Tenerife Real Estate Holdings v. WM Capital Management Inc. ( 2021 )


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  •            United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 19-1765
    FRANCISCO ALMEIDA-LEÓN; WANDA CRUZ-QUILES;
    CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP ALMEIDA-CRUZ; JUAN ALMEIDA-LEÓN,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    TENERIFE REAL ESTATE HOLDINGS, LLC,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    WM CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC.,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    ____________________
    No. 19-1766
    TENERIFE REAL ESTATE HOLDINGS, LLC,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    FRANCISCO ALMEIDA-LEÓN; WANDA CRUZ-QUILES;
    CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP ALMEIDA-CRUZ; JUAN ALMEIDA-LEÓN,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.
    WM CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC.,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. John A. Woodcock, Jr.,* U.S. Senior District Judge]
    *   Of the District of Maine, sitting by designation.
    Before
    Howard, Chief Judge,
    Thompson and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
    Edilberto Berríos-Pérez for appellants.
    Roberto E. Berríos-Falcón and Berríos Falcón, LLC on brief
    for appellant Tenerife Real Estate Holdings, LLC.
    Jairo A. Mellado-Villarreal, with whom Tessie Leal-Garabís,
    and Mellado & Mellado-Villarreal were on brief, for appellee.
    March 26, 2021
    THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.                 This appeal arises from a
    dispute over the enforcement of a contract that controls the
    assignment and liquidation of several mortgage notes.                       Francisco
    Almeida-León, his wife Wanda Cruz-Quiles, the couple's conjugal
    partnership,        and     Francisco's          brother        Juan     Almeida-León
    (collectively, "the Almeidas"), initiated an action against WM
    Capital Management, Inc. ("WM Capital").                     The complaint includes
    claims for redemption of property and breach of contract.                             WM
    Capital filed a counterclaim seeking specific performance of the
    contract and also sought joinder of Tenerife Real Estate Holdings
    LLC ("Tenerife"), a signatory to the contract at issue.                              The
    district    court    joined     Tenerife,       dismissed      the     claims   in   the
    Almeidas' complaint, and granted summary judgment in favor of WM
    Capital on its counterclaim for specific performance. The Almeidas
    and Tenerife (collectively, the "appellants" where appropriate)
    challenge those district court orders on appeal.                       We affirm.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    We note at the outset that the procedural history of
    this case has many moving parts, so we beg the reader's patience
    as we make our way through the setup.                  In 2007, an official from
    R-G   Premier   Bank       of   Puerto    Rico       ("R-G    Premier")    approached
    Francisco    and    Juan    Almeida      with    a    business    opportunity.         A
    businessman     named       Emérito      Estrada-Rivera         wanted     to   obtain
    -3-
    financing from R-G Premier for his car dealership venture but was
    unable to obtain a loan from R-G Premier on his own.                     The R-G
    Premier official therefore suggested to Francisco and Juan that
    they take advantage of their strong credit to obtain a loan from
    R-G Premier and use the funds to provide a loan to Estrada-Rivera.
    In   exchange,       Francisco    and   Juan    would    receive   interest    from
    Estrada-Rivera, and the R-G Premier official also promised to
    facilitate       a   separate    construction     loan    application   on    their
    behalf.   Francisco and Juan agreed to this arrangement, taking out
    two loans from R-G Premier totaling approximately $2.6 million,
    and subsequently providing a loan in that amount to Estrada-Rivera.
    The deal was short-lived.           Estrada-Rivera defaulted on
    his obligations soon after the deal was finalized, which led Juan
    and Francisco to default on their obligations to R-G Premier.                    In
    2011, the Almeidas brought a foreclosure action against Estrada-
    Rivera in Puerto Rico state court.                  The Almeidas obtained a
    judgment enabling them to foreclose on three mortgage notes that
    secured Estrada-Rivera's property on John F. Kennedy Avenue in San
    Juan   ("Kennedy       Notes").1        These    three    mortgage   notes     were
    The Almeidas originally brought a lawsuit against
    1
    Estrada-Rivera in 2008 in Puerto Rico state court. Through that
    lawsuit the Almeidas obtained control over the Kennedy Notes. The
    2011 foreclosure action involved the same Kennedy Notes. However,
    for reasons unclear to this Court, the named plaintiffs in the
    2011 action included Francisco and his wife, Wanda, but not Juan.
    -4-
    subordinate to a fourth mortgage note that was originally issued
    to   the   General    Motors   Acceptance   Corporation   ("GMAC   Note").
    Tenerife, a corporate entity controlled by the Almeidas, later
    acquired the GMAC Note.
    With that judgment in hand, Francisco and Juan set out
    to resolve the debt owed to R-G Premier.        However, continuing the
    string of defaults, R-G Premier itself failed and in 2012 was put
    under the stewardship of a receiver, the Federal Deposit Insurance
    Corporation ("FDIC-R").        Shortly thereafter, the FDIC-R initiated
    an action in the U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto
    Rico to recoup on the loan originally made by R-G Premier.2            The
    district     court   granted    a   judgment   in   FDIC-R's   favor   for
    $2,828,850.11 and also put in place a temporary restraining order
    prohibiting liquidation of the mortgage notes acquired in the
    Almeidas' state court action against Estrada-Rivera.3 Negotiations
    ensued with the FDIC-R regarding how to satisfy the judgment for
    $2,828,850.11.
