Thе brothers Mortell (Donald, James, and Ramon) were equal owners of Mortell Company. Until 1981 Donald was the President and Chief Executive Officer, James was Chairman of the Board, and Ramon was Chief Operating Officer. Mortell Company has been profitable, and its wealth has severed familial bonds.
I
In 1981 Donald fell behind in paying off a loan, which he had secured by a pledge of some Mortell Company stoсk. The bank foreclosed and sold the stock to the firm and its pension plan. Donald tried to repurchase these shares but eventually executed an agreement by which he sold his remaining stock and severed ties to the firm. Mortell Company and several affiliates (a detail we disregard, treating the buyers as a single firm) bought all of Donald’s remaining stock (and the stock held by his seven children, another detail we ignore) for $6,558,714. It promised to pay more in the event the firm was sold before December 31, 1987. The critical provisions calculated the sum this way:
A. (2) One-half (%) of 29.8347% of the sales price ... in excess of $15,895,116 if the [Company is] sold after December 31,1984, and prior to December 31, 1987.
(3) The amount determined ... shall be reduced (but to not less than -0-) by $844.51 multiplied by the number of days between December 1, 1981, and the closing date of the sale....
B. In no event will the payment under this paragraph ... exceed the sum of $2,000,000.
G. The percentages set forth in subpar-agraph A ... have been computed on the basis that at the time of any sale ... James W. Mortell and his family will own 42.520695% of the equity ... and Ramon J. Mortell and his family will own 42.520695% of the equity_ Notwithstanding anything to the con *1324 trary in subparagraph A , it is understood and agreed among the parties that the purpose ... is to treat [Donald and his family] in an equal and equitable manner with [Ramon, James, and their families]_ [T]he percentages set forth in subparagraph A ... shall be revised as may be appropriate for such percentages to reflect equal and equitable treatment of [Donald and his family], considering the actual percentage ownership ... by James W. Mortell and Ramon J. Mortell and their respective families.
In April 1986 another firm purchased all outstanding stock of Mortell Co. for $30.9 million. Mortell Co. concluded that it owed Donald $1.2 million after computing the sum due under paragraph A(2) and subtracting the amounts provided by paragraph A(3). Donald contended that be-, cause of the “equal and equitable manner” language of paragraph G he was entitled to one third of the $10.9 million, less whаt he had already received, plus another $1.9 million, representing one third of the distributions ($5.8 million) his brothers had received between 1981 and 1986. That came to a total of $5.1 million, almost $4 million more than he had been offered. James and Ramon replied that paragraph G came into play only if their stakes in the firm changed, and that Donald’s payment was at all events subject to the $2 million cap set in paragraph B. Lucre has sundered many a family, and this $4 million difference of opinion exceeded the cohesion of the Mor-tell clan.
In June 1986 Donald filed suit in an Illinois court against his brothers and Mor-tell Co. The complaint alleged that the defendants broke the agreement. In March 1987 Donald filed a second suit, this time in federal court, naming as defendants his brothers, Mortell Co., and Addis E. Hull, a partner of Jеnner & Block (the firm’s corporate counsel). This complaint alleged that the course of conduct by which Mortell Co. obtained the stock and tendered so little in return violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-68. The only allegation in the complaint, as finally amended, adding to the facts we have recounted says:
... [T]he named defendants employed the United States Mail in filing reports, conducting negotiations, entering into various agreements, offering and receiving legal advice, as previously stated, so as to conceal their activities and intentions ..., all in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1341 [proscribing mail fraud].
Because the complaint failed to plead fraud with “particularity” — indeed to identify any fraud — it could have been dismissed forthwith under Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
Skycom Corp. v. Telstar Corp.,
In October 1988 the state court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Mortell v. Mortell, No. 86-L-125 (21st Cir. Kankakee Cnty. Oct. 13, 1988). Judge Gould concluded that the contract is unambiguous and that under its terms Donald was entitled to only $1.2 million. Moreover, the judge concluded, James and Ramon could not have been liable in any event because they were not parties to the contract. James signed only in his capacity as an officer of Mortell Co., and Ramon did not sign at all. Because Donald had not established any ground for piercing the corporate veil, James and Ramon could not have been personally responsible for the corporation’s obligations.
