I attest to the accuracy and
integrity of this document
New Mexico Compilation
Commission, Santa Fe, NM
'00'05- 12:13:57 2014.02.20
Certiorari Denied, January 23, 2014, No. 34,466
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
Opinion Number: 2014-NMCA-025
Filing Date: November 19, 2013
Docket No. 31,280
JOE TUNIS, SHIRLEY WHEELER,
JOHN EWERT, and PATTY SALESSES,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
and
DONNA ROBBINS,
Plaintiff,
v.
COUNTRY CLUB ESTATES HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION, INC.,
Defendant-Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LUNA COUNTY
Daniel Viramontes, District Judge
Scott Hulse P.C.
R. Glenn Davis
El Paso, TX
for Appellants
L. Helen Bennett, P.C.
L. Helen Bennett
Albuquerque, NM
for Appellee
OPINION
1
FRY, Judge.
{1} Plaintiffs appeal from the district court’s order dismissing their action under Rule 1-
012(B)(6) NMRA for failure to state claims on which relief could be granted. The district
court reasoned that, under the doctrine of res judicata, the judgment in an earlier declaratory
judgment action precluded Plaintiffs’ claims in the present case.1 Because the district court
considered matters outside the pleadings, we conclude that the motion to dismiss was
converted to a motion for summary judgment.
{2} In the prior declaratory judgment action, Defendant Country Club Estates
Homeowners Association, Inc. (the Association), by its then president, Plaintiff Ewert,
sought a declaration that the Association’s governing board was the board headed by Ewert
(the Ewert Board) rather than a purportedly newly elected board (the Fletcher Board). The
district court in the prior action apparently confirmed an arbitration award declaring the
Fletcher Board to be the legitimate board. The Fletcher Board then sought in the same action
to recover its attorney fees from the individual members—Plaintiffs in the present case—of
the Ewert Board, but the district court in that case ordered the fees to be paid by the
Association. Now, in the present case, pursuant to a provision in the Association’s bylaws,
Plaintiffs (who were members of the Ewert Board) are seeking indemnification of the
attorney fees they incurred in defending against the attorney fee claim made by the Fletcher
Board in the prior case.
{3} Relying on Section 33 of the Restatement (Second) of Judgments (1982), we first
hold under the principle of claim preclusion that the judicial declaration of the parties’ status
in the prior declaratory judgment action does not preclude Plaintiffs’ claim for
indemnification of their attorney fees in the present action. Second, we conclude that under
the principle of issue preclusion, the issue of Plaintiffs’ indemnification claim was not
actually litigated in the prior action. Third, in response to the Association’s “right for any
reason” argument, we hold that summary judgment on the alternative ground of lack of
standing was improper due to disputed issues of material fact. We therefore reverse.
BACKGROUND
{4} This action on appeal and the prior case arose out of differing views by homeowners
regarding the development of properties of the Association. A majority of the homeowners
and the then-current board of directors, the Ewert Board, which included Plaintiffs, wanted
limited expansion; a minority of the homeowners wanted greater expansion. The minority
enlisted the developer to vote its undeveloped lots in a recall election with the goal of
1
As this Court recently stated in Pielhau v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
Co., “the term ‘res judicata’ encompasses both claim and issue preclusion.” 2013-NMCA-
112, ¶ 7 n.1 (No. 31,899, Sept. 23, 2013). We use the terms “claim preclusion” and “issue
preclusion” as much as possible rather than the term “res judicata.”
2
ousting Plaintiffs and the rest of the Ewert Board and electing a new board. The minority
prevailed in a recall election, and the Fletcher Board, which represented the wishes of the
homeowner minority, took office. Four of the seven members of the ousted Ewert Board are
Plaintiffs/Appellants in the case now before this Court.
{5} Following the recall election and installment of the Fletcher Board, the Ewert Board
filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment as to the validity of the recall election and
as to the legal governance of the Association. The complaint named as the plaintiff the
Association “by its President, John Ewert, Plaintiff” and named as the defendant “Pamela
Fletcher in her Representative Capacity as President of a Board of Directors Purportedly
Elected on October 29, 2007, Defendants.” We refer to this action as “the declaratory
judgment action.”