    Tenerife was also not involved in that lawsuit.
    2   The lawsuit named Juan, but not Francisco, as the
    defendant.
    While the FDIC-R's judgment was against Juan, the
    3
    temporary restraining order effectively halted the sale of the
    John F. Kennedy Avenue property and therefore tied the hands of
    all appellants, each of whom had an interest in notes secured by
    that property.
    -5-
    In July 2014, the FDIC-R and appellants entered into a
    contract entitled "Agreement to Satisfy Judgment[] and Assignment
    of Mortgage Notes" ("2014 Agreement").             According to the 2014
    Agreement,       the   FDIC-R   would   receive   "an   undivided    one-half
    interest" in the Kennedy Notes and the GMAC Note.             The parties to
    the agreement agreed to jointly motion the state court to amend
    the judgment in the foreclosure proceedings against Estrada-Rivera
    to recognize the FDIC-R as a "co-plaintiff and judgment creditor."
    They also agreed that the FDIC-R would facilitate a "Phase 1
    Environmental Site Assessment" of the John F. Kennedy Avenue
    property.        Once those conditions were met, the Kennedy Notes and
    the GMAC Note would be liquidated through the sale of the real
    estate   collateral.        Following    the   liquidation,   the   agreement
    stipulated that the proceeds necessary to satisfy the judgment
    would first be distributed to FDIC-R and any remaining proceeds
    would be distributed to appellants.4
    In December 2015, the FDIC-R sold its interest in the
    2014 Agreement to WM Capital, a company based in New York.               This
    transfer gave the Almeidas, who had been frustrated at the amount
    of time it was taking to liquidate the mortgage notes, what they
    Appellants disagree with certain aspects of this
    4
    reading of the 2014 Agreement, and we address that issue in our
    analysis below.
    -6-
    hoped was an opportunity to reclaim full ownership of the Kennedy
    Notes.5 Before the state court certified WM Capital as a substitute
    co-plaintiff in the Estrada-Rivera case, the Almeidas initiated
    the suit underlying this appeal in Puerto Rico state court alleging
    breach of contract and right to redemption of property. WM Capital
    removed the case to the U.S. District Court for the District of
    Puerto Rico on diversity grounds.
    At the outset of the case, WM Capital successfully moved
    the district court to dismiss the Almeidas' right of redemption
    claim under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).           The district court reasoned
    that the 2014 Agreement assigned only an interest in the proceeds
    from a liquidation of the mortgage notes, not an ownership interest
    in the notes themselves.       As such, WM Capital's interest in the
    mortgage notes could not be subject to a co-ownership redemption
    claim.
    WM    Capital    also    filed   a   counterclaim   against     the
    Almeidas   and   Tenerife    for    specific     performance   of   the   2014
    Agreement, and requested that Tenerife be joined as a plaintiff
    under Fed. R. Civ. P. 19.          The district court denied the joinder
    motion, finding that WM Capital had not established that Tenerife
    was a required plaintiff, but noted that permissive joinder under
    5Tenerife was not a named plaintiff in the original
    state court lawsuit underlying this appeal.
    -7-
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 20 might be appropriate.       Accordingly, WM Capital
    moved the district court to join Tenerife as a plaintiff under
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 20.        The Almeidas did not oppose this second
    joinder motion, and the district court summarily granted it.
    WM Capital also filed two motions for summary judgment.
    First, WM Capital sought summary judgment on the Almeidas' breach
    of contract claim, which the district court granted.6     The district
    court explained that the state court did not acknowledge WM Capital
    as a co-plaintiff and judgment creditor in the Estrada-Rivera case
    until after the Almeidas filed their complaint. Since WM Capital's
    entrance into the state court case was a condition precedent to
    liquidation, the district court reasoned that WM Capital could not
    have been the cause of a failure to liquidate the mortgage notes
    at the time the complaint was filed.     The district court therefore
    granted summary judgment in WM Capital's favor on the Almeidas'
    breach of contract claim.
    WM   Capital's     second   motion   for   summary   judgment
    addressed its claim for specific performance, the sole remaining
    claim in the case.   Having already found the existence of a valid
    contract and having dismissed the Almeidas' right to redemption
    6  While this motion was filed prior to Tenerife's
    joinder, the court granted the motion approximately one year after
    Tenerife's joinder.
    -8-
    and breach of contract claims, the district court held that WM
    Capital was entitled to summary judgment for specific performance
    of the 2014 Agreement.   It then entered a final judgment requiring
    liquidation of the three Kennedy Notes and the GMAC Note, with the
    proceeds   first   distributed   to    WM   Capital   to   satisfy   the
    $2,828,850.11 judgment resolved by the 2014 Agreement and the
    remaining proceeds distributed to appellants.
    On appeal, appellants challenge various aspects of four
    district court orders and the final judgment discussed above. They
    contend that the district court erred when it (1) dismissed the
    Almeidas' right to redemption claim, (2) joined Tenerife under
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 20, (3) granted summary judgment in WM Capital's
    favor on the Almeidas' breach of contract claim, and (4) granted
    summary judgment in WM Capital's favor on its counterclaim for
    specific performance.    Appellants also raise several arguments
    with respect to the district court's final judgment, which largely
    track their arguments regarding summary judgment.
