Conjugal Partnership Comprised by Jones v. Conjugal Partnership Comprised of Pineda

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 93-1404

     THE CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP COMPRISED BY JOSEPH JONES 
        AND VERNETA G. JONES, D/B/A STENOTYPE SYSTEMS,

                   Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                              v.

            THE CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP COMPRISED OF 
                ARTHUR PINEDA AND TONI PINEDA,

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

  [Hon. W. Arthur Garrity, Jr.,* Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                           

                                         

                            Before
                      Cyr, Circuit Judge,
                                        
                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                            
                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                          

                                         

Olga M. Shepard for appellants.
               
Maria H. Sandoval for appellees.
                 

                                         
                         May 4, 1994
                                         

                 

*Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.

          BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.  This  is a breach of
          BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
                                      

contract  action arising out  of a dispute  between two court

reporters  in  the  United  States  District  Court  for  the

District  of Puerto  Rico.    The  appeal involves  two  jury

trials.    In the  first  trial,  a jury  found  in favor  of

plaintiff, Joseph Jones, and awarded him $225,000 in damages.

The  district   court  granted   a  postjudgment   motion  by

defendant, Arthur Pineda,1 vacated the  judgment, and ordered

plaintiff  to  remit $140,000  or submit  to  a new  trial on

damages.   Plaintiff  refused to  accept the  remittitur, and

proceeded to trial.  This time around he was awarded $20,000.

He  appeals, challenging  the district  court's jurisdiction,

its decision  to vacate  the  original judgment  and order  a

partial remittitur or a new trial on damages, and the court's

admission of  evidence,  at  both  trials, on  the  issue  of

mitigation of damages.  We affirm.

                              I.

                          BACKGROUND
                                    

          The following  facts are  viewed in the  light most

favorable  to  the verdict  winner,  the  plaintiff, and  all

reasonable  inferences  are drawn  in  his  favor.   Lama  v.
                                                         

                    

1.  More  precisely, the  plaintiffs-appellants in  this case
are the conjugal partnership  comprising Joseph Jones and his
wife  Vernetta, who  worked together  as  Stenograph Systems,
Inc.   The defendants-appellees  are the conjugal partnership
comprising Arthur Pineda and his wife Toni.   Throughout this
opinion, we refer to the parties in the singular, meaning the
husband court reporter.

                             -2-
                              2

Borras, 16 F.3d 473,  477 (1st Cir. 1994).2   Plaintiff Jones
      

came from New York State to Puerto Rico in March 1987 to work

as  the official  court reporter  for federal  district judge

Jose A. Fuste.  The position was offered for a one-year term,

and Jones  left Judge  Fuste's employ  as scheduled  in March

1988.   Shortly  thereafter, defendant  Pineda, the  official

court reporter for federal  district judge Raymond L. Acosta,

offered Jones a lucrative opportunity.  Judge  Acosta was the

presiding judge in the San Juan Dupont Hotel Fire Litigation,

a complex multi-plaintiff case which promised a lengthy trial

during which the attorneys would require daily transcripts.

          Pineda realized that he and his wife, who was not a

court  reporter  but  aided  her  husband  in  producing  the

transcripts,  would  be unable  to  handle  this task  alone.

After some preliminary discussions, Pineda  and Jones reached

an oral agreement  whereby Pineda agreed  to hire Jones  "for

the  entire length of  the Dupont  trial," during  which they
                                 

would  split all  of  the court  reporting  duties and  fees.

Jones  agreed to remain in Puerto Rico until the trial ended,

and  further agreed to get  a letter of  reference from Judge

Fuste.  Subsequently, Pineda  sought Judge Acosta's approval,

which was  reluctantly given,  for hiring Jones.   Apparently

                    

2.  For a more thorough recitation of the facts of this case,
we  refer  you  to  the district  court's  thorough  opinion,
Conjugal   Partnership  Comprised   by   Jones  v.   Conjugal
                                                             
Partnership  Comprised by  Pineda, 798  F. Supp.  892 (D.P.R.
                                 
1992) ("Conjugal I").
                  

                             -3-
                              3

Jones  had  transcribed several  pretrial conferences  in the

Dupont  case, and  Judge Acosta  was  not impressed  with his

reporting  skills.    Nonetheless,  given  Pineda's  repeated

assurances, Judge Acosta  acquiesced to Jones'  participation

for  "phase  I"  of the  Dupont  trial.    But, Pineda  never

informed  Jones  that  Judge  Acosta's  authorization  was  a

condition precedent to the  oral contract, or that revocation

of  the  judge's  approval  would result  in  the  contract's

termination.  And, Pineda never informed Judge Acosta that he

had hired Jones for the duration of the trial.

