The Bank of Saipan (the “Bank”) sued CNG Financial Corp. (“CNG”) for damages resulting from a complex fraud perpetrated by third parties against both entities. The facts of this case involve at least two fraudulent schemes involving con-artists who are now tucked away in jail. The facts more specifically relevant involve the victims of these schemes: the Bank, which loaned money to the con-artist to purchase the subsidiaries of CNG; and CNG, which received the loan proceeds as partial payment for the subsidiaries, which it had to reassume when the con-artist purchaser defaulted. The Bank argues it is entitled to the money it loaned the purchaser, which is proceeds in CNG’s possession; but CNG argues that the Bank is not entitled to these proceeds because it has unclean hands, a defense to the Bank’s equitable claim for money had and received.
At the close of the Bank’s evidence, the district court granted judgment as a matter of law to CNG. We affirm the dismissal of the fraud claim. We reverse the dismissal of the money had and received claim, and remand it for trial.
I
In the summer of 2001 two sophisticated con-artists — now serving time in federal prison on various fraud convictions — arrived in Saipan, an American territory in the Western Pacific. These men, B. Douglas Montgomery and DuSean Berkich, pretended to be important and wealthy businessmen and wanted to buy the small Bank of Saipan. Montgomery and Ber-kich colluded with Bank president Tomas Aldan and offered to buy the Bank.
Even before the sale was finalized, Montgomery and Berkich took over the Bank and began making improper and undocumented loans to various individuals
Meanwhile, in Texas, Michael Wilson, another sophisticated con-man with a previous felony conviction, presented himself to CNG as an important and wealthy businessman, and expressed his intent to purchase two of CNG’s failing subsidiaries, Finity and Fi-Scrip. Wilson, who apparently had no funds at all, needed capital to finance the purchase. A mutual con-artist friend arranged a meeting with Montgomery and Berkich to obtain a loan. After meeting in Saipan, Montgomery and Ber-kich loaned Wilson $5 million of the Bank’s money, $4.5 million of which was paid to CNG in the purchase of Finity and Fi-Serip.
Wilson had feigned wealth on a claim to 48,000 outstanding credit card accounts. The accounts, which were in fact nonexistent, were to be used as collateral for his Bank loan. Wilson actually informed Montgomery and Berkich that these accounts did not exist, but the two loaned him the $5 million anyway. CNG was, allegedly, also aware of Wilson’s lies regarding the phony credit card accounts but decided to proceed with the deal provided Wilson could obtain the necessary financing. The Bank alleges that CNG knew or should have known that Wilson could not obtain financing legitimately. The Bank further states that CNG raised its asking price for its subsidiary companies substantially after it learned of Wilson’s fraud, presumably to take advantage of the known fraud in whatever way it could.
Wilson paid the $4.5 million from the' Bank to CNG and CNG financed the remaining amount to satisfy its $19.7 million asking price in the form of promissory notes taken from Wilson. Wilson eventually defaulted on the promissory notes and the Bank loan, and CNG took back its interest in the subsidiary companies (but retained the $4.5 million pilfered from the bank).
This suit arose in federal district court when Fi-Scrip, Finity and others sued the Bank for release of the Bank’s UCC-1 filing on some of Finity and Fi-Scrip’s computer equipment. The Bank responded with counterclaims against CNG and others for the losses it suffered from the Wilson loan. At issue before the district court were the remaining claims by the Bank against CNG for misrepresentation, aiding and abetting fraud, unjust enrichment, money had and received, and joint enterprise.
At trial, after the conclusion of the Bank’s evidence, CNG moved for an entry of judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 50. The district court granted the motion and made the following oral findings: 1) there was no misrepresentation by CNG to the Bank; 2) CNG did not owe a special duty to the Bank that would require disclosing information about Wilson; 3) there was no joint venture between CNG and Wilson that would make CNG liable for Wilson’s conduct; 4) there was no evidence that CNG committed fraud or duress, or took any undue advantage of the situation; 5) there was no evidence that CNG knew or should have known that Wilson was defrauding the Bank; 6) any representations that may have been made by CNG had no influence whatsoever on whether the Bank would lend the money to Wilson; 7) the Bank lacked clean hands; and 8) CNG relied upon the Bank loan by changing its position and transferring interest in Fi-Scrip and Finity to Wilson. The Bank filed a timely appeal of the district court’s judgment as a matter of law with respect to the money had and received and fraud claims.
We review judgments as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50
de novo,
applying the same standards that the district court applied and considering all the evidence in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Cramer,
A
We first review the judgment as a matter of law with respect to the money had and received claim. Texas follows the ordinary principles of common law for such claims:
The question, in an action for money had and received, is to which party does the money, in equity, justice, and law, belong. All plaintiff need show is that defendant holds money which in equity and good conscience belongs to him. Again, it has been declared that a cause of action for money had and received is less restricted and fettered by technical rules and formalities than any other form of action. It aims at the abstract justice of the case, and looks solely at the inquiry, whether the defendant holds money, which belongs to the plaintiff.
Staats v. Miller,
The Bank argues, and offered evidence at trial to demonstrate, that CNG is holding money that rightfully belongs to the Bank and that, absent the fraud by Montgomery and Berkich, the Bank would still possess that money. As a matter of equity, therefore, the Bank contends that the money should be returned to it.
CNG does not dispute any of the Bank’s basic contentions but instead argues that an action for money had and received, likd all equity-oriented actions, carries with it the affirmative defense of “unclean hands.” That is, a plaintiff seeking equitable relief, once the affirmative defense is raised, must show that she has not contributed to the harm at issue.
