ORDER OF DISMISSAL AND REMAND
This matter is before the court on motion of defendants to dismiss the matter on the pleadings pursuant to Rules 12(b)(6) and 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Plaintiff, has opposed this motion and seeks remand of the matter to the state court from which it was removed.
For the reasons stated below, this court dismisses all claims under Rule 12(b)(6) except to the extent they seek to vacate the prior judgment in Ray H. Cheuming, Jr. v. Ford Motor Company, Civil Action No. 92-CP-289-359 (Kershaw County, South Carolina) (hereinafter “Chewning I” matter). As the only surviving claims seek equitable relief in the form of the vacating of a judgment, this court finds that those matters should be remanded to the court rendering the challenged judgment.
STANDARD
A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) should be granted only when it appears that plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of a claim that would entitle plaintiff to relief on that claim.
Conley v. Gibson,
BACKGROUND
In this action, plaintiff alleges that defendants engaged in a pattern of hiding or destroying evidence and lawyer-assisted perjury in Cheuming I. Plaintiff alleges that he was damaged by these actions by an adverse result in Chewning I. The present action is asserted against the defendant in Chewning /(Ford), an expert witness who testified in the Chewning I trial (Biekerstaff), and the corporation that employed the expert witness (Biekerstaff & Associates).
The present complaint alleges five causes of action that are all directly related to alleged misconduct by the parties, witnesses and attorneys in Chewning I: (1) “Fraud and/or Non-Disclosure”; (2) “Intentional Non-Disclоsure of Material Fact”; (3) “Fraud on the Court”; (4) “Civil Conspiracy”; and (5) “Spoliation of Evidence.” Plaintiff seeks “judgment against Defendants, for damages including special damages, punitive damages, equitable relief estopping Ford from asserting the verdict procured by the Defendants’ fraud and criminal acts, prejudgment interest, costs, attorneys’ fees and such other relief as the Court deems proper.”
In the complaint, plaintiff addresses the relationship between the present action and Chewning I as follows:
This suit is a fraud suit and is not brought for the purpose of relitigating the claims in the underlying [case]. The evidence in this fraud case is limited to the facts and circumstances surrounding [defendants’] and others’ actions during FORD’s defense in [the earlier action] such as inter alia, fraudulent conceаlment, obstruction of justice and tampering with witnesses.
Complaint ¶ 14.
DISCUSSION
This court begins its analysis with the presumption that verdicts are binding absent
The court in
Robinson
was presented with a situation very similar to the allegations in this case. Plaintiffs, who had been unsuccessful in an earlier product liability suit, brought a later common law fraud action against both counsel for the defendant in the earlier action and a corporation related to the original defendant. Plaintiffs argued that they were “not attempting ... tо have the previous judgment set aside____ Rather, they [were] seeking to recover damages ... caused by the defendants’ fraud in the course of obtaining that judgment.”
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of the claims against these third parties because “the previous judgment operate[d] as a bar to the damages claimed by the plaintiffs.”
In a similar vein, plaintiff in this action suggests that the present action can somehow be tried without retrial of the earlier action. Complaint ¶ 14 (quoted supra). This court cannot envision how this could be accomplished. To succeed in this action as presently advanced, plaintiff would have to first prevail in proving that one or more of the defendants wrongfully denied him access to evidence or presented perjured testimony. Proof of these allegations would not, however, end the inquiry. To succeed in proving causation and damages, plaintiff would have to prove that but for these wrongful acts, plaintiff would have received a jury verdict awarding him damages in the earlier case. This clearly raises the collateral estoppel concerns addressed in Robinson. Moreover, a determination of the amount of damages in the present case would require the new jury to speculate as to the amount the prior jury would have awarded but for the defendants’ wrongful conduct. 2
In short, the fact finder in this case would have to speculate as to what a fact finder in an earlier case would have done if the case had been presented differently.
