A scaffold collapsed in August 1989, injuring carpenter Larry Pohlmann. Pohl-mann sued the manufacturer, Bil-Jax, Inc., in a Missouri state court. Bil-Jax answered, asserting lack of personal jurisdiction as a defense. After a trial, the jury returned a $2,000,000 verdict in favor of Pohlmann. The trial court ordered a new trial or a remittitur to $362,339. Pohl-mann refused the remittitur and appealed the grant of a new trial. The Missouri Court of Appeals remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint “without prejudice” for lack of personal jurisdiction.
Pohlmann v. Bil-Jax, Inc.,
Pohlmann then filed this action in Missouri state court. The second complaint recited the dismissal of his prior suit without prejudice, reasserted causes of action for strict liability and negligence, and added claims for punitive damages and prejudgment interest. Bil-Jax removed, invoking the district court’s diversity jurisdiction, and moved to dismiss on the ground that the prior Missouri Court of Appeals decision precluded Pohlmann from relitigating the personal jurisdiction issue. The district court agreed, dismissing the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction because “the personal jurisdiction issue has already been decided by the Missouri courts.” Pohlmann appeals. Concluding that the preclusion issue is not so cut-and-dried, we reverse and remand.
The district court’s jurisdiction over the person of defendant Bil-Jax in this diversity case turned on whether Bil-Jax was amenable to the personal jurisdiction of the state court and had been validly served prior to removal.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(k)(1)(A);
Omni Capital Int’l v. Rudolf Wolff & Co.,
Pohlmann argues the Missouri Court of Appeals decision is entitled to no preclusive effect because it was a dismissal without prejudice that did not adjudicate the merits of his claims and left him free to commence another action. We generally agree that dismissal of a case without prejudice does not result in
claim
preclusion (to use more venerable terminology, it creates no res judicata bar). But an
issue
actually decided in a non-merits dismissal is given preclusive effect in a subsequent action between the same parties (in the older terminology, the first adjudication creates a collateral estoppel). Many cases have given this kind of preclusive effect to rulings on personal jurisdiction as well as other jurisdiction issues.
See e.g., Deckert v. Wachovia Student Fin. Servs.,
Under' Missouri law, the first question in deciding whether collateral es-toppel applies is “whether the issue decided in the prior adjudication was identical with the issue presented in the present action.”
Oates v. Safeco Ins. Co.,
This proposition is demonstrated by hypothetically changing a critical fact in one of the above-cited cases. In
Kitces v. Wood,
In our view, there are practical reasons why this distinction has not resulted in the relitigation of personal jurisdiction issues in the many cases where plaintiffs unsuccessfully sought to invoke a court’s long-arm jurisdiction over a foreign corporation. Most corporate defendants raise serious personal jurisdiction issues in an early motion to dismiss. Typically, in response to such a motion, the court will grant plaintiff reasonable discovery on the personal jurisdiction issue. The issue is then decided on a full jurisdictional fact record, with the court making supporting findings of fact if it decides to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. When that decision becomes final, the adjudicated jurisdictional facts will be given preclusive effect, and any attempt by plaintiff to file a second suit in the courts of that State will result in a quick dismissal, unless critical jurisdictional facts have changed in the interim. The jurisdictional fact-finding in the first suit dooms the second because, even in jurisdictions where collateral estoppel is limited to questions of fact, not issues of law, Questions of material fact that are determinative of legal issues may not be relit-igated except, perhaps, to avoid injustice.
In contrast to the more typical cases, Bil-Jax in this case lay in the weeds for two-and-one-half years and then sprung its jurisdictional trap by a motion for directed verdict at the close of Pohlmann’s case in the trial of the first lawsuit. By then, Bil-Jax no doubt hoped that Pohlmann’s claims were time-barred in all other jurisdictions. The trap caught its prey, and Pohlmann’s first suit was dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction. There were no jurisdictional findings in the trial court, simply a ruling by the appellate court that the trial record did not establish the trial court’s personal jurisdiction over Bil-Jax when the first suit was commenced in November 1993. That ruling sheds little if any light on the different legal issue whether Missouri courts, including the district court, had personal jurisdiction over Bil-Jax when the second suit was commenced in December 1997. In these circumstances, we conclude the Supreme Court of Missouri would not dismiss the second suit on the ground that “the question of personal jurisdiction in Missouri” was preclusively determined in the first suit. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
