Barge EMC-423 exploded on January 19, 2005, while under way between Joliet and Chicago with a cargo of clarified slurry oil. The blast threw deckhand Alex Oli-va into the water; he did not survive. Contending that Dennis Egan, master of the tug Lisa E that had been pushing the barge, had told Oliva to warm a pump using a propane torch, the United States obtained an indictment charging Egan and the tug’s owner (Egan Marine Corp.) with violating 18 U.S.C. § 1115, which penalizes maritime negligence that results in death, plus other statutes that penalize the negligent discharge of oil intо navigable waters.
After a bench trial, Judge Zagel found that the prosecution had established, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Egan gave the order to Oliva, that the torch caused the explosion, that Oliva died as a result, and that the barge released oil as a further result. That such an order, if given, was negligence (or worse) no one doubted; open flames on oil carriers are forbidden by Coast Guard regulations and normal prudence. The court sentenced Egan to six months’ imprisonment, a year’s supervised release, and restitution of almost $6.75 million. Egan Marine was placed on probation for three years and ordered to pay the same restitution, for which it and Egan are jointly and severally liable.
The criminal prosecution was the second trial of these allegations. Two years before the grand jury returned its indictment, the United States had filed a civil suit against Egan Marine seeking damages on the same theory: that Egan directed Oliva to warm the pump using a torch, whose flame
Egan and Egan Marine sought the benefit of issue preclusion (collateral es-toppel), arguing that the United States should not be allowed to contend that tliey are guilty beyond a reasonable doubt after Judge Leinenweber found that the proоf did not show culpability even by a prepon-deraré of the evidence. But Judge Zagel rejected this contention.
The Supreme Court has said that the outcome of a civil case has preclusive force in a criminal prosecution. See Yates v. United States,
United States v. Weems,
Alexander held that the outcome of an administrative proсeeding cannot be invoked to block the resolution of a criminal indictment. The .opinion observed that many administrative systems are designed to be informal and expeditious, and that when the agency loses an administrative adjudication it may not be entitled to judicial review.
When using these considerations of public policy to decide whether to give preclu-sive effect to administrative adjudications, Alexander drew on Standefer v. United States,
Standefer did not cast doubt on Yates. The considerations that led the Court to abjure nonmutual preclusion in the criminal-criminal sequence do not pertain to mutual preclusion in the civil-criminal sequence. Many a civil decision is fully explained (as Judge Leinenweber’s was), and all are reviewable on appeal. The Supreme Court understands mutual preclusion not just as a judicial work-saving device but as a matter of right for the litigants involved. See, e.g., Federated Department Stores, Inc. v. Moitie,
This is so even when one of the litigants is the United States. See, e.g., Montana v. United States,
There is of course a potential for nonmu-tuality in the civil-criminal sequence — but it is the United States that prefers a situation in which it can win but not lose. The United States filed the civil suit seeking damages and hoped to enjoy the fruits of victory. But it tells us that a loss meant little, because after losing it could pursue the criminal prosecution and ask a different judge or jury to reach a different outcome. The principal stakes in both the civil and criminal cases are money. Six months in prison are not to be sneezed at, but the main contest has been about recompense for Oliva’s death and the oil released from the barge. What would have been labeled “damages” in the civil case is called “restitution” in the criminal case, but the money cоvers the same losses either way. And had the criminal case gone to- trial first and defendants been acquitted, the United States doubtless would be arguing that it could still pursue civil remedies because of the different burdens of
Every litigant would like multiple chances tо win; that’s what the United States is claiming, while it contends that for Egan and Egan Marine any one loss would be dispositive (at least for financial issues). And, by bringing the civil case first, the United States received the benefit of civil discovery, which is more extensive than that allowed in criminal prosecutions by Fed. R. Crim. P. 16 — discovery that it could put to use in the criminal case as well as the civil one. We understand why the United States seeks these advantages but do not think it entitled to them, without the detriment of being bound by the civil judgment if it loses. If it fails to show some fact in the civil suit by a preponderance of the evidence, it is precluded from trying to show the same thing beyond a reasonable doubt.
Judge Zagel stated that, even if issue preclusion applies in the civil-criminal sequence (as we have сoncluded it does), he would exercise discretion not to use that doctrine in this prosecution. He did not say where that discretion comes from or address the significance of decisions such as Federated Department Stores that reject judicial efforts to treat rules of prеclusion as dispensable whenever judges prefer another outcome. See
Normal rules of preclusion have some flex. For example, “[a] new determination of the issue [may be] warranted by differences in the quality or extensiveness of the procedures followed in the two courts”. Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 28(3). In other words, if the first forum’s procedures do not conduce to sufficiently reliable decisions, the second forum may decide that it is best to determine the issue anew. This is what Alexander said about the difference betweеn administrative adjudication and criminal litigation. But Judge Zagel ■ did not conclude that Judge Leinenweber had conducted the civil trial unreliably or that any of the other exceptions in Restatement § 28 had been established; he simply announced that he would disregard the civil judgment because that course seemed best to him. That’s not an appropriate way to treat the outcome of a properly conducted federal civil trial.
Egan Marine was the only defendant in the civil suit. The United States maintains that Egan therеfore cannot receive the benefit of the judgment, which it sees as the sort of nonmutual issue preclusion forbidden by Standefer. (The United States also contends that Egan forfeited his entitlement to the benefit of issue' preclusion, but he preserved his position by telling the district court that he was adopting Egan Marine’s arguments on issue preclusion.)
Standefer used the word “nonmutual” to refer to the use of preclusion across different persons, so that A’s victory over C in one case would imply B’s victory over C in another. But the law of рreclusion has long recognized that if A and B are in a contractual relation (“in privity” as judges often say) then they are entitled to the same treatment under normal principles of mutual preclusion. Egan and Egan Marine were in such a relation. Indeed, in the civil suit the United States contended that Egan Marine was - vicariously liable for Egan’s acts precisely because of their employment relation. The civil suit was about Egan’s conduct, which was attributed to his employer, and Judge Leinenweber’s corе finding (which we quoted earlier) was that the United States had not shown that Oliva was using a propane torch at all, let alone that in using a torch he was follow-
Another way to see this is to recall that Standefer dealt with considerations unique to nonmutual preclusion in criminal litigation: acquittals are unexplained and unre-viewable on appeal. Judge Leinenweber’s decision, by contrast, was accompanied by an opinion and reviewable in this court— though the United States chose not to appeal. It is much easier to' see why a reviewable civil finding that X has not been shown by a preponderance of the evidence should foreclose a contention that X is true beyond a reasonable doubt than it is to carry one criminal acquittal over to a different case.
Because bpth Egan and Egan Marine are entitled to the benefit of the civil judgment, we need not discuss any of the remaining issues. The convictions are reversed, and the case is remanded for the entry of judgments of acquittal.
