A federal prisoner has sued federal and state law enforcement officers for the return of gems and cash that he claims the defendants seized in the course of searching his home. The district court allowed Okoro to proceed in forma pauperis, but later dismissed his suit on the ground that it was barred by res judicata or, alternatively, by absence of federal subject-matter jurisdiction. Okoro has appealed, presenting questions concerning jurisdiction to recover property held by federal authorities and the res judicata effect of dismissals under the statute (28 U.S.C. § 1915) governing proceedings in forma pauperis.
Back in 1993 Okoro was arrested in his home by several of the defendants on suspicion of being a heroin dealer; the search of which he complains in the present suit was incident to the arrest. Prosecuted on federal drug charges — and drugs allegedly seized in the search were introduced in evidence against him — he was convicted and sentenced to prison, where he remains. But shortly before this court affirmed Okoro’s conviction and sentence in an unpublished opinion, he had filed a civil suit in federal district court
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claiming that the defendants—the same defendants as in the present case, plus others— had framed him in violation of the Constitution. He asked for leave to proceed in forma pauperis. This was denied, and his suit dismissed, on the ground that it was frivolous in light of
Heck v. Humphrey,
Okoro brought a second, essentially identical suit, which was disposed of similarly. Then he brought the present suit, seeking the return of the gems allegedly seized during the search that had accompanied his arrest. This suit was not dismissed on
Heck
grounds, presumably because success in it would not necessarily undermine the validity of Okoro’s conviction; he could be guilty of drug violations yet also have been the victim of a theft by the officers who arrested him.
Gonzalez v. Entress,
The district court’s manner of disposing of Okoro’s suit—first holding that it was barred by res judicata and then, in the alternative, that it was outside the court’s jurisdiction—was irregular. With an immaterial exception explained in
McNamara v. City of Chicago,
Although Okoro’s pleading was convoluted (he did not have a lawyer), the judge was correct to conclude that what Okoro essentially seeks is simply the return of his property under Rule 41(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. It is true that motions under this rule ordinarily seek relief against the United States (not named in Okoro’s motion). See, e.g.,
United States v. Solis,
The district judge (Judge Nordberg) dismissed Okoro’s Rule 41(e) motion for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that it had to be filed with the district judge (Judge Shadur) who had presided at Okoro’s criminal trial and was and is presiding over the numerous postconviction proceedings that Okoro has filed in an effort, as yet unsuccessful, to void his conviction, because the motion was ancillary to the criminal case. This was a mistake. Ancillary the
motion
was, and so it could properly have been filed with Judge Shadur,
United States v. Taylor,
So we proceed to the alternative ground on which the district court refused to give Okoro any relief — that his motion is barred by res judicata. This would be clear if the two prior suits had been paid suits dismissed on the merits for failure to state a claim in light of
Heck v. Humphrey.
It would not matter that the prior suits charged different violations of law, alleged different facts, and sought different relief. Under the federal common law of res judicata, a subsequent suit is barred if the claim on which it is based arises from the same incident, events, transaction, circumstances, or other factual nebula as a prior suit that had gone to final judgment.
Wilson v. City of Chicago,
But we must consider whether it matters that the first two suits were not paid suits and did not result in judgments on the merits, but instead were dismissed under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) (now 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2)(B)(1) as frivolous. The black-letter law is that only a “judgment on the merits” has res judicata effect. E.g.,
Herrmann v. Cencom Cable Associates, Inc., supra,
Or suppose he had brought a state-law tort suit in federal district court against one of the defendants and it had been dis
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missed on the ground that there was no diversity of citizenship. He could not refile the suit in federal court, even though it had been dismissed on jurisdictional grounds, because (as in our previous example) a jurisdictional dismissal is res judicata on the jurisdictional issue.
Ricketts v. Midwest National Bank,
It may seem paradoxical to suggest that a court can render a preclusive judgment when dismissing a suit on the ground that the suit does not engage the jurisdiction of the court. But the paradox is superficial. A court has jurisdiction to determine its own jurisdiction.
United States Catholic Conference v. Abortion Rights Mobilization, Inc.,
The dismissal of a suit on the ground that the suit is frivolous is a form of jurisdictional dismissal,
Neitzke v. Williams,
In the usual case, however, to say that a suit is frivolous is to say that its want of
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merit is so patent that the court can and should dismiss it even if the defendant, whether for tactical reasons or because of sheer incompetence, does not move to dismiss it on the ground that shows its complete want of merit.
Gammon v. GC Services Limited Partnership,
What is true, however, harking back to the distinction between collateral estoppel and res judicata (or issue preclusion and claim preclusion), is that the preclusive effect even of a jurisdictional dismissal based on frivolousness may be narrower than that of a judgment on the merits. Suppose that the plaintiffs suit alleged violations of federal law, but the conduct alleged might also violate state law. Were the suit to be dismissed on the merits, the plaintiff could not refile it in state court and by changing his theory from federal to state law escape the bar of res judicata. E.g.,
River Park, Inc. v. City of Highland, Park, supra,
This distinction saves Okoro. His previous suits were dismissed as frivolous, that is, for want of jurisdiction, and the only binding-effect of the dismissals was to prevent him from filing a new suit with the same jurisdictional defect. The suits were frivolous because so
clearly
barred by
Heck
that the court was required to notice and enforce the bar. This left Okoro free to file a new suit provided it was not barred by
Heck.
He tried to avoid the bar by limiting the new suit to a claim for the return of his property, a claim not necessarily inconsistent with his conviction being valid. The defendants do not argue that the new suit is barred by
Heck,
and the question is sufficiently unclear to prevent us from saying that the suit is frivolous. The fact that Okoro could have included his present claim in his previous suits, and would be barred from litigating it had he not done so if either of those suits had been decided on the merits (since the rule of res judicata is not suspended for litigants merely because they proceed without legal assistance, e.g.,
Sassower v. American Bar Ass’n,
The suit was dismissed prematurely. It is neither outside the jurisdiction of the district court nor barred by res judicata. Of course in so ruling we decide nothing about the merits of the suih — including its timeliness. Rule 41(e) does not prescribe a deadline for moving for the return of property, and the parties have not favored us with any discussion of whether there is a deadline and if so what it is. The defendants have not pleaded a defense of untimeliness, and we shall leave it to the district court to decide in the first instance whether the defense has been waived.
Reversed and Remanded.
