MEMORANDUM OPINION
On April 8, 2004, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the appeal of this court’s October 15, 2003 preliminary injunction for the limited purpose of allowing this court to consider whether to dissolve or modify the injunction based upon the February 10, 2004 Order in
Southern Federal Power Customers, Inc. v. Caldera,
In September 1990, Alabama and the federal defendants submitted a Joint Motion to Stay this case, agreeing that, “until such time as the stay is terminated [under the terms of the joint motion], Defendants agree not to execute any contracts or agreements which are the subject of the complaint in this action unless expressly agreed to, in writing, by Alabama and Florida.” Doc. 41. The court 1 granted the Joint Motion to Stay, noting that “the court views the parties to this action as bound by the terms of their joint motion.” Doc. 44. That stay was repeatedly extended by every judge who has presided over this decades-old case. See docket sheet.
In January, 2003, the Corps and Georgia, without the Corps first complying with the termination provisions of the 1990 Joint Motion to Stay this case, entered into a settlement agreement (“the D.C. agreement”) with other parties in the D.C. case. In response, Alabama and Florida moved this court for a temporary restraining оrder and preliminary injunction. See Docs. 130, 156, 159. After considering the numerous briefs and evidentiary submissions from all the parties involved, and after hearing oral arguments at a hearing on September 24, 2003, the court granted the motion for a preliminary injunction. Doc. 192. The movants now seek dissolution of the September 24, 2003 injunction based upon the D.C. court’s Order approving the settlement agreement. 2
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Upon a motion to modify or vacate a preliminary injunction, the court does not review the injunction
de novo,
as many of the federal defendants’ arguments would seem to require.
See Sys. Fed’n No. 91 v. Wright,
I. Violation of the 1990 Stay Order
The February 10, 2004 Order in
Southern, Federal Power Customers, Inc. v. Caldera,
The D.C. Order does not contradict this court’s finding that the D.C. agreement violated the 1990 stay Order. As the federal defendants point out, “it appeared” to the D.C. court that the 1990 stay Order “was vacated by the unilateral notice to that effect... in September, 2003, and should no longer serve to bar [the D.C. agreement] today.”
3
Caldera,
The federal defendants and Georgia suggest that the October 15, 2003 injunction is an inappropriate sanction because invocation of a court’s inherent power to enforce its orders “requires a finding of bad faith,”
Doc.
242, p. 23; because Alabama and
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Georgia received the full benefit of the 1990 stay Order,
Doc.
238, p. 20; and because an injunction lasting “in perpetuity,”
Doc.
288, p. 21, and “for all time,”
Doc.
242, p. 24, is too harsh a remedy fоr the violation. Such arguments are inappropriate.
See
the Eleventh Circuit’s April 8, 2004 Order (authorizing only motions to lift or vacate the preliminary injunction “based on the D.C. Order”);
see also United States v. Swift & Co.,
However, the court did find an inference of bad faith based on the fact that, while the Corps and Georgia were engaged with Alabama and Florida in discussions and negotiations involving allocation of water in Lake Lanier, they never mentioned to Alabama and Florida that they were simultaneously engaged in settlement discussions in thе D.C. case that involved some of the same issues. See Doc. 248, p. 11 n. 6; p. 26 n. 19, 20. Additionally, the court finds that Alabama and Florida did not receive the full benefit of the 1990 stay Order because, by failing to notify them of the settlement negotiations before those negotiations were complete, the Corps robbed Alabama and Florida of the opportunity to participate in the negotiations or to litigate their objections with the benefit of timely notice and compliance with the discovery requirements. Finally, the court points out that its injunction is not “perpetual,” but will last only until the case is resolved on the merits, and may be lifted earlier “for just cause.”
II. Claim and Issue Preclusion
As an alternativе basis for the satisfaction of the requirement that the plaintiffs show a likelihood of success on the merits, the court found that Alabama and Florida demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of their statutory challenges to the D.C. agreement. Georgia and the federal defendants argue that, beсause the D.C. court approved the settlement agreement over similar statutory challenges, claim and issue preclusion bar the future success on the merits of the statutory challenges. Therefore, Georgia and the federal defendants argue, the circumstances underlying the injunction have changed, and thе injunction should be lifted. However, because the likelihood of success on the merits of the statutory challenges to the settlement agreement was merely an alternative basis for imposing the injunction, the D.C. court’s ruling on those challenges does not justify lifting the injunction.
Furthermore, the D.C. court’s order cannot bar claims
4
brought by those not parties to the settlement in the D.C. cоurt. The D.C. court dismissed the case without prejudice
5
because the case settled. A dismissal without prejudice does not preclude later litigation of claims, and,
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as noted in the D.C. Order, a dismissal as moot on the basis of a settlement agreement cannot operate to bar the claims of those not parties to the settlement agreement.
Caldera,
Issue preclusion also does not bar Alabama and Florida from raising their statutory objections to the settlement agreement in the future. The D.C. court considered the statutory objections within the limited context of deciding a single issuе: whether the settlement agreement should be approved as “fair, adequate, and reasonable” and “not illegal or contrary to public policy.”
Caldera,
Alternatively, the Corps is equitably estopped from asserting claim and issue preclusion. “A party asserting es-toppel must establish the following three elements of a traditional equitable-estoppel claim: (1) words, acts, conduct or acquiescence causing another to believe in the existence of a certain state of things[;] (2) wilfulness or negligence with regard to the acts, conduct or acquiescence[;] and (3) detrimental reliance by the other party upon the state of things so indicated.”