    II. Analysis
    Having carefully considered the record, we affirm the
    four district court orders and the final judgment challenged by
    appellants.    They are addressed below in the order they were
    decided by the district court.
    -9-
    A. Appellants' Right of Redemption Claim
    The   Almeidas    brought   a    claim    against      WM    Capital
    asserting the right of redemption in property under Puerto Rico
    law.    According to the Almeidas, they had the right to purchase WM
    Capital's interest in the 2014 Agreement for the price WM Capital
    had paid the FDIC-R.7          The district court dismissed the right of
    redemption claim pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).                    We review
    the district court's ruling de novo, accepting all well-pleaded
    facts    in   the   operative    complaint     and   drawing   all    reasonable
    inferences in appellants' favor.             Kader v. Sarepta Therapeutics,
    Inc., 
    887 F.3d 48
    , 56 (1st Cir. 2018).8              As this case falls under
    our diversity jurisdiction, we apply the substantive law of Puerto
    Rico.     Rinsky v. Cushman & Wakefield, Inc., 
    918 F.3d 8
    , 16 n.3
    Notably, according to the Almeidas, WM Capital obtained
    7
    the FDIC-R's interest in the 2014 Agreement -- including the
    "undivided one-half interest" in the Kennedy Notes and the GMAC
    Note -- for $92,840.71. Given that the Kennedy Notes and the GMAC
    Note were potentially worth several million dollars, the Almeidas
    had a strong financial incentive to try to consolidate their
    interest in the 2014 Agreement by paying WM Capital the
    comparatively small sum of $92,840.71.
    We consider the text of the 2014 Agreement in reviewing
    8
    the district court's order. Appellants refer to the 2014 Agreement
    in their briefs on appeal. Further, the 2014 Agreement is "central
    to" appellants' right of redemption claim and is "sufficiently
    referred to in the complaint."         Gargano v. Liberty Int'l
    Underwriters, Inc., 
    572 F.3d 45
    , 47 n.1 (1st Cir. 2009) (quoting
    Watterson v. Page, 
    987 F.2d 1
    , 3-4 (1st Cir. 1993)).
    -10-
    (1st Cir. 2019) (quoting Levin v. Dalva Bros., Inc., 
    459 F.3d 68
    ,
    73 (1st Cir. 2006)).
    The right of redemption is essentially the right to
    acquire property.    See Baetjer v. Garzot, 
    124 F.2d 920
     (1st Cir.
    1942).   Under the Civil Code of Puerto Rico, a co-owner of property
    may exercise the right of redemption whenever another co-owner
    transfers ownership to a third party.         
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3922
     ("A co-owner of a thing held in common may exercise the
    redemption in case the shares of all the other co-owners, or of
    any of them, are sold to a third party.").      The co-owner asserting
    this right must purchase the property from the third party for the
    amount paid by the third party plus expenses.         
    Id.
     § 3912.   This
    serves to reduce joint ownership of property, which Puerto Rico
    law disfavors.      Ortiz Roberts v. Ortiz Roberts, 
    3 P.R. Offic. Trans. 876
    , 879 (1975).
    In   determining   whether   the   right   of   redemption   is
    available to appellants, we must first consider the property
    interest at issue.       The 2014 Agreement defines the property
    interest purchased by WM Capital from the FDIC-R as a one-half
    interest in the Kennedy Notes and the GMAC Note.                The 2014
    Agreement does not assign WM Capital rights to the underlying real
    property, nor does it envision that WM Capital will hold its one-
    half interest in the mortgage notes indefinitely.            Instead, WM
    -11-
    Capital's interest is limited to the proceeds from liquidation of
    the   real   property    equal      to    the    amount     owed   under    the     2014
    Agreement.      This interest is described as an "assignment for
    payment" and requires that the parties take steps to sell the
    mortgaged     properties      at    a     foreclosure     auction     "as     soon    as
    possible."      Only    after      the    parties    take    these    steps    is    the
    underlying debt extinguished.
    We agree with the district court that this form of
    property assignment constitutes what is known under Puerto Rico
    law as a pago por cesión de bienes or payment by assignment of
    property.     See 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3179
    .                     Like the 2014
    Agreement, the purpose of a pago por cesión de bienes is to
    "release[] [the debtor] from liability" through the assignment of
    an interest in property.            
    Id.
         Also, like the 2014 Agreement, a
    pago por cesión de bienes extinguishes the debt only after the
    creditor     collects   the     funds      generated    by   the     liquidation      of
    property, with any surplus proceeds transferred back to the debtor.
    Trabal Morales v. Ruiz Rodríguez, 
    125 P.R. Dec. 340
    , 345 n.5
    (1990).
    Puerto Rico courts have not directly addressed whether
    a pago por cesión de bienes constitutes a transfer of ownership
    subject to the right of redemption.                 However, persuasive Spanish
    -12-
    authority holds that it does not.9             There is no dispute that a
    change in property ownership is required to trigger the right of
    redemption.    
