The NAACP brought this action against a group of state and local educational authorities, alleging unconstitutional segregation in the Los Angeles public schools. The three local defendants, the Los Angeles Unified School District, the Board of Edu
*937
cation of the City of Los Angeles, and the Superintendent of Schools,
1
moved for summary judgment on the ground that the present suit was barred by the adjudication of an identical claim before the Superior Court of Los Angeles County in
Crawford
v.
Board of Education,
(No. C822854).
2
The district court denied the motion,
I.
FACTS
In 1963, the California Supreme Court held in a unanimous decision that school boards are under an obligation to remedy racial segregation in the public schools, regardless of the cause of such segregation.
Jackson v. Pasadena City School District,
Soon thereafter, Crawford was filed as a class action on behalf of black school children in the Los Angeles Unified School District, 3 seeking desegregation of the District’s schools. After the failure of the District to formulate a satisfactory voluntary plan for desegregation, Crawford came to trial in 1968 in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County before Judge Alfred Gitelson. The parties agreed to limit the scope of the court’s inquiry into the District’s activities to the period from May 1,1963 to the beginning of trial. After considering an enormous body of evidence and holding a lengthy trial, Judge Gitelson rendered judgment for the plaintiff class on May 12,1970. Judge Gitelson found that a number of the schools in the District were segregated, and concluded that the Board of Education had segregated its students de jure as the result of policies, practices, and omissions on the part of the Board. 4
The Board of Education appealed to the California Supreme Court, which affirmed the judgment of the Superior Court, but only on the basis of the Board’s failure to remedy racial segregation in the public schools, as was required under the California State Constitution by
Jackson.
Craw
ford
v.
Board of
Education,
On remand to the Superior Court, Judge Paul Egly held extensive hearings on the appropriate remedy, and ordered mandatory busing to begin in September 1978. 5 However, on November 6,1979, the California voters enacted Proposition 1, which restricted the power of the state courts to order busing and pupil assignment as remedies for school segregation to that exercised by the federal courts under the Fourteenth Amendment. The effect of Proposition 1, therefore, was to overrule the part of Jackson and the cases following it which permitted court-ordered busing and pupil assignment as remedies for school segregation even in the absence of de jure segregation.
The Crawford defendants then petitioned to the Superior Court to end mandatory school busing in Los Angeles. The court denied the request, holding that Proposition 1 did not apply to Los Angeles, since Judge Gitelson’s 1970 decision had found de jure segregation, a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment for which busing is an appropriate remedy.
In December 1980, the California Court of Appeal reversed, and vacated the order refusing to terminate the mandatory busing plan.
Crawford v. Board of Education,
On July 2, 1981, the Board submitted a desegregation plan to the Superior Court, Judge Robert Lopez now presiding. 7 Judge Lopez accepted the plan, with modifications, on September 10, 1981. 8 The court held that the desegregation plan remedied present conditions in the District, and that the plan protected the rights of all students and met constitutional standards. Order Re Final Approval of School Board Desegregation Plan and Discharge of Writ of Mandate at 7 (Superior Court of Los Angeles County No. C822854) (September 10, 1981 Order). 9 The court stated that the “underlying issues [in Crawford] have been resolved,” id. at 8, and, on November 25, 1981, awarded costs and attorneys’ fees, and terminated jurisdiction. 10
Meanwhile, on April 15, 1981, the NAACP filed the present case in the District Court for the Central District of California as a class action on behalf of black children eligible to attend the Los Angeles schools. The plaintiffs alleged unconstitutional segregation in the Los Angeles Unified School District from its establishment until the present, and sought a temporary restraining order to enjoin the termination of mandatory busing in the District. The district court granted the temporary restraining order on April 17, 1981,
The District then moved for summary judgment on the ground that the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel preclude this suit. 11 The district court denied *939 the motion on July 16,1981, but certified an interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
II.
PRECLUSION OF THE DE JURE SEGREGATION CLAIM
The District asserts that the NAACP is precluded under the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel from litigating its contention that the Los Angeles schools were segregated de jure, since that claim was adjudicated in Crawford. The district court under the circumstance it confronted refused to apply res judicata or collateral estoppel. We reverse.
