Cоnstance DuBroff and her wholly-owned corporation Sedergo Unlimited, Inc. sued her former husband Duncan DuBroff, his wholly-owned corporation DuBroff Energy Corporation, several of his business associates and his lawyers in federal district court. Mrs. DuBroff alleged that the defendants conspired to defraud and in fact defrauded her of community property in the course of a divorcе settlement. She alleged that their actions violated federal securities laws and regulations, see 15 U.S. C. § 78j(b) and 17 C.F.R. 240.10b-5, as well as federal racketeering statutes, see 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq.
During their marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Du-Broff each held 50% of the stock of Du-Broff Energy Corporation (“DEC”). DEC bought, managed and explored for various oil, gas and mineral interests. At the time of their divorce, Mr. and Mrs. DuBroff agreed to split the assets of DEC between two corporations: Duncan DuBroff would own 100% of DEC, and Constance DuBroff would own 100% of Sedergo, a new entity created for the purpose. The transaction was structured like this: Sedergo was formed and it issued 100% of its capital stock to DEC in exchange for approximately half of DEC’s assets. DEC then transferred all of Sedergo’s stock to Constance DuBroff in exchange for all her holdings in DEC. As a result, Duncan DuBroff ended up owning all of DEC, which in turn held *558 about half of its original assets; Constance DuBroff ended up owning all of Sedergo, which in turn owned about half of DEC’s original assets. This transaction closed in December 1982 and the divorce decree incorporating the property settlement was entered in January 1983 in Montgomery County District Court.
After the divorce, Sedergo’s participation in continuing or new ventures with DEC and other business partners did not go smoothly. The parties accuse each other of various misdoings irrelevant to the case as it comes before us, but at least two of the predicate RICO acts are alleged to have occurred after the closing of the property settlement in December 1982 and the incorporatiоn of the settlement into the divorce decree in January 1983. At some point, Constance DuBroff decided that she had been deceived: that her ex-husband had lied to her, concealing various corporate opportunities of DEC under the guise of entities of whose existence she was unaware at the time of the divorce.
In consequence Mrs. DuBroff brought this suit, alleging that thе property settlement transaction included a fraudulent scheme in connection with the sale of securities in violation of federal law and that the various defendants had violated RICO by predicate acts of mail, wire and state-law fraud. After long delays in the federal motions practice, she sought a bill of review in the Montgomery County District Court on the basis of alleged “extrinsic” fraud in the divorce settlement. She then settled with most of the defendants — her ex-husband, several business partners and associates, DEC, and other corporate entities — in exchange for her voluntary dismissal with prejudice of both state and federal proceedings against them. As a result, only her husband’s lawyers and their firm (the “lawyer defendants”) remain as defendants (and appellees) in this case. Eventually, the trial court dismissed this case as res judicata because “the actions complained of were all approved by a Texas state court in a divorce decree_” Mrs. DuBroff and her corporation appeal.
Texas Law: Fraud and Res Judicata
“It is now settled that a federal court must give to a state-court judgment the same preclusive effect as would be given that judgment under thе law of the state in which the judgment was rendered.”
Migra v. Warren City School District Board of Education,
Texas courts do not always apply
res judicata
with great strictness to second claims raising a new allegation of fraud. For example, in
Jeanes v. Hamby,
[W]e hold that even though [plaintiff] Jeanes’ cause of action for fraudulent conspiracy arose from some of the same events which gave payment on the note, the two causes of action depend upon the determination of altogether different factual and legal questions and are sufficiently distinct so as to prevent the doctrine of res judicata from precluding Je-anes’ suit.
Jeanes,
On the other hand, earlier cases emphasize the distinction between “intrinsic” and “extrinsic” fraud. Fraudulent misbehavior by a party to a prior suit cannot be successfully attacked if the fraud was “intrinsic,”
*559
i.e.,
part of the fraudfeasor’s actions in the context of the earlier dispute or the suit itself.