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3922
     (allowing redemption
    for "[a] co-owner of a thing held in common").             And with respect
    to an "assignment for payment," one Spanish treatise makes clear
    "[t]here is no acquisition by the creditors of the ownership of
    the assigned property."          I-2 José Puig Brutau, Fundamentos de
    Derecho   Civil   312   (Bosch   ed.,    4th   ed.    1988).   Instead,   the
    creditors take over the property as liquidators of the debtor's
    assets and with the fixed purpose of applying the amount obtained
    to the extinction of the debts.         Id. at 313.    Spanish Supreme Court
    precedent makes this same point.           See id. at 314 (citing Spanish
    Supreme Court Judgment of May 11, 1912, holding that "operations
    . . . do not suppose a change of ownership" where the "debtor
    confers upon the creditors the possession and administration of
    the property in benefit of the transferees, and a mandate to
    proceed with the sale and payment of their respective credits,"
    Puerto Rico's Civil Code is "derived from Spanish law."
    9
    Rivera-Colón v. AT&T Mobility P.R., Inc., 
    913 F.3d 200
    , 209 (1st
    Cir. 2019) (quoting Borschow Hosp. & Med. Supplies v. Cesar
    Castillo Inc., 
    96 F.3d 10
    , 15 (1st Cir. 1996)). Therefore, "[i]n
    interpreting the Civil Code of Puerto Rico . . . authoritative
    commentaries on analogous provisions of the Spanish Civil Code are
    more persuasive than common law analogies, which are inapplicable
    but for purpose of comparative analysis." Republic Sec. Corp. v.
    P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer Auth., 
    674 F.2d 952
    , 958 (1st Cir. 1982).
    -13-
    and citing Spanish Supreme Court Judgment of March 13, 1953,
    reaffirming that assignments of the right to proceeds from a sale
    can occur "without transmission of ownership").
    Appellants do not provide any contrary Puerto Rico or
    Spanish   authority     holding   that    a    pago    por   cesión    de   bienes
    constitutes a transfer in ownership subject to the right of
    redemption.    Instead, appellants argue that the district court's
    order defined the 2014 Agreement as a trust agreement, and that
    property held in trust is subject to the right of redemption.
    There is Puerto Rico case law holding that the right of redemption
    applies to property held in a statutory trust.               Appellants rely on
    Ortiz Roberts, in which the Puerto Rico Supreme Court held that
    where real property is held in a trust, the beneficiaries of the
    trust are akin to "tenants in common."                3 P.R. Offic. Trans. at
    885.   As such, when one beneficiary sells their share in that trust
    to a third party, the other beneficiaries maintain "a right and
    cause of action to redeem the share."            Id. at 886.        This result,
    the Puerto Rico Supreme Court reasoned, aligned with the policy
    behind    redemption,    which    is    "the    extinction     of     the   common
    ownership, or at least the reduction of the number of co-owners."
    Id. at 880.
    The fundamental flaw in appellants' argument is that the
    district court never held that the 2014 Agreement creates trust
    -14-
    obligations, and instead explicitly rejected that argument.10    In
    fact, it likely would have been erroneous for the district court
    to have held that the 2014 Agreement created a trust.
    Trusts in Puerto Rico are governed by the Trust Act, Act
    No. 219 of August 31, 2012, 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 32, §§ 3351
     et
    seq.11   The 2014 Agreement does not comply with the statutory
    requirements for creating a trust.   It does not include an express
    statement of the parties' intention to create a trust -- a key
    requirement under the Trust Act.     See 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 32, §§ 3352
    , 3352a (stating that, among other requirements, "[t]he trust
    instrument shall specify . . . the express statement of the
    intention to create said trust").      The 2014 Agreement is also
    missing other statutorily required information.    See 
    id.
     §§ 3352a
    10 According to the Almeidas, the district court found
    that "the Agreement created a trust and held that, under the laws
    of Puerto Rico, redemption does not apply to participants in a
    trust." That is not accurate. The district court considered the
    Almeidas' argument that the 2014 Agreement created trust
    obligations and summarily rejected it. Appellants do not actually
    challenge that finding before this Court, but rather recast the
    district court's order to suit their purposes and argue that Ortiz
    Roberts applies to that alternative rendition.
    11 Prior to the enactment of the Trust Act, trusts were
    governed by the provisions of Sections 834 through 874 of the
    Puerto Rico Civil Code, which have since been repealed.
    See Section 71 of Act No. 219 of August 31, 2012, codified at 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 2541
    .
    -15-
    (requiring that the "[t]he trust instrument" specify "the name of
    the trust being created"; "the designation of the person who may
    include other assets in the trust . . . and the manner in which
    such other assets may be included"; and "the full and clear
    designation of the trustor, the trustee, and the beneficiary or
    substitutes thereof," among other information).        Furthermore, it
    was not constituted through a deed.       See 
    id.
     § 3352 (requiring
    that a trust be created "through a deed").     Nor are there any well-
    pleaded facts in the second amended complaint (or even elsewhere
    in the record) that the alleged "trust" was recorded in the Special
    Trust Registry, that all statutory requirements related to the
    recordation were complied with, and that the execution of the trust
    was timely notified to the Notarial Inspection Office.         See id.
    § 3351d (stating that, once constituted, the trust "shall be
    recorded in the Special Trust Registry," where the "deed number
    and name of the notary before whom it was executed," among other
    information, shall be stated); id. (requiring that "[t]he notary
    before whom the trust instrument was executed . . . notify the
    same to the Notarial Inspection Office not later than the first
    ten days of the month following the execution thereof").        Because
    the   2014   Agreement   does   not   comply   with   these   statutory
    requirements, any "trust" created under the agreement would be
    -16-
    null.   See id. § 3351d (stating that if the statutory requirements
    are not met, the trust will be deemed null).
