Municipality v. Prudential ( 1993 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 92-1651
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,

    Cross-Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.

    SHEARSON-AMERICAN EXPRESS, INC., ET AL.,
    Cross-Defendants.

    __________
    BANCO COOPERATIVO DE PUERTO RICO,

    Intervenor, Appellant.
    ____________________

    No. 92-1652
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,

    Cross-Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.

    SHEARSON-AMERICAN EXPRESS, INC., ET AL.,
    Cross-Defendants.

    __________
    PRUDENTIAL BACHE SECURITIES, INC.,

    Intervenor, Appellant.
    ____________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________
    ____________________

    Before
    Stahl, Circuit Judge,
    _____________

    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Skinner,* Senior District Judge.
    _____________________

    ____________________

    Manuel Fernandez-Bared and Ramon Coto-Ojeda with whom Nestor M.
    ______________________ ________________ __________
    Mendez-Gomez and McConnell Valdes Kelley Sifre Griggs & Ruiz-Suria
    ____________ ____________________________________________________
    wereon brief forintervenor, appellant PrudentialBache Securities, Inc.

    ____________________

    *Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.

















    Plinio Perez Marrero for intervenor, appellant Banco Cooperativo
    ____________________
    De Puerto Rico.
    Enrique Peral with whom Munoz Boneta Gonzalez Arbona Benitez &
    _____________ _________________________________________
    Peral, Ann S. Duross, General Counsel, Colleen B. Bombardier, Senior
    _____ _____________ _____________________
    Counsel, Jaclyn C. Taner, Counsel, and Richard Schwartz were on brief
    _______________ ________________
    for cross-plaintiff, appellee.



    ____________________

    June 24, 1993
    ____________________





















































    CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge. In these appeals,
    ____________________

    two creditors challenge appellee's rights to the assets of

    the mastermind of a multimillion dollar fraud, each creditor

    claiming that it has a superior claim to the money.

    Miguel Serrano Arreche ("Serrano"), a former Puerto

    Rico stockbroker, was indicted and convicted in 1985 of wire

    fraud, mail fraud, and other violations of federal criminal

    statutes. Serrano's misdeeds have been extensively

    chronicled elsewhere. See, e.g., United States v. Serrano,
    ___ ____ ______________ _______

    870 F.2d 1, 3-5 (1st Cir. 1989).1 The primary victim of

    Serrano's fraud was Home Federal Savings and Loan Association

    ("Home Federal"), a Puerto Rico bank which collapsed partly

    from losses caused by Serrano. United States v. Serrano, 870
    _____________ _______

    F.2d at 4. The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance

    Corporation ("FSLIC") took control in 1985 and, thereafter,

    the appellee Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC")

    became Home Federal's successor in interest pursuant to the

    Financial Institutions Recovery, Reform, and Enforcement Act

    of 1989. See 12 U.S.C. 1821a et seq.
    ___ _______


    ____________________

    1. See also United States v. Tormos-Vega, 959 F.2d 1103 (1st
    ________ _____________ ___________
    Cir.), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 191 (1992); FDIC v. CNA
    _____________ ____ ___
    Casualty of Puerto Rico, 786 F. Supp. 1082 (D.P.R. 1991);
    ________________________
    United States v. Serrano, 680 F. Supp. 58 (D.P.R. 1988),
    _____________ _______
    modified, 870 F.2d 1 (1st Cir. 1989); FSLIC v. Shearson-
    ________ _____ _________
    American Express, Inc., 658 F. Supp. 1331 (D.P.R. 1987);
    _______________________
    United States v. Tormos-Vega, 656 F. Supp. 1525 (D.P.R.
    ______________ ___________
    1987), aff'd, United States v. Boscio, 843 F.2d 1384 (1st
    _____ ______________ ______
    Cir.), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 848 (1988); United States v.
    _____________ ______________
    Serrano, 637 F. Supp. 12 (D.P.R. 1985); United States v.
    _______ ______________
    Serrano, 622 F. Supp. 517 (D.P.R. 1985).
    _______

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    The present action was brought in 1984 in the

    United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico

    by the Municipality of Ponce, against defendants that

    included Home Federal, Serrano, Shearson Lehman Brothers,

    Inc., and Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc. (Puerto Rico)

    (collectively "Shearson"). Home Federal filed cross-claims

    against Serrano, Shearson, and others. Both the Municipality

    of Ponce and Shearson settled and left the case. On October

    16, 1989, the district court entered a default judgment for

    the FDIC (now representing Home Federal) on its cross-claims

    against Serrano, finding Serrano liable to the FDIC for

    $44,265,241. Thereafter, on May 17, 1990, the FDIC secured

    from the district court an order attaching Serrano's assets

    to enforce the foregoing judgment.

    This appeal stems from efforts by two other

    creditors, appellants Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc.

    ("Prudential") and Banco Cooperativo ("Banco"), to intervene

    in the same district court action after certain of Serrano's

    assets were transferred to the district court pursuant to the

    FDIC's attachment. Prudential and Banco asked the district

    court to withdraw its order authorizing disbursement of

    Serrano's funds to the FDIC, and are appealing from its

    refusal to do so.

