ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
This matter came on for hearing upon defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. The Court has considered the arguments of counsel, and being fully advised in the premises, FINDS and ORDERS as follows:
Plaintiffs were previously defendants in a foreclosure action in this Court filed by defendant Western Plains Service Corporation. Western Plains Service Corporation v. Ponderosa Development Corporation, et al, Civil Action No. C81-20-B (D.Wyo.1983). Plaintiffs in their amended answer and counterclaim in that action alleged that defendants Brown and Bjordahl undertook the same conduct that serves as the basis for their fourth and fifth causes of action in the amended complaint herein. The record in Civil No. C81-20-B shows that the Court permitted plaintiffs herein to amend their amended answer and counterclaim at the final pretrial conference to allege that Western Plains Service Corporation, through its agents Brown and Bjordahl, defrauded plaintiffs and that they were afforded a full and fair opportunity to develop that issue at trial of that case. The Court in Civil No. C81-20-B reserved its ruling upon Western Plains Service Corporation’s Motion for a Directed Verdict upon the allegation and subsequently ruled *879 in Western Plains Service Corporation’s favor during the jury instruction conference, stating that plaintiffs had offered inadequate evidence to establish a jury question upon that issue, and refused to submit the question to the jury. The factual allegations underlying that fraud claim were virtually identical to those underlying plaintiffs’ first and fifth causes of action herein. The jury in Civil No. C81-20-B returned a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor upon their counterclaim and awarded plaintiffs $250,000.00 damages upon their breach of contract claim, and $40,000.00 upon their slander of title claim, on which judgment was entered. Plaintiffs do not dispute that they were parties in such prior action.
Under the doctrine of claim preclusion, or res judicata, a final judgment upon the merits in an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating the issues that were or could have been raised in that action.
Allen v. McCurry,
Furthermore, to the extent that plaintiffs now seek to apply new legal theories to the same underlying factual allegations previously asserted in Civil No. C8120-B, such claims are barred as well under the merger doctrine of res judicata, and under the compulsory counterclaim rule.
Shadid v. Oklahoma City,
Plaintiffs’ second cause of action herein alleges that defendant officers and directors of Western Plains Service Corporation were negligent in their supervision of the activities of Western Plains Service Corporation. They seek to hold such de
*880
fendants liable for the plaintiffs’ damages allegedly sustained as a result of such negligence. The plaintiffs lack standing to assert such claims or to impose liability upon such defendants upon the theory of negligent supervision. The duty to supervise corporate employees is owed primarily to the corporation’s shareholders to whom the directors and officers owe a fiduciary duty as the trustee of the shareholders’ investment. 3A
Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations,
§§ 1065-1073, 1078-1080; Annot.,
Directors Liability for Defalcations,
Plaintiffs’ third cause of action alleges the defendant Savings and Loan Associations (S & Ls), as shareholders of Western Plains Service Corporation, were the alter ego of Western Plains. They seek to hold defendant S & Ls personally liable for the judgment in Civil No. C81-20-B by piercing the Western Plains’ corporate veil. Defendants submitted affidavits and exhibits showing that the separate corporate formalities were observed, that the shareholders of Western Plains Service Corporation did not dominate the corporate activities of Western Plains Service Corporation, and that there are no other grounds for piercing the corporate veil under
AMFAC Mechanical Supply Co. v. Federer,
Two alternative grounds exist to support the dismissal of plaintiffs’ second and third causes of action herein. First, these claims were in existence at the time Western Plains Service Corporation filed its initial complaint in Civil No. C81-20-B on February 9, 1981, but the plaintiffs failed to assert those claims in their initial answer and counterclaim or in their first amended answer and counterclaim. Then, on March 21,1983, over twenty-five months after the initial complaint had been filed, plaintiffs sought leave to further amend their answer and counterclaim so as to assert the claims now set forth in their second and third causes of action herein. That motion was denied because of the imminent trial setting in Civil No. C81-20B, and because it was doubtful that the Wyoming Court had personal jurisdiction over the shareholders, officers and/or directors of Western Plains Service Corporation who are all residents of or incorporated in the State of South Dakota and North Dakota. Those claims could, and should, have been asserted by plaintiffs in Civil
*881
No. C81-20 in the first instance. They were merged into the verdict and judgment in Civil No. C81-20-B and are now barred by the doctrine of res judicata.
Allen v. McCurry,
Second, these issues were fully and fairly litigated in
Zimmerman, et al. v. First Federal Savings and Loan Ass’n of Rapid City, et al.,
Civil Action No. C8226-B consolidated with C82-399-B (D.Wyo.1983) {Zimmerman). The plaintiffs herein participated in that action, testifying on behalf of the plaintiffs. Counsel for plaintiffs herein, and in Civil No. C81-20-B, was given access to all of the written discovery materials possessed by the plaintiffs in
Zimmerman.
Such materials motivated him to seek the second amendment to the answer and counterclaim in Civil No. C8120. After a lengthy trial on the merits in
Zimmerman,
the defendants herein prevailed by jury verdict upon these very same issues of negligent supervision and piercing the corporate veil. Now, the plaintiffs are attempting to present the same matters to a new jury panel in hopes of obtaining a different and inconsistent result. The Court believes such issues have been judicially determined in defendants’ favor and that plaintiffs herein should not be permitted to relitigate such claims but rather should be held to the results heretofore obtained.
Cauefield v. Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York,
ORDERED that defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment be, and the same hereby is, granted; it is further
ORDERED that plaintiffs’ complaint herein be, and the same hereby is, dismissed. It is further
ORDERED that the plaintiffs take nothing, that the action be dismissed on the merits, and that the defendants recover of plaintiffs their costs of action.
