The trial court awarded summary judgment to appellee Ibrahim Goodwin on the ground that appellants Winston Murray and Naomi Smith were collaterally es-topped from relitigating a critical issue that was resolved against them in a related lawsuit between the same parties. This court subsequently reversed the decision in that related lawsuit and remanded the case for further proceedings, thereby nullifying the finality required for collateral estoppel to operate. We therefore reverse the judgment now before us without addressing other issues raised in this appeal.
In brief outline, Murray and Smith first sued Goodwin in the Landlord and Tenant (“L & T”) Branch for possession of real estate and unpaid rent. See Murray v. Goodwin,
Meanwhile, Goodwin moved to dismiss the L & T complaint on the ground that his thirty-day notice to quit for nonpayment of rent — a condition precedent to the L & T action — was invalid because he had no contractual rent obligation. The L & T court granted Goodwin’s motion, finding that a tenancy “of sorts” did exist based on Goodwin’s testimony, but that this tenancy was “inconsistent” with the notice to quit because it did not require Goodwin to pay rent. Murray v. Goodwin, supra,
During the pendency of that appeal, Goodwin moved for summary judgment in
Then this court decided the appeal in the L & T action. “[Assuming for the sake of argument that Goodwin testified accurately concerning the terms of his agreement with appellants,” Murray v. Goodwin,
It is well-settled that for collateral es-toppel, or issue preclusion, to operate in subsequent litigation, a prerequisite is that the issue must have been determined previously by “a valid, final judgment.” Wilson v. Hart,
When the trial court rendered its decision in this ease, the L & T court judgment was final for purposes of issue preclusion even though the judgment was on appeal. See, e.g., Amcast Indus. Corp. v. Detrex Corp.,
In applying this rule here, we think it immaterial that our opinion in the L & T appeal did not question the L & T court’s determination of tenancy. It is enough that we did not affirm that determination. The upshot of our decision is that there is now no final judgment at either the trial or appellate level in the L & T case that embodies the L & T court’s finding. Hence there is no longer anything to support the invocation of collateral estoppel in the use and occupancy action.
Thus, though we do not say that the trial court erred at the time that it relied on collateral estoppel to award summary judgment to Goodwin, we nonetheless must reverse that award on account of the subsequent development in the L & T case.
So Ordered.
Notes
. On the same ground, the court awarded summary judgment to Murray and Smith on one of Goodwin’s counterclaims, in which Goodwin sought to recover his outlays to maintain and improve the property. Subsequently the trial court granted Murray and Smith judgment as a matter of law on Goodwin’s remaining counterclaims, which were based on Murray’s alleged agreement to sell him the property.
. "That doctrine [of collateral estoppel] can be invoked against a party where (1) the issue was actually litigated; (2) was determined by a valid, final judgment on the merits; (3) after a full and fair opportunity for litigation by the party; (4) under circumstances where the determination was essential to the judgment.” Id. Our determination that the second of these requirements is not satisfied in this case renders it unnecessary to examine whether the other three requirements were met, and we express no view on that question.
.The Davis court recognized an exception to the "general rule [that] an order not final for the purpose of appeal lacks the required finality to support collateral estoppel” where a party "voluntarily dismisses the action and thereby prevents a previous determination of an issue from becoming embodied in a valid, final judgment on the merits.”
