On May 1, 2001, Appellant Frank Brooks (“Brooks”) brought suit against Appellee Raymond Dugat Company L C, (“Dugat”), claiming a cause of aсtion for maintenance and cure under the General Maritime Law for a slip and fall he suffered on the M/V AMANDA on June 2, 1998. Brooks hаd filed a similar suit, including a claim for maintenance and curé, against Dugat in May of 2000 but voluntarily moved to dismiss all of his claims with prejudice. The operative facts and maintenance and cure causes of action are the same in both suits.
On March 4, 2002, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas granted Dugat’s Motion for Summary Judgment and found that Brooks’s claim was barred by claim preclusion. Thе court did not address issue preclusion or whether Dugat was Brooks’s employer at the time of the injury. Brooks now appeals the granting of summary judgment.
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Young v. Equifax Credit Info. Servs. Inc.,
For claim preclusion to apply, the following four requirements must be mеt: (1) the parties must be identical in both suits; (2) the prior judgment must have been rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction; (3) there must be a final judgment on the merits; and (4) the same cause of action must be involved in both suits.
U.S. v. Shanbaum,
All the requirements are met in the instant suit. The first and second requirements are not disputed — the parties are identical and the court that rendered the prior judgment, which coincidentally was the same district court that dеcided the instant summary judgment motion, was a court of competent jurisdiction.
The third requirement, that there be a final judgment on the merits in the prior proceeding, is also met. A dismissal with prejudice is a final judgment on the merits.
Schwarz v. Folloder,
The fourth requirement, that the same cause of action is involved in both suits, is also met. To determine whether the .two suits involve the same cause of action, this Cоurt applies the transactional test and asks whether the two suits involve the same nucleus of operative facts. Agrilectric Power Partners, Ltd., v. General Elec. Co., 20, F.3d 663, 665 (5th Cir.1994). Bоth the instant suit and prior suit involve the exact same facts.
Even though these four requirements are met, the present apрeal focuses on the application of claim preclusion to a maintenance and cure claim. Thе fact that a maintenance and cure claim is involved, however, does not affect the instant suit.
The right to maintenance and cure is ongoing and serial suits may be brought to collect maintenance and cure payments as they come due.
Pelotto v. L & N Towing Co.,
We agree with the district court’s determination in this suit that the logical conclusion drawn from Fifth Circuit precedent is that, if a finding has been made that the plaintiff is not due maintenance and cure, then claim preclusion would bar all subsequent claims for maintenance and cure. Brooks’s dismissal with prejudice was tan-tamont to a judicial determination of his non-entitlement tо maintenance and cure arising out of his slip and fall on June 2, 1998.
See Schwarz,
AFFIRM.