    To understand the present dispute, it is necessary

    to realize that in September 1987, Serrano had petitioned for



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    bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the

    District of Puerto Rico, triggering the automatic stay of 11

    U.S.C. 362. The FSLIC sought and received partial relief

    from the stay on January 13, 1989, permitting the instant

    action to continue in the district court until entry of

    judgment. Serrano's only significant assets were 32,400

    shares of Bayam n Federal Savings Bank stock, which at one

    time had been held in a trading account at Prudential.2 By

    order of the bankruptcy court, the stock was sold for

    approximately $700,000 in April 1989 and the proceeds were

    deposited with the bankruptcy court as property of the

    estate. On November 17, 1988, Prudential filed its own claim

    in the bankruptcy proceeding. On October 16, 1989, as we

    have said, the district court entered a judgment for the FDIC

    in its cross-claims against Serrano.

    On May 16, 1990, the bankruptcy court issued an

    order dismissing Serrano's bankruptcy case, but expressly

    retaining jurisdiction to decide how to dispose of all funds

    held for Serrano. The bankruptcy court gave all creditors,

    which included Prudential, eleven days to express their

    positions as to the disposal of these funds, indicating that

    unless otherwise ordered, they would be returned to Serrano.

    See 11 U.S.C. 349(b)(3). That same day, after entry of the
    ___


    ____________________

    2. Earlier in 1987 Prudential had delivered the stock to the
    United States District Court pursuant to a court order in
    United States v. Serrano, Crim. No. 84-381(JP).
    _____________ _______

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    bankruptcy petition dismissal, the FDIC moved in the district

    court for a writ of attachment and execution, to be served

    upon the bankruptcy court and any custodian of Serrano's

    funds in that court, attaching Serrano's funds after payment

    of administrative expenses and directing their transfer to

    the district court for application to the FDIC's judgment.

    The district court allowed the motion on May 17, 1990,

    ordering the bankruptcy court within twenty days to deliver

    to the district court clerk the remaining funds belonging to

    Serrano subsequent to the payment of the administrative

    expenses, and directing that Serrano refrain from collecting

    the funds. A copy of this attachment was shown to

    Prudential's counsel on May 18, 1990, at a meeting of

    creditors called by Prudential at its offices to discuss

    disposition of the bankruptcy funds. Prudential made no

    effort in the bankruptcy court to challenge the validity of

    the attachment nor to argue that its own claim should be paid

    from the bankruptcy funds in preference to the FDIC's claim.

    On June 27, 1990, the bankruptcy court issued its

    order disposing of all the assets in Serrano's case. The

    bankruptcy court clerk, after paying various fees, expenses

    and a child support claim, was directed by the bankruptcy

    court to deliver the remainder to the district court clerk in

    compliance with the attachment, said funds to remain subject

    to any liens as per the bankruptcy court's previous order of



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    sale of the stock. Pursuant to this order, the bankruptcy

    clerk paid over more than $560,000 to the clerk of the

    district court. On August 10, 1990, the district court

    ordered the funds disbursed to the FDIC.

    Five days after the district court had entered its

    disbursement order, Prudential made its first appearance in

    this action. On August 15, 1990, Prudential moved the

    district court to allow it to intervene in the instant action

    and stay the scheduled disbursement to the FDIC, alleging

    that it had a lien on the attached funds that had priority

    over the FDIC's attachment. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 24.3 The
    ___


    ____________________

    3. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24 provides, in relevant
    part:

    (a) Intervention of Right. Upon timely
    _______________________
    application anyone shall be permitted to
    intervene in an action: . . . (2) when
    the applicant claims an interest relating
    to the property or transaction which is
    the subject of the action and the
    applicant is so situated that the
    disposition of the action may as a
    practical matter impair or impede the
    applicant's ability to protect that
    interest, unless the applicant's interest
    is adequately represented by existing
    parties.

    (b) Permissive Intervention. Upon timely
    ________________________
    application anyone may be permitted to
    intervene in an action: . . . (2) when an
    applicant's claim or defense and the main
    action have a question of law or fact in
    common. . . . In exercising its
    discretion the court shall consider
    whether the intervention will unduly
    delay or prejudice the adjudication of
    the rights of the original parties.

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    district court stayed the disbursement pending ruling on

    Prudential's motion to intervene. On August 20, 1990, Banco

    Cooperativo, which also had never before been a party to this

    action, moved to intervene, asserting that it had a priority

    claim to the attached funds.4

    On March 11, 1992, the district court, after

    considering the parties' motions and exhibits submitted in

    support of their claims (and without specifically indicating

    whether it was ruling on the motions to intervene or on the

    merits), denied Prudential's and Banco's claims and lifted

    the stay of the disbursement of the funds to the FDIC.