          The  Dupont  trial  was  scheduled  to  proceed  in

discrete  "phases."  Phase I  began in March  1989 and lasted

for thirty-three days.  Jones and Pineda shared the  workload

and the  fees generated by  phase I.   Phase II  commenced on

June 27, 1989,  and lasted  until December 1990.   The  trial

ended  in December 1991.  Pineda terminated Jones on June 30,

1989, and told Jones  that he made too many mistakes  and was

slowing things  down.   Earlier that  day  Pineda had  voiced

similar concerns about Jones to Judge  Acosta who agreed that

Jones should no longer work on the case and revoked his prior

authorization.  Pineda  told Jones that he  (Pineda), and not

Judge Acosta was responsible for Jones' discharge.  There was

evidence  that  on   June  29,  the  day   before  Jones  was

terminated, a  new system was  developed for linking  the in-

court stenograph machine to a computer located outside of the

                             -4-
                              4

courtroom,  enabling  one  reporter  (Pineda) to  handle  the

reporting work.

          For  his  work  on  phase I  of  the  trial,  Jones

received, $49,108.00, or approximately $1,500 for each of the

thirty-three  sessions.   This represents  half of  the total

fees paid  for reporting  services during phase  I, $112,083,

less  expenses.   The  entire  trial  generated  a  total  of

$465,787.75 in court reporting fees.

          The jury found that, under the  parties' agreement,

Pineda   was  obligated   to  pay   Jones  one-half   of  the

compensation  received for transcribing the trial, whether or

not Judge  Acosta continued  to authorize Jones'  presence in

the courtroom.   Consequently,  it awarded Jones  $225,000 in

damages.  

          Pineda moved  for judgment as  a matter of  law, or

alternatively, for a new trial pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 50

and 59.  In  a thoughtful opinion, the district  court denied

the motion for judgment as a matter of law:

          [T]he  jury  found  reasonably  that,  in
          exchange for plaintiff's promise to stay,
          the   defendant    promised   to   employ
          plaintiff  for the duration of the Dupont
          trial   and   to   divide   equally   the
          compensation  he  received;  and  further
          found    reasonably    that   defendant's
          obligation to pay  was not conditioned on
          Judge  Acosta's  continuing  approval  of
          plaintiff's       participation      and,
          alternatively,  that defendant  knowingly
          assumed the risk that Judge  Acosta would
          not approve  of plaintiff's participation
          after phase I. . . . 

                             -5-
                              5

Conjugal I, 798 F. Supp. at 896.  The court  also declined to
          

order  a  new trial  on  liability  because  "the verdict  on

liability, while by no means  inevitable, was not against the

clear weight of the evidence."  Id. at 899.  The court found,
                                   

however,  that damages were a "different story."  Id. at 899.
                                                     

The  court found  that  the jury's  award was  excessive, was

based on a  flawed analysis, and that a  new trial limited to

the issue  of damages  was necessary.   Id.  at 900-02.   The
                                           

court added that plaintiff  could avoid a retrial on  damages

by agreeing to  remit $140,000.   Id. at  902-03.   Plaintiff
                                     

declined  the offer and proceeded  to trial.   He was awarded

$20,000 in damages.  This appeal ensued.

                             II.

                          DISCUSSION
                                    

          On appeal plaintiff argues primarily that:  (1) the

district  court lacked subject  matter jurisdiction;  (2) the

trial judge  abused his  discretion in vacating  the original

judgment and  ordering a  remittitur or alternatively,  a new

trial on damages; and  (3) the trial judge erred  in allowing

defendant to present  evidence, in both the first  and second

trials,  concerning mitigation  of damages  because defendant

had not pleaded mitigation as an affirmative defense.

A.  Jurisdiction
                

          This action  was removed from  Puerto Rico Superior

Court  pursuant  to 28  U.S.C.    1442(a)(3).    See Conjugal
                                                             

                             -6-
                              6

Partnership   Comprised  by  Jones  v.  Conjugal  Partnership
                                                             

Comprised  by Pineda, 734 F. Supp. 41 (D.P.R. 1990) (granting
                    

defendant's removal  petition and denying  plaintiff's motion

to remand).  That statute provides:

          (a)   A   civil   action    or   criminal
          prosecution  commenced  in a  State court
          against any of  the following persons may
          be removed by them to the district  court
          of the United States for the district and
          division embracing the  place wherein  it
          is pending:
          . . . 
               (3) Any officer of the courts of the
          United States, for any Act under color of
          office  or  in  the  performance  of  his
          duties.

28 U.S.C.    1442(a)(3).3  Plaintiff  contends that the  case

was improvidently  removed from superior court  and should be

remanded.  We disagree.

          The  statute guarantees  an officer of  the federal

courts the right to remove an action commenced against him in

state court when he can  allege a "colorable" federal defense

to  that action.    Mesa v.  California,  489 U.S.  121,  136
                                       

(1989); American Policyholders  Ins. Co. v. Nyacol  Products,
                                                            

989 F.2d 1256,  1259 n.3 (1st Cir. 1993).   Although the Mesa
                                                             

court  was  concerned  principally  with     1442(a)(1),  the

                    

3.  Although  Puerto  Rico is  not  a  "State," Congress  has
expressly  provided that  actions commenced  in the  Superior
Court  of Puerto Rico are removable under the federal removal
statutes.  48 U.S.C.   864; Camacho, 868 F.2d at 486 n.4.
                                   

