A savings and loan institution brought this Louisiana diversity action to enforce two promissory notes made by Paul and June Murray (the Murrays). The Murrays counterclaimed asserting that the S & L failed to credit against the notes certain services under the Louisiana law of compensation, that it reneged on an oral pledge to provide further loans to the Murrays entered into contemporaneously with the prоmissory notes, and that the S & L violated the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act (LUTPA), La.R.S. 51:1401 et seq. While the suit was pending, the S & L was declared insolvent, and the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) ultimately became the institution’s successor in interest in the suit. The district court thereafter granted RTC’s motions for summary judgment on both the principal demand and the Mur-rays’ counterclaims. We affirm.
Promises, Promises
On July 18,1985, the Murrays executed a promissory note (First Note) for $819,000 payable to Delta Savings & Loan, Inc. (Delta Inc.). The First Note was secured by a mortgage and bore interest at the annual rate of 13 percent. It required monthly payments of interest and payment on August 1, 1986, of all principal and interest due. The balloon payment was not made. On October 30, 1987, the Murrays executed another promissory note (Second Note) for $100,898.50 payable to Delta Inc., and bearing interest аt the annual rate of 7 percent. On its face, this Second Note required eleven monthly payments of $645.38 and one final balloon payment on October 29, 1988, of all principal and interest due.
Delta Inc. filed suit on the two notes in Louisiana state court on February 1, 1989, praying for judgment against the Murrays for the balance due on the notes, recognition of the mortgage securing the First Note, and attornеys’ fees for bringing the action. The Murrays filed an answer and a reconventional demand against Delta Inc., asserting that Delta Inc. violated the LUT-PA by engaging in unfair, deceptive, unethical, oppressive, and unscrupulous conduct and by preventing the Murrays from successfully developing certain real estate. In addition, the Murrays claimed that Delta Inc. refused to honor its commitment to make additional loans to the Murrays.
Singing the Delta Blues
On August 7, 1989, about five months after Delta Inc. filed suit against the Mur-rays, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) declared Delta Inc. to be insolvent, terminated its powers, and appointed the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) as Delta Inc.’s Receiver and Liquidator. The FHLBB also organized Delta Savings & Loan Association, F.A. (Delta FA), transferred substantially all of the assets (including the two Murray notes) and certain liabilities of Delta Inc. to Delta FA, and appointed the FSLIC as Conservator of Delta FA. General liabilities, including the Murrays’ counterclaims against Delta Inc., were not assigned.
Effective with the passage of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act (FIRREA) on August 9, 1989, RT.C succeeded to the FSLIC’s roles as Conservator of Delta FA and Receiver of Deltа Inc. See FIRREA § 501, 12 U.S.C. § 1441a. On September 6, 1989, on RTC’s motion the state court substituted RTC as Receiver of Delta Inc. as party plaintiff and defendant-in-reconvention but failed to recognized RTC in its capacity as Conservator as a party to the action. That same day, RTC removed the case to federal court.
*92 On October 9, 1989, after removal was complete, RTC mysteriously moved the state court to issue an Amеnded Substitution Order reflecting that RTC as Conservator of Delta FA is the party plaintiff and that RTC as Receiver of Delta Inc. is the defendant-in-reconvention. On October 30, RTC filed in the federal district court an Ex Parte Motion and Proposed Order for leave to file an Amended Notice of Removal to reflect the distinct capacities in which RTC is a party to the proceedings. The district court granted the motion by order, stating that RTC as Conservator of Delta FA is the party plaintiff to enforce the promissory notes, with RTC as Receiver of Delta Inc. the proper party to defend the Murrays’ reconventional demand.
In December 1989, RTC, in both of its capacities, moved for summary judgment on the principal and reconventional demands. Attaching the affidavit of Delta FA Assistant Vice President Cedric Harrison, RTC stated that the First and Second Notes were in default and that, although the Murrays had tendered some payments on the First Note between June and December of 1988, they were returned because they were insufficient to cure the default on that note. RTC sought judgment in the amount of $837,604.07, 1 plus costs, late charges, interest accruing after November 1989, and attorneys’ fees.
The Murrays’ formal opposition, aсcompanied by the affidavit of Paul Murray, reasserted their reconventional demand that Delta Inc. had failed to fulfill further loan commitments in violation of the original agreement on the Second Note, and also had violated the LUTPA. The Mur-rays in the opposing papers also asserted that they had made payments on both notes from June to December of 1988 and that, in December 1988, Deltа Inc. had wrongly returned payments which would have brought the First Note current. Finally, for the first time, the Murrays claimed that they were entitled to a set-off against the notes for architectural and sewerage treatment services they provided Delta Inc.
