In this appeal we apply the doctrine of res judicata to a quiet title action. The case represents a second round of litigation over title to land lying between the present course of the Boise River and its former riverbed. All of the parties own real property along the river. Movement of the stream has increased the dry land occupied by the Aldape family, and has flooded property owned by the other parties.
The first round of litigation began when the Aldapes filed a quiet title action against numerous record owners, including defendants Akins and Nesbitt, asserting title to the occupied dry land upon a theory of adverse possession. The trial court decided, and the Supreme Court affirmed,' that insofar as the Aldapes’ claim pertained to property owned by Akins and Nesbitt, the elements of adverse possession had not been proven.
See Aldape v. State,
In the second round, the Aldapes filed another quiet title action against Akins and Nesbitt. This time the Aldapes asserted title upon a theory of accretion: 1 Akins and Nesbitt raised the defense of res judicata against this renewed challenge to their title. However, the district court allowed the case to be tried on the accretion theory, and eventually held in favor of the Aldapes. This appeal ensued. For reasons explained below, we reverse. Because our decision rests upon the doctrine of res judicata, we need not reach other issues raised on appeal concerning the theory of accretion.
I
Res judicata denotes “a thing or matter settled by judgment.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1174 (rev. 5th ed. 1979). The doctrine of res judicata preeludes the relitigation of a matter previously adjudicated. Functionally, the doctrine has two components — claim preclusion and issue preclusion.
“[CJlaim preclusion,” or true res judicata ... treats a judgment, once rendered, as the full measure of relief to be accorded between the same parties on the same “claim” or “cause of action.” * * * When the plaintiff obtains a judgment in his favor, his claim “merges” in the judgment; he may seek no further relief on that claim in a separate action. Conversely, when a judgment is rendered for a defendant, the plaintiff’s claim is extinguished; the judgment then acts as a “bar.” * * * Under these rules of claim preclusion, the effect of a judgment extends to the litigation of all issues relevant to the same claim between the same parties, whether or not raised at trial.
* * * * * *
[C]ollateral estoppel or “issue preclusion” ... bars the relitigation of issues actually adjudicated, and essential to the judgment, in a prior litigation between the same parties.... [T]he contested issue
distinguished from avulsion. The latter is a sudden addition to land by the action of water. Title to that soil remains in the original owner. G. THOMPSON, EXAMINATION OF TITLES 72-73 (1929). *257 must have been litigated and necessary to the judgment earlier rendered.
Kaspar Wire Works, Inc. v. Leco Engineering & Machine, Inc.,
In the form of claim preclusion, the doctrine of res judicata serves three fundamental purposes. First, it “[preserves] the acceptability of judicial dispute resolution against the corrosive disrespect that would follow if the same matter were twice litigated to inconsistent results.” 18 C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER & E. COOPER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 4403, at 12 (1981). Second, it serves the public interest in protecting the courts against the burdens of repetitious litigation; and third, it advances the private interest in repose from the harassment of repetitive claims. Id. at 13-16.
II
Before we examine claim preclusion in detail, an historical note is appropriate. The modern doctrine of res judicata, with its broad component of claim preclusion, has been a product of evolution. In the nineteenth century, res judicata simply precluded relitigation of the same cause of action.
E.g., Cromwell v. County of Sac,
The First Restatement was consistent with a landmark Idaho case. In
Joyce v. Murphy Land & Irrigation Co.,
We think the correct rule to be that in an action between the same parties upon the same claim or demand, the former adjudication concludes parties and privies not only as to every matter offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim but also as to every matter which might and should have been litigated in the first suit. [35 Idaho at 553 ,208 P. at 242-43 .]
The
Joyce
rule has been employed to bar plaintiffs from relitigating the same or similar claims in
Houser v. Southern Idaho Pipe &.Steel, Inc.,
Our Supreme Court has recognized the limits of the
Joyce
rule where matters raised in the second litigation were not ripe for adjudication in the prior action.