See, e.g., Alexander v. Hagedorn,
The fraud asserted to have been discovered by the Vartanians after the June 1981 judgment does not vitiate the res judicata effect of that order. See McRae v. Turner,626 S.W.2d 351 , 352 (Tex.App.—Fort Worth 1981, no writ). As stated in McRae,626 S.W.2d at 352 , “... [the] judgment otherwise persists [as] res judi-cata until set aside; and it cannot be attacked or set aside by any method save the exclusive remedy provided by bill of review. McEwen v. Harrison,162 Tex. 125 ,345 S.W.2d 706 (1961).” Although fraud is a ground for setting aside an agreed judgment, the other requirements for a bill of review, not alleged here, must also be alleged and proved.
Vartanian Family Trust,
In addition — although the parties do not cite them — our research reveals a number of Texas cases that deal directly with allegations of fraud in a divorce settlement. In
Chapman v. Chapman,
The divorce decree in the instant case is very similar [to the decree in Bankston v. Bankston,251 S.W.2d 768 (Tex.Civ.App.—Dallas 1952, mand. overr.) ] as it embodied a property settlement agreement which was based on valuations of community property, most of which were ongoing as in Bankston, the husband had provided thе wife with the material information of the value and nature of these concerns; and it was this information on which the wife relied in agreeing to the property division.
* * * * * *
In order to vacate the judgment, the wife must fail unless she can show extrinsic fraud. As in Bankston,251 S.W.2d 768 , 772, the fraud alleged at most relates to untruths which misled the wife into acquiescence and approval of an unjust division of property. Furthermоre, assuming presentment that misrepresentations were made by the husband upon which the wife relied, the misrepresentations obviously bore only on matters at issue in the former trial (or which could have been at issue on that trial) and therefore amounted to no more than intrinsic fraud.
Chapman,
There is, in addition, another line of divorce cases that deals with items of marital property omitted from express division on divorce. Most of these cases deal with the spouses’ rights in retirement plans or pensions not mentioned in the divorce decree or divided at the time of the divorce. The Texas courts allow a subsequent action for partition of such property, without any allegation of fraud, and one court has explained that normal rules of res judicata do not apply to this type of post-divorce proceeding:
The familiar aspect of the rule of res judicata, barring relitigation of issues which might have been litigated in the exercise of reasonable diligence and absent fraud, as well as those actually tried, evidently does not prevent partition of articles of community property omitted from express division or adjudication on divorce, it being held that the parties become joint owners of such omitted articles.
Heisterberg v. Standridge,
Even in the
Heisterberg-type
case, however, collateral estoppel applies — that is to say, if the original decree explicitly mentions and apportions property rights in the pension or other property, whether correctly or incorrectly, the decree cannot be attacked in a second proceeding.
See Constance v. Constance,
We are, however, a federal circuit court. As such we are hardly authorized to make innovative decisions shaping Texas family law. In addition, this case presents two more novel issues of greаt uncertainty. First, this action is now against the ex-husband’s
lawyers;
their allegedly wrongful conduct was in concert with Duncan Du-Broff, but they are not sued as his agents. None of the Texas cases even hint at whether the
res judicata
rules should be transmogrified into collateral estoppel rules protecting those not party to the divorce proceeding. Second, Mrs. DuBroff alleges the existence of a continuing RICO conspiracy, one that continued even after the closing of the property settlement transaction. Ordinarily, this new wrong would not be considered barred by the pri- or proceeding.
See, e.g., Blair v. City of Greenville,
Federal Courts and Texas Procedures
Contemplating these numerous, difficult, and novel issues of Texas law, we are
*561
strongly inclined to direct Mrs. DuBroff to the Texas сourts for appropriate relief. The Restatement suggests that actions challenging prior judgments on the basis of fraud should be brought in the court where the judgment was entered.
