Lindа D. SAPP, Plaintiff—Appellant, v. MEMORIAL HERMANN HEALTHCARE SYSTEM, Defendant—Appellee.
No. 10-20340
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Dec. 29, 2010.
407 Fed. Appx. 866
Summary Calendar.
Shauna Johnson Clark, Esq., Carolanda Bremond, Fulbright & Jaworski, L.L.P., Houston, TX, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before WIENER, PRADO, and OWEN, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:*
Linda Sapp is a former nurse within the Memorial Hermann Healthcare System (Memorial System). Contemporaneously with that employment, Sapp also pursued an advanced nursing degrеe through Texas Woman‘s University (TWU). TWU placed her in a practicum at a hospital in the Memorial System. Sapp has filed two suits stemming from this employment and education. Sapp first filed suit against the Memorial System alleging, inter alia, sexual, racial, age-based, and religious discrimination (Sapp I). One manifestation оf this discrimination, she claimed, was the Memorial System‘s not properly crediting her for a proposal written during the time of her employment and practicum. Sapp lost that suit, and did not appeal. In the
I
The Memorial System is a network of healthcare facilities. Linda Sapp worked as a nurse within the Memorial System, specifically at its Woodlands Facility. During that time, she also sought a masters in nursing from TWU. As part of her education, Sapp completed a practicum at a different facility within the Memorial System. During that practicum, Sapp worked on a proposal for a new system of career advancement at the facility, a so-called “career ladder” system. The parties disagree regarding the percentage of the work on this proposal done by Sapp and by her preceptor, Julie Segovia. That said, Sapp contends that she has not been properly credited for this proposal.
As a result, Sapp filed suit against the Memorial System in Sapp I. There Sapp claimed, inter alia, sexual, racial, age-based, and religious discrimination, arguing that she had been insufficiently credited for the careеr ladder proposal. The federal district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Memorial System. Sapp did not appeal.
Instead, Sapp filed Sapp II—the instant suit. In this suit, Sapp alleges that the Memorial System‘s use of the career ladder proposаl violates a copyright she holds on the career ladder proposal and constitutes unfair trade practices and unfair competition. The court‘s scheduling order, dated March 10, 2009, required motions to amend the pleаdings and add new parties be filed by May 1, 2009. Both parties moved for summary judgment. Then, on October 12, 2009, Sapp filed for leave to amend her petition to add TWU and Heather Kopecky, a nursing supervisor. The court denied the motion and Sapp‘s motion for a continuance pursuant to
II
We first address the denial of Sapp‘s motion to amend the complaint. The district court reaffirmed the denial in its final order, and we have jurisdiction to review a final order pursuant to
In considering whether thе district court abused its discretion, this court has noted a four-factor test designed to guide the district court‘s analysis: “(1) the explanation for the failure to timely move for leave to amend; (2) the importance of the amendment; (3) potential prejudice in allowing the amendment; and (4) the availability of a continuance to cure such prejudice.”6 We have recently reaffirmed that owing to “the importance of the pre-trial order in achieving efficаcy and expeditiousness upon trial in the district court, appellate courts are hesitant to interfere with the court‘s discretion in creating, enforcing, and modifying such orders.”7 No single factor is dispositive, nor must all the factors be present.8
Here the lower court denied the motion for leave to file an amended pleading, but did so “without prejudice to being reurged, if appropriate, following a ruling on the pending motions for summary judgment.” The court also observed that Sapp had filed her own motion for summary judgment, presumably indicating the lack of importance to her of amending her claims. Moreover, in denying the motion the lower court explicitly noted the Memorial System‘s pending res judiсata summary judgment motion—indicating a concern with the prejudice and delay that allowing amendment could bring to a party potentially on the verge of concluding its involvement in the litigation. In light of the foregoing, denying this motion was not an abuse of discretion.
