OPINION
The certified question in this case asks whether a Nevada default judgment based on a defendant’s failure to answer a complaint served by publication carries issue-preclusive effect. Because Nevada law requires an issue to have been actually and necessarily
FACTS
The certified question originates in a proceeding before the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada to de termine the dischargeability of a debt embodied in a Nevada default judgment against respondent Luis Sandoval, the debtor, in favor of Charles O. Ajuziem. The default judgment was based on Ajuziem’s complaint, which asserted claims for damages for assault and battery, including punitive damages, arising out of an altercation between Ajuziem and Sandoval at a soccer game. Ajuziem was a referee and Sandoval was a player on a soccer team. According to the complaint, Sandoval verbally threatened Ajuziem and punched Ajuziem in the eye, injuring him. Service of the complaint was accomplished by publication. When Sandoval neither answered nor appeared, the state trial court entered judgment by default. Ajuziem later assigned the judgment to appellant Leslie Howard.
A United States bankruptcy court determines the issuepreclusive effect of a state court judgment by the law of the court that rendered judgment.
In re Cantrell,
Five Star Capital Corp. v. Ruby,
Under Nevada law, would a default judgment obtained after a failure to answer a properly served complaint for tortious assault and battery have preclusive effect in a later lawsuit in which any of the necessary elements of tortious assault and battery were at issue? Put another way, is such a Nevada default judgment considered “actually . . . litigated” within the meaning of the fourth factor of Nevada’s issue preclusion doctrine as announced in Five Star Capital?
This question meets the criteria specified in NRAP 5 for this court to accept and answer a question of law certified to it by a federal court.
See Volvo Cars of North America v. Ricci,
DISCUSSION
Issue preclusion prevents relitigation of an issue decided in an earlier action, even though the later action is based on different causes of action and distinct circumstances.
Five Star,
(1) the issue decided in the prior litigation must be identical to the issue presented in the current action; (2) the initial ruling must have been on the merits and have become final; ... (3) the party against whom the judgment is asserted must have been a party or in privity with a party to the prior litigation; and (4) the issue was actually and necessarily litigated.
Id.
at 1055,
Courts elsewhere are divided on whether and when a default judgment can establish issue preclusion. Most courts hold that issue preclusion is not available for a default judgment obtained based simply on a defendant’s failure to file an answer.
See Arizona
v.
California,
Other courts follow a more relaxed view of issue preclusion based on default judgments, finding that if the party had a fair opportunity to litigate the issues and/or if the court made express findings in its default judgment, issue preclusion is appropriate.
See, e.g., In re Cantrell,
Issue preclusion serves to avoid relitigation and to conserve judicial resources. However,
Five Star’s
requirement that an issue has been “actually and necessarily litigated” before issue preclusion will attach serves important competing concerns with fairness. As
comment e to the Restatement (Second) of Judgments, section 27 recognizes, there are a number of legitimate reasons why a party may not have previously litigated an issue: the party did not receive actual notice of the proceedings, “[t]he action may involve so small an amount that litigation of the issue may cost more than the value of the
For these reasons we conclude that Nevada’s issue-preclusion test requires that an issue be “actually litigated” and not simply that a party had an opportunity to litigate the issue.
Five Star,
Notes
We note that some of these same courts, which do not allow issue preclusion based on a default judgment where no answer was filed, recognize the possibility of issue preclusion for other types of default judgments, such as a default judgment based on abusive or dilatory litigation tactics.
See Matter of Gober,
