Aftеr examining the briefs and the appellate record, this three-judge panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not be of material assistance in the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R. App.P. 34(a); Tenth Cir.R. 34.1.8(c) and 27.-1.2. The cause is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), as receiver of the insolvent Penn Square Bank, sued Myron Palermo for the balance of a promissory note Palermo signed in connection with his purchase of an interest in Oklahoma oil wells through the bank. Admitting the correctness of the note balance, Palermo defended on the ground that he had been fraudulently induced to make the purchase and sign the note. He also counterclaimed, seeking both rescission and damages. The FDIC has appealed from a jury verdict favoring Palermo.
On appeal the FDIC contends that the district court erred in (1) allowing the case to be tried to a jury; (2) denying the FDIC’s motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict; (3) denying the FDIC’s motions for mistrial and new trial; (4) instructing or refusing to instruct the jury; (5) allowing Palermo to pursue a fraud claim for both rescission and damages; and (6) allowing Palermo to seek an affirmative recovery against the FDIC despite the Oklahoma statute of limitations.
The only nоndocumentary evidence produced at the trial was one witness for the FDIC to prove the existence of and default on the promissory note, and one witness, Palermo, for the defense. Palermo admitted the default on the note. Palermo testified that he was involved in the business of oil and gas exploration and production. In October 1980 he received a call from an acquaintance, Billy Underwood, who told him that Penn Square Bank was arranging the sale of a V32 interest in five Oklahoma oil wells with problem loans. A Penn Square loan officer, Clark Long, later phoned Palermo. Palermo testified that Long told him that the wells werе “making 150 barrels a day,” and that “it looks like a pretty good deal.” R. IV, 74. Long told Palermo that the bank could not take less than $130,000 for the interest because
When Palermo and Underwood went to the bank to close the deal, Long there repeated his assurances, telling Palermo that the interest would pay back “about $150,000 in three years,” id. at 76, and that the operator of the wells, Great Plains Oil and Gas, was a valued customer of the bank and a good operator. Long gave Palermo a detailed reserve report on the wells, with notations added in Long’s writing stating “$150,000 in 36 months” and “actual production of 150 Bbl/day.” R. II, Ex. 5; R. IV, 76-77. Without further investigation, Palermo аnd Underwood each signed a note borrowing $65,000 from Penn Square, wrote checks payable to Roy Oliver, the owner, and turned the checks over to Long with the understanding that the bank would give this money to Oliver. Oliver assigned Palermo one-half of the offered interest. Palermo testified at trial that he had relied completely on Long in this transaction and that he had not made any independent investigations.
Production on the wells was lower than Palermo had expected. He testified that in the first three or four months following his purchase, the wells “were probably producing somewhere around 20 or 30 barrels a day.” R. IV, 82. Palermo testified that “about twо months” after signing the note he was sued by various service companies to whom Great Plains owed money and that it then became apparent to him that the purchased interest would not produce the hoped for $150,000 income over three years. Great Plains later went bankrupt. Palermo testified that he had paid “$25,000 or so” in attorneys’ fees to defend suits stemming from Great Plains’ difficulties and another $25,000 in operating expenses for the wells. R. IV, 83. By October 1981, Palermo had also paid Penn Square $22,-840.94 on the note. On October 28, 1981, Palermo advised the bank that he would make no further payments.
Palermo did not dispute the FDIC’s evidence that $55,358.75 in princiрal remained unpaid on the promissory note. He did not challenge the reserve report, but maintained that all of Clark Long’s representations were fraudulent. In addition to evidence of Great Plains’ difficulties and the disappointing production from the wells, there was documentary evidence that the bank had actually loaned only $50,000, not $130,000, to Roy Oliver.
The court submitted the case to a jury. By special verdict the jury found that Palermo “proved his claim of fraud,” and “is entitled to recover actual damages in the amount ... of $22,840.94,” R. I, 133, the exact amount Palermo had paid on the note.
We consider in Part I the FDIC’s contentions of errоr relating primarily to Palermo’s claim that he was defrauded. In Part II we consider the contentions of error relating primarily to the allowable damages.
I
A
The FDIC argues that Palermo waived his right to a jury trial by failing to make a timely request, and that the district court should not have allowed a jury to hear this case. Fed.R.Civ.P. 38(b) requires a demand for a jury trial on an issue triable of right by a jury to be made within ten days of the last pleading directed to such issue. Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 38(d), failure to so demand constitutes a waiver of trial by jury, but a trial court retains discretion upon motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 39(b) to order a jury trial when one was not properly demanded under Rule 38.