    Prudential and Banco appealed separately from the district

    court'sfinalorder. Weconsolidatedtheirappeals,and nowaffirm.5


    ____________________

    4. Appellee FDIC does not contest the existence of the
    appellants' purported claims against Serrano. Banco
    Cooperativo claims that it sued Prudential in a Puerto Rico
    court in 1984, seeking damages for embezzlement by Serrano
    during his tenure, in 1980, as an officer of Prudential's
    Institutional Department. In 1985, Prudential filed a third-
    party complaint against Serrano in that case, asking that
    Serrano be held liable for the amount of any judgment which
    may be entered against Prudential in the action brought by
    Banco Cooperativo.

    Banco claims that it eventually received a judgment
    against Serrano in the amount of $295,000 plus interest.
    _______
    (Banco does not explain how it obtained a judgment against
    Serrano when it had sought damages only from Prudential.) At
    the time Prudential filed its motion to intervene, its claim
    against Serrano was still contingent, as final judgment had
    not yet been rendered in its third-party action.

    5. The district court had jurisdiction over this action
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1331, because the original plaintiff,
    Municipality of Ponce, brought federal claims against the
    defendants. This court has jurisdiction over the appeals

    -8-















    I.
    I.

    No. 92-1652 - Prudential
    No. 92-1652 - Prudential
    ________________________

    Appellant Prudential raises three issues on appeal.

    The first, discussed in Section A below, concerns the

    validity of the FDIC's attachment, an issue implicitly

    decided by the bankruptcy court's order to release Serrano's

    funds in compliance with the attachment. We hold, infra,
    _____

    that res judicata bars Prudential from raising the issue
    ___ ________

    anew.

    The other two issues raised by Prudential,

    discussed in Sections B and C below, concern the priority of

    its alleged lien relative to the FDIC's attachment. The

    questions of priority among liens on Serrano's property and

    of the validity of Prudential's lien unlike the validity

    of the FDIC's attachment formed no part of the bankruptcy

    court's decision and so are not barred from being raised now.

    The bankruptcy court, when it ordered the funds to be turned

    over in compliance with the FDIC's attachment, made clear

    that "said funds remain subject to any liens as per our order

    of sale." The bankruptcy court's order of sale, dated April

    27, 1989, approved the liquidation of the stock shares

    "provided the proceeds from the surrender of the shares are

    to be deposited with the Clerk of the United States

    Bankruptcy Court for the District of Puerto Rico, in an


    ____________________

    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1291.

    -9-















    interest bearing account with liens, if any, attaching to
    __________________________________

    said proceeds . . . ." (emphasis added). The court dismissed
    _____________

    the bankruptcy petition before ever adjudging the validity of

    Prudential's alleged secured claim on the proceeds and

    without deciding whether the FDIC's attachment took priority

    over other liens on the proceeds. Res judicata, therefore,
    ___ ________

    does not bar Prudential from now raising those questions, and

    we address them on their merits.

    A. Validity of FDIC's Attachment
    A. Validity of FDIC's Attachment
    _____________________________

    Prudential's first argument is that the district

    court should have declared the FDIC's attachment null and

    void because it was obtained in violation of the automatic

    stay allegedly still in effect in Serrano's bankruptcy case.

    See 11 U.S.C. 362. It is Prudential's theory that Fed. R.
    ___

    Civ. P. 62(a), applying by force of Bankruptcy Rules 7062 and

    9014, extended the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. 362 for ten

    days after the bankruptcy court had dismissed Serrano's

    bankruptcy petition. This argument has met with little

    success in other cases involving similar circumstances. See
    ___

    In re de Jesus Daez, 721 F.2d 848, 851-52 (1st Cir. 1983); In
    ___________________ __

    re Weston, 101 B.R. 202, 203-06 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. 1989),
    __________

    aff'd, 967 F.2d 596 (9th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct.
    _____ ____________

    973 (1993). Prudential's standing to challenge an alleged

    violation of the automatic stay is also problematic. See In
    ___ __

    re Pecan Groves of Arizona, 951 F.2d 242, 245 (9th Cir. 1991)
    __________________________



    -10-















    ("Language from many cases indicates that, if the trustee

    does not seek to enforce the protections of the automatic

    stay, no other party may challenge acts purportedly in

    violation of the automatic stay."). We do not pass on these

    issues, however, as we are satisfied, infra, that Prudential
    _____

    is barred by res judicata from raising the automatic stay as
    ___ ________

    a bar.6 We add that it would be difficult to pass on the

    merits of the automatic stay issue from the record now before

    us, which does not include a full report of the bankruptcy

    proceedings and, in particular, omits much information

    relevant to the stay and to orders issued lifting the stay in

    respect to the district court proceeding in question.

    This court recently explained:

    The doctrine of res judicata bars all
    ___ ________
    parties and their privies from
    relitigating issues which were raised or
    could have been raised in a previous
    _________________________
    action, once a court has entered a final
    judgment on the merits in the previous
    action. United States v. Alky
    _______________ ____
    Enterprises, Inc., 969 F.2d 1309, 1314
    __________________
    (1st Cir. 1992). The essential elements
    of res judicata, or claim preclusion, are
    ___ ________
    (1) a final judgment on the merits in an
    earlier action; (2) an identity of
    parties or privies in the two suits; and
    (3) an identity of the cause of action in
    both the earlier and later suits. Kale
    ____


    ____________________

    6. Although the district court did not rely upon the grounds
    of res judicata, and the parties ignored this theory on
    ___ ________
    appeal, we may do so as we need not limit ourselves to the
    exact grounds for decision utilized below. Watterson v.
    _________
    Page, 987 F.2d 1, 7 n.3 (1st Cir. 1993); Aunyx Corp v. Canon
    ____ __________ _____
    U.S.A., Inc., 978 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir. 1992), cert. denied,
    _____________ ____________
    113 S. Ct. 1416 (1993).

