Thе single issue presented for review is whether a judgment of a federal bankruptcy court discharging the debt of a defendant held liable in a malicious prosecution action operates as collateral estoppel in favor of the other defendants. We hold that collateral estoppel was properly invoked and affirm.
I.
Three different lawsuits make up the procedural history of this case. For convenience, we denominate them Suits No. 1, 2 and 3, based chronologically on the date they began. In this opinion we decide the latest round of Suit No. 2, which has already come before this court once.
Seven Elves, Inc. v. Eskenazi,
Suit No. 1 was an involuntary bankruptcy proceeding brought on December 16, 1975 against appellant Seven Elves, Inc. in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. The suit was initiated by Jack Eskenazi, appellees Gаry Lieb-man and Jack Riback, and other creditors of Seven Elves. Eskenazi agreed to act on behalf of Liebman and Riback in filing and prosecuting the action. We previously found that “Liebman and Riback executed a power-of-attorney authorizing Eskenazi to act as their agent in retaining counsel and in prosecuting the bankruptcy cause, but did not themselves participate directly in the action.”
Suit No. 2, the current suit, is a malicious prosecution action brought on December 1, 1976 by Seven Elves against Eskenazi, Lieb-man, Riback and others. The suit seeks recovery for injuries allegedly sustained as a result of the involuntary bankruptcy proceeding. Jurisdiction is founded on diversity of citizenship. On October 23, 1978, after the defendants failed to appear at trial, a default judgment of $250,000 was entered against them. The defendants chose to *243 deal with the default judgment in different ways.
Liebman and Riback took an appeal to the Fifth Circuit, successfully arguing that the trial court should have granted relief from the judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b). We reversed the judgment and remanded for a new trial on the merits.
While the Fifth Circuit appeal was pending, Eskenazi filed Suit No. 3, a voluntary bankruptcy petition brought in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California, seeking to discharge his debt to Seven Elves resulting from the default judgment. Seven Elves intervened and objected to the discharge on grounds that the default judgment was a debt for “willful and malicious injury” under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6) and hence not discharge-able. After a trial, the court found for Eskenazi in a decision dated April 14, 1980, and discharged the debt. Finding of Fact 11 of the court’s decision states: “There is no evidence that the filing of the aforesaid Petition for Involuntary Bankruptcy was unjustifiеd; to the contrary, there is evidence that SEVEN ELVES was in financial distress at the time of such filing.”
Seven Elves appealed Suit No. 3 to the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, which affirmed, rejecting the argument that the court below was clearly erroneous in finding that Eskenazi “had acted without malice and with probable cause in joining in the filing of an involuntary bankruptcy petition against Seven Elves, Incorporated.”
1
In re Eskenazi,
The issue before us now is whether the district court, after remand from the Fifth Circuit, correctly held that the finding in Suit No. 3 that Suit No. 1 was not brought for purposes of willful and malicious injury operates as collateral estoppel on the issue of probable cause in Suit No. 2. It is a sign of our times that an original debt of some $800 owed by Seven Elves to Liebman and Riback generated a diversity suit, two bankruptcy proceedings, an appеal to the Ninth Circuit and two trips to the Fifth Circuit, none of which has rewarded anyone by so much as a dime.
II.
A federal court applies federal common law in deciding the collateral es-toppel effect of a prior federal judgment.
Reimer v. Smith,
(1) The issue at stake must be identical to that involved in the prior action;
(2) the issue in the prior action must have been actually litigated; and
(3) the determination of the issue in the prior action must have been necessary and essential to thе prior judgment.
Johnson v. United States,
There is no question but that the third element has been met. The determination urged as collateral estoppel by Lieb-man and Riback is the California bankruptcy court’s finding in Suit No. 3 that the default judgment was dischargеable. Seven Elves argued in that proceeding that the debt was not dischargeable because it fell within the exception set out in 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6). This issue was not merely necessary to the court’s decision to discharge the debt; it was in fact the only issue in dispute and the whole basis for Suit No. 3 and the Ninth Circuit appeal.
The heart of our current inquiry is whether the first element of identity of the issues is met. Resolving this inquiry requires us to answer two questions. First, is a finding that under the Bankruptcy Code a suit was not brought for purposes of willful and malicious injury equivalent to a finding of probable cause under Texas tort law? Secоnd, does the fact that Eskenazi had probable cause necessarily mean that Lieb-man and Riback had probable cause as well? Under the uncontroverted facts of this case, the answer to both questions is yes.
