ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
Arbitration presumably intended to resolve this dispute without resort to the courts has now produced lawsuits and appeals in two different states. As their contract provided, the parties submitted a dispute over its interpretation to arbitration. After an arbitration panel issued an award, both parties sued, one in Indiana to overturn the award and the other in Illinois to enforce it. We hold that because the Illinois court was the first to enter a judgment on the validity of the award, the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution requires Indiana courts to accord that judgment the same effect it would receive in an Illinois state court. Under Illinois law, a stay for a reasonable time pending appeal of the Illinois judgment is at least one appropriate action for a trial court to take before determining the res judicata effect of that judgment. Although under the peculiar facts of this case the Indiana court had jurisdiction over the
Factual and Procedural Background
The parties to this lawsuit are Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District (“NICTD”), an Indiana municipal corporation, and Chicago SouthShore and South Bend Railroad (“SouthShore”), an Indiana partnership engaged in the railway freight business. 1 NICTD and SouthShore had an agreement whereby SouthShore operated its freight business over NICTD’s rails and agreed to pay a fee for the privilege. In 1992 a dispute arose between NICTD and SouthShore over the amount of the annual fee. It is undisputed that the Agreement initially set the fee for each year after 1990 at twelve per cent of SouthShore’s gross revenues for the prior year. However, the parties differed over whether a clause providing for mandatory renegotiation of the fee every third year to account for inflation applied to SouthShore itself, or only to a subsequent purchaser of SouthShore’s rights. The parties were unable to resolve their differences through mediation and in 1993 NICTD initiated a demand for arbitration. The Agreement stipulated that Indiana law governed and provided that (1) “all arbitration proceedings shall take place within the State of Indiana”; and (2) if either party believed an arbitration decision was based on an “error of law,” the aggrieved party could “institute an action at law within the State of Indiana to determine such legal issue.”
These provisions notwithstanding, the parties agreed to hold the arbitration proceedings in Chicago for the convenience of the three Chicago-based attorneys who served as arbitrators. 2 In the summer of 1994 an evi-dentiary hearing was held in the offices of a law firm in Chicago. On August 11, 1994, the arbitration panel ruled in a split decision that the inflation adjustment clause applied only to a subsequent purchaser of South-Shore, and not to SouthShore itself. Accordingly, the award set the annual fee at twelve per cent of SouthShore’s annual gross revenues for the prior year.
On September 9, 1994, NICTD filed a declaratory judgment action in the Superior Court of LaPorte County, Indiana. Although not styled as a motion to vacate or modify the award, NICTD’s complaint essentially asked for a declaration that its interpretation of the Agreement was correct and in substance challenged the arbitration decision. On October 26, 1994, SouthShore moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, citing the Uniform Arbitration Act’s provision conferring jurisdiction to confirm the award on the courts of the State where the parties agreed to arbitrate.
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On October 28, 1994, South-Shore filed an application to confirm the arbitration award in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois. On December 16, 1994, NICTD filed a “motion in lieu of answer” in Illinois contesting the jurisdiction of the Illinois court over the arbitration. On February 22, 1995, the Indiana trial court granted SouthShore’s motion to dismiss, agreeing with SouthShore that NICTD was
Meanwhile, NICTD had initiated a timely appeal of the Indiana trial court’s dismissal of its suit in LaPorte County. On February 20, 1996, the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s dismissal. The court held that (1) Indiana had subject-matter jurisdiction because the Agreement, and not the place of arbitration, controlled the location of judicial review; and (2) the arbitrators’ interpretation of the contract was contrary to law.
