Justice Felix Frankfurter once observed, “to some lawyers, all facts are created equal.” However, for the purposes of collateral estoppel, they are not. The defendant, Microsoft Corporation, was granted permission to take an interlocutory appeal from the district court’s ruling that collateral estoppel would apply to 352 findings of fact arising from prior federal antitrust litigation. Because we find the district court’s application of the “necessary and essential” requirement of collateral estoppel was too broad, we reverse the district court’s order and remand with instructions.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
Joe Comes and Riley Paint sued Microsoft Corporation for violating provisions of the Iowa Competition Law.
See
Iowa Code §§ 553.4, 553.5 (1997). This is the third time this case has journeyed into this court.
See Comes v. Microsoft Corp.,
In the spring of 1998, the United States and several states (including Iowa) filed a civil action against Microsoft Corporation in the District of Columbia for violations of the Sherman Act (hereinafter the “Government Action”). A bench trial before Judge Thomas Jackson lasted 76 days and included testimony from 26 live witnesses, deposition excerpts from 79 additional witnesses, and over 2700 exhibits. Rather than issue one decision and judgment, Judge Jackson bifurcated his decision by first making 412 findings of fact “proved by a preponderance of the evidence.”
See generally United States v. Microsoft Corp.,
Microsoft appealed this decision, and the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia affirmed Judge Jackson’s conclusion that Microsoft illegally
*117
maintained a monopoly in the PC operating systems market.
United States v. Microsoft Corp.,
In the present case, the class of plaintiffs alleges Microsoft maintained or used a monopoly in conjunction with its Windows 98 operating system for the purpose of excluding competition or controlling, fixing, or maintaining prices in violation of Iowa Code sections 553.4 (prohibiting restraint of trade) and 553.5 (“A person shall not attempt to establish or establish, maintain, or use a monopoly of trade or commerce in a relevant market for the purpose of excluding competition or of controlling, fixing, or maintaining prices.”). These allegations are based in part on the factual findings and conclusions made in the Government Action. In July of 2004, the plaintiffs filed a motion requesting the court use the doctrine of collateral estop-pel to foreclose Microsoft from relitigating 352 of the 412 factual findings made in the Government Action.
The district court granted this motion through a pretrial order applying the doctrine of “offensive” collateral estoppel to preclude Microsoft from relitigating the 352 factual findings. We granted Micro-' soft’s application for leave to appeal the district court’s ruling.
The overarching issue in this appeal is whether the district court correctly applied the requirement that facts subject to collateral estoppel be “necessary and essential” to the judgment in the prior litigation. Microsoft contends the court’s misapplication of this standard led to an overbroad ruling in which preclusive effect was given to 336 factual findings that were not “necessary and essential” to the judgment. 1
II. Standard of Review
Because this appeal is premised upon the district court’s application of an incorrect legal standard, our review is for error.
See Walters v. Herrick,
III. Merits
The doctrine of collateral estop-pel, sometimes referred to as issue preclusion, prevents parties from relitigating issues previously resolved in prior litigation if certain prerequisites are established.
Hunter v. City of Des Moines,
This case involves offensive use of the collateral estoppel doctrine. The plaintiffs, who were strangers to the first judgment, seek to rely upon the prior judgment that Microsoft had maintained an operating system monopoly by anticompet-itive means and ask the court to accord preclusive effect to 352 of the 412 findings of fact entered in the Government Action.
Collateral estoppel may be invoked if four prerequisites are met:
(1) the issue concluded must be identical; (2) the issue must have been raised and litigated in the prior action; (3) the issue must have been material and relevant to the disposition of the prior action; and (4) the determination made of the issue in the prior action must have been necessary and essential to the resulting judgment.
Id. The fighting issue in this case involves the application of the fourth prerequisite to the findings of fact entered in the Government Action.
Admittedly, the fourth requirement of our collateral estoppel analysis — the determination made of the issue in the prior action must have been necessary and essential to the resulting judgment — is exceedingly vague. However, prior cases demonstrate that we apply this requirement somewhat narrowly.
