It is trite, but true, that not every wrong has a remedy — much less a remedy wholly satisfactory to the purported victims. This litigation illustrates the point in the context of an appeal matching the plaintiffs, a group of borrowers who complain that they were swindled, against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), in its capacity as liquidating agent for the now defunct Bank for Savings (the Bank). Specifically, plain
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tiffs challenge district court orders granting summary judgment against them in respect to (1) claims that they originally brought against the Bank, and (2) counterclaims pressed against them by the FDIC to recover amounts allegedly due on certain promissory notes payable to the Bank. In disposing of the matter, the district court wrote at some length,
see Vasapolli v. Rostoff,
I. BACKGROUND
We abjure a detailed, fact-laden account in favor of a simple sketch. Because two of the orders that we are reviewing arose under the aegis of Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, we construct this sketch, and limn the material facts, in the light most hospitable to the appellants.
The myriad plaintiffs in this civil action are bound together by what appears in retrospect to have been a serious error in judgment: they all borrowed money from the Bank in connection with the purchase of condominium units from Steven M. Rostoff or business entities controlled by him. Although each plaintiff’s predicament is slightly different, the record reveals a consistent pattern of chicanery practiced by Rostoff and certain bank employees. In a typical instance, a plaintiff purchased a condominium based on multiple misrepresentations by Rostoff such as: that the unit had been completely renovated and was being sold at a substantial discount from market value; that the unit could be resold profitably through Rostoff at the end of one year; and that the unit owner would incur no out-of-pocket expenses during the period of his ownership. Bank officials abetted these misrepresentations in divers ways, including the procurement of inflated appraisals.
Rostoffs scheme climaxed in a string of high-pressure closings scheduled at 15-min-ute intervals on the Bank’s premises. The plaintiffs received little notice of when the closings were to occur — many of them were held at night — and Rostoff did not provide them with the relevant documents until they arrived at the Bank. Rostoff appeared to have free run of the Bank’s offices, sometimes opening the outer door to let purchasers enter.
Among other things, the plaintiffs allege that, although they had applied to the Bank for long-term loans, the actual documents presented to them for signature were short-term notes, each of which necessitated a balloon payment at the end of a one-year or three-year term. 1 If a plaintiff objected, he was told that he would lose his deposit unless he signed the papers then and there.
After they discovered Rostoffs cozenage, the plaintiffs ceased payment on the notes; the Bank foreclosed many of the mortgages; and federal prosecutors indicted (and eventually convicted) Rostoff and certain Bank employees on criminal charges. While the prosecution was still embryonic, a group composed of allegedly defrauded borrowers brought a civil action in a Massachusetts state court against Rostoff, the Bank, and other defendants. 2 In their suit, plaintiffs sought variegated relief under theories of fraud, conspiracy, breach of contract, negligence, racketeering, deceptive trade practices, and the like. The Bank counterclaimed, seeking recovery from the plaintiffs under their promissory notes. In response to the counterclaims, the plaintiffs asserted numerous affirmative defenses, averring, *32 among other things, that they had been fraudulently induced to sign the notes.
The Bank capsized in March of 1992. The FDIC stepped in as liquidating agent and, after it had replaced the Bank in the pending civil action, removed that action to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. In due course, the FDIC sought, and attained, summary judgment.
See Vasapolli,
Consistent with these determinations, the court granted brevis disposition on all remaining causes of action urged by the plaintiffs against the FDIC. At the same time, the court resolved thirteen counterclaims in the FDIC’s favor, and, thereafter, permitted the FDIC to file five more counterclaims, which the court then resolved on the same basis. Finding no satisfactory reason for delay, the court entered a final judgment disposing of all claims and counterclaims between the plaintiffs and the FDIC. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 54(b).
The plaintiffs then moved for relief from judgment, asserting for the first time that sums used in a previous Maine proceeding, though incorrectly calculated, were entitled to full faith and credit. The district court denied the motion. This appeal followed.
II. APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
We set out in somewhat abbreviated form the two sets of legal principles that together electrify the beacon by which we must steer.
A. The Summary Judgment Standard.
Summary judgment is appropriate when the record reflects.“no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). For purposes of this determination, the term “genuine” means that “the evidence about the fact is such that a reasonable jury could resolve the point in favor of the nonmoving party....”
United States v. One Parcel of Real Property, Etc. (Great Harbor Neck, New Shoreham, R.I.),
An order granting summary judgment engenders
de novo
review.
See Pagano v. Frank,
B. The D’Oench, Duhme Doctrine.
The FDIC assumes two separate roles when a bank collapses. As receiver, the FDIC manages the failed bank’s assets; in its corporate capacity, the FDIC insures the failed bank’s deposits.