Northern Indiana Commuter Transp. Dist v. Chicago SouthShore and South Bend R.R.,
SouthShore moved for rehearing in the Indiana Court of Appeals on March 21,1996. In the motion, SouthShore raised for the first time the December 20, 1995 Illinois trial court decision confirming the award. South-Shore contended that (1) the Full Faith and Credit Clause required Indiana courts to give that decision preclusive effect; and (2) the sua sponte ruling by the Court of Appeals on the merits of NICTD’s complaint had denied SouthShore due process of law because SouthShore had never been given the opportunity to answer the complaint on the merits. In denying rehearing, the Court of Appeals first observed that full faith and credit generally requires a state “to give to a judgment at least the res judicata effect which the judgment would be accorded in the State which rendered it.”
Northern Indiana Commuter Transp. Dist. v. Chicago Southshore and South Bend R.R.,
Armed with the opinion of the Indiana Court of Appeals, NICTD moved in the Illinois trial court to vacate the Illinois judgment and argued that the Full Faith and Credit Clause required Illinois to give preclu-sive effect to the Indiana appellate decision. On July 24, 1996, the Illinois court denied NICTD’s motion, observing that the Indiana Court of Appeals “certainly didn’t give full faith and credit to the courts of the state of Illinois.” SouthShore sought transfer from
In broad brush, the parties’ contentions in this Court are as follows. SouthShore argues that (1) Indiana courts must give full faith and credit to the Illinois judgment confirming the arbitration award; and (2) the Illinois judgment is accorded res judicata effect in Illinois and therefore must be given the same effect here. NICTD responds that the Illinois judgment was rendered in violation of NICTD’s federal constitutional right to procedural due process. Specifically, NICTD contends that the Illinois court erred by not allowing NICTD to respond to the merits of SouthShore’s petition to confirm. According to NICTD, a judgment rendered in violation of due process need not be recognized in Indiana. NICTD also argues that exclusive jurisdiction has always existed in Indiana and that no deference is required to an Illinois judgment rendered by a court without jurisdiction over the matter. South-Shore replies that the jurisdictional issue was finally determined by the Illinois trial court and thus cannot be relitigated in Indiana.
I. Full Faith and Credit
This case largely turns on settled constitutional principles governing the preclusive effect to be accorded a judgment rendered by the courts of another state. The Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution mandates that “[f]ull faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state.” U.S. CONST, art. IV, § 1. The constitutional provision is implemented by an Indiana statute making explicit that “records and judicial proceedings” from courts in other states “shall have full faith and credit given to them in any court within this state, as by law or usage they have in the courts whence taken.” Ind.Code § 34-1-18-7 (1993). Full faith and credit has long meant that “the judgment of a state court should have the same credit, validity, and effect, in every other court of the United States, which it had in the state where it was pronounced.”
Underwriters Nat’l Assurance Co. v. North Carolina Life and Accident and Health Ins. Guar. Ass’n,
Nonetheless, “before a court is bound by the judgment rendered in another State, it may inquire into the jurisdictional basis of the foreign court’s decree. If that court did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter or the relevant parties, full faith and credit need not be given.”
Underwriters Nat’l Assurance Co.,
Finally, certain dispute resolution mechanisms unquestionably do not constitute “judicial proceedings” for purposes of fidl faith and credit.
See, e.g., McDonald v. City of West Branch,
II. Full Faith and Credit is Properly Preserved
As a preliminary matter, NICTD contends that SouthShore waived its right to rely on the Full Faith and Credit Clause by not presenting the Illinois judgment in the Indiana Court of Appeals at the earliest opportunity. For this proposition, NICTD cites several Indiana appellate procedural cases holding that new claims or issues, including constitutional arguments and the defense of res judicata, cannot be presented for the first time in a petition for rehearing.
See, e.g., City of Indianapolis v. Wynn,
We are also mindful of the deference to the courts of a sister state that comity suggests even if the Full Faith and Credit Clause does not require it. To the extent SouthShore is responsible for not raising the issue sooner, the Illinois courts are not at fault. The Illinois trial court was the first to enter a judgment enforcing the arbitration award. If we held that SouthShore’s full faith and credit argument was waived and ruled in NICTD’s favor on the merits, the possibility of inconsistent judgments would arise. Under these circumstances, we decline to find waiver here.
