This action is brought under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983. The district court first abstained from ruling to await the conclusion of state proceedings. The Alabama Supreme Court rendered judgment adversely to the plaintiff, Wendell Webb, and the defendants moved the district court for summary judgment on grounds of res judicata or collateral estoppel. The summary judgment motion was granted on April 9, 1987. We reverse the summary judgment because
I. Background
Wendell Webb had care of a foster child, Darrin Yosyka, pursuant to a long-term foster care agreement with the Lee County Department of Pensions and Security entered into December 15, 1981. On January 20, 1984, Darrin was removed from Webb’s foster care without a hearing and put into state custody. Webb pursued return of the child through a post-removal administrative hearing conducted by the Alabama Department of Pensions and Security. Webb was represented by counsel, and the evidence before the panel came from some fifty witnesses. On a best interest of the child theory, the administrative panel upheld the state’s removal.
Webb appealed the administrative panel’s decision to the Family Court Division of the Circuit Court of Montgomery County. On December 28, 1984, the family court held that Webb had standing to appeal as a matter of foster parents’ due process rights. The court also held that Webb had no statutory right to appeal the temporary hearing procedure, and therefore determined that Webb’s only avenue of appeal was by petition for writ of common law certiorari. Webb filed such a petition on January 15, 1985. The family court reviewed the case on the record and, on April 16,1986, found that thе administrative panel’s decision was supported by substantial evidence. Webb appealed to the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals. Finding evidence to support the decision based on the appropriate best interest of the child test, the civil appeals court affirmed the family court on October 8, 1986. Webb v. State, Dept. of Pensions & Security,
Meanwhile, Webb filed this section 1983 suit in federal district court on January 18, 1985. The complaint alleged four counts: 1) loss of property and liberty interests because of Darrin’s removal without due process of law; 2) loss of property and liberty interests because of failure to provide adequate notice of charges against Webb in the administrative hearing; 3) a pendent state claim of breach of the long-term foster care agreement; and 4) a pendent state claim of conspiracy to defraud Webb by making false representations with regard to the placement of Darrin.
In its first order, the district court dismissed the suit brought against the state departments as barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Invoking the federal abstention doctrine, the district court abstained from deciding the suit brought against the state officials. In its second order, following completion of the state proceеdings, the district court found that the “causes of action in the instant case arose from the same circumstances relied upon in the State cause of action and either were or could have been raised in that proceeding,” and that “the federal question (due process) was raised in the State Court and was finally decided against the Plaintiff.” The district court dismissed the cause of action “as barred by the princiрles of res judicata or collateral estoppel.”
The parties allege no disputed issues of fact in this case, and therefore summary judgment is reviewed de novo as to the correct application of law. Tackitt v. Prudential Ins.,
II. Analysis
State preclusion of federal claims arises from the Full Faith and Credit Clause, U.S. Const., Art. IV, § 1, as implemented by 28 U.S.C.A. § 1738:
Such Acts, records and judicial proceedings or copies thereof, so authenticаted, shall have the full faith and credit in every court within the United States and its Territories and Possessions as they have by law or usage in the courts of such State, Territory, or Possession from which they are taken.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court has directed federal courts addressing section 1983 suits fully to apply state preclusion principles when considering preclusive effects of state decisions. Migra v. Warren City School Dist.,
The benchmark Alabama case reciting the elements necessary for a finding of res judicata or collateral estoppel is Wheeler v. First Alabama Bank of Birmingham,
The elements of res judicata are as follows: 1) prior judgment rendered by court of competent jurisdiction; 2) prior judgment on the merits; 3) parties to both suits substantially identical; and 4) same cause of action present in both suits. If these elements are present, then the former judgment is an absolute bar to any subsequent suit on the same cause of action, including any issue which was or could have been litigated in the prior action.
Collateral estoppel operates whеre the subsequent suit between the same parties is not on the same cause of action. Requirements for collateral estoppel to operate are 1) issue identical to one involved in previous suit; 2) issue actually litigated in prior action; and 3) resolution of the issue was necessary to the prior judgment. If these elements are present, the prior judgment is conclusive as to those issues actually detеrmined in the prior suit.
A. Collateral Estoppel
Whether part of the same cause of action or not, if the due process claims raised under section 1983 were not decided in the state court proceedings, there can be no collateral estoppel. Conley v. Beaver,
In considering Webb’s standing to appeal the administrative panel’s decision, however, the Montgomery family court did discuss Webb’s due process rights as a foster parent. The issue arose in the court’s response to the defendants’ motion to dismiss Webb’s appeal: “The question of standing is dependent upon the question of whether or not Mr. Webb, as a foster parent, is entitled to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment.” The court concluded that, “having established that Mr. Webb had a right to a due process hearing, it cannot be said that due process would prevent the right to appeal an adverse decision; therefore, the only real question is what method of appeal is cоrrect.”
The defendants maintain that the family court’s discussion of Webb’s constitutional rights actually decided Webb’s section 1983 claims. Standing to appeal was disputed because Alabama provided neither an explicit statutory basis nor direct precedent for the post-termination proceedings governing foster parent care in Alabama.
