GARCIA, J.
Nearly 10 years ago, following an unsuccessful investment venture, the parties began litigating their dispute in federal court. The district court entered judgment in favor of Paramount Pictures Corporation — the defendant in that action — and that judgment was affirmed on appeal. Paramount — now the plaintiff — subsequently initiated this state court action. In this appeal, defendants assert that Paramount's claim is barred by res judicata because it should have been asserted as a counterclaim in the earlier federal action. We agree.
In 2004, Melrose Investors LLC was formed as a special purpose vehicle to facilitate investment in certain films produced and distributed by plaintiff Paramount Pictures Corporation. Defendants Allianz Risk Transfer AG, Marathon Structured Finance Fund, L.P., Newstar Financial Inc., and Munich Re Capital Markets New York, Inc. (the investors) invested in Melrose's debt and equity.
Prior to investing, the parties exchanged and executed a number of documents, including a private placement memorandum (PPM) and a subscription agreement. The subscription agreement contained a number of representations and warranties, including, among others, a waiver provision and a covenant not to sue. Section 4 (s) of the subscription agreement provided that Paramount had not "made any express or implied representation, warranty, guarantee or agreement, written or oral" to the investors regarding a number of specified matters — for instance, the manner of distribution of any films. The next paragraph, section 4 (t), provided that each investor "waives and releases all claims against Paramount" or any of its affiliates "arising out of, or in connection with, the offering of the Securities," and further "waives and releases Paramount"
In December 2008, the investors brought suit in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, asserting claims for securities fraud (a federal question), common-law fraud (a state-law cause of action), and unjust enrichment (a state-law cause of action).
Following a bench trial, Paramount moved for entry of judgment in its favor. The district court granted Paramount's motion, finding "no basis for disregarding the subscription agreement" and "no legal reason why th[e] claim waiver would not apply as a matter of law." Because the waiver was "valid and enforceable," the court determined that "plaintiff investors waived their claims." The court further noted: "In paragraph 4
While the investors' appeal was pending in the Second Circuit, Paramount commenced this action in Supreme Court, alleging that the investors had breached the covenant not to sue in the subscription agreement by filing the federal action.
Supreme Court denied the investors' motion to dismiss. The court "decline[d] to apply FRCP 13 (a)'s compulsory counterclaim rule to support [the investors'] res judicata defense," reasoning that New York "has a permissive counterclaim rule that was enacted by the legislature," and it would "not be proper" to ignore that rule.
The Appellate Division unanimously reversed, granting the investors' motion and dismissing Paramount's complaint (Paramount Pictures Corp. v Allianz Risk Transfer AG, 141 A.D.3d 464 [1st Dept 2016]). While noting that "New York's permissive counterclaim rule would save [Paramount's claim] from the traditional bar of res judicata," the court determined that "the inquiry does not end there where the prior action was adjudicated in a compulsory counterclaim jurisdiction" (id. at 467). The Court then determined that Paramount's claim was compulsory under rule 13 (a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure because "[i]t existed at the time [Paramount] served its answer to the complaint in the federal action and `arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter' of defendants' federal claim(s)" (id. [citations omitted]). Though it
We granted Paramount's motion for leave to appeal (28 N.Y.3d 909 [2016]).
The viability of Paramount's instant claim hinges on the preclusive effect of the parties' prior federal judgment. As the United States Supreme Court has instructed, "[t]he preclusive effect of a federal-court judgment" on a subsequent state court action is "determined by federal common law" (Taylor v Sturgell, 553 U.S. 880, 891 [2008]; see also Semtek Int'l Inc. v Lockheed Martin Corp., 531 U.S. 497, 507 [2001], quoting Deposit Bank v Frankfort, 191 U.S. 499, 514-515 [1903]). "For judgments in federal-question cases," the "uniform federal rules of res judicata" apply (Taylor, 553 US at 891 [internal quotation marks and brackets omitted]) whereas, "[f]or judgments in diversity cases, federal law incorporates the rules of preclusion applied by the State in which the rendering court sits" (id. at 891 n 4, citing Semtek, 531 US at 508). The United States Supreme Court "has the last word on the claim-preclusive effect of all federal judgments" (Semtek, 531 US at 507).
The Supreme Court has not squarely addressed the applicable federally prescribed rule of decision — the uniform federal rules or state preclusion law — in a case where, as here, the judgment in the parties' federal action encompassed both federal- and state-law claims.