Almost 150 years ago, long before we articulated the present collateral estoppel analysis, we said “[mjatters which arise only incidentally in the evidence, however much they may influence the mind of the judge or jury in arriving at a conclusion, are not matters
adjudicated.” Haight v. City of Keokuk,
In
Hutchinson v. Maiwurm,
In
Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics v. D.J.I.,
These cases illustrate that we apply the necessary and essential requirement narrowly, and only preclude those facts vital or crucial to the previous judgment, or those properly characterized as ultimate facts without which the previous judgment would lack support.
See generally id.; Hutchinson,
IY. Analysis of the District Court’s Ruling
At the outset, the district court correctly recited the necessary and essential requirement — ‘When issues of law or fact were raised and litigated and relevant to the prior proceeding, collateral estoppel precludes relitigation when the determination of those issues was also necessary and essential to the judgment in the earlier action.” The court then set forth the legal standard for monopolization claims used by the D.C. Court of Appeals in the Government Action and identified approximately two and a half pages of legal conclusions that' “survived intact” after the D.C. Court of Appeals modified the district court’s judgment in the Government Action. However, when the court determined 352 out of the 412 findings of fact “were necessary and essential to the elements of the government’s monopolization claim against Microsoft” because these findings “provided a proper foundation” or “proper basis” for individual elements of the monopolization claim in the Government Action, the court’s interpretation of our collateral estoppel doctrine drifted away from the doctrine’s original intent.
*120 The district court’s first precluded finding of fact illustrates that the necessary and essential requirement was misapplied:
A “personal computer” (“PC”) is a digital information processing device designed for use by one person at a time. A typical PC consists of central processing components (e.g., a microprocessor and main memory) and mass data storage (such as a hard disk). A typical PC system consists of a PC, certain peripheral input/output devices (including a monitor, a keyboard, a mouse, and a printer), and an operating system. PC systems, which include desktop and laptop models, can be distinguished from more powerful, more expensive computer systems known as “servers,” which are designed to provide data, services, and functionality through a digital network to multiple users. -
This finding is clearly not a fact “upon which the case turned” and it is not a fact one would deem vital or crucial to the ultimate issue precluded — that Microsoft violated the antitrust laws for unlawful monopoly maintenance of operating systems from the period of 1995-1998.
See D.J.I.,
545. N.W.2d at 875;
Hutchinson,
Before a court applies collateral estoppel offensively, the court must also consider whether treating an iásue or fact as conclusively determined will complicate the determination of other issues in the subsequent action or prejudice the interests of the defending party.
Hunter,
A lengthy list of subsidiary facts granted preclusive effect could be very prejudicial to a defendant. Application of collateral estoppel to every subsidiary matter actually litigated in a prior proceeding greatly increases the hazards in trying the first lawsuit as well as the hazards of misuse in a subsequent lawsuit because “[ljogical relevance is of infinite possibility,” and an innocuous fact in the first proceeding could be used as a critical fact against the defendant in a second proceeding.
See Evergreens v. Nunan,
Because the court did not properly apply the necessary and essential standard and did not properly consider the potential prejudice inherent in such a large list of subsidiary facts, we reverse the district court’s order granting preclusive effect to these factual findings.
V. Directions for Remand
Our necessary and essential requirement parallels the standard set forth in the first Restatement of Judgments, which stated collateral estoppel is “applicable to the determination of facts in issue, but not to the determination of merely evidentiary facts, even though the determination of the facts in issue is dependent upon the determination of the evidentiary facts.” Restatement of Judgments § 68 cmt. p (1942). Judge Learned Hand stated this distinction more succinctly when he wrote:
[A] “fact” may be of two kinds. It may be one of those facts, upon whose combined occurrence the law raises the duty, or the right, in question; or it may be a fact, from whose existence may be rationally inferred the existence of one of the facts upon whose combined occurrence the law raises the duty, or the right. The first kind of fact we shall for convenience call an “ultimate” fact; the second, a “mediate datum.” “Ultimate” facts are those which the law makes the occasion for imposing its sanctions.