See, e.g., Paramount Pictures Corp. v. Thompson Theaters, Inc.,
Although Rule 39 provides for the court’s discretion to be invoked by motion, “some similar manifestation of the desire of a party to have a jury trial” will suffice. 9 C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 2334 at 112 (1971);
see also Swofford v. B & W, Inc.,
We will reverse the trial court’s deсision to allow trial to a jury under Rule 39(b) only if it appears from all of the facts and circumstances that the court abused its discretion.
Paramount Pictures,
B
The FDIC argues that the district court erred in denying its motions for directed verdict and judgment n.o.v. because Palermo failed to prove the necessary elements of fraud.
Federal law controls the rights and liabilities of the FDIC in its capacity as receiver of a national bank. 12 U.S.C. § 1819 (“All suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity to which the [FDIC] shall be a party shall be deemed to arise under the laws of the United States____”);
see Argonaut Savings & Loan Assoc. v. FDIC,
In fashioning the federal common law in this area we may look for guidance to the law of the state having the closest connection to the transaction at issue when to do so would not conflict with the need for uniform rules governing bank liquidations.
See D’Oench, Duhme & Co. v. FDIC,
Under Oklahoma law the elements of fraud are:
(1) a material, false representation;
(2) made with knowledge of falsity, or recklessly without any knowledge of its truth, and made as a positive assertion;
(3) with intention that it be acted upon by the other party;
(4) actual reliance by the other party; and
(5) resulting injury.
D & H Co. v. Shultz,
Oklahoma imposes a high standard of proof on the party alleging fraud. Fraud is never presumed; the evidence must be “clear, strong and convincing and such as to rebut every presumption of honesty and fair dealing.”
Jewell v. Allen,
In this circuit, the sufficiency of the evidence to go to the jury is a matter of federal law even in diversity cases.
Hidalgo Properties, Inc. v. Wachovia Mortgage Co.,
Palermo alleges that his signature on the promissory note was procured by the following misrepresentations: (1) that the five oil wells were actually producing 150 barrels per day; (2) that a V32 interest in the wells would pay back $150,000 in three years; (3) that Great Plains was a good operator and a valued customer of the bank; and (4) that the previous owner of the V32 interest was in default on a $130,000 loan from Penn Square secured by the proрerty.
There is some evidence tending to show that all of these representations were false. Except for the fourth misrepresentation, however, Palermo produced no evidence to establish that the misrepresentations were made knowingly or recklessly. There is no indication that Clark Long had access to any information other than the reserve report on which to base his statements regarding production and income from the wells. Palermo admitted that the report confirmed Long’s prediction that the wells
Evidence of scienter is similarly lacking with respect to Long’s misrepresentations about Great Plains. Palermo presented no evidence that Great Plains was not a good customer of the bank as of October 1980. Nor was there any evidence that Long knew or should have known anything negative about Grеat Plains’ operations at that time, or that Long spoke without a reasonable basis for believing that Great Plains was a good operator.
There is evidence, however, tending to show that Long’s misrepresentations regarding the outstanding indebtedness on the property were made with knowledge of their falsity. Various bank records were admitted which indicate that the bank loaned Roy Oliver $50,000 on October 10, 1980, secured by “5 wells in Noble Co., OK,” R. III, Ex. 3, and that Oliver repaid this loan on October 22,1980, the same day he deposited the $130,000 received from Palermo and Underwood. The FDIC did not attempt to rebut the natural inference arising from this evidence thаt Long had knowingly misrepresented the amount of the loan.
Palermo testified that the amount the bank was willing to loan on the property was important to him in determining the value of the wells and that he would not have bought the property had he known that Oliver only owed $50,000 on it. Estimates of value are generally regarded as insufficient to support justifiable reliance, especially when the property involved “depends for its value upon contingencies which may never occur.”
Myers v. Chamness,
In analogous circumstances, courts have held that a buyer of property may maintain an action for fraud against a seller who misrepresents the price he himself has paid for the property.
See, e.g., Withroder v. Elmore,
There is Oklahoma authority that might be construed to the contrary. In
Steiner v. Hughes,
“[W]e have found no ease, by this court, in which the contended fraud consisted merely of a statement made by the seller, upon inquiry by the purchaser, that the property was costing, or had cost him, the seller, more than it actually cost, where this court has held that such a statement, unless coupled with other elements of fraud, inequality оf the parties, overreaching or confidential relations, has been held to constitute actionable misrepresentation.”
Id.
at 270,
We note in more recent Oklahoma decisions, statements that ordinarily might be regarded as opinions or estimates of value have been treated as material when the circumstances indicate reasonable reliance.