In the absence of a federal question claim, the res judicata rules of New York — the "State in which the [rendering] court" sat — would ordinarily govern the preclusive effect of state-law claims (Semtek, 531 US at 508). But "even when States are allowed to give federal judgments ... no more than the effect accorded to state judgments" — i.e., in diversity cases — "that disposition is by direction of [the United States Supreme Court], which has the last word on the claim-preclusive effect of all federal judgments" (Semtek, 531 US at 507). As such, the Supreme Court has provided that state preclusion law may apply to federal diversity judgments only to the extent state law is not "incompatible with federal interests" (id. at 509).
Those federal interests are heightened where, as here, the federal judgment encapsulates matters of federal substantive law. In addition to the general interests underlying res judicata — judicial economy, finality, consistency, among other things — the "need for a uniform federal rule" is enhanced where federal, rather than state, substantive law is at issue (id. at 508). Given those objectives, the Supreme Court has been unequivocal: Though "no federal textual provision addresses the claim-preclusive effect of a federal-court judgment in a federal-question case," the Court has "long held that States cannot give those judgments merely whatever effect they would give their own judgments, but must accord them the effect that this Court prescribes" (id. at 507; see also Taylor, 553 US at 891).
In federal court, rule 13 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs the pleading requirements for counterclaims, requiring a defendant to plead certain related claims. Specifically, rule 13 (a) provides, in relevant part, that a counterclaim is compulsory if it "arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party's claim" (Fed Rules Civ Pro rule 13 [a] [1] [A]). Although the text of rule 13 (a) does not explain the consequences for failure to plead a compulsory counterclaim, "virtually all courts agree that a party who fails to plead a compulsory counterclaim cannot raise that claim in a subsequent action" in federal court (Michael D. Conway, Narrowing the Scope of Rule 13[a], 60 U Chi L Rev 141, 141 [1993]; 6 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 1417, Compulsory Counterclaims — Effect of Failing to Plead a Compulsory Counterclaim [3d ed 2010]). The rule itself and its accompanying Advisory Committee Notes are "silent on whether Rule 13 (a) was intended to be a rule of administration for the federal courts or was expected to have wider application" — namely, in state court actions (Wright § 1417).
The preclusive effect of a judgment is determined by two related but distinct concepts — issue preclusion and claim preclusion — which collectively comprise the doctrine of "res judicata" (see Taylor, 553 US at 892). Issue preclusion, also known as collateral estoppel, bars the relitigation of "an issue of fact or law actually litigated and resolved in a valid court determination essential to the prior judgment" (New Hampshire v Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 748-749 [2001]; see also Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 27). As a result, the determination of an essential issue is binding in a subsequent action, even if it recurs in the context of a different claim (Taylor, 553 US at 892).
While issue preclusion applies only to issues actually litigated, claim preclusion (sometimes used interchangeably with "res judicata") more broadly bars the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action (Cromwell v County of Sac, 94 U.S. 351, 352 [1877]). The doctrine "encompasses the law of merger and bar" — it precludes the relitigation of all claims falling within the scope of the judgment, regardless of whether or not those claims were in fact litigated (Migra v Warren City School Dist. Bd. of Ed., 465 U.S. 75, 77 n 1 [1984]; Monahan v New York City Dept. of Corr., 214 F.3d 275, 285 [2d Cir 2000]; Wright § 1417). As such, claim preclusion serves to bar not only "every matter which was offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim or demand," but also "any other admissible matter which might have been offered for that purpose" (Nevada v United States,
Collectively, these doctrines serve to "relieve parties of the cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve judicial resources, and, by preventing inconsistent decisions, encourage reliance on adjudication" (Allen v McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94 [1980]). By promoting consolidation, res judicata shields litigants from undue harassment and protects against the substantial time and expense associated with needless and repetitive litigation (Taylor, 553 US at 892; see also Allan D. Vestal, Res Judicata/Preclusion by Judgment: The Law Applied in Federal Courts, 66 Mich L Rev 1723, 1723 [1968]). The reduction of duplicative proceedings similarly furthers the goals of convenience, efficiency and judicial economy — the same trial court presides over unified discovery, all relevant motions, and a single trial (Allen, 449 US at 94; Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 156). Res judicata also preserves the integrity of the courts by fostering finality and minimizing the risk of conflicting judgments, which serve only to undermine public confidence in the judicial process (see Nevada, 463 US at 128-129; Vestal, 66 Mich L Rev at 1723; Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 162).