See Timberland Design, Inc. v. First Serv. Bank for Sav.,
Mindful of this reality, the Supreme Court more than half a century ago acted to protect the FDIC and the public funds it administers by formulating a special doctrine of estoppel.
See D’Oench, Duhme & Co. v. FDIC,
III. ANALYSIS
Appellate courts have no monopoly either on sagacity on clarity of expression. Thus, when a district court produces a cogent, well-reasoned opinion that reaches an eminently correct result, a reviewing tribunal should not write at exceptional length merely to put matters in its own words.
See, e.g., In re San Juan Dupont Plaza Hotel Fire Litig.,
First:
It is settled beyond peradventure that both misrepresentation and fraudulent inducement are within
D’Oench,
Duhme’s sphere of influence.
See Levy v. FDIC,
Assuming for argument’s sake that the transactions were patently bogus, and that a routine analysis of the Bank’s records would have indicated as much, 4 this set of circumstances still would not suffice to salvage the plaintiffs’ case. The D’Oench, Duhme doctrine comes into play to pretermit many transactional claims against the FDIC even when due diligence could easily have unmasked the fraud — and plaintiffs’ claims of misrepresentation and fraudulent inducement fall within this generality.
There is, to be sure, an exception for claims that are premised on a breach of an agreement or warranty that is itself contained in the failed bank’s records. In this case, however, the plaintiffs have not succeeded in identifying any violation of a specific contractual provision or assurance contained in the Bank’s records. It follows inexorably that the district court properly invoked the
D’Oench, Duhme
doctrine in
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granting summary judgment to the FDIC despite the plaintiffs’ claims of misrepresentation and fraudulent inducement.
See McCullough,
Second:
Conventional wisdom holds that claims or affirmative defenses premised on duress are within the orbit of, and barred by, the
D’Oench, Duhme
rule.
See, e.g., Newton v. Uniwest Fin. Corp.,
The plaintiffs invite us to lurch into this wilderness, asserting that their case exemplifies the sort of “external duress” that can sidestep the D’Oench, Duhme rule. We decline the invitation. The short, dispositive reason for refusing to embark on this journey is that the facts of this ease, even when viewed most sympathetically to the plaintiffs, cannot support a finding of duress.
Under Massachusetts law, a party claiming duress can prevail if he shows that (1) “he has been the victim of a wrongful or unlawful act or threat” of a kind that (2) “deprives the victim of his unfettered will” with the result that (3) he was “compelled to make a disproportionate exchange of values.”
International Underwater Contractors, Inc. v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co.,
8 Mass.App. Ct. 340,
(1) That [he] involuntarily accepted the terms of another; (2) that circumstances permitted no other alternative; and (3) that said circumstances were the result of coercive acts of the opposite party.
Ismert &
Assocs.,
Inc. v. New England Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Here, the plaintiffs seek to ground their duress claim on the high-pressure atmosphere of the closings and the lack of sufficient time to examine the closing documents. This is simply not the type and kind of duress that Massachusetts law credits. Coercion and fear, rather than greed, are the stuff of duress. Thus, the authorities are consentient that the presence of a profit motive negates the coercion or fear that is a
sine qua non
for a finding of duress.
See
13 Samuel Wilhston,
A Treatise on the Law of Contracts
§ 1604 (3d ed. 1970);
see also Coveney v. President & Trustees of Coll, of Holy Cross,
In the alternative, plaintiffs assert that the prospect of losing their deposits created coercion. But even if they felt this fear, the threat, at worst, was that they would have to bring a legal action to recover their deposits, not that the deposits would be lost altogether. We concur with the lower court,
Third:
Relying on
New Connecticut Bank & Trust Co. v. Stadium Mgmt. Corp.,
New Connecticut Bank involved guarantors who alleged negligence on the part of a financial institution in its exercise of control over the operations of the company whose loans had been guaranteed. Id. at 207 n. 1. The case at hand is readily distinguishable, for the plaintiffs’ claims of negligence are based on alleged misrepresentations relating to the formation of an agreement with the bank. In this sense, then, plaintiffs’ claims are fundamentally different from those asserted in New Connecticut Bank.
Moreover, negligent misrepresentations and intentional misrepresentations are sisters under the skin. Each partakes of the flavor of the secret agreements at which the
D’Oench, Duhme
rule is aimed. And plaintiffs cannot evade the rule by the simple expedient of creatively relabelling what are essentially misrepresentation claims as claims of negligence.
