   of 
                      an issue may be implied if, during the trial, a party

acquiesces in the introduction of evidence which is relevant only

to that issue.") (emphasis added); Luria Bros. & Co., 780 F.2d at

1089 
              ("That 
                    such 
                         evidence, relevant to both pled and unpled issues,

was 
             introduced 
                       without 
                               objection does not imply consent to trial of

the unpled issues, absent some obvious attempt to raise  them.");

Ellis v. Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co., 609 F.2d 436, 440 (10th Cir.

1979) 
               ("Implied 
                        consent 
                                may not be inferred merely because evidence

relevant 
                  to 
                     a properly pleaded issue incidentally tends to prove a

fact  not within  the pleadings."),  cert. denied,  445 U.S.  964

(1980).  We disagree.  

          At  trial, the  Trustee maintained  that the  Stahelski

Settlement proceeds received by Mrs. Rauh constituted  fraudulent

conveyances under ch. 109A because (1) the Debtor, with intent to

                               15


keep assets from his creditors, diverted to Mrs. Rauh the bulk of

the 
             consideration 
                          he 
                             otherwise would have received in settlement of

his  claims against  Stahelski; and  (2) none  of the  settlement

proceeds 
                  received by Mrs. Rauh were attributable to the settlement

of her own tort claim for infliction of emotional distress.   See

supra  p. 4.   Accordingly, the only  conceivable purpose of  the

Trustee's 
                   evidentiary proffer relating to the $15,000 cash payment

was to establish the amount of the Stahelski Settlement  transfer

which was voidable.  The evidence offered by the Trustee was  not

even remotely probative  of whether the  Debtor had conveyed  the

$40,000 promissory note with  fraudulent intent, nor whether  the

transfer 
                  of 
                     the promissory note constituted consideration for Mrs.

Rauh's relinquishment of her tort claim. 

          Furthermore, Mrs. Rauh  has not  demonstrated that  any

"unfair  prejudice" would  result  from the  postjudgment  relief

requested 
                   by 
                      the Trustee.  See DCPB, Inc., 957 F.2d at 917; Scully

Signal Co.,  570 F.2d  at 362.   At trial,  the bankruptcy  court

expressly rejected her  contention that the  Stahelski-Settlement

payments 
                  were 
                      in 
                         satisfaction of her emotional distress claim.  The

court  found  instead   that  the  Debtor  thereby   fraudulently

transferred his interests in E.W.S. and Realty indirectly to Mrs.

Rauh, see supra p. 4, a  finding Mrs. Rauh does not challenge  on

appeal. 
                  
                  Nor 
                      has Mrs. Rauh suggested that her contention in regard

to  the  Trustee's  $15,000  fraudulent-transfer  claim  differed

significantly from her  defense to the  surrender of the  $40,000

promissory 
                    note, see supra p. 4, which took place in the identical

                               16


circumstances
                      .  See Modern Elec., Inc. v. Ideal Elec. Sec. Co., 81

F.3d 
              240, 
                   247 
                      (D.C. 
                            Cir. 
                                 1996) (complaint amended to include unjust

enrichment claim, after parties had tried similar quantum  meruit

claim); 
                 Morgan 
                       and 
                           Culpepper, Inc., 676 F.2d at 1068 ("Federal Rule

of Civil Procedure 15(b)  contemplates amendments in cases  where

relevant issues have been litigated."); Cunningham v. Quaker Oats

Co.
            , 
              107 
                 F.R.D. 
                        66, 
                            70-71 (W.D.N.Y. 1985) (new plaintiff allowed to

be 
            named 
                  in 
                     complaint, where defense to original plaintiff's claim

was primarily legal in nature, the defense had already been tried

and it applied to both the original and new plaintiff).  

          As 
                      Mrs. 
                           Rauh 
                                implicitly consented to try the fraudulent-

conveyance 
                    claim 
                         relating to the $15,000 cash transfer she received

in 
            the 
                Stahelski Settlement, and she has not shown that any unfair

prejudice would result from the postjudgment relief requested  by

the Trustee, the motion to conform the complaint and the judgment

with the evidence should have been allowed. 

2.   Checks from Debtor's Customers

          The 
                       bankruptcy 
                                 court 
                                       likewise denied the Trustee's motion

to 
            amend 
                  the 
                      judgment to set aside alleged fraudulent transfers of

several checks from the Debtor's business customers made  payable

directly,  or endorsed  over, to  Mrs.  Rauh.   See 11  U.S.C.  S

548(a)(2) (transfers by insolvent  within one year of  bankruptcy

petition); id.  S  549 (postpetition  transfers).   Although  the

bankruptcy court once again acted on the mistaken belief that the

Trustee had filed no postjudgment motion to amend the  complaint,

see supra Section  II.B, we may affirm  its ruling on any  ground

                               17


supported by the record.  See Max Sugarman Funeral Home, Inc.  v.