Invoking the doctrine of claim preclusion, the investors contend that Paramount's covenant not to sue claim should have been litigated in the prior federal action, and therefore Paramount's state court action is barred.
The Supreme Court has not articulated a precise test for determining whether there is an identity of claims for purposes
The common-law doctrine of claim preclusion mirrored these limitations. For purposes of res judicata, case law focused on the precise "cause of action" asserted in the two suits (see United States v Memphis Cotton Oil Co., 288 U.S. 62, 67-68 [1933]; see also In re General Adjudication of All Rights to Use Water in Gila Riv. Sys. & Source, 212 Ariz. 64, 70, 127 P.3d 882, 888 [2006]) and, guided by the aim of pleading — "to frame one single legal issue" — that phrase came to have "a very narrow meaning" (Williamson, 186 F2d at 469). Indeed,
One version of the test, for instance, examined the "primary right" of the plaintiff that had allegedly been infringed, and scrutinized whether the two actions involved an alleged infringement of that same legal right by the same wrongful act or omission (see Wagner, 82 ALR Fed 829, § 2 [a]; Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 24, Comment a; Baltimore S. S. Co. v Phillips, 274 U.S. 316, 321 [1927]). Another test focused on whether the same evidence that was considered in the first judgment would sustain the second (see Nevada, 463 US at 130 n 12; see also Wagner, 82 ALR Fed 829, § 2 [a]; Restatement [First] of Judgments § 61). These narrow conceptions of a "claim" limited the effects of res judicata, enabling piecemeal litigation with minimal risk of preclusion (see Williamson, 186 F2d at 469; Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 24, Comment a).
But "[d]efinitions of what constitutes the `same cause of action'" for purposes of claim preclusion "have not remained static over time" (Nevada, 463 US at 130 [citations omitted]). Increasingly, modern practice has placed a premium on the policies underlying res judicata — notions of efficiency, finality, and judicial economy, among other things. The earlier common-law rule favoring claim isolation and party autonomy has been gradually supplanted by a new "general philosophy" — one of "limiting the number of law suits possible over one controversy" (Proceedings of the American Bar Association Institute at 247). In response to these evolving procedural ideas, courts have broadened preclusion principles to "apply in contexts not formerly recognized at common law" (Allen, 449 US at 94), and "[t]he scope of claims barred has expanded" (Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 145). In turn, modern conceptions of res judicata embrace a broadened notion of the scope of a "claim" (see Williamson, 186 F2d at 469 ["(T)he meaning of `cause of action' for res judicata purposes is much broader today than it was earlier"]; see also Vestal, 66 Mich L Rev at 1723-1724 [noting that the "increase in the use of the principle of res judicata/preclusion in the federal courts" is embodied in, among other
This progression is also reflected in the concomitant evolution of modern procedural rules — namely, pleading and joinder reforms — that similarly operate to urge consolidation of related claims into a single action (Proceedings of the American Bar Association Institute at 247; Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 24, Comment a; Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 141; Williamson, 186 F2d at 469-470; Funny Guy, 293 Va at 146, 795 SE2d at 892). Rule 13, for instance, was designed "to flush out all possible counterclaims early in the litigation; in other words `to prevent multiplicity of actions and to achieve a just resolution in a single lawsuit of all disputes arising out of common matters'" (Cyclops Corp. v Fischbach & Moore, Inc., 71 FRD 616, 619 [WD Pa 1976], citing 3 Moore's Federal Practice ¶ 13.12 [1] [1974]). Though it may be "a species different" than res judicata, rule 13 "also has a claim preclusive effect" in federal court, providing an "independent basis" to "bar[] claims that should have been presented in a prior action" (Polymer Indus. Prods. Co. v Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., 211 FRD 312, 318 [ND Ohio 2002], affd 347 F.3d 935 [Fed Cir 2003 en banc]; Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 141, 157-158; Wright § 1417). In other words, rule 13 (a) operates as a procedural shortcut — an expedient employed by federal courts to achieve the preclusive ends of res judicata (Polymer, 211 FRD at 318; Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 141; see also Trustees of N.Y. City Dist. Council of Carpenters Pension Fund v MI Installers & Furniture Servs., Inc., 2013 WL 1385791, *8, 2013 US Dist LEXIS 50014, *24-25 [SD NY, Mar. 28, 2013, No. 12 Civ 2362 (VM)] [noting that the court's res judicata analysis hinged on "the same reason" as its compulsory counterclaim assessment]). Or, viewed another way, as modern procedural devices broadened the scope of claims that may (and in some cases, must) be litigated, the scope of claims covered by res judicata — those claims that should have been litigated — has symmetrically widened (see Restatement
This modern notion of res judicata has called for a broadened standard for determining whether two claims — or, as in this case, a claim and counterclaim — are the "same" for purposes of claim preclusion. Though courts tasked with applying the "uniform federal rules of res judicata" employ a variety of formulations for purposes of defining a "claim," the clear trend has been towards the adoption of a transactional analysis (see Wagner, 82 ALR Fed 829, § 2 [a]; see also Nevada, 463 US at 130 n 12; Conway, 60 U Chi L Rev at 145 n 23; Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 24, Comment a).