    Ortiz Roberts is therefore not binding in this case.
    Moreover, we find that the policy goal addressed by Ortiz Roberts
    -- reducing joint ownership of property through application of the
    right of redemption -- does not apply with equal force here.
    Unlike the trust at issue in Ortiz Roberts, the 2014 Agreement
    operates to liquidate the underlying property "as soon as possible"
    with the end result of extinguishing joint ownership.             The 2014
    Agreement therefore does not raise the same concerns with respect
    to perpetuating joint ownership that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court
    addressed in Ortiz Roberts.
    In sum, we find that the 2014 Agreement is a pago por
    cesión de bienes that does not constitute a change in ownership
    subject to the right of redemption.         Moreover, the 2014 Agreement
    did not create a trust and this case does not raise the same policy
    concerns   with   respect   to   joint    ownership   addressed   in   Ortiz
    Roberts.   The district court's dismissal of appellants' right of
    redemption claim is affirmed.
    -17-
    B. Joinder of Tenerife under Fed. R. Civ. P. 20
    Appellants challenge the district court's joinder of
    Tenerife into this litigation.12       The majority of their arguments
    focus on how Tenerife was not an "indispensable" party under Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 19.   Those arguments are of no consequence, however,
    because the district court denied WM Capital's joinder motion
    brought pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 19 and instead joined Tenerife
    pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 20.    Appellants offer two additional,
    highly abbreviated arguments against joinder, claiming that the
    district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and that joinder
    violated Tenerife's due process rights.      While we typically review
    a district court's joinder decision for abuse of discretion,
    Picciotto v. Cont'l Cas. Co., 
    512 F.3d 9
    , 15 (1st Cir. 2008), we
    review questions of law de novo, Román-Cancel v. United States,
    
    613 F.3d 37
    , 41 (1st Cir. 2010).        We find appellants' arguments
    unpersuasive   and,   with   respect    to   the   due   process   issue,
    insufficiently developed to warrant further review.          See United
    States v. Zannino, 
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1990) ("It is not
    enough merely to mention a possible argument in the most skeletal
    12 WM Capital argues that the Almeidas lack standing to
    raise joinder-related arguments on Tenerife's behalf and that the
    Almeidas forfeited these arguments by failing to object to joinder
    before the district court. Given that we find the same arguments
    raised by Tenerife fail, we need not resolve these standing and
    forfeiture issues with respect to the Almeidas.
    -18-
    way, leaving the court to do [the] work, create the ossature for
    the argument, and put flesh on its bones.").
    Appellants     first    argue    that    the    dispute   between      WM
    Capital and Tenerife is "fictitious" such that the district court
    lacked subject matter jurisdiction.                Appellants assert that WM
    Capital, by joining Tenerife as a plaintiff, is "suing itself on
    behalf of Tenerife, creating a fictitious controversy on the
    pleadings."      Appellants do not develop this point further, leaving
    this Court largely to speculate how Tenerife's joinder raises
    subject matter jurisdiction concerns.13              While the briefs are not
    helpful in making clear their point, we are mindful that federal
    courts have sua sponte recognized that they lack jurisdiction "when
    the   controversy    is   no    longer    'live'    or     the   parties   'lack    a
    legal[ly]     cognizable       interest   in   the       outcome,'"    Shelby      v.
    Superformance Int'l, Inc., 
    435 F.3d 42
    , 45 (1st Cir. 2006) (quoting
    Ortiz–Gonzalez v. Fonovisa, 
    277 F.3d 59
    , 64 (1st Cir. 2002)), and
    have accordingly dismissed such claims.              If this is the challenge
    appellants are attempting to make, they cannot succeed.                         The
    disputes in this case are neither dead nor lacking an outcome-
    interested litigant.           Most notably     here,       WM Capital     filed a
    This Court has an independent duty to assess the
    13
    existence of subject matter jurisdiction.    Espinal-Domínguez v.
    Puerto Rico, 
    352 F.3d 490
    , 495 (1st Cir. 2003).
    -19-
    counterclaim alleging that Tenerife breached the 2014 Agreement,
    and Tenerife filed an answer to that counterclaim denying the
    allegations and asserting affirmative defenses.                 These pleadings
    evidence an active dispute as to the proper operation of the 2014
    Agreement,        and    appellants'     arguments    fail   to    provide    an
    identifiable basis for labeling this dispute as "fictitious."
    Seeing no such basis on our own review,14 appellants' arguments
    regarding subject matter jurisdiction fail.
    Appellants next argue that Tenerife's joinder deprived
    Tenerife of due process, because it occurred after the district
    court already ruled on several issues in this case.                  Joining a
    party in the middle of litigation is not inherently impermissible,
    and there are some instances where even post-judgment joinder is
    appropriate.       See Perry v. Blum, 
    629 F.3d 1
    , 16–17 (1st Cir. 2010).
    We must therefore look to appellants for an explanation of why
    they deem the process in this particular case insufficient.                   
    Id.
    In doing so, appellants must demonstrate that the lower court
    failed to "comport with the strictures of due process," such as by
    failing to provide "notice" or "an opportunity to be heard at a
    meaningful        time   and   in   a   meaningful   manner."      
    Id. at 16
    .
