Francis Lovely brought an action in the federal district court against Oscar Laliberte, alleging that Laliberte was maliciously and unconstitutionally employing state process to evict him from Laliberte’s mobile home park. Allegedly Laliberte’s true motivation for the eviction stemmed from Lovely’s public protests over the condition and scarcity of mobile home parks, his petitions to alter local zoning ordinances, and his “tenant group activities”. The action, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeks to bring Lovely’s situation within the logic of Lavoie v. Bigwood,
Laliberte had originally sought a Writ of Possession, N.H.R.S. 540:12, against Lovely in the Lebanon District Court, Lebanon, New Hampshire. The court ordered issuance of the writ, and Lovely exercised his right to a de novo trial in the New Hampshire Superior Court, a court of general jurisdiction in which legal and equitable defenses are broadly available and counterclaims may be filed. At the superior court hearing the controversy centered around whether Lovely and his family by keeping rabbits and dogs and engaging in other purportedly offensive conduct, had violated the landlord’s rules. Lovely did not raise his First Amendment claim either as a defense 1 or as a counterclaim. *1263 The court ordered Lovely’s eviction, and Lovely did not appeal, preferring instead to institute the present federal court proceeding.
Res judicata precludes even “perfect defenses ... of which no proof was offered .... [A] judgment estops not only as to every ground of recovery or defense actually presented in the action, but also as to every ground which might have been presented, . . .” Cromwell v. County of Sac,
Res judicata is, of course, different from collateral estoppel, which we have discussed and applied in recent cases. Mastracchio v. Ricci,
Citing England v. Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners,
Finally, Lovely seems to argue that he should be spared the harsh application of res judicata because his attorney in the state proceeding was derelict in failing to present the constitutional defense. But the principle behind res judicata, the prevention of duplicative litigation, has the same force regardless of the ultimate “reason” for the second suit. An attorney’s actions in litigation bind the client and the client’s later doubts concerning the course pursued by his attorney are not a good justification for subjecting the opposing party to continuous litigation.
Affirmed.
Notes
. There is mention in the transcript of the superior court hearing of the possibility that Laliberte was “retaliating” against Lovely for his speech activities. It arises, however, in the context of a denial by Laliberte, elicited by bis attorney, that such motivation existed. Lovely’s attorney at the Possession action testified in federal court at the hear *1263 ing on November 14, 1973, that he had declined to press the First Amendment defense in the state action; although he was aware that he could do so he thought it would be unwise. The attorney did, however, with the knowledge and acquiescence of opposing counsel, visit the chambers of the superior court judge and leave with him copies of the Lavoie and Habib opinions.
. There is no general right of removal based upon a federal defense, whether statutory or constitutional. The ALI proposals that would make it so have met with some criticism. H. Friendly, Federal Jurisdiction: A General View 124-27 (1973) ; Currie, The Federal Courts and the American Law Institute II, 36 U.Chi.L.Rev. 271-75 (1969). The only statute providing for federal constitutional defense removal, 28 U.S.C. § 1443, has been severely limited by the Supreme Court. City of Greenwood v. Peacock,
. We need not decide whether circumstances of this nature would ever justify a state defendant’s bringing a federal § 1983 action before the state trial seeking an injunction or declaratory judgment.
See
Mitchum v. Foster,