The approach embodied in the Second Restatement similarly provides that "[a] defendant who may interpose a claim as a counterclaim in an action but fails to do so" is precluded from relitigating that claim if
By incorporating compulsory counterclaims statutes and rules — adopted in all federal jurisdictions, and in the vast majority of states — the Restatement employs the transactional approach embodied in those statutes and rules to broaden the scope of a "cause of action" to which res judicata applies (see Wright § 1417; see also Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 22).
In a "modern procedural system" — which "permits the presentation in [one] action of all material relevant to the transaction" — "[t]he transaction is the basis of the litigative unit or entity which may not be split," irrespective of the variant legal theories available (Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 24,
Under any transactional analysis, Paramount's covenant not to sue claim is sufficiently related to the investors' claims in the federal case so as to preclude its assertion in a subsequent action (Pike, 266 F3d at 91). In their federal suit, the investors predominantly alleged that, through material misrepresentations and omissions, Paramount induced them to invest in the Melrose investment. These fraud-type allegations necessarily implicate the negotiations surrounding the Melrose investment — namely, the representations, warranties, and disclosures made by Paramount in connection with the transaction. The investors' claims therefore required the district court to consider the scope and validity of the various documents exchanged and agreements executed in connection with the Melrose investment, including the PPM (cited frequently in the investors' federal complaint) and, as relevant here, the subscription agreement.
Indeed, in its ruling, the district court reached issues that would likely prove dispositive to Paramount's instant claim: the court noted that the waiver provision of the subscription agreement also contained "an agreement by the plaintiffs in no event to bring any claim" — i.e., a covenant not to sue — and held that those provisions were "binding" on the investors. This overlap of essential facts is exemplified most poignantly by Paramount's offensive assertion of collateral estoppel in the instant case with respect to the district court's factual and legal findings concerning the subscription agreement.
At bottom, Paramount's covenant not to sue claim is based on the "same transaction" as the federal action (the Melrose investment); it involves much of the "same evidence" (the subscription agreement and surrounding negotiations); and its essential facts (the scope and validity of the subscription agreement's provisions) were present in the first action (see Monahan, 214 F3d at 285). Unlike in cases involving malicious prosecution or other similar claims, Paramount did not "depend[] upon the judgment" in the federal action in order to allege a breach of the covenant not to sue (Mount Everest Ski Shops, Inc. v Nordica USA, Inc., 736 F.Supp. 523, 525 [D Vt
Pursuant to federal principles of claim preclusion — the applicable rules of decision in this case (Semtek, 531 US at 507) — Paramount's covenant not to sue claim is transactionally related to the investors' claims in the federal case, amounting to the same "claim" for purposes of res judicata. As such, Paramount's claim should have been asserted in the parties' prior federal action. Because it was not, it is now barred.
The order, insofar as appealed from, should be affirmed, with costs.
RIVERA, J. (concurring).
I agree with the plurality that plaintiff Paramount Pictures Corporation is barred by res judicata from pursuing a claim for attorneys' fees based on defendants' alleged breach of a covenant not to sue, because
Indeed, the posture of this case and the manner in which the parties have litigated the issues render it particularly ill-suited
The facts relevant to the res judicata analysis are not in dispute. Several investment entities (investors) sued Paramount in federal district court for the Southern District of New York for securities fraud, arising from Paramount's alleged misrepresentations and omissions. In that lawsuit, Paramount argued that the investors waived their right to sue for fraud under a waiver clause contained in section 4 (t) of the parties' subscription agreement. Section 4 (t) also contains what the parties refer to as a "covenant not to sue," by which each investor "agree[d] that in no event shall it assert any claim or bring any action contradicting the acknowledgments and agreements in this paragraph." After a bench trial, the district court dismissed the complaint, determining, in relevant part, that the investors waived their claims and failed to establish the alleged fraud, and further noting that the investors made a binding agreement "in no event to bring any claim." The Second Circuit affirmed, concluding that the investors failed to establish the underlying facts of their claims and thus that the district court properly dismissed the complaint (Marathon Structured Fin. Fund, LP v Paramount Pictures Corp., 622 Fed Appx 85, 87 [2d Cir 2015]).
