LESLIE E. KOBAYASHI, District Judge.
Before the Court is Defendant Hawaii Aviation Contract Services, Inc.'s ("HACS") Motion to Dismiss this Action with Prejudice ("Motion"), filed on March 5, 2012. HACS also filed a supplemental memorandum in support of the Motion on April 16, 2012. Plaintiff Bruce G. Schoggen ("Plaintiff") filed his memorandum in opposition on April 23, 2012, and HACS filed its reply on April 27, 2012. This matter came on for hearing on June 4, 2012. Appearing on behalf of HACS was Carl Osaki, Esq., and appearing on behalf of Plaintiff, who was present, was Ira Dennis Hawver, Esq. After careful consideration of the Motion, supporting and opposing memoranda, and the arguments of counsel, HACS's Motion is HEREBY GRANTED because res judicata bars all of Plaintiff's claims for the reasons set forth below.
Plaintiff was employed by HACS pursuant to a "Pilot Contract" dated January 27, 1993. Pursuant to the automatic renewal provision, Plaintiff renewed the Pilot Contract in 1998 and 2003. [Complaint at ¶¶ 6-8.] The instant case arises from HACS's termination of Plaintiff's Pilot Contract in September 2004 for medical reasons. Plaintiff denies that HACS had a valid basis to terminate the Pilot Contract. [
Pursuant to the Pilot Contract's mandatory arbitration clause, Plaintiff filed a motion in this district court to compel arbitration. Then-Chief United States District Judge David Alan Ezra granted the motion on May 17, 2005. His order stated that Plaintiff could file a new action in this district court if issues remained after the arbitration.
The arbitration hearing went forward on September 26 and 27, 2006. The arbitrator issued a Partial Final Award of Arbitration dated November 13, 2006 ("November 2006 Award"), finding, inter alia, that HACS's termination of Plaintiff breached the Pilot Contract.
The arbitrator issued the Final Award of Arbitrator on March 5, 2007 ("Final Award").
Plaintiff states that, since the Final Award, HACS has neither allowed him to work nor paid him pursuant to the Pilot Contract. Plaintiff argues that his termination constitutes age discrimination because it occurred shortly before his sixtieth birthday. Plaintiff also argues that his termination constitutes disability discrimination because HACS breached the Pilot Contract during a time when HACS claimed Plaintiff suffered from a medical disability. [
At issue in the instant Motion is whether the res judicata, or claim preclusion, doctrine bars Plaintiff's claims in the instant case. This Court concludes that Plaintiff's claims are barred.
HACS asks this Court to take judicial notice of the proceedings in the Compel Action and the proceedings in the action to confirm the arbitration award,
The Ninth Circuit has recognized that an arbitration decision can have res judicata or collateral estoppel effect.
Both Plaintiff and HACS were parties in the Compel Action, the arbitration proceedings, and the Confirmation Action. Plaintiff's complaint in the Compel Action, [HACS's Suppl. Mem., Aff. of Carl H. Osaki, Exh. A,] is virtually identical to the Complaint in the instant case, and the two complaints allege the same causes of action. Thus, Plaintiff asserted all of the grounds for recovery which he now asserts in this action in the Compel Action. Insofar as Judge Ezra granted Plaintiff's petition to compel arbitration, Plaintiff could have brought all of those claims in the arbitration proceedings. Plaintiff, however,
[Confirmation Order at 3.] Res judicata therefore bars Plaintiff's claims in the instant case if the prior actions and the instant case are based on the same cause of action.
First, allowing Plaintiff to prosecute the claims in the instant case would destroy or impair the rights and interests that the arbitrator determined in the arbitration proceeding and that Judge Mollway confirmed in the Confirmation Action. For example, insofar as the Final Award denied Plaintiff's Motion for Front Pay Award and Judge Mollway confirmed the Final Award, awarding front pay in the instant case would destroy the rights determined in the prior actions. This Court also emphasizes that, in the Confirmation Action, Plaintiff did not move to have any part of the arbitration awards vacated or modified.
Second, if the Court allowed Plaintiff to proceed in this case, he would present substantially the same evidence that he presented when he sought front pay in the arbitration proceedings. Plaintiff also would have presented substantially the same evidence in the Confirmation Action if he had sought to vacate or modify the portion of the Final Award denying his request for front pay.
Finally, the Court finds that all of the relevant proceedings arose from HACS's improper termination of Plaintiff's Pilot Contract and from Plaintiff's allegation that HACS failed to provide him with all of the relief awarded in the arbitration proceedings. Thus, the arbitration proceedings, the Confirmation Action, and the instant case satisfy both the third element of the
This Court therefore FINDS that the arbitration proceedings and the Confirmation Action involved "the same parties on the same cause of action."
On the basis of the foregoing, HACS's Motion to Dismiss this Action with Prejudice, filed March 5, 2012, is HEREBY GRANTED. The Court directs the Clerk's Office to enter judgment in favor of HACS on all claims.
IT IS SO ORDERED.