See generally Robinson,
Plaintiff also seeks punitive and other unspecified damages for defendants’ alleged activities. Clearly, however, the basic causation underlying all claims would require a finding that defendants’ actions caused an adverse verdict in the prior action. The basic injury, likewise, would be the verdict not awarded in the earlier action.
Robinson,
In the face of established procedures that avoid speculation, plaintiff faces a substantial challenge to convince the court to adopt what appears to be a very novel alternative remedy. He has failed to do so. Indeed, plaintiffs own memorandum in support of remand seems to concede the limited nature of the remedies available to him by arguing that this matter must be remanded to the court that was “defrauded” by the alleged wrongful activities. Specifically, plaintiff argues that this court should “remand the entire matter to the State Court to enable that forum to address whether оr not it was defrauded by the activities complained of and what remedy should result therefrom.” Plaintiffs Memorandum in Support of Remand at 1. Plaintiff repeatedly states that the defendants in this case committed fraud on the state court by offering false testimony and using lawyer-procured perjured testimony. Id. at 1-2. Plaintiff further states:
The acts that give rise to these causes of action encompass the activities of Defendants Ford, Biekerstaff, Bickerstaff & Associates and Ford’s attorneys during the discovery, the trial and after the trial of Chewning’s [Chewning I] case____Defen-dants apparently do not want the State Court they defrauded to hear this case. Rather, they want this Federal Court to hear the matter. As they rely upon the judgment obtained below to bar Chewn-ing’s claim, Defendants are intending for this Court to, in effect, enjoin Chewning from pursuing a remedy for the fraud perpetrated on the State Court and him.
Id. at 2-3.
Each of the eases plaintiff cites in support of his remand argument is an action seeking to vacate a judgment. None involves independent claims for damages. Neither has plaintiff directed the court to any authority that would allow for an independent claim at law. The cases he citеs in support of his various claims merely state the elements normally applicable to those claims. None of the cited cases suggests that these causes of action may be applied in the special arena of fraud on a court or to support a claim for damages resulting from perjury in judicial proceedings. Rather, the only cases plaintiff сites in his memoranda which relate directly to judicial proceedings are either cases decided under Rule 60 and related doctrines that might result in the granting of a new trial, 3 or relating to the court’s discretion to allow comment to a jury on the absence or destruction of evidence. 4
Often a party does not seek to overturn a judgment on [grounds of fraud] until sometime after that judgment has been affirmed on appeal or the time for appeal has elapsed ... Under such circumstances, the party seeking to overturn a federal civil judgment normally can proceed in three ways. That party can file a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(3) fоr relief on the ground of fraud, misrepresentation or other misconduct____The aggrieved party also can seek to set aside the judgment on the narrower theory that it was obtained by “fraud on the court.” Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford-Empire Co.,322 U.S. 238 ,64 S.Ct. 997 ,88 L.Ed. 1250 (1944) ... Finally the party that wishes to challenge the judgment can pursue an independent action in equity. Great Coastal Express, Inc., v. Int’l Brotherhood of Teamsters,675 F.2d 1349 , 1357-58 (4th Cir.1982), cert. denied,459 U.S. 1128 ,103 S.Ct. 764 ,74 L.Ed.2d 978 (1983).
Under each of thоse approaches the proper court in which to raise the allegation that a judgment was obtained by fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct normally is the district court. It is obvious that a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(1) or (3) or an independent action in equity should be filed in the district court. Furthermore, the proper forum in which to assert that a party has perpetrated a “fraud on the court” is the court which allegedly was a victim of that fraud.
In the cited ease of
Hazel-Atlas,
the Supreme Court discussed the long recognized power of the federal courts to alter or set aside judgments based on certain forms of after-discovered fraud, in spite of the general rule limiting correction of judgment to the term of court in which the judgment was entered.
Similarly, the Fourth Circuit’s reference to “an independent claim in equity” in
Great Coastal
does not create any independent claim for damages. Indeed, the “independent claim” itself appears to refer to the provisions of Rule 60(b).
