ELIZABETH K. DILLON, District Judge.
Pending before the court is a motion by plaintiff Carnell Construction Corporation (Carnell), in which it seeks to "collaterally estop Defendant/Counterclaimant Danville Redevelopment & Housing Authority [(DRHA)] from raising, arguing, or relitigating issues the jury decided at the third trial." (Dkt. No. 833.) The motion is fully briefed and ripe for disposition. For the reasons discussed below, the court will grant the motion insofar as it requests a ruling that the issues to be tried have been narrowed by prior proceedings in this case. The motion does not seek the exclusion of any specific evidence, however, and thus the court's ruling herein is not an evidentiary one. The parties may file any motions to exclude evidence at the fourth trial by the deadline set forth in the court's scheduling order.
This case was appealed after a third jury trial.
In its collateral estoppel motion, Carnell argues that the jury in the third trial decided three issues, that none of those three issues were challenged on appeal, and thus that DRHA should not be allowed to contest those issues again. (Dkt. No. 833 at 1, Dkt. No. 834 at 5.) The issues identified by Carnell as conclusively established are that: "(1) Carnell complied with its contract; (2) DRHA breached its contract by failing to pay Carnell for extra work it performed; and (3) DRHA removed Carnell from the project without just cause." (Dkt. No. 833 at 1.)
In its brief, two-page response, DRHA states that it "does not dispute Carnell's articulation of the doctrine of collateral estoppel." (Dkt. No. 841 at 2.) DRHA complains, though, that Carnell has failed to identify the actual evidence it contends may be inadmissible by application of the collateral estoppel doctrine, and that absent such identification, DRHA is unable to "substantively respond" to the motion. (Id.) DRHA requests that the court deny the motion, but states that if Carnell identifies specific evidence it seeks to exclude based on collateral estoppel, DRHA wants an the opportunity to respond. (Id.)
In reply, Carnell that it has no obligation to specify what evidence should be excluded from trial; instead, collateral estoppel precludes relitigation of the issues Carnell has identified, not any specific evidence. (Dkt. No. 842 at 1-2.) It reiterates its request for a ruling "that Defendants may neither raise, argue, nor relitigate the issues of whether Carnell complied with the contract in question, whether Defendants breached the contract by failing to pay Carnell for extra work, and whether Defendants had any just cause in terminating Carnell from the project." (Id. at 3.)
At the outset, the court notes its agreement with the general principle that the issues identified by Carnell are not part of the upcoming trial. As Carnell notes—and DRHA does not dispute—these issues have been decided in this case and as between these parties. Whether analyzed under the doctrine of collateral estoppel,
The effect that the limited scope of the retrial will have on the presentation of specific evidence is not raised by Carnell's motion. Obviously, there is a factual overlap in this case between the race discrimination and retaliation claims, which are being retried, and liability for the contract claims, which are not being retried. Thus, some of the same evidence that would have supported the contract claims and defenses may also be relevant to the race discrimination and retaliation claims. In apparent recognition of this fact, DRHA's response asks for a more specific request from Carnell as to the evidence that Carnell seeks to exclude from the fourth trial. (See generally Dkt. No. 841.) In reply, Carnell has not identified any.
The court does not render any evidentiary rulings as part of its ruling on the collateral estoppel motion, but the parties may file motions in limine at the appropriate time to resolve more specifically the issue of what evidence, if any, should be precluded due to the limited nature of the claims to be retried. Additionally, as part of their proposed jury instructions, the parties may want to suggest an instruction to the jury concerning issues that have already been addressed and decided in the case.
For the foregoing reasons, Carnell's motion will be GRANTED insofar as it seeks to preclude litigation of the issues it identifies. The court does not make any specific evidentiary rulings herein.