Peterson v. Commonwealth

84 Va. Cir. 239
CourtMontgomery County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 2012
DocketCase No. CL09-005525; Case No. CL09-005526
StatusPublished

This text of 84 Va. Cir. 239 (Peterson v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Commonwealth, 84 Va. Cir. 239 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge William N. Alexander, II

I. Defendants ’Plea of Res Judicata and Motion to Dismiss

Defendants, the Commonwealth of Virginia, Charles W. Steger, and James A. Hyatt have moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ actions, with prejudice, on the grounds they are barred by the doctrine of res judicata. A brief recitation of the facts is necessary.

On April 16,2009, each plaintiff filed a separate, but identical, complaint simultaneously against Defendants Steger, Hyatt, and others in the Circuit Court of King George County and separate but identical complaints against these defendants and others in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County. The Commonwealth of Virginia was not a defendant in the King George actions. The Montgomery cases contained greater and more detailed factual allegations than the King George cases. The King George complaints were filed as Civil Rights actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and sought “compensatory damages against all defendants for causing injury and death to [each] decedent as well as damages in favor of the beneficiaries under Virginia Code § 8.01-50 . . .” in the amount of $10,000,000. The Montgomery County complaints are wrongful death actions and seek compensatory damages in the amount $10,000,000.

The claims for relief in all four cases arose out of the same occurrence, the shootings that occurred on April 16,2007, in the Norris Hall classrooms on the campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University when Seung-Hui Cho shot and killed thirty students and members of the faculty and wounded seventeen others.

The King George complaints were nonsuited on April 8, 2010, and refiled on October 7, 2010. In the King George actions, Defendants filed Motion[s] to Dismiss by Way of Special Appearance. On November 3, 2011, the King George County Circuit Court granted Defendants’ motions to dismiss and entered orders dismissing the actions with prejudice. The court found each complaint “was filed more than a year ago and that [plaintiffs] neither requested that the Clerk issue process in [these matters] nor made any attempt to serve Defendants with the Complaint[s] within one year of the filing of the Complaint[s].” The cases were dismissed pursuant to Rule 3:5(e) and Va. Code § 8.01-277(B). In a letter to counsel, Plaintiffs conceded the motions to dismiss were well founded and endorsed orders dismissing the King George cases with prejudice.

At the hearing on Defendants’ res judicata motion on January 6, 2011, plaintiffs nonsuited the Montgomery County complaints against Defendant Hyatt.

Does the dismissal with prejudice of the King George complaints invoke the application of res judicata so that the Montgomery cases against [241]*241Defendant Steger must now be dismissed with prejudice? Defendants contend res judicata applies, the King George dismissals based on Rule 3:5(e) and Code § 8.01-277(B) are dismissals with prejudice, the dismissals are considered to be on the merits, and the preclusive effect of Rule 1:6 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia applies. Because the King George claims, as well as all other claims arising from the Norris Hall shootings have been dismissed with prejudice, the Montgomery County cases against Defendant Steger must now be dismissed with prejudice.

Plaintiffs contend the cause of action asserted in the King George cases and dismissed are separate and distinct from that asserted in the Montgomery cases, that the King George actions were Civil Rights suits based on knowing violations of plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, that those suits are not based on negligence, that the King George cases were not dismissals on the merits but on procedural grounds of failure of service, that the preclusive effect of Rule 1:6 does not apply, and the Motion to Dismiss should be denied.

Plaintiffs, citing Davis v. Marshall Homes, Inc., 265 Va. 159, 164, 171 (2003), and relying on the four prong test for determining res judicata assert that, since the cause of action in the King George cases is different from that asserted in the Montgomery County cases, res judicata is not available as a defense. In Davis, the Court explicitly rejected application of the transactional analysis test in determining res judicata in favor of a same facts, same evidence test. Plaintiffs’ reliance on Davis is misplaced.

In Brock v. Voith Siemens Hydro Power Generation, 59 Va. App. 39, 46 (2011), Judge Kelsey discussed res judicata at length:

Virginia’s application of the claim preclusion component of res judicata was best stated a century ago: “Every litigant should have opportunity to present whatever grievance he may have” but if given an opportunity to do so and “having failed to avail himself of it, he must accept the consequences.” Miller v. Smith, 109 Va. 651, 655, 64 S.E. 956, 957 (1909). Thus, the “effect of a final decree is not only to conclude the parties as to every question actually raised and decided, but as to every claim which properly belonged to the subject of litigation and which the parties, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, might have raised at the time.” Smith v. Holland, 124 Va. 663, 666, 98 S.E. 676, 677 (1919) (citations omitted).
Claims precluded by res judicata include those “made or tendered by the pleadings,” as well as those “incident to or essentially connected with the subject matter of the litigation, whether the same, as a matter of fact, were or were not considered.” Lofton Ridge, L.L.C. v. Norfolk S. Ry., 268 Va. 377, 381, 601 S.E.2d 648, 650 (2004) (citations omitted). This “could-have-litigated-should-have-litigated principle,” Virginia Imps., Ltd. v. Kirin Brewery of Am., L.L.C., 50 Va. App. 395, [242]*242410, n. 6, 650 S.E.2d 554, 561 n.6 (2007), finds its roots in the earliest Virginia precedents and was recently incorporated into Rule l:6(a), which restates the general rule that, when applicable, claim preclusion applies “whether or not the legal theory or rights asserted in the second or subsequent action were raised in the prior lawsuit, and regardless of the legal elements or the evidence upon which any claims in the prior proceeding depended, or the particular remedies sought.”

On July 1, 2006, The Supreme Court adopted Rule 1:6 “promulgated to supersede the holding in Davis” and changed the “same evidence” test back to the very “transactional” approach rejected in Davis v. Marshall Homes. Virginia Imports, Ltd., supra; Asterita v. Ghent, 2009 Va. Cir. Lexis 23, 30-31 (2009); Gray v. Canellis, 77 Va. Cir. 187, 189 (2008). Rule 1:6 provides:

(a) Definition of Cause of Action.

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Bluebook (online)
84 Va. Cir. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-commonwealth-vaccmontgomery-2012.