11 This matter is before the Court on Appellee JPMorgan Chase Bank's motion to summarily affirm the district court's decision on the ground the appeal fails to present a substantial basis for review. Appellant Nan-ey Madsen's response to the motion asserts that this Court's discussion of preemption in Madsen v. Washington Mutual Bank FSB,
{2 The procedural background of the extensive litigation underlying this case was discussed at length in Madsen IV. Following our decision in that case, this Court's denial of a petition for rehearing, and the United States Supreme Court's denial of a petition for certiorari, Ms. Madsen filed a new complaint alleging grounds for the same relief that was sought by the earlier complaint. The new complaint was dismissed as barred by res judicata, and this appeal followed.
183 Contrary to Ms. Madsen's contentions, Madsen IV addressed the availability of all potential pending claims on the merits. Madsen IV treated arguments asserting a "common law pledge" and "unjust enrich
T4 Even assuming Madsen IV's statements can be viewed merely as providing alternate grounds for the same legal conclusion, none of those statements can be disregarded as dicta or construed as preserving any claims implicitly grounded, or explicitly contained, in the contract Moreover, further assuming a good-faith, legally supportable belief that Madsen IV had not properly resolved all pending claims, Ms. Madsen could have proffered such an argument on remand. As noted above, Madsen IV instructed the district court to terminate the litigation on remand by entering summary judgment, and the district court complied with that mandate. A timely appeal of that decision would have presented the last opportunity to raise the argument that this Court did not resolve all pending claims in Madsen IV.
15 Thus, the litigation preceding the filing of Ms. Madsen's new action definitively resolved her claims and erected a res judicata bar to any subsequent complaint raising claims that could have and should have been raised in that litigation. See Snyder v. Murray City Corp.,
Notes
. To the extent Ms. Madsen complains that Mad-sen IV improperly construed the claims addressed by Madsen I, that argument was laid to rest by our denial of the petition for rehearing in Madsen IV.
. It is worth noting that some Utah cases have cited the standard for claim preclusion in a fashion that may be viewed as internally inconsistent. Snyder and our recent decisions in Moss v. Parr Waddoups Brown Gee & Loveless,
