This is a Mississippi diversity action. The plaintiff Freeman sues for the wrongful death, Miss.Code Ann. § 11-7-13 (1984 Supp.), of his infant daughter Laura, on behalf of himself and of four other statutory wrongful death beneficiaries (i.e., Laura’s mother and her three minor siblings). Freeman appeals from the dismissal of these claims on the ground of collateral estoppel. The district court based its dismissal on the circumstance that — in a previous suit brought by Freeman individually against the present same defendants for his own personal injuries arising from the same accident in which Laura was killed— Freeman’s individual suit had been dismissed, upon a jury verdict exculpating the defendants of negligence in the accident.
We affirm the dismissal of Freeman’s own wrongful death claim. However, finding no privity between him and the other wrongful death beneficiaries, we reverse the dismissal of the claims of the four other wrongful death beneficiaries, holding further that the doctrine of “virtual representation” does not justify the application of collateral estoppel.
I.
This litigation arises out of a collision in Mississippi between a vehicle driven by Freemаn and a truck driven by the defendant Deis in the course of his employment with the co-defendant Lester Coggins Trucking, Inc. As a result of the collision, Freeman and a passenger in his vehicle sustained personal injuries, and two other passengers, including the present decedent Laura, Freeman’s infant daughter, were killed. Four suits were filed in federal court for personal injuries or wrongful death, of which for present purposes we need note only the present suit (by Freeman for himself and as representing four other claimants as Laura’s wrongful death beneficiaries), and the earlier-tried one by Freeman individually for his own personal injuries. The latter suit was dismissed after an adverse jury verdict that by special interrogatory found the same two defendants free of the same negligence asserted by the present suit. 1
Based upon this adverse jury finding and the resulting dismissal of Freeman’s action *862 for his own personal injuries, the district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment grounded on collateral estoppel.
II.
Freeman’s suit was dismissed in federal court. Consequently, although both it and the present suit аre Mississippi diversity cases, “the doctrines of
res judicata
and collateral estoppel require application of the federal rule when, as in this case, a party seeks to estop a claim from being raised in a diversity action brought in federal court on the basis of an earlier determination made in a federal court sitting pursuant to its diversity jurisdiction.”
Stovall v. Price Waterhouse Co.,
“Federal common law permits the use of collateral estoppel upon the showing of three necessary criteria[.]”
Hicks v. Quaker Oats Company,
(1) that the issue at stake be identical to the one involved in prior litigation;
(2) that the issue has been actually litigated in the prior litigation; and
(3) that the determination of the issue in the prior litigation has been a critical and necessary part of the judgment in that earlier action.
Hicks, supra,
“[A] right, question, or fact distinctly put in issue and directly determined as a ground of recovery by a court of competent jurisdiction collaterally estops a party or his privy from relitigating the issue in a subsequent action.”
Hardy v. Johns-Manville Sales Corporation,
Wе will therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal on collateral estoppel grounds of Freeman’s claim for damages due him individually because of Laura’s allegedly wrongful death.
III.
A different issue, however, is presented as to whether collateral estoppel should bar the wrongful death claims here asserted on behalf of the mother and siblings of Laura. They wеre not parties to the first suit by Freeman, brought by him individually for his own personal injuries. Although Free *863 man himself as plaintiff brings the present action for their injuries in a representative capacity, the issue is whether their claims are precluded because of the adverse determination of Freeman’s individual claims in the earlier suit.
The ordinary rule is that a party appearing in a representative capacity for others is not bound by the determination of an earlier suit in which he appeared only in an individual capacity.
Sayre v. Crews,
Likewise, viewing these present wrongful death claims as asserted on behalf of the mother and siblings of Laura, they would not ordinarily be precluded as barred by the unfavorable judgment in the first suit brought by their husband-father Freeman, for close family relationships are not sufficient by themselves to establish privity with the original suit’s party, or to bind a nonparty to that suit by the judgment entered therein.
See Leonhard v. United States,
Each [family member] has an independent cause of action for personal injuries, free from claim preclusion, just as other multiple plaintiffs are presumed to own separate claims. None is bound by issue preclusion in an action for personal injuries, for the same reasons as apply to preclusion among unrelated parties____ [Preclusion does not apply between litigation conducted by one family member in a personal capacity and litigation conducted by the same person as a reprеsentative of another family member.
Wright, Miller, and Cooper, supra, § 4459 at pp. 524-25.
The district court recognized these principles, but it felt that the Fifth Circuit’s expanded notion of “virtual representation,”
see
18 Wright, Miller, and Cooper,
supra,
§ 4457, permitted application of collateral estoppel to bar the present subsequent suit by the mother and siblings of Laura. Under this doctrine, “a person may be bound by a [prior] judgment even though not а party if one of the parties to the suit is so closely aligned with his interests as to be his virtual representative.”
Aerojet General Corporation v. Askew,
In holding that the present “privy relationship” was sufficiently close to justify application of collateral estoppel, the district court cited
Hardy v. Johns-Manville Sales Corporation,
IV.