As the Supreme Court explained in
Allen v. McCurry,
The federal courts have traditionally adhered to the related doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel. 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. Cromwell v. County of Sac,94 U.S. 351 , 352 [24 L.Ed. 195 ]. Under collateral estoppel, once a court has decided an issue of fact or law necessary to its judgment, that decision may preclude re-litigation of the issue in a suit on a different cause of action involving a party to the first case. Montana v. United States,440 U.S. 147 , 153 [99 S.Ct. 970 , 973,59 L.Ed.2d 210 ] .... As this Court and other courts have often recognized, res judicata and collateral estoppel relieve parties of the cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve judicial resources, and, by preventing inconsistent decisions, encourage reliance on adjudication.
In applying the requirements for res judicata and collateral estoppel, we are obligated by 28 U.S.C. § 1738 “to give the same preclusive effect to state court judgments that those judgments would be given in the courts of the State from which the judgments emerged.”
Kremer v. Chemical
Con
struction Corp.,
A. Res Judicata
Under California law, the application of res judicata is dependent on the conclusion that: (1) there was a final judgment on the merits in the earlier proceeding; (2) the claims were part of a cause of action that was litigated and decided, or that might have been litigated, in the earlier proceeding; and (3) the parties against whom the principle is invoked were parties or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication.
See Dillard v. McKnight,
1. Final Judgment
The district court, having before it only the remittitur from the California Court of Appeal, held that there was no final judgment on the merits in
Crawford,
and therefore refused to preclude litigation in the federal court of the NAACP’s claim.
2. Claims Litigated
When there is a final judgment between the same parties or their privies, res judicata will preclude the maintenance of a second suit on the same cause of action, settling not only every issue that was raised, but also every issue that might have been raised in the first action.
Olwell
v.
Hopkins,
Initially we must demonstrate that the claim of the plaintiff class in
Crawford
was the same as that alleged by the present class in this case. Under California’s “primary rights” theory of res judicata, a “ ‘cause of action’ is based upon the harm suffered” by the plaintiff, and not upon the legal ground for relief, since even “where there are multiple legal theories upon which recovery might be predicated, one injury gives rise to only one claim for relief.”
Slater v. Blackwood,
Next, we must show that the claim of de jure segregation advanced in the present case was actually litigated, or might have been litigated, in Crawford. To do this a brief review of the California proceedings is necessary.
In his 1970 decision, Judge Gitelson held, inter alia, that there was
de jure
segregation in the Los Angeles Unified School District in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, at Conclusions 7-10 (Superior Court of Los Angeles County No. C822854 May 12, 1970). Numerous specific findings of fact demonstrate this.
E.g., id.
at Findings 1(c), 1(h), 38, 59, 82. The District appealed that holding to the California Supreme Court, which, while it declined to rest its decision on
de jure
segregation, observed that Judge Gitelson’s findings supported his conclusion.
Crawford
1,
[W]e conclude that the racial imbalance and segregation which existed in many schools in the District and the Board’s actions in relation thereto did not constitute a violation of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment ... in that racial imbalance and segregation did not result from Board acts performed with segregative intent and discriminatory purpose.
The NAACP argues that for res judicata to apply, the claim of de jure segregation not only must have been decided in Crawford, it must also have been properly litigated there. According to the NAACP, the Crawford plaintiffs, relying on Jackson, planned their argument and presentation of evidence before the Superior Court to establish the existence of de facto segregation, and the finding of de jure segregation was the reaction of Judge Gitelson sua sponte to the evidence. In addition, the NAACP contends that the Court of Appeal held only that de jure segregation was not proven, and that a holding that an issue was “not proven” is, for purposes of res judicata, distinguishable from a holding that an issue was “disproved.” We cannot accept these propositions.
First, the record fails to support the NAACP’s assertion that the
Crawford
plaintiffs did not attempt to establish
de jure
segregation on the part of the District. The plaintiffs moved to be allowed to show a bad faith intent to segregate the Los Angeles schools on the part of the District, and Judge Gitelson granted the motion, E.R. 4, Ex. 5-6, thereby placing the issue of segregative intent before the court.
14
Moreover, as mentioned above, many of Judge Gitelson’s findings of fact and conclusions of law were devoted to the
de jure
claim. No doubt it is true that the
Crawford
plaintiffs would have placed greater emphasis on
de jure
segregation had Proposition 1 then been in force. However, it provides no basis to deny the ordinary res judicata effect of the
Crawford
decision.