RTC thereafter filed a Supplemental Affidavit of Cedric Harrison in which Harrison admitted that the Murrays had indeed made payments from June through November 1988 and that thеse were accepted by Delta Inc. However, Harrison stated that the original mistaken affidavit statement did not affect the RTC’s correct balance due on the notes. Furthermore, he stated that the checks which the Murrays tendered in December 1988 were in fact returned because “they were insufficient to cure the default on the First Note.” •
The court entered summary judgment in favor of the RTC as Cоnservator on the principal demand and recognized the security, and in favor of the RTC as Receiver on the Murrays’ reconventional demand. The Murrays bring this appeal.
Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment in this case
de novo.
As we have often repeated, summary judgment is proper only if no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
RTC as Conservator Crashes the Party
The Murrays first contend that RTC's attempt to correct its capacities and properly make RTC as Conservator the party plaintiff in the removed eаse was ineffective because it involved the state court after removal. The Murrays are correct that a state court has no power to proceed with a case which has been properly re
*93
moved to federal court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1446(d) (state court powerless in case after its removal to federal court);
Murray v. Ford Motor Co.,
The federal district court, however, identified RTC as Conservator of Delta FA as party plaintiff to the proceeding when it allowed RTC’s October 30, 1989, Amended Noticе of Removal. Although the original Notice was not in proper form, the Amended Notice indicated the proper capacities in which RTC is a party to the proceedings. Because the district court accepted the revision, we cannot allow the Murrays’ proposed hypertechnical application of § 1446, especially after our
Farina v. Mission Investment Trust,
would render federal pleadings excessively techniсal, contrary to Rule 8(e)(1), which states that “No technical forms of pleadings or motions are required,” and Rule 8(f) which states that “All pleadings shall be so construed as to do substantial justice.”
Id. at 1074. Although the actions of RTC in both state and federal court has required much unnecessary labor on the part of all, we nevertheless hold that the federal district court's October 1989 action puts the legal imprimаtur for formal substitution of the proper RTC parties in this case.
The Reconventional Demand
We also reject the Murrays’ argument that the district court erred in dismissing their reconventional demand that Delta Inc. had reneged on a pledge to provide further financing. In particular, the Murrays claimed that Delta Inc. was liable to them for failing, as promised, to advance financing for the acquisition and development of additionаl real estate.
2
This purported agreement was not in writing and, as such, was not in Delta Inc.’s official records. The RTC argued, and the district court held, that
D’Oench, Duhme & Co. v. FDIC,
D’Oench, Duhme
immunizes the FDIC from defenses asserted against it based upon agreements not firmly established in the financial institution’s records.
*94
See
Compensation Claims
The Murrays, in their opposition to RTC’s motion for summary judgment, presented for the first time their affirmative defense that they are entitled to a set-off against the notes for architectural and sewerage treatment services they provided Delta Inc. The RTC argues that the Murrays waived this affirmative defense because they did not raise it in the responsive pleаding,
see
F.R.Civ.P. 8(c), or supplemental pleading,
see
F.R.Civ.P. 15(d).
See Moore v. Tangipahoa Parish School Bd.,
First, the Murrays’ claims for set-offs are based upon allegеd oral agreements which under the
D’Oench, Duhme
doctrine may not be maintained against the federal receiver.
See Kroenke, supra,
Furthermore, Louisiana’s law of compensation does not support the Murrays' claims. Louisiana Civil Code art. 1893 provides that “compensation takes place by operation of law when two persons owe to each other [debts] that are
liquidated and presently due.”
(Emphasis added.) Without even a figure from the Murrays for the value of the architectural services, and confusing information regarding the sewerage treatment services,
5
we find that the claims are clearly unliquidated, and therefore not maintainable
*95
against RTC's action on the notes.
See American Bank v. Saxena,
As this Court recently held in
Campbell Leasing, Inc. v. FDIC,
Can RTC Call the Notes?
While the Murrays acknowledge that they owe these debts, in their answer they generally deny that they were in default on the two loans. In their opposition to RTC’s motion for summary judgment, the Mur-rays contest the allegation in the RTC affidavit of Cedric Harrison that the Murrays had made no payments on the loans since May 1988 and that their December 1988 payments were insufficient to cure the default. To his affidavit Paul Murray attached photocopies of a series of cancelled checks tendered and accepted by Delta Inc. from June to November 1988. Except for the payments made in July, each month’s payments totalled $4,165. 6 The Murrays also assert that they tendered payments totalling $4,160 in December 1988, which they say was sufficient to cure the default, but that Delta Inc. returned the checks.
This discrepancy clearly does not generate a genuine issue of material fact. First, it was corrected by Harrison, in his supplemental affidavit, that Delta Inc. had received the June to November 1988 payments. However, this admission does not change the facts that the loans were due and payable well before December 1988. 7 More important, the Murrays do not deny that they had been either unwilling or unable to make the required balloon payments of the remaining balances and truly cure the defaults on the two notes.
Harrison also stated that the 1988 payments had been credited to the First Note, so that his calculations of the amounts due on the two loans were correct. 8 But the Murrays have neither offered a contradictory figure nor called RTC’s figure into dispute in any material way by producing their own records or by factually disputing those of Delta Inc.