III. Litigation of the Jurisdictional Issue in Illinois
Our first line of inquiry in assessing what credit, if any, to give the Illinois judgment is whether the Illinois court “fully considered” and “finally determined” the issue of its own jurisdiction over the subject matter and the person of the parties.
Underwriters Nat’l Assurance Co.,
Under the relevant provisions of the Illinois Uniform Arbitration Act, which are substantively the same in this respect as Indiana’s, jurisdiction to enforce the award is conferred on the courts of the state specified in a written arbitration agreement between the parties.
Compare
710 Ill.Comp.Stat.
We might agree with NICTD that the Illinois court’s construction places excessive weight on the physical presence of the arbitrators and ignores the apparent intent of the parties as expressed in the Agreement. We might also agree that the statutes of both states seem to emphasize a written agreement to confer jurisdiction and that none appears to be present in this record conferring jurisdiction on Illinois courts. However, the question of jurisdiction in Illinois was fully litigated and, as explained below, we are not free to second-guess an Illinois trial court as we may those of Indiana. Moreover, the subject-matter jurisdiction of the Illinois courts is a matter of Illinois law. The December 20, 1995 judgment confirming the award eliminates any doubt as to the decision of the Illinois trial court to exercise jurisdiction.
Stoll v. Gottlieb,
IY. Illinois Law of Res Judicata
The effect Indiana must accord the Illinois judgment turns on the effect that judgment would be given in Illinois.
Underwriters Nat’l Assurance Co.,
The only troublesome question is whether Illinois regards the judgment as “final”
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and binding. There are no Illinois
At one time the Iffinois Supreme Court painted with a broad brush in emphasizing the importance of finaUty: “The rule has been settled that where a judgment in one
The more recent intermediate appellate decisions holding that a stay should issue pending the outcome of the appeal in the first case were decided several decades after the
State Life
litigation.
Illinois Founders
(1993),
Shaw
(1989), and
Wiseman
(1971) all reasoned that a stay was required because the second judgment, once rendered, would be final even if the first judgment upon which it was based was subsequently reversed.
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In that situation, the aggrieved party in the second case would be without a remedy even if it obtained appellate relief in the first case — the
State Life
scenario.
Wiseman
quoted the above language from
State Life
and purported to acknowledge the validity of its general rule, but held that a stay was required pending the outcome of the appeal in the first case.
Wiseman,
We have used the term “res judicata” in this opinion to refer to “claim preclusion” and not in a generic sense. A further complication is introduced because Illinois appears to distinguish claim preclusion fi’om issue preclusion, or “collateral estoppel,” in determining the effect of a pending appeal. For collateral estoppel purposes a judgment is not final in Illinois until “the potential for appellate review [has] been exhausted.”
Ballweg v. City of Springfield,
In the face of all of this, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit recently observed: “To be blunt, we have no idea what the law of Illinois is on the question whether a pending appeal destroys the claim preclusive effect of a judgment.”
Rogers,
federal judge confronted with duplicative litigation need not barge ahead on the off-chance of beating the state court to a conclusion. It is sensible to stay proceedings until an earlier-filed state ease has reached a conclusion, and then (but only then) to dismiss the suit outright on grounds of claim preclusion.
Id.
(citing
Colorado River Water Conservar tion Dist. v. United States,
V. Alleged Flaws in the Illinois Proceedings
NICTD attempts to repackage the Illinois judgment as a ruling grounded on NICTD’s procedural default and, therefore, not a judgment on the merits. However, the ruling that is critical here is not the holding that NICTD’s motion to vacate or modify the award came too late under the Illinois Uniform Arbitration Act. Rather, the essential holdings of the Illinois courts are: (1) the Illinois courts, not Indiana, had jurisdiction over a suit to confirm the award; and (2) the award was confirmed in accordance with Illinois practice. It is irrelevant that this ultimate result may have been driven by the fact that NICTD’s motion to vacate or modify the award was stricken due to Illinois procedural default.