{6} During the pendency of the declaratory judgment action, the Fletcher Board
submitted the issues to arbitration through the Association’s architectural control
committee.2 The arbitrator determined that the recall election was effective and that the
Fletcher Board was the duly constituted Board of the Association. The district court appears
to have entered judgments confirming the award. The confirmed award apparently provided
that if the Ewert Board did not turn over the Association’s books and records or if it
unsuccessfully tried to set aside the award, the Ewert Board might be liable for the Fletcher
Board’s attorney fees.
{7} In a post-judgment hearing apparently related to the Ewert Board’s motion to vacate
the court’s judgments, the court addressed questions related to whether the Ewert Board
members could be held individually liable for the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees in the
declaratory judgment action. As of that hearing, it appears that the Association had paid the
attorney fees for the work done on behalf of the Ewert Board, at least through the arbitration.
The issue at the hearing centered on the Fletcher Board’s request for payment of its attorney
fees. In regard to those attorney fees, the Ewert Board members argued that the Fletcher
Board’s attorney fees should not be assessed against the Ewert Board members individually
because if they were, the Ewert Board members could seek indemnification from the
Association under a clause in the Association’s bylaws. They maintained that in order to
avoid circuitous litigation, the Association should simply pay the Fletcher Board’s attorney
fees, just as it had paid the Ewert Board’s attorney fees.
{8} The district court agreed with the Ewert Board and entered an order noting that
because the Ewert Board’s attorney fees were paid by the Association, “the fairest way to
2
The record on appeal does not contain any part of the arbitration proceeding, the
judgments entered in connection with the merits of the declaratory judgment action, or any
documents reflecting a motion by Plaintiffs to vacate any resulting judgment. Therefore, we
rely in part on statements in hearings and briefs as to what appears to have occurred in the
declaratory judgment action.
3
handle [the Fletcher Board’s] attorney[] fees is for counsel to be paid by [the Association.]”
This order appears to have ended the declaratory judgment action.
{9} Five of the seven members3 of the Ewert Board then filed a complaint against the
Association seeking recovery of $28,724.72, representing attorney fees they incurred to
defend against the Fletcher Board’s pursuit of fees against the Ewert Board members
individually in the declaratory judgment action. Plaintiffs alleged entitlement to the fees
under the indemnification clause contained in the Association’s bylaws. In part, the
provision states:
[The Association] shall indemnify any person who was or is a party . . . to
any . . . pending or completed action [or] suit . . . by reason of the fact that he
or she is or was a director, trustee, officer, employee[,] or agent of [the
Association] . . . against expenses (including attorney[] fees) . . . actually and
reasonably incurred by him or her in connection with such suit, action[,] or
proceeding if he or she acted in good faith and in a manner he or she
reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of [the
Association.]
Plaintiffs further alleged that they “were involved in the [declaratory judgment action] by
reason of the fact that they were members of [the Association’s] Board of Directors” and
also that “[t]he actions by Plaintiffs in connection with the [declaratory judgment action]
were . . . taken in good faith and based on what was reasonably believed to be in or not
opposed to the best interests of [the Association].” In its answer to the complaint, the
Association asserted affirmative defenses of res judicata and failure to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted, among other defenses.
{10} The Association, under the Fletcher Board’s governance, filed a motion to dismiss
based on its affirmative defense of res judicata. In their response to the motion to dismiss,
Plaintiffs argued that case law permits their claim to be asserted in a subsequent lawsuit and
that the two lawsuits involved neither the same parties nor the same claims. In regard to
their party status, Plaintiffs stated that they “were not parties to the [declaratory judgment
action], but to the extent they had any involvement in [that action] at all, it was in their
representative capacities, not in their individual capacities, as is the case here.”
