OPINION
This case reaches the court, for the second time, with a 15-year-long history of litigation. The issue presented is whether the trial court erred, upon remand from the Kentucky Supreme Court and without the Court’s instruction, in revoking an award of post-judgment interest on the basis of sovereign immunity.
In 1992, Brooks initiated a suit against her former employer, Lexington-Fayette Urban County Housing Authority (Housing Authority) for race discrimination and retaliation in contravention of the Kentucky Civil Rights Act (KCRA). On October 17, 1997, the Fayette Circuit Court entered a judgment in conformity with the jury’s verdict. The jury found for the Housing Authority on Brooks’ claim of
Both parties engaged in vigorous post-verdict and post-judgment practice, thus delaying finality of the judgment. Among the post-verdict activity is the Housing Authority’s objection to Brooks’ Motion for Entry of Judgment which included the allowance of post-judgment interest. The Housing Authority cited
Powell v. Board, of Education of Harrodsburg,
The parties’ post-judgment motion practice included a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict pursuant to Civil Procedure Rule (CR) 50.02, filed by the Housing Authority, and a CR 59.01 motion filed by Brooks.
Having considered the parties’ motions and responses, the Fayette Circuit Court entered a Final Judgment (Judgment) on June 7, 1999. The Judgment included the following language: “[T]he Trial Verdict and Final Judgment was heretofore entered herein on October 17,1997, the same being herein incorporated by reference^]” Such incorporation by reference would have included the allowance of post-judgment interest specifically addressed in that judgment and challenged in post-judgment motion practice. Finally, the Judgment included an award of attorney fees in favor of Brooks in the amount of $52,474.50.
Both parties appealed the Judgment, but the Housing Authority did not identify the award of post-judgment interest as an issue on appeal. After this Court rendered its opinion, the Supreme Court granted discretionary review in order to address several issues not relevant to this appeal. The Supreme Court affirmed the circuit court’s original findings and remanded the case to the “Fayette Circuit Court to reinstate the judgments in Brooks’ favor.”
Brooks v. Lexington-Fayette Urban County Housing Authority,
Upon remand of the case, the Housing Authority relied on a Supreme Court case decided the same day as
Brooks.
That case is
Ky. Dept. of Corrections v. McCullough,
The issue to be resolved on this appeal is whether the circuit court erred upon remand of this case by denying Brooks any post-judgment interest on either the 1997 or the 1999 Judgments. We hold that when the trial court rescinded that portion of its original Judgment allowing interest, it did so contrary to the law of the case doctrine applicable to this case. Consequently, we reverse the circuit court’s judgment that reinstates the June 7, 1999, judgment without the allowance of post-judgment interest.
Our Supreme Court has plainly stated that “a judgment is not final so long as post judgment motions are available and time for making such a motion remains[.]” Kurtsinger
v. Bd. Of Trustees of Kentucky Retirement Systems,
We look to the language of that one Final Judgment to determine its meaning.
Glogower v. Crawford,
The Housing Authority candidly admits that when the case was first appealed to this Court, and subsequently to the Supreme Court, it “did not raise as an issue on appeal the trial court’s award of post-judgment interest on the 1997 judgment[.]” The Housing Authority’s mistake was in believing the 1999 judgment did not address post-judgment interest. As noted, supra, the subsequent judgment re-adjudicated all the issues in the former judgment not specifically addressed in the Final Judgment. Personnel Bd. v. Heck, supra. In order for the Housing Authority’s position to be tenable at this stage, the Final Judgment would had to have specifically excluded the allowance of interest. Instead, the court incorporated all portions of the October 17,1997 judgment including the award of interest.
The Housing Authority could have argued in the first appeal that as a state agency, Brooks could not recover post-judgment interest. Our Supreme Court said that “where a contention was not made, if it could or should have been made on appeal, the doctrine of
res judicata
prevented re-litigation of the same contention in a subsequent appeal.”
Lebow v. Cameron,
Brooks argues that the law of the case doctrine forecloses the Housing Authority from contesting the post-judgment interest award after failing to raise this issue during its first appeal. In response, the Housing Authority objects to applying the law of the case to this appeal for two reasons. First, it contends that because
The law of the case doctrine is “an iron rule, universally recognized, that an opinion or decision of an appellate court in the same cause is the law of the case for a subsequent trial or appeal however erroneous the opinion or decision may have been.”
Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. Blackwell’s Adm’r,
The law of the case rule is a salutary rule, grounded on convenience, experience and reason. It has been often said that it would be intolerable if matters once litigated and determined finally could be relitigated between the same parties, for otherwise litigation would be interminable and a judgment supposed to finally settle the rights of the parties would be only a starting point for new litigation.
Id.
The law of the case doctrine is similar to but distinct from the doctrine of
res judicata.