As its last line of defense, NICTD asserts that the general constitutional obligation to give full faith and credit to the Illinois judgment does not apply in this case because the judgment was allegedly rendered in violation of NICTD’s right to due process of law. Specifically, NICTD contends that it was denied due process because it was never able to present a challenge to the merits of SouthShore’s application to confirm. Assessing this claim' requires some understanding of the Illinois Uniform Arbitration Act. The Act imposes no time limits on the filing of an application to confirm an arbitration award. 710 Ill.Comp.Stat.Ann. 5/11 (West 1992);
United Steelworkers v. Danly Mach. Corp.,
According to NICTD, the dismissal of its motion to vacate or modify violated its due process right to be heard on the merits of SouthShore’s application to confirm. The extent to which conformity to due process is a prerequisite for a judgment to be given full faith and credit was dealt with tangentially in
Kremer v. Chemical Constr. Corp.,
Noting that this was a relatively undeveloped area of the law,
Kremer
drew on Full Faith and Credit Clause jurisprudence: “[T]he Court’s decisions enforcing the Full Faith and Credit Clause ... suggest that what a full and fair opportunity to litigate entails is the procedural requirements of due process.”
Id.
at 483 n. 24,
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s concurring and dissenting opinion in
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Epstein,
Assuming that a due process violation could strip the Illinois decision of its status under the Full Faith and Credit Clause, we see no due process violation in the Illinois proceedings. Procedural due process in this context requires only notice and a reasonable opportunity to be heard, not that the opportunity necessarily be seized or successful. NICTD does not contend that it was denied the opportunity to challenge the arbitration award within ninety days, as required by the Illinois Uniform Arbitration Act. Nor does NICTD assert that ninety days was constitutionally insufficient time to act to protect its rights in Illinois. Distilled to its essence, NICTD’s claim is that Illinois courts denied NICTD the opportunity to file an untimely response. This does not provide a basis for disregarding the Illinois judgment: “A party cannot escape the requirements of full faith and credit and res judicata by asserting its own failure to raise matters clearly within the scope of a prior proceeding.”
Underwriters Nat’l Assurance Co.,
VI. NICTD Cannot Relitigate the Jurisdictional Issue
NICTD’s recourse is to exhaust appellate remedies in Illinois. If Illinois law is as described by the trial court, the appeal in this case amounts to a constitutionally impermissible collateral attack on the jurisdictional question NICTD lost in that forum. In a related context, the U.S. Supreme Court has indicated that the policy of finality applies with no less force to questions of jurisdiction:
After a party has his day in court, with opportunity to present his evidence and his view of the law, a collateral attack upon the decision as to jurisdiction there rendered merely retries the issue previously determined. There is no reason to expect that the second decision will be more satisfactory than the first.
Stoll,
On this crucial point, the Court of Appeals erroneously relied on the absence of a full and fair hearing in Indiana.
Northern Indiana Commuter Transp. Dist.,
We hold that the constitutional obligation to give full faith and credit to another state’s judicial decisions requires that Indiana give the same effect to the Illinois decision as would an Illinois court. We conclude, although without conviction, that a second Illinois trial court would stay rather than dismiss NICTD’s complaint. Accordingly, that is the appropriate action for the Indiana trial court to take. We note that because the Full Faith and Credit Clause makes no reference to finality, some commentators have observed that a stay pending the outcome of an appeal might be the most appropriate disposition irrespective of the law of the issuing state: “If the appeal in the rendering forum does not operate to vacate the judgment under that forum’s law, the recognizing court may entertain an action on the judgment or, more usually, stay its recognition and enforcement proceedings pending the determination of the appeal.” Eugene F. SCOLES
&
PETER HAY, CONFLICT OF LAWS, § 24.28 at 991 n. 2 (2d ed. 1992);
cf. Griffin v. Griffin,
VII. Jurisdiction of the Indiana Trial Court
Finally, this appeal originally focused on whether Indiana courts have subject-matter jurisdiction over this case.
