Defendant Heriberto Fernandez Monsis-vais entered a conditional guilty plea to a charge of possession with intent to distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). He reserved the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress the introduction into evidence of the marijuana he was accused of possessing. On that appeal, another panel of this court reversed the district court’s determination that the marijuana was admissible.
See United States v. Monsisvais,
The instant appeal arises from the remand. Instead of dismissing the case against defendant or proceeding to try defendant without the benefit of the marijuana that was the subject of the prior appeal, the government filed, and was granted, a motion to be permitted to present evidence at a supplemental hearing on the motion to suppress. At the supplemental hearing the government provided the evidence this court found lacking in the first hearing, 1 and on the basis of that additional evidence the district court ruled the marijuana evidence was not to be suppressed. The instant appeal is from that ruling.
We directed the parties to submit memorandum briefs on whether the district court’s order was indeed appealable. After considering those briefs we are satisfied that we have jurisdiction. In effect the guilty plea was never withdrawn nor was there any retrial. Rather, the case is in the same posture as at the time we heard the first appeal, except that the government had a second opportunity to present evidence.
Merely stating the posture of the present case answers, we believe, the only issue before us on appeal: whether the trial court erred in conducting the supplemental hearing. We hold that the supplemental hearing on the motion to suppress was improper because this court’s decision in Monsisvais I was the law of the case and therefore binding on the district court on remand.
The law of the case “doctrine posits that when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case.”
Arizona v. California,
“[i]n terms of the dynamics between trial and appellate courts, the phrase ‘law of the case’ signifies, in broad outline, that a decision of an appellate tribunal on a particular issue, unless vacated or set aside, governs the issue during all subse *116 quent stages of the litigation in the nisi prius court, and thereafter on any further appeal.”
Id.
at 150 (citing
Arizona v. California,
“[w]hen a case is appealed and remanded, the decision of the appellate court establishes the law of the case and it must be followed by the trial court on remand. If there is an appeal from the judgment entered after remand, the decision on the first appeal establishes the law of the case to be followed on the second.”
IB J. Moore, J. Lucas
&
T. Currier,
Moore’s Federal Practice
If 0.404[1], at 119 (2d ed. 1991) (footnote omitted) (emphasis in original). This court has accepted the doctrine as “a restriction self-imposed by the courts in the interests of judicial efficiency. It is a rule based on sound public policy that litigation should come to an end, and is designed to bring about a quick resolution of disputes by preventing continued re-argument of issues already decided.”
Gage v. General Motors Corp.,
Although the specific circumstances of this case are unusual, there have been closely analogous cases. They support our holding.
United States v. White,
Another instructive case is
Baumer v. United States,
We recognize that the law of the case doctrine has long been considered only a rule of practice in the courts and not a limit on their power.
See Messinger v. Anderson,
The government does not contend that any of the three circumstances that might justify departing from the law of the case exist in this ease, and it is clear that none do. The “different or new evidence” exception does not apply because, as the border patrol agent acknowledged, III R. 49-50, the additional evidence provided by the government at the supplemental hearing was evidence it had in its possession, but failed to produce, at the time of the original hearing. In Baumer, the court said
“[t]here is nothing in the record to indicate that the evidence produced at the hearing after remand was unavailable to the taxpayers during the first trial. The taxpayers simply chose not to produce that evidence. They chose their trial strategy, litigated accordingly, and lost. They are not now entitled to resurrect a previously abandoned issue.”
Baumer,
“[t]he ‘different evidence’ exception to the law of the case doctrine does not apply when a trial court gratuitously jettisons the rule in order to address an issue explicitly decided, and foreclosed, in an earlier appeal in the same case. Any other outcome would severely undermine the efficacy of the doctrine. If, by the simple expedient of flaunting the law of the case, a trial court which should have deferred to an appellate court’s resolution of an issue could proceed to address the issue anew, then the doctrine would disappear into thin air.” Id. at 151.
The government argues that our earlier opinion merely foreclosed examination of the legal bases by which the stop of defendant’s truck could be challenged or justified but did not forbid the court from considering additional evidence bearing on that legal issue. The district judge believed that the law of the case doctrine applied, but he also read our decision in
Monsisvais I
as inviting the presentation of additional evidence on the issue of admissibility. While we understand how the district court might so read our decision, that is an incorrect reading. The
Monsisvais I
opinion pointed out the deficiencies in the government’s evidence at the original sup
*118
pression hearing; but it also explicitly decided the issue of the legality of the stop of defendant’s vehicle. The prior panel’s determination was that the facts the government presented during the court proceedings leading to defendant’s conviction were insufficient as a matter of law to support the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress. This is a legal determination that became the rule of law in the case and was binding upon the district court after remand. It is unfortunate if the government blundered when attempting to make its case the first time. But we see no distinction in principle between this case and one that has been reversed because of insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
See Burks v. United States,
It does not matter that in cases that the government believes are closely analogous a different panel of this court upheld the denial of the motion for suppression. Nor does it matter that in an earlier, unrelated case the government had presented testimony that “Highway 85 is a well-documented alien smuggling route ... [where the Border Patrol had] apprehended many alien smuggling loads_”
See United States v. Pollack,
On remand, the district court was not free to consider additional evidence on the issue of legality of the stop; rather, it was obligated to follow this court’s determination. A different result would allow the district court to substitute its opinion for that of this court, which is what the law of the case doctrine is intended to avoid.
See United States v. Singleton,
The government argues that had the Monsisvais I panel intended to bar further proceedings on this issue it could have remanded the case with directions to permit defendant to withdraw his guilty plea and to dismiss the case. We reject that proposition also. Our judgment did not forbid retrial simply because we did not know what other evidence the government had that might permit a jury to find defendant guilty. If the case could be retried without the suppressed evidence and a conviction obtained, then we did not intend to forbid that action. But to permit a second opportunity to make the case on suppression that was deficient in the first place is not the same as an interlocutory order of the court that is subject to reconsideration any time before the case is ended.
REVERSED AND REMANDED. If the government has sufficient evidence apart from that which this court previously held must be suppressed, the court shall permit withdrawal of the guilty plea and allow the government to proceed. Otherwise, the court shall order the indictment dismissed.
Notes
. The record before the prior panel was "silent as to the characteristics of the area in which the vehicle was encountered, the proximity of the area to the border, the usual patterns of traffic on the particular road and information about recent or expected illegal immigrant activity in the area.”
Monsisvais I,
.
Some courts characterize the law of the case doctrine as applying to both findings of fact and conclusions of law.
See, e.g., United States v. Burns,