                             -7-
                              7

general provision of  the federal  officer removal  statute,4

the  Court noted that  "subsections (2)-(4) of    1442(a) are

largely the  `residue' of the pre-1948,  more limited removal

statutes  now  entirely encompassed  by  the general  removal

provision  of the first clause of subsection (1)."  Mesa, 489
                                                        

U.S. at 134.   The  Court further noted  that subsection  (3)

should be interpreted consistently  with subsection (1).  Id.
                                                             

at 135.  Consequently, the present case  was properly removed

if defendant asserted a federal right or raised a question of

federal  law in his defense.  Id. at 126-27 (citing Tennessee
                                                             

v. Davis, 100 U.S. 257, 262 (1880)).  
        

          In  his Answer,  defendant  alleged that  plaintiff

"served at  the pleasure  of  the [District]  Court," was  no

longer acceptable  to the court because  of poor performance,

and was  properly  dismissed  by  Judge Acosta.    Answer  to
                                                             

Complaint at      A-C  & E.    Defendant's  removal  petition
         

averred  that  the  dispute  arose  "out  of   the  laws  and

regulations of the United  States . . . which govern and  set

                    

4.  Section  1442(a)(1)  permits  removal  of  an  action  to
federal court by:

          Any officer  of the United States  or any
          agency  thereof,  or person  acting under
          him,  for any  act  under  color of  such
          office  or on account of any right, title
          or  authority claimed  under  any Act  of
          Congress   for    the   apprehension   or
          punishment of criminals or the collection
          of revenue.

28 U.S.C.   1442(a)(1).

                             -8-
                              8

the  relationship between  the United  States Courts  and the

court  reporters  [who]  perform  duties  for   said  courts,

including the  power to  dismiss or  terminate the  duties of

said  court  reporters."   Notice  of Removal  at    2.   The
                                             

removal petition also stated that,

          [i]n  order  to  determine   whether  the
          defendants are  or  [are] not  liable  in
          this civil action .  . . any court .  . .
          must construe the terms  [and] provisions
          of  those Acts  of Congress  dealing with
          the  United  States   Courts  and   those
          regulations issued  by the Administrative
          Office of the United States  dealing with
          court   reporters  and   the  supervisory
          powers of  the courts over  federal court
          reporters. . . .

Id.  Finally, in opposition  to plaintiff's motion to remand,
   

defendant elaborated on the statutes and regulations adverted

to in his removal petition.   In particular, defendant argued

that court  reporting and  court reporters in  federal courts

are regulated by  28 U.S.C.    753 and  the Court  Reporter's

Manual  issued by  the  Administrative Office  of the  United

States Courts (AO).   Opposition to Motion to  Remand at   4.
                                                     

Defendant  further maintained  that  he  was  not  personally

liable  to plaintiff,  that  Judge Acosta  was authorized  to

discharge plaintiff  under   753  and the AO  guidelines, and

that the judge did  so as a result of  plaintiff's inadequate

performance.  Id. at   5.
                 

          We believe  that these allegations  were sufficient

to satisfy the  statutory requirements, and thus the case was

                             -9-
                              9

properly removed.  Venezia v. Robinson, 16 F.3d 209, 212 (7th
                                      

Cir.  1994)  ("Once the  federal  defendant  has a  plausible

federal defense,  removal is appropriate so  that the federal

court may determine whether the defense succeeds.  A  federal

defendant need not  show that  he is entitled  to prevail  in

order  to have  access  to the  federal forum.").   Plaintiff

insists, however, that this is a state law breach of contract

action that was properly filed  in superior court and  should

have  remained there.  We  disagree.  By  raising a colorable

federal defense, a  defendant-official converts an  otherwise

nonremovable  state law action into one that falls within the

federal court's jurisdiction.   See Mesa 489  U.S. at 136-37.
                                        

The federal officer removal statute does not require that the

case  be one that could have originally been filed in federal

court.    Williams v. Brooks,  945 F.2d 1322, 1325  (5th Cir.
                            

1991) (citing cases); see Mesa, 489 U.S. at 136 ("The removal
                              

statute . . . serves to overcome the `well-pleaded complaint'

rule which would otherwise preclude removal even if a federal

defense  is alleged.").  Moreover,  that this is  a breach of

contract  case arising under Puerto  Rico law is  not alone a

bar to removal.   See  Camacho v. Autoridad  de Telefonos  de
                                                             

Puerto Rico, 868  F.2d 482,  487 (1st Cir.  1989) (under  the
           

federal removal statute "the right  to remove is not vitiated

even   if  the   case   necessitates  the   construction  and

interpretation of state or local law").

                             -10-
                              10

          Finally,  although plaintiff  has  pointed  to  the

ultimate failure  of defendant's federal defense  as a ground

for  remand, it is irrelevant for purposes of removal under  

1442(a) that  Pineda did not prevail on  his federal defense.

See 28 U.S.C.   1447(c); see  also Jamison v. Wiley, 14  F.3d
                                                   

222, 239  (4th Cir. 1994)  ("Nothing in  the federal  removal

statutes authorizes  the  remand  of a  case  that  has  been

properly  removed under    1442(a)(1) on the  ground that the

federal employee's . . . defense is later rejected.").