    -11-















    v. Combined Insurance Co. of America, 924
    _________________________________
    F.2d 1161, 1165 (1st Cir.), cert. denied,
    ____________
    ___ U.S. ___, 112 S. Ct. 69, 116 L. Ed.
    2d 44 (1991).

    Aunyx Corp. v. Canon U.S.A., Inc., 978 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir.
    ____________ ___________________

    1992), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 1416 (1993) (emphasis in
    _____________

    original). "The normal rules of res judicata and collateral
    ___ ________

    estoppel apply to the decisions of the bankruptcy courts."

    Katchen v. Landy, 382 U.S. 323, 334 (1966); Chicot County
    _______ _____ _____________

    Drainage Dist. v. Baxter State Bank, 308 U.S. 371, 375-78
    _______________ _________________

    (1940); Turshen v. Chapman, 823 F.2d 836, 839 (4th Cir.
    _______ _______

    1987); see generally 1B James Wm. Moore et al., Moore's
    ___ _________ ______ _______

    Federal Practice 0.419[3] (2d ed. 1993). Orders, judgments
    ________________

    and decrees of the bankruptcy court from which an appeal is

    not timely taken are final, 1 Collier on Bankruptcy
    _______________________

    3.03[4], at 3-179 (Lawrence P. King ed., 15th ed. 1993), even

    if erroneous. Union Joint Stock Land Bank v. Byerly, 310
    ____________________________ ______

    U.S. 1, 7-8 (1940); Van Huffel v. Harkelrode, 284 U.S. 225,
    __________ __________

    227 (1931). While actions taken in violation of the

    automatic stay are often characterized as void and without

    effect, orders of the bankruptcy court modifying the stay or

    finding no violation, even if erroneous, are entitled to

    respect and are not subject to collateral attack. See Union
    ___ _____

    Joint Stock Land Bank, 310 U.S. at 7-8 ("The District Court
    _____________________

    did not lose jurisdiction by erroneously construing or

    applying provisions of the statute under which it

    administered the bankrupt estate. Its order was voidable,


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    but not void, and was not to be disregarded or attacked

    collaterally . . . ."); 1B Moore's Federal Practice
    __________________________

    4.19[3-.2], at 635.

    All the elements of res judicata are met here.
    ___ ________

    First, by its final order on June 27, 1990, transferring

    Serrano's funds in compliance with the attachment, the

    bankruptcy court rendered a final judgment that the

    attachment was valid. After dismissing Serrano's bankruptcy

    case, the bankruptcy court had retained jurisdiction to

    determine whether to return the debtor's funds to him or to

    another, and gave all the creditors, of whom Prudential was

    one, eleven days to "express their positions as to the

    disposal of these funds." Prudential's counsel appeared at

    the hearing in the bankruptcy court directly before issuance

    of the order dismissing the bankruptcy case, at which time

    the court indicated that that order was contemplated and said

    that it intended to grant the creditors ten or eleven days to

    "let me know what I should do with these funds." In fact, on

    May 17, 1990, Prudential's counsel invited the attorneys for

    other creditors, including the FDIC's counsel, to a meeting

    at Prudential's offices to discuss the disposition of the

    funds. This meeting took place on May 18, 1990, at which

    time the FDIC's counsel showed to Prudential a copy of the

    attachment order it had just obtained in the district court.

    Notwithstanding the foregoing, Prudential never advised the



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    bankruptcy court of its present contention that the FDIC's

    attachment was invalid, being in supposed violation of the

    automatic stay, nor did it urge the bankruptcy court to

    refuse to honor the attachment. Prudential's inaction is in

    notable contrast to that of another creditor, Shearson

    Lehman, which, on June 5, 1990, moved the bankruptcy court to

    declare the attachment null and void in violation of the

    automatic stay the very same contention Prudential

    belatedly raises now. Shearson Lehman's contention was

    expressly denied by the bankruptcy court on June 27, 1990, in

    its final order. In that same order, the bankruptcy court

    disposed of the balance of the funds in express compliance

    with the attachment, after first ordering the payment of

    certain fees, expenses and other items. The bankruptcy

    court's June 27 order constituted an appealable final

    judgment. In re Parque Forestal, Inc., 949 F.2d 504, 508-09
    ___________________________

    (1st Cir. 1991). However, Prudential took no appeal.

    Second, Prudential does not deny that, as one of

    Serrano's creditors, it was a party to the bankruptcy

    proceedings, nor that it was fully cognizant on May 16-18,

    1990, of the bankruptcy court's dismissal of Serrano's case,

    of its retention of jurisdiction, and of the FDIC's

    attachment. Nor can Prudential deny that it knew of the

    bankruptcy court's invitation to all creditors to express

    their positions as to the future disposition of the funds.



