WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellant David Taylor (“Taylor”) appeals the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment in favor of Defendant-Appellee Charter Provo School, Inc. d/b/a Provo Canyon School (“New Provo Canyon”), holding that New Provo Canyon is not a state actor for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Concluding that the district court’s holding is correct, we affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This case involves claims arising from the psychiatric treatment Taylor received while a student/patient at New Provo Canyon, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Defendant-Ap-pellee Charter Medical Corporation (“CMC”) and a private, adolescent, residential hospital in Provo Canyon, Utah. Taylor was a minor when his mother voluntarily admitted him to New Provo Canyon where he was a residential patient from October 1990 to August 1991.
After attaining the age of majority, Taylor filed suit in state court in 1995 against New Provo Canyon and CMC, alleging various state law claims — fraud, medical negligence, false imprisonment, breach of fiduciary duty, and gross negligence — arising from his treatment at New Provo Canyon. After the defendants removed the case to district court on diversity grounds, Taylor amended his complaint to add specified § 1983 claims.
New Provo Canyon then moved for partial summary judgment as to the § 1983 claims only, insisting that it was not “acting under color of state law” when it treated Taylor and
was thus not liable as a state actor under § 1983. Taylor countered that consideration of New Provo Canyon’s position on the “state actor” issue is foreclosed by the Tenth Circuit ease of
Milonas v. Williams.
Milonas
was a class action suit brought against the Provo Canyon School (“Old Provo Canyon”) in 1980. In
Milonas,
a district court in Utah found that Old Provo Canyon — -an independent institution not then affiliated with New Provo Canyon or CMC in any way — was a state actor for the purposes of § 1983 and enjoined Old Provo Canyon from continuing specified practices. The Tenth Circuit affirmed.
In the instant litigation, which commenced after CMC formed New Provo Canyon to acquire the assets of Old Provo Canyon, Taylor asked the district court to take judicial notice of the state actor holdings in both the district and the appellate court decisions in
Milonas
to establish that New Provo Canyon is a state actor for purposes of the present suit.
The district court rejected Taylor’s argument and granted New Provo Canyon’s motion for partial summary judgment, dismissing Taylor’s § 1983 claims only.
The parties tried the remaining state court claims to a jury, which found that New Provo Canyon was 25% at fault for the damages Taylor suffered.
After the court determined that New Provo Canyon was liable to Taylor in the amount $7,500, Taylor timely filed a notice of appeal.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de
novo
and its refusal to take judicial notice for abuse of discretion.
B. Judicial Notice
In his appellate brief, Taylor argues that, “as a matter of stare decisis, collateral estoppel, or judicial notice, the district court’s decision in
Milonas
should inform the decision of the district court and the decision of this Court.” Taylor’s contentions are wholly without merit. We write primarily to address when, if ever, a court can take judicial notice of the factual findings of another court, and we turn to this issue first.
Taylor argues that the district court erred in not taking judicial notice of the
Milonas
courts’ determination that Old Provo Canyon was a state actor. Rule 201 of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides that a court
may
take judicial notice of an “adjudicative fact” if the fact is “not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot be questioned.”
Taylor asserts that the factual findings of the district court in
Milonas
— upheld on appeal — fall within this second category. We disagree.
We have not previously addressed this precise issue, but the Second,
Eighth,
and
Eleventh Circuits
have, holding that, even though a court may take judicial notice of a “document filed in another court ... to establish the fact of such litigation and related filings,”
a court cannot take judicial notice of the factual findings of another court. This is so because (1) such findings do not constitute facts “not subject to reasonable dispute” within the meaning of Rule 201;
and (2) “were [it] permissible for a court to take judicial notice of a fact merely because it had been found to be trae in some other action, the doctrine of collateral estoppel would be superfluous.”
In
General Electric Capital Corporation v. Lease Resolution
Corporation,
the Seventh Circuit adopted a rule similar, but not identical, to that of the Second and Eleventh Circuits. The court in
General Electric
held that the district court had erred in taking judicial notice of a finding that a settlement in a prior, unrelated proceeding was “fair, reasonable, and adequate.” The Seventh Circuit held that these findings did not qualify as facts “not subject to reasonable dispute.”
The court did not, however, adopt a
per se
rule against taking judicial notice of an adjudicative fact in a court record, stating:
We agree [with the Second and Eleventh Circuits] that courts generally cannot take notice of findings of fact from other proceedings for the truth asserted therein because these are disputable and usually are disputed. However, it is conceivable that a finding of fact may satisfy the indisputability requirement of Fed.ft.Evid. 201(b).