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The Agreement initially stipulated that (1) Indiana law governs; (2) the parties may challenge an “error of law” by instituting “an action at law within the State of Indiana to determine such legal issue”; and (3) by explicit written agreement “all arbitration proceedings shall take place”
Although in most situations there will be only one state that qualifies for jurisdiction over the award under its version of the Uniform Act, the Indiana version does not purport to confer exclusive jurisdiction on Indiana if more than one state has jurisdiction pursuant to its own laws. In this case, SouthShore argues that the award is reviewable only in Illinois, irrespective of what the Agreement might have originally provided, because the arbitration took place there. NICTD responds that the physical location was purely for the convenience of the arbitrators and that the parties contemplated no reformation of the written agreement, which specified Indiana governing law and agreed to arbitration in Indiana. NICTD concedes that it waived the Agreement’s original stipulation that “all” arbitration proceedings take place in Indiana, but contends that this did not rise to the level of a waiver of the contract’s provision for arbitration in Indiana so as to confer jurisdiction on Indiana courts.
Arbitration provisions can be waived and the existence of waiver depends upon the circumstances of each case.
Kendrick Mew,’l Hosp., Inc. v. Totten,
It is of course true that conduct inconsistent with an arbitration agreement — notably filing a lawsuit in a court of competent jurisdiction — can effect a waiver of the right to arbitrate.
See, e.g., McNall v. Farmers Ins. Group,
Conclusion
The judgment of the LaPorte Superior Court dismissing NICTD’s complaint is reversed. The case is remanded to the La-Porte Superior Court to enter a stay for a reasonable time pending final resolution of NICTD’s appellate review in Illinois. Depending on the resolution of that review, dismissal may or may not be appropriate.
Notes
.NICTD was created by statute in 1977. See 1977 Ind. Acts, P.L. 229, § 1 (repealed and reco-dified in 1980); see new Ind.Code §§ 8-5-15-1 to 8-5-15-26 (1993 & Supp.1996). In 1984, the General Assembly gave NICTD the authority to own and operate a railroad between Chicago and several points in Indiana. See 1984 Ind. Acts, P.L. 64, §§ 1-15. In 1989, the "old” Chicago SouthShore declared bankruptcy and NICTD and Anacostia & Pacific Company, Inc. ("A & P”) joined forces to purchase its operating assets from the bankrupt estate. NICTD acquired the passenger business and A & P took over freight operations. The two entered into a Memorandum Agreement ("Agreement”) providing, among other things, that A & P would pay NICTD a maintenance-of-way fee for the use of NICTD’s rail lines. The "new” SouthShore, the party to this case, acquired all of A & P’s rights and liabilities under the Agreement later that year.
. The agreement to arbitrate in Chicago was made orally, but was memorialized in a letter from the chair of the arbitrators to all counsel noting that "[t]he parties by counsel waived the requirement that 'All arbitration proceedings shall take place within the State of Indiana.’ ”
. On November 18, 1994, NICTD filed an amended complaint in the Indiana action. In response, SouthShore renewed its motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and relied on its memorandum of law filed on October 26, 1994.
. 710 Ill.Comp.Stat.Ann. 5/1-23 (West 1992).
. As noted above, the Appellate Court of Illinois recently affirmed the decision of the Illinois trial court. In its discussion of the Full Faith and Credit Clause and, particularly,
Nevada v. Hall,
. NICTD does not maintain that its pending appeal in Illinois divests the Illinois trial court judgment of binding effect for purposes of the Full Faith and Credit Clause. Nor would any contention along these lines be viable. In its most recent pronouncement on full faith and credit doctrine, the Supreme Court of the United States reiterated that the Full Faith and Credit Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1738 — which mandates that the "judicial proceedings” of any state "shall have the same full faith and credit” in federal courts as they have in the rendering state — "directs all [federal] courts to treat a state court judgment with the same respect that it would receive in the courts of the rendering state.”