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    Despite this, Prudential complains that since it

    received no formal notice from the district court of the

    FDIC's attachment, it was not a party to the dispute over the

    attachment. We cannot see, for purposes of any action

    Prudential might have taken in the bankruptcy court, that the

    absence of notice from the district court was material.

    Prudential was fully cognizant that the bankruptcy court

    intended to take action in June on the question of disposal

    of Serrano's assets, including the effect of the attachment.

    Yet Prudential took no steps to pursue the matter before the

    bankruptcy judge, including in particular to raise the

    bankruptcy-related issue of the effect of the automatic stay

    on the validity of the attachment. We are satisfied that

    Prudential was a party to the proceedings in the bankruptcy

    court over the ultimate disposition of Serrano's assets

    proceedings that ended with the bankruptcy court's

    recognition of the FDIC's district court attachment and its

    direction to turn over the assets in compliance therewith.

    Finally, Prudential's current challenge to the

    attachment based on the automatic stay implicates the very

    same underlying issue resolved by the bankruptcy court when

    it gave effect to the attachment. The bankruptcy court's

    final order of June 27, 1990 necessarily required it to have

    determined whether or not the FDIC's attachment was valid so

    as to be entitled to effect. The bankruptcy court clearly



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    had jurisdiction to make that determination and, in

    particular, had jurisdiction to adjudicate any claim of

    invalidity based on purported violation of the automatic

    stay. See 11 U.S.C. 105(a) (authorizing bankruptcy court
    ___

    to "issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary

    or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title.");

    11 U.S.C. 362(d), (f) (authorizing court to grant relief

    from stay); 1 Collier on Bankruptcy 362.01[1], at 362-9
    ______________________

    ("[T]he bankruptcy court, as a court of equity exercising in
    __

    rem jurisdiction over assets in its custody and control, can
    ___

    protect its jurisdiction by injunction, whether or not such

    power is expressly set forth . . . ."); see generally In re
    ______________ _____

    Continental Air Lines, 61 B.R. 758 (S.D. Tex. 1986)
    ________________________

    (discussing jurisdiction of bankruptcy court over enforcement

    of automatic stay).

    As already noted, another creditor, Shearson

    Lehman, moved in the bankruptcy court to have the attachment

    declared null and void for precisely the same reasons

    Prudential now advances, viz., that the FDIC had allegedly
    ___

    violated the automatic stay when it sought and received an

    order from the district court attaching bankruptcy assets

    within one day after the bankruptcy court had dismissed

    Serrano's petition.7 The bankruptcy court included in its


    ____________________

    7. The text of Prudential's current brief on this issue
    matches verbatim whole portions of Shearson's motion on this
    ________
    issue before the bankruptcy court.

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    June 27, 1990 order a specific denial of Shearson Lehman's

    motion, indicating by that ruling its absence of doubt

    concerning the existence of jurisdiction to adjudicate the

    claimed bar of the automatic stay.

    Prudential never made a similar motion nor in any

    way challenged the attachment in the bankruptcy court, nor

    did it appeal from the bankruptcy court's order recognizing

    the FDIC's attachment. Instead, after the bankruptcy court

    had acted and the attachment had been fully executed,

    Prudential petitioned to intervene in the attaching district

    court for the purpose of arguing, post hoc, that the

    bankruptcy automatic stay had invalidated the attachment.8

    By the time of its petition, a final judgment giving effect

    to the attachment was in effect in the bankruptcy court. As

    res judicata now bars a collateral attack on the bankruptcy
    ___ ________

    court's judgment, we treat the FDIC's attachment as valid.

    B. Pledge Agreement
    B. Pledge Agreement
    ________________

    Prudential says that, even assuming the FDIC had a

    valid attachment on the stock proceeds, Prudential holds a

    superior lien on the proceeds by virtue of a form signed by



    ____________________

    8. While Prudential was not formally noticed as to the
    attachment, it learned about it from the FDIC's counsel on
    May 18, 1990, and, as an additional course, could have
    promptly sought to intervene in the district court in hopes
    of quashing the attachment before it was executed in the
    bankruptcy court. Instead, Prudential waited for nearly
    three months, until well after execution of the attachment,
    before doing anything.

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    Serrano to open a brokerage account at Prudential (the

    "Customer Agreement").9 Prudential contends that the

    Customer Agreement operated, under Puerto Rico law, as a

    "pledge" of any securities held in the brokerage account. By

    virtue of this pledge, Prudential reasons, it acquired a lien

    over the Bayam n Federal stock shares and their proceeds

    prior to the FDIC's attachment because the stock was, up

    until 1987, held in Serrano's account at Prudential.

    The district court correctly rejected Prudential's

    argument. Puerto Rico law provides, "A pledge shall not be

    effective against a third person, when evidence of its date

    is not shown by authentic documents." 31 L.P.R.A. 5023.