III
We review the court‘s denial of Sapp‘s Rule 56(f) motion—to suspend summary judgment pending discovery—for abuse of discretion.9 Rule 56(f) has been recodified “without substantial change” as Rule 56(d).10
The rule allows for a delay in summary judgment to facilitate discovery when the non-movant cannot adequately oppose summary judgment at that time.11 A motion under the rule “must set forth a plausible basis for believing that specified facts, susceptible of collection within а reasonable time frame, probably exist and indicate how the emergent facts, if adduced, will influence the outcome of the pending summary judgment motion.”12 Here Sapp argued that she required more time for discovery, speсifically seeking depositions of Rebecca Krepper, a TWU dean, and Heather Kopecky, a faculty member at TWU who wrote Sapp a commendation letter for her role in authoring the career ladder рroposal.
IV
We review a decision to stаy discovery pending a dispositive motion for abuse of discretion.15 The Memorial System requested that the court stay discovery pending the outcome of the summary judgment motion and quash the upcoming deposition of Kopecky. The court granted the motion. We have previously held that where discovery would not be useful to the resolution of a pending summary judgment motion presenting a question of law, it is not an abuse of discretion to grant such a motion.16 The res judicata effect of a previous judgment is, in fact, a question of law.17 As we have previously said, it would be “wasteful to allow discovery on all issues raised in a broad complaint when, for example, the case will not reach” a determination on those merits.18 As discussed above, the discovery here went to the underlying merits and not to the pending summary judgment question of res judicata. Therefore, it was not an abuse of discretion to stay discovery.
V
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo.19 Though the federal rule pertaining to summary judgment has been amended in the period of pendency for this appeal, the change does not affect the substance of the rule.20 The rule permits the grant of summary judgment “if the movant shows that there is no genuine disputе as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”21 Here the district court granted summary judgment on the basis of res judicata. “Under res judicata, a final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action.”22 The res judicata effect of a previous judgment is also reviewed de novo.23
We have developed a four-part test, each prong of which must be met for res judicata to bar an action:
There is no dispute with respect to factors two and three. The district court in Sapp I had jurisdiction to issue a final summary judgment, and it did. With respect to the first factor, despite arguments designed to cloud the issue, the Memorial System is the named defendant in both suits. Thus the parties are identical.
In evaluating the fourth factor, the district court employed the so-called “transactional test.” We have recently rеaffirmed that the transactional test is appropriate in considering whether suits involve the same claim or cause of action.25 It considers whether the two suits involve “the same nucleus of operative facts.”26 This inquiry focuses upon “whether the facts are related in time, space, origin, or motivation; whether they form a convenient trial unit; and whether their treatment as a unit conforms to the parties’ expectations or business understanding or usage.”27
Herе Sapp‘s two suits arise from a single nucleus of operative fact: Sapp worked on a proposal, and believes that she was not properly rewarded for it. In Sapp I, Sapp sought to gain her purportedly deserved rewаrds through one legal avenue. Upon her loss in Sapp I, Sapp brought a second suit alleging an alternative theory of recovery, but seeking the same rewards she could not secure in Sapp I. As we have said, “a single cause of action or сlaim cannot be ‘split’ by advancing one part in an initial suit and attempting to reserve another part for a later suit.”28 Therefore, res judicata bars Sapp II, and summary judgment was properly granted.
Notably, because it was not an abuse of discretion to deny leave to amend, Sapp‘s argument that “[j]udicial [e]stoppel defeats [r]es [j]udicata if [the] [m]otion to [a]mend is allowed” is unavailing. Similarly, Sapp argues to this court that there is a continuing harm that cannot be settled by res judicata. She does so without citation and without having raised the issue in the district court. Both independently constitute waiver of an issue.29 Similarly, the single sentence, lacking citation and sandwiched between otherwise unrelated arguments, averring that Sapp could not bring her copyright claim in conjunction with her Sapp I claims constitutes waiver.30
As the district court properly granted summary judgment, Sapp‘s motion for summary judgment remains moot.
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For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the order of the district court.