          At oral  argument plaintiff argued  that our recent

decision  in American Policyholders  precludes application of
                                   

the federal removal  statute in  this case.   Our reading  of

that case leads us  to the opposite conclusion.   In American
                                                             

Policyholders we held  that a suit against  a federal officer
             

exclusively in his or her official capacity is a suit against

the  agency  for  purposes  of removal  under     1442(a)(1).

American  Policyholders, 989 F.2d  at 1260.   And, because an
                       

agency may not remove a case under the statute, id. at  1259,
                                                   

"a  federal  officer  sued  solely  in his  or  her  official

capacity may not  remove a  suit to federal  court under  the

aegis of 28 U.S.C.   1442(a)(1)."  Id. at 1261.  Because this
                                      

action was brought against defendant solely in his individual

and  not his  official capacity,  it was  subject to  removal

under   1442(a)(3).

                             -11-
                              11

B.  Remittitur or A New Trial on Damages
                                        

          Plaintiff  argues that the  district court erred in

vacating  the original  judgment of  $225,000 and  ordering a

remittitur  of $140,000  or,  alternatively, a  new trial  on

damages.  According to plaintiff,  the district court was not

entitled to substitute its judgment for that of the jury.

          Under Federal  Rule of Civil Procedure  59(a), "[a]

new trial may be granted  . . . on all or part  of the issues

. . . ."   Fed. R.  Civ. P. 59(a); Allen  v. Chance Mfg. Co.,
                                                            

873  F.2d 465, 474 (1st Cir. 1989).   On the issue of damages

the court found  that the "[d]amages awarded to  plaintiff by

the jury were  so clearly excessive . . . as to require a new

trial on  damages, unless  a remittitur would  be appropriate

and acceptable  to plaintiff .  . .  ."  Conjugal  I, 798  F.
                                                    

Supp. at 900.   We  have recognized that  a district  court's

discretion to grant a new trial extends to cases in which the

court  determines that the  damages awarded  by the  jury are

excessive.  See Perez-Perez  v. Popular Leasing Rental, Inc.,
                                                            

993 F.2d 281,  283 (1st  Cir. 1993) ("`The  motion for a  new

trial may  invoke the discretion of the court in so far as it

is bottomed  on  the  claim  .  .  .  that  the  damages  are

excessive.'" (quoting  Montgomery Ward  & Co. v.  Duncan, 311
                                                        

U.S. 243,  251 (1940))); McIsaac v.  Didriksen Fishing Corp.,
                                                            

809 F.2d 129, 135 (1st Cir. 1987).

                             -12-
                              12

          "Under the practice of  remittitur . . .  the court

may also  condition the denial of a motion for a new trial on

the  filing by plaintiff of a remittitur in a stated amount."

Phelan v. Local 305, 973 F.2d 1050, 1064 (2d Cir. 1992);  see
                                                             

also  Catullo v. Metzner, 834 F.2d 1075, 1082 (1st Cir. 1987)
                        

("Rule 59 empowers the trial court to order  remittitur where

a  damage award  is  not  supported  by  the  weight  of  the

evidence.").  The court must, however, hold out the option of

a new trial.  Phelan, 973 F.2d at 1064 (collecting cases).
                    

          We  will reverse  a  district court's  decision  to

order a remittitur or a partial new trial due to an excessive

damage  award, only  where the  court abused  its discretion.

Quinones-Pacheco v. American Airlines,  Inc., 979 F.2d 1 (1st
                                            

Cir. 1992); Catullo, 834 F.2d at 1082.  Here, we must analyze
                   

the district  court's decision against the  proper measure of

damages under Puerto Rico  law.  The Supreme Court  of Puerto

Rico has held that,

          "the  measure  of  damages  sustained  by
          reason  of  failure  on  the part  of  an
          employer  to comply  with a  contract for
          services    is,    prima    facie,    the
          compensation stipulated  in the contract,
          subject  to reduction  upon proof  by the
          defendant as  to the amount  the employee
          did  gain or could have gained during the
          time the contract remained in force."

Villar  & Co.  v.  Conde, 30  F.2d 588,  590 (1st  Cir. 1929)
                        

(quoting  Hardouin v.  Krajawsky-Pesant  Co., 22  P.R.R.  641
                                            

                             -13-
                              13

(1923)).    This standard  was  correctly  identified by  the

district court.  Conjugal I, 798 F. Supp. at 901.
                           

          Here  the  district  court  engaged  in  a detailed

examination  of  the  evidence  pertaining  to  damages,  and

concluded that  the jury's excessive generosity was traceable

to two errors.  First, the court determined that the jury, in

computing  plaintiff's damages,  failed  to  deduct the  fees

generated  during phase I  of the Dupont  trial, $112,083 (of

which  plaintiff received  his  share), from  the total  fees

earned during the entire  trial, $465,787.75.  Therefore, the

jury  used  $465,787.75  as   a  starting  point  instead  of

$353,704.25 (i.e., $465,787.75 - $112,083).
                 

