The procedural questions raised in this appeal stem from a medical malpractice claim. Appellant, Charles H. Roane, alleged that appellees, Washington County Hospital and Dr. A.F. Abdullah, injured his right arm during surgery for his carpal tunnel syndrome. The Circuit Court for Washington County dismissed the claim pursuant to the law of the case doctrine. We affirm the dismissal, but for the reason that res judicata barred the claim.
Background
Roane filed his first medical malpractice complaint on April 29, 1996 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland. The claim was docketed as Civil Action No. B-96-1322. Appellees moved to dismiss the complaint because Roane failed to submit it for arbitration as required by Maryland Code, Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, § 3-2A-04, and
Davison v. Sinai Hospital,
Roane refiled the claim in the Maryland Health Claims Arbitration Officе on September 9, 1996. Following nearly two years of discovery, the parties agreed to waive arbitration and to pursue the matter in the Circuit Court for Washington County. True to his original instinct, however, on September 21, 1998, Roane filed the second complaint in the federal district court, not the Statе circuit court. This complaint was docketed as Civil Action No. CCB-98-3191. It mirrored the first federal complaint.
Appellees moved to dismiss the second complaint on the ground that Roane’s filing in federal court contravened the forum selection clause of the parties’ waiver agreement, which set the case for State circuit court. They requested dismissal of the action, or, in the alternative, transfer of the case to the State court. Following a conference call with the parties, the district court accepted appellees’ argument and, on Dеcember 9, 1998, ordered the case “[transferred to the Circuit Court for Washington County.” The circuit court “received” the case and designated it as Civil Action No. 21-C-98-005882 OT. The parties construed this transfer as a de facto refiling of the suit in State court.
At this point, the case proceeded on two different tracks. Roane pursued the claim in federal court by appealing the district court’s transfer. In circuit court, he moved, unsuccessfully, to stay the circuit court proceedings during the pendency of the federal appeal. Appellees answered Roane’s complaint in circuit court, and the parties prepared for trial. The circuit court also handled a number of substantive matters, including a motion for summary judgment and two motions for intervention. At the federal level, on September 10, 1999, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled that the plain language of the Health Care Malpractice Claims Act precluded the forum selection clause agreed to by the parties. Accordingly, it vacated the district court’s transfer of the case to State court and remanded the matter to the district court for further proceedings.
Dr. Abdullah then moved to dismiss the suit in circuit court. He argued that the U.S. Court of Appeals’ decision rendered the State action invalid, and that Roane’s pursuance of the same cause of action in both State and federal court constituí
ed
On November 23, 1999, Washington County Hospital moved to dismiss the claim in circuit court, arguing that under Rule 41(a)(1) and the Maryland counterpart, Rule 2-506(c), Roane’s second voluntary dismissal of the federal claim operаted as an adjudication on the merits, which served as res judicata to the State action. Dr. Abdullah joined in the Hospital’s motion. The circuit court granted the dismissal on March 13, 2000, not adopting appellees’ arguments, but ruling that, “[ujnder the ‘law of the case’ doctrine, the Fourth Circuit’s decision immediately divested the Circuit Court for Washington County of any jurisdiction as further proceedings were unequivocally contemplated in the U.S. District Court.”
Discussion
The Law of the Case Doctrine:
At the outset, the parties agree that the trial court erred in basing its ruling on the law of the case doctrine. That doctrine provides that “once a decision is established аs the controlling legal rule of decision between the same parties in the same case it continues to be the law of the case.”
Kline v. Kline,
The federal courts, like Maryland courts, apply the law of the case doctrine and the mandate rule.
See Agostini v. Felton,
Concurrent Jurisdiction, Voluntary Dismissals & Res Judicata:
The federal courts and Maryland State courts often possess concurrent jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court laid dоwn the ground rules to be applied in cases of concurrent jurisdiction between State and Federal courts nearly 60 years ago, holding in Penn General Casualty Co. v. Pennsylvania,294 U.S. 189 ,55 S.Ct. 386 , 389,79 L.Ed. 850 (1935), that:
Where the judgment sought is strictly in personam, for the recovery of money or for an injunction compelling or restraining action by the defendant, both a statе court and a federal court having concurrent jurisdiction may proceed with the litigation, at least until judgment is obtained in one court which may be set up as res adjudicata in the other....
It has generally been recognized that this doctrine is not one of Constitutional imperative, but rather onе of comity, or accommodation.
Cavaliere v. Town of North Beach,
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a) states in part: 2
(a) Voluntary Dismissal: Effect Thereof.