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Epstein,
. Another factor that apparently influenced the Illinois trial court was the then-recent decision by the LaPorte Superior Court not to exercise jurisdiction over NICTD’s challenge to the arbitration. Although we question whether this should have been part of the inquiry, the Illinois judgment is still entitled to preclusive effect for the reasons explained in this opinion.
. "Final” appears to be used in two senses in some discussions of this subject. A judgment may be "final” in the sense that it is not subject to modification and is ripe for appeal. It is also
. In its Illinois appeal, NICTD argued that Illinois courts were required to give full faith and credit to the Indiana Court of Appeals decision adjudicating the jurisdictional issue and, accordingly, should not take jurisdiction over the arbitration. In rejecting this claim, the Appellate Court of Illinois reasoned in part that “the decision of the Illinois court to confirm the arbitration award was not in derogation of any decision then existing by the Indiana court.”
Chicago SouthShore and South Bend R.R.,
. On July 15, 1997, the Appellate Court of Illinois denied NICTD’s motion for rehearing. Ordinarily that court's judgment would now be final.
PSL Realty Co. v. Granite Inv. Co.,
. Of these, only Illinois Founders involved the preclusive effect to be accorded an Illinois judgment that was being appealed. Shaw concerned a bankruptcy judgment, Wiseman a New York state judgment, and Golden Rule a California state judgment. However, none of these decisions appeared to condition the availabilily of a stay on whether the judgment whose preclusive effect was at issue was rendered in the Illinois state courts or elsewhere. Rather, all emphasized the possibility of inconsistent judgments if the first judgment was overturned on appeal.
.
See also Wilson v. City of Chicago,
. Although not styled as a due-process violation, NICTD argued in its Illinois appeal that it should have been allowed to answer the merits of South-Shore's application to confirm. The Appellate Court of Illinois reached the same conclusion we do here — that NICTD had an opportunity to challenge the award in Illinois and failed to do so in a timely manner.
Chicago SouthShore and South Bend R.R.,
.
Cf. Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Hunt,
.NICTD points out that the arbitration clause in the Agreement provides that the award shall be binding "except that if either party claims that [it] is based upon an error of law it may ... institute an action at law within the State of Indiana to determine such legal issue.” Based on this provision, and noting that the Agreement stipulates Indiana law as governing, NICTD contends that it is not bound by the award pending resolution of its Indiana lawsuit. SouthShore replies that arbitration awards are final even if based on an error of law. In view of the terms of the Agreement, NICTD may well have a point. However, this also is a matter that can be, and was, raised and adjudicated in Illinois, where the trial court declined to delay enforcement of the award notwithstanding NICTD's contentions.
. After its jurisdictional challenge in Illinois was rebuffed, NICTD filed a motion to stay the Illinois proceedings pending the outcome of its appeal in Indiana. In a hearing on November 6, 1995, the Illinois trial court denied this motion and indicated that it would confirm the award in favor of SouthShore.
. As noted, the trial court treated NICTD's complaint as a motion to set aside the award. NICTD’s efforts to style its claim as a declaratory judgment action are unavailing. Because NICTD seeks relief from the arbitration decision, the trial court was correct to treat the complaint as a motion to set aside the award under the Indiana Uniform Arbitration Act.
. SouthShore points to cases where the contract was silent as to the locus for arbitration. In that circumstance, courts in other states have held that the location of the arbitration determines subject-matter jurisdiction under their version of the Uniform Act.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Tri-City Constr. Co. v. Marsh,
. The Agreement prescribed that "the subject matter hereof shall be embodied in definitive agreements to be prepared and executed by the parties....” NICTD argues, and SouthShore does not appear to dispute, that this provision required amendments to the Agreement to be in writing and signed by the parties. We agree with NICTD that the parol agreement here to hold arbitration proceedings in Chicago did not meet these requirements and therefore did not constitute an amendment to the Agreement.
