The threshold issue in this appeal is whether a default judgment results in issue preclusion under Colorado law. In an opinion issued on November 10, 1997, we stayed this appeal and certified a question to the Colorado Supreme Court. That court refused the certification without additional comment. In this opinion, we wrestle with how the Colorado Supreme Court would have ruled if it had accepted certification, and conclude it would have found that the default judgment in this case prevents the appellee from litigating his personal liability under a sublease.
I. Background
We provided a detailed summary of the events leading up to this appeal in our original opinion certifying to the Colorado Supreme Court, Stephan v. Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, Inc.,
When the sublessee failed to make some of these payments, Rocky Mountain covered the default. It then sued Rocky Mountain-Illinois and Lawrence in the district court for the county of La Plata, Colorado. Both defendants failed to appear, and the district court entered a default judgment against them. Rocky Mountain proceeded to regis
The Stephans, concerned that Rocky Mountain might pursue them individually for liability arising out of the leasor’s action, filed suit in federal district court and sought a declaration that they had no further financial exposure under the sublease. Rocky Mountain responded with a motion for dismissal or, alternatively, for summary judgment. The district judge dismissed the Stephans’ complaint insofar as it pertained to Patricia,
In addition to the question of Colorado law, this appeal raises questions about the appropriateness of the district court’s entry of summary judgment sua sponte, as well as whether the Illinois circuit court’s refusal to deny recognition to the default judgment has issue-preclusive effect under Illinois law. Because we find that'the default judgment in Colorado precludes Lawrence from litigating his financial exposure under the sublease, we do not reach these other issues.
II. Certification of the Question
As we explained in Rocky Mountain I, the doctrine of issue preclusion (formerly known as collateral estoppel) limits the Ltigation of issues that have been decided in a previous action. In the proceeding before the Colorado court, Rocky Mountain’s complaint alleged that Lawrence was personally liable under the sublease. As a necessary predicate to a possible grant of summary judgment, the district judge had to determine whether the default judgment “decided” that Lawrence was personally Lable under the sublease and hence estopped him from rehtigating that issue. Because a Colorado court rendered the default judgment, Colorado law governs whether the judgment has issue-preclusive effect. See 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (full faith and credit statute); Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
In resolving this puzzling matter, the district court emphasized that a majority of federal courts, the Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 27, and commentators such as Charles Wright, Arthur Miller, and Edward Cooper have rejected the notion that a default judgment results in issue preclusion. Although this is persuasive evidence of how the Colorado Supreme Court might rule, in Rocky Mountain I we were concerned about two opinions from the Colorado Court of Appeals that, while not on all fours with the instant case, nonetheless suggested that Colorado may have bucked the national trend. We also noted, as did the district judge, that, as recently as 1996, a state supreme court had held that default judgments have issue-preclusive effect. See TransDulles Center, Inc. v. Sharma,
As a result of this flea-flicker, we find ourselves back behind the line of scrimmage and still confronted with the threshold question: under Colorado law, does the default judgment rendered against Lawrence estop him from litigating the issue of his personal liability under the sublease? As we tackle this question for a second time, we admittedly are tempted to attribute some meaning to the Colorado Supreme Court’s refusal of our certified question. Does it reflect implicit approval of prior statements of the Colorado Court of Appeals? This interpretation seems plausible. Or perhaps it connotes agreement with the opinion of the federal district judge? This seems less likely. But, in any event, like the usual denial of certiorari by the United States Supreme Court, see generally Peter Linzer, The Meaning of Certiorari Denials, 79 Colum.L.Rev. 1227 (1979), refusals of certified questions have no precedential significance. Accordingly, we will try to approach the issue whether the default judgment gave rise to issue preclusion without ascribing any particular significance to the disappointing response of the Colorado Supreme Court.
III. Analysis
Because we sit in diversity jurisdiction, we must attempt to resolve the question of issue preclusion in the same mariner as would the Colorado Supreme Court. See Todd v. Societe BIC,
We previously have observed that in the absence of authority from the highest court of a state, “this court must follow authority from the state intermediate appellate court if it represents a sound, or even defensible, prediction” of how the state’s highest court would rule on an issue. McCoy v. Richards,
We explained in Rocky Mountain I that because the facts, in Ortega are distinguishable from those in this case, we were hesitant to rely on Ortega in determining how the Colorado Supreme Court would rule if confronted with Rocky Mountain’s appeal. See Rocky Mountain I,
The facts in Aspen, a case that the parties have not cited and that the district court does not appear to have considered, more closely resemble those in this appeal. Nonetheless, we were concerned, that, the posture of Aspen did not afford the Colorado Court of Appeals an occasion to consider the appropriateness of collateral estoppel where the defaulting party had minimal participation in the earlier suit. See Rocky Mountain I,
The foregoing recapitulation of our understanding of Ortega and Aspen helps explain why we certified the question whether issue preclusion barred Lawrence from litigating his financial exposure under the sublease. But while we have struggled with these cases, we conclude that they indicate how the Colorado Supreme Court would have ruled if it had accepted our certification. Both Ortega and Aspen postulate that issue preclusion applies to the issues subsumed within a default judgment. The plain language of As-pera and the citation in Ortega to Quality Sheet indicate that the Colorado Court of Appeals adheres to this rule regardless of the extent of the defaulting party’s participation in the earlier lawsuit. Hence both Ortega and Aspen intimate that the Colorado Supreme Court would find that the default judgment estopped Lawrence’s declaratory judgment action.
We have already stated that this court must follow authority from a state intermediate appellate court if the authority represents a defensible prediction of how the state’s highest court would rule. See, e.g., McCoy,
It may be, as the district court suggests, that the Restatement and the majority of federal courts have adopted the “better rule.” See Stephan,
Accordingly, we Reverse the district court and Remand with an instruction to enter summary judgment in favor of Rocky Mountain.
Notes
. As part of the settlement agreement, Rocky Mountain entered a covenant not to sue Patricia. In proceedings before the district court, Rocky Mountain conceded that it could not bring any claims against her, and hence there was no case or controversy that involved Patricia.
