The plaintiff, Rekhi, was employed by Wildwood Industries as vice-president of engineering under a five-year written contract, made in August of 1986, which entitled him to certain benefits if he was fired before the contract expired. He was fired two years after the contract was signed, and he filed a claim for $55,770 with the Illinois Department of Labor under the state’s Wage Payment and Collection Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, ¶¶ 39m-l
et seq.,
which creates a remedy for employees denied a contractual entitlement to wages or benefits. After a hearing, the Department determined that Wildwood owed Rekhi only $6,407.90. Dissatisfied, Rekhi brought suit in an Illinois state court against Wildwood for breach of contract. The court deemed the order to pay issued by the Department of Labor a judgment in an earlier suit between the same parties arising out of the same dispute, and therefore res judicata; and dismissed the suit. Rekhi appealed, and the Illinois Appellate Court reversed, holding that orders by the Department of Labor in
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claims under the Wage Payment and Collection Act are not res judicata because the Department’s proceedings under the Act are not judicial.
Wildwood did not seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Illinois, so the decision of the Illinois Appellate Court became final and the case returned to the trial court. Rekhi meanwhile had moved to a different state, and because he did not think the state trial judge friendly to his case he dismissed his suit voluntarily (and without prejudice) and refiled it in federal district court as a diversity suit. Wildwood moved the district judge for summary judgment on the ground that the Illinois Appellate Court had been wrong; the order by the Department of Labor was res judicata. The district judge denied the motion, holding that the ruling by the Illinois Appellate Court had established the “law of the case,” which he was bound to follow.
That Illinois should (as it does, 735 ILCS 5/2-1009) countenance a procedure under which a party dissatisfied with the judge should be able to dismiss and start over after the judge has made a key ruling that has been appealed amazes us, and our amazement is lessened only slightly by the recent statute requiring the refiled suit to be filed within the period of the statute of limitations. 735 ILCS 5/13-217, as amended by the Civil Justice Reform Amendments of 1995, Ill.Pub. Act 89-7. It is not the only questionable feature of the dispute. That Wildwood, rather than seeking review of the Illinois Appellate Court’s decision on an issue of state law in the supreme court of the state, should in fact though not in form seek that review in the federal courts, is an affront to federalism, although the primary fault may lie with Rek-hi, who decided to start over in federal court. Even so, it is conceivable that Wildwood’s oblique challenge to the state court’s ruling in federal court could be blocked by an extension of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, on which see our recent discussion in
Hoover v. Wagner,
Now, strictly speaking, jurisdictional issues should be resolved ahead of issues on the merits. But when the former are difficult and the latter easy, it is permissible if inelegant and even “illogical” to skip to the latter, provided there is no practical difference in the outcome, and there would be none here.
Norton v. Mathews,
One might think that when the case started over in federal district court Rekhi had a slam-dunk argument against Wildwood’s defense of res judicata: that the ruling of the Illinois Appellate Court, at least when it became final upon Wildwood’s failure to seek leave to appeal to the state supreme court, was itself res judicata as to Wildwood’s defense of res judicata. The appellate court determined that orders by the Department of Labor in actions under the Wage Payment and Collection Act are not res judicata; Wildwood could have sought further review of that determination but did not do so; it should be barred from seeking to redetermine it now.
The more precise term for this argument is “collateral estoppel,” that being the name of the part of the overall doctrine
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of res judicata that limits the relitigation of specific issues (“issue preclusion” is the modern term, though it has not succeeded in displacing “collateral estoppel” entirely), as distinct from the relitigation of entire cases or claims (“claim preclusion”). Collateral es-toppel applies to rulings of law as well as to findings of fact. That at least is the general rule—with immaterial exceptions, on which see
Restatement (Second) of Judgments
§ 28(2) (1982)—and the rule applied in federal cases,
Allen v. McCurry,
If so, it might seem to follow that since the ruUng by the IUinois Appellate Court in Rek-hi’s first suit was based on a full and fair adjudication of an issue that had been ruled on with finaUty in a Utigation between the same parties as in the later federal suit, the parties would be bound by that first ruling. But there is a fly in this ointment. The ruling was not actuaUy final, because it remanded the case, and hence was not a final judgment on the merits, which under Illinois law it had to be in order to be res judicata.