See Varn v. Maloney,
We do not believe that the Oklahoma Supreme Court would deny relief to Palermo as a matter of law for Long’s misrepresentation about the loan value. The value of a Va2 interest in five oil and gas wells is not as readily ascertainable as the market price of a publicly-traded stock. It was reasonable for Palermo to have placed considerable weight on the willingness of a national bank to accept the property as security for a $130,000 loan, as he testified he did. We conclude that the evidence concerning Long’s misrepresentation about the loan value of the property was sufficiently clear and convincing to submit the issue to the jury. We therefore agree that the district court properly denied the FDIC’s motions for directed verdict and judgment n.o.v.
C
The FDIC argues that the district court erred in refusing to declare a mistrial following Palermo's remark that Long was “under investigation by the FBI,” R. IV, 92, and in denying the FDIC’s motion following the verdict for a new trial on the same grounds. The district court found, however, that “the trial as a whole did not apppear to be subverted nor the parties prejudiced by the forbidden testimony.” R. I, 207. The court noted that the statement had been made only once, and that it concerned a person who was neither a party nor a witness.
Cf. Rodgers v. Hyatt,
D
The FDIC argues that the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the issue of waiver. A party is only entitled to instructions on those theories of his or her case that are supported by competent evidence.
Brownlow v. Aman,
The FDIC’s proposed instruction confused waiver with estoppel. Waiver is the intentional relinquishment, by express words or unequivocal action, of a known right.
See, e.g., Midwest Maintenance & Construction Co. v. Vela,
“(a) after the defendant, Palermo, began the course of action contemplated by the parties to the transaction, but before that course of action was completed, the defendant, Palermo, learned what the actual facts were; and
(b) nonetheless, with full knowledge of the actual facts, defendant, Palermo, thereafter continued the course of action contemplated by the transaction, when a reasonably careful person under the same or similar circumstances would not have do [sic] so.”
R. I, 79. This instruction comes closer to stating, if anything, the rule on equitable estoppel, than the rule on waiver.
Although some cases have used the terms waiver and estoppel interchangeably,
see, e.g., Hidalgo Properties,
II
A
The FDIC argues that the district court erred in allowing Palermo to seek both rescission and damages for his fraud claim. We need not decide whether these remedies are mutually exclusive, as the FDIC maintains, because we find that Palermo’s failure to comply with the Oklahoma statute governing rescission, Okla.
Under § 235, the party attempting rescission must act “promptly, upon discovering the facts which entitle him to rescind” and must offer to return everything of value which he has received under the contract. The prompt action requirement is strictly enforced.
Harmon v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
In this case, Palermo admits that he became aware of the alleged fraud in October 1981. Although he informed the bank at that time that he did not intend to pay off the loan, he did not demand a refund of the payments he had already made, and did not tender back the property. In fact, he continued to receive monthly income from the property. His first attempt to rescind appears in the answer and counter-complaint he filed in March 1984, after the FDIC sued him to collect the balance on the note. This is simply too late.
B
Having failed to satisfy the Okla.Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 235 requirements for rescission, Palermo is limited to affirming the contract and counterclaiming for damages. The counter-complaint he filed here sufficiently alleges a claim for damages based on the bank’s fraud.
But we agree with the FDIC that the statute of limitations bars Palermo from seeking affirmative relief. As noted above, this action for fraud arises under federal law because the FDIC has brought the action as receiver for Penn Square. 12 U.S.C. § 1819. When no federal statute of limitations expressly applies to an action arising under federal law, federal courts generally apply the most closely analogous state statute of limitations in the absence of countervailing federal policy.
DelCos-tello v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
Under Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, § 95 (Supp.1985), an action for fraud must be commenced within two years of the discovery of the fraud. 2 At trial, Palermo admitted that at least by October 1981 he was aware that the wells were not producing 150 barrels per dаy, that Great Plains was not a good operator, and that his income from the property would not approach $150,000 in three years. Palermo’s October 28, 1981, letter to Clark Long states that “the properties you sold me were completely misrepresented by you as a loan officer of the Penn Square Bank.” R. Ill, Ex. 2. Although Palermo apparently did not learn until after this action had been commenced that the outstanding indebtedness on the property had been misrepresented, this fact could only have served to confirm Palermo’s belief that he had been misled; it did not constitute “discovery of the fraud” for purposes of thе statute of limitations. The limitations period therefore expired no later than October 28, 1983.
Under the Oklahoma pleading code in effect at the time this action was commenced, the filing of a complaint operates as a waiver of the statute of limitations defense with regard to any set-off or counterclaim in the nature of a recoupment that arises out of the same transaction as the original complaint. Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, § 273 (1960); Mid-State Homes, Inc. v. Johnston, Ml P.2d 1302, 1306 (Okla.1976). The statute of limitations continues in effect, however, with respect to any claim for affirmative relief:
“It is well settled in Oklahoma that while the statute of limitations will not bar a fraud from being asserted as a defense to the enforcement of a transaction asserted as fraudulent, the statute will run and bar affirmative relief sought on the ground of fraud when the cause of action accrued more than two years previously.”