Back in federal court, the defendants moved for summary judgment on the ground of claim preclusion (res judicata). Donald сould have pleaded fraud in the state case but neglected to do so. Because judgments are preclusive on all arguments arising out of a single claim that were
or could have been
raised,
Cromwell v. County of Sac,
94 U.S. (4 Otto) 351,
Donald could have raised in state court the same claim of fraud that underpins his RICO action. Fraud and breach of contract are alternative legal theories for redress of the same wrong. Under Illinois law, which governs here, 28 U.S.C. § 1738, failure to plead fraud in the first suit bars a second litigation. Although proof of fraud would entail different facts from proof of breach of contraсt, and although some Illinois cases use identity of facts as the trigger for claim preclusion, we decided long ago that the dominant line of cases in Illinois adopts the “nucleus of operative facts” approach rather than the “identity of facts” approach. See
Lee v. City of Peoria,
Donald contends that RICO actions are different, because RICO provides (he says) for exclusive federal jurisdiction. This creates the possibility that Illinois would not deem a judgment preclusive in a later RICO action because the first court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter. Cf.
Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
Unfortunately for Donald, we rejected this very argument in a case involving a judgment from Illinois.
Henry v. Farmer City State Bank,
Questions of fact not litigаted in the first case may be pursued in a second on a different claim: issue preclusion applies only to questions actually and necessarily decided in the first case. Fraud is not a discrete “issue” in a broader RICO “claim”, however. Compound offenses are made up of many “claims”, each of which may be barred by omission in earlier litigation even if the law of issue preclusion (collatеral estoppel) would not come into play. We concluded in Henry that the state law of claim preclusion would KO the contention that the defendants committed fraud; we therefore held that the RICO claim itself failed. Today’s case is no different.
*1326 Donald insists that even if Mortell Co. is off the hook, his brothers and attorney Hull may not obtain the benefit of the state judgment. Hull was not a party to the state сase. James and Ramon, while parties, escaped liability on the ground that officers and shareholders are not liable for corporate debts. Because this showed, Donald insists, that James and Ramon were “not proper parties” to the state case, they may be pursued in the current case.
Hull was not a party to the state case, but Donald does not contend that Hull defrauded him directly. Hull gave advice to Mortell Co., which may have acted on it. We very much doubt that Illinois holds attorneys personally liable to third parties for action taken in reliance on legal advice, but if state law allows such an approach the liability is derivative. It depends on the client’s actions wrongfully injuring someone. Hull therefore could be liable only through the acts of Mortell Cо., and because Mortell Co. has prevailed against Donald, Hull too is entitled to judgment.
Lee v. City of Peoria,
As for the claim against James and Ramon: Donald confuses lack of jurisdiction with losing on the merits. Judge Gould did not dismiss the state case against James and Ramon for lack of jurisdiction over thе defendants or the subject matter. He granted summary judgment on the merits in their favor, on alternative grounds — that Mortell Co. had kept its promises, and that Donald had not met the conditions necessary to hold officers and investors liable on corporate obligations. That James and Ramon won on two grounds hardly shows that they were not proper parties to the litigation; it shows, rather, that Donald’s claim against them was doubly flawed. Corporate officers and investors may be held to answer for corporate obligations if the plaintiff proves certain things; Donald didn’t. Donald seems to believe that only the
winner
in the state case is precluded from litigating a second time. Hardly. The state court’s decision was on the merits, which bars further efforts.
American National Bank & Trust Co. v. City of Chicago,
II
One aspect оf Donald’s complaint survives the preclusive force of the state decision. Count II of the federal complaint maintained that Mortell Company’s pension plan violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461, by purchasing an obligation of Mortell Co. and by investing imprudently in high-risk securities of other firms. Donald says he is a participant in this plan and demands relief. This ERISA claim grows out of thе management of the plan rather than the sale of Donald’s stock to Mortell Co. and the subsequent sale of that enterprise, and so it is not barred by omission to plead it in state court. The district judge bounced it out his door, however, on the ground that Donald had not exhausted his remedies within the plan.
Dale v. Chicago Tribune Co.,
Rule 30(a) of this circuit’s rules requires counsel to attach to the brief thе opinion or oral statement supporting the judgment under review, and Circuit Rule 30(b) requires the inclusion in the separate appendix of all other pertinent opinions and explanations. Circuit Rule 30(c) requires counsel to certify compliance with Rules 30(a) and (b). Appellate courts must examine the district judge’s explanations for their decisions; without these, we cannot intelligently prepаre for argument or render a decision. Although counsel for appellants made the certificate required by Rule 30(c) — otherwise the Clerk would not have accepted the brief for filing — the certificate was false. No document attached to the brief contained the district judge’s explanation for his decision, and appellants did not file a separate appendix. Neithеr the statement of facts nor the argument in Donald’s brief makes good the omission. For all anyone could tell after reading the papers Donald filed, the district judge had no reason for dismissing the ERISA claim.