See Jorgensen v. Jorgensen,
Our invocation of res judicata is strengthened by the fact that the NAACP did not attempt to establish
de jure
segregation upon the remand following
Crawford II.
A litigant cannot simply move his case to federal court because he anticipates an unwelcome, albeit partially victorious, outcome in the state courts and thereby escape the ordinary preclusive effects of that outcome.
See Allen v. McCurry,
More troublesome is fixing the scope of the res judicata bar. The district court believed that the
Crawford
litigation would preclude relitigation of the
de jure
claim only for the years 1963-1968, since the evidence presented to Judge Gitelson in the Superior Court involved the District’s activities only during that period.
The parties were not limited to 1963-1968 period in their presentation of evidence. Although the Crawford parties stipulated that the plaintiffs need not introduce any evidence of the District’s activities other *942 than during the 1963 to 1968 period, 15 each was free to move for admission of evidence dating from before 1963 and after 1968. E.R. 4, Ex. 7. Since res judicata precludes claims that might have been litigated, as well as those that actually were litigated, the res judicata bar embraces the period between 1963 and Judge Gitelson’s decision in 1970.
The existence and scope of the post-1970 bar involves a similar analysis. According to both the district court and the parties, the
Crawford
plaintiffs could have reopened the
de jure
segregation claim on remand from the Court of Appeal in
Crawford II
to the Superior Court in 1981.
3. Same Parties
Fixing the identity of the parties barred by res judicata also poses some difficulty. The rule is that a judgment for the named plaintiffs in a class “will be binding on all the persons belonging to the class ... and ... subsequently coming into the class.”
King v. International Union of Operating Engineers,
The question then arises whether the Crawford judgment can bar the present case. Our difficulty springs from the fact that the present class is not completely identical to that of Crawford. The present class, the class on whose behalf this suit was brought, did not close on September 10, 1981. It remains open. 17 School children not in the Crawford class now are in the class involved in the present suit.
Where, however, the earlier and later classes are “substantially identical” and the interests of the later class were represented by the earlier, a judgment in the earlier case can preclude the later one.
See Bell v. Board of Education,
The Bronson court explained:
*943 [A] public body should not be required to defend repeatedly against the same charge of improper conduct if it has been vindicated in an action brought by a person or group who validly and fairly represent those whose rights are alleged to have been infringed. Though the plaintiffs in the instant action are not the same persons as those who instituted [the earlier action], that action was brought to vindicate the rights of all minority school children and parents affected by the actions and policies of the ... Board. There is a strong community of interest between the [earlier class] and the Bronson plaintiffs and both actions sought relief on behalf of the same large group of black citizens. For the purposes of [preclusion] we do not consider the plaintiffs in the present action to be “strangers” to the [earlier] litigation.
The members of the class of the present case, which grows in numbers each year, are “substantially identical” to those of
Crawford.
Their interests were well represented there. We hold, therefore, that the
Crawford
adjudication bars the present class from relitigating the claim that the Los Angeles schools were segregated
de jure
on or before the final judgment in
Crawford. See Garcia v. Board of Education,
The NAACP presents three arguments against this conclusion. First, it contends that res judicata applies only to classes that are formally certified, which that in Crawford was not. Second, the NAACP claims that the Crawford class does not embrace children who entered the Los Angeles schools after May 1970, when Judge Gitelson issued his decision. Finally, it asserts that, in the context of class actions, res judicata only precludes claims that were fully litigated and decided, and not claims that might have been litigated, but were not. We shall address each argument.
First, while it is true that the class in
Crawford
was never formally certified since formal procedures for class certification were not available to the Superior Court of Los Angeles County until 1973, that does not preclude giving res judicata effect to the
Crawford
decision. The California courts have treated
Crawford
as a class action,
see, e.g., Crawford I,
Second, the
Crawford
class did not close in 1970. The order issued by Judge
*944
Lopez on September 10,1981, approving the District’s plan and resolving the merits of
Crawford,
refers to “present conditions” in the District. The order makes it crystal clear that the remedy is intended to benefit school children attending the Los Angeles schools in 1981, and not merely class members as of May 1970. Indeed, Judge Lopez devoted considerable attention to the fact that conditions had changed substantially between 1963 and 1981.