While the federal appeal was pending, Paramount filed the instant action in state court against the same investors who were the plaintiffs in the prior federal action, seeking attorneys' fees for the investors' alleged breach of the covenant not to sue.
The plurality's discussion of which rule of res judicata to apply and the history of federal claim preclusion law is unnecessary (plurality op at 69-71 [part II], 73-77 [part III.B]), but I agree with the plurality's conclusion that Paramount's claim here is transactionally related to the prior federal claim and, as such, should have been asserted in that case as a compulsory counterclaim (plurality op at 78-80). Although the plurality reaches its judgment after what is ostensibly a "federal res judicata" analysis, it mirrors the analysis under our state law and leads to the same conclusion: Paramount's claim is clearly part of the same transaction, and so barred. Paramount effectively conceded that there is a transactional relationship between its claims by alleging in the trial court that the investors were collaterally estopped from denying that section 4 (t)'s covenant not to sue applied in the state action because the district court found that section 4 (t)'s waiver provision applied.
"It is blackletter law that a valid final judgment bars future actions between the same parties on the `same cause of action'" (Matter of Reilly v Reid, 45 N.Y.2d 24, 27 [1978]). "This State has adopted the transactional analysis approach in deciding res judicata issues [so that] once a claim is brought to a final conclusion, all other claims arising out of the same transaction or series of transactions are barred, even if based upon different theories or if seeking a different remedy" (O'Brien v City of Syracuse, 54 N.Y.2d 353, 357 [1981]). Thus, res judicata "applies not only to claims actually litigated but also to claims that could have been raised in the prior litigation" (Matter of Hunter, 4 N.Y.3d 260, 269 [2005]). As explained, and notwithstanding Paramount's exhortations to the contrary, Paramount's state claim is transactionally related to the investors' federal claim and should have been raised in the federal
Paramount maintains that this ordinary analysis should not apply because New York is a permissive counterclaim jurisdiction, which reflects a legislative preference to maximize party forum selection. Paramount's argument misses the mark and distracts from the central question in this case, namely what preclusive effect to give the prior federal court judgment. We answer that question by looking to the rules that define the scope and consequences of the litigants' claims and the final judgment entered. Where the prior litigation took place in a different jurisdiction, our law requires that we begin by looking to the law of the issuing forum to determine the judgment's scope in its home jurisdiction. Here, the final judgment in the prior action was entered by a federal court, under a system which has adopted a compulsory counterclaim pleading requirement (see Fed Rules Civ Pro rule 13 [a]). We give res judicata effect to the prior federal judgment as it stands under that pleading regime, with its attendant consequences for future litigation.
To the extent Paramount suggests that it appropriately relied on New York's permissive pleading requirement, it is mistaken. To refrain from asserting a claim carries risks even under New York's law. Even if the investors had initially brought suit in New York state court instead of federal court, it is not clear that Paramount's state claim would be permitted, as under our jurisprudence New York will not always allow a previously unasserted claim to proceed in a future state action. As the Court has explained, our permissive counterclaim rule "does not ... permit a party to remain silent in the first action and then bring a second one on the basis of a preexisting claim for relief that would impair the rights or interests established in the first action" (Henry Modell, 68 NY2d at 462 n 2). Paramount unpersuasively claims this state court action could not possibly impair rights or interests established in the prior federal case, since Paramount won in that lawsuit. Nothing in our case law limits the reach of a holding to the victorious party. If the federal decision established the rights and interests of the investors too, New York courts would be required to respect that decision as well.
Moreover, Paramount's approach would encourage simultaneous litigation in two jurisdictions and promote forum shopping,
This case illustrates the point. Although Paramount could have filed its claim in the prior action, it filed its state action while the federal appeal was pending, after the parties had litigated in federal court for seven years, in the hopes of vindicating a claim that might have been impossible to establish under controlling Second Circuit precedent (see Artvale, Inc. v Rugby Fabrics Corp., 363 F.2d 1002, 1008 [2d Cir 1966] [holding that a party may not recover attorneys' fees on an action for breach of a covenant not to sue where the allegedly breaching plaintiff "claim(s) in good faith" that the covenant "had been obtained by unfair means"]). To permit Paramount's use of the state courts in this way undermines the goals of finality and efficiency, in support of a litigant who had every opportunity to bring the claim in federal court but chose not to. Res judicata is one of the cornerstones on which the stability of our legal system rests and New York will not lend its courts or laws to undermine the settled decisions of other legitimate tribunals.
