This is a sequel to the decision of the same panel reported at
If in our first decision we had merely ruled that response costs include attorneys’ fees, and had remanded for the entry of an appropriate judgment, it would be reasonably clear that the ruling was merely an interim ruling in an ongoing case. The doctrine of law of the case, which governs the weight that interim rulings in a litigation are given in the subsequent stages of that litigation,
Williams v. Commissioner,
The denial of certiorari is a red herring. It marks the end of the appellate process and so, if the judgment from which certiorari was sought were itself a final judgment (the significance of this qualification will become clear in due course), it establishes finality in a strong sense. But we shall see that a final judgment is res judicata even if it is still appealable. A more important though not necessarily decisive point is that our ruling when last this case was before this panel was not a final judgment in the sense in which 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (the “final judgment” rule of federal appealability) makes certain decisions by district courts final and appealable; and the black-letter rule is that the doctrine of res judicata requires a final judgment.
Federated Department Stores v. Moitie,
And yet the principle itself is not unwavering. It is adhered to much more strictly when the issue is the applicability of res judicata than when it is the applicability of collateral estoppel,
Restatement (Second) of Judgments
§ 13, comments a, g (1982), but even there there have been occasional exceptions. See, e.g.,
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. United States,
And although, as the “requirement” of a final judgment implies, res judicata or collateral estoppel is normally asserted in a separate case from the one in which the judgment or ruling sought to be used as a bar to further litigation was rendered, there are exceptions to this principle too. See, e.g.,
Avitia v. Metropolitan Club of Chicago, Inc., supra; Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. United States, supra; Lair v. Oglesby,
We must situate the present ease in this welter of principles and exceptions. It is helpful to orderly discussion to ask first whether there is a final judgment in the sense of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and then whether, if not, the absence can be overlooked on the authority of cases such as Avitia.
We did not actually affirm the declaratory judgment that the district judge had issued in December 1992. We reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings, which resulted in the issuance of a new declaratory judgment in April 1994, the month after the attorneys’ fees order was entered. Although the new declaratory judgment was not significantly different from the old one, it was a new, final judgment from which Detrex could have appealed and in fact did appeal. (Its appeal is from both the award of attorney’s fees and the second declaratory judgment, although the only relief it seeks concerns the attorney’s fees.) Moreover, even if the remand could be ignored, as immaterial to attorney’s fees, the propriety of treating as final and appealable a declaratory judgment that declares a right to attorneys’ fees in an amount yet to be determined is questionable, to say the least.
Szabo v. US. Marine Corp.,
We can approach the question slightly differently, though with the same result. Orders concerning attorneys’ fees are normally deemed collateral to the litigation in which they are awarded.
Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co.,
So either the lawsuit as a whole was still pending when Key Tronic was decided, or the order awarding attorneys’ fees — the only part of the lawsuit affected by that decision — was still pending. Either way, there was no final judgment; but we have seen that a final judgment is not an absolute requirement of collateral estoppel. (Another way to put this, though it comes to the same thing, is that finality has a different meaning when the issue is appealability and when the issue is collateral estoppel, or in rare cases res judicata. See Restatement, supra, comment b.) And, superficially at least, the Lummus criteria seem fulfilled in this case. We had decided, upon full hearing and, we thought, with finality, that response costs do include attorneys’ fees. Certiorari had been sought and denied. The issue was concluded, and could not have been reexamined by the district court; only the amount of attorneys’ fees, not the plaintiffs’ entitlement to them, remained for further consideration. We had decided the issue of entitlement “finally.”
We
had. But Detrex had not exhausted its appellate remedies. The Supreme Court has jurisdiction to review nonfinal decisions by the courts of appeals, 28
*160
U.S.C. § 1254(1);
Forsyth v. Hammond,
Although judgments that have not yet been, and still can be, appealed, are res judicata (or have collateral-estoppel effect),
Williams v. Commissioner, supra,
We admit that there is an element of circularity in relying on this last point, for if we decided that the doctrine of collateral estop-pel forbade us to apply Key Tronic, this would furnish an independent basis for a decision not to award the plaintiffs attorney’s fees, and if the Court agreed it would not reverse us even if the result was an outcome contrary to Key Tronic. But the essential point is that Detrex should not be deprived of its full appellate remedies in the name of collateral estoppel.
What has made this case complicated to analyze is the apparent merger of law of the case and collateral estoppel that has been brought about by allowing collateral estoppel to be based on judgments that are not final and appealable, that are, therefore, in a sense merely interim rulings, as in this case. For interim rulings are the domain of the law of the case doctrine. As both law of the case and collateral estoppel are flexible doctrines, classification need not be critical. Both doctrines express a reluctance motivated by a desire to promote the inexpensive and expeditious dispatch of litigation to reopen issues that have been resolved with a fair approach to definitiveness. That definitiveness is missing where as in this case a litigant has not exhausted his appellate remedies — recall that “opportunity for review” was one of the factors mentioned by Judge Friendly in Lummus as bearing on the decision whether to give collateral estoppel effect to a nonfinal order.
It is true as we have noted that exhaustion of appellate remedies is not a normal requirement of res judicata or collateral estoppel. A final judgment by a district court has preclusive effect even though the judgment is pending on appeal. But of course the only preclusion is of other suits, or of specific issues in other suits; the losing party is not precluded from pressing his appeal! Which describes this case. Until our ruling on the scope of response costs became final, Detrex was entitled to pursue its appellate remedies, and hence to obtain the benefit of a favorable decision by the Supreme Court rendered before the pursuit was complete.
The order awarding attorneys’ fees is
REVERSED.
