In this case, we apply the principles of res judicata in dеciding whether a pair of adult children (“Petitioners”) may proceed with a lawsuit against an energy company that spilled heating oil in their parents’ home. Their parents (“Cochran Parents” or “Parents”) had previously sued Griffith Energy Services (“Griffith”), the same company, and won a judgment after a jury trial.
The Circuit Court for Washington County dismissed the Petitioners’ lawsuit, holding, inter alia, that Petitioners’ claims were barred by res judicata. The Court of Special Appeals (“CSA”) affirmed in an unrepоrted opinion, reaching only the res judicata issue. Petitioners appealed, and we granted certiorari on the following question presented:
Will Maryland allow a defendant who commits fraud during litigation to continue to escape liability, even when that fraud inflicted actual harm on the victims independent of the litigation, victims who are not owners and do not have the power to test the property? 1
We will affirm and hold that the Petitioners’ claims are barred by res judicata.
Facts and Legal Proceedings
This case is the second iteration of a lawsuit agаinst Griffith Energy Services,
In the course of the first litigation, Griffith had the home tested, in May 2006, and the results showed more than a 300 percent increase in benzene levels. Griffith and its attorneys failed to disclose this information to the Cochran Parents until late 2006. When Griffith made the disclosure, the Cochran Parents amended their lawsuit to include a claim that Griffith fraudulently concealed the contamination levels in the home. The Cochran Parents further alleged that Griffith and its lawyers had affirmatively misreрresented that the test results showed improvement in the benzene levels.
The Circuit Court granted summary judgment on the fraud claim, opining: “To say the [Cochran Parents] had a right to rely on any representation in such a highly contested and contentious case ... stretches credulity to the point that it no longer exists.” The Circuit Court also said the fraud allegations were inadequately pled. The case went to trial on the negligence and breach of contract claims, and the Cochran Parents prevailed. Their jury award, in the low six figures, was affirmed by the CSA in an unreported opinion, filed July 2, 2008. Although the Cochran Parents appealed the summary judgment on the fraud claim, the intermediate appellate court affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court.
Apparently not satisfied with the verdict obtained by their parents, in May 2009, Petitioners filed suit against Griffith and its attorneys (“Respondents”) for fraud and negligent supervision. 2 In their complaint, as facts common to all counts alleged, Petitioners claimed to have suffered “loss of use of the lower portion of the home ... emotional distress, concern, anxiety, and loss of enjoyment of the use of the home, and past, present, and future concern, anguish and anxiety regarding the health effects which may have been inflicted upon them.”
Respondents moved to dismiss the lawsuit, and the Circuit Court for Washington County granted that motion in an order filed March 2, 2010. The Circuit Court ruled that Petitioners’ claims were barred by res judicata; that Respondents owed Petitioners no duty to disclose the results of the air quality test; and that the Petitioners did not allege any legally cognizable damages.
Petitioners timely appealed to the CSA, raising four issues:
1. Did the circuit court err by treating the appellees’ dispositive motion as a motion to dismiss, when matters outside the complaint were presented to and relied upon by the court in granting that motion?
2. Did the circuit court err by holding that the appellants were barred from instituting suit under the doctrine of res judicata?
3. Did the circuit court err by holding that the fraud counts were barred because the defendants owed no duty to the appellants?
4. Did the circuit court err by holding that the claim for damages is barred?
Petitioners filed a petition for
certiorari,
which we granted on November 18, 2011.
See Cochran v. Griffith Energy Servs.,
Discussion
In reviewing a lower court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss, we must determine whether the court was “legally correct.”
See, e.g., Napata v. Univ. of Md. Med. Sys. Corp.,
The doctrine of
res judicata
“bars the relitigation of a claim if there is a final judgment in a previous litigation where the parties, the subject mattеr and causes of action are identical or substantially identical as to issues actually litigated and as to those which could have or should have been raised in the previous litigation.”
R & D 2001, LLC v. Rice,
As we explained in Norville:
Res judicata protects the courts, as well as the parties, from the attendant burdens of relitigation. This doctrine avoids the expense and vexation attending multiple lawsuits, conserves the judicial resources, and fosters reliance on judicial action by minimizing thе possibilities of inconsistent decisions.
Norville,
Petitioners argue that
res judicata
should not apply because they were not parties to the first suit and not in privity with their Parents, the plaintiffs in that suit.
