Victor Guerrero, a Mexican immigrant and aspiring California correctional officer, filed a federal action alleging discriminatory failure-to-hire against the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (the CDCR), among other defendants. He pled federal and state law claims, but only his state claims allowed him to seek general damages.
The federal court dismissed Guerrero's state claims on Eleventh Amendment grounds, effectively limiting his potential money recovery to the equitable remedy of backpay. To recoup damages, Guerrero filed this action in superior court. After final judgment was entered in the federal action-in Guerrero's favor-the superior court dismissed his state claims under California claim preclusion principles.
On appeal, Guerrero now argues that federal law, not California law, governs the preclusive effect of the federal judgment. Under federal law, Guerrero contends, there is a well-recognized exception to claim preclusion rules where jurisdictional limitations in a prior suit blocked the plaintiff's request for complete relief, as was the case here. We agree and shall reverse.
II. FACTS
A. Background
Guerrero is among the many Americans who are popularly known as "Dreamers." He was brought from Mexico to the United States by his parents in 1990 at age 11. In 1995, at age 15, he created a false Social Security number (SSN) to acquire a job, and used the made-up SSN until 2007, when he secured a legitimate SSN. He became a United States citizen in 2011.
After Guerrero gained citizenship, he applied to become a correctional officer with the CDCR. He passed the written and physical exams in the first stage of the
Question 75 on the questionnaire presented a problem. It asked, "Have you ever had or used a social security number other than the one you used on this
Undaunted, Guerrero appealed to the State Personnel Board (the SPB), lost, and then reapplied to the CDCR in spring 2013. He again passed the first stage of eligibility and moved on to the background investigation questionnaire. Once again, he answered "yes" to question 75 and provided an explanation. Ultimately, he was rejected again. He appealed to the SPB, to no avail.
B. Underlying Litigation
1. Filing of the Federal Action
After exhausting administrative remedies, Guerrero filed a complaint in federal district court on December 9, 2013 (the Federal Action), naming the CDCR, the SPB and various individuals as defendants. That case alleged employment discrimination in violation of title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) and California's Fair Employment and Housing Act ( Gov. Code, § 12940 et seq. ) (FEHA); national origin discrimination in a state-conducted program in violation of Government Code section 11135 ; federal constitutional claims under section 1983 of title 42 of the United States Code for violation of the equal protection and due process clauses of the United States Constitution; and state constitutional claims for violation of the equal protection and due process clauses of article I, section 7 of the California Constitution.
By way of relief, Guerrero sought, inter alia, declaratory relief, injunctive relief (including reinstatement to the CDCR correctional officer hiring process), compensatory damages, and an award of attorney fees and costs. He bolstered this requested relief with claims for a writ of mandate under Code of Civil Procedure section 1085 barring further use of question 75; and a writ of administrative mandamus under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5 directing the CDCR and the SPB to set аside their decisions declaring him ineligible to be a correctional officer.
2. Dismissal of State Law Claims in the Federal Action
As the Federal Action moved forward, Guerrero added specificity, filing a first amended complaint in January 2014 and then a second amended complaint in February 2014. On motions to dismiss the second amended complaint, the district court granted dismissal in part. The court rejected the
The order of dismissal explained that "[b]ecause adjudication of plaintiff's California state-law claims in federal court would contravene the Eleventh Amendment, plaintiff's state-law claims against all
Going into trial, Guerrero's third amended complaint presented only federal questions. ( Guerrero I , supra ,
3. Filing of the State Court Action
In accordance with the district court's observation that the state law claims "may be re-filed in state court," Guerrero filed a complaint in San Francisco County Superior Court (State Court Action) while the Federal Action wаs still pending. Once again, Guerrero named the CDCR and the SPB as defendants along with various individuals, and once again, he alleged failure-to-hire under a disparate impact theory based on the use of question 75. It is undisputed that, factually, the allegations of discrimination in these parallel state and federal proceedings were virtual mirror images.