{11} The Association responded, arguing, among other things, that Plaintiffs were barred
because they were parties or “parties in privity” in the declaratory judgment action, they
were individually named, and they could have asserted the claim in that action. The
Association also argued that the indemnification issue was asserted and adjudicated in the
declaratory judgment action.
3
Of the five Plaintiffs in the present case, only four have appealed the district court’s
dismissal. Therefore, all references to “Plaintiffs” refer to those who appealed.
4
{12} After a hearing on the motion to dismiss, the district court entered an order
dismissing Plaintiffs’ action for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted,
not on res judicata grounds, but instead, in effect, on the basis of lack of standing. It held
that the indemnification clause applies only to “persons who were or are part[ies] to
litigation” and, because Plaintiffs alleged that they were not parties to the declaratory
judgment action, they were not entitled to indemnification. Notably, neither the briefs
related to the motion to dismiss nor the discussion in the hearing on the motion addressed
whether Plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed for lack of standing because they did not
come within the terms of the indemnification clause.
{13} In a motion to reconsider the court’s order, Plaintiffs argued for reconsideration of
the dismissal because the Association’s motion to dismiss was based on res judicata, not lack
of standing, and because Plaintiffs had standing. In addition, within their motion to
reconsider, Plaintiffs sought leave to amend their complaint “to clarify their right to relief”
in an effort to establish standing.
{14} The district court heard the issues related to the motion to reconsider and entered an
order determining that the district court in the declaratory judgment action “specifically
addressed the issue of indemnification,” that the parties had the opportunity then to further
address the issue, that Plaintiffs “had the opportunity to seek recovery of attorney[] fees in
that matter[,]” and that the parties “acted at their own peril in acting otherwise.” The court
then ruled that Plaintiffs’ action was “barred by the doctrine of res judicata,” and the court
also, with no elaboration, denied Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend.
{15} Plaintiffs appealed the district court’s order. They assert two main points: the
district court erred in dismissing on grounds of res judicata and, at a minimum, the court
should have granted Plaintiffs leave to amend. We hold that the district court erred in
dismissing Plaintiffs’ complaint on grounds of res judicata.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
{16} “We review motions to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim under Rule 1-
012(B)(6) de novo.” Madrid v. Vill. of Chama, 2012-NMCA-071, ¶ 12, 283 P.3d 871, cert.
denied, 2012-NMCERT-006, 294 P.3d 1243. Dismissal under Rule 1-012(B)(6) is
appropriate where the principle of claim preclusion bars a plaintiff’s complaint. See
Universal Life Church v. Coxon, 1986-NMSC-086, ¶¶ 8-9, 105 N.M. 57, 728 P.2d 467
(holding that claim preclusion may be raised in a motion to dismiss as an affirmative defense
barring a claim).
{17} However, “[w]here matters outside the pleadings are considered on a motion to
dismiss for failure to state a claim, the motion becomes one for summary judgment[.]”
Foster v. Sun Healthcare Group, Inc., 2012-NMCA-072, ¶ 6, 284 P.3d 389 (second
5
alteration in original) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted), cert. denied, 2012-
NMCERT-006, 294 P.3d 1243. In ruling on the motion to dismiss and the later motion for
reconsideration in this case, the district court considered the following documents outside
the pleadings: the complaint in the declaratory judgment action, the affidavit of Plaintiff
Shirley Wheeler, the last order entered in the declaratory judgment action, and the
Association’s reference manual. We therefore treat the motion to dismiss as a motion for
summary judgment. “We construe all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving
party and will uphold a grant of summary judgment where there are no genuine issues of
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Id. The present
case involves a purely legal question as to whether res judicata applies to preclude Plaintiffs’
claims.
{18} It is not entirely clear whether the parties and the district court focused on the claim
preclusion aspect or the issue preclusion principle of res judicata. We therefore consider
both aspects of res judicata in turn.
