delivered the opinion of the court:
Third-party plaintiff-appellant George A. Fuller Company (Fuller) was the contractor on a project for Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine (the college). Schmidt, Garden & Erikson was the architect (the architect.) After completion of the project, the college sued Fuller in Federal court for breach of contract; Fuller counterclaimed against the college for breach of contract and filed a claim against the college for breach of contract and filed a claim against the architect for causing it to suffer delay damages. Claims relating to damages suffered by subcontractors were withdrawn from the case by stipulation and demand of the college and the architect. The jury returned verdicts for all defendants on all the claims. Thereafter, one of the subcontractors filed a claim in State court against Fuller for damages resulting from being delayed in performing its subcontract work. Fuller then filed this third-party action against the college and the architect. The trial court dismissed on grounds of collateral estoppel and apparently res judicata and also indicated that it believed the third-party complaint did not state a cause of action. It denied a motion for leave to amend the complaint because of its belief that the State action was barred by the prior Federal action. We reverse, holding that the State action is not barred since the parties withdrew the claims in question and in light of the general verdict there is no specific finding upon which a holding of collateral estoppel could be based. Since it appears from the record that the trial court would otherwise have allowed the motion to amend the complaint, we remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings including the desired amendment of the complaint. However we believe that the present complaint does state a valid cause of action against the owner.
The college filed its suit in Federal court in 1975 seeking damages for Fuller’s alleged breach of construction contract. Fuller, as already noted, filed a counterclaim against the college and a third-party claim against the architect. It claimed that due to alleged breaches of the construction contract by the college and the negligent acts, errors, omissions and breaches of contract by the architect, it was delayed and hindered in its contract; and was damaged in the amount of $1,992,944. Initially, one of its claims was that due to defendants’ conduct it might be liable to subcontractors. Fuller also filed to foreclose its mechanics’ lien. Accordingly, as required by law, all other lien claimants were joined as additional counterdefendants and they, in turn, filed their lien claims. It was provided by stipulation that the claims of Fuller, the college and the architect among themselves would be tried before a jury and that thereafter the issue raised by the subcontractor claims would be tried by the court. Thereupon counsel for the college and the architect demanded that:
“I also think that some of the claims that are contained in there are some of the subcontractors’ claims which we are going to hear in the next portion of the trial, Mr. Hoffman, Mr. Reliable, and therefore those should not be included in any damage claim by Fuller. Those are going to be adjudicated in the subsequent hearing.”
Therefore it would appear that the issue of Fuller’s potential liability as it related to subcontractors was not submitted to the jury. The jury returned general verdicts for all the defendants on all the claims.
Reliable Welding, the subcontractor involved in the action, withdrew its claim and refiled it in the State court. One subcontractor, Hoffman, did proceed to a bench trial in the Federal court. The trial court found all three parties, Fuller, the college and the architect to be responsible for the delays as to Hoffman. Fuller’s conduct which caused the delay apparently consisted of instructing the subcontractor to remove the backfill which ordinarily would have been there. While the Federal court denied Fuller’s claim over against the college and the architect it did so only on the ground that following Board of Education v. Joseph J. Duffy Co. (1968),
After Reliable filed its claim for delay damages, Fuller filed its present action against the college and the architect. While the complaint against the college is quite lengthy and detailed it is accurately summarized by defense counsel: “If we [Fuller] are liable to Reliable, it’s because the college breached its contract with us,” that is, any delays were the direct and proximate result of the college’s acts in breach of its contract with Fuller and not due to any active conduct by Fuller. Fuller’s claim against the architect seems to be based both on the college’s contract with Fuller, to which it does not appear the architect was a party, and in tort based solely on a general duty to exercise due care to avoid harming the interests of Fuller and its subcontractors.
I
The doctrine of collateral estoppel bars the litigating of the same issue twice. But it is only applicable when the issue was actually and necessarily litigated and determined in the first actions. (Kemling v. Country Mutual Insurance Co. (1982),
II
Normally where the parties and causes of action are the same in the two lawsuits, the claimant is barred by the doctrine of res judicata from raising those matters relating to the same cause of action which were raised or which might have been raised and determined in the first suit. (Baird & Warner, Inc. v. Addison Industrial Park, Inc. (1979),
Ill
The modern tendency in Illinois is to try to lace the ultimate liability for a loss in whole or in part where logic suggests such liability really belongs — usually against the more negligent party or parties. (See, for example, discussion in Kissel, Developments in Third Party Practice—Contribution and Indemnity, 71 Ill. B.J. 654 (1983).) Defendants claim that Fuller’s complaint cannot state a cause of action because:
(a) Fuller’s own conduct precludes indemnification as a matter of law;
(b) as a matter of law, absent an express indemnification agreement, a stranger to a contract cannot be required to indemnify one of the parties to that contract for damages arising out of a breach of that contract;
(c) Fuller cannot assert a breach of contract claim against the architect because the architect owed no contractual obligations to Fuller.
(a)
Fuller’s complaint alleged that any losses were not the result of any active conduct of Fuller but were due to the college’s and architect’s acts and omissions. The defendants do not contend that these allegations are insufficient to set forth a claim for recovery by a passive wrongdoer over against an active wrongdoer. Rather they contend that the claim is barred by the Federal court’s finding that Fuller as well as the college and the architect were guilty of delays against Hoffman. This contention is without merit for two reasons. First, the only cited conduct of Fuller causing delay toward Hoffman was peculiar to Hoffman — the giving of instructions to remove the backfill. It is not related to the question whether Fuller was guilty of actively delaying Reliable, a totally different party doing different work. Second, the Federal court did not measure the magnitude of the conduct of the parties and determine that one was active, one passive or both were active. Rather it denied indemnification for a totally different reason.
(b)
Defendants rely on Board of Education v. Joseph J. Duffy Co. (1968),
Unlike Duffy and Talandis, here there was a contractual relationship between Fuller and the college and Fuller is claiming damages because the college allegedly breached that contract. A person breaching a contract can be held liable for such damages as may fairly and reasonably be considered as naturally arising from the breach thereof in light of the facts known or which should have been known or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been within the contemplation of the parties as a probable result of a breach thereof. (Sheppard v. Fagan (1981),
(c)
The architect’s contention that it owed no contractual obligation to Fuller is at least to some degree irrelevant since the claim was in both contract and tort and under Gateway Erectors v. Lutheran Hospital (1981),
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
JOHNSON and LINN, JJ., concur.