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WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellant David Taylor (“Taylor”) appeals the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment in favor of Defendant-Appellee Charter Provo School, Inc. d/b/a Provo Canyon School (“New Provo Canyon”), holding that New Provo Canyon is not a state actor for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Concluding that the district court’s holding is correct, we affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This case involves claims arising from the psychiatric treatment Taylor received while a student/patient at New Provo Canyon, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Defendant-Ap-pellee Charter Medical Corporation (“CMC”) and a private, adolescent, residential hospital in Provo Canyon, Utah. Taylor was a minor when his mother voluntarily admitted him to New Provo Canyon where he was a residential patient from October 1990 to August 1991.
After attaining the age of majority, Taylor filed suit in state court in 1995 against New Provo Canyon and CMC, alleging various state law claims — fraud, medical negligence, false imprisonment, breach of fiduciary duty, and gross negligence — arising from his treatment at New Provo Canyon. After the defendants removed the case to district court on diversity grounds, Taylor amended his complaint to add specified § 1983 claims.
New Provo Canyon then moved for partial summary judgment as to the § 1983 claims only, insisting that it was not “acting under color of state law” when it treated Taylor and
was thus not liable as a state actor under § 1983. Taylor countered that consideration of New Provo Canyon’s position on the “state actor” issue is foreclosed by the Tenth Circuit ease of
Milonas v. Williams.
Milonas
was a class action suit brought against the Provo Canyon School (“Old Provo Canyon”) in 1980. In
Milonas,
a district court in Utah found that Old Provo Canyon — -an independent institution not then affiliated with New Provo Canyon or CMC in any way — was a state actor for the purposes of § 1983 and enjoined Old Provo Canyon from continuing specified practices. The Tenth Circuit affirmed.
In the instant litigation, which commenced after CMC formed New Provo Canyon to acquire the assets of Old Provo Canyon, Taylor asked the district court to take judicial notice of the state actor holdings in both the district and the appellate court decisions in
Milonas
to establish that New Provo Canyon is a state actor for purposes of the present suit.
The district court rejected Taylor’s argument and granted New Provo Canyon’s motion for partial summary judgment, dismissing Taylor’s § 1983 claims only.
The parties tried the remaining state court claims to a jury, which found that New Provo Canyon was 25% at fault for the damages Taylor suffered.
After the court determined that New Provo Canyon was liable to Taylor in the amount $7,500, Taylor timely filed a notice of appeal.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de
novo
and its refusal to take judicial notice for abuse of discretion.
B. Judicial Notice
In his appellate brief, Taylor argues that, “as a matter of stare decisis, collateral estoppel, or judicial notice, the district court’s decision in
Milonas
should inform the decision of the district court and the decision of this Court.” Taylor’s contentions are wholly without merit. We write primarily to address when, if ever, a court can take judicial notice of the factual findings of another court, and we turn to this issue first.
Taylor argues that the district court erred in not taking judicial notice of the
Milonas
courts’ determination that Old Provo Canyon was a state actor. Rule 201 of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides that a court
may
take judicial notice of an “adjudicative fact” if the fact is “not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot be questioned.”
Taylor asserts that the factual findings of the district court in
Milonas
— upheld on appeal — fall within this second category. We disagree.
We have not previously addressed this precise issue, but the Second,
Eighth,
and
Eleventh Circuits
have, holding that, even though a court may take judicial notice of a “document filed in another court ... to establish the fact of such litigation and related filings,”
a court cannot take judicial notice of the factual findings of another court. This is so because (1) such findings do not constitute facts “not subject to reasonable dispute” within the meaning of Rule 201;
and (2) “were [it] permissible for a court to take judicial notice of a fact merely because it had been found to be trae in some other action, the doctrine of collateral estoppel would be superfluous.”
In
General Electric Capital Corporation v. Lease Resolution
Corporation,
the Seventh Circuit adopted a rule similar, but not identical, to that of the Second and Eleventh Circuits. The court in
General Electric
held that the district court had erred in taking judicial notice of a finding that a settlement in a prior, unrelated proceeding was “fair, reasonable, and adequate.” The Seventh Circuit held that these findings did not qualify as facts “not subject to reasonable dispute.”
The court did not, however, adopt a
per se
rule against taking judicial notice of an adjudicative fact in a court record, stating:
We agree [with the Second and Eleventh Circuits] that courts generally cannot take notice of findings of fact from other proceedings for the truth asserted therein because these are disputable and usually are disputed. However, it is conceivable that a finding of fact may satisfy the indisputability requirement of Fed.ft.Evid. 201(b). This requirement simply has not been satisfied in this case.
It is not necessary at this point for us to determine whether courts in this circuit are never permitted to take notice of the factual findings of another court or are permitted to do so on
rare
occasion, subject to the Rule 201’s indisputability requirement, because the
Milonas
courts’ state actor determination cannot clear the rale’s “indisputability” hurdle.
That Old Provo Canyon was a state actor for the purposes of the
Milonas
suit (let alone for the purposes of the present suit) was certainly open to dispute and was, in fact, disputed by the parties. That determination simply was not the type of “self-evident truth[] that no reasonable person could question, [a] truism[ ] that approaches] platitude[ ] or banalitfy],” as required to be eligible for judicial notice under Rule 201.
