This case, which arises out of the attempts of two federal agencies to disgorge funds from Janet Sehaberg,
1
the ex-wife of alleged Ponzi-scheme artist Stephen Walsh, see
CFTC v. Walsh,
Janet Sehaberg was married to Stephen Walsh for more than two decades. By the time of their separation in 2004, Walsh had amassed a substantial fortune and the two negotiated a settlement that gave Schaberg a not-insubstantial fortune of her own. Under that settlement, finalized in 2006, Walsh agreed to pay Sehaberg 12.5 million dollars in biannual installments through 2020 and to allow Sehaberg to keep nearly 5 million dollars held in several checking accounts during the marriage. Sehaberg conveyed to Walsh her interest in a house in Port Washington, New York, while Sehaberg assumed sole ownership of condominiums in New York City and in Florida. Both parties waived their rights to any further equitable distribution, maintenance, or inheritance. In 2008, Schaberg remarried and adopted her current name.
In 2009, the CFTC and the SEC accused Walsh of operating a Ponzi scheme through which he and a partner fleeced *197 investors of as much as 554 million dollars. Walsh, the agencies claimed, had convinced investors to deposit money into an entity that, although purportedly a pass-through vehicle for investing in an “equity index arbitrage” fund, Walsh actually used extensively for his own personal expenses.
The agencies sued not only Walsh but Schaberg. They did not allege that she herself committed or even had knowledge of any wrongdoing, only that she nevertheless possessed the proceeds of that wrongdoing-transferred directly to her from the investment entity in question — and should have to disgorge those proceeds to pay the defrauded investors. Pending resolution of the matter, the agencies sought and received a series of orders restraining Schaberg’s funds, including the preliminary injunctions at issue here, which leave Schaberg “without access to the vast majority of her assets.”
Walsh I,
On Schaberg’s interlocutory appeal from the preliminary-injunction orders, we recognized that the agencies may obtain disgorgement of ill-gotten funds only to the extent that a relief defendant like Schaberg lacks a legitimate claim to them.
See id.
at 225, citing
SEC v. Cavanagh,
(1) Does “marital property” within the meaning of New York Domestic Relations Law § 236 include the proceeds of fraud?
(2) Does a spouse pay “fair consideration” according to the terms of New York Debtor and Creditor Law § 272 when she relinquishes in good faith a claim to the proceeds of fraud?
Id at 231-32.
On the first question, the Court of Appeals ruled unambiguously and unanimously for Schaberg, holding that “proceeds of fraud can constitute marital property” and that “monies obtained by fraud cannot be followed by the original owner into the hands of an innocent former spouse who now holds them (or assets derived from them) as a result of a divorce proceeding where that spouse in good faith and without knowledge of the fraud gave fair consideration for the transferred property.”
Walsh II,
On the second question, the Court of Appeals reached a more complicated conclusion. On the one .hand, it held that “consideration cannot be predicated on a spouse’s relinquishment of a claim to a greater share of the proceeds of fraud.”
Id.
at 175,
Is a determination that a spouse paid “fair consideration” according to the terms of New York Debtor and Creditor Law § 272 precluded, as a matter of law, where all or part of the marital estate consists of the proceeds of fraud?
Id.
at 176,
The decision of the Court of Appeals, although not resolving every potential future question in this case, requires that we vacate the orders of the district court. We review the district court’s preliminary injunctions for abuse of discretion, which may be found when that court “proceeds on the basis of an erroneous view of the applicable law.”
Walsh I,
The agencies, seeking to avoid vacation of the preliminary-injunction orders, turn their sights to the second issue we discussed in
Walsh I,
the issue of fair consideration, arguing in effect that we should affirm the preliminary injunctions on an alternative ground.
Cf. NXIVM Corp. v. Ross Inst.,
Whatever the eventual resolution of this dispute, it is clear that we cannot affirm for lack of fair consideration based on the present record. First, the Court of Appeals answered squarely in the negative the very question the agencies would have us answer affirmatively: whether a finding that a divorced spouse paid “fair consideration,” and is therefore a bona fide purchaser for value, is “precluded, as a matter of law, where part or all of the marital estate consists of the proceeds of fraud.”
Id.
at 176,
Second, it appears that at least some portion of the funds spent on the Port Washington property may have been untainted, so that Schaberg’s relinquishment of her interest in that property could constitute substantial (if not necessarily sufficient) consideration. 3
Third, while rights to maintenance and inheritance from Walsh might not have been worth much at the time of the divorce, given that Walsh’s (legitimate) net worth appears to have been negative, they may well, like out-of-the-money options, have had some value. There is some possibility, however remote, that Walsh might someday rebuild a legitimate fortune, to a portion of which Schaberg would have been entitled had she not divorced him. Whatever the value of that right, it is not zero, and Schaberg provided some consideration (though perhaps not much) when she relinquished that right.
Fourth, the Court of Appeals made clear that “even where a spouse does not relinquish a ‘fair equivalent’ for the aggregate of assets, it is possible that fair consideration may be exchanged for at least some of the assets.”
Id.
at 177,
We therefore cannot affirm the district court’s orders on the grounds suggested by the agencies. 4
We express no view on how the district court should resolve the matter of “fair
*200
consideration” should the agencies renew their applications for injunctive relief against Schaberg. That will depend on an assessment of a number of fact-intensive issues, including the ones we raise here and possibly others.
See id.
at 175-76,
For these reasons, we VACATE the district court’s orders converting its temporary restraining order into a preliminary injunction and its order elaborating the preliminary injunction, without prejudice to any renewed application by the agencies to restrain some or all of the assets in question, and we REMAND to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. As reflected in the caption, Sehaberg was sued by the agencies under the name Janet Walsh.
. The closest the district court came to reaching the second issue was to state that "Schaberg does not contend that she gave any consideration in exchange for a share of the allegedly fraudulently obtained funds at issue.” If this comment is taken as describing Schaberg’s posture on the good-faith-purchaser issue, it is untrue, because Schaberg did argue that she gave fair consideration. If this comment merely points out that Schaberg did not pay the victims of the fraud, that is true but irrelevant.
. Contrary to the CFTC’s suggestion, Schaberg did raise this point below.
. The agencies also argue that, regardless of the outcome under state law, federal law should control because of the federal interests at stake. We concluded in
Walsh
/, however, that "if Schaberg truly is a good faith purchaser for value of the assets in her posses
sion
— a
question of New York state law
— her assets would not be subject to disgorgement in a proceeding against her former husband.”
