MICHAEL J. DEGUELLE, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. KRISTEN J. CAMILLI, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 12-2541
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued July 9, 2013 — Decided August 1, 2013
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 10-CV-103-JPS — J.P. Stadtmueller, Judge.
POSNER, Circuit Judge. The plaintiff, DeGuelle, an accountant, was employed between 1997 and 2009 in the tax department of S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc., a large Wisconsin manufacturer of cleaning supplies. He alleges that while employed there he discovered that the company had committed tax fraud. The company fired him, then sued him in a Wisconsin state court for breach of contract, conversion, and
DeGuelle had filed the present suit in federal district court against S.C. Johnson & Son long before the Wisconsin suit was dismissed. The district court had dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim, but we had reversed, 664 F.3d 192 (7th Cir. 2011), and remanded the case to the district court. The federal suit charges both federal and state violations, but all growing out of the alleged tax fraud. If there was no fraud, the present suit is groundless, as noted in our previous opinion. Id. at 200. On remand the district judge, after the trial court in Wisconsin granted summary judgment in favor of the company, did likewise. His ground was that the finding by the Wisconsin court that there had been no tax fraud bound him by the doctrine of collateral estoppel (a term giving way to “issue preclusion“). If his application of the doctrine was sound, he was right to dismiss because, as we said, if there was no tax fraud there is no merit to this
As collateral estoppel has traditionally been understood, the resolution of an issue in a previous litigation between the same parties (or parties “in privity” with them, but that is not involved in this case) normally is conclusive of the issue in a subsequent litigation. But there are conditions. The party against whom the issue had been resolved must have had, first, a “full and fair opportunity” to litigate the issue in the previous suit (where “opportunity” includes incentive—the parties could foresee that the same issue might arise in a future litigation in which the winner would assert collateral estoppel), and, second, a meaningful opportunity to appeal the resolution of the issue. A party would not have had such an opportunity if for example the resolution had been inessential to the decision of the trial court, and therefore either ignored by the parties or treated by the appellate court as moot. See, e.g., Taylor v. Sturgell, 553 U.S. 880, 892 (2008); United States v. Kashamu, 656 F.3d 679, 685–86 (7th Cir. 2011); In re Catt, 368 F.3d 789, 791–92 (7th Cir. 2004); Bell v. Dillard Dep‘t Stores, Inc., 85 F.3d 1451, 1456 (10th Cir. 1996). But when the conditions for applying collateral estoppel are satisfied, “the doctrine promotes important goals: it allows a party only one opportunity to litigate an issue thereby conserving the time and resources of the parties and the court; promotes the finality of judgments; preserves the integrity of the judicial system by eliminating inconsistent results; and ensures that a party not be able to relitigate issues already
There is no question of lack of opportunity or incentive to appeal—DeGuelle got a ruling from the Wisconsin appellate court on the trial court‘s determination regarding tax fraud. But he argues that he was denied a full and fair hearing in the trial court (that is, an adequate hearing—“full and fair” is a redundant expression) by being denied an opportunity to conduct discovery without which the tax expert he had hired to counter the Kirkland & Ellis tax expert could not prepare a proper affidavit. The argument is groundless. He‘d been allowed to conduct discovery and had done so. But because he had failed to respect confidentiality orders, the judge directed that confidential financial records of S.C. Johnson & Son be sent directly to DeGuelle‘s expert—and this was done—with the proviso that while the expert could discuss the preparation of his expert opinion, and therefore the pertinent documents, with DeGuelle, he couldn‘t show him the documents without the judge‘s permission. DeGuelle responded by ordering his expert not to prepare an expert report. That unreasonable behavior could not have justified the judge in rejecting the Kirkland lawyer‘s expert opinion—as demanded by DeGuelle on the false ground that the judge had precluded his filing an opinion by his tax expert. In all likelihood his expert after reviewing the documents concluded that there was no evidence of tax fraud. But this inference is not necessary to justify the judge‘s actions.
