Fournier v. Illinois Casualty Co.

391 N.W.2d 258, 1986 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1246
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 23, 1986
Docket85-1448
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 391 N.W.2d 258 (Fournier v. Illinois Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fournier v. Illinois Casualty Co., 391 N.W.2d 258, 1986 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1246 (iowa 1986).

Opinion

CARTER, Justice.

Plaintiff, Betty Jane Fournier, as administrator of a decedent’s estate and individually brought the present action against the defendant Illinois Casualty Company to recover amounts allegedly required to be paid under a policy of liability insurance for indemnification of a judgment debtor of plaintiff. The judgment debtor is a liquor licensee insured by the defendant for liability arising under the provisions of the Iowa dram-shop statute, Iowa Code § 123.92 (1981). The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on the primary ground that plaintiff’s claim both as administrator and in her individual capacity is barred under the doctrine of claim preclusion. For reasons which we will discuss, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

Plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of her deceased son and individually previously brought an action in the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County against the local chapter of the Fraternal Order of Eagles seeking to recover under the provi *259 sions of Iowa Code section 123.92 for damages recoverable under that statute from a licensed purveyor of alcoholic beverages. She successfully established in that action that her minor son, Brian, had been struck and killed by a driver who had become intoxicated by means of alcoholic beverages obtained from the Fraternal Order of Eagles. A judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff as administrator of her deceased son’s estate in the sum of $87,-644.22 and in favor of the plaintiff individually as mother of her deceased son in the amount of $100,000.

The defendant, who is the liability insurer of the Fraternal Order of Eagles on the claims in question, tendered the sum of $50,000 to the clerk of the district court contending that this payment fully satisfied its obligations to indemnify the judgment debtor for its insured liability. In declaratory judgment litigation subsequently brought by the insured judgment debtor, in which plaintiff intervened in her capacity as administrator, we made certain determinations with respect to claims made by the judgment debtor and judgment creditors for payment of additional amounts by defendant under its dram-shop insurance policy. That decision is contained in Fraternal Order of Eagles v. Illinois Casualty Co., 364 N.W.2d 218 (Iowa 1985).

In granting summary judgment in the present action, the district court concluded that the claims now being made are merely an effort to relitigate on a different theory the same claims that were rejected in the prior litigation. Whether that contention is correct is the issue we must decide on this appeal.

I. Scope of the Claim Determined in the Prior Litigation.

In the prior litigation against the defendant involving the limits of its policy, the insured, as judgment debtor, and the plaintiff, administrator, as a judgment creditor, urged that defendant’s obligations had not been fully discharged by the tender of $50,-000, which represented the bodily injury limit of the policy for injury to one person. Both judgment debtor and judgment creditor urged in that litigation that plaintiff, Betty Jane Fournier, in the dram-shop action, had received two separate and distinguishable recoveries for “injury in person”: one in her capacity as representative of her deceased son’s estate and a second in her capacity as mother of the decedent. It was urged that these were recoveries by two separate persons each of which was based on “injury in person.”

Based upon this theory, the judgment debtor and judgment creditor asked the court to construe defendant’s policy as requiring further payment on defendant’s part in addition to the sum which had already been tendered. In our decision in the prior litigation, 364 N.W.2d at 222, we rejected these contentions stating that “[n]o further recovery can be had on the policy under the theory that Betty as an individual parent was ‘injured in person.’ ” After so concluding, we further stated:

We do not decide whether any claim on her part as a parent under Iowa R.Civ.P. 8 based on Iowa Code section 123.92 for injury to property or to means of support would be compensable under other provisions of the policy because such issues are not raised in this case.

Id. at 222. In the present case, the contention advanced is that the defendant, Illinois Casualty Company, is required to make further indemnification of its insured for the judgments in the dram-shop action by reason of the policy coverages relating to injuries sustained as “property damage.”

We have recognized that declaratory judgment actions can give rise to claim preclusion in much the same manner as other types of litigation but only with respect to the same claim or cause of action. In Westway Trading Corp. v. River Terminal Corp., 314 N.W.2d 398, 401 (Iowa 1982), we stated:

Res judicata, in the sense of claim preclusion, applies only if the cause of action in the [prior] litigation was the same as the present action. A cause of action is the same when the asserted invasion of rights is the same. A plaintiff is not entitled to a second day in court simply *260 by alleging a new ground of recovery for the same wrong. In order to determine whether the cause of action is the same, we examine the protected right, the alleged wrong, and the relevant evidence.

Support for the foregoing view is found in Restatement (Second) Judgments § 33 (1980), which states:

A valid and final judgment in an action brought to declare rights or other legal relations of the parties is conclusive in a subsequent action between them as to the matters declared, and, in accordance with the rules of issue preclusion as to any issues actually litigated by them and determined in the action.

In the REPORTER’S NOTE accompanying this section, it is observed that

The problem of deciding the scope of a prior determination is one frequently encountered in other contexts.... [T]he same techniques used elsewhere can be applied to declaratory judgments, and, as noted, a declaratory judgment will often be more revealing in this regard than other judgments.

Id. at 340. The Restatement’s suggested test for determination of the dimensions of a claim is as follows.

(1) When a valid and final judgment rendered in an action extinguishes the plaintiff’s claim pursuant to the rules of merger and bar, ... the claim extinguished includes all rights of the plaintiff to remedies against the defendant with respect to all or any part of the transaction, or series of connected transactions, out of which the action arose.
(2) What factual grouping constitutes a “transaction,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
391 N.W.2d 258, 1986 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fournier-v-illinois-casualty-co-iowa-1986.