          According to  the district court, the  jury's error

was  almost  certainly  attributable  to   counsels'  "casual

treatment of  the evidence pertaining to  damages."  Conjugal
                                                             

I,  798 F.  Supp. at  900.   The figures  show that  the jury
 

likely committed  this  oversight.   If  we take  the  higher

figure,   deduct  $15,000   for  expenses5  and   divide  the

difference   ($450,787.75)  by   two,  the   quotient  (i.e.,
                                                            

plaintiff's "prima  facie" loss)  comes out  to approximately

$225,000 -- the amount actually awarded by the jury.

          The second defect in the damage award identified by

the district court was the  jury's apparent failure to reduce

                    

5.  This  is the minimum amount of expenses, supported by the
record, incurred by defendant after plaintiff's discharge.

                             -14-
                              14

plaintiff's damages by the  amount plaintiff earned after his

discharge on June 30, 1989, and before the termination of the

Dupont  trial  in December  1991.    It was  undisputed  that

plaintiff earned approximately $50,000 in 1990 and $40,000 in

1991  from court  reporting  sources.   There  was no  direct

testimony as  to plaintiff's  court reporting income  for the

balance of 1989.   Because  Puerto Rico law  requires that  a

damage award be reduced by the amount of the plaintiff's gain

during the remaining life of the contract, the jury's failure

to do so here resulted in an excessive damage award.

          After scanning the trial  record, we agree with the

district court  that these  deficiencies infected the  jury's

damage calculation and resulted in an excessive damage award.

Therefore, a new trial or a partial remittitur was warranted.

          With  respect to  the remittitur,  plaintiff argues

that he was  willing to remit a  lesser amount, and  that the

court's remittitur was excessive.   The rule in this  circuit

for computing a remittitur is the "least intrusive" standard.

See  Catullo, 834  F.2d at  1083; see  also Earl  v. Bouchard
                                                             

Transp. Co., 917  F.2d 1320, 1328 (2d Cir.  1990) (explaining
           

three different  rules for computing remittitur  and adopting

the  least  intrusive  method).   Under  this  standard,  the

remittitur  amount should  reduce  the verdict  "only to  the

maximum  that would  be  upheld by  the  trial court  as  not

excessive."  Earl, 917 F.2d at 1330.  The district court used
                 

                             -15-
                              15

this standard in calculating its remittitur.  Conjugal I, 798
                                                        

F.  Supp. at 902-03.   We can  find nothing in  the record to

substantiate plaintiff's  claim that the  trial judge  abused

his discretion by remitting the amount that he did, $140,000.

          As our  discussion above  indicates, see supra,  p.
                                                        

14,  the  maximum  amount  of plaintiff's  prima  facie  loss

supported  by the  evidence  was  $169,350 (i.e.,  ($353,705-
                                                

$15,000)/2).   Under  Puerto Rico  law, this  figure must  be

reduced  by  the  minimum  amount  of  mitigation  proved  by

defendant  at trial,  approximately $90,000.6   Consequently,

we  are left  with a  maximum  damage award  of approximately

$80,000.  Plaintiff's attack  on the amount left in  place by

the district court, $85,000, is therefore without force.

C.  Mitigation of Damages
                         

          Plaintiff maintains that he  is entitled to a third

trial  on  damages  because  the  district  court  improperly

admitted, at both trials, evidence pertaining to the issue of

mitigation   of  damages.     According  to   plaintiff  this

constituted  reversible error  because  the  defendant  never

pleaded mitigation as an affirmative defense.

                    

6.  Because plaintiff  was only  able to estimate  his annual
earnings for 1990 and 1991, the district court discounted the
figures  provided  by  plaintiff.     The  court   reasonably
concluded from the evidence that plaintiff  earned a total of
$85,000  from  court  reporting   between  the  time  he  was
terminated  until the end of  the Dupont trial.   Conjugal I,
                                                            
798 F. Supp. at 903.

                             -16-
                              16

          It is true that  defendant did not plead mitigation

of damages as an  affirmative defense in his complaint.   Nor

does it appear that  the issue was addressed in  any pretrial

orders  prior to  the first trial.   Plaintiff  did, however,

include a  proposed jury instruction concerning mitigation of

damages in  his proposed charge submitted  in anticipation of

the first trial.7

          At  the first  trial, the  issue of  mitigation was

initially raised during  defense counsel's  cross-examination

of plaintiff, when he asked plaintiff about income from court

reporting sources subsequent to being discharged.  At no time

during  this line  of  questioning  did  plaintiff's  counsel

                    

7.  Plaintiff's proposed instruction number 25 states:

               The measure of damages  sustained by
          reason of  failure  on  the  part  of  an
          employer  to  comply  with   a  contract,
          subject  to reduction  upon proof  by the
          defendant as  to the amount  the employee
          did gain or could  have gained during the
          time  the  contract  remained  in  force.
          Hardouin  v.   Krajewski-Pesant  Co.,  22
                                              
          P.R.R. 641.