The California bankruptcy court’s finding that Eskenazi was entitled to a discharge, was substantially equivalent to a finding that he initiated the proceeding against Seven Elves with probable cause. Under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6), an individual is not entitled to a discharge from any debt “for willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or to the property of another entity.” In rejecting Seven Elves’ reliance on this provision, the bankruptcy court found that “[t]here is no evidence that the filing of the aforesaid Petition for Involuntary Bankruptcy was unjustified; to the contrary, there is evidence that SEVEN ELVES was in financial distress at the time of such filing.” The court found that Hugh Dodds, a collection mаnager for Esk- *245 enazi’s company, Esko Industries, Inc., had made repeated attempts to collect a debt owed by Seven Elves, and had recommended to Eskenazi that an involuntary bankruptcy suit be filed on the basis of his unsuccessful efforts.
We have defined “willful and malicious” under section 523(a)(6) to mean “without just cause or excuse.” Willful means intentional and malicious adds the absence of just cause or excuse.
Matter of Dardar,
Under Texas law, lack of probable cause is a necessary element of a malicious prosecution action. A prosecutor has probable cause if he acts as an ordinarily or reasonably prudent person would act under thе circumstances,
Pate v. Stevens,
Appellant does not seem to dispute thаt the bankruptcy court’s decision amounted to a finding of probable cause as to Eskena-zi. Instead, the thrust of its argument is that a finding of probable cause as to Esk-enazi does not amount to a finding of probable cause as to Liebman and Riback. It argues that Eskenazi’s business acumen and knowledge of the financial condition of Seven Elves differed from those of Liebman and Riback.
Eskenazi’s business acumen is irrelevant to probable cause. As explained above, the test of probable cause is essentially an objective one, and asks whether an оrdinarily or reasonably prudent person would have acted as the prosecutor did. To quote the language most frequently used in the Texas cases, probable cause means “the existence of such facts and circumstances as would excite the belief, in a
reasonable mind,
acting on the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that the person charged was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted.”
Pendleton v. Burkhalter,
Seven Elves argues that, even if the test is an objective оne, it nevertheless depends on “the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor .. .. ”
Pendleton, supra.
It argues that the knowledge available to Esk-enazi was not the same as that available to Liebman and Riback. This argument is unconvincing because we have already found that Liebman and Riback tоok a passive role in the involuntary bankruptcy cause, and extended a power of attorney to Eskenazi authorizing him to act as their agent in prosecuting the action on their behalf.
Seven Elves, Inc.
v.
Eskenazi,
Under ordinary agency concepts the knowledge of an agent is imputed to his principal.
Victory v. State,
Of course, if the principal knows more than the agent, then probable cause may exist for one and not the other. If Liebman and Riback knew that Seven Elves was actually solvent, they might have lacked probable cause even though Eskenazi was justified in bringing the action based on his own knowledge. However, the position of Seven Elves is that the principals knew less than Eskenazi. In its brief it asserts that “Liebman and Riback knew nothing of the financial affairs of Seven Elves at the time [of the involuntary bankruptcy petition] other than the fact that their bill was not paid.” The uncontradicted deposition testimony of both Liebman and Riback supports this position.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The bankruptcy court in Suit No. 3 held that it was not bound by the default judgment against Eskenazi in Suit No. 2. The bankruptcy appellate panel agreed, relying on the following cases for its conclusion that the prior decision of a non-bankruptcy tribunal does not operate as res judicata when a bankruptcy court determines dischargeability questions:
Brown v. Felson,
. The precise issue here is whether a federal court sitting in diversity applies federal or state law in deciding the collateral estoppel effect of a prior judgment оf a federal court which heard a case under its federal question jurisdiction. Suit No. 3, a bankruptcy case brought under federal question jurisdiction, is offered here as collateral estoppel in Suit No. 2, a diversity case. Although Reimer suggests as a general proposition that federal law applies whеn deciding the effect of a prior federal judgment, our research turns up no recent Fifth Circuit cases squarely addressing the issue as framed above.
“Federal law clearly governs the question whether a prior federal court judgment based on federal question jurisdiction is res judicata in a case also brought . .. under federal question jurisdiction.”
Aerojet-General Corp. v. Askew,
In short, the law of this circuit is that federal law govеrns in the federal question/federal question, diversity/diversity, and diversity/federal question contexts. Since our precedents clearly require the use of federal law in the diversity/diversity context, federal law should apply a fortiori to the federal question/diversity case presented herе. If anything, concerns over respecting state courts and policies are less serious in the federal question/diversity context than in the diversity/diversity context. Correspondingly, concerns with preserving the integrity of federal judgments and procedure expressed in our decisions are if аnything greater here than in the diversity/diversity context. We note further that the Erie doctrine’s policy of preventing forum shopping is not in jeopardy, since state courts generally are required to follow federal rules in deciding the preclusive effect of a prior federal question judgmеnt of a federal court. 18 C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4468 at 656-57 (1981). Thus, when a federal question decision is offered as collateral estoppel in a diversity suit, “[mjost cases can be decided readily on the ground that state courts would be obliged to apply federal rules of preclusion, so federal courts are of course free to do so.” Id. § 4472 at 740.