See, e.g., Truly v. Austin,
Yet the cases applying the clean hands doctrine, particularly as a defense to a claim for money had and received, are equivocal as to whether unclean hands (or what relative degree of unclean hands) bar recovery altogether. Texas courts have long spoken in terms of weighing the equities, even when foreclosing recovery completely; the inquiry must thus go beyond an analysis of the plaintiffs errors of omission or commission, to balance these against the defendant’s unjust acts.
See, e.g., Norris v. Gafas,
The evidence cited by CNG against the Bank to support its affirmative defense of unclean hands sounds in negligence. CNG argues that the Bank failed to investigate Wilson’s credit and collateral, and that the Bank’s board, loan committee, and other
It should be noted, however, that the unclean hands defense is inapplicable altogether where the plaintiffs sins do not affect or prejudice the defendant.
See, e.g., Rodgers v. Tracy,
CNG further argues that there can be no claim for money had and received without some affirmative inequitable conduct by the defendant. In support of this proposition it cites
Heldenfels Bros., Inc. v. City of Corpus Christi,
For example, property stolen from the plaintiff and transferred to a third party for consideration and received in good faith might still be recovered via an analogous equitable restitution action.
See, e.g., Tri-State Chemicals, Inc. v. Western Organics, Inc.,
The facts suggest that it will not be a simple matter to determine whether CNG accepted the Bank’s money from Wilson in good faith. The record contains evidence that CNG knew Wilson was a felon and a fraud and had no legitimate way of obtaining the money to pay for CNG’s failing subsidiaries. The fact that CNG is alleged to have raised the asking price for the subsidiaries upon discovering that Wilson was a fraud might suggest that CNG entered into the transaction in less than good faith. Thus there is a genuine question of fact concerning CNG’s good faith, which is yet another issue that should be left for the jury.
Finally, CNG argues that CNG’s change of position upon its receipt of the Bank’s funds — the release of its interests in Finity and Fi-Scrip — precludes the Bank’s recovery.
See Greer v. White Oak State Bank,
In sum, the material issues of fact raised with respect to this money had and received action require a fact-finder to determine who should rightly claim the money wrongfully obtained from the Bank. Courts are naturally hesitant to return money to plaintiffs when both parties are at more or less equal fault; hence we have the equitable defenses such as unclean hands. Nevertheless, in this case there are genuine questions of fact to be resolved in determining the equities that might require CNG to return money to the Bank. The district court’s judgment as a matter of law on the money had and received claim therefore constitutes error.
B
We now turn to the judgment as a matter of law with respect to the fraud claim. The district court held that there was no fiduciary relationship between CNG and the Bank that would have required disclosure of Wilson’s fraud, that there were no misrepresentations or material omissions by CNG to the Bank, that Wilson had not committed fraud against the Bank, and that there was neither evidence of a common scheme between Wilson and CNG nor evidence that CNG aided and abetted Wilson.
Yet this basis for a finding of fraud was never raised in the trial court. The Bank did not mention knowing receipt as a basis for fraud in its opening statements or proposed jury instructions, nor in opposition to CNG’s Rule 50 motion. As such, the argument is waived and we cannot find that the district court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law on the fraud claim. 7
Ill
In sum, the district court, in granting judgment as a matter of law in favor of CNG for the reasons enumerated supra, got it all right except with respect to its ruling on unclean hands. It concluded that the evidence showed that the Bank had unclean hands, and that finding may not be incorrect. The error was in concluding that unclean hands was an absolute bar to recovery on the money had and received claim; the disputed facts require, for the reasons we have addressed in this opinion, that this claim be submitted to the jury, under proper instructions, for its determination. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED with respect to the fraud claim, REVERSED with respect to the money had and received claim, and REMANDED for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
MOTION TO STRIKE REPLY BRIEF DENIED AS MOOT; AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part; REMANDED.
Notes
. The Bank argues that the money had and received claim, as an action at law, is not subject to the "unclean hands" equitable doctrine. CNG contends that this argument was raised for the first time in the Bank's reply brief, and moves to strike the relevant portions of that brief. We need not rule on the motion, however, as the Bank's view of the law is not the law of Texas: "[RJecoveiy for money had and received, though legal in nature, is controlled by equitable principles, and ... it is axiomatic that the 'clean hands’ doctrine functions in equitable actions.”
Texas Bank & Trust Co. v. Custom Leasing, Inc.,
. The mandate in
Harris
was recalled, but "the original decision stands unchanged except [with respect to unrelated issues].”
. This is consistent with our case law.
See, e.g„ Gulf Oil, 322
F.2d at 31-32. The only clear precedent to the contrary,
Texas Bank & Trust,
. The record is mixed with respect to the extent the Bank was negligent in allowing Montgomery and Berkich to take over the Bank’s operations prior to the completion of the sale and permitting large loans to be disbursed without board approval. For its part, the Bank presents evidence that certain Bank employees worked diligently to procure security for the loan to Wilson, but were thwarted by the illegal conspiracy among the bank president, Montgomery, and Berkich'— some of which activity CNG is alleged to have known about.
. The parties dispute the degree of wrongdoing that must be shown before a plaintiff's actions render his hands "unclean." CNG argues that a conscious decision not to investigate a potential mistake is enough to defeat the Bank’s claim. See
Gulf Oil,
.See
also Gulf Oil,
. Even if the knowing receipt argument were properly preserved, Wilson did not defraud the Bank; the record shows no misrepresentations to the Bank that the Bank relied upon. Although Wilson told Montgomery and Ber-kich that he planned to use the non-existent credit card accounts as collateral, he admitted that the credit card accounts did not exist. Moreover, the Bank (in the control of the criminal conspiracy) was going to lend the money to Wilson regardless of any collateral. Without an underlying fraud, CNG could not be derivatively liable for the knowing acceptance of fraudulent benefits.