Were the doctrine of collateral estoppel as compact as we have thus far assumed, requiring only that the finding sought to be given collateral estoppel effect in subsequent
But we can‘t stop here. We are required to apply not our own notions of collateral estoppel, or the federal common law of collateral estoppel (illustrated by the federal cases we cited earlier—for “the preclusive effect of a federal-court judgment is determined by federal common law,” Taylor v. Sturgell, supra, 553 U.S. at 891), but Wisconsin‘s doctrine of collateral estoppel. True, the full faith and credit clause (
Instead Wisconsin‘s supreme court has adopted a five-factor “test” for deciding whether to give a finding collateral estoppel effect. In re Estate of Rille ex rel. Rille, 728 N.W.2d 693, 707 (Wis. 2007). No weight is assigned to any factor; the weighting is in the discretion of the trial court. Id. at 707. (Such a multifactor test is thus more accurately termed a multifactor list. United States v. Rosales, 716 F.3d 996, 997 (7th Cir. 2013).)
The factors are:
- Could the party against whom preclusion is sought have obtained review of the judgment as a matter of law;
- Is the question one of law that involves two distinct claims or intervening contextual shifts in the law;
- Do significant differences in the quality or extensiveness of proceedings between the two courts warrant relitigation of the issue;
- Have the burdens of persuasion shifted such that the party seeking preclusion had a lower burden of persuasion in the first trial than in the second; and
Are matters of public policy and individual circumstances involved that would render the application of collateral estoppel to be fundamentally unfair, including inadequate opportunity or incentive to obtain a full and fair adjudication in the initial action?
In re Estate of Rille ex rel. Rille, supra, 728 N.W.2d at 707.
The first factor gestures, a little mysteriously, to the requirement that the loser have been able to appeal the adverse ruling sought to be used against him; the requirement is diluted in the Wisconsin supreme court‘s formulation by the trial judge‘s having discretion as to how heavily to weight it. Factor 2 we do not understand at all. Factors 3 and 4 are aspects of the requirement that the loser have had an opportunity for an adequate hearing in the first proceeding. Factor 5, while also related to the adequacy of that hearing, opens a Pandora‘s Box by invoking public policy, individual circumstances, and fundamental fairness. So the five-factor test is really eight factors. Would we could stop with eight! We can‘t; for after listing the eight factors the opinion states that “these enumerated factors are illustrative; they are not exclusive or dispositive.... The final decision whether the doctrine of issue preclusion [collateral estoppel] should be applied rests on the [trial] court‘s sense of justice and equity.” Id. The “test” thus is formless. (And what by the way is the difference between “justice” and “equity“?)
Later in the opinion we learn that in applying factor 5 the trial court must “‘balance competing goals of judicial efficiency and finality, protection against repetitious or harassing litigation, and the right to litigate one‘s claims.‘” Id. at 712, quoting Michelle T. v. Crozier, 495 N.W.2d 327, 330 (Wis. 1993). That brings the number of factors to 11, though in a
Cases from other states applying multifactor tests abound, but they tend to rely on the Restatement‘s test, which is similar to Wisconsin‘s but less baroque. See, e.g., Allen v. V & A Bros., Inc., 26 A.3d 430, 444–45 (N.J. 2011); Elliott v. State, 247 P.3d 501, 503–05 (Wyo. 2011); Monat v. State Farm Ins. Co., 677 N.W.2d 843, 845–47 and n. 2 (Mich. 2004); Clusiau v. Clusiau Enterprises, Inc., 236 P.3d 1194, 1198–99 (Ariz. App. 2010). Section 28 of the Restatement of Judgments lists four factors that upon inspection expand to eight, but the list is more clearly written and narrower than Wisconsin‘s; it does not include fundamental fairness and it is not open-ended. See also Restatement, supra, §§ 27, 29.
Conceivably the reference in the Wisconsin decisions to “fundamental fairness” echoes or alludes to cases in which a state is asked in the name of comity—the mutual respect of sovereigns—to give collateral estoppel effect to a finding by a court in a foreign country. The full faith and credit clause does not obligate states to respect foreign judgments beyond what comity requires. See United States v. Kashamu, supra, 656 F.3d at 683; Int‘l Transactions, Ltd. v. Embotelladora Agral Regiomontana, SA de CV, 347 F.3d 589, 593–94 (5th Cir. 2003); Philadelphia Gear Corp. v. Philadelphia Gear de Mexico, S.A., 44 F.3d 187, 191 (3d Cir. 1994).
Free-wheeling as the Wisconsin courts’ formulation of the doctrine of collateral estoppel is, none of its curlicues
DeGuelle‘s further argument that collateral estoppel should not apply lest it deter whistleblowers from suing is also frivolous. It amounts to saying that whistleblowers should be exempt from preclusion and thus be allowed to file identical cases against the same parties in succession. Not even Wisconsin‘s open-ended test would abide such a blow to finality.
AFFIRMED.
