On 5 March 1992 the Mayor & City Council of Ocean City (Ocean City) filed suit in the District Court for Worcester County against Edgar Hobbs German Jr. and G.T. Tech, Inc., appellees, for property damage sustained by an Ocean City police car in an automobile accident. On 25 June 1992, Sgt. *515 Albert Warner, Ocean City’s police employee who had been driving Ocean City’s vehicle in the pertinent accident, and his wife, appellants, sued appellees in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for damages resulting from his personal injuries and her loss of consortium stemming from the accident.
The District Court for Worcester County (Bloxom, J.) found both drivers, Sgt. Warner and Mr. German, to have been negligent and entered judgment in the property damage suit in favor of the appellees on 1 July 1992. The Circuit Court for Worcester County (Eschenburg, J.) affirmed that result on appeal. No further appeal was noted by Ocean City from that judgment.
Appellees thereafter filed in the litigation pending in Baltimore County a motion for summary judgment based on the preclusive effect of the Worcester County judgment. The Circuit Court for Baltimore County granted this motion on 20 April 1993. Apрellants filed this timely appeal. They present two questions, which we have slightly re-phrased, for review:
1. Did the lower court err in granting defendants’/appellees’ summary judgment?
2. Is the decision in the case of Mayor & City Council of Ocean City v. G.T. Tech and Edgar Hobbs German res judicata as against the appellants?
Facts
On 9 August 1991, Mr. German was driving a vehicle owned by G.T. Tech in Ocean City, Maryland, when he struck an Ocean City police car being driven by Sgt. Albert Warner in the course of his police duties. Both vehicles were damaged as a result of the accident. Sgt. Warner also suffered personal injuries.
On 5 March 1992, the Mayor & City Council of Ocean City filed suit (German I) against German and G.T. Tech in the District Court for Worcester County for property damage to its police car. The court heard testimony from both drivers during the 1 July 1992 trial and concluded that, although German was negligent in causing the accident, Warner was *516 contributorily negligent. Specifically, Judge Bloxom found that Sgt. Warner had failed to use due care by traveling at 35-40 miles per hour in the bus lane on Coastal Highway, during a “terrible rainstorm,” without his emergency equipment in operation. The court therefore entered judgment for the defendants/appellees. The Circuit Court for Worcester County, on appeal by Ocean City, affirmed the judgment and specifically the determination of Sgt. Warner’s contributory negligence. Judge Eschenburg posited his decision in the latter regard on Sgt. Warner’s failure to activate his emergency equipment under the weather and traffic conditions prevailing at the- time of the accident.
Appellants had filed suit (German II) against German and G.T. Tech in the Circuit Court for Baltimоre County on 25 June 1992. The record indicates that the defendants/appellees received notice of this filing on 6 July 1992, six days after the Worcester County District Court trial was held. Appellees filed a Motion for Summary Judgment against appellants on 5 March 1993, arguing that German II should be barred based on the principle of res judicata and appellants’ failure to join their personal claims in German I. The Circuit Court for Baltimore County granted this motion on 20 April 1993, and this appeal followed.
Discussion
Standard of Review
Summary judgment is reserved for situations in which the movants clearly demonstrate the absence of any genuine issue of material fact and that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Md.Rule 2-501(a). The threshold issue in a proper motion for summary judgment, therefore, is whether a significant factual dispute exists.
See Bond v. NIBCO, Inc.,
Because the absence of any material factual dispute is required for a grant of summary judgment, the trial court essentially makes a ruling as a matter of law.
See Heat & Power v. Air Products,
Finally, when analyzing the lower court’s decision, we ordinarily are confined to the basis relied on by that court and may not otherwise explain its conclusion by introducing new legal theories.
See Cheney v. Bell Nat’l Ins. Co.,
Res Judicata
In Maryland, the doctrine of res judicata is defined in the following terms:
*518 [A] judgment between the same parties and their privies is a final bar to any other suit upon the same cause of action, and is conclusive, not only as to all matters that have been decided in the original suit, but as to all matters which with propriety could have been litigated in the first suit.
See Rowland v. Harrison,
The parties in
German II,
the instant litigation, do not dispute the finality of the first judgment, nor do they dispute the fact that a single issue is common to the two actions, i.e. whether Sgt. Warner was contributorily negligent in causing the accident. Rather, the crux of their argument focuses on whether privity exists between appellants and Sgt. Warner’s еmployer, the Mayor & City Council of Ocean City. Recent Maryland caselaw indicates that an employment relationship alone can suffice to establish privity for purposes of res judicata. In
Deleon v. Slear,
Other Maryland caselаw, however, indicates that there are other, more involved, aspects to the concept of privity. As the Court of Appeals has explained:
[F]or the purpose of the application of the rule of res judicata, the term “parties” includes all persons who have a direct interest in the subject matter of the suit, and have a right to control the proceedings, make defense, examine the witnesses, and appeal if an appeal lies.... So, where persons, although not formal parties of record, have a direct interest in the suit, and in the advancement of their interest take open and substantial control of its prosecution, or they are so far represented by another that their interests receive actual and efficient protectiоn, any judgment recovered therein is conclusive upon them to the same extent as if they had been formal parties.
Ugast v. LaFontaine,
In further defining the application of the concept of privity within the context оf res judicata, we refer to the related procedural bar of collateral estoppel, in which this issue has been examined recently in greater depth. The doctrine of collateral estoppel is similar, but not identical, to that of res judicata.
