David R. Herzog, the trustee in the Kroner bankruptcy proceedings, appeals the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s ruling that his claim against Cheryl F. Kroner for restitution of payments the debtor made on her house was barred by the dismissal with prejudice of a prior adversary proceeding against her. We affirm.
I. FACTS
The debtor filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 26, 1988. On November 14, 1988, the trustee filed a core, adversary proceeding alleging pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(3) that the debtor was not entitled to a discharge because he owned an undisclosed interest in the residential property in which he lived, even though legal title to the property was in a trust, and his wife, Cheryl Kroner, was the sole beneficiary of that trust. The complaint further alleged that the trustee was entitled to an equitable lien on the property, as the debtor made all payments due on loans secured by his wife’s beneficial interest in the real estate. The bankruptcy court, during a hearing on January 17, 1989, stated that it found the complaint deficient, 1 but granted the trustee time to amend the complaint. Herzog failed to file an amended complaint, and on May 9, 1989, the bankruptcy court entered an order agreed to by all parties dismissing the complaint with prejudice.
Some ten months later on January 3, 1990, Herzog filed a second adversary complaint in the bankruptcy court against Kroner (on different grounds than the one dismissed with prejudice), alleging that the estate was entitled to restitution for payments the debtor made on Mrs. Kroner’s residential property. The latter complaint alleged that Mrs. Kroner was the principal maker of a $250,000 note that the debtor co-signed as “an accommodation party, as that term is defined in the Illinois Uniform Commercial Code, Ch. 26 Ill.Rev.Stat. § 3-415(1)_” Although the complaint acknowledged that it was a non-core proceeding, it stated “[tjhis Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this cause as a non-core proceeding related to a case under Title 11, as defined in 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1). Plaintiff consents to entry of final orders or judgment by this Court.” The bankruptcy court granted Cheryl F. Kroner’s motion to dismiss the trustee’s complaint on May 14,1990, on the basis of res judica-ta:
“In the case at hand, it is quite clear to this court that res judicata precludes the litigation of the Present Proceeding. The Prior Proceeding and the Present Proceeding involved the same loan agreements, the same loan payments, the same property, the same transactions, the same facts, the same parties and the same points in time. In the Present Proceeding, the Trustee attempts to raise another claim that should have been raised at the time of the Prior Proceeding. The policy behind res judicata is to protect defendants and the courts from a multiplicity of suits arising from the same set of facts. Litigation must end. The court cannot and will not allow the Present Proceeding to continue.”
II. ISSUES
This case presents two issues for review: 1) Whether the failure to raise an argument before the bankruptcy court waives it on de novo review in the district court; 2) Whether granting consent to the bankruptcy court to enter final judgment in a non-core proceeding subjects the claim to the res judicata effect of a prior proceeding.
III. DISCUSSION
Herzog failed to argue that a judgment in a core proceeding is without res judicata effect on a subsequent, non-core proceeding in the bankruptcy court and again in the district court. The trustee did not raise this argument until his motion for reconsideration pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 8015, which he filed after the district judge issued his sua sponte supplement to his Memorandum Opinion and Order. On appeal, Herzog initially contends that the district court erred in declining to reconsider his appeal from the bankruptcy court on the basis of waiver. He asserts that refusing to consider the argument that the non-core proceeding may not be precluded on the basis of a core judgment fails to give a true de novo review of the bankruptcy court’s decision. We are of the opinion that this argument is without merit, for if that were the law, waiver would be inapplicable anytime the standard of review is de novo. As the appellee pointed out, the trustee’s contention confuses the concepts of waiver and de novo review. The waiver doctrine merely determines which arguments are properly preserved for consideration on appeal while the de novo standard of review refers to the appellate court’s fresh look at the way the trial court applied the law to the facts of the case. The law is clear, an issue not preserved for appeal is simply not reviewable regardless of the standard of review.
The trustee further asserts that the district judge was mistaken in his view of waiver, as “a District Court may ‘consider any issue presented by the record even if the issue was not presented to the bankruptcy court.’ ” (Quoting
In re: Pizza of Hawaii, Inc.,
“This fact goes to the weight of the appellant’s authorities, not as an excuse for not raising the issue below. Appellant was not restricted from arguing this point at trial, only in supporting [his] argument. It is a well-established rule in [the Eighth] circuit that defenses not raised or litigated in the trial court cannot be urged for the first time on appeal.”
Morrow v. Greyhound Lines, Inc.,
We think the trustee’s double waiver of the
Barnett
argument (in the bankruptcy court as well as in the district court, where he failed to raise it until after entry of judgment) is dispositive, but we will address the decision briefly. In
Barnett,
we held that non-core proceedings brought in the district court could not be precluded by the bankruptcy court’s prior judgment in a core proceeding: “[P]reviously unasserted claims [are] barred by res judicata only if these claims would have been
core proceedings
in the bankruptcy court.”
Barnett,
IV. CONCLUSION
The trustee, by not raising in the bankruptcy court or the district court prior to
Affirmed.
Notes
. The record fails to reveal why the bankruptcy court found the complaint deficient, but since the dismissal of the initial complaint is not an issue on this appeal, we need not discuss it.
