5 Mass. App. Ct. 277 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1977
The plaintiff appeals from the allowance of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the ground of estoppel by judgment.
There has been much litigation between the parties, all of it based on the efforts of the plaintiff to develop a shopping center in the Springfield area. A more detailed account of those efforts may be found in Albano v. Jordan Marsh Co. 2 Mass. App. Ct. 304, 305-310 (1974) (herein
The sole surviving count in the present action is in tort, alleging malicious interference with the plaintiff’s business relationships; in substance the plaintiff alleges that the defendant (which was to be the prime, or “anchor,” tenant in the proposed shopping center) wrongfully induced other tenants (smaller retail stores) to break their leases with the plaintiff. The present action was begun in 1968, and thus actually predates Albano I, a “petition for declaratory judgment” filed in 1971, tried in 1973, and affirmed on appeal in 1974. After the entry of the 1973 decree in the Superior Court in Albano I the defendant was permitted to amend its answer in the present action to assert the defense of res judicata. Because Albano I had been appealed, however, the present action was placed on the list of nontriable cases until resolution of that appeal. The plaintiff’s unsuccessful efforts to obtain review of that interlocutory disposition of the present action are chronicled in Albano II, supra.
On March 12, 1976, the defendant filed a motion for summary judgment in the present action on the ground of “res judicata or collateral estoppel.” The plaintiff filed an affidavit in opposition thereto. The judge allowed the motion and filed a statement of “Conclusions of Law” pertinent to his decision. In short, he ruled that the facts essential to the maintenance of the present action in tort had been found adversely to the plaintiff in Albano I.
In our opinion, however, the method of analysis propounded by the plaintiff is not, under modem authority, the correct one. The question is not whether a particular finding was “essential” to the judgment in the prior action, but rather whether that finding has been “the product of full litigation and careful deliberation.” Home Owners Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. v. Northwestern Fire & Marine Ins. Co. 354 Mass. 448, 455 (1968). See Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 68, Reporter’s Note to comment h, at 167 (Tent. Draft No. 1, 1973). Thus, the fact that the two cases involve the application of different principles of law (see Sandler v. Silk, 292 Mass. 493, 498-500 (1935); Boylston v. McGrath, 348 Mass. 640, 643-644 [1965]) is not decisive. The ordinarily conclusive effect of a judgment in a former action cannot be circumvented merely by characterizing a second action differently from the first. “Two actions are not necessarily for different causes of action simply because the theory of the second would not have
It is necessary, then, to look beyond the captions of the pleadings and examine the entire record of the first case in order to determine whether the issues involved in the present action were actually raised, litigated, and carefully deliberated in the first case. Home Owners Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn., supra. Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 76 and Comments b and c (Tent. Draft No. 3, 1976). We conclude (as did the judge below) that they were. An examination of the pleadings in Albano I
We attach no special significance to the fact that the primary object of Albano I may have been to establish the rights of Albano and Jordan Marsh under their lease; nor do we attach significance to the apparent agreement of the parties to postpone trial on the present action until the resolution of Albano I. As we see it, the plaintiff saw fit to open up the issues involved in the present action in Albano I and to litigate them at trial and on the earlier appeal. He cannot now insist that those issues should be relitigated because they were somehow not central to the relief sought in Albano I. If the plaintiff had had that concern during the course of Albano I, he could have filed appropriate motions to remove those issues from Albano I. Such a course of action would have been especially appropriate because of the unusual circumstance that the present action (i.e., the “second” action for res judicata purposes) had been filed and was actually pending at the time Albano I (the “first” action for res judicata purposes) was commenced. Thus the precise cause of action on which the plaintiff intended to rely in his “second” action had already been set forth.
The long and tortuous course of litigation between the parties illustrates the interests to be served by avoiding piecemeal litigation. See Albano II at 654-655. See also Grunberg v. Louison, 343 Mass. 729 (1962). The lower court acted wisely in permitting the defendant to amend its answer to assert the defense of res judicata (see Willett v. Webster, 337 Mass. 98, 100 [1958]) and properly in allowing the motion for summary judgment based on that ground.
Judgment affirmed.
The judge stated: “To the extent that his tort action relies on an allegation that Jordan acted wrongfully and maliciously in refusing to grant an extension of time, the allegation fails since the declaratory judgment decree expressly found that Jordan acted at all times in good faith. To the extent that Albano’s difficulties were caused by the suit over the Highway, caused inferentially by Jordan, the allegation fails since the declaratory judgment action found that Jordan played no part in instigating this litigation. To the extent that the tort action depends on Albano’s assertion that Jordan caused the other tenants to abandon their leases, the action fails since the prior action has
The record and briefs on appeal in Albano I, including the pleadings, findings and final decree, were introduced as an exhibit in the present action.
No question appears to have been raised in the lower court or on appeal that any of the several tenants (all named) in the declaration