Johnson,
The new Oklahoma Pleading Code, Okla.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, §§ 2001-2027, effective November 1, 1984, repealed § 273 discussed above and changed the rule with respect to affirmative relief. Section 2013C of the new pleading code provides:
“Where a counterclaim and the claim of the opposing party arise out of the same transaction or occurrence, the counterclaim shall not be barred by a statute of limitation notwithstanding that it was barred at the time the petition was filed, and the counterclaimant shall not be precluded from recovering an affirmative judgment.”
This section did not become effective until nearly nine months after the FDIC filed its complaint. Palermo’s brief quotes Rule 1 for the District Courts of Oklahoma (effective November 1, 1984) as providing that the new pleading code “governs all proceedings in actions pending on thе day that it takes effect.” We note, however, that Rule 1 also provides that the new code is not to be applied when “its application in a particular action would not be feasible or would work injustice, in which event the former procedure applies.” West’s Oklahoma Court Rules and Procedure 527 (1987). Applying § 2013C would work injustice, in our view, if it were allowed to revive a right to damages in a case commenced nine months before that section’s effective date, simply because the suit had not yet terminated. We therefore conclude that Palermo could assert his fraud claim only as a set-off or counterсlaim in the nature of a recoupment, to reduce or eliminate his liability on the promissory note, not as a claim for affirmative relief.
C
The court’s instructions to the jury were improper because they allowed the jury to effect rescission. The jury was instructed that the FDIC was entitled to recover on the note “unless the defendant proves fraud,” R. IV, 195. During trial, the jury was repeatedly told that Palermo was seeking to rescind and would tender back the property and the revenues he had received. The court’s instructions permitted the jury to effect a rescission by restoring Palermo to the position he had occupied beforе purchasing the property. Rescission and restitution in fact appears to be the most likely theory for the jury’s award, since that award equaled to the penny the total amount Palermo had paid on the note. This measure of damages cannot be had upon affirmance of a contract and claim for damages, the only cause of action available to Palermo.
See Holcomb & Hoke Mfg.,
The jury’s instructions were improper on the fraud counterclaim because they stated “if you find that the defendant has proved his claim of fraud, you may award him actual damages to compensate him for the fraud.” R. IV, 199. The court did not instruct the jury thаt the damages were limited to the amount of the defendant’s liability on the note and that they were required to offset the defendant’s damages against this liability.
The court’s instruction on computing damages was also erroneous. The jury was told that it could compute the defendant’s damages “by considering defendant’s expenses incurred in operating the property and defending against claims based on his ownership and deducting therefrom any sums he received as revenues on his invest
Ill
In sum, on Palermo’s fraud claim, we conclude that the trial court correctly permitted the case to be tried to a jury, properly rejected the FDIC’s motions for directed verdict and judgment n.o.v. and for mistrial and new trial based on prejudicial testimony, and rightly refused to instruct the jury on the FDIC’s theory of waiver. The FDIC presented no substantial evidence to impeach Palermo’s testimony on fraud, which the jury evidently believed. We see no reason to retry that issue, despite the errors relating to the damages portion of the trial. We therefore affirm the jury verdict for Palermo on his claim of fraud.
We also conclude that Palermo was not entitled to pursue his fraud claim as one for rescission under Oklahoma law, but only as a claim for damages, and only as a set-off or counterclaim in the nature of a recoupment, not as a claim for affirmative relief. The instructions to the jury on damages were sufficiently erroneous to require a new trial on the issue of damages. We therefore set aside the award of damages based on those instructions and remand for a рroper determination of damages in light of the principles expressed herein.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. Palermo was aware that the properties he was purchasing were highly speculative. He admitted having read the first page of the reserve report which states:
"The accuracy of this estimate of reserves is soley [sic] a function of interpretation and judgment. Such findings should be accepted with the understanding that future production and other events could well justify the revision of these reserve estimates. This is especially true with the formation under evaluation and therefore, it is my recommendation to have properties of this nature re-evaluated at annual intervals.
All data utilized in the forecast was furnished by the working interest owner or the operator and assumed to be accurate and correct.”
R. II, Ex. 5.
. Palermo’s argument that the five-year contract limitations period should apply is without merit. Under the instant case, the cases Palermo cites involve failure of consideration in addition to fraud as grounds for cancellation of deeds.
See Baker
v.
Massey,
. Here, the only misrepresentation which the jury could have found to be fraudulent related directly to the price at which the property could be sold. In these circumstances, the value of the property as represented is equal to the price paid for the property.
See Beavers,