    We note that the district court persuasively addressed
    14
    other challenges to subject matter jurisdiction below, and
    appellants have not raised specific challenges to the district
    court's reasoning on those points.
    -20-
    Generally, appellants must demonstrate that this alleged lack of
    process caused "prejudice," such that the "abridgement of due
    process is likely to have affected the outcome of the proceedings."
    Amouri v. Holder, 
    572 F.3d 29
    , 36 (1st Cir. 2009) (quoting Pulisir
    v. Mukasey, 
    524 F.3d 302
    , 311 (1st Cir. 2008)).
    In this endeavor we find appellants' arguments entirely
    lacking.    As to whether the district court failed to provide
    sufficient process in deciding to join Tenerife as a plaintiff,
    appellants' arguments are highly abbreviated and contain factual
    misstatements.15   Moreover, on the issue of prejudice, there is no
    explanation for how the district court's joinder decision was
    "likely to have affected the outcome of the proceedings."   Id. at
    36.   Lastly, but importantly, appellants' opening briefs are
    unaccompanied by a single citation to legal authority addressing
    the issue of joinder and due process.      More is required on an
    appeal to this Court.    Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(8)(A) (appellant's
    15For instance, appellants allege that the district
    court permitted WM Capital to "select[]" Tenerife's complaint,
    causes of action, and the requested remedy. This is not accurate
    -- the district court merely granted WM Capital's joinder motion,
    and Tenerife did not subsequently seek to assert claims on its own
    behalf. Appellants also allege that Tenerife was "never notified"
    of this litigation.    Of course, Tenerife was joined into the
    litigation and at that point was on notice of the proceedings.
    But moreover, given that the Almeidas initiated this litigation
    and also created and exert control over Tenerife, the notion that
    this litigation was proceeding totally unbeknownst to Tenerife is
    specious at best.
    -21-
    brief "must contain . . . appellant's contentions and the reasons
    for them, with citations to the authorities and parts of the record
    on which the appellant relies"); cf. Paterson-Leitch Co. v. Mass.
    Mun. Wholesale Elec. Co., 
    840 F.2d 985
    , 990 (1st Cir. 1988) (a
    litigant must "spell out its arguments squarely and distinctly"
    and may not present an argument "bereft of meaningful citation to
    authority").   Under these circumstances, we find that appellants'
    due process arguments must fail.       Zannino, 
    895 F.2d at 17
     (an
    argument is "waived" if "adverted to in a perfunctory manner,
    unaccompanied by some effort at developed argumentation").
    C. Appellants' Breach of Contract Claim
    Appellants argue that the district court erroneously
    dismissed their breach of contract claim on summary judgment and
    prior to sufficient discovery.        The Almeidas' second amended
    complaint alleged that the FDIC-R breached the 2014 Agreement.
    The FDIC-R purportedly failed to promptly conduct an environmental
    impact study, resulting in a delay in the liquidation of the
    mortgage notes.   According to the complaint, this delay continued
    "until the commencement of the present case" on January 22, 2016.
    The delay, say the appellants, constituted a contract breach that
    caused them damages, a disputed issue that should have been left
    to a jury to decide.
    -22-
    The district court saw things differently and held that
    the breach of contract claim failed as a matter of law.                We review
    that determination de novo, construing the record in the light
    most    favorable   to    appellants      and      resolving   all   reasonable
    inferences in their favor.       Miller v. Sunapee Difference, LLC, 
    918 F.3d 172
    , 176 (1st Cir. 2019).          For the reasons below, we affirm.
    Under Puerto Rico law, "[w]here the terms of a contract
    are    clear,   leaving   no   doubt    as    to   the   contracting   parties'
    intentions, such contract will be observed according to 'the
    literal sense of its stipulations.'"            Markel Am. Ins. Co. v. Díaz-
    Santiago, 
    674 F.3d 21
    , 31 (1st Cir. 2012) (quoting 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3471
    ).         With respect to appellants' claim that WM
    Capital is responsible for a delay in the property sale, the
    relevant contractual provisions are clear.                 The 2014 Agreement
    requires a foreclosure sale and liquidation of the associated
    mortgage    notes   "as   soon   as    possible."         However,   there   are
    conditions precedent to that sale and liquidation.               One condition
    is that the Puerto Rico state court must first amend its judgment
    in the Estrada-Rivera case to recognize the FDIC-R as a "co-
    plaintiff and judgment creditor."             Another condition is that the
    FDIC-R must facilitate an environmental site assessment.                     The
    fulfillment of both conditions is required prior to sale.
    -23-
    Based    on   this    straightforward         reading   of   the   2014
    Agreement, we find that the district court properly dismissed
    appellants' breach of contract claim.               A cognizable claim for
    breach of contract under Puerto Rico law requires sufficient
    allegations of a breach of the contractual terms and that the
    breach caused an identifiable harm.              Mattei Nazario v. Vélez &
    Asociados, 
    145 P.R. Dec. 508
     (1998) (a breach of contract claim
    arises "when the breach of a contractual obligation causes harm to
    any of the contracting parties"). In this case, the 2014 Agreement
    only allowed the parties to move forward with the property sale
    after the state court amended its judgment.             Therefore, the breach
    alleged by appellants (a delay in conducting the environmental
    impact study) could only have caused the alleged harm (a delay in
    the sale of the properties), at the earliest, starting on February
    11,   2016,   when      the    state     court     amended     its     judgment.