See generally McCullough,
Because plaintiffs’ claims of negligence are nothing more than a rehash of their preter-mitted misrepresentation claims, the dist’Ut court appropriately granted the FDIC’s motion for
brevis
disposition of those claims.
See, e.g., McCullough,
Fourth:
A claim premised on fraud in the factum is not foreclosed by the
D’Oench, Duhme
rule.
See Langley,
Fraud in the factum occurs when a party is tricked into signing an instrument without knowledge of its true nature or contents.
See id.
at 93,
Here, the plaintiffs allege that they were the victims of fraud in the factum because they thought they were signing long-term notes when they actually signed short-term notes. We agree with the district court,
see Vasapolli,
Fifth:
Following the entry of judgment, the plaintiffs moved under Fed. R.Civ.P. 60(b)(6) for relief from the judgment. The district court treated the motion as a motion to alter or amend the judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). We agree both with the district court’s approach and with its recharacterization. In addressing a post-judgment motion, a court is not bound by the label that the movant fastens to it. If circumstances warrant, the court may disregard the movant’s taxonomy and reclassify the motion as its substance suggests.
See Vargas v. Gonzalez,
In their motion, the plaintiffs hinted at some unhappiness with the use of Massachusetts law to calculate amounts due on mortgage notes relating to certain properties in Maine. 6 The plaintiffs also made a more specific claim in regard to two borrowers, asserting that the amounts calculated in a prior Maine proceeding must be accorded full faith and credit in the instant case. 7 See 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (1988).
We need not reach questions of whether Maine or Massachusetts law governs the calculation of deficiency amounts, or of whether the two plaintiffs are entitled to the benefit of the errors committed in the course of the earlier action. We review a trial court’s decision denying a Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend a judgment for manifest abuse of discretion,
see Appeal of Sun Pipe Line Co.,
It is crystal clear that the plaintiffs were aware of the earlier Maine actions at and after the time when the FDIC first moved for summary judgment. Throughout the time between the FDIC’s first motion for summary judgment and the entry of final judgment—a period that lasted over one year—the plaintiffs failed either to request that the court apply Maine law in lieu of Massachusetts law, or to raise the “full faith and credit” argument. These ideas surfaced only after the district court ruled against the plaintiffs and entered final judgment. This was too late.
The plaintiffs have offered. no plausible reason for waiting until after the entry of judgment to inform the court of the prior proceedings or to object to the amounts claimed all along by the FDIC. By like token, having briefed and argued all pertinent state-law issues in terms of Massachusetts law, plaintiffs have no basis for condemning the district court’s unwillingness to take a second look after it had entered final judgment.
See Fashion House, Inc. v. K Mart Corp.,
Unlike the Emperor Nero, litigants cannot fiddle as Rome burns. A party who sits in silence, withholds potentially relevant information, allows his opponent to configure the summary judgment record, and acquiesces in a particular choice of law does so at his peril. In the circumstances of this case, we cannot say that the district court’s refusal to grant the plaintiffs’ post-judgment motion constituted an abuse of discretion.
See Hayes v. Douglas Dynamics, Inc.,
IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. In the end, the plaintiffs’ proposed causes of action are either barred, or unsubstantiated, or both. Hence, the district court did not err in concluding that the plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate a trialworthy issue on their direct claims. By the same token, the court committed no error in holding that the plaintiffs, as eounterdefendants, had exhibited no valid defense against the FDIC’s particularized demands for money due.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Eleven plaintiffs extended the terms of their loans by subsequent written agreement with the Bank.
. The complaint was subsequently amended to add additional plaintiffs and defendants. A total of 17 borrowers appear as appellants in this proceeding.
. We hasten to add that, given Rostoff's wiliness, this assumption seems something of a stretch.
. The plaintiffs’ claim of duress is flawed in another respect as well. A contract signed under duress is voidable, hut not automatically void.
See Newton,
. When a mortgagee purchases foreclosed property at public sale, Maine law limits deficiency amounts to the difference between the fair market value of the mortgaged property at the time of public sale and the amount that the court determines is due on the mortgage. See Me.Rev. Stat.Ann. tit. 14, § 6324 (West 1980 & Supp. 1993).
. In regard to this aspect of plaintiffs' motion, it appears that the FDIC’s attorney made an error in the handling of the Maine foreclosure actions. As a result, the Maine judgments understated the liability of these two borrowers.
. Even if plaintiffs’ post-judgment motion were to be considered under Rule 60(b)(6) rather than Rule 59(e), the outcome would be the same.
See Perez-Perez v. Popular Leasing Rental, Inc.,