               In an action  for damages for breach
          of  a contract  for services  it devolves
          upon  the defendant  to  prove  that  the
          plaintiff secured or  could have  secured
          another    position,   and    while   the
          discharged  employee is bound to look for
          other work or take the risk of having the
          amount  claimed  reduced  by  the  amount
          which he  could  have earned,  he is  not
          required to look for  work of a different
          nature, or in another locality, or in the
          service of an unsuitable employer.  Id.
                                                 

                             -17-
                              17

object  on  the grounds  that the  defendant had  waived this

defense by failing  to plead  it in accordance  with Fed.  R.

Civ.  P. 8(c).   The  sole objections  raised by  plaintiff's

counsel  were that  the questions exceeded  the scope  of the

direct  examination, and  that  plaintiff's  income  was  not

pertinent to the case.  At the end of the trial, the district

court instructed the jury,  without objection from plaintiff,

on the doctrine of mitigation.

          After  the  district   court  granted   defendant's

postjudgment  motion,  plaintiff  moved  for  reconsideration

based in part  on defendant's failure to plead  mitigation of

damages as an affirmative defense.  The district court denied

the motion on  the ground that,  "mitigation was referred  to

repeatedly during  trial and  in the Court's  instructions to

the   Jury   without  any   objection  being   interposed  by

plaintiffs.  Plaintiffs' conduct during trial amounted in our

opinion to a waiver of the ground they now assert."  

          Between  the  first  and second  trials,  defendant

engaged in extensive discovery on the  issue of mitigation of

damages.    Questions  concerning mitigation  were  posed  by

defendant  in  written  interrogatories  and  at  plaintiff's

deposition.  Both parties retained  experts (certified public

accountants) who authored reports on plaintiff's damages, and

later  testified  at  trial   on  the  issue  of  mitigation.

Additionally,  both  parties  submitted  trial  memoranda  in

                             -18-
                              18

which, at the court's direction, the  issue of mitigation was

briefed.   The parties also filed a joint trial memorandum in

which plaintiff included, among  his claims and defenses, the

statement  that "[p]laintiffs  made every effort  to mitigate

the damages caused  by the breach of  contract by defendants,

but were  set  back  by  the unilateral  termination  of  the

contract by defendants, which  affected plaintiffs' good name

and reputation in the industry."

          Furthermore,  in  the  opening statement  plaintiff

proposed that the  judge give  to the  jury, he  specifically

asked the court to address the issue of mitigation:

               Once the amount due to plaintiffs is
          determined,  then,  you  must  consider[]
          whether or not plaintiffs had the duty to
          mitigate  the  damages   suffered  as   a
          consequence of the breach of  contract by
          defendants.   Also, you must consider the
          steps  taken  by  plaintiffs to  mitigate
          these damages.  Then, you  must determine
          whether  an  amount  for   mitigation  of
          damages, if  any, is to be  deducted from
          plaintiffs' award.

Finally,  in a  proposed jury  charge submitted prior  to the

second   trial,   plaintiff   devoted    seven   instructions

exclusively to the  issue of  mitigation of damages.   At  no

time during the activities leading up to the second trial did

plaintiff  argue that  defendant  had waived  the defense  of

mitigation of damages by omitting it from his answer.

          On the  opening day of the  second trial, defendant

moved to amend his answer, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b),

                             -19-
                              19

to include  mitigation of damages as  an affirmative defense.

Plaintiff   objected.     The  court   overruled  plaintiff's

objection and allowed the amendment:

               [O]n mitigation, the  law of  Puerto
          Rico and  every other jurisdiction  is so
          clear that prima facie damage  for breach
          of contract places  on the injured  party
          the obligation to mitigate.
               But  it is  more than  that.   It is
          that  part  of  plaintiffs'  proof  in  a
          breach  of  contract  case, as  in  every
          case,   is   causation,  liability,   and
          liability  causing  damage to  the extent
          that an injured  plaintiff can avoid that
          damage  by  working  himself.    To  that
          extent his  damage is not  caused by  the
          defendant,  but  is,  rather, caused,  if
          this  is  the  evidence,  by  plaintiffs'
          failure  to  exert  reasonable effort  to
          make up for this loss of income.
                            * * *
               Now, basically it is the defendants'
          burden to  prove mitigation.   In the way
          this  case stands  the defendant  will go
          forward  and  have the  burden  of proof.
          But  to  eliminate   from  the  case  the
          mitigation  issue,  and  implicitly,  the
          importance of  the plaintiff establishing
          causation  between  liability and  damage
          requires,  in my  view, the  amendment of
          the  pleading  that  the   defendant  has
          proposed.

Transcript of Second Trial,  Vol. I, pp. 34-35.  At the start
                          

of the  third  and final  day of  trial, after  the issue  of

mitigation had been litigated,  the court revisited its prior

ruling:

               [T]he   Court    now   vacates   its
          allowance . .  . [of] defendant's  motion
          to  amend   its  answer  by   adding  the
          affirmative  defense   of  mitigation  of
          damages.   This order does not affect the
          evidence  at this  trial or  the evidence

                             -20-
                              20

          that will go  to the  jury, but,  rather,
          the state of the pleadings.

