This case has been briefed, argued, and submitted for decision to a panel of this court. Various motions to intervene have been filed and are awaiting rulings.
*721 On February 8, 1982, the parties to the action by letter signed by Joseph M. Alioto notified the court that the parties to the litigation had settled their differences and have agreed that the judgment of the district court may be vacated and the appeal dismissed. No objection has been received by opposing counsel and we therefore consider that the litigation is moot.
Under similar circumstances, the Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit said:
When, during the pendency of an appeal, a case becomes moot, so that there is no longer any case or controversy before this court, there is a loss of jurisdiction; this lack of jurisdiction results from the constitutional limitation contained in Article III, § 2 of the Constitution. If the circumstances which rendered the case moot, after the judgment in the trial court, are due to circumstances over which appellant had no control, then the Supreme Court has, in some circumstances, in order to avoid unfairness, reversed and remanded with directions to the trial court to dismiss the suit instead of dismissing the appeal. But that is not the invariable practice. And we think that it is not the proper course here. This case has not become moot because of intervening circumstances over which appellant had no control. It resembles one where, after an appeal is taken, the defeated plaintiff settles and compromises the action or executes a release of his right to appeal .... [Dismissal of the suit, as distinguished from dismissal of the appeal, might result in unfairness to appellee by subjecting him to other vexatious actions by appellant. :j; if: sfs sjc iü sj:
We shall, therefore, merely dismiss the appeal, with the consequence that the judgment . .. made by the trial court will stand as entered.”
Cover v. Schwartz,
We find the distinction between litigants who are and are not responsible for rendering their case moot at the appellate level persuasive. If the effect of post-judgment settlements were automatically to vacate the trial court’s judgment, any litigant dissatisfied with a trial court’s findings would be able to have them wiped from the books.
“It would be quite destructive to the principle of judicial finality to put such a litigant in a position to destroy the collateral conclusiveness of a judgment by destroying his own right of appeal.” IB Moore’s Federal Practice H 0.416[6] at p. 2327 (2d ed. 1982). That possibility would undermine the risks inherent in taking any controversy to trial and, in cases such as this one, provide the dissatisfied party with an opportunity to relitigate the same issues. 1
We consider the facts of this case in which the appellant settled the dispute after judgment distinguishable from the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Great Western Sugar v. Nelson,
Thus the question in
Munsingwear
was whether an exception to the rule of bar by
res judicata
should apply where mootness of the appeal had prevented the appellant from securing a review of an adverse lower court judgment. The Court held that it should not, since the appellant can protect himself by moving to vacate the lower court judgment at the time the appeal is dismissed; and this the Government had failed to do. It was the Court’s discussion of the Government’s right to secure vacation of the lower court judgment that is relevant to our case. The Court relied upon the rule in
Duke Power Co. v. Greenwood County,
Our question, not dealt with in Munsingwear, is whether an exception to the Duke Power Company rule should be recognized when the appellant has by his own act caused the dismissal of the appeal and is in no position to complain that his right of review of an adverse lower court judgment has been lost. We hold that such an exception should be recognized; that it is not the duty of the appellate court to direct dismissal of the action under the circumstances of this case. Whether it should be dismissed by the district court, and whether the lower court judgment should continue to have collateral estoppel effect are questions we do not reach.
The court in
Munsingwear
points out, “[cjoncededly the judgment in the first suit would be binding in the subsequent ones if an appeal, though available, had not been taken or perfected.”
Id.
Thus the consequences and attendant hardships of dismissal or refusal to dismiss remain to be explored; and the decision, on the facts of this case, between the competing values of finality of judgment and right to relitigation of unreviewed disputes should be left to the district court — either the court below or the one in which collateral estoppel is asserted.
Similarly, we find that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Great Western Sugar v. Nelson,
Finally, the facts of the present case also serve to distinguish our holding from the Supreme Court’s recent action in vacating this court’s decision in
Security Bancorp v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
For the reasons stated above, we dismiss this appeal as moot and deny the motion to vacate the judgment of the district court.
All motions to intervene are likewise denied without prejudice, however, to the right of any interested party to seek dismissal of the action by the district court.
Notes
. Appellant’s original complaint challenged the legality of a strike called by the Teamsters on April 1, 1976, and sought to vacate an arbitration decision which found the strike did not violate the terms of their collective bargaining agreement. The district court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law upholding the arbitration award against appellant’s allegations of fraud, coercion and undue means. Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc. v. Western Conference of Teamsters, No. C-76-661 (N.D.Cal.1980); Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc. v. Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 70, No. C-77-2626 (N.D.Cal.1980). In a related antitrust action also brought by appellant, the district court refused to permit appellant to relitigate issues regarding the validity of the arbitration decision and granted partial summary judgment in favor of defendants relying upon the findings of the district court in this case. See Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc. v. Trucking Employers, Inc., No. C — 79 — 0321 (N.D.Cal.1981). We do not see why appellant should be permitted to avoid the collateral estoppel effect of the district court’s findings by settling this dispute on appeal and petitioning for vacation of the court’s adverse findings.