Evergreens,
This section was significantly altered in 1982 by the Second Restatement of Judgments. The second Restatement .rejected rote application of the ultimate fact/eviden-tiary fact analysis because, even if a fact is properly categorized as evidentiary, “great effort may have been expended by both parties in seeking to persuade the adjudicator of its existence or nonexistence and it may well have been regarded as the key issue-in the-dispute.”. Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 27 cmt-. j (1982). The second Restatement replaced its comment discussing the distinction between ultimate and evidentiary facts with a new analysis where the court must determine “whether the issue was actually recognized by the parties .as important and -by the trier as necessary to the first judgment.” Id. (emphasis added). This “important and necessary” analysis ■ protects parties, from the dangers of innocuous, subsidiary facts because it only precludes such, facts as were truly disputed in the first proceeding. Or, as aptly stated by the First Circuit Court of Appeals,
[w]hen two adversaries concentrate in attempting • to resolve an- issue importantly involved in litigation,- there is no unfairness in considering that issue settled for all time between the parties -and those in their shoes. But .. ...it is unfair to close the door to.issues which have not been on stage center, for there is no knowing what the white light -of controversy would have revealed.
Farmington Dowel Prods. Co. v. Forster Mfg. Co.,
Because this analysis" protects against the dangers stemming from preclusion on subsidiary facts, we adopt this analysis as well. Rather than pigeonholing facts as evidentiary or ultimate, courts must determine whether the issue was actually recognized by the parties as important and by the adjudicator as necessary to the first judgment. Under this analysis, collateral ' estoppel will only adhere to those factual findings necessary and essential to the prior judgment, rather than findings of every minute fact contested by the parties in the previous trial.
As noted above, the .parties agree 16 of the 352 factual findings granted pre- *122 elusive effect by the district court were necessary and essential to the underlying judgment. For example, findings 33 and 34 hold: '
33. Microsoft enjoys so much power in the market for Intel-compatible PC operating systems that if it wished to exercise this power solely in terms of price, it could charge a price for Windows substantially above that " which could be charged in a competitive market. Moreover, it could do so for a significant period of time without losing an unacceptable ¿mount of business to competitors. In other words, Microsoft ' enjoys monopoly power in the relevant market.
34. Viewed together, three main ' facts indicate that Microsoft enjoys monopoly power. First, Microsoft’s share •of the market for Intel-compatible PC • operating systems is extremely large and stable. Second, Microsoft’s dominant market share is protected by a high barrier to entry. Third, and largely as a result of that barrier, Microsoft’s customers lack a commercially viable alternative to Windows.
Both of these findings were necessary arid essential to the underlying judgment because the court had to establish Microsoft had monopoly power before it could conclude Microsoft maintained monopoly power. These findings were also important because both, parties debated the relevant market and Microsoft’s monopoly power in that market..
Because the district court failed to apply the proper standard in evaluating plaintiffs’ .collateral estoppel claims, we reverse its order.. The case is remanded to that court .for a reconsideration of this issue under the standard that we have articulated, aided by the more particularized arguments that will now be available to counsel as the result of our clarification of the rule of law to be applied. On remand, the parties herein will have the opportunity to convince the court which facts were actually recognized by the parties in the Government Action as the key issues in dispute and by the adjudicator as necessary to the final judgment.
VI. Conclusion
Because the district court’s application of the “necessary and essential” requirement of collateral estoppel was too broad, we reverse the district court’s order and remand for further proceedings in conformance with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. The parties agree 16 of the 352 factual findings were necessary and essential to the D.C. Circuit's judgment. The sixteen findings of the judgment are set forth in paragraphs 18, 33-34, 161, 164, 170, 213, 244-45, 339, 350-52, 394, 401, and 406.
. This court- is cognizant of the difficulty in presenting this case at trial and. an underlying motivatipn of Comes to start this case with a panoply of facts that are deemed estab- ' lished — facts that do not need further proof. These findings would provide a broad landscape of facts upon which to park this case. Given, the size of this litigation, it is enticing to start this case with a foundation of basic facts. However, as explained herein, such is not the purpose of collateral estoppel.