In Southwest Airlines, supra, we outlined generally the circumstances in which the relationship between the one who is party in the first, and the nonparty thereto sought to be bound or precluded by collаteral estoppel in the second suit, may be sufficiently close as to justify preclusion:
First, a nonparty who has succeeded to a party’s interest in property is bound by any prior judgments against that party.... Second, a nonparty who controlled the original suit will be bound by the resulting judgment____ Third, federal courts will bind a nonparty whose interests were represented adеquately by a party in the original suit____
Southwest Airlines, supra,
Since the mother and the siblings of the second suit obviously did not succeed in property to any interest of Freeman asserted in the first suit, and obviously did not control the original suit by Freeman,
3
the district court apparently concluded that the interests of the nonparty mother and siblings “were represented adequately” by Freeman in the first suit. Hоwever, both from
Southwest Airlines
itself and the succeeding decisions of this circuit, the concept of “adequate representation” does not refer to apparently competent litigation of an issue in a prior suit by a party holding parallel interests;
4
rather, it refers to the concept of virtual representation, by which a nonparty may be bound beсause the party to the first suit “is so closely aligned with his [the nonparty’s] interests as to be his virtual representative,”
Aerojet General Corp., supra,
Further, as the jurisprudence of this circuit after Southwest Airlines makes plain, for parties to be so “closely aligned," or that the party’s representation in the first suit “adequately” represents the non-party’s interests in the first suit so as to preclude a nonparty in subsequent litigation, requires more than a showing of parallel interests or, even, a use of the same attorney in both suits.
The most recent decision of this circuit on the issue,
Hardy v. Johns-Mansville Sales Corp., supra,
extensively discusses the applicable principles at
After pointing out that the nonparties were not shown in
Hardy
to have participated directly or indirectly in the first suit,
In
Pollard v. Cockrell,
V.
We conclude, therefore, that the plaintiff Freeman’s present action, insofar as in his capacity representing the wrongful death claims of Laura’s mother and siblings, is not barred by the judgment based upon jury determination of non-negligence dismissing the earlier suit brought by Freeman individually to recover only for his own personal injuries sustained in the same accident. The mother and siblings were not parties to the first suit nor were they in privity with Freeman in his first suit, nor — within the contours of the limited exception of this court permitting non-parties to be bound because of their virtual representation in the first suit — were the mother and siblings so closely aligned in legal interest with Freeman as to justify a holding that their interests were adequately represented in the first suit. We are re-enforced in this conclusion because, so far as we can ascertain, no appellate decision has ever applied collateral estoppel in like circumstances, whereas its application has consistently been rejected in the few reported instances in which sought.
An underlying principle is that “[i]t is a violation of due process for a judgment [in a prior suit] to be binding on a litigant who was not a party or a privy and therefore
*866
has never had an opportunity to be heard.”
Parkland Hosiery Company, Inc. v. Shore,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment insofar as it dismisses the plaintiff Freeman’s individual claim for wrongful death damages, but we REVERSE the district court’s judgment insofar as it dismisses the claims asserted on behalf of the other wrongful death beneficiaries of Laura Freeman. Each party to bear its own costs.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
Notes
. Freeman also assеrted in the present action that Lester Coggins Trucking, Inc. is liable for negligently entrusting a company vehicle to Deis. The record does not indicate whether Freeman asserted the same theory of recovery in the prior action. Under Mississippi law, however, liability cannot be imposed on an employer on a theory of negligent entrustment unless the еmployee is first found to be negligent.
Brown Oil Tools, Inc. v. Schmidt,
. Throughout this litigation, the parties have viewed Bobby Freeman’s wrongful death claim solely in terms of collateral estoppel. The district court did the same in reviewing and ruling upon the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. This issue might perhaps better be viewed in terms of res judicata, since both suits concerned grounds for relief, though differing, that arose out of conduct complained of in the first action.
See Kilgoar v. Colbert County Board of Education,
. "To have control of litigation requires that a person have effective choice as to the legal theories and proofs to be advanced in behalf of the party to the action. He must also have control over the opportunity to obtain review."
Hardy, supra,
Thus, in
Montana v. United States,
. In support of the adequate representation statement,
Southwest Airlines
cites and describes only virtual representation decisions, as follows,
Heckman v. United States, 1912,224 U.S. 413 , 445-46,32 S.Ct. 424 , 434-35,56 L.Ed. 820 (United States represents interests of American Indians); Kerrison v. Stewart, 1876, 93 U.S. [(3 Otto)] 155, 160,23 L.Ed. 843 , 845 (trustee represents interests of beneficiaries); Aerojet-General Corp. v. Askew, 5 Cir.1975,511 F.2d 710 (state represents interests of a home-rule county); Berman v. Denver Tramway Corp., 10 Cir.1952,197 F.2d 946 (local government represents interests of the public).
The discussion in Southwest Airlines of this third, or adequate-representation exception, is limited to virtual representation decisions and principles.546 F.2d at 98-100 .