See
Restatement (Second) of Judgments 26(2) & comment k (1981). In Texas, this suggestion is made mandatory: The only way to challenge a court-approved settlement or “agreed judgment” in Texas on the basis of fraud is to bring a “bill of review” in the original court.
3
See Vartanian Family Trust,
In
Chapman v. Aetna Finance Co.,
Thus, there is probably no requirement under § 1738 that we dismiss Mrs. Du-Broff’s claim. There are, however, good reasons to do so as a matter of discretion and of comity between federal and state courts. Because the federal claims in this cаse arise out of a divorce proceeding, and because no Texas law to which we have been directed (or which we ourselves have discovered) gives even the faintest guidance as to how the Texas courts would treat an action against an ex-spouse’s lawyers based on federal law, we conclude that this is one of those relatively rare cases in which abstention is appropriate.
Abstention Under Burford v. Sun Oil Company
In
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
[W]e find that the absence of a state law claim in the instant case is not fatal to Burford abstention. The motivating force behind Burford abstention is not the desire to avoid a state law question, but rather, a reluctance to intrude into state proceedings where there exists a complex state regulatory system. As we have previously observed, Burford-type abstention requires neither the presence of a state law issue nor unclarity in pertinent state law. Rather, a court ab-stanting under Burford relegates а federal issue to state court jurisdiction because the federal issue touches some overriding state interest.” B.T. Inv. Managers v. Lewis,559 F.2d 950 , 955 (5th Cir.1977).
New Orleans Public Service v. City of New Orleans,
We conclude that abstention is appropriate here for a number of reasons. First, there is perhaps no statе administrative scheme in which federal court intrusions are less appropriate than domestic relations law. “Even when a federal question is
*562
presented, federal courts decline to hear disputes which would deeply involve them in domestic matters.”
Thompson v. Thompson,
Even a quick search reveals several cases where
Burford
abstention has been invoked in cases involving domestic matters. For example, in
Petersen v. Petersen,
Where federal adjudication would interfere with state policy in an important matter of local concern, the Supreme Court has long found abstention appropriate. Burford v. Sun Oil Co. Matrimony and divorce are subject to extensive and intricate regulation by the various states, and state courts have developed particular competence in adjudication of these issues. Federal court intervention in this case would not only infringe on core state concerns and risk inconsistent state and federal adjudications, but would require “exploration of a difficult field of New York law with which, because of its proximity tо the exception for matrimonial actions, federal judges are more than ordinarily unfamiliar.” Phillips, Nizer, Benjamin, *563 Krim & Ballon v. Rosenstiel,490 F.2d 509 , 515 (2d Cir.1973) (Friendly, J.).
Petersen,
On Burford considerations, we therefore abstain, remanding the case to the district court for dismissal without prejudice so that Mrs. DuBroff may, if she wishes, pursue her state and federal claims against the lawyer defendants in Texas state courts. It is so
ORDERED.
Notes
. The property settlement includes the following clause:
6.04. Each Party, except as otherwise providеd for in this Agreement, releases the other from all claims, liabilities, debts, obligations, actions, and causes of action demand [sic] of every kind and description that have been incurred, related to, or arising from the marriage between the Parties. However, neither the husband or wife is relieved or discharged for any obligation expressly set forth in this Agreement, said obligations and covenants to survive this Agreement, and to be fully enforceable after the granting of the Divorce, or under any instrument or document executed pursuant to this Agreement ...
. See supra note 1.
. This procedure is akin to a motion to reopen under Federal Rule 60(b)(3), although there is no time limit as in Rule 60(b).
. If the Texas courts ultimately hold that Mrs. DuBroffs claims are not barred by res judicata or collateral estoppel, but that nеvertheless RICO is unenforceable in Texas courts, our decision to abstain in this case would not necessarily bar a subsequent suit in federal court on the grounds that federal court is the only forum where a remedy is available. In that case, the Texas courts will have resolved the difficult state-law issues, eliminating the need for abstention, and the federal court can proceed.