3
The CSA rejected this theory, holding that Petitioners were in privity with their Parents. The court relied on
Ugast v. LaFontaine,
[T]he term “parties” includes all persons who have a direct interеst in the subject matter of the suit, and have a right to control the proceedings, make defense, examine the witnesses, and appeal if an appeal lies. So, where persons, althoughnot formal parties of record, have a direct interest in the suit, and in the advancement of their interest take open and substantial control of its prosecution, or they are so far represented by another that their interests receive actual and efficient protection, any judgment recovered therein is conclusive upon them to the same extent as if they had been formal parties. (Citations omitted; emphasis added.)
Applying Ugast, the CSA held that Petitioners, based on their pre-existing interest in redressing their exposure to the benzene in the family home, were indeed “so far represented by [their parents] that their interests received actual and efficient protection” in the prior lawsuit. As the court explained:
According to the complaint, [Petitioners] were living in the Cochran home “for substantial periods of time” during the discovery stage of the Cochran Parents’ litigation, when the test results were allegedly concealed. They also allege that [Griffith’s] remediation efforts deprived them оf the ... use and enjoyment of a portion of the home and caused emotional distress and anxiety regarding the home and future health effects. Even when drawing all inferences in the appellants’ favor, we must conclude that they were aware of the Cochran Parents’ litigation and chose not to intervene.
Indeed, the fraudulent conduct alleged by [Petitioners] was [Griffith’s] failure to disclose and misrepresentations regarding the test results to the Cochran Parents. Therefore, assuming the truth of the facts in the complaint, appellants were in privity with their parents for purposes of res judicata. (Citation omitted and emphasis added.)
The CSA also relied on its decision in
Douglas v. First Sec. Fed. Sav. Bank, Inc.,
Before us, Griffith cites
Ugast
and
Douglas
for these same propositions. Our research also reveals other eases that support binding a nonparty to a lawsuit in similar circumstances.
See, e.g., Greenwell v. Am. Guar. Corp.,
In a case of particular interest,
VanDeWalle v. Albion Nat'l Bank,
[T]he facts remain that the parents and sons had a close, mutual relationship with respect to the property and that all three suits arise out of the same occurrence. As noted by one commentator, “it has come to be recognized that the privity label simply expresses a conclusion that preclusion is proper.” 18 Charles A. Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 4449 at 418 (1981). Under the circumstances, the entire VanDeWalle clan is in privity for the purposes of these suits.
Id. at 573.
Here, the claim in both cases involved the Cochran residence, in which Petitioners resided while they were not in college.
See, e.g., Douglas,
The bedrock of Petitioners’ claim is that they were entitled to rely on the alleged misrepresentations and fraudulent nondisclosure by Respondents to the Cochran Parents, with respect to the test results. Thus, the claims by Petitioners in this suit, resting on this alleged fraud, are derived
solely
from their parents’ claims, and are thus inextricably intertwined with the claims adjudicated in the first suit. There is no allegation that Respondents made any independent fraudulent statements to Petitioners themselves. This, too, supports privity. The fraud claim was decided in the first suit, and the Circuit Court’s grant of summary judgment against the Cochran parents was appealed to the CSA, where it was affirmed. The
res judicata
principles and interpretative cases are apt for the circumstances present here and weigh heavily in favor of finding privity between Petitioners and their parents. This is especially so, as their claim rests on
Yet, we must consider a counterpoint highlighted by Petitioners at oral argument, relating to a particular facet of that first suit. During oral argument, Petitioners’ counsel brought to our attention pretrial statements in the first lawsuit, in which the Cochran Parents declared that they were not seeking damages on behalf of their adult children. This fact seemed quite pertinent, as Petitioners’ intеrests arguably may not have received “actual and efficient protection” when no damages were claimed on their behalf.
See Ugast,
In a motion in limine filed in the Cochran Parents’ lawsuit, Griffith sought to exclude any evidence pertaining to injuries suffered by the Petitioners, stating:
[Griffith] anticipates that [the Cochran Parents] may attempt to introduce evidence regarding physical or emotional injuries to the [Petitioners]. However, because the children are not parties to the action, any evidence regarding their injuries would not be pertinent to any issues of the case.