A.D.B. 
                Investors
                        , 
                          926 
                              F.2d 1248, 1253 n.9 (1st Cir. 1991).  As Mrs.

Rauh did not agree to try  this issue, we decline to disturb  the

bankruptcy court ruling. 

          The record discloses  that Mrs. Rauh was never on  fair

notice of these claims.  The checks in question were material  to

count VI of  the complaint as amended  prior to trial, see  DCPB,

Inc.
             , 
               957 
                   F.2d at 917; Luria Bros. & Co., 780 F.2d at 1089; Ellis,

609 F.2d at 440, wherein the Trustee alleged that funds presently

in 
            Mrs. 
                 Rauh's various bank and mutual fund accounts were property

of 
            the 
                chapter 
                       7 
                         estate, 
                                 either because Ms. Rauh had converted them

from the Debtor, or the Debtor had fraudulently conveyed them  to

her. 
               
               See
                   
                   sup
                      ra pp. 5-6.  Count VI focused on transfers from joint

accounts 
                  to 
                     accounts held in Mrs. Rauh's name alone (e.g. "between

November, 
                   1988 and November, 1989, the Defendant and/or the Debtor

transferred funds . . . at various times from jointly owned  bank

accounts to other bank accounts.").  See supra Section II.A.   In

her answer  Mrs. Rauh asserted  that "these accounts  contain[ed]

monies 
                which 
                      were earned or derived solely by her efforts and were

not monies earned or derived from any effort of the debtor."

          The  dispute at  trial likewise  concerned whether  the

monies in the joint accounts had derived solely from Mrs.  Rauh's

own efforts, or from the Debtor's.  See supra note 3.   Mrs. Rauh

testified that  she was  the sole source  of these  monies.   The

Trustee, in turn, used the Debtor-customer checks made payable to

Mrs. Rauh to impeach her credibility by way of demonstrating that

                               18


the Debtor    not Mrs. Rauh    was the source of those particular

deposits to their joint accounts.

          T

c                      ence, nor the Trustee's examination of the

           fairly  signaled an  intention to  establish that  th
                     hus, 
                         neither 
                                the 
                                    Trustee's introduction of these Debtor-
           ustomer 
                  checks 
                        into 
                             evid
          witnesses,                                                      e

Debtor had transferred  these specific checks  to Mrs. Rauh  with

fraudulent 
                    intent, 
                           within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. SS 548(a)(2) and

549.   Rather,  it was  not until  after trial  that the  Trustee

mentioned 
                   these 
                        specific 
                                 transfers to Mrs. Rauh's accounts from the

Debtor's business customers.  As the Trustee thus failed to alert

Mrs. 
              Rauh 
                   to 
                      his intention, her failure to object at trial did not

connote  implicit consent to  try the unpled  issue.  See  Modern

Elec., Inc., 81 F.3d at 247; United States v. 890 Noyac Road, 945

F.2d 1252, 1257 (2d  Cir. 1991); Luria Bros.  & Co., 780 F.2d  at

1089.

          Although  the Trustee's  unpled  claims may  well  have

prevailed 
                   at 
                      trial, we cannot assume that Mrs. Rauh would not have

been able to establish her present contention    that the  checks

were 
              not 
                  property of the chapter 7 estate    had she been afforded

fair 
              notice 
                    and 
                        opportunity to resist the unpled claims at trial.11

See 890  Noyac Road,  945 F.2d at  1259 (although opposing  party

already may have presented all the evidence she had, "[g]iven the

  
            
             
              
              11
                For 
                    example, at trial Mrs. Rauh testified that she had used
personal funds  to defray various  business expenses because  the
Debtor's  checking  account had  been  attached.    Further,  she
represented that she had overpaid some of the Debtor's  suppliers
and 
             that 
                  their 
                       checks 
                              accordingly represented reimbursements of her
overpayments.

                               19


confused context in  which this proof was presented, however,  we

decline to speculate  about how [the defendant] might have  dealt

with 
              the 
                  issue . . . had it been squarely presented."); Morgan and

Culpepper,  Inc.,  676  F.2d  at  1068  ("We  deem  improper  the

Commission's prejudgment of possible defenses which a company may

assert. . .  . Where amendment of  pleadings is permitted on  the

basis of the second half of Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b), the Commission

may 
             not 
                 deny 
                     the 
                         petitioner the opportunity to present new defenses

by stating the ex parte conclusion that all possible defenses are

meritless."). 
                        
                        As 
                          Mrs. 
                               Rauh was not afforded fair notice that these

newly 
               minted 
                     Debtor-customer check claims were being interjected by

the 
             Trustee 
                     at trial, the Trustee was not entitled to amend either

the complaint or the judgment.

                               III

                           CONCLUSION

          Accordingly, the judgment is  amended to set aside  the

$15,000 cash  payment  received by  Mrs.  Rauh in  the  Stahelski

Settlement.  In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.  No

costs.

          SO ORDERED.

                               20

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