See
Clearly, the remedies at issue in Great Coastal, Hazelr-Atlas, and Weisman were equitable remedies relating to the validity of judgments. None of the three cases suggest the existеnce of an independent action for damages. Plaintiff has pointed to no cases that suggest otherwise.
The remedies plaintiff seeks, and the independent claims he desires to advance, would, in effect, allow relitigation of cases by placing before a jury a decision that has clearly been vested within the equitable powers of the court. Moreovеr, the claims, as plaintiff asserts them, would require litigation of a claim within a claim and require one jury to delve into the collective mind of another jury, a highly speculative and unprecedented practice. Finally, allowing the damages claims advanced by plaintiff to proceed would allow a dissatisfied party to “subvert the balance of equities contained in [Rule 60]” to an even greater extent than that which the court rejected in
Great' Coastal.
The remedy provided by Rule 60 and related common law doctrines vests the court with discretion to аllow a new trial. If the court finds that a new trial is warranted, that new trial is conducted as if the first trial never occurred. This balance avoids the necessity for a trial within a trial, and recognizes the general interest in the finality of judgments, while still providing appropriate relief for ill-gotten judgments. Plaintiffs relief, if any, must be obtained under this carefully balanced scheme.
A Rule 60 motion or equitablе action to set aside a verdict may be heard only by the court whose judgment is challenged.
Weisman,
It appears from the briefs that plaintiff has already pursued at least one Rule 60(b) motion in Cheuming I. Although defendants argue that plaintiff should be precluded from advancing the present claims because of an adverse decision on this prior motion, it is not clear to this court whether the same allegations here were or could have been raised in that motion. The resolution of those questions can, however, best be resolved by the original tribunal on remand. Similarly, whether all of the present defendants or only Ford can properly be retained as defendants in an equitablе action to set aside a verdict should be decided by that court based on its procedures and applicable law. 5
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, this court finds that plaintiffs remedy, if any, is to petition the original court either through a Rule 60 motion or an “independent action in equity” (if allowed by the procedures of that court), to reopen or vacate the earlier judgment. This court, therefore, grants defendants’ motion to the extent it seeks dismissal of the independent claims for damages. This results in the dismissal, with prejudice, of all causes of action other than the third cause of action, except to the extent that they can be construed as a Rule 60 motion or independent action in equity to set aside a judgment to the extent such procedures are available in the state court. 6 Because the remaining claims can properly be pursued only in the court that rendered the judgment now challenged, this court also grants plaintiffs motion to remand. The remainder of the action may, therefore, be presented to the state court for decision under its applicable rules and case law relevant to plaintiffs third cause of action for fraud on the court and such other related claims in equity, if any, as the state court may allow to be added by amendment.
This matter is remanded without cost to either side.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals seemed to suggest that these additional parties could, in fact, be defendants in an independent action to set aside the verdict. At first blush, this seems unnecessary as the relief to be granted, a new trial, would not appear to require more than the parties to the original action. However, since the action can affect the interests of these other parties (in that they would lose the right to rely on the doctrine of collateral estoppel), it is arguable that they might be joined in such an action even though it would not appear necessary to this court. Their inclusion does not, however, appear to allow for any greater relief than would otherwise be available.
. By including in his prayer a request that defendants be precluded from relying on the prior judgment, plaintiff suggests his mistaken belief that the underlying claim for damages could be tried separately by a retrial of the Chewning I case.
. See Plaintiffs Memorandum in Suрport of Remand at 4, citing common law fraud on the court cases as well as more recent Rule 60 and "independent cause of action in equity” cases.
. Plaintiff relies on
Vodusek v. Bayliner Marine Corp.,
. In their memorandum in opposition to remand, defendants advance various arguments which this court finds go to the merits of the inquiry remanded to the state court. This court has not, therefore, considered these arguments in regard to the present motion, reserving those for the state court on remand.
. This court has not resolved whether any defendants other than Ford would properly be defendants in such an action. See supra note 1. However, the relief available should not vary.