    Problematically for appellants, the operative complaint does not
    allege that the FDIC-R caused a delay that extended to February
    11, 2016, or beyond.        Instead, the complaint alleges actions that
    delayed the sale up until "the commencement of the present case,"
    which occurred on January 22, 2016.
    Simply     put,     delaying    the    sale   of   property    through
    January 22, 2016, could not have caused the harm alleged by
    appellants where the sale of property was prohibited prior to
    -24-
    February 11, 2016, in any event.          The Almeidas could have sought
    to   supplement   their    complaint,     if   appropriate,   to   include
    allegations that the FDIC-R caused a delay beyond February 11,
    2016.   See Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(d).             But no such supplemental
    complaint was filed.      Instead, the second amended complaint, filed
    on May 10, 2016, maintained that the FDIC-R's failure to conduct
    an environmental impact study caused a delay in the property sale
    only through January 22, 2016.            The breach of contract claim
    therefore fails to allege a plausible theory of liability, and
    this failure provides a sufficient basis to affirm the district
    court's dismissal of that claim.        See RSA Media, Inc. v. AK Media
    Grp., Inc., 
    260 F.3d 10
    , 16 (1st Cir. 2001) (summary judgment
    appropriate absent a plausible theory of causation and evidence
    thereof).
    D. WM Capital's Specific Performance Claim and the Final
    Judgment
    The last challenge brought by appellants is to the
    district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of WM Capital
    on its claim for specific performance.            WM Capital's specific
    performance claim alleged that the 2014 Agreement requires the
    liquidation of both the Kennedy Notes and the GMAC Note with the
    funds stemming from that liquidation paid first to WM Capital.          WM
    Capital moved for summary judgment, which the district court
    -25-
    granted.    The district court thereafter entered a final judgment
    requiring    appellants   to   comply    with   the   2014   Agreement   as
    interpreted by the district court.       Appellants single out the GMAC
    Note and primarily argue that the district court erred in holding
    that the 2014 Agreement unambiguously requires its liquidation
    with the resulting proceeds going first to WM Capital.          They argue
    they should have been afforded a trial to resolve whether the
    court's understanding of the agreement is correct.16              For the
    reasons below, we affirm the district court's decision.
    In addressing this issue, the district court first
    determined that the 2014 Agreement was unambiguous as to the
    As the district court observed below, appellants have
    16
    not pointed to any specific contract language that they claim is
    ambiguous such that a trial is necessary. On appeal, appellants
    continue to provide little explanation of what ambiguity in the
    2014 Agreement must be resolved at trial.      The Almeidas' brief
    does not argue any specific portion of the 2014 Agreement is
    ambiguous, and Tenerife's argument on this point is sparse.
    Tenerife correctly observes that there is a disagreement between
    appellants and WM Capital as to whether the GMAC Note is governed
    by the 2014 Agreement. According to Tenerife, the district court
    "should have considered [this disagreement] to be sufficient to
    establish a material controversy of an essential fact since the
    terms of the Agreement are then ambiguous enough to deny summary
    judgment and proceed with a trial on the merits to present evidence
    as to the intent of the parties."      As best we can understand,
    Tenerife is arguing that the parties' disagreement as to the
    requirements of the 2014 Agreement demonstrates that the 2014
    Agreement must be ambiguous. As we explain, because we find no
    ambiguity in the relevant sections of the 2014 Agreement, this
    argument must fail.
    -26-
    handling of the GMAC Note.     According to the district court, the
    plain language of the contract assigned to the FDIC-R an undivided
    one-half interest in the "Kennedy Notes" and the "GMAC Note."17
    Further, the parties agreed to facilitate a liquidation of the
    mortgage notes through a sale of the underlying properties, with
    the proceeds of the sale going first to FDIC-R to satisfy its
    judgment against appellants.18 Appellants, including Tenerife (the
    17    Paragraph 3.1.2 reads:
    Borrower, Co-Holders and Tenerife hereby assign to the
    FDIC-R, as of the Effective Date of this Agreement, an
    undivided one-half interest in each of the Kennedy
    Notes, GMAC Note, and GMAC Judgment. The Kennedy Notes
    and GMAC Note will be consigned by the FDIC-R, Co-Holders
    and Borrower to the State Court in the Foreclosure Action
    as of the date of the execution of this Agreement until:
    (i) the sale of Kennedy Property, (ii) termination of
    this Agreement under Section 3.2 below, (iii) or
    cancellation of the Kennedy Notes and GMAC Notes. While
    the Kennedy Notes and GMAC Note are consigned to the
    State Court, the Parties and any potential purchaser of
    the Kennedy Property accompanied by one or more of the
    Parties may obtain access to inspect such notes.
    18   Paragraph 3.1.3 reads:
    To evidence the FDIC-R's one-half interest in the
    Kennedy Notes given as assignment for payment ("Dación
    o Cesión para Pago"), the Parties will immediately file
    in the Foreclosure Action a joint motion, in the form
    attached hereto as Exhibit 1, requesting that the
    judgment entered in that case be amended to include FDIC-
    R as co-plaintiff and judgment creditor.      As soon as
    such amended judgment is entered, the Parties, subject
    to Section 3.2 below, will seek without delay and use
    their best efforts to conduct the Foreclosure Auction as
    soon as possible.
