This opinion considers the viability of the second of two lawsuits filed by Trust-mark Insurance Company (“Trustmark”) against ESLU, Inc. (“ESLU”) for breach of contract. ■ In 1994, Trustmark decided to expand its business and appoint agents to sell its insurance policies. Accordingly, that same year Trustmark and ESLU executed a contract, called the Managing General Underwriting Agreement (“MGUA”). Pursuant to the MGUA, ESLU would be Trustmark’s managing general agent and would sell “excess stop loss group insurance policies.” MGUA 1(a). ESLU was also to underwrite these policies using the same procedures that had been profitable for the company in the past.
The present controversy began when Trustmark determined that ESLU had incorrectly calculated the deductibles for one of Trustmark’s insureds. In what we will refer to as “Trustmark I,” Trustmark filed suit in September 1999 against ESLU, claiming breach of contract, negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. Trustmark argued that ESLU breached the underwriting agreement by failing to underwrite three policies in accordance with the contract. On January 25, 2000, the trial judge set a scheduling order and the parties continued with discovery. Trustmark learned that ESLU had incorrectly calculated at least two more companies’ deductibles. Accordingly, on May 29, 2000, the date which the scheduling order set as the deadline for any amendments, Trustmark amended its complaint to add the facts relating to those two additional policies.
In March 2000, Trustmark began an audit of ESLU’s work. Nine months after the amendment period had passed, and two months after the discovery period had ended, on February 27, 2001, Trustmark again moved to amend the complaint. It moved to amend that complaint to add additional counts of breach of contract relating to 42 separate insurance policies that Trustmark alleged were improperly
Upon the conclusion of Trustmark I, Trustmark filed the instant suit, a second suit against ESLU which we will call “Trustmark II.” Trustmark again alleges that ESLU had breached the MGUA, citing the 42 separate insurance policies which it had attempted to include in the first action. ESLU moved to dismiss Trustmark II pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), arguing that because the breach of the MGUA was the subject of Trust-mark I, the doctrine of res judicata prevented Trustmark from relitigating claims which arose out of that contract.
When ESLU submitted its 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss Trustmark II, it attached various documents in support. Trustmark attached further documentation in its response. Without expressly excluding any of those documents, the district court dismissed the suit; Trustmark appeals.
Trustmark argues that when the district court accepted all of the documentation provided at the 12(b)(6) stage it considered matters outside the pleadings, thus converting that motion into a motion for summary judgment. Because a court converting a 12(b)(6) motion into a motion for summary judgment must give the parties 10 days notice, and Trustmark was not given that notice, Trustmark argues that the case should be reversed and remanded.
Whenever a judge considers matters outside the pleadings in a 12(b)(6) motion, that motion is thereby converted into a Rule 56 Summary Judgment motion. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b);
Concordia v. Bendekovic,
This Circuit has consistently interpreted the notice rules strictly.
Finn v. Gunter,
The harmless error exception detailed in
Property Management
is a limited exception which we will not often recognize.
See, e.g., Jones,
Although the
Property Management
exception is limited, after having conducted a careful review of the record in this case, we believe that the case before us is sufficiently “unique” that the exception applies. To explain why, we turn to the rationale underlying the exception. “[T]he purpose of the rule is to notify the parties that the court may dispose of the case by summary judgment so that ‘the nonmoving party will have an opportunity to marshal its resources and ... rebut[ ] the motion for summary judgment with every factual and legal argument available.’ ”
Denis,
Similarly, in this case, Trustmark moved for an extension of time in which to file its response to the 12(b)(6) motion, stating: “ESLU’s Motion is a
comprehensive dis-
Also significant is the fact that when ESLU filed its 12(b)(6) motion it attached eight exhibits. 1 When Trustmark filed its response to the 12(b)(6) motion it attached twelve exhibits, denoted as Exhibits A-L. 2 In other words, Trustmark itself attached to its response the same kinds of information that ESLU attached to its motion. By doing so, it was inviting the district court to consider the same, a position inconsistent with its position on appeal.