4. Trial and Judgment in the Federal Action
While the State Court Action was stayed, a bench trial took place in the Federal Action, which ended with a judgment for Guerrero on his Title VII claim, awarding much of the relief he sought, including reinstatement to the CDCR's correctional officer hiring process and $140,362 in backpay contingent on his successfully completing the CDCR training academy, plus an award of $1,237,024.82 in prevailing party attorney fees and $166,541.87 in costs. ( Guerrero v. California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (N.D.Cal. June 16, 2016, No. C 13-05671 WHA)
Guerrero was not wholly successful in the Federal Action, however. (See Guerrero Fees Order , supra ,
Following completion of the Federal Action, the trial court in the State Court Action heard argument on the preclusive effect of the federal judgment. On November 6, 2015, it issued an "Order on Res Judicata Effect of Federal Judgment" ruling that "this case should be dismissed and judgment entered against [Guerrero]" because "[u]nder California law including its primary rights doctrine ... the same primary rights were at issue in the federal case ... and in this case." It is from the adverse judgment entered upon this order that Guerrero now appeals.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review and Principles of Res Judicata
We review a dismissal on grounds of res judicata de novo as an issue of law. ( Noble v. Draper (2008)
Unlike issue preclusion, which applies only to issues that were actually litigated, claim preclusion applies not just to what was litigated, but more broadly to what could have been litigated. Here, under what is sometimes known as the rule against "claim splitting," the doctrines of bar and merger do the work. (See Rest.2d
B. Applicability of Federal Law
The main issue Guerrero presents on appeal, described by the trial court as "the central problem here," is "which law provides the rule of decision for res judicata analysis." Do we apply California law or federal law?
The basic principles of claim preclusion are roughly the same under California and federal law, but there are some key differences. For example, while federal law defines a "claim" for purposes of claim preclusiоn using a transactional test, California law uses the older pleading term "cause of action" and defines it according to the common law doctrine of primary rights.
Guerrero argues that, in determining the preclusive effect оf the judgment in the Federal Action, the trial court erroneously applied the California doctrine of primary rights. He correctly points out that in Semtek Int'l Inc. v. Lockheed Martin Corp. (2001)
Although federal common law applies under Semtek , the ultimate rule of decision chosen in that case was the law of the state where the judgment-issuing federal court sat, a holding which effectively embeds state law into federal law unless some paramount federal interest calls for a departure from it. This aspect of Semtek is consistent with the conventional approach to conflict of laws in federal diversity cases,
We read the holding in Taylor as an unequivocal directive that federal claim preclusion law applies in this case, without reference to California law. Long before
Citing City of Simi Valley v. Superior Court (2003)
The only California case we have found that takes account of the changed landscape following Semtek , correctly stating the rule announced in Taylor -oddly, without citing it, even though Taylor had been on the books by then for more than a year-holds that "where a prior federal judgment was based on federal question jurisdiction, the preclusive effect
C. Jurisdictional Competency Exception
We agree with Guerrero that the trial court erred in applying California's
Faced with a well-established claim preclusion exception, the CDCR attempts to offer a trump card. According to the CDCR, under Acuña v. Regents of University of California (1997)
To unravel the problem, we must start with Mattson v. City of Costa Mesa (1980)
The Mattson court described the circumstance presented there as one where the federal court "in the first action has discretionary jurisdiction and declines to exercise [it]." ( Mattson , supra ,
But Mattson must be read closely. The court was careful not to attach preclusive consequences to the mere act of filing
"In such circumstances," the Mattson court explained, "the rule that would best accommodate the rights of the plaintiff to fully litigate his claim and to invoke the jurisdiction of the federal court and the right of the defendant, the courts and the public to be free of multiple litigation of the same cause of action, is that once the federal court has declined to exercise pendent jurisdiction over the state claim, if the plaintiff then elects to proceed to trial and judgment in the federal court, his entire cause of action is either merged in or barred by the federal court judgment so that he may not thereafter maintаin a second suit on the same cause of action in a state court. [¶] A contrary rule would invite manipulation. It would permit a plaintiff halfheartedly to request the federal court to exercise pendent jurisdiction, offer little resistance to any argument by the defendant against its exercise, and hope that the federal court would decline to exercise pendent jurisdiction and thereby reserve to the plaintiff a second chance to prevail in a state court action should he be successful in the federal court." ( Mattson , supra ,
Acuña extended the Mattson rule to a case where the plaintiff landed in federal court by removal, not by choice. The case began with a state court action asserting employment discrimination claims under the federal Age Discriminatiоn in Employment Act (ADEA) and for race, ethnicity and age bias under FEHA. ( Acuña , supra , 56 Cal.App.4th at pp. 643-644,
What must ultimately carry the day, however, no matter how Acuña is read, is that it predates Semtek and Taylor . Mattson , on which Acuña relies, has been both praised (see Hernandez v. City of Pomona (2009)
IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment dismissing Guerrero's state claims is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
We concur:
Tucher, J.