Transcript  of Second Trial, Vol. III, p.  3.  The court then
                           

explained that defendant was not required to plead mitigation

of  damages as an affirmative defense, and that the court had

granted defendant's motion to amend because  it did not think

that  the amendment  had any  real  significance.   The court

added, however, that  it realized that there  was support for

the  position  that  mitigation was  an  affirmative defense.

Therefore, the court "un-amended"  defendant's answer so that

plaintiff could raise the present issue on appeal.

          After   the  jury  returned  its  $20,000  verdict,

plaintiff moved to set aside the judgment  based primarily on

the  trial court's  admission  of mitigation  evidence.   The

court denied the motion:

               At   the   first  trial   plaintiffs
          offered  evidence  of  damage   to  their
          reputation for having been "kicked out of
          Puerto Rico", which was relevant  only to
          mitigation   and   did   not  object   to
          instructions submitting the issue  to the
          jury.     The  retrial   on  damages  was
          preceded  by  abundant  discovery  as  to
          mitigation, at the Court's  direction the
          parties  briefed  the  law applicable  to
          this  issue  and   both  parties   called
          alleged   experts    to   testify   about
          plaintiffs'    actual    and    potential
          earnings.  In  our opinion  any error  in
          the  Court's  reception  of  evidence  on
          mitigation    could    not   have    been
          prejudicial.

Conjugal  Partnership   Comprised   by  Jones   v.   Conjugal
                                                             

Partnership Comprised  by Pineda, No. 90-1051  (D. Mass. Dec.
                                

                             -21-
                              21

15, 1992) (order denying  motion to set aside  new judgment).

We review plaintiff's claim of error against this backdrop.

          There  is some  question as  to whether  or not  we

should  look  to  state  law  in  determining  if  failure to

mitigate damages is an affirmative defense under Fed. R. Civ.

P. 8(c),8  compare Sayre v.  Musicland Group, Inc.,  850 F.2d
                                                  

350,  354   (8th  Cir.   1988)  (whether  mitigation   is  an

affirmative defense  under Rule 8(c) is  a federal procedural

matter and is  governed by  the federal rules),  with 999  v.
                                                         

C.I.T. Corp., 776 F.2d  866, 870 n.2 (9th Cir.  1985) (citing
            

California law for the proposition that mitigation of damages

is an affirmative  defense under  Rule 8(c)).   We need  not,

however,  dwell on this dilemma.   Failure to  mitigate is an

affirmative defense  as a  matter of federal  procedural law,

see  Lennon v. U.S. Theatre  Corp., 920 F.2d  996, 1000 (D.C.
                                  

Cir. 1990); Modern  Leasing v. Falcon Mfg. of California, 888
                                                        

F.2d 59,  62 (8th Cir. 1989), as well as Puerto Rico law, see
                                                             

Odriozola v.  S. Cosmetic Dist. Corp., 116 D.P.R. 485 (1985),
                                     

and therefore must be pleaded. 

          Generally speaking, failure to plead an affirmative

defense  results in a waiver of the defense and the exclusion

of all evidence relevant to it.  See Federal Deposit Ins. Co.
                                                             

                    

8.  Under  Rule 8(c), certain  enumerated defenses,  of which
mitigation is not one, and "any other matter  constituting an
avoidance  or an affirmative defense," must be pleaded by the
defendant.  

                             -22-
                              22

v.  Ramirez-Rivera,  869  F.2d  624,  626  (1st  Cir.  1989);
                  

Depositors Trust Co. v. Slobusky, 692 F.2d 205, 208 (1st Cir.
                                

1982).   Nevertheless, it is settled that "[w]hen there is no

prejudice and when fairness  dictates, the strictures of [the

raise  or  waive]   rule  may  be  relaxed."     Jakobsen  v.
                                                         

Massachusetts  Port Authority,  520 F.2d  810, 813  (1st Cir.
                             

1975).   Under Fed.  R. Civ. P.  15(b),9 the trial  court may

and  should liberally  allow amendments  to the  pleadings if

prejudice  does  not  result.     Id.    Moreover,  when   an
                                     

affirmative defense that has not been raised in the pleadings

has  actually been tried  by implied consent  of the parties,

                    

9.  Rule 15(b) provides as follows:

          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 to do so does
          not  affect the  result of  the trial  of
          these issues.  If evidence is objected to
          at  trial on  the ground  that it  is not
          within the issues  made by the pleadings,
          the  court may allow  the pleadings to be
          amended and  shall do so freely  when the
          presentation of the  merits of the action
          will   be   subserved  thereby   and  the
          objecting  party  fails  to  satisfy  the
          court that the admission of such evidence
          would prejudice the party  in maintaining
          the  party's action  or defense  upon the
          merits.      The   court  may   grant   a
          continuance to enable the objecting party
          to meet such evidence.

