This is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of a renewed motion for summary judgment by a government official who asserts that he has absolute immunity from appellee’s common law tort claim. The trial court denied the renewed motion on the ground that the previous denial of substantially the same motion by another judge *1270 constituted the law of the case. We affirm.
Appellees Riley Pointer, an operating engineer employed by the General Services Administration (GSA), and Paul S. Shupp, a foreman with GSA, filed this common law action claiming damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress against appellant Jerome A. Kaplan, a GSA supervisory labor-management specialist.
1
The complaint was prompted by an alleged series of threatening and harassing telephone calls appellees received at home and at work from appellant. Before filing an answer, appellant moved the trial court for summary judgment on the ground that, under the Supreme Court’s plurality opinion in
Barr v. Matteo,
The law of the case doctrine bars a trial court from reconsidering a question of law that was already decided in the same case by another court of coordinate jurisdiction.
Ehrenhaft v. Malcolm Price, Inc.,
when (1) the motion under consideration is substantially similar to the one already raised before, and considered by, the first court; (2) the first court’s ruling is “sufficiently ‘final’;” and (3) the prior ruling is not “clearly erroneous in light of newly presented facts or a change in substantive law.”
P.P.P. Productions,
The motion for summary judgment under review here is “substantially similar” to the one that was denied by Judge Mencher; both were predicated on the assertion of absolute immunity under Barr. In renewing his motion appellant did not allege, and in ruling on it Judge Gardner did not rely on, any newly presented facts. Thus, there are only two issues before us: whether the first order was “sufficiently final” for law of the case purposes, and whether there was such a change in substantive law as to render the first order clearly erroneous.
An order denying a motion for summary judgment possesses sufficient finality for purposes of the law of the case doctrine as to bar another judge from granting a renewed motion substantially similar to the first.
See Kurth v. Dobricky,
The renewal of appellant’s motion for summary judgment was premised on an alleged significant change in the substantive law governing official immunity. In support of his argument, appellant relied on the companion cases of
Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
Under
Barr v. Matteo,
In support of his renewed motion for summary judgment, appellant urged that in
Nixon
and
Harlow
the Supreme Court emphasized that trial courts should dispose of baseless claims against officials by granting meritorious motions to dismiss or for summary judgment, and that the Court interpreted the phrase “within the outer perimeters of one’s official responsibility” in the broadest possible terms. Our examination of
Nixon
and
Harlow
on those points reveals nothing approaching a “significant intervening change in substantive law.”
Tompkins v. Washington Hospital Center,
We conclude that Nixon and Harlow —progeny of Butz — do not constitute such an intervening change in the substantive law applicable to this case as to render clearly erroneous the order denying appellant’s original motion for summary judgments. 6 In short, Judge Mencher’s denial of appellant’s first motion for summary judgment was the law of the case, precluding Judge Gardner from ruling anew on appellant’s subsequent motion, substantially like the first. 7 Judge Gardner was correct in acknowledging that fact and disposing of the renewed motion accordingly.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This, case has traversed a long and circuitous procedural trail. We discuss only so much of it as our disposition of this appeal necessitates.
. The collateral order doctrine, first articulated by the Supreme Court in
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
.
See also Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
. Federal courts consistently acknowledge that
Barr's
doctrine of absolute immunity from common law torts survives the Court's ruling in
Butz, McKinney v. Whitfield,
.
See also Mitchell v. Forsyth,
— U.S.-,
.
Compare Tompkins v. Washington Hospital Center,
. Given the grounds of our ruling we express no view as to the merits of appellant’s claim of official immunity or as to whether appellant may have been required to have appealed Judge Mencher’s order in order to preserve that issue for our review.
