The facts of this case present two issues on appeal. The first of these is whether or not the denial of a motion for summary judgment asserting the defense of res judicata is immediately ap-pealable. If so, then we must address the merits of defendants’ res judicata defense to determine whether or not Northwestern’s *534 claims for damages are barred. On the facts of this case, we hold that the denial of defendants’ motion affects a substantial right and we have addressed the merits of defendants’ res judicata defense.
In addition to the defense of res judicata, the individual defendants have also raised the defenses of absolute immunity and qualified immunity, and claim that it was error for the trial court to have denied their summary judgment motion on these theories. Recent case law has left no doubt that the denial of a motion for summary judgment on the basis of immunity is immediately appealable.
See EEE-ZZZ Lay Drain Co. v. North Carolina Dep’t of Human Resources,
The facts of this case and the relationship between the two suits brought by Northwestern are essential to an understanding of this matter. In 1987, Northwestern began developing a tract of land in Gaston County for use as a mobile home park and submitted plаns to the Gaston County Planning Board for approval. At the time the initial plans were submitted, Gaston County had in effect a 1986 Mobile Home Park Ordinance. In September of 1987, Gaston County revised its Mobile Home Park Ordinance and adopted a 1987 version. Three days prior to the revision of the Mobile Home Park Ordinance, Northwestern amended its рlans to increase the number of available spaces for mobile homes since a package treatment plant would be used instead of septic tanks. When Northwestern submitted its revised plans, the Planning Board rejected them as being a hazard to the public welfare and also said that future plans would need to comply with thе 1987 ordinance.
Claiming that its plans had been improperly disapproved by the Gaston County Planning Board, Northwestern filed an action on 26 August 1988 entitled “Complaint, Request for Preliminary and Permanent Injunction, Request for Writ of Mandamus and Request for Writ of Certiorari” (hereafter the “1988 action”) against *535 the County of Gaston, the members of the Gaston County Board of Commissioners, as well as the members of the Gaston County Planning Board. On 19 December 1988 the trial court issued a permanent injunction in favor of Northwestern requiring defendants to issue a permit to Northwestern under the 1986 ordinance. At no point in the 1988 action did Northwestern seek anything other than equitable relief. The 1988 action eventually reached the Supreme Court which upheld the trial court and required the Gaston County Planning Board to issue a permit in favor of Northwestern.
While the 1988 action was pending before the Supreme Court, Northwestern filed a motion to amend its complaint on 27 July 1990 in both the Supreme Court and the Gaston County Superior Court seeking to add claims for monetary damages and attorney’s fees. At the same time, Northwestern also filed the complaint in the current action alleging essentially the same facts as in the 1988 action, but this time seeking monetary damages for discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and for a wrongful taking without compensation, instead of equitable relief. Both the Supreme Court and the Superior Court denied Northwestern’s motion to amend, forcing it to pursue its claims for monetary damages in this separate action. Northwestern alleges that the three year delay from the filing of the 1988 action has caused it irreparable injury which has necessitated the claims for monetary damages.
After Northwestern filed the current action, defendаnts filed a motion for a more definite statement as to the capacity in which the individual defendants were being sued. Northwestern filed an amended complaint alleging that defendants were being sued in both their individual and official capacities. Defendants answered on 26 December 1990, asserting that Northwestern’s claims for monetary damages were barred by res judicata and qualified immunity. Defendants thereafter moved for summary judgment on these grounds. The trial court denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment and defendants have appealed to this Court.
As a general rule, the denial of a motion for summary judgment is a nonappealable interlocutory order.
Iverson v. TM One, Inc.,
Until recently, none of our appellate courts had thoroughly explored the issue of whether the denial of summary judgment based on the doctrine of res judicata was immediately appealable. However, in
Bockweg v. Anderson,
The doctrine of res judicata precludes a second suit involving the same claim between the same parties or those in privity with them when there has been a final judgment on the merits in a prior action in a сourt of competent jurisdiction.