See
September 10, 1981 Order at 4-7. Thus, the court treated the
Crawford
class as remaining open until 1981, and not as having closed with Judge Gitelson’s decision in 1970. It follows that the children who entered the class after 1970 and before September 10, 1981 fall into the category of persons “subsequently coming into the class,” and are bound by the final judgment on the merits.
See Williams v. California,
The NAACP’s third contention — that only claims that were fully litigated can be barred — is also without merit. It relies for this proposition on
Bronson v. Board of Education,
The Sixth Circuit, subsequent to the filing of the NAACP brief in the present case, reversed this decision.
Bronson v. Board of Education,
The Sixth Circuit in this
Bronson
case looked to
Bell v. Board of Education,
The present case clearly meets these requirements. The
de jure
claim was decided in
Crawford.
No one disputes that the
Crawford
class was adequately represented.
19
And while the passage of Proposition 1 has altered California law, the present case is based on
federal
law, in which the basic theory of liability for unlawful segregation has remained substantially the same. See
Bronson,
As the Bell court noted, if future classes are not barred by an earlier decision of no segregation, then:
we would open up for relitigation all school desegregation judgments .... A plaintiff who disagrees with a prior final determination of liability ... would be entitled to relitigate the finding of liability. Rights and duties in desegregation cases previously litigated and established would never become final. They would always be subject to collateral attack. Desegregation judgments, like tickets to the theater, would be good for today’s show only.
Thus, we hold that all members of the class in this litigation are barred by res judicata from relitigating the claim of de jure segregation in the District occurring before September 10, 1981.
B. Collateral Estoppel
This conclusion is buttressed by collateral estoppel. For collateral estoppel to apply, there must be a final judgment on the merits, the issue decided in the prior adjudication must be identical to the one presented in the later proceeding, and the party against whom the plea of estoppel is asserted must have been a party or in privity with a party to the earlier action.
Bernhard v. Bank of America,
The discussion of the final judgment and identical party requirements in the context of res judicata applies equally to collateral estoppel. The NAACP asserts, however, that even if these two requirements are met, collateral estoppel cannot preclude the present action, since the doctrine only affects issues that are “litigated and determined.”
See People v. Sims,
As previously noted, the
Crawford
plaintiffs raised, and had the opportunity fully to litigate, the
de jure
issue, not only for 1963-1968, but also for the pre-1963 era, and for the period from the beginning of the Superior Court trial in 1968 until the termination of jurisdiction over them in 1981. However, the
Crawford
plaintiffs chose not to do so as extensively as it might have. Thus,
de jure
segregation falls into the category of issues which were pleaded and decided, but not as fully litigated as it was possible to do as a result of the choice of the party against whom estoppel is asserted. Under California law, when an issue is decided against a party which has chosen not to litigate it, that party is estopped from relitigating the issue.
See People v. Sims,
The California Supreme Court said:
What is significant here is that the County had notice of the hearing as well as the opportunity and incentive to present its case to the hearing officer .... The People cannot now take advantage of the fact that the County .. . chose not to present evidence at the prior proceeding.
Although Sims is distinguishable from the present case, it remains true that the Crawford plaintiffs had both the opportunity and incentive to litigate fully the question of de jure segregation in the District before 1981. Only by doing so could they obtain mandatory busing. They did not do so. They came to federal court. We hold that they are estopped to litigate in this forum de jure segregation in the District before September 10, 1981.
III.
CONCLUSION
The conditions for applying both res judicata and collateral estoppel have been met in the present case. Moreover, the California courts amply satisfied the requirements of the Due Process Clause in the
Crawford
litigation.
See Kremer v. Chemical Construction Corp.,
We therefore hold that the present plaintiffs are barred from relitigating the claim that the District was segregated
de jure
on or before September 10, 1981. The plaintiffs, of course, are not barred from assert
*946
ing that the District was segregated unlawfully after that date. On remand the plaintiffs may present evidence at trial of relevant District actions before 1981, but the rules of relevancy should be evenly applied.
See Bronson,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We refer to the local defendants collectively as the District.
. The state defendants also moved for summary judgment on Eleventh Amendment and case or controversy grounds, and the district court granted their motions.