(1) By Plaintiff; By Stipulation. Subject to the provisions of Rule 23(e), of Rule 66, and of any statute of the United States, an action may be dismissed by the plaintiff without order of court (i) by filing a notice of dismissal at any time before service by the adverse party of an answer or of a motion for summary judgment, whichеver first occurs, or (ii) by filing a stipulation of dismissal signed by all parties who have appeared in the action. Unless otherwise stated in the notice of dismissal or stipulation, the dismissal is without prejudice, except that a notice of dismissal operates as an adjudication upon the merits when filed by a plaintiff who has once dismissed in any court of the United States or of any state an action based on or including the same claim.
(2) By Order of Court. Except as provided in paragraph (1) of this subdivision of this rule, an action shall not be dismissed at the plaintiffs instance save upon order of thе court and upon such terms and conditions as the court deems proper.... Unless otherwise specified in the order, a dismissal under this paragraph is without prejudice.
(Emphasis added.) In this case, appellees had answered the complaint in the State action, so Roane could not voluntarily dismiss the claim in that jurisdiction. When he filed the second dismissal, however, appellees had not answered the complaint in district court. By the plain language of Rule 41(a), therefore, the second dismissal precluded further adjudication of the claim in federal court.
Res judicata, or
claim preclusion, bars a plaintiff from pursuing a second action against the same defendant based on the same cause of action.
FWB Bank v. Richman,
Roane reminds us that the voluntary dismissаl rule is intended to prevent plaintiffs from harassing defendants with multiple filings and dismissals; it contemplates indecisive or vindictive plaintiffs, who keep their opponents in perpetual fear of litigation.
See ASX Inv. Corp. v. Newton,
Roane also contends that the district court dismissed the complaint by its own order pursuant to Rule 41(a)(2). Accordingly, he persists, no prejudice attached to the dismissal. Roane refers us to
Morris v. City of Hobart,
Morris is readily distinguishable from Roane’s case. First, here, there is no court order for us even to decipher. Second, Roane’s voluntary dismissal reads like a pleading, not like a court order, and the circumstances do not indicate that the parties intended the paper to be a court order. Roane points tо the judge’s signature on the dismissal as evidence of its directive effect. We read that signature, however, as mere acknowledgment and approval of Roane’s action. Indeed, a judge signed the 1996 dismissal in the same fashion, and there is no contention that that dismissal was by order of the court. Moreover, Roane’s argument on appeal is disingenuous, given that he defined the second dismissal as a filing under 41(a)(1), not 41(a)(2), in his opposition to Dr. Abdullah’s motion to dismiss.
Roane further argues, creatively, but in error, that when the district court transferred the case to State court, it sent the “substantive cаse,” and retained only a procedural right—“the potential to bring the main case back to Federal court.” In his view, therefore, the second dismissal was not an adjudication on the merits because it dismissed only the procedural right to pursue the claim in federal court. Roane doеs not offer, and we do not find, any support for this argument. The whole claim proceeded in both the State and federal courts until the federal court
The Judicial Estoppel Doctrine:
Roane next seeks refuge from the import of the voluntary dismissal rule in the doctrine of judicial estoppel. That doctrine precludеs a party who successfully pursued a position in a prior legal proceeding from asserting a contrary position in a later proceeding.
Mathews v. Gary,
“If parties in court were permitted to assume inconsistent positions in the trial of their causes, the usefulness of courts of justice would in most cases be paralyzed; the coercive process of law, available only between those who consented to its exercise, could be set at naught at all.... It may accordingly be laid down as a broad proposition that one who, without mistake induced by the oppositе party, has taken a particular position deliberately in the course of litigation, must act consistently -with it; one cannot play fast and loose.”
WinMark Ltd. Partnership v. Miles & Stockbridge,
Roane contends appellees pursued inconsistent positions by first arguing in 1998 that the forum selection clause of the waiver agreement directed the case be tried in State circuit court, and then arguing in 1999 that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to hear the case. While it is true that appellees initially argued that the district court should not hear the claim, Roane did not rely on that argument to his detriment. To the contrary, he fought appellees on the validity of the fоrum selection clause and, ultimately, prevailed before the U.S. Court of Appeals. Moreover, following the voluntary dismissal, appellees did not argue that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to hear the claim, but, rather, that res judicata precluded its re-litigation. As Washington County Hospital explains in its brief, Roane might have employed the doctrine of judicial estoppel if he had consented to appellees’ 1998 motions to transfer the case to circuit court, and, once there, appellees had filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that the circuit court lackеd jurisdiction to hear the claim. That, however, is not what happened in this case. Roane pursued his claim, to varying degrees, in two court systems and then ended the litigation by voluntarily dismissing his claim in one of those jurisdictions.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED; APPELLANT TO PAY COSTS.
Notes
. The typical splitting of a claim occurs when a party pursues certain damаges in one suit and other damages in another suit, all of which are based on the same nucleus of facts.
See Jones v. Speed,
. Maryland Rule 2-506 (2001) duplicates the federal rule in language and purpose.
