This сase is before the court on the motion of Raymond L. McGeshick, the appellant, for a recall of this court’s mandate and the grant of a petition for rehearing. For the reasons
BACKGROUND
The underlying appeal, a medical malpractice case within the diversity jurisdiction of the district court, was decided on the merits by this court on November 15, 1993.
See McGeshick v. Choucair,
While the appeal was pending before us, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals issued a dеcision in
Martin v. Richards,
'On May 4, 1995, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin decided
Martin. See Martin v. Richards,
DISCUSSION
It is well settled that, as a gеneral proposition, courts possess inherent power to recall a mandate in exceptional circumstances.
Patterson v. Crabb,
Public policy dictates that there be an end of litigation; that those who have contested an issue shall be bound by the result of the contest, and that matters once tried shall be considered forever settled as between the parties.
Baldwin v. Iowa State Traveling Men’s
Assoc.,
In determining the appropriate balance between these countervailing factors of correcting a judicial course of action that has proven to have been improvidently chosen
In civil litigation, the obvious present stopping point would be a requirement that relief is available only if different results have been reached in cases growing out of a single historic fact setting. There is no indication whether relief should be given in all such situations.... On the other hand, there is nothing in the opinions that prevents the extension of the power to grant relief. Claims arising out of indistinguishable but historically separate fact situations some day may seem to present equally strong demands for relief.
16 Charles A. Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 3938, at 287 (1977).
When we turn to the specific Erie
1
situation before us, we find more еxplicit guidance to assist us in striking the appropriate balance between the competing policy concerns. Our colleagues on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit have faced the problem we now face.
DeWeerth v. Baldinger,
The very nature of diversity jurisdiction leaves open the possibility that a state court will subsequently disagree with a federal court’s interpretation of state law. However, this aspect of our dual justice system does not mean that all divеrsity judgments are subject to revision once a state court later addresses the litigated issues. Such a rule would be tantamount to holding that the doctrine of finality does not apply to diversity judgments, a theory that has no basis in Erie or its progeny.
DeWeerth,
In this regard, we think that the approach ' of the Second, Fоurth and Fifth Circuits is quite compatible with that taken by our colleagues in the Tenth Circuit in
Pierce v. Cook & Co.,
In this matter, the alteration, or clarification, in the law of Wisconsin occurred in a ease entirely unrelated to the ease befоre us. Nor are we faced with a situation in which the plaintiff was forced to litigate in federal court because of the operation of the removal statute. We also note that this action is one for damages between рrivate litigants and does not implicate special public interest concerns that might be present in governmental litigation in which the court’s previous action requires action by the parties of a continuing nature and in which recаll of the mandate would not be “especially disruptive of the interests in finality of judgments.”
American Iron & Steel Inst. v. EPA,
Petition for Rehearing Dismissed as Moot.
Notes
.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
. In
Brenna v. Federal Cartridge Corp.,
. In
Dowell,
the court noted that the case had been removed from state court, but did not appear to consider that fact of significant consequence. However, it did rely on another element of plaintiff choice. It noted that the plaintiff had not chosen to appeal the earlier adverse determination of state law.
Dowell,