“There is a difference between such adherence (the law of the case doctrine) and
res adjudicóla.
One directs discretion; the other supersedes it and compels judgment. In other words, in one it is a question of power, in the other of submission.”
Southern Ry. Co. v. Clift,
Sowders v. Coleman,
The Housing Authority’s position that
McCullough
represented a change in the law, and therefore its prior raising of the issue would not have been ripe, is untenable. Although it is true that there are cases where the change of controlling law rendered the doctrine inapplicable,
see Estep v. Commonwealth,
The Housing Authority’s second argument is that an exception to the doctrine must control the instant case.
Conditions triggering an exception to the doctrine are laid out in Blackwell’s Adm’r, supra, in which an electric power company was sued for negligence regarding an electrocution accident involving one of the company’s high tension wires. To summarize Blackwell’s Adm’r, the issue was whether there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury. The Court answered in the affirmative in the first appeal and in the negative in the second. The plaintiff contested the second decision and invoked the law of the case doctrine, but the Court concluded that an exception to the doctrine was controlling.
Blackwell’s Adm’r noted that “a number of courts have maintained and held that the rule is not inflexible but is subject to exception, although the exception must be rare and the former decision must appear to be clearly and palpably erroneous,” Blackwell’s Adm’r at 542. The Court then identified conditions commonly held to prompt an exception to the doctrine. In particular, it quoted a Missouri decision which stated:
[wjhether from grace or right when cogent and convincing reasons appear, such as lack of harmony with other decisions and where no injustice or hardship would flow from a change, or where by inadvertence principles of law have been incorrectly declared the first time, or mistake of fact has been made, or injustice to the rights of parties would be done by adhering to the first opinion, then the exceptions to the rule have play, and it is our duty to re-examine and correct our own errors on the second appeal in the same case.
Id., quoting Mangold v. Bacon,
[a]ll of these cases reflect an accelerating trend to make an exception to the general rule where it clearly appears that the result of the error to be cured far outweighs any harm that may be done in the particular case, especially where no rights have accrued or become vested and no substantial change has been made in the status of the parties by reason of the former decision.
Id. at 543.
The Housing Authority argues that the conditions for an exception summarized in
Blackwell’s Adm’r
are present in this case. According to the Housing Authority, lack of harmony with other decisions exists be
While we are in want of practical precedent as to how to apply the abstract words in
Blackwell’s Adm’r
granting an exception to the doctrine, it is clear that the mere existence of conflict between the law of a case and other decisions does not guarantee the application of an exception. “[A]n opinion or decision of an appellate court in the same cause is the law of the case for a subsequent trial or appeal
however erroneous the opinion or decision may have been.” Id.
at 542 (Emphasis supplied). “A final decision of this Court,
whether right or wrong,
is the law of the case and is conclusive of the questions therein resolved.”
Williamson,
at 325 (Emphasis added). Above all, in
Board of Trustees of U. of Ky. v. Hayse,
In Hayse, a former assistant professor of the University of Kentucky, instituted an action against the Board of the Trustees of the University and one of its deans alleging that the defendants wrongfully denied his tenure in violation of his constitutional rights. The trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of the defendants. On appeal, the Court of Appeals remanded the case to the trial court finding sufficient evidence to send the case to the jury and did not rule on the defendants’ sovereign immunity defense. The defendants raised this defense in its second appeal. The Supreme Court responded that the remand in the first appeal “with no discussion of the sovereign immunity defense, which had been raised and, which, if appropriate, would call for dismissal, forecloses further litigation of these questions as a matter of law.” Id. at 614 (citation omitted).
The crux of the Housing Authority’s objection substantially corresponds to the argument made by Justice Anggelis’ dissent in Hayse. That dissent expresses concern that a precedent will be established in which state immunity can be waived “by an application of ‘the law of the case’ or by failure to plead such affirmative defense or by the failure to properly preserve it for appellate review to this Court.” Id. at 617 (J. Anggelis, dissenting). Despite obvious awareness of this argument, the Hayse majority chose to find that the law of the ease doctrine overrides the principle of state immunity. We are compelled to follow that precedent.
In addition, the present case will not create a bad precedent. No appellate decision affirmatively held in the first appeal that interest may be imposed on KCRA-based judgments. It is the consequence of valid judgments coupled with operation of a valid legal doctrine — the law of the case doctrine — that binds the Housing Authority to pay the interest at issue. In contrast, the court in
Blackwell’s Adm’r,
which recognized an exception, had made an erroneous holding in the first appeal
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Fayette Circuit Court is REVERSED and REMANDED for disposition in accordance with this opinion.
ALL CONCUR.
Notes
. Hayse was overruled on grounds other than the law of the case doctrine by Yanero v. Davis, 65 S.W.3d 510 (Ky.2001).