Thomas M. McInnis & Assoc., Inc. v. Hall,
It is not disputed that the 1988 action was brought before a court of competent jurisdiction and that the Supreme Court’s decision in that case constituted a final judgment on the merits. It is also clear to us that the same parties are involved. The only difference in the parties in the 1988 action and the present matter
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is that the defendants have been sued as individuals and additionally in their official capacities. Northwestern claims that this is enough to defeat defendants’ claim of res judicata and cites
Roy v. City of Augusta, Maine,
A test or a definition for determining what is the “same claim” for the purposes of res judicata has not been definitively addressed by our appellate courts. Instead, our appellate courts have addressed in an elusive manner several different factual situations and then concluded whether or not the same claim was prеsent, all without much discussion.
See e.g. King v. Grindstaff,
Recently, there has been a strong movement on the part of some litigants for the courts of this State to adopt the Rеstatement’s “transactional approach” to res judicata for determining whether two causes of action are part of the same claim.
See Restatement (Second) of Judgments
§ 24. Defendants in this case have urged us to do so, as did the defendants in
Bockweg.
Under, the transactional approach “all issues arising out of ‘a transaction or series of transactions’ must bе tried together as one claim.”
Bockweg,
In
Bockweg,
the Supreme Court had the opportunity to address the transactional approach further, and although they did
*538
not adopt it, we have found guidance in the language used by the Court. The Supreme Court stated that defendants had failed to cite any authority under the transactional approach where “two different instances of negligence leading to two different injuries should constitute one claim which may not be split.”
Id.
at 494,
As in this case, the applicability of res judicata is often as difficult as a solution to the Bosnian conflict.
See Shelton v. Fairley,
Although the factual situation presented by this appeal is unique to our courts, several of the federal circuits have considered this scenario. In fact, the Seventh Circuit had before it facts virtually identical to those in this matter in the case of
Hagee v. City of Evanston,
On appeal the Seventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s ruling that the developer’s claims for monetary damages were barred by res judicata. The Seventh Circuit reasoned that the developer’s claims for damages were merely a reincarnаtion of the first suit, simply under a different legal theory and requesting a different relief. Finding no reason why the developer could not have raised the claims for damages at the same time as the claim for injunctive relief, the Seventh Circuit ruled that the damages were within the purview of the first suit and barred by res judicata. We find the reasoning of the Seventh Circuit to be consistent with the policies of this State regarding res judicata and hereby adopt the Seventh Circuit’s rationale as the general rule for future cases covering identical facts.
However, in reaching its decision the Seventh Circuit warned, in a footnote, of two scenarios where its rationale should not be apрlied. The first of these involved the situation where a plaintiff needed to act quickly to obtain a temporary injunction and did not have the time to bring a claim for damages contemporaneously with the injunction. The second exception involved the situation where the plaintiff was unable to bring the claim for damages *540 because the damages had not yet been incurred. We believe that it is this second exception into which the facts of the case at bar fall.
Northwestern claims that when it filed the 1988 action, the full extent of its damages was not known and it was not until the appeal of the 1988 action was completed that the full extent of damages could be dеtermined with certainty. We have reviewed the record before us to determine whether or not at the time Northwestern filed the 1988 action it had incurred any damages. Unfortunately the record is devoid of any conclusive evidence. Without this information, we cannot determine whether Northwestern is merely seeking a new remedy for the same injury or proceeding on a new claim arising out of a separate and distinct injury.
It has been suggested that certain statements in Northwestern’s amended complaint may bar its action as a matter of law. The 1988 action was filed by Northwestern on 26 August 1988.
See Northwestern Fin. Group, Inc. v. County of Gaston,
We thus remand this matter for trial. If the trial court determines that Northwestern had incurred monetary damages at the
*541
time the 1988 action was filed then the present action is barred whether or not the full extent of Northwestern’s damages was known with certainty because all оf Northwestern’s claims for relief should have been brought in the same action. The failure to do so would violate the rule against claim splitting.
Bockweg,
Therefore, the trial court’s denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment is affirmed and this action is remanded to the trial court for a determination at trial as to whether or not Northwestern had incurred any monetary damages at the time the 1988 action was filed.
Affirmed and Remanded with instructions.