WILSON, J. (dissenting).
I begin with a proposition as to which I believe the plurality and I agree: New York is a "permissive counterclaim" jurisdiction, so that, had Allianz Risk Transfer AG's initial lawsuit been filed in New York State court, without a federal securities law claim, Paramount Pictures Corporation would not have been required to file as a counterclaim thereto its claim that Allianz breached the contract's covenant not to sue. New York's legislature has adopted a different rule from rule 13 (a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, driven by its judgment about the efficiency of the two different approaches (see CPLR 3019). In that regard, there is no right answer: the Federal Rules rest on a rebuttable presumption that trying all claims — including claims the defendant may have against the plaintiff — in a single action is the most efficient way to proceed, even if that complicates, slows, and enlarges that lawsuit, because there will be no second lawsuit. New York, like several other states (including Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut), has made a different calculation, permitting defendants to choose not to litigate counterclaims as part of the initial action, so that the initial action may proceed more simply and expeditiously. The second action may be obviated because of settlement or substantially reduced or eliminated by operation of issue preclusion arising from the first action. Indeed, the procedural difference between New York's permissive counterclaim rule and the Federal Rules is not stark. Despite the requirement of rule 13 (a), federal district courts often end up in the same place that a New York court would because of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure rule 42 (b), which expressly permits federal district courts to bifurcate any counterclaims from the plaintiffs' claims.
First, Semtek Int'l Inc. v Lockheed Martin Corp. (531 U.S. 497, 508 [2001]) holds that a federal court sitting in diversity must apply the res judicata rules of the forum state. Taylor v Sturgell (553 U.S. 880, 891 [2008]) holds that a federal court vested with federal question jurisdiction must apply federal common-law res judicata rules. Neither case decides what a federal court should do when both federal and state-law claims are present. The plurality concludes that, so long as a federal court's judgment is entered in an action that raised a federal claim, the preclusive effect of all claims disposed of in that lawsuit must be determined by federal res judicata law. The Supreme Court has not directly decided that question, but I believe the Supreme Court would decide the question differently, holding that the claim-preclusive effect of each claim in the federal action should be determined by the res judicata principles of the jurisdiction whence each claim sprung.
Second, my above disagreement with the plurality's conclusion does not matter in this case, because Paramount's counterclaim for breach of the covenant not to sue is not barred by federal or New York claim-preclusion doctrine. The plurality misinterprets federal claim-preclusion law and reaches the wrong result in its application. Neither the Supreme Court nor the Federal Courts of Appeals have decided whether a covenant not to sue can be separately litigated in state court as a matter of federal res judicata. In federal courts, it is rule 13 (a) — not federal claim preclusion doctrine — that bars litigants from separately filing what should have been a compulsory counterclaim. Rule 13 (a) is a procedural rule expressing the policy choice of the federal courts as to how best to operate efficiently, and cannot impose that choice on state legislatures that have made a different judgment. Federal res judicata principles would not bar subsequent litigation in state court unless that litigation would nullify the original judgment or impair the rights of the parties established in the first action, neither of which is true here.
As the plurality explains, the preclusive effect of a judgment of a federal court is determined by federal common law, which, in turn, is ultimately pronounced by the United States Supreme Court (see Semtek, 531 US at 503). In Semtek, the Supreme Court directed that federal courts sitting in diversity (that is, when no federal question is present) must apply the preclusion law of the state in which the federal court sits (id. at 508). Where a lawsuit is based on the violation of the federal constitution or a federal statute, "federal courts participate in developing `uniform federal rule[s]' of res judicata, which [the United States Supreme Court] has ultimate authority to determine and declare" (Taylor, 553 US at 891). Semtek involved state-law claims only; Taylor involved a federal claim only. Neither case explicitly states how the claim-preclusive effect should be determined when, as here, a case involves both federal and state-law claims.