    The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has stated: "An authentic



    ____________________

    9. The Customer Agreement provided, in part:

    I [Serrano] agree, as follows, with
    respect to all the accounts in which I
    have an interest alone or with others,
    which I have opened or open with you
    [Prudential] for the purchase and sale of
    securities and commodities:

    . . .

    Any and all credit balances,
    securities, or contracts relating thereto
    and all other property of whatever kind
    belonging to me or in which I have an
    interest held by you or carried for my
    accounts shall be subject to a general
    lien for the discharge of my obligations
    to you (including unmatured and
    contingent obligations) however arising .
    . . .


    -18-















    document is a legalized document, which is publicly attested,

    which is legally valid by itself." Ramos Mimoso v. Tribunal
    ____________ ________

    Superior, 93 P.R.R. 538, 540 (1966). A private agreement or
    ________

    writing is not an authentic document; a document verified

    before a notary public is an authentic document. In re
    _____

    Santos & Nieves, Inc., 814 F.2d 57, 60 (1st Cir. 1987); Ramos
    _____________________ _____

    Mimoso, 93 P.R.R. at 541. The record here supports the
    ______

    district court's finding that no notarized or other properly

    authenticated document evidenced the date of Serrano's

    alleged pledge of the stock shares. The only document

    alleging to show the date of the supposed pledge is the

    Customer Agreement, which is merely signed by the parties and

    not notarized.

    Prudential concedes that no notarized or otherwise

    "authentic" document exists to evidence the date of the

    pledge, but argues that it is sufficient that the purpose of
    _______

    the authentic document requirement was fulfilled. Prudential

    filed a copy of the Customer Agreement in 1987 with the clerk

    of a court in which criminal proceedings against Serrano were

    being conducted, and now argues that this filing satisfies

    the policy behind 31 L.P.R.A. 5023. However, the authentic

    document rule is "a formal and absolute rule" that is

    strictly construed. In re Supermercados San Juan, Inc., 575
    ___________________________________

    F.2d 8, 12 (1st Cir. 1978); Trueba v. Zalduondo, 34 P.R.R.
    ______ _________

    713, 716 (1925). Neither section 5023 nor any cases



    -19-















    interpreting it support Prudential's theory that the

    authentic document requirement can be fulfilled simply by

    filing a copy of an unnotarized document in court.

    Prudential attempts to analogize this case to

    Trueba v. Zalduondo, 34 P.R.R. 713 (1925), in which the
    ______ _________

    Supreme Court of Puerto Rico held that a transfer of

    corporate stocks as collateral for a loan that was recorded

    in the corporations' official records was valid against

    later-attaching third parties, even though the transfer did

    not comply with the authentic document rule codified in the

    predecessor statute to 31 L.P.R.A. 5023. However, Trueba
    ______

    expressly held that section 13 of the Private Corporations

    Act, (now codified as 14 L.P.R.A. 1509), and not the

    predecessor to 31 L.P.R.A. 5023, governed under those

    circumstances. The Trueba decision "was based on the fact
    ______

    that stock so transferred would be authenticated by the

    public and formal records of the corporation as a transfer of

    a security interest." In re Supermercados San Juan, Inc.,
    ____________________________________

    575 F.2d at 12. The Trueba court did not create an exception
    ______

    to section 5023 and, in fact, reiterated that the authentic

    document rule "is a rigid rule." Trueba, 34 P.R.R. at 716.
    ______

    Because Prudential does not contend that the Private









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    Corporations Act, as opposed to 31 L.P.R.A. 5023, governs

    this case, Trueba is inapposite.10
    ______

    The district court correctly held that Prudential's

    purported pledge agreement did not comply with the authentic

    document requirement of 31 L.P.R.A. 5023 and thus was not

    valid against the FDIC as a pledge.

    C. Puerto Rico Agency Law
    C. Puerto Rico Agency Law
    ______________________

    Prudential argues that it acted as Serrano's agent

    for the purchase and sale of securities and, as such,

    acquired a statutory lien on all securities held on behalf of

    Serrano, including the Bayam n Federal stock. Prudential

    points to a Puerto Rican statute providing that, "The agent

    may retain the things which are the objects of the agency in

    pledge until the principal pays the indemnity and

    reimbursement referred to in the two preceding sections [

    4462, 4463]." 31 L.P.R.A. 4464. Prudential misinterprets

    the statute, however. Even if Prudential were Serrano's

    agent, section 4464 does not give it a lien on the stock

    proceeds superior to the FDIC's attachment because Prudential


    ____________________

    10. Prudential's citation of In re Las Colinas, Inc., 294 F.
    _______________________
    Supp. 582 (1968), vacated and remanded, 426 F.2d 1005 (1st
    ____________________
    Cir. 1970), is similarly unhelpful. Even if parts of it
    remain good law, the relevant issue in that case was whether
    certain collateral, transferred after a pledge agreement was
    notarized and signed, constituted a valid pledge of that
    collateral. Id. at 602-03; see also Omega Int'l Corp. v.
    ___ ________ __________________
    Interstate Steel de Puerto Rico, Inc., 590 F. Supp. 844, 850
    ______________________________________
    (D.P.R. 1984) (explaining In re Las Colinas). Here,
    _____________________
    Prudential concedes that there was no notarized pledge
    agreement.