The Res Judicata/Claim Preclusion Issue
{19} The principle of claim preclusion “precludes a claim when there has been a full and
fair opportunity to litigate issues arising out of that claim.” Kirby v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.
of Am. (Kirby II), 2010-NMSC-014, ¶ 61, 148 N.M. 106, 231 P.3d 87 (emphasis, internal
quotation marks, and citation omitted). The application of claim preclusion is supported by
various rationales, including: “protect[ing] individuals from the burden of litigating multiple
lawsuits[,] . . . promot[ing] judicial economy[,] and . . . promot[ing] the policy favoring
reliance on final judgments by minimizing the possibility of inconsistent decisions.” Anaya
v. City of Albuquerque, 1996-NMCA-092, ¶ 11, 122 N.M. 326, 924 P.2d 735 (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
{20} “The party asserting [claim preclusion] must satisfy the following four requirements:
(1) the parties must be the same, (2) the cause of action must be the same, (3) there must
have been a final decision in the first suit, and (4) the first decision must have been on the
merits.” Kirby II, 2010-NMSC-014, ¶ 61 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation
omitted). “Whether the elements of claim preclusion are satisfied is a legal question, which
we review de novo.” Id.
Section 33 of the Restatement (Second) of Judgments
{21} In their briefs on appeal, Plaintiffs rely on Sections 26 and 36 of the Restatement
(Second) of Judgments, neither of which is particularly helpful. However, in reviewing the
Restatement, we determined that Section 33 is the starting point for consideration of claim
preclusion in this case. That section addresses the preclusive effect of a judgment in a
declaratory judgment action.
A valid and final judgment in an action brought to declare rights or
6
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.
Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 33. Comment (c) to that section states, “When a
plaintiff seeks solely declaratory relief, the weight of authority does not view him as seeking
to enforce a claim against the defendant.” Instead, the plaintiff is seeking a judicial
declaration. “The effect of such a declaration . . . is not to merge a claim in the judgment or
to bar it. Accordingly, regardless of outcome, the plaintiff or defendant may pursue further
declaratory or coercive relief in a subsequent action.” Restatement (Second) of Judgments
§ 33 cmt. c. Thus, a plaintiff may seek further relief in a later lawsuit, and “it is irrelevant
that the further relief could have been requested initially.” Id.
{22} In the present case, this means that the Ewert Board members are bound by what the
district court apparently declared in the declaratory judgment action, which was that the
Fletcher Board was the legitimate, governing board of the Association. Under Section 33,
this is the only “claim” precluded by the declaratory judgment action. The Ewert Board’s
claim for indemnification in the present case is not precluded because it is not the same as
the declaration sought and decided in the declaratory judgment action, and it is irrelevant
under Section 33 whether the present claim could have been brought in the declaratory
judgment action. See Jamestown Vill. Condo. Owners Ass’n v. Mkt. Media Research, Inc.,
645 N.E.2d 1265, 1270 (Ohio Ct. App. 1994) (relying on Section 33 of the Restatement and
stating that “a declaratory judgment is not res judicata on an issue or claim not determined
thereby even though it was known and existing at the time of the original action”).
{23} However, under Section 33, the Ewert Board members would also be bound under
the doctrine of issue preclusion by any issues that were actually litigated and necessarily
decided in the declaratory judgment action. See Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 33
cmt. b. Indeed, it appears that the parties and the district court may have focused on the
question of whether the indemnification issue had been precluded by the declaratory
judgment action. This brings us to the crux of this appeal, which is whether the issue in the
present case—the Ewert Board members’ entitlement to indemnification for fees incurred
in defending against the Fletcher Board’s attorney fee claim against them—was actually
litigated and necessarily decided in the declaratory judgment action.
Res Judicata/Issue Preclusion Does Not Apply
{24} For the doctrine of issue preclusion to apply, “the moving party must show that (1)
the party to be estopped was a party to the prior proceeding, (2) the cause of action in the
case presently before the court is different from the cause of action in the prior adjudication,
(3) the issue was actually litigated in the prior adjudication, and (4) the issue was necessarily
determined in the prior litigation.” Mascarenas v. City of Albuquerque, 2012-NMCA-031,
¶ 31, 274 P.3d 781 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “Once the moving party
7
has produced sufficient evidence to meet all four elements, the district court must determine
whether the party to be estopped had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue in the
prior litigation.” Id.