    -27-
    entity that controls the GMAC Note), signed the 2014 Agreement.
    As such, appellants agreed that they had read the agreement,
    understood its contents, and were entering into it voluntarily.19
    Relying on this reading of the 2014 Agreement, and having
    already dismissed appellants' causes of action, the district court
    explained why specific performance was warranted.       This task was
    not a heavy lift.    As noted by the district court, Puerto Rico law
    provides for specific performance of a valid contract.       See 
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3052
    .     The district court therefore granted
    summary judgment in favor of WM Capital and entered a final
    judgment that tracked the terms of the 2014 Agreement.      The final
    judgment required appellants to take steps "to foreclose on the
    Paragraph 3.1.7 reads, in relevant part:
    In the event that a third party purchases the Kennedy
    Property at the Foreclosure Auction for the Minimum Bid
    Amount, the proceeds of such sale up to the full amount
    of the Judgment will be immediately paid first to the
    FDIC-R as full satisfaction of the Judgment.      FDIC-R
    will then deliver or otherwise assign, as necessary, any
    excess sale proceeds to Borrower and Co-Holders.
    19   Paragraph 3.3 reads, in relevant part:
    The Parties each represent and warrant that it has read
    this Agreement and knows and understands its contents
    fully and has voluntarily executed this Agreement after
    having had the opportunity to consult with counsel of
    their choosing, and without being pressured or
    influenced by any representation of any person acting on
    behalf of either party.
    -28-
    four     mortgage    notes    identified          in   paragraph      3.1.2   of   the
    Agreement," including the GMAC Note, "and sell the encumbered
    Kennedy property via public auction as provided for under the
    Agreement."     Further, as required by paragraph 3.1.3 of the 2014
    Agreement, WM Capital was given first priority in payment from the
    proceeds of the sale.
    Upon our own review, we agree with the district court's
    interpretation of the relevant contract language.                      In short, the
    2014   Agreement,     to     which    Tenerife         is   a   signatory,    clearly
    contemplates the liquidation of both the Kennedy Notes and the
    GMAC Note with first priority from the proceeds going to WM
    Capital. In the absence of any ambiguity in the terms of the 2014
    Agreement, the district court properly enforced its plain meaning
    at summary judgment.         Torres Vargas v. Santiago Cummings, 
    149 F.3d 29
    , 33 (1st Cir. 1998); see also Vulcan Tools of P.R. v. Makita
    USA, Inc., 
    23 F.3d 564
    , 567 (1st Cir. 1994) ("When an agreement
    leaves no doubt as to the intention of the parties, a court should
    not look beyond the literal terms of the contract." (citing Marina
    Indus. Inc. v. Brown Boveri Corp., 
    114 P.R. Dec. 64
    , 72 (1983))).
    Furthermore, given the clear language of the 2014 Agreement, and
    having     already    affirmed       the     district       court's    dismissal   of
    appellants' claims, we find that the district court properly
    -29-
    ordered specific performance of the terms of that contract.    See
    
    P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3052.20
    20 Appellants make several other arguments, none of which
    merits substantial discussion. Appellants claim that WM Capital
    failed to file a sworn statement with its summary judgment motion.
    But this is of no consequence, as the question before the district
    court was one of contract interpretation, and the parties both
    submitted identical copies of the 2014 Agreement. Appellants also
    make the sweeping claim that the district court erred when it
    "decided every factual issue."        However, appellants neither
    identify the specific factual disputes allegedly resolved in error
    nor explain how those factual disputes are "material" to WM
    Capital's specific performance claim. Borges ex rel. S.M.B.W. v.
    Serrano-Isern, 
    605 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 2010) (facts are "material"
    only if they have "the potential to change the outcome of the
    suit").   Appellants next argue that the district court did not
    properly account for the "deceit" and "fraud" allegedly committed
    by WM Capital. But as the district court noted below, appellants
    have not identified any record evidence to support this allegation,
    and this fact alone dooms appellants' argument under Puerto Rico
    law.   See Citibank Glob. Mkts., Inc. v. Rodríguez Santana, 
    573 F.3d 17
    , 29 (1st Cir. 2009) (Puerto Rico law presumes "good faith"
    by contracting parties and therefore requires a party seeking to
    invalidate a contract based on contractual deceit to "rebut the
    presumption of good faith with evidence of intentional fault or
    bad faith"). Lastly, appellants attack the district court's final
    judgment.   These arguments largely track appellants' attacks on
    the district court's summary judgment decision, and they fail for
    the same reasons. Additionally, appellants had the opportunity to
    object to the final judgment before the district court and failed
    to do so. Appellants are therefore prohibited from raising these
    objections on appeal.    Rockwood v. SKF USA Inc., 
    687 F.3d 1
    , 9
    (1st Cir. 2012) ("Our case law is clear that 'arguments not raised
    in the district court cannot be raised for the first time on
    appeal.'" (quoting Sierra Club v. Wagner, 
    555 F.3d 21
    , 26 (1st
    Cir. 2009))).
    -30-
    III. Conclusion
    For   the   reasons   stated   above,   we   disagree   with
    appellants' challenges to the district court orders and final
    judgment.    We affirm.
    We deny WM Capital's motion for sanctions.        All other
    pending motions are denied as moot.
    -31-