Joseph Manufacturing Company, Inc., and Safeco Insurance Company of America v. Olympic Fire Corporation

986 F.2d 416, 1993 WL 45162
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1993
Docket92-3074
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 986 F.2d 416 (Joseph Manufacturing Company, Inc., and Safeco Insurance Company of America v. Olympic Fire Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Manufacturing Company, Inc., and Safeco Insurance Company of America v. Olympic Fire Corporation, 986 F.2d 416, 1993 WL 45162 (10th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

JOHN P. MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Joseph Manufacturing Company, Inc., and Safeco Insurance Company of America, plaintiffs, appeal the dismissal of their claims for breach of contract, breach of implied warranty, and negligence on the ground their federal action was barred by the res judicata effect of a state court judgment. Joseph Mfg. Co. v. Olympic Fire Corp., 781 F.Supp. 718 (D.Kan.1991). Joseph and Safeco contend the district court erred in permitting the defendant, Olympic Fire Corporation, to raise the state court judgment in a dispositive motion long after the time the pretrial order had designated. Olympic maintains in cases involving comparative negligence, Kansas law mandates joinder of all inter-party claims and, following judgment, bars any claim not joined. Hence, Olympic argues the district court correctly allowed it to amend the pretrial order to raise the preclusion defense. We conclude the district court erroneously found amendment of the pretrial order was required to avoid manifest injustice to the defendant under the facts of this case and reverse.

In February or March 1987, Joseph returned a postcard mailed by Olympic, indicating Olympic should inspect and service its two fire extinguishers located at Joseph’s place of business. Joseph paid for the service and pressurizing, but a month later, a fire broke out in its dock area, and neither fire extinguisher functioned. The fire spread, causing extensive property damage before the fire department extinguished it.

On April 20, 1989, Richard Hornung, Joseph’s owner, together with Joseph and Safeco, Joseph’s insurer, filed this diversity suit in federal court (federal action) claiming Olympic breached its service contract and implied warranty in failing to maintain or negligently maintaining and servicing the fire extinguishers. Mr. Hornung sought damages for personal injury and property loss. He settled his claim prior to the dispositive summary judgment motion and is not a party to this appeal.

One week after the federal action was filed, on April 27, 1987, the owner of the building leased by Joseph filed suit in Johnson County, Kansas, (state action) against *418 Olympic and Joseph, her lessee. 1 In the state action, Joseph was not represented by the attorney who represented it in the federal action; however, counsel for Olympic was the same in both cases.

During trial in August 1990, the state court granted Joseph’s motion for directed verdict based on a lease provision exonerating the tenant from liability for any fire losses caused to the premises. Despite this holding, the state court permitted the jury to compare fault between Joseph and Olympic as if Joseph had remained a party. 2 The jury concluded Olympic was 55% at fault, and Joseph was 45% at fault.

Armed with that state judgment, on September 6,1990, Olympic returned to federal court and filed a motion for summary judgment, contending Joseph had failed to file a counterclaim asserting the negligence and breach of warranty claims in the state court; therefore, by operation of the Kansas one-trial rule, the plaintiffs were precluded from litigating those issues in federal court. Contemporaneously, Olympic filed a motion to amend the pretrial order to permit the filing of the summary judgment motion. The motion to amend was required because a scheduling order entered on August 4, 1989, had set December 1, 1989, as the deadline for filing motions to amend or to add parties. That same order also set February 5,1990, as the date of the final pretrial conference and imposed a deadline of April 16, 1990, for the filing of all dispositive motions.

Joseph objected to the motions, but the issues were not resolved until almost a year later, on November 14, 1991, when the case was reassigned to a new presiding judge. Following a hearing, the district court granted the motion to amend and the motion for summary judgment in favor of Olympic on all of Joseph’s and Safeco’s claims. The court denied summary judgment against Mr. Hornung individually. The court also denied Joseph’s later motion for reconsideration, and this appeal followed.

We review a decision on a motion to modify a pretrial order for abuse of discretion. Burnette v. Dresser Indus., Inc., 849 F.2d 1277, 1282 (10th Cir.1988). We begin our review with an analysis of the district court’s reasoning.

Obviously, the court was troubled by two divergent, but nonetheless compelling points. First, Kansas law does indeed have the preclusive effect advocated by Olympic. Thus, the court believed itself constrained to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims under the full faith and credit clause. Second, however, were the peculiar circumstances of this case which then seemingly denied plaintiffs any effective right to litigate their federal claims. Faced with this dilemma, the court ultimately concluded it was bound by 28 U.S.C. § 1738 3 to give judgment to Olympic because a state court would do so.

We do not take issue with the district court’s analysis of either the law of Kansas or the mandates of the full faith and credit clause. Rather, our disagreement is with its application of Fed.R.Civ.P. 16(e).

In our view, the keystone of this case is Rule 16(e). Before Olympic could even raise the merits of the state law as the basis of its preclusion defense, it had to demonstrate it was entitled to modify the pretrial order in the first instance. 4 If *419 defendant could not do so, the defense was eliminated regardless of the state of Kansas law.

Initially, we note, when entered, the pretrial order was silent on what the district court called, “the possible preclusive effect of the state court litigation.” 781 F.Supp. at 720. We also note when the federal pretrial order was concluded, the pendency of the state action and its status were well known to counsel for Olympic. Whether Joseph’s federal counsel knew of the status of that action is not certain from the record, but he claims he was not apprised. That claim is not significantly controverted by any fact in our record. We must also presume that both counsel, Kansas practitioners, were aware of the existence of the one-trial rule; however, whether each was equally aware of its applicability to this case is problematical. Based on subsequent events, however, it appears to us Olympic’s attorney was more certain than plaintiffs’ counsel that it would have applicability here.

Nonetheless, the state action proceeded to judgment without any consideration of the claims Joseph and Safeco asserted against Olympic in the federal action. The record, however, contains evidence that Joseph’s state counsel attempted to file a late counterclaim which was resisted by Olympic partly on the ground that allowing the counterclaim would subject Olympic to “needless duplicitous action.” Olympic now explains that it resisted the counterclaim because its purpose was to seek indemnity and not to raise issues dealing with comparative negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
986 F.2d 416, 1993 WL 45162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-manufacturing-company-inc-and-safeco-insurance-company-of-america-ca10-1993.