Although pressed to do so at oral argument, Trustmark has been unable to show that it would have proffered additional evidence beyond exhibits A through L which it did attach to its response in the court below. Considering all of these factors-Trustmark’s express acknowledgment that the motion was a dispositive motion involving substantial legal and factual issues about the scope of the prior litigation; the fact that Trustmark followed ESLU’s lead and attached to its own response the evidence from the prior litigation that it deemed relevant; and the fact that it cannot now identify any additional evidence that it would have proffered-we determine that this case is sufficiently unique that even if the district court did convert the 12(b)(6) into a motion for summary judgment any error is harmless. Thus, we need not remand this case, but instead decide the merits of the res judicata claim at this time.
Based upon the record, we find that the district court also correctly determined that the second lawsuit was barred by res judicata. A party seeking to invoke res judicata must show that the prior decision (1) was rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction; (2) was final; (3) involved the same parties or their privies; and (4) involved the same causes of action.
In re Piper Aircraft Corp.,
Claims are part of the same “cause of action” when they “arise out of
Now to compare Trustmark I and Trustmark II. The parties cannot dispute that both lawsuits, allege breach of the MGUA. However, Trustmark attempts to circumvent this problem by arguing that the second lawsuit involves the
12 different policies.
Each individual error, Trust-mark claims, is separate and distinct; thus the claims are not the same, but are instead 42 separate wrongs. Although Trustmark points out the individual errors made by ESLU, that is not dispositive. A series of breaches of the same contract, all occurring before filing suit, should be brought in that suit.
See, e.g.,
Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 24 cmt. d (1982) (“When a defendant is accused of successive but nearly simultaneous acts, or acts which though occurring over a period of time were substantially of the same sort and similarly motivated, fairness to the defendant as well as the public convenience may require that they be dealt with in the same action.”);
Prime Mgmt. Co., Inc. v. Steinegger,
The similarities between the two lawsuits are clear. Both involve breaches of the same contract, committed by the same party and involving the same general type of conduct. Trustmark itself attempted to amend its complaint to add the claims to the first lawsuit. In so doing, it stated that the claims in the second complaint were “related to the same basic set of circumstances presented in both the initial and Amended Complaint.” Trust-mark also must admit that some of the same witnesses will be called to explain Trustmark II as were called in Trustmark I. In this situation, where the second lawsuit alleges a breach of the same contract that was breached in the first, by the same party, in the same general manner, those actions constitute the factual predicate, and any claims relating to that contract should be brought in the same lawsuit. 3
Because “[r]es judicata bars the filing of claims which were raised or could have been raised in an earlier proceeding,” relevant in this analysis is when the facts arose.
Ragsdale,
Trustmark argues, however, that the delayed discovery doctrine should apply to this case. The delayed discovery rule prevents a cause of action from accruing until the plaintiff either knows or reasonably should know of the act giving rise to the cause of action.
Hearndon v. Graham,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Those exhibits were all documents from the Trustmark I record, including the complaint, the answer and motion to dismiss, the scheduling order by the court, the motion to amend the complaint and the order permitting that amendment, the pretrial statement by the parties, the order granting ESLU. final summary judgment, and the final judgment in favor of ESLU.
. Those exhibits included either documents from the Trustmark I record or documents relating to that litigation, including the district court's order from Trustmark I, the plaintiff’s motion and amended motion for extension of discovery, the magistrate’s ruling on those motions, a letter from one of the attorneys to the other, a motion to file a second amended complaint, the contract, objections to the magistrate’s order denying Trustmark's motion for extended discovery and corresponding affidavits in support, and a joint pretrial statement.
. We recognize also that Trustmark also sued ESLU for fraud and misrepresentation, claiming that ESLU breached the Termination Amendment. The parlies executed that Amendment to the MGUA in order to terminate their relationship; the decision to terminate the relationship was caused by what Trustmark believed were the repeated breaches of the MGUA by ESLU. Under the Termination Amendment, ESLU was not allowed to offer renewal coverage to employers after August 1, 1998. ESLU allegedly stated that two
Res judicata acts as a bar “to all legal theories and claims arising out of the same operative nucleus of fact.”
Pleming v. Universal-Rundle Corp.,
We also note that in Trustmark I, ESLU counterclaimed for breach of the Termination Amendment because it had not been compensated under that Amendment. At that time Trustmark asserted, as a defense to the counterclaim, that ESLU had not performed. Had it so desired, Trustmark clearly could have claimed a breach of the Amendment at that time. We conclude that this portion of the contract, regardless of whether it is an amendment, arises out of the same nucleus of facts as Trustmark I.