See, e.g., Duthie v. Lewiston Gun Club,
However, even when the ripeness limitation and the mandamus exception are taken into account, it must be acknowledged that our Supreme Court has not been entirely consistent in its application of the
Joyce
rule. In
Green v. Gough,
The Idaho cases refusing to apply res judicata, unless there is an identity of issues, have failed to note the fundamental distinction between issue preclusion and claim preclusion. As noted earlier in this opinion, issue preclusion requires that the issues litigated be the same, but claim preclusion does not. Failure to perceive this distinction may, in turn, be traced to the historical practice of expressing res judicata in terms of the “cause of action.” The traditional concept of a “cause of action” embraces both the entitlement asserted by a plaintiff (the claim) and the basis of the plaintiff’s assertion (the issues). We believe the time has come in Idaho to state the doctrine of res judicata in terms free from the recrudescent trappings of a cause of action.
HI
Dissatisfaction with the cause of action as the foundation of res judicata has led to reformulation of the doctrine in the recently completed RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS (1982) (herein cited as the Second Restatement). The Second Restatement is familiar to many Idaho judges and practitioners. Tentative drafts of the Second Restatement have been cited with approval by our Supreme Court in Houser and Ramseyer, supra.
The Second Restatement expressly recognizes the difference between claim preclusion and issue preclusion. The bar of claim preclusion is succinctly stated at § 19: “A valid and final personal judgment rendered in favor of the defendant bars another action by the plaintiff on the same claim.” The limits of this rule of bar are determined by the dimensions of the concept of a “claim.” The Second Restatement adopts a transactional view toward claims.
When a valid and final judgment rendered in an action extinguishes the plaintiff’s claim ... the claim extinguished *259 includes all rights of the plaintiff to remedies against the defendant with respect to all or any part of the transaction ... out of which the action arose.
******
What factual grouping constitutes a “transaction” ... [is] to be determined pragmatically, giving weight to such considerations as whether the facts are related in time, space, origin, or motivation, whether they form a convenient trial unit, and whether their treatment as a unit conforms to the parties’ expectations or business understanding or usage.
Second Restatement at § 24. Comment a to § 24 makes it clear that the transactional concept of a claim is broad, and that the bar of claim preclusion is similarly broad:
[I]n the days when civil procedure still bore the imprint of the forms of action and the division between law and equity, the courts were prone to associate claim with a single theory of recovery, so that, with respect to one transaction, a plaintiff might have as many claims as there were theories of the substantive law upon which he could seek relief against the defendant....
******
The present trend is to see claim in factual terms and to make it coterminous with the transaction regardless of the number of substantive theories, or variant forms of relief flowing from those theories, that may be available to the plaintiff....
Accordingly, the bar of claim preclusion may apply even where there is not a substantial overlap between the theories advanced in support of a claim, or in the evidence relating to those theories. Comment b to § 24. This conclusion is more fully stated in § 25 of the Second Restatement:
The rule of § 24 applies to extinguish a claim by the plaintiff against the defendant even though the plaintiff is prepared in the second action
(1) To present evidence or grounds or theories of the case not presented in the first action, or
(2) To seek remedies or forms of relief not demanded in the first action. Comment d in this section further explains the effect of claim preclusion:
Having been defeated on the merits in one action, a plaintiff sometimes attempts another action seeking the same or approximately the same relief but adducing a different substantive law premise or ground. This does not constitute the presentation of a new claim when the new premise or ground is related to the same transaction or series of transactions, and accordingly the second action should be held barred.
There are exceptions to the bar of claim preclusion. However, they are narrowly defined in § 26 of the Second Restatement. Such exceptions are recognized where the parties themselves have agreed that the plaintiff may split his claim, where the court in the first action has expressly reserved the plaintiff’s right .to maintain the second action, where there are limitations on the subject matter jurisdiction of the court hearing the first action, or where the judgment in the first action was inconsistent with the implementation of a general statutory or constitutional scheme. Exceptions may also exist in special types of cases where a plaintiff is permitted to sue more than once for recurrent wrongs, and where there are extraordinary reasons for allowing a second action — such as the protection of personal liberty, or the need to bring coherency to disparate judgments in prior litigation.
We believe the Second Restatement, with its definitive treatment of claim preclusion, clarifies the scope of res judicata. We adopt it, subject to the ripeness limitation and mandamus exception which have been enunciated by our Supreme Court.