Lee, J.
Notes
In July 2017, a Ninth Circuit panel sustained the district court's finding of Title VII disparate impact liability against the CDCR, but reversed the judgment with respect to the SPB, holding that "[i]n its purely adjudicatory role in this case, there is no evidence that [the SPB] discriminated against or interfered with the CDCR's relationship with Guerrero, nor is [the SPB] in a position analogous to [a state agency that had become] 'so entangled with the operation of California's local school districts that individual districts are treated as " 'state agencies' " for purposes of the Eleventh Amendment.' [Citation.] Therefore, [the SPB] cannot be liable under a third party disparate impact theory." (Guerrero II, supra, 701 Fed.Appx. at pp. 618-619.) Because the fees and costs awards were entered on an apportioned basis against both the CDCR and the SPB, the case was remanded to the district court for the limited purpose of reconsidering that apportionment. (Id. at p. 619.)
While this appeal was pending, we granted a stipulated motion dismissing thе SPB and the individual defendants, leaving the CDCR as the sole respondent.
"The federal courts utilize a transactional analysis; i.e., two suits constitute a single cause of action if they both arise from the same 'transactional nucleus of facts' [citation] or a single 'core of operative facts.' [Citation.] California follows the primary right theory of Pomeroy; i.e., a cause of action consists of 1) a primary right possessed by the plaintiff, 2) a corresponding primary duty devolving upon the defendant, and 3) a delict or wrong done by the defendant which consists in a breach of such primary right and duty. [Citations.]" (Gamble v. General Foods Corp. (1991)
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins (1938)
See Paul J. Mishkin, The Variousness of "Federal Law": Competence and Discretion in the Choice of National and State Rules for Decision (1957)
Texas Industries Inc. v. Radcliff Materials, Inc. (1981)
Villacres v. ABM Industries Inc. (2010)
Franceschi v. Franchise Tax Bd . (2016)
The highest appellate courts in other states that have explicitly addressed the question in a considered way have been unanimous in reaching the same conclusion Louie did. (See Donnelly v. Eklutna, Inc . (Alaska 1999)
See also section 26(1)(c), comment c(1) of the Second Restatement ("Where formal barriers existed against full presentation of claim in first action (Subsection (1)(c) ). The general rule of § 24 [Dimensions оf 'Claim' for Purposes of Merger or Bar-General Rule Concerning 'Splitting'] is largely predicated on the assumption that the jurisdiction in which the first judgment was rendered was one which put no formal barriers in the way of a litigant's presenting to a court in one action the entire claim including any theories of recovery or demands for relief that might have been available to him under applicable law. When such formal barriers in fact existed and were operative against a plaintiff in the first action, it is unfair to preclude him from a second action in which he can present those phases of the claim which he was disabled from presenting in the first.").
Freeman v. Oakland Unified School District (9th Cir. 1999)
Federal law-Feminist Women's Health Center v. Codispoti (9th Cir. 1995)
See United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs (1966)
The Fifth Tentative Draft of the Second Restatement was the immediate precursor to the Second Restatement, published in 1982, two years after Mattson was decided. Except for new section numbering and new letter designation of comments, there are no material differences betwеen the Fifth Tentative Draft and the Second Restatement, as pertinent here.
See Harris v. Grimes (2002)
The Mattson court's analysis of the аpplicable restatement principles centers on section 61.1, comment e of the Fifth Tentative Draft of the Second Restatement, which became section 24, comment g of the Second Restatement. Structurally, section 24 (entitled "Dimensions of 'Claim' for Purposes of Merger or Bar-General Rule Concerning Claim Splitting") is followed by section 25 (entitled "Exemplifications of General Rule Concerning Splitting"), which is followed in turn by section 26 (entitled "Exceptions to the General Rule Concerning Claim Splitting"). As carried over from the First Restatement, section 62, comment j, the explanatory language Mattson relies upon most heavily, which ultimately became section 24, comment g-concerning the consequences of a "plaintiff having voluntarily brought his action in a court that can only grant him limited relief"-is an illustration of the general rule in application. But the Second Restatement makes clear that this illustrative scenario refers to the bringing of a subsequent suit within "the same system of courts." Section 24, comment g; see, e.g., Allstate Ins. Co. v. Mel Rapton, Inc . (2000)
Judge of the Superior Court of California, County of San Mateo, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