The plurality's answer to that question is that "where federal preclusion principles would operate to preclude a claim — and
The plurality's answer is not the answer I predict the Supreme Court will eventually give. Instead, Semtek's rationale requires us to analyze the claim-preclusive effects of the federal claim and the state-law claims separately. In the present case, the claim-preclusive effect of the judgment dismissing the federal 10b-5 claim should be determined by the "uniform federal rules of res judicata" (Taylor, 553 US at 891 [internal quotation marks and brackets omitted]). The claim-preclusive effect of the judgment as to the state-law fraud and unjust enrichment claims, however, should be determined by New York's rules of res judicata.
In Semtek, the Court held that the claim-preclusive rule of the forum state should be applied in diversity cases:
With that rationale in mind, it becomes important to recall that the claim-preclusive effect of any judgment is determined by the claims in which the merits were actually adjudicated. Indeed, Semtek held that despite Federal Rules of Civil Procedure rule 41 (b)'s specification that an involuntary dismissal operates as an "adjudication on the merits," claim-preclusive effect is not given to all claims nominally disposed of "on the merits," but only to those "in which the merits of [a party's] claim are in fact adjudicated [for or] against the [party] after trial of the substantive issues" (id. at 502). Thus, if a complaint contains two causes of action, and a court dismisses one without prejudice (or in some other manner in which the merits are not decided) and adjudicates the other to conclusion, only the second claim will have preclusive effect, not the first. If the first is a claim based on federal law, and the second a claim based on state law, Semtek's rationale would require the claim-preclusive effect of the state-law claim to be determined by state-law res judicata principles, not federal. Taking the example one step further, if both the federal and state-law claims are adjudicated on the merits, the claim-preclusive effect of the federal claim would be determined by federal common law, as per Taylor, but the claim-preclusive effect of the state-law claim would be determined by state res judicata principles, as per Semtek.
As was true in Semtek, "any other rule would produce the sort of `forum-shopping ... and ... inequitable administration of the laws' that Erie seeks to avoid ... since filing in, or removing to, federal court would be encouraged by the divergent effects that the litigants would anticipate from likely grounds of dismissal" (id. at 508-509). Under the plurality's rule, some parties would be similarly incentivized to forum shop by including a federal claim — related or not, colorable or not — along with state-law claims. Put differently, the claim-preclusive
In a case heard in federal court, where both a federal claim and a state-law claim are present, the claim-preclusive effect of the federal claim will be determined by federal claim-preclusion doctrine, as Taylor requires, and the claim-preclusive effect of the state-law claim will be determined by state claim-preclusion doctrine, as Semtek provides. Again, the plurality and I agree that, if the claim-preclusive effect of either one would bar a subsequent claim, it does not matter what the effect of the other would be — the subsequent claim is barred. That is, each claim adjudicated on the merits by the federal court will have its own claim-preclusive effect, independent of the others. Take, as an example, a plaintiff who sues for a declaration of patent invalidity (federal claim) and for unfair competition by the patent holder, based on deceptive marketing of the patented product (state-law claim). Each claim, if decided on the merits, will have a different claim-preclusive effect, based on the nature of the claim itself. The patent claim, if decided in the plaintiff's favor, would preclude the patent holder from bringing a later infringement action against the plaintiff (under federal res judicata rules). The unfair competition claim, if decided on the merits, would not bar a subsequent claim by the patent holder for patent infringement. My analytical difference with the plurality (if a federal claim is present, the plurality would apply federal common-law claim preclusion doctrine to determine the effect of all claims in the case, whereas I would apply federal claim-preclusion doctrine to the federal claims and state claim-preclusion doctrine to the state claims) is not the source of our disagreement as to the result here; that disagreement arises from our divergent views on whether the federal court's judgment rejecting Allianz's federal securities fraud claims operates to preclude Paramount from bringing its claim for breach of the covenant not to sue, discussed below.
If, as I believe, the Supreme Court would direct us to apply New York res judicata principles to determine whether Paramount's claim is barred by the prior judgment on the state-law claims, then it would not be barred. (I do not want to read too much into the plurality's opinion but, by deciding this case on the basis of a difficult and unsettled proposition of federal
The plurality asserts that under federal res judicata principles, a defendant in a prior federal question action cannot later assert, in state court, a counterclaim that arises from the same transaction or occurrence as the original federal claim. How can that be? As the plurality correctly notes, it cannot be by means of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure rule 13 (a) "by itself" (plurality op at 72).