2
One element they both share, however,
*520
is the common requirement of privity.
See Subsequent Injury v. Ehrman,
Maryland cases analyzing the concept of privity within the rules of collateral estoppel place great emphasis on the procedural rights of the party against whom the doctrine is to be invoked.
See generally, Leeds Federal v. Metcalf,
In discerning whether a party’s procedural rights have been addressed adequately, a court may focus on the nature of the interests binding the two parties, and, correspondingly, whether they share the same incentive in their separate litigation attempts.
See generally Subsequent Injury v. Ehrman,
Against this backdrop, we consider the Baltimore County Circuit Court’s decision to bar
German II
based on the principles of res judicata. At first glance, the employment relationship that exists in the present litigation appears to mirror the situation found in
Deleon,
in which the employee was found to be in privity with the employer. Upon a closer reading, however, the two cases are distinguishable. In
Deleon,
a single plaintiff sued one defendant on charges of defamation, lost that suit, and then sued a second defendant on the same charges. In his role as plaintiff in his first case, Dr. Deleon employed a comprehensive litigation strategy that involved taking more than twenty depositions, producing lengthy memoranda, and filing numerous exhibits with the
*522
courts.
Deleon,
The situation of the parties in the instant case is inapposite to that in Deleon. Although Sgt. Warner, a plaintiff in German II, was a witness in German I, he did not have the same degree of control that Dr. Deleon was permitted to exercise in his litigation. As nonparties in German I, neither Sgt. Warner nor his wife 3 were permitted to take depositions, file pleadings or documents with the court, or appeal from any court’s decision.
Moreover, there is a divergence of interests between Ocean City, which based its claim exclusively on damage done to its police car (Ocean City sued for $3,009.72 for its property loss), and the present appellants, who ground their case on personal damages not limited to the value of a car (the cumulative ad damnum clauses of their complaint sought $2.5 million). Thus, the interests of the two parties are simply not identical, and, correspondingly, they do not share the same incentives in their respective pursuits of litigation—a fact that may have played a role in Ocean City’s failure to petition the Court of Appeals for a writ of certiorari in German I. Although Sgt. Warner was an employee of the plaintiff in German I, this relationship, standing alone, is simply insufficient to establish the existence of privity in the instant case for purposes of res judicata.
Our conclusion is consistent with that of the Supreme Court of Georgia, which faced a strikingly similar factual situation in
Norris v. Atlanta & West Point R.R. Co.,
Norris and his wife subsequently filed a joint complaint against the railroad for injuries to Norris and his wife’s loss of consortium.
Id.
The railroad moved for summary judgment, relying on the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel.
Id.
On further appeal, the Supreme Court of Georgia reversed.
Norris,
Although under certain circumstances the master or, more rarely, the servant, may claim the benefits of a prior adjudication in favor of the other ... the master or servant who has never had a day in court cannot be barred by a prior adjudication against the other. An agency or master-servant relationship does not ipso facto constitute privity for purposes of res judicata or estoppel by judgment.... In the present case Mr. and Mrs. Norris are not in privity with SDSI. Therefore, they cannot be barred from litigating their action against the railroad by res judicata or collateral estoppel even though the issue of Norris’ negligence was present in the [previous] action.
Id.
In conclusion, we note that while the common interests implicit in an employment relationship ordinarily would tend to bind employers and employees in privity • for the purposes of res judicata, the facts of the case sub judice do not support such a holding. Rather, a court must examine whether each set of plaintiffs enjoyed the procedural protections to which they were entitled and if the purposes and effects of rеs judicata have been served. In the instant case, appellants, who were not parties in German I, were not afforded basic procedural rights available to the parties, including appellees, in that litigation. Although the underlying philosophy of res judicata places a premium on judicial economy, denying an effective day in court to partiеs whose interests were not adequately represented in the previous litigation would work a denial of due process.
Finally, appellees assert that the failure of Sgt. Warner and his wife to intervene in German I renders them bound by the results of that case. This contention is not consistent with the language of the Maryland Rules of intervention, which establish that a person seeking to intervene may be permitted to do so, but such a person is not under obligation to seek intervention. See Md.Rule 3-214(a) (1994) (“Upon timely motion, a person shall be permitted to intervene in an action____”) (emphasis added); Md.Rule 3-214(b) (1994) (“Upon timely motion a person may be permitted to intervene in an action....”) (emphasis added). Because Maryland law does not place an affirmative duty on appеllants to intervene, we cannot penalize them for electing to litigate their claims in another appropriate forum.
JUDGMENT REVERSED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLEES.
Notes
. This is of particular relevance to the instant case because appellees relied on res judicata as their sole legal ground for moving for summary judgment, according to what appears in the record extract. Although collateral estoppel additionally was asserted in appellees' Answer to the Bill of Complaint in German II, German and G.T. Tech did not rely on that ground in their Memorandum In Support of Motion For Summary Judgment. The record extract does not reveal that the trial judge, in granting summary judgment, considered any ground other than that raised in appellees’ motion. Accordingly, we shall consider whether the grant of that motion is legally correct on the ground of res judicata only.
.
See generally Esslinger v. Baltimore City, 95
Md.App. 607,
(1) the identity of parties;
(2) actual litigation of an issue or fact of law;
(3) essentialness of that determination to the final judgment; and
(4) the appealability of that determination by the party against whom
the issue preclusion is being asserted.
Esslinger v. Baltimore City,
. We note, in any event, that Ms. Warner patently has no employment relationship with Ocean City.