{25} Here, the parties spent a great deal of their time in the district court and on appeal
arguing about whether the first element—identity of parties—exists. We do not address that
element because we conclude that the third element is dispositive: the Association failed to
establish that the indemnification issue raised in the present case was actually litigated in the
declaratory judgment action.
{26} In the declaratory judgment action, the indemnification provision in the Association’s
bylaws came up in the context of the Fletcher Board’s request to have the individual Ewert
Board members pay the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees incurred in defending the claim
regarding which board was the legitimate governing body of the Association. The Ewert
Board responded to this request by explaining to the district court that the Association had
paid the Ewert Board’s attorney fees through the arbitration and that a fair decision would
be to require the Association to pay the Fletcher Board’s fees as well. The Ewert Board
pointed out that if the district court were to require the Ewert Board members to pay the
Fletcher Board’s fees, the Ewert Board members could seek indemnification from the
Association under the Association’s bylaws. Thus, the Ewert Board raised the
indemnification provision to point out that the Association would in any event end up
footing the bill for the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees.
{27} The question asserted in the present case regarding the Ewert Board’s attorney fees
incurred in defending against the Fletcher Board’s attorney fee claim never came up in the
declaratory judgment action. Because it never came up, it was never litigated. The
Association has not asserted that any evidence was introduced in that action regarding the
fees being claimed in the present case, and certainly the district court’s order in that case
reflects no decision about those fees or whether the Ewert Board members were entitled to
indemnification for them. While the district court in the declaratory judgment action stated
that it found the Ewert Board’s argument regarding indemnification “compelling,” that
comment was made in the context of the Fletcher Board’s attorney fee claim against the
Ewert Board members, not in the context of the Ewert Board members’ claim in the present
case regarding their own attorney fees. Because the Association has failed to establish that
the issues in the present case were actually litigated in the declaratory judgment action, their
defense of issue preclusion fails, and the district court’s decision to the contrary was
erroneous.
Standing
{28} Although the district court ultimately dismissed the present suit on the basis of claim
preclusion, which we have concluded was in error, we may affirm a trial court’s ruling on
a ground that was not relied on below if reliance on the new ground would not be unfair to
the appellant. Meiboom v. Watson, 2000-NMSC-004, ¶ 20, 128 N.M. 536, 994 P.2d 1154.
8
The Association argues that Plaintiffs lacked standing and that we should affirm the district
court’s decision on that basis even though the district court did not rely on it in its final
order. We are not persuaded.
{29} The Association’s argument based on standing is threefold. First, it maintains that
the bylaws’ indemnification provision precludes Plaintiffs’ claim because the provision does
not allow indemnification related to claims brought “by or in the right of the corporation,”
and Plaintiffs asserted their claim in the declaratory judgment action ostensibly on the
Association’s behalf. Second, it contends that Plaintiffs have not asserted a viable claim for
common law indemnification. Third, it argues that the bylaws only permit indemnification
of “any person who was or is a party . . . to any pending or completed action [or] suit . . . by
reason of the fact that he or she was a director, trustee, officer, employee or agent of [the
Association]” for attorney fees incurred in that proceeding. Because Plaintiffs alleged in
their complaint that they were not parties to the declaratory judgment action, the Association
contends, they are not able to avail themselves of the indemnification provision.
{30} We conclude that it would be unfair to Plaintiffs to address the Association’s first and
second arguments because they were never made in the district court, Plaintiffs had no
opportunity to develop responses to those arguments, and the district court never had the
opportunity to rule on them. The Association’s third argument was raised below, and we
therefore consider it. We conclude that there are issues of fact that preclude summary
judgment on that basis.
