The underlying suit, which we’ll call suit number 1, is a diversity suit, governed by Illinois law, for damages arising from an automobile accident. A jury determined that both drivers had been negligent, and thе judge entered judgment against them in accordance with the verdict. Enrick, a passenger in one of the cars, brought a separate suit, suit number 2, against the driver of the other car, one of the defendants in suit number 1. The parties to number 1 decided to settle, and pursuant to the terms of the settlement they askеd the judge to vacate the judgment in their suit. Enrick asked the judge to let him intervene to oppose the settlement, because he wanted the judgment to stand so that he could use it to establish the liability of the driver of the other car in suit number 2, his suit against that driver—use it, that is, as “offensive collateral estoppel,” to preclude the driver from relitigating the issue of his negligence.
Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore,
Enrick has appealed from the judge’s order vacating the judgment. Doubting whether wе have jurisdiction of the appeal, we asked the parties to brief the question.
To intervene in a suit is to become a party to it,
Stringfellow v. Concerned Neighbors in Action,
The opportunity to use a judgment in a suit to which one is not a party to gain an advantage in a suit to which one is a party is valuable, but the denial of the opportunity is not a sufficient injury to confer standing. The principle is well established in cases in which the oрportunity is merely to use the judgment (or rather,
*421
in the usual case, the opinion accompanying the judgment) as a precedent that might persuade a court in a subsequent case.
Boston Tow Boat Co. v. United States,
One case holds, however, that a person whо would like to use a judgment for purposes of offensive collateral estoppel has standing to challenge the vacation of that judgment.
American Games, Inc. v. Trade Products, Inc.,
Even if (as we need not decide to resolve this appeal) the
American Games
dеcision is wrong, the predominant view is that intervention does not require that the in-tervenor have an interest sufficient under Article III to entitle him to sue, since the court’s jurisdiction is adequately supported by the fact that the original parties must have standing, as otherwise the suit could not continue.
Purcell v. BankAtlantic Financial Corp., supra,
If intervention always meant that the intervenor became a party with all the rights the original parties had, so that if the party on whose side he intervened dropped out of the case he could take his place and continuе the litigation to judgment, he would have to show that his interest in the suit was sufficient to confer standing under Article III. Such a conclusion would be implicit in the rule mentionеd earlier that jurisdiction must continue throughout a litigation. It is not enough that there was jurisdiction originally but it lapsed before judgment was *422 entered; when it lapses, the suit must be dismissed.
But “intervention” can be and is usеd more broadly (or loosely) to denote a situation in which the resolution of a dispute can be expedited or made more accurate or otherwise improved by allowing someone to enter the litigation, conduct discovery, examine and cross-examine witnesses, and otherwise disрort himself as a party would, or else to participate in a more limited capacity, as in the present case. Whether such participations are called “intervention” or something else, and the participants are called “parties” (invariably they are, if permitted to intervene, however limited a participation the judge authorizes) or something else, such participation is within the power of a district judge to allow if hе has a reasonable basis in judicial expedience to do so. See, e.g.,
Jessup v. Luther,
This analysis may seem to make the question whether the possibility оf using a judgment as offensive collateral estoppel in the intervenor’s suit is sufficient to confer standing on the intervenor inescapable in the present case. But the case is peculiar because the judge, while vacating the judgment because the parties to suit number 1 wanted him to, made clеar that he thought the judgment unsound and therefore that he would have set it aside quite apart from the settlement. A vacated judgment is not a permissible basis fоr collateral estoppel. E.g.,
Warner/Elektra/Atlantic Corp. v. County of DuPage,
Even if the judge would not have set aside the judgment—for it is merely highly likely, and not certain, that he would have done so—his criticisms of the judgment would undoubtedly have dissuaded the court in suit number 2 from giving the judgment collateral estoppel effect; for a judgment must not be given such effect if “any special circumstances exist which would render preclusion inappropriate or unfair.”
Crowder v. Lash,
Dismissed.
