Hеrnandez, a Lafayette, Louisiana landowner contesting a zoning decision of that city, appeals from a district court judgment which granted the city’s motion for summary judgment. Hernandеz claims that the district court erred by improperly applying federal rather than state law principles of res judicata and by using res judicata where the factual circumstаnces have changed since the prior state court judgment was rendered. While Hernandez’s first assertion is correct, it avails him naught since neither law permits further litigation of this issue. We affirm. 1
Hernandez is contesting the residential zoning of a 16.7-acre tract of land in Lafayette which he desires zoned for commercial use. At the root of the disagreement wаs a city plan to build a road through Hernandez’s property, a plan which the city has since abandoned. Hernandez argues that the city’s refusal to rezone his property violated his due process rights by depriving him of the use of his property and depressing the value of his land which the city wants.
The disagreement resulted in two law suits — a § 1983 action in federal court and a state court suit contesting the validity of the city’s zoning ordinance as it applied to Hernandez’s land. The district court acted first, granting the city’s motion for summary judgment based on thе § 1983 immunity of the city and its mayor. The dismissal was entered December 13, 1978.
While the appeal from that judgment was pending in this court, Hernandez proceeded with the parallel actiоn in the Fifteenth Judicial District Court of Louisiana. That suit challenged the zoning ordinance on the same grounds as those alleged in the federal complaint and sought declaratory and injunctive relief. The trial court decided in favor of Hernandez and directed the city to rezone his property from R-l-A (single family detached and townhouse) to B — 1-0 (professional office). The Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal reversed on March 26, 1981, holding that Hernandez was not denied due process of law by the city’s refusal to rezone.
Hernandez v. City of Lafayette,
On May 1, 1981, this court affirmed the district court’s judgment dismissing the mayor, but reversed the dismissal of the city. The case was remanded with directions to determine whether the R-l-A zoning classification denied Hernandez any viable economic use of his property.
Hernandez v. City of Lafayette,
The city moved for summary judgment on the federal claim on the ground of res judicata, citing the Louisiana Court of Appeal’s judgmеnt. The district court held that federal rather than state principles of res judicata were applicable. The court noted that Hernandez alleged that changes hаd occurred in the area since the 1980 state trial, but concluded that they did not constitute grounds to relitigate the issues decided in the state court.
It is now beyond doubt that the defense of res judicata is available in a subsequent § 1983 action.
Allen v. McCurry,
However, Hernandez’s correction of this error provides him no help on this appeal. Applying Louisiana res judicata instead of federal res judicata produces the same result.
The Louisiana res judicata rule establishes a presumption of correctness and precludes relitigation of the object of the judgment only when there is (1) an identity of the parties, (2) an identity of the cause, and (3) an identity of the thing demanded. La.Civ.Code art. 2286;
Dornak v. Lafayette General Hospital,
The second element-cause is the “juridical or material fact which is the basis of the right claimed, ...”
Mitchell v. Bertolla,
The third requirement is that the “thing demanded” must be identical in each action. Hernandez argues that the thing demanded is different since the state action sought declaratory and injunctive relief while the federal suit prayed for money damages. The Louisiana Supreme Court has cautioned against hair-splitting and mechanistic applications of res judicata.
State ex rel. Guste v. City of New Orleans,
Hernandez next argues that changed circumstances occurring after the state court judgment precludes the use of res judicata. He asserts that these changes place his property in a different posture than it was at the timе of the state court trial.
Hernandez cites a number of cases for the proposition that a blanket application of res judicata is improper where therе are changed circumstances. But these cases say a little more than that. The changed circumstances must be “significant” and must create “new legal conditions.”
Jackson v. De Soto Parish School Board,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The facts of this case are devеloped in a previous panel decision.
Hernandez v. City of Lafayette,
. See Comment, Litigation Preclusion in Louisiana: Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation and the Death of Collateral Estoppel, 53 Tul.L. Rev. 875 (1979);
The thing demanded ... encompasses ... the fundamental nature of the right claimed, ... Thus, it can be said that the requirement of identity of things demanded is fulfilled when recognition is sought in the second suit of the same right to the same controverted thing that was actually litigated and determined by the judgment in the first — even though a differеnt relief or type of recognition is sought.
Id. at 881.
. Hernandez argues that the judge erred since he stated he need not decide whether changed circumstances existed. By stating that, Hernandez contends, the judge placed the burden of proof on him to show that the circumstances had in fact changed. The fact of the matter is that the judge, taking Hernandez’s allegations as true, found that no issues of material fact existed and that the allegations failed to change the preclusive effect of the state court judgment.