*96 Delta Inc. had the right under the loans to demand payment at any time (within prescription) after the dates of maturity, regardless of the Murrays’ monthly, but inadequate, payments, and did make such written demand in December 1988, before suit was filed. The Murrays’ contention that their $4,160 tender somehow could have cured the long-standing default on either note — an audacious absurdity — is insufficient to present a genuine issue of material fact. The notes were due, and they were unpaid. Finally, the Murrays’ position that RTC’s affidavit error regarding the several 1988 payments somehow precludes summary judgment is equally untenable. 9
Conclusion
In sum, this case is, as we have said of similar suits on promissory notes, “fit grist for the summary judgment mill.” See FDIC v. Cardinal Oil Well Servicing Co., Inc., 837 F.2d 1369, 1371 (5th Cir.1988). The distriсt court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the RTC on its principal demand and against the Murrays on their reconventional demand was therefore correct.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This figure represents the balances which RTC calculated were due on the First and Second Notes of $722,326.05 and $115,278.02, respectively.
. The Murrays do not appeal the district court’s dismissal of their claim that Delta Inc. violated the LUTPA. The court correсtly held that the LUTPA does not govern the actions of a state chartered savings and loan institution such as Delta Inc.
See
La.R.S. 51:1406 (expressly exempting actions of institutions subject to the jurisdiction of the commissioner of financial institutions);
State Bank of Commerce v. Demco of La., Inc.,
. There has been much discussion on the issue of whether § 1823(e) truly codifies the
D'Oench, Duhme
doctrine, is more limited, or goes further.
Compare, e.g., FDIC v. Wood, 758
F.2d 156, 159 (6th Cir.1985)
(D’Oench
“generally considered" to have been codified in § 1823(e))
and Bowen v. FDIC,
. We also reject the Murrays’ contention that, because the set-offs supposedly оccurred by operation of law prior to the failure of Delta Inc., D’Oench does not apply. The D’Oench, Duhme doctrine does not require that the oral obligation arise after the institution fails but only that, as here, the adverse party attempt to enforce it against the federal receiver to reduce or erase the adverse party's liability. Also, as we discuss, the alleged debts were never liquidated under Louisiana law, and therefore it cannot be said that the set-offs occurred prior to Delta Inc.’s failure.
. The Murray affidavit suggests that Delta Inc. paid $35,000 to an individual who co-owned a sewerage treatment facility with the Murrays. Instead of paying the Murrays a like sum, the affidavit states, Delta Inc. informed the Murrays that it would issue a credit toward the couple’s indebtedness. The affidavit does not set forth what percentage of the facility the Murrays owned or who informed the Murrays that they would receive an offset or even the amount of the offset.
.These payments, made to and accepted by Delta Inc. after June 1, 1988, were:
Date Amount Date Amount
06/02/88 $4,165.00 09/24/88 $2,000.00
07/01/88 2,000.00 09/26/88 2,165.00
07/14/88 1,000.00 10/28/88 1,665.00
08/11/88 1,000.00 10/30/88 2,500.00
08/11/88 3,165.00 11/30/88 4,165.00
.As we detail above, the First Note was payable on August 1, 1986, and the Second Note became due and payable on October 29, 1988.
.While the Murrays indicated below and at oral argument that they understood that their monthly payments were somehow applied to both notes, RTC counters that no payments were ever made on the Second Note, and the Murrays in their brief suggest that with the December 1988 payments they "attempted ... to bring
the First Note
current” (emphasis added). We need not delve into Delta Inc.’s records to resolve this quarrel because the Murrays have failed to proffer specific evidence contradicting RTC’s calculations of the amount due on both notes.
See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio,
. Were we to construe this contention to mean that Delta Inc. somehow modified the original contracts by accepting monthly payments after the maturity dates of the notes, we would nevertheless have to hold that Louisiana law does not support it.
The Murrays point to a photocopy of a December 1988 installment loan bill for $4,165, which they contend Delta Inc. sent monthly to the Murrays, mainly for the proposition that the December 1988 payments cured any default on the First Note. However, the terms of both the First and Second original promissory notes are clear with regard to their mаturity, and clearly support the RTC’s position that the loans were already in default and demandable. While Louisiana law recognizes modification of written contracts by oral agreement or by the conduct of the parties in certain contexts, see e.g., Pelican Electrical Contractors v. Neumeyer,419 So.2d 1 , 5 (La.App. 4th Cir.), writ denied,423 So.2d 1150 (La.1982) (written contracts for construction may be modified by oral contracts and by the conduct of the parties), the implication that the Deсember bill is a modification, accompanied with the Murrays’ "impression” of the status of the loans, without more, is not sufficiently specific to raise a fact issue and defeat summary judgment. See Matsushita, supra note 8; Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322,106 S.Ct. 2548 , 2552,91 L.Ed.2d 265 , 276 (1986) (Rule 56(c) mandates entry of summary judgment "against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial”).
