Alleging losses by robbery, plaintiff corporations brought this action to recover $244,510.90 under contracts of insurance with defendant insurers. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs, and the trial сourt granted defendants’ motion for new trial on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict. The trial court denied defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the vеrdict. Plaintiffs appeal from the order granting a new trial. Defendants appeal from the judgment.
We agree with defendants’ contention that their plea of collatеral estoppel defeats plaintiffs’ action. In a criminal action that became final before the present action was commenced, Albert Teitelbaum, president of plaintiff corporations, was convicted of conspiracy to commit grand theft, attempted grand theft, and the filing of a false and fraudulent insurance clаim. The conviction was affirmed on appeal.
(People
v.
Teitelbaum,
The doctrine of res judicata has a double aspect -. (1) it “precludes parties or their privies from relitigating a cause of action that has been finally determined by a court of competent jurisdiction.” (2) “Any issue necessarily decided in such litigation is conclusively determined as to the parties or their privies if it is involved in a subsequent lawsuit on a different cause оf action.”
(Bernhard
v.
Bank of America,
In the
Bernhard
case,
supra,
this court rejected the doctrine of mutuality of estoppel that had been applied to limit the scope of collateral estoppel, and held three questions to be pertinent in determining the validity of the plea. “Was the issue decided in the prior adjudication identical with the one presented in the action in question? Was there a final judgment on the merits? Was the party against whom the plea is asserted a party or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication?” (
Notwithstanding the apparent aрplicability of collateral estoppel, it is contended that the cases in this state do not indicate that a criminal conviction is conclusive in a subsequent civil action. Additionally, plaintiffs urge that the plea be rejected on the ground that since plaintiffs did not have the initiative in the criminal action and since Teitelbaum chose not to testify and was unable to utilize an important witness in the criminal proceeding, they did not have a full and complete day in court on the issue now sought to be foreclosеd against them.
The cases do not preclude the application of collateral
*605
estoppel in a civil case to issues determined in a previous criminal prosecution. Those relied upon for the contrary proposition are either based upon the doctrine of mutuality of estoppel
(Risdon
v.
Yates,
Since the requirement of mutuality of estoppel was expressly abandoned in the Bernhard ease, Risdon v. Yates, supra, and the eases following it are no longer authoritative.
In re Anderson, supra,
rejected the plea as applied to a former acquittal on the ground that “ ‘the difference in degree in the burden of proof in criminal and civil eases precludes application of the doctrine of res judicata. The acquittal was merely ... an аdjudication that the proof was not sufficient to overcome all reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused.’ ” (
A plea of guilty is admissible in a subsequent civil action оn the independent ground that it is an admission. It would not serve the policy underlying collateral estoppel, however, to make such a plea conclusive. “The rule is bаsed upon the sound public policy of limiting litigation by preventing a party who has had one fair trial on an issue from again drawing it into controversy. ’ ’
(Bernhard
v.
Bank of America,
Collateral estoppel applies to successive criminal trials
(People
v.
Beltran,
Plaintiffs contend, however, that in the absence of mutuality, collateral еstoppel ought not be applied against a party who did not have the initiative in the previous action. (See
Nevarov
v.
Caldwell,
It should be noted, however, that a criminal judgment that is subject to collateral attack on the ground, for example, that it was obtained through the knowing use of perjured testimony
(Mooney
v.
Holohan,
Teitelbaum’s election not to testify in his own behalf in the criminal case was рresumably made on the assumption that he would benefit thereby. His error, if any, in trial strategy would no more defeat the plea of collateral estoppel than the fаilure of a litigant to introduce relevant available evidence in any other situation.
Teitelbaum urged his inability to compel the testimony of the alleged co-consрirator on his appeal from the judgment in the criminal ease, and it was determined that it did not warrant a reversal. A fortiori, it will not sustain a collateral attack upon the criminal judgment.
The order denying defendants’ motion for judgment notAvithstanding the verdict and the order granting a new trial are reversed and the trial court is directed to enter judgment for defendants. Defendants shall recover their costs on these appeals.
Gibson, C. J., Me Comb, J., Peters, J., White, J., and Tobriner, J., concurred.
Schauer, J., concurred in the judgment.
Notes
Formerly Buies on Appeal, rule 33.