Griffith argued that such evidence was irrelevant and inadmissible, and that any probative value it possessed would be substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice and confusion of the issues. In the same motion, Griffith also sought to exclude any evidence of Petitioners’ lost wages and inconvenience, on grounds that Petitioners were not named plaintiffs in the first lawsuit. In their response, the Cochran Parents indicated that they did not “intend to introduce evidence of injuries to [Petitioners],” and that they did not “intend to present any evidence of [Petitioners’] lost wages.” The Circuit Court granted Griffith’s motion to exclude any evidence regarding “injuries to the Cochran Children” and “lost wages of [the Cochran Parents’] Adult Children.”
At first blush, the Cochran Parents’ voluntary omission of evidence regarding Petitioners’ damages in the first trial seems to support Petitioners’ contention that they were not adequately represented in that lawsuit, thus destroying the apparent privity. Upon fuller reflection, however, we conclude that neither the order nor the filings that preceded it detract from the notion that Petitioners were in privity with their parents. Context is key to our thinking.
The Cochran Parents’ failure to allege or prove damages peculiar tо our Petitioners does not mean that Petitioners lacked privity with their parents on grounds that their interests were not protected in the first suit, within the meaning of Ugast or the other privity cases. To say that the motion in limine, response, and order destroyed the privity between Petitioners and their parents, we would have to ignore the mandate that a litigant assert his rights when he is intimately involved with a lawsuit.
Certainly, there was nothing about the first lawsuit that was at odds with any claim Petitioners’ might havе had or asserted.
5
Indeed, as we indicated earlier, Petitioners’ claims, evolv
ing from their intermittent residence in the family home, were inextricably intertwined with those of their parents because they rest on alleged misrepresentations made by Respondents to the Parents, not to Petitioners. If we were to hold that Petitioners could have a “second bite at the apple” after the conclusion of the first suit, we would violate the finality principles underlying
res judicata.
Such a holding would effectively allow the Cochran family to make a strategic decision to exempt themselves from preclusion principles in case they considered the verdict in the first lawsuit insufficient. We bear in mind the observation from the Wright treatise that “it has come to be recognized that the privity label simply expresses a conclusion that preclusion is proper.” 18A Charles A. Wright et al.,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 4449 (2d ed.2002). Surely, to allow a second litigation against the Respondents on this same issue would contravene the res
judicata
doctrine, which, by design, “avoids the expense and vexation attending multiple lawsuits, conserves the judicial resources, and fosters reliance on judicial action by minimizing the possibilities of inconsistent decisions.”
Norville,
For the reasons set forth, we are convinced that Petitioners are in privity with the Cochran Parents. Privity is the only element of res judicata that Petitioners dispute. Thus, the intermediate appellate Court did not err in holding that Petitioners’ claim is barred by res judicata. We affirm the Court of Special Appeals’ judgment on this ground.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONERS.
Notes
. In their brief, Petitioners reformulated the question into four:
A. Did the circuit court err by treating the respondents’ dispositive motion as a motion to dismiss, when matters outside the complaint were presented to and relied upon by the court in granting that motion?
B. Did the circuit court err by holding that the petitioners were barred from instituting suit under the doctrine of res judicata?
C. Did the circuit court err by holding that the fraud counts were barred because the defendants owed no duty to the petitioners?
D. Did the circuit court err by holding that the claim for damages is barred?
. The suit was filed in the Cirсuit Court for Prince George’s County but transferred in 2009 to the Circuit Court for Washington County.
. Petitioners do not dispute that the other elements of res judicata apply.
. This Court is not required to take judicial notice,
see
Maryland Rule 5-201, but may take judicial notice of adjudicative facts about the parties’ activities.
See Dashiell v. Meeks,
The general rule undoubtedly is that a court will not travel outside the record of the case before it in order to take notice of proceedings in another case, even between the same parties, and in the same court, unless the proceedings are put in evidence; and the rule is sometimes enforced with considerable strictness.... But in exceptional cases, as high authority shows, the dictates of logic yield to the demands of justice, and the courts in order to reach a just result, will make use of established and uncontroverted facts not formally of record in the pending litigation. (Citations and quotation marks omitted.)
Id.
at 176,
. We do not address Respondents’ asserted defenses that they owed no duty of care to Petitioners or that Petitioners suffered no compensable damages.