{31} The Association’s reference manual states that the Association will indemnify not
only a party to the specified type of action, but also a person who “is threatened to be made
a party” to such an action. The Fletcher Board’s request to personally seek attorney fees
against the individual members of the Ewert Board can be viewed as a potential threat to
make these individuals additional parties in the declaratory judgment action. Finally, the last
order entered in the declaratory judgment action indicates that there had been a potential for
the individual liability of the Ewert Board members, thus suggesting that those members
either were parties or could have become parties even if they were not originally parties to
the action. As a result, there is a factual issue as to whether Plaintiffs were parties to the
declaratory judgment action or threatened to be made parties to it, or whether they were
never parties to the action. This issue is for the fact finder to decide.
CONCLUSION
{32} For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s order of dismissal and
remand for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
{33} IT IS SO ORDERED.
____________________________________
CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
9
I CONCUR:
____________________________________
TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge (dissenting).
SUTIN, Judge (dissenting).
{34} I respectfully dissent.
{35} In the post-judgment hearing apparently related to the Ewert Board’s motion to
vacate the court’s judgments (the post-judgment hearing), the court addressed questions in
regard to whether the Ewert Board members could be held individually liable for the
Fletcher Board’s attorney fees in the declaratory judgment action. The Ewert Board
members contended that the Ewert Board members were not parties to the declaratory
judgment action since they were neither named plaintiffs nor personally served with any
claim seeking to hold them individually responsible for the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees.
The Fletcher Board contended that the Ewert Board members were individually responsible
principally because they initiated the declaratory judgment action and because they were
individually set out in an averment of the complaint.
{36} At the outset of the post-judgment hearing, a question arose as to who attorney
Martin E. Threet represented. Mr. Threet stated, “I represent the former [Ewert] board as
a whole through their representative named as the plaintiff in the matter.” When opposing
counsel indicated that one of the paragraphs in the motion to set aside the judgments applied
just to the individual Ewert Board members, indicating that the movants were separate from
the Association, the district court stated, “As far as I’m concerned he represents the prior
board and every individual of it.” Mr. Threet then responded, “That is correct, Your Honor.”
{37} The discussion of representation continued between the court and attorney Michael
D. Stell in regard to assessing individual liability for attorney fees against the Ewert Board
members, that is, “individuals[] who in their minds were simply honoring the charge that
they had been given to represent the interest of the [A]ssociation and its membership[]
through litigation of this case and until the issues were addressed.”
[Mr. Stell:] The individuals themselves had never been named as
parties in this lawsuit. They [have] never been served, and they never [have]
appeared. And for that reason[,] this court does not have jurisdiction over the
individuals.
[The court]: So you don’t think they had an attorney that identified
himself as representing the board of directors and each individual member
which was ratified again this morning, every time I’ve asked that it’s been
10
the same response? You don’t think that’s incongruous?
What do the [R]ules of [C]ivil [P]rocedure say, if I’ve got a lawyer[,]
I’ve got to go out and serve the individuals? No. There’s not a [R]ule of
[C]ivil [P]rocedure, there’s not a case in New Mexico that requires that. I
send the stuff to the lawyer.
[Mr. Stell]: But the lawyer was representing the entity.
[The court]: No, he wasn’t, he was representing the entity and each
individual member of it.
[Mr. Stell]: I suppose that’s kind of where we, perhaps, have
different views because I think that Mr. Threet was representing the board as
an entity[] and was not representing the individuals.
[The court]: So when I asked if he’s representing each individual
member, he said yes, he was wrong? There’s a disagreement with counsel at
this table about what he was doing for a year and a half.
[Mr. Stell]: Let me explain. When the case was first filed, it was
filed on behalf of the entity, which the plaintiff’s [sic] believed properly
existed. And of course it was seeking the court’s ruling as to whether that
was, in fact, the case.
[The court]: And what happened in that case?
[Mr. Stell]: Exactly. Over time —
[The court]: What happened in that case?
[Mr. Stell]: Over[]time the [c]ourt decided that, in fact, this was
not the proper—
[The court]: But before the court decided[,] what happened in