IV
The bar of claim preclusion, as set forth in the Second Restatement, applies with special force to quiet title actions. It has long been recognized that a claim of title to property is a claim of ownership. *260 “A person is said to have title to that which is of right his property, and his property is that over which he may of right exercise an exclusive dominion.” G. THOMPSON, supra note 1, at 50.
The Idaho statutes governing quiet title actions further recognize the broad nature of a claim to title. I.C. § 6-401 defines an action to quiet title as an action which “may be brought by any person against another who claims an estate or interest in real or personal property adverse to him, for the purpose of determining such adverse claim.... ” Our Supreme Court has held that every estate or interest known to the law in real property, whether legal or equitable, may be determined in an action to quiet title.
Lewiston Lime Co. v. Barney,
Precisely because a claim of title is a general claim of ownership of the property, a complaint to quiet title is sufficient if it alleges, in ordinary and concise terms, that the plaintiff is the owner of the disputed property, without setting forth the probative facts by which that ultimate fact is to be established.
E.g., Hammitt v. Virginia Mining Co.,
It follows that the plaintiff in a quiet title action does not merely claim' title by a specific theory, or assert that there is a specific defect in the adversary’s title. Rather, the plaintiff claims ownership, and he claims it upon any legal theory or set of probative facts which may be employed to establish such ownership. It has been widely held, in decisions consistent with the modern view of claim preclusion, that res judicata applies to repetitive actions concerning title to property, regardless of whether differing theories have been advanced in support of the claim of ownership.
E.g., Taylor
v.
Williams,
“Judgments establishing property rights fall within the ... clear need for repose.” 18 C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER, & E. COOPER, supra, at 112. The parties in a quiet title action rightfully expect conflicting claims of ownership to be resolved. The very purpose of a quiet title action is to establish the security of title. Nothing could more profoundly disturb the security of title than for two judges, in separate actions involving the same parties, to enter contradictory decrees purporting to “quiet” title in the same property. Yet that is precisely what has occurred in the present case. A decree quieting title in Akins and Nesbitt, and affirmed by our Supreme Court in Aldape I, has been succeeded by another judgment in the district court purporting to quiet title in the Aldapes.
It cannot be gainsaid that the theory of accretion, upon which the Aldapes relied in the second action, was available during the first action. Both the theory of accretion and the theory of adverse possession offered in
Aldape I
grew out of the same central operative fact — the movement of the Boise River. Moreover, when
Aldape I
was on appeal in the Idaho Supreme Court, the attorney then serving as counsel for the Aldapes requested the Supreme Court to remand the case for consideration of the accretion theory. The Court properly declined to do so because that theory was first raised on appeal, and had not been present
*261
ed to the trial court.
The Aldapes have suggested that it may have been tactically advantageous for them to try the accretion theory in an action separate from Aldape I. We need not probe the tactics of the parties. It is sufficient to say that we do not equate tactical advantage with a right to bring separate actions upon the same claim.
The Aldapes also have contended that accretion and adverse possession could not have been combined to form a convenient trial unit. It is true that some of the probative facts supporting one theory would not have been germane to the other. But this circumstance, by itself, would not have compelled bifurcation of a trial. The transcripts in this appeal and in Aldape I disclose short trials; consolidation would not have produced undue inconvenience. 2 In any event, whether to conduct a unified or bifurcated trial is a decision for the trial court to make, having been apprised of all the issues. The trial court would have no opportunity to make this decision if a litigant were permitted to try his claim piecemeal, submitting different theories in separate actions.
We conclude that the bar of claim preclusion, as described by our Supreme Court in Joyce, and as further developed in the Second Restatement, applies to this case. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed. Costs to appellants.
Notes
. “ ‘Accretion’ is the increase of riparian land by the gradual deposit, by water, of solid material ... so as to cause that to become dry land which was before covered by water.”
Nesbitt v. Wolfkiel,
. A similar consolidation of issues occurred in Nesbitt v. Wolfkiel, supra note 1. In that case, both theories — adverse possession and accretion — were presented at a single trial which apparently consumed less than one day.