Yet the court gave a reason. Our search of the record turned up an opinion of Magistrate Kauffman, to whom Judge Baker referred the case. Magistrate Kauffman recommended that thе court dismiss the complaint for failure to exhaust, adding:
it is incumbent upon a plaintiff to plead circumstances under which he would not be required to exhaust remedies, if indeed exhaustion is discretionary with the Court[, as plaintiffs contend it is]. In the present complaint, the plaintiffs have failed to state why they should not be required to exhaust remedies in this case.
Judge Baker adopted this report. Donald then filed an amended complaint, which makes no effort to plead circumstances excusing exhaustion. No surprise that when the plaintiffs did not even try to comply with the requirement the judge had imposed by adopting the magistrate’s report, it was dismissed in due course. It may be that Judge Baker gave an oral explanation, but if so appellant has not ordered the transcript.
Donald’s brief on aрpeal refers to none of this, although he belatedly attempts to supply in the brief the statement of reasons that Judge Baker wanted filed in his court. He did not even furnish the amended complaint. (Appellees filed a supplemental appendix containing the amended complaint and the state judge’s opinion, another striking omission from Donald’s papers.) A false certificate under Rule 30(c) is a sufficient reason to affirm without reaching the merits, and we follow that course. The court must be able to rely on counsel to furnish the district court’s explanation of the decision under review. Our initial impressions about the issues presented were mistaken; the flaw (as Judge Baker saw things) was an omission in pleading rather than a substantive rule requiring exhaustion. Failure to follow our rules sometimes is fatal, see
Walton v. United Consumers Club, Inc.,
Ill
This is grudge litigation, and weak grudge litigation at that. Perhaps the contract suit had a bit of substance, though the state judge did not think so. Refusal to say die is a more serious matter. Dupli-cative litigation needlessly increases costs, both to the adverse parties and to the legal system. Donald persisted in litigating, even adding the firm’s lawyer as a party. The federal complaint is conspicuously deficient. As we have observed, it does not identify any fraud and so fails the most basic requirement. Hull was added without benefit of a legal theory and without any realistic prospect of surviving a motion based on the statute of limitations. Hull’s last appearance is in November 1981, with thе signing of the contract; Illinois law *1328 gives four years to sue, and Donald took six; a conspiracy among Hull, James, and Ramon might extend the time, but the complaint does not allege its existence or give reason to believe one existed. Neither complaint nor briefs makes the ERISA claim intelligible. For all we can tell, Donald has no remaining interest in the plan (or only a defined benefit packаge), so that the events of which he protests did not harm him. Moreover, the last identified investment decisions occurred more than six years before filing the complaint, giving color to the contention that the statute of limitations has run. These defects, coupled with briefs and other papers that suggest inattention to both facts and law, could have supported an award in the district court under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11.
Rule 11 does not apply directly in this court. Incautious language to the contrary in
Thornton v. Wahl,
The short of it is that Donald has wasted everyone’s time: Chief Judge Baker’s, ours, and his adversaries’ — and of course his adversaries’ money. They hired two sеts of expensive counsel (Hull needed to retain separate counsel to urge defenses unavailable to James and Ramon and, if appropriate, to point the finger at them). Needless litigation also injures parties in other cases, whose grievances fester while federal courts attend to bootless claims. Even a small chance of gaining $12 million (Donald’s objective) сan justify a lot of legal bills from a plaintiff's perspective, or. generate them in defense; a treble damages claim under RICO may treble the expense of the case as well as the stakes.
Everything we can see suggests that the appeal is objectively frivolous, justifying an award of attorneys’ fees as sanctions under Rule 38 without regard to Donald’s motives. Because the appellees did not request sanctions, however, Donald’s lawyers have not had an opportunity to address the subject, and our impressions may be insufficiently informed. We invite the parties to file memoranda within 15 days addressing the question whether sanctions are appropriate. The appellees should simultaneously file statements of the legal fees reasonably incurred in defending this appeal. Costs shall abide the decision on sanctions.
Affirmed.
