This is a civil rights suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in which plaintiff seeks compensatory and punitive damages against the Providence, Rhode Island Police Department and against a then Sergeant Ricci, a member of that departmеnt, based upon the allegation that defendant Ricci committed perjury during the state court trial in which plaintiff was convicted of murder. Because plaintiff's appeal of his conviction to the Rhоde Island Supreme Court “raised like issues as have been raised in the instant matter”, the federal suit was stayed by the district court by agreement of counsel pending the outcome of that appeal. After the Rhode Island Supreme Court affirmed plaintiff’s conviction the court below granted summary judgment for defendants sua sponte. The district court reasoned that the state judgment acted to bar the complaint by means of the operation of principles of collateral estoppel, relying upon our decision in Cardillo v. Zyla,
Plaintiff, whо brings this appeal pro se, has raised two issues for review. First, he urges that the court below erred in requiring him to present his new evidence to the state courts before he could use it as the basis for a fеderal civil rights suit. He argues that this amounted to a requirement of exhaustion of remedies, and that such a requirement cannot be applied to civil rights actions. The second issue raised is whether a statе criminal conviction may be used to bar a civil rights suit for damages by operation of principles of collateral estoppel. Both of these issues raise points not previously considerеd by this court in this precise context.
In Guerro v. Mulhearn,
*1259 This case presents a somewhat different situation. No state criminal proceedings are ongoing, the direct criminal appeal having run its course. Therefore, the impact of fedеral proceedings upon the state judicial system, upon the administration of justice and upon the province of the Great Writ are all attenuated. But plaintiff states in his brief that he is in the process оf presenting his newly discovered evidence to the Rhode Island courts. Thus, while it is possible that cases may arise in a context like this one in which the policies which call for deferral of the federаl action will not be sufficiently at stake to make such deferral necessary, that is not true here. Since the prospect of further state court action is very real, and since by its very nature the purpose of this state proceeding will be to call in question the validity of the criminal conviction, the district court properly decided that the matter in issue which had not already been presented tо the state courts should not be heard in federal court until the state action was completed.
The second issue raised by plaintiff concerns the collateral estoppel effect to be given to his criminal conviction. The district court rested its finding against plaintiff on this point upon Cardillo v. Zyla,
The Supreme Court has never ruled on the question of the applicability of princiрles of res judicata and collateral estoppel
1
to actions under section 1983. In Preiser v. Rodriguez,
“if a successful state prosecution, based upon the use of information obtained by violating the defendant’s constitutional rights, could bar a civil rights action against the police for violating his rights, either by analogy to the law of malicious prosecution or on theories of res judicata or estoppel by judgment, the Civil Rights Act would, in many cases, be a dead letter.”439 F.2d at 1288 .
This concern was echoed in Ames v. Vavreck,
Nevertheless, it now appears well established that when a civil rights action is brought in federal court which presents the same issue as was decided in a prior state civil action, that prior state judgment may have a collateral estoppel (or res judicata) effect upon the
*1260
federal suit. Bricker v. Crane,
The same principles have been applied by a number of courts to the situation where the prior judgment is a state сriminal conviction,
see
Thistlethwaite v. City of New York,
In this circuit a holding that a state criminal conviction can have a collateral estoppel effect upon a federal civil rights action can be reached simply by analytically combining our holdings in Bricker v. Crane,
supra,
and P. I. Enterprises v. Cataldo,
supra
(civil rights action preceded by state civil judgment), with our holding in Cardillo v. Zyla,
supra
(federal diversity action preceded by criminal conviction). As shown above, this result aсcords with the overwhelming weight of authority. As to the scope of this collateral estoppel, we think it proper to repeat what we have said on this topic before. “Collateral estoppel operates, of course, only as to matters actually litigated and decided at the prior trial.
See
Palma v. Powers, [supra], citing Cromwell v. County of Sac,
In the instant case, since the antecedent action was a criminal trial, and since such trials do not
re
suit, generally,
in
explicit findings as to anything but the ultimate issue of guilt or innocence, the proper course in determining whether collateral estoppel principles are to operate in the federal trial is set out in Cardillo v. Zyla,
supra.
There the court “examined the record of the antecedent criminal case to determine the issues decided by that judgment”.
The court below reasoned that, “If the alleged perjui'e [sic] testimony was indeed essential to a jury’s finding of guilt, then the issues have been resolved against plaintiff in State Courts. If the alleged perjure [sic] testimony was not essential to his conviction below, then even if the testimony was false, plaintiff has not suffered any damages as a result thereof.” We have examined the amended complaint, and can find nothing in it to indicate that infringement of any fеderally protected right is involved other than the right to a fair trial. Thus, while it is quite possible that cases may arise in which civil rights claims based upon actions before or at trial would not be “issues whose earliеr determination was essential to the criminal judgment”, Cardillo v. Zyla,
supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The term res judicata is sometimes used generically to cover a number of related principles. More narrowly, res judicata refers to preclusion of a cause of action, while collateral estoppel refers to preclusion of an issue.
See
Palma v. Powers,
. In Moran v. Mitchell, Judge Merhige suggested the possibility of an exception to the general applicability of collateral estoppel tо section 1983 actions in the situation where, because of limitations placed upon the availability of federal habeas corpus, for example, the custody requirement, a plaintiff might otherwisе have no federal forum available to him in which to seek vindication of his federally protected rights.
It may also be worthwhile to note another aspect of the relationship between habеas and res judicata/collateral estoppel. As pointed out by the Court in Fay v. Noia,
. For example, it might be claimed that before or during trial rights of privacy, or free speech, or freedom from unlawful pretrial incarceration have been infringed, and these could constitute compensable wrongs wholly apart from the question of the constitutional validity of conviction.