Tefel v. Reno,
The Corps agreed to the notification and discovery terms of the 1990 stay Order. Alabama and Florida have shown that they relied on their reasonable expectations that the Corps would satisfy those court-ordered obligations. By willfully violating the court’s order while engaged in ongoing discussions with Alabama and Florida as part of the ACF compact negotiations, the Corps engaged in affirmative misconduct and caused Alabama and Florida to arrive in the D.C. court too late to participate in settlement negotiations and without the benefit of the Corps’ prior compliance with its discovery obligations under the 1990 stay Order. Therefore, the Corps is es-topped from asserting their res judicata and collateral estoppel arguments. Any such arguments exist now solely because of the Corps’ willful violation of the 1990 stay Order.
Georgia is also estopped from asserting claim and issue preclusion on the basis of the D.C. Order. Knowing the requirements of the 1990 stay Order, 6 *1320 Georgia willfully cooperated with and acquiesced in the Corps’ violation of that Order while at the same time participating with Alabama and Florida in the ACF compact discussions. Alabama and Florida detrimentally relied on the state of things аs indicated by the violation of the Order-that the Corps and Georgia were not engaged together in settlement negotiations that would affect the claims before this court. Furthermore, Georgia benefited by cooperating with the Corps’ violation of this court’s Order because the settlement agreement spеcifically preserved Georgia’s claims against the Corps-a provision not available to Alabama and Florida because the Corps did not notify them in time to take part in the settlement agreement. Therefore, Georgia is estopped from asserting claim and issue preclusion regarding Alabama’s аnd Florida’s statutory challenges to the settlement agreement.
III. Conclusion
Because the court finds no reason to dissolve the injunction on the basis of the D.C. order, the court will continue to maintain the preliminary injunction as written “until this case is resolved on the merits or lifted by order of this court for just cause.” See Doe. 192.
The dispute among the pаrties as to the allocation of water from Lake Lanier is now centered in this court. The D.C. court dismissed the D.C. case as moot. In addition, the Northern District of Georgia has entered an order abating and administratively closing a related case, Georgia v. United States Army Corps of Eng’rs, No. 2:01-CV-26-RWS, pending final judgment in this action. This court has lifted its general stay of this case and the parties have been proceeding with issues outside the scope Of the preliminary injunction and the appeal. In addition, the court has invited all those whose petitions for leave to intervene were previously denied without prejudice to now petition for leave to intervene. See Doc. 262. In short, this case finally is in a posture to move forward with an orderly, legal resolution of this most contentious matter.
An order in conformity with this memorandum opinion will be entered contemporaneously.
ORDER
On April 8, 2004, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the appeal of this court’s October 15, 2003 preliminary injunction for the limited purрose of allowing this court to consider whether to dissolve or modify the injunction based upon the February 10, 2004 Order in
Southern Federal Power Customers, Inc. v. Caldera,
Notes
. United States District Judge James H. Hancock was at that time presiding over the case.
. The D.C. Order has been appealed to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Alabama recently filed a Notice of Activity in Related Cases (Doc. 273) that included a copy of the transcript of the oral argument before the D.C. Circuit. Having reviewed the transcript of the oral argument, the court must point out an error in the representation made to the Circuit Court by Mr. Gray, counsel for the federal defendants. Mr. Gray represented, based upon an inference from Judge Jackson’s statement that he had a phone conference with this court, that the two judges had agreed to the scheme for handling the matter. *1317 (Tr. pp. 23-25.) The court notes that such representation does not rest in fact.
. The Corps did not take any action to give notice to lift the stay until September 22, 2003-after Alabama and Florida called to this court's attention that the Corps had taken steps that violated the 1990 Order. See Corps’ Exhibit 1, Doc. 187; Doc. 192, p. 4. What effect the Corps' unilateral notice may have had on subsequent events is irrelevant because the transgression had already occurred that resulted in this court's action.
. Florida filed a complaint in the D.C. case thаt included claims for declaratory and in-junctive relief based on its statutory challenges to the settlement agreement. Though the D.C. court overruled the objections of the States of Alabama and Florida to the Settlement Agreement,
Caldera,
. The order dismissing the D.C. case did not state whether the case was dismissed with or without prejudice.
See Doc.
239, Ex. H. However, the settlement agreement approved by the D.C. court provided that the case should be dismissed without prejudice. Further, the case was dismissed without prejudice because it was dismissed as moot.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b) ( "[A] dismissal under this subdivision and any dismissal not provided for in this rule, other than a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction ... operates as an adjudication
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upon the merits.”);
Iron Arrow Honor Soc’y v. Heckler,
. Though Georgia wаs not a party to this action until the court granted its motion to *1320 intervene in September 2003, see Doc. 183, Georgia was aware of the terms of the Joint Motion to Stay. Alabama and the federal defendants served Georgia with a copy of the Joint Motion. See Certificate of Service, Doc. 41. Further, Alabama and the federal defendants filed the Motion in conjunction with their negotiations with Georgiа and Florida to resolve matters that are the subject of this case. Doc. 41, p. 2. The Joint Motion set forth certain of Georgia's rights and obligations. Under the Joint Motion, Georgia had the right to request that the parties terminate the stay. Doc. 41, p. 3. The Joint Motion also stated that "before.. .Georgia may participate in [settlement] discussions, it shall agree, in writing, to abide by” paragraph 5 of the Joint Motion regarding the evidentiary admissibility of statements made during negotiations. Doc. 41, p. 4.