. The Crawford class (Crawford plaintiffs) was expanded later to include Mexican-American children in the Los Angeles schools.
.
See Crawford
v.
Board of Education,
. Judge Gitelson was defeated in his bid for reelection to the Superior Court, and Judge Egly was assigned the case.
. As the Supreme Court has explained, a holding of
de jure
segregation must be based on a finding of purpose or intent to segregate,
Keyes v. School District No. 1,
The Court of Appeal also upheld the constitutionality of Proposition 1.
. Judge Egly recused himself from further participation in Crawford.
. Soon thereafter, United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA), an intervenor since 1979, filed a “Notice of Motion and Motion for Clarification of Order re Final Approval of School Board Desegregation Plan and Discharge of Writ of Mandate; Declaration and Points and Authorities in Support Thereof.” Judge Lopez held a hearing on October 30, 1981 and denied this motion. UTLA continues to challenge the District’s implementation of the September 10, 1981 Order on the grounds that it did not require the District to violate its collective bargaining agreement with UTLA members. UTLA alternatively claims that if the order did require a breach of their agreement, the plan was not a reasonably feasible one as required under Crawford II.
. Initially, the Crawford plaintiffs appealed the September 10, 1981 Order. The appeal was dismissed on May 24, 1983, however, pursuant to the Crawford plaintiffs’ own motion. Crawford v. Board of Education, No. 2d Civil 66706 (Cal. Ct. App. May 24, 1983).
. The District appealed the award of attorneys’ fees. The California Court of Appeal ruled that the attorneys’ fees appeal would be briefed and considered after UTLA’s appeal was resolved. See Crawford v. Board of Education, No. 2d Civil 67061 & 67532 (Cal. Ct. App. Jan. 28, 1983).
. The District also contended that the district court should abstain from deciding this case, since
Crawford
was still before the California courts. With the termination of state court
*939
jurisdiction over
Crawford
plaintiffs, however, the basis for invoking the abstention doctrine has disappeared, and the parties agree that abstention is no longer an issue in this appeal. In addition, the District argued unsuccessfully that the NAACP is barred from raising its
de jure
claim here by the doctrine of virtual representation.
. See supra note 9. Intervenor UTLA continues to challenge the implementation of the September 10, 1981 Order. See supra note 8. Under California law,
[a]n appeal from a judgment by some of the defendants, although the notice of appeal is *940 general in its terms, is of necessity an appeal from only that portion of the judgment which injuriously affects the appealing defendants, and is thus, in effect, an appeal from ... the portion of the judgment adverse to their interests, unless the reversal or modification of the whole judgment is essential to protect the interests of the appealing defendants.
Lake v. Superior Court,
. The District appeals the award of the attorneys’ fees. Such an award is considered part of the determination of costs under California law,
see Folsom v. Butte County Assoc. of Governments,
. The Crawford plaintiffs pleaded violations of the Fourteenth Amendment and the California Constitution, and Judge Gitelson based his decision on both constitutions. E.R. 3, at 28-29.
. The Crawford defendants also agreed not to object to any evidence from the 1963-1968 period on materiality or relevancy grounds, and to waive their right to move to dismiss the action for failure to prosecute. E.R. 4, Ex. 7. It should be noted that the 1963-1968 limitation on the introduction of evidence was based, at least in part, on the absence of reliable records for the years before 1966. E.R. 5, Ex. DD, at 8.
. The NAACP also argues that res judicata cannot be a bar here because the decision in favor of the plaintiffs in
Crawford
was based entirely on state law,
see Crawford v. Board of
Education, - U.S. -,
. On February 16, 1982, the district court certified the present class as consisting of all black students who live within the District and are eligible to attend one of the District’s schools during the pendency of this lawsuit. The Crawford class consisted of black and Mexican-American children attending the District’s schools.
. In
Bronson v. Board of Education,
the court held that collateral estoppel, rather than res judicata, barred a second class action where the members of the later class were different from those of the earlier, and the earlier class was “spurious,” see
Dickinson v. Burnham,
. Judge Lopez characterized the Crawford plaintiffs as the “prevailing party” and awarded their counsel over one million dollars in attomeys’ fees. Final Order Terminating Jurisdiction at 1, 14 (Superior Court of Los Angeles County No. C822854 Nov. 25, 1981).