In addition, the
Milonas
courts’ state actor determination is not an “adjudicative fact” within the meaning of Rule 201. Whether a private party is a state actor for the purposes of § 1983 is a mixed question of fact and law
and is thus subject to our
de novo
review.
Rule 201 authorizes the court to take notice only of “adjudicative
facts,”
not legal determinations.
Therefore, a court cannot take judicial notice of another court’s legal determination that a party constituted a state actor for the purposes of § 1983: That determination is neither an adjudicative fact within the meaning of Rule 201 nor beyond “reasonable dispute.”
This result is wholly consistent with our precedent. In
Colonial Leasing Co. of New England v. Logistics Control
Group,
we addressed whether, in a creditor’s subsequent suit against its debtor for fraudulent transfer of assets, the district court had improperly taken judicial notice of the existence of a prior judgment in favor of that creditor.
In holding that the district court did not abuse its discretion, we stated that “[t]he district court could properly take judicial notice, under Rule 201(b), of the judgment
for the limited purpose of taking as true the action of the Oregon court in entering judgment for [the creditor] against [the debtor]
.... The judicial act itself was not a fact ‘subject to reasonable dispute’... .”
This language suggests that a court cannot (at least as a general matter) take judicial notice of a judgment for other, broader purposes. We hold so expressly today.
The sole relevant case Taylor cites in favor of his argument,
Kinnett Dairies, Inc. v. J.C. Farroiv,
lends him no succor. In
Kinnett,
the plaintiff requested that the district court “take judicial notice of the record in [a separate, but related case] and asked the clerk to bring it into the courtroom particularly the discovery depositions.
The district court stated in its opinion that it had taken “judicial notice” of the subject material, but did not clarify of what exactly it had taken notice. On appeal, the defendant objected to the inclusion of the depositions and other evidence in the record. We rejected the defendant’s argument, noting that the defendant (1) had not objected to the plaintiffs request for judicial notice in the district court and (2) had been granted the opportunity to submit its own evidence and to question those parties whose depositions were made part of the record.
In his brief, Taylor argues that, in so holding in
Kinnett,
we went beyond simply permitting a district court to take judicial notice of facts found true by another court, actually allowing the district court to take “as true certain evidence in depositions in a completely separate case.”
Taylor misreads
Kinnett.
In fact, the issue in
Kinnett
was not even properly categorized as one of judicial notice, despite the court’s use of that term. A fact that has been judicially noticed is not subject to dispute by the opposing party — indeed, that is the very purpose of judicial notice.
The district court in
Kinnett,
however, did not accept the deposition testimony and evidence presented to it as true, but rather granted the defendant the opportunity to present counter-evidence and examine witnesses on the issues covered by the alleged judicially-noticed deposition testimony.
The court did not, as Taylor asserts in his brief, take “as true certain evidence in depositions in a completely separate case.” It simply admit
ted into evidence deposition testimony taken in another case.
Kinnett,
therefore, in no way conflicts with our holding today that the district court did not err in refusing to take judicial notice of the
Milonas
courts’ state actor determination.
C. Stare Decisis
We dispense with Taylor’s remaining two arguments quickly. First,
Milonas
is not entitled to stare decisis effect in this Circuit because it is a Tenth Circuit case, and there is no rule of intercircuit stare decisis.
Moreover, “[sjtare decisis means that like facts will receive like treatment in a court of law.”
Milonas
was a class action suit, in which the federal district court in Utah looked to Old Provo Canyon’s treatment of the class as a whole to determine whether state action existed.
The present inquiry — • whether New Provo Canyon’s treatment of one individual constituted state action — differs substantially from that in
Milonas,
irrespective of whether, for purposes of a class action suit, Old Provo Canyon’s treatment of its patients generally constituted state action. Thus, the question here does not present the necessary “like facts” to trigger the stare decisis doctrine.
D. Collateral Estoppel
For the very same reason, Taylor’s collateral estoppel argument fails. Collateral estoppel — or claim preclusion — is applied to bar litigation of an claim previously decided in another proceeding by a court of competent jurisdiction when — but only when — the facts and the legal standard used to assess the facts are the same in both proceedings.
Collateral estoppel does not bar the litigation of the state actor issue in the present suit because, although an entity may be deemed a state actor generally, in the case of a private party, the relevant question is whether the specific conduct in question constituted state action.
Milonas
determined that Old Provo Canyon’s challenged conduct — treatment of the class — constituted state action. That conduct is irrelevant to whether New Provo Canyon’s individualized treatment of Taylor constitutes state action. The facts underlying the two disputes are by no means the same.
Finally, finding no merit in Taylor’s remaining arguments, we decline to address them.
III.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.