    -21-















    did not "retain the things," viz., the Bayam n Federal stock
    ___

    certificates. The stock was transferred to a court in 1987

    pursuant to a court order, and was subsequently liquidated.

    We find no authority for the proposition that section 4464

    creates statutory liens on things, let alone their proceeds,

    which are not retained by the agent. For this reason alone,

    the district court's ruling that Prudential does not have a

    lien over the stock pursuant to Puerto Rico agency law was

    plainly correct.11

    The district court did not err in finding that

    Prudential had no lien with priority over the FDIC's

    attachment and in dismissing Prudential's claims over the

    funds attached by the FDIC.12

    II.
    II.

    No. 92-1652 - Banco Cooperativo
    No. 92-1652 - Banco Cooperativo
    _______________________________

    Appellant Banco Cooperativo says that it obtained a

    judgment and award of damages against Serrano on September

    15, 1987 from a Puerto Rico court in a civil action. Banco



    ____________________

    11. The district court also found that section 4464 was
    inapplicable because Serrano's alleged liability to
    Prudential is unrelated to the stock shares previously held
    in his account and because the liability was merely
    contingent, not due and payable. See I-II Jose Puig Brutau,
    ___
    Fundamentos de Derecho Civil 545-46 (2d ed. 1976).
    ____________________________

    12. Prudential also makes various arguments based on New
    York law. We do not consider any of them as Prudential makes
    no argument on appeal that the district court erred in
    determining that Puerto Rico law, not New York law, governs
    this case. See Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(3), (5).
    ___

    -22-















    never executed the judgment, attached the funds that are the

    subject of this appeal, or otherwise obtained a lien on any

    of Serrano's property. Banco also concedes that the FDIC

    obtained a valid judgment against Serrano on October 16,

    1989, and properly executed the judgment by attaching the

    funds at issue on May 17, 1990. Banco contends, nonetheless,

    that Puerto Rico law gives its claim on Serrano's assets

    priority over the FDIC's.

    We agree with the district court that the statute

    on which Banco relies, 31 L.P.R.A. 5194, does not apply

    here. The first provision of Title 31, Chapter 399 provides:

    "Credits shall be classified for their graduation and payment

    in the order and manner specified in this chapter." 31

    L.P.R.A. 5191. 31 L.P.R.A. 5194 provides in part:

    With regard to all other personal and
    real property of the debtor, preference
    shall be given to: . . .
    (4) Indebtedness which without a
    special privilege appear:
    (a) In a public instrument.
    (b) In a final judgment, should
    they have been the object of
    litigation.
    These credits shall have preference
    among themselves according to the
    priority of dates of the instruments and
    of the judgments.

    Banco interprets section 5194(4) to mean that its claim to

    the funds has "preference" over the FDIC's claim because

    Banco obtained its judgment two years before the FDIC was

    awarded its judgment. Under Banco's interpretation, section



    -23-















    5194(4) makes irrelevant the fact that the FDIC attached the

    property in dispute and Banco did not.

    The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has consistently

    held otherwise, finding that 31 L.P.R.A. 5194 does not

    supplant the standard rule that, as between two judgment

    creditors without other liens, the first creditor to attach

    has priority. In Oronoz & Co. v. Alvarez, 23 P.R.R. 497
    ____________ _______

    (1916), the Court rejected the argument that a creditor

    always has priority if it has a judgment antedating the

    judgment of other creditors. Id. at 500. The Court
    ___

    explained:

    We have recently decided that mere
    priority in judgment gives the prior
    creditor no lien. Auffant v. Succession
    _______ __________
    of Manuel de J. Ramos et al., [23 P.R.R.
    _____________________________
    385 (1916)]. An attachment or other
    similar step is necessary to give the
    judgment a priority and as between
    judgment creditors the first to attach
    has the priority. It is a race of
    diligence. The priority of payments to
    which sections 1822 et seq. of the Civil
    _______
    Code [31 L.P.R.A. 5191 et seq.] relate
    _______
    has no application to attachments.

    Id. The Court reaffirmed the first-to-attach rule in Puerto
    ___ ______

    Rico Bedding Mfg. Corp. v. Herger, 91 P.R.R. 503 (1964),
    _________________________ ______

    writing that, "There is no question that among common

    creditors the first one who attaches has preference over the

    others . . . ." Id. at 507. The Court clarified that the
    ___

    preference created by attachment "does not go beyond the

    right which the debtor may have over the property attached,"



    -24-















    meaning that valid liens already on the property when

    attached cannot be defeated by an attachment. Id. In
    ___

    Empresas Capote, Inc. v. Superior Court, 3 P.R. Sup. Ct.
    ______________________ _______________

    Off'l Translations 1067 (1975), the Supreme Court of Puerto

    Rico reiterated, "It should be remembered that, grounded on

    the axiom prior tempore portior jure, even among common
    ____________________________

    creditors, '. . . the first one who attaches has preferences

    over the others, but such preference does not go beyond the

    right which the debtor may have over the property attached.'"