Instead, the plurality suggests a novel theory: although at the time rule 13 (a) was enacted, it barred (as a procedural rule applicable only to federal courts) actions that would not have been barred by the doctrine of claim preclusion, federal common law of claim preclusion has "systematically widened" over the years to the point that it is now coterminous with rule 13 (a). The plurality's conclusion is completely unwarranted.
As a general matter, the federal cases on which the plurality relies for the proposition that federal common law has expanded to be coterminous with rule 13 (a) do not support any such proposition.
Second, and much more fundamentally, the doctrine of claim preclusion, which derives from the doctrines of merger and bar, protects the finality of a judgment; courts could not exist unless their judgments meant something, and to mean something, the same essential claim cannot repeatedly be retried by the losing party, in hope of winning someday. Therefore, a plaintiff cannot bring the same or related claims over and over, and the defendant cannot try to attack the original judgment by bringing his or her own claims later. A counterclaim rule, on the other hand, reflects a judgment about whether it would be more efficient to litigate a different claim by a different party in the original lawsuit or a separate lawsuit. A litigant in federal court who chooses not to file a compulsory counterclaim is barred from filing that claim later in federal court, because the federal courts have made a procedural choice that efficiency and fairness would best be served by hearing all claims at once if they arise from the same transaction or occurrence, unless the district court bifurcates the claim for efficiency's sake.
Of course, a federal court judgment would preclude a defendant from bringing a state court action that would nullify that federal judgment or impair the rights established in the first action; that is the purpose of claim preclusion. Additionally, because of the procedural choice made in rule 13 (a), a defendant would be barred from bringing his or her counterclaim — even if it would not be barred by claim preclusion — in a separate federal court action, because the Federal Rules have made an efficiency judgment about how cases will proceed, and the procedural rules of the federal courts apply to the second action if attempted in federal court.
The plurality relies on the history of what constitutes a "claim" for purposes of federal claim preclusion to support its conclusion that federal res judicata now encompasses the compulsory counterclaim law. However, the plurality fails to recognize the different effects of claim preclusion on plaintiffs and defendants. The "expansion" the plurality refers to — what constitutes a claim for purposes of claim preclusion — relates to restrictions on plaintiffs' "claim splitting." When a final judgment is rendered in favor of the plaintiff, the plaintiff cannot later bring an action on the original claim or any claims that
Claim preclusion restricts the defendant, too, but in different ways. Absent a compulsory counterclaim rule, there are two situations where a defendant in the first action may be barred from bringing a second action on a claim that could have been raised in the first action: where successful prosecution of the counterclaim in a subsequent action would (1) nullify the original judgment or (2) impair the rights of the parties established in the first action (see Valley View Angus Ranch, Inc. v Duke Energy Field Servs., Inc., 497 F.3d 1096, 1101 [10th Cir 2007]; Martino v McDonald's Sys., Inc., 598 F.2d 1079, 1084-1085 [7th Cir 1979]; 18 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 4414 [3d ed]; Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 22, Comment f). "For such an occasion to arise, it is not sufficient that the counterclaim grow out of the same transaction or occurrence as the plaintiff's claim" (Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 22, Comment f). It does not matter that the facts relevant to a counterclaim are also relevant to a defense asserted: "[A]fter litigation of the defense judgment is given for the defendant, the defendant is not precluded by the rule of merger from maintaining a subsequent action against the plaintiff based upon these facts. In the subsequent action, the rules of issue preclusion will apply to issues litigated and determined in the first action" (Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 22, Comment d [citations omitted]). Nor does it matter that the counterclaim itself could also have been raised as a defense:
Under both federal and state claim preclusion law, Paramount's claim is not barred. Neither precludes a defendant from bringing a claim arising from the same transaction or occurrence as the plaintiff's claim, unless doing so would nullify the judgment or impair the rights established in the first action. In federal court, rule 13 (a) would prevent the defendant from filing separately. This case is not in federal court, our rules — not federal rules — apply, and whether wisely or unwisely, New York has made a different procedural choice. Thus, the only question is whether litigation of Paramount's covenant-not-to-sue claim would nullify the federal court judgment or impair the rights of the parties from the first action.
Although Paramount's claim for breach of the covenant not to sue arises from the contract, it does not in any way attack the judgment or impair Allianz's rights from the first action. How could it when Paramount was victorious in the first action? Issue preclusion would prevent Allianz from relitigating issues it lost, but neither federal nor New York rules of claim preclusion restrict Paramount from bringing its claim for breach of the covenant not to sue in a separate state court action.
Order, insofar as appealed from, affirmed, with costs.