This appeal involves a diversity action against appellant, Gilbert Smith, to enforce a 1971 judgment rendered in ap-pellee’s favor against Smith’s closely-held corporation, Bayou Fabricators Co., Inc. 1 The prior suit arose when a shrimp boat that appellee had purchased from Bayou was partially destroyed by fire. Appellee recovered a judgment against Bayou for $16,996.66 plus interest, but was subsequently unable to collect the judgment because of Bayou’s insolvency.
Appellee then filed the present action against appellant seeking recovery for the 1971 Bayou judgment based upon the allegation that “there existed such a unity of interest and ownership” between appellant and Bayou that the former was the alter ego of the latter. In his amended complaint, appellee alternatively argued that payments made to appellant after Bayou had become insolvent and after appellee had become Bayou’s judgment creditor were illegal preferences, portions of which appellee was entitled to recover from appellant.
The district court submitted two special interrogatories to the jury pursuant to Rule 49(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. One asked the jury to decide whether appellant was Bayou’s alter ego. The other queried whether monies paid by appellant to Bayou from 1966 to 1971, other than an initial contribution to capital, were loans. 2 The jury answered both questions in the affirmative.
Armed with these findings, the district court entered judgment for the ap-pellee based upon the legal conclusions that appellant, as Bayou’s alter ego, was liable on the 1971 judgment, and that the post-insolvency monetary transfers to appellant constituted repayments of loans and were, therefore, illegal preferences. Appellant’s total liability on both portions of the judgment was not to exceed the amount of the 1971 judgment against Bayou, plus interest.
On appeal, the parties agree that if the district court’s judgment is to be affirmed by upholding the alter ego theory of recovery, review of the preference issue becomes unnecessary. We concur in this view and affirm the district court
A preliminary contention of appellant which must be disposed of is that the district court lacked in personam jurisdiction under Alabama’s long arm statute, Code of Alabama, Title 7, Section 199(1). Although Bayou was incorporated in Alabama and had its principal place of business there, appellant is and has been a resident of Mississippi.
The issue of jurisdiction under Alabama’s long arm statute is not controlled by state law but rather is a question of federal due process. King & Hatch, Inc. v. Southern Pipe & Supply Co., 5 Cir., 1970,
Appellant does not contest the jury’s alter ego finding. The alter ego interrogatory was submitted to the jury as an issue within the confines of Alabama law.
See
Appelbaum v. First National Bank,
Despite the jury’s alter ego finding, appellant argues that there must be full relitigation of the substantive issues of liability and damages before he can be held for Bayou’s debts. Generally speaking, a final judgment is res judicata only between parties to the lawsuit and their privies. Baltimore Steamship Co. v. Phillips, 1927,
The effect of applying the alter ego doctrine ... is that the corporation and the person who dominates it are treated as one person, so that any act committed by one is attributed to both, and if either is bound, by contract, judgment, or otherwise, both are equally bound. .
See also
International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. v. General Telephone & Electronics Corp., M.D.N.C., 1973, 369
We reject appellant’s claim that appellee’s insurer ' should have been joined as a party plaintiff because of its status as partial subrogee to the cause of action against appellant. Appellant relies upon United States v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 1949,
Finally, we do not view the answers to the interrogatories as being inconsistent, and reject appellant’s argument in that regard.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Dudley v. Bayou Fabricators, Inc., S.D.Ala., 1971,
. From 1966 to 1971, appellant’s total investment in Bayou was $251,514.30, $50,000 of which was an initial contribution to capital.
. Apjjellant loaned Bayou $201,514.30 from 1906 to 1971. Bayou transferred $138,869.-59 in cash and accounts receivable to appellant during the same period, and still owes him $62,644.71.
. Before the 1966 amendments, Rule 19(a) classified parties to be joined, i. e., “persons having a joint interest,” as “necessary” or “indispensable.” The Court in
Aetna
jdaced the unjoined insureds in the “necessary party” category, and as a result, viewed their joinder as compulsory.
. The rigid classifications of former Rule 19(a) were abandoned in 1966 in favor of a more flexible description of parties for which joinder would be “desirable.” Rule 19, E.R.Civ.I’., Advisory Comm. Note, 39 F. R.D. 89, 91. Joinder is compulsory only where the facts fit within one of the Rule 19(a) i>remises. Id. at 91-92. See generally Cohn, The New Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 54 Geo.L.J. 1204, 1204-11 (1966).
. Public Service Co. of Oklahoma v. Black & Veatch, 10 Cir., 1972,