    Id. at 1078-79 (quoting Puerto Rico Bedding Mfg. Corp. v.
    ___ ________________________________

    Herger, 91 P.R.R. 503, 507 (1964)).
    ______

    Some provisions of Chapter 399 other than 31

    L.P.R.A. 5194 create statutory preferences, a concept

    equivalent to statutory liens, on certain types of property.

    These statutory preferences take priority over attachments

    even if the preference holder does not formally attach the

    property. For example, 31 L.P.R.A. 5192(1) creates, in

    essence, a seller's lien "for the amount of the sale of [the]

    personal property which may be in possession of the debtor to

    the extent of the value of the same." 31 L.P.R.A. 5192(1);

    see In re Jack's Club & Hotel, 138 F. Supp. 620, 622 (D.P.R.
    ___ __________________________

    1956). Thus, the credit of a manufacturer who was not paid

    for mattresses and bed frames it sold to a retail store had

    priority over the credit of another creditor who attached the

    items in the store. Puerto Rico Bedding Mfg. Corp., 91
    _________________________________



    -25-















    P.R.R. at 507-09. While the attachment created a preference,

    or lien, in favor of the attaching creditor, "such preference

    does not go beyond the right which the debtor may have over

    the property attached." Id. at 507-08. That is, 31 L.P.R.A.
    ___

    5192, without the need for execution or attachment, gives

    the seller an interest in the property sold that diminishes

    the debtor's interest in the property and that cannot be

    defeated by attaching creditors. See also Heirs of Garriga
    ________ _________________

    v. O'Meara, 28 P.R.R. 332, 334-35 (1920) (discussing priority
    _______

    of the statutory preferences created by 31 L.P.R.A. 5192

    over attachments).

    In contrast, 31 L.P.R.A. 5194(4) does not create

    a seller's lien or any other type of statutory lien on

    property of the debtor. It does not refer to specific

    property of the debtor or specific transactions between the

    creditor and debtor. Compare 31 L.P.R.A. 5192(3) (creating
    _______

    lien for the costs of transportation on goods transported by

    creditor) and 31 L.P.R.A. 5192(6) (creating lien on fruit
    ___

    crops in favor of creditor who provided seeds) with 31
    ____

    L.P.R.A. 5194(4) (referring to no specific property). The

    silence of 5194(4) implies that a general judgment creditor

    must execute its judgment by attaching property, such as the

    debtor's cash or stock certificates, before it can claim any

    sort of "lien" on that property.





    -26-















    Here, the FDIC and Banco were both judgment

    creditors, but the FDIC, by attaching the stock proceeds,

    obtained a lien on those proceeds which has priority over

    Banco's unexecuted judgment against the debtor. Banco had no

    lien or other legally-recognized property interest in

    Serrano's assets at the time of the attachment. All it had

    was an unsecured credit in its favor as the result of a court

    judgment. Thus, the FDIC's attachment reached all of the
    ___

    funds released by the bankruptcy court and is not subject to

    a claim by Banco.

    For these reasons, the district court did not err

    in determining that 31 L.P.R.A. 5194(4) does not give

    Banco, which did not execute its judgment, priority over the

    FDIC, which obtained a valid attachment of the funds.13









    ____________________

    13. We have considered and found no merit in Banco's myriad
    other arguments. For example, we do not have the authority
    to declare Oronoz & Co. to be wrongly decided by the Puerto
    ____________
    Rico Supreme Court or mistranslated by the official court
    translator, as Banco urges us to do. The case of Rodr guez
    _________
    v. Solivellas & Co., 49 P.R.R. 618 (1936), which discussed 31
    ________________
    L.P.R.A. 5194, held that a prior mortgage on certain
    property had priority over a cautionary notice of attachment
    on the property. It did not hold, as appellant maintains,
    that attachments have no effect on the rights of judgment
    creditors with prior claims, but relied instead upon the same
    principle discussed above, that "[an] attachment is valid
    only as regards any balance left after cancelling the former
    security." Id. at 623.
    ___

    -27-















    Therefore, the district court properly dismissed Banco

    Cooperativo's claim.14

    III.
    III.

    In conclusion, we find no error and so affirm the

    district court's order in Appeal No. 92-1652, dismissing the
    _______

    claims of Prudential, and in Appeal No. 92-1651, dismissing
    _______

    the claim of Banco Cooperativo to the funds held by the

    court.

    Affirmed. Costs to appellee.
    ________ _________________






















    ____________________

    14. Banco complains that the district court should have
    "reprobated" or sanctioned the FDIC for acting in bad faith
    when it obtained its attachment. Banco did not raise this
    issue in a timely fashion, waiting until it moved for
    reconsideration of the district court's Opinion and Order to
    bring the issue to the court's attention. Consequently, we
    will not consider it on appeal. See Brown v. Trustees of
    ___ _____ ___________
    Boston Univ., 891 F.2d 337, 352 (1st Cir. 1989), cert.
    _____________ _____
    denied, 496 U.S. 937 (1990). Moreover, we find no evidence
    ______
    in the record to support Banco's allegations of bad faith on
    the FDIC's part.

    -28-