B. Res Judicata
Given that the due process claims are not issue precluded, they can be claim precluded only if the claims raised in the state and federal litigation are part of the same cause of action. The pivotal question concerning res judicata in this case is whether under Alabama law the due pro-cess claims are part of the same cause of action as the foster care termination claims.
Alabama courts have used many and varied tests in deciding the same cause of action prong of res judicata. According to the “substantially the same evidence” test, Wheeler,
Even if the due process issue and the termination issue are deemed to arise from the same cause of action, Webb’s section 1983 claims do not appear to be res judicata because it is not clear that Webb could have raised those claims as part of his state proceedings. Alabama preclusion law bars a subsequent case оn the same cause of action “not only as to every matter which was raised and actually litigated, but as to every other matter which might have been litigated.” Abel v. Waters,
Webb’s claims with regard to the administrative hearings process could have been raised no earlier than on appeal in Montgomery’s family court. The family court had plenary jurisdiction through its enabling statute: “[A] judge of the family relations division ... shall have and exercise all the jurisdiction, powers, rights and authority, and possess all of the qualifications, perform all of the duties, and be subject to the obligations and penalties that other circuit judges have, exerсise, perform, and [are] subject to.” 1971 Ala. Acts 2707. Exercising its plenary jurisdiction, the family court decided that Webb’s only avenue of appeal was to petition for a common law writ of certiorari because it could find no statutory right of appeal for administrative review of foster care termination.
Common law writs in Alabama are significantly circumscribed in their scope of review:
The function of the common law writ of certiorari extends only to questions touching the jurisdiction of the subordinate tribunal and the regularity of its proceedings. The appropriate office of the writ is to correct errors of law apparent on the face of the record. The trial is not de novo, but on the record, and the only matter to be determined is the quashing, or affirmation, of the proceedings brought up for review.
Jefferson County v. Berkshire Dev. Corp.,
Keeping within the narrow confines of the common law writ, both the family court and the civil appeals court reviewed this case only on the record, for proper applica
The limited nature of common law certio-rari review is substantiated by the fact that Webb in his state appeal did try, without success, to raise one of the due process claims in this case. Webb included a section in his petition for common law certiora-ri that alleged “[injadequate notice as to how to proceed or what reasons were behind the child’s removal.” The family court completely ignored the claim in its judgment. Apparently proper under the rules of Alabama’s common law writ, the family court’s treatment of the notice issue is a compelling sign that Webb’s due process claims could not have been raised and cоnsidered in the context of the common law certiorari review.
The district court found one alternative to be a sufficient possibility to preclude Webb’s federal action: “[I]f Plaintiff’s appeal to the Circuit Court was limited, Plaintiff should have filed an additional action in Circuit Court for consolidation with Plaintiff’s initial action and raised those issues he now raises in this Court.” In this regard, the defendants argue that Ala.R. Civ.P. 18 would have allowed Webb to jоin new claims with the appeal, or that Ala.R. Civ.P. 42 would have allowed Webb to file separate claims and move to consolidate them with the appeal. Rules 18 and 42, however, are not appellate rules and do not authorize joinder and consolidation of original claims with claims on appeal. We have found no Alabama case that considers consolidation of a new action or joinder of additional claims with claims being appealed on the basis of a common law writ of certiorari. There is nothing to indicate that an Alabama court would make the significant exception posited by the defendants and the district court to the traditionally limited common law writ. There is no basis to conclude that Alabama law as a general rule would find claim preclusion because of a failure to attempt consolidation or joinder of a new claim with a common law certiorari appeal. Preclusion does not obtain where a plaintiff would have been unable to raise a subsequent federal claim in the prior state administrative action, Cosines,
The fact that this case began as an administrative hearing with no statutory right оf appeal requires us to treat the family court proceedings as a limited appeal based on a common law writ of certio-rari. As such, it is at best unclear that Webb could have raised his due process claims on the merits before the family court or the civil appeals court. Because it is unfounded to conclude that Alabama preclusion principles would have required Webb’s due procеss claims to be brought in the context of his common law writ of certiorari, those due process claims are not precluded.
The summary judgment is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
Notes
. Webb’s long-term foster care agreement was in fact the first and only one of its kind at the
. The family court’s statement in the course of its standing discussion that "[i]n this Court’s opinion, this hearing was sufficient to protect the due process rights of Mr. Webb” could only have been dicta and not a holding on the merits. First, the issue had not been argued by the parties. Second, the cotut followed the statement with its consideration of Webb’s right to appeal. The court’s conclusion that Webb had a right to appeal flatly contradicts a reading of the court’s due process "opinion” as final and on the merits. The district court was in error to rely on this statement as a conclusive determination of Webb’s due process claims.
. Similarity of the evidence was determinative in Lesley v. City of Montgomery,
. A logical relationship was found in Brooks v. Peoples Nat. Bank of Huntsville,
. In Sullivan v. Walther Builders, Inc.,
. In Ashurst v. Preferred Life Assurance Soc.,
. Available only where no other appeal can be had, Jefferson,
. Where definitive res judicata rules were similarly lacking, at least one Circuit has taken a cautious approach in a section 1983 case. In Jones v. City of Alton,
. Our holding that Webb's due process claims are not precluded should not be construed as any holding on the merits that Webb either did or did not receive due process.