Relph v. Board of Education,
We needn’t plunge deeper into this thicket. Collateral estoppel is a defense, and not a jurisdictional one, and it is waived by not being argued. Rekhi failed to argue collateral estoppel in the district court. Instead he argued law of the case. That doctrine limits redetermination of rulings made earlier
in the same lawsuit. Christianson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp.,
Rekhi has another bad argument, that the denial of Wildwood’s motion for summary judgment (the ground of the motion being, the reader will recall, that the order to pay which terminated the Department of Labor’s proceeding barred Rekhi’s two lawsuits by res judicata) became moot when the ease went to trial. Many opinions do say that denial of summary judgment is mooted by trial and judgment, e.g., Watson
v. Amedco Steel, Inc.,
Stated otherwise, the principle that an order denying summary judgment is rendered moot by trial and subsequent judgment on the merits is intended for eases in which the basis for the denial was that the party opposing the motion had presented enough evidence to go to trial. Defenses are not extinguished merely because presented and denied at the summary judgment stage. If the plaintiff goes on to win, the defendant can reassert the defense on appeal.
It is true that our very recent decision in
Allahar v. Zahora,
Luckily for Rekhi, he has one sound argument, which is that the Illinois Appellate Court got it right: under Illinois law, determinations by the Department of Labor under the Wage Payment and Collection Act, or at least the sort of determination the Department made here, do not have a preclusive
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effect in subsequent suits. In so concluding, the Illinois Appellate Court relied on one of its previous decisions,
Miller v. J.M. Jones Co.,
Illinois gives preclusive effect only to determinations made in adjudicatory proceedings, whether judicial or administrative,
Powers v. Arachnid, Inc.,
Perhaps—or perhaps not. Conceivably, the Department’s orders have no binding force and simply bolster an employee’s claim, in a subsequent suit under the Act, for punitive damages. See Ill.Rev.Stat. eh. 48, ¶ 39m-14(b);
Stafford v. Bowling, supra,
An alternative ground for this conclusion proceeds from the fact that orders issued by the Department of Labor under the Wage Payment and Collection Act are not judiciaUy reviewable under the state’s Administrative Review Act. The Wage Payment and Collection Act does not say they are and under IUinois law it would have to for the Administrative Review Act to apply. 735 ILCS 5/3-102. From the inapplicability of the Administrative Review Act, the court in
Stafford v. Bowling, supra,
In the federal system, when no specific method of obtaining judicial review of final orders by administrative agencies is prescribed by statute, an aggrieved party can still obtain judicial review, by bringing a declaratory or injunctive suit against the agency.
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
But we have assumed that the only basis for giving the Department of Labor’s order preclusive effect would be the doctrine of collateral estoppel; and for completeness of analysis we should interrogate that assumption. It could be argued—and is perhaps implied in Wildwood’s brief, since neither party has drawn a sharp distinction between res judicata in the sense of claim preclusion and collateral estoppel (issue preclusion)—that Rekhi’s complaint to the Department touched off a suit concluded by the order to pay, precluding any subsequent suit arising out of the parties’ dispute over Rek-hi’s entitlement to wages and benefits arising from his dismissal, rather than precluding simply a redetermination of the amount owed. Res judicata in the sense of claim preclusion does not require that an issue actually have been litigated, but only that it could have been.
Torcasso v. Standard Outdoor Sales, Inc.,
The argument for claim preclusion in this case would be that any defect in the procedure leading up to the Department’s order could be rectified on appeal and should not be subject to being attacked (or ignored) in a separate suit. But appeal how? We pointed out earlier that there are no cases in which an order issued by the Department has been the subject of a judicial review proceeding in the ordinary sense, that is, a proceeding in which the agency that issued the order is named as a defendant or respondent in a judicial proceeding in which the court is asked to set the order aside. The mode of review for such orders under Illinois law is, so far as we are able to determine, simply for the employee to sue the employer in state court (if as here the employee is dissatisfied with the order, or if the employer is dissatisfied and refuses to comply with it) and for that court in the course of the proceeding to determine de novo whether the order was correct.
Rekhi’s suit was not blocked by res judica-ta or collateral estoppel, and the judgment in his favor is therefore
AFFIRMED.
