In this brеach of contract suit, the district court dismissed Arlyn Nordhom’s claim against Ladish Company and Armco, Inc. on res judicata grounds, holding that Nordhorn should have raised this claim in an earlier suit against HITCO, a former sister company of Ladish. Nordhorn appeals. We reverse because Nordhorn’s claim in this case is based on a different contractual relationship and is against different parties than those involved in the preceding litigation. Res ju-dicata principles therefore do not apply to bar this litigation. We reverse and remand for further proceedings, including a determination of whether this claim is barred by the statute of limitations.
I
In the early 1980’s, HITCO and Ladish Company were both subsidiaries of Armco, Inc. At that time, Armco owned a “family of companies” that manufactured different airplane parts. Ladish and HITCO did not manufacture the same products, although as sister companies, they often engaged in collective marketing efforts. In 1983, Nordhorn promoted both HITCO and Ladish products to Grumman and Rohr, general contractors bidding on Gulfstream and Fokker Aircraft’s “G-IV/F100 Program.” The relationship between HITCO, Ladish, and Armco was dissolved sometime priоr to 1988, when Nord-horn sued HITCO. HITCO therefore had no corporate relationship with Ladish or Armco at any time during the course of the HITCO litigation.
Nordhorn’s suit against HITCO was based upon a breach of a written sales agreement signed in May 1984. Nordhorn was to promote a specific list of nacelle components manufactured by HITCO for use in Gulf-stream and Fokker’s G-IV/F100 Program, and was to be paid a commission on sales. A “nacelle” is an aircraft engine casing, and does not include the engine mounts manufactured by Ladish. That lawsuit was settled in July of 1989, pursuant to a written agreement in which Nordhorn agreed to waive “all claims and counterclaims asserted or which could have been asserted in [that] case.”
During the course of discovery in the HIT-CO litigation, Nordhorn learned of his claim against Ladish and Armco. He asserts that this claim is based upon a separate oral agreement he had with Ladish to promote their forged metal engine mounts for use in the G-IV/F100 Program, along with the nacelle components manufactured by HITCO. According to Nordhorn, Grumman won the bid for the G-IV/F100 Program but informed him that the Ladish engine mounts would not be used in the contract. He alleges that months later, when Grumman decided to purchase the engine mounts after all, Ladish never informed Nordhorn of the sales. Nordhorn alleges that Ladish breached its agreement by failing to pay Nordhorn commissions on those sales.
Following the HITCO settlement, Nord-horn filed this action against Ladish and Armco (referred to collectively as “Ladish”). The district court entered judgment in favor of the defendants on res judicata grounds, stating that the claim against Ladish could and should have been brought in the earlier suit against HITCO.
II
In order to bar a later suit under the doctrine of res judicata, an adjudication must (1) involve the same “claim” as the later suit, (2) have reached a final judgment on the merits, and (8) involve thе same parties or their privies.
Blonder-Tongue Laboratories v. Univ. of Ill. Found.,
A. Identity of claims
Nordhorn’s suit against Ladish does not involve the same “claim” as his suit *1405 against HITCO. The Ninth Circuit determines whether or not two claims are the same for purposes of res judicata with reference to the follоwing criteria:
(1) whether rights or interests established in the prior judgment would be destroyed or impaired by prosecution of the second action; (2) whether substantially the same evidence is presented in the two actions; (3) whether the two suits involve infringement of the same right; and (4) whether the two suits arise out of the same transactional nucleus of facts.
Costantini v. Trans World Airline,
Second, while some of the same evidence is relevant to both suits, the crucial evidence in the Ladish suit, evidence that an oral contract between Nordhorn and Ladish existed and that Ladish sold fоrged metal engine mounts to Grumman without paying commissions to Nordhorn in violation of that contract, was at most tangential to the HITCO lawsuit. For the same reason, although the two suits are related in the sense that the companies and products were at one time related, Nordhom is not alleging an infringement of the same “right,” or a claim based on the same nucleus of facts in his suit against Ladish as he did against HITCO. Nordhom claimed a right to be paid commissions undеr an alleged oral contract with Ladish which is separate from his right asserted in the HIT-CO litigation to be paid commissions under the written sales agreement with HITCO.
B. Identity of Parties
In addition, Ladish was neither a party to the HITCO action, nor in privity with HITCO at the time of the HITCO litigation.
See
Restatement (2nd) of Judgments §§ 34(3), 39, 43-61 (a person who is not a party to an action is generally not entitled to .the benefits of res judicata). This Circuit has held that when two parties are so closely aligned in interest that one is the virtual representative of the other, a claim by or against one will serve to bar the same claim by or against the other.
E.g., In re Dominelli,
Corporate affiliations may be relevant in determining whether two parties are in privity for purposes of issue or claim preclusion under this analysis where there is identity of control. For example, in
In re Gottheiner,
Thus, because the claim against Ladish does not involve the same contract or defendants as those parties in the prior litigation, and because the defendants in the suit were not in privity with HITCO at the time of the prior litigation, res judicata does not bar the instant suit.
Ill
As an alternative ground for affirming the district court’s judgment, Ladish contends that the claim is barred by the three-year Washington statute of limitations for oral contrаcts. ROW 4.16.080(3). Under Washington law, Nordhom became entitled to commissions under his oral agreement when Ladish contracted to sell engine mounts to Grumman in April or May of 1984.
Colwell v. Eising,
Nordhorn’s claim of “fraudulent concealment,” is based on his allegation that when Grumman changed its mind and decided to purchase the mоunts from Ladish, Ladish failed to track its sales by invoicing them through HITCO, as agreed, or to pay him the commissions due. Ladish never gave any false information to Nordhorn regarding its sales of engine mounts, however. Rather, Nordhorn contends only that he was led to believe that Ladish would not be making any sales covered by their contract because Grumman told him, subsequent to his presentation, that the Ladish engine mounts would not be used in the G-IWF100 program. At the time, this statement was traе. Ladish itself made no representations to Nordhorn concerning actual sales to Grumman.
Washington courts require more than a mere failure to provide information for a claim of fraudulent concealment. As the сourt stated in
Wood v. Gibbons,
Nordhorn’s stronger contention is that Washington’s liberal discovery rale should apply to his case. Under the Washington discovery rale, a cause of action generаlly accrues upon the discovery of the elements of the claim, or when, in due diligence, the plaintiff should have discovered the elements of the claim.
See Matter of Estates of Hibbard,
Nordhorn analogizes his case to
U.S. Oil & Refining Co. v. State,
Finally, Nordhorn argues that Ladish may have shipped engine mounts to Grumman within the three-year statute of limitations, and that claims based on those sales should not be barred. However, we need not decide that issue at this time, because there is no evidence that any such shipments were in fact made. In addition, because neither the existence nor the terms of the alleged oral contract with Ladish have been proven, it is impossible to say at this point whether a series of shipments would constitute a single sale or several sales.
The decision of the district court is REVERSED AND REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