                             -23-
                              23

the court must treat the defense as if it had  been raised in

the original responsive pleading.  Id.; Depositors Trust Co.,
                                                            

692 F.2d at 208.

          With respect  to the first trial, it  is clear that

the issue  of mitigation was actually  tried with plaintiff's

implied consent.  "One sign of implied consent is that issues

not raised by  the pleadings are presented and argued without

proper objection  by opposing counsel."   Matter of Prescott,
                                                            

805 F.2d 719, 725 (7th Cir. 1986) (citing cases).  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.  Id.;  Hardin v. Manitowoc-Forsythe Corp., 691
                                                        

F.2d 449, 457 (10th Cir. 1982).  Here, defendant's mitigation

evidence   was  presented   without  relevant   objection  by

plaintiff.

          Furthermore,  implied  consent  is generally  found

where the  opposing party  actually produced evidence  on the

new issue.  See Law v. Ernst & Young, 956 F.2d  364, 375 (1st
                                    

Cir. 1992); Lynch  v. Dukakis,  719 F.2d 504,  508 (1st  Cir.
                             

1983);  Hardin, 691 F.2d at  457; see generally  6 Charles A.
                                               

Wright & Arthur  R. Miller, Federal Practice  and Procedure  
                                                           

1493  at 28  (1990) (citing  cases).   Here, as  the district

court noted, plaintiff's testimony concerning  alleged damage

to his reputation within court reporting circles was relevant

                             -24-
                              24

only to the issue  of mitigation.10  Moreover,  plaintiff did
    

not  object to  that portion  of  the jury  charge concerning

mitigation of damages.   See Zappia v. Baltimore &  Ohio R.R.
                                                             

Co., 312 F.2d 62,  64 (6th Cir. 1962) (implied  consent found
   

where party did  not object to jury  instruction on unpleaded

issue).  Finally, plaintiff never asked for a  continuance in

order to meet the  evidence of mitigation, nor did  he allege

any  prejudice resulting  from the  court's admission  of the

mitigation evidence at the  first trial.  Rhode Island  Educ.
                                                             

v. Secretary U.S. Dep't of Educ., 929 F.2d 844, 855 (1st Cir.
                                

1991) (unpleaded issue  properly raised where  opposing party

failed  to argue prejudice); George Cohen Sons & Co. v. Koch,
                                                            

376  F.2d 629, 632-33 (1st Cir. 1967) (claim tried by implied

consent  of the parties where opposing party failed to seek a

continuance to meet evidence  on unpleaded issue).  Moreover,

in  light  of  the  fact  that  plaintiff,  prior  to  trial,

submitted  a proposed  jury  instruction on  the doctrine  of

mitigation,  we   can  reasonably  conclude   that  plaintiff

anticipated   that  the   issue  would   be   litigated,  and

consequently was not prejudiced when it was raised. 

                    

10.  This testimony  was relevant to the  issue of mitigation
because  while a party is  under a duty  to mitigate damages,
"only those  who are able to  mitigate must do so."   Noble v
                                                           
Corporacion Insular de  Seguros, 738  F.2d 51,  55 (1st  Cir.
                               
1984).   It was not  otherwise relevant  since only  economic
damages are  recoverable in  a breach of  contract action  in
Puerto Rico.  See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31,   3023 (1990).
                 

                             -25-
                              25

          Turning our attention to the second trial, we reach

the same  conclusion.   We note, however,  that the  district

court erred as a matter of  law in holding that mitigation of

damages  is  not  an  affirmative defense  under  Rule  8(c).

Nevertheless, because  we affirm the court's  ruling that the

issue  of mitigation  was properly  litigated, its  error was

harmless.

          It is hornbook law that,  "`at the trial stage  the

case is to be heard on the merits, and is not to be hamstrung

by   faulty  pleadings,   unless  actual,   not  conjectural,

prejudice  results from  the  faulty pleadings.'"   Green  v.
                                                         

United States, 629 F.2d 581, 584 n.1 (9th Cir. 1980) (quoting
             

2A James  W. Moore et al., Moore's Federal Practice   8.05 at
                                                   

8-34 (2d ed. 1979)).  Because the issue of mitigation was the

subject of substantial pretrial activity, plaintiff had ample

notice  that the defense of  mitigation would be litigated at

the  second  trial.    Consequently,  the  district   court's

decision to admit the mitigation evidence and allow the issue

to be litigated was proper.  See Pane v. RCA  Corp., 868 F.2d
                                                   

631, 637 (3d Cir.  1989) (where unpleaded affirmative defense

was referred to repeatedly in  pretrial motions and no unfair

surprise  resulted,  district   court  did   not  abuse   its

discretion in allowing the issue to be litigated).

          We  have  considered  plaintiff's other  claims  --

particularly those concerning the trial court's denial of his

                             -26-
                              26

motion  for sanctions under Fed.  R. Civ. P.  11, the court's

decision  to stay the  execution of judgment  after the first

trial,  and its  refusal to  compel discovery  of defendant's

personal financial  papers --  and  find them  to be  without

merit.

          The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
                                                Affirmed.
                                                        

                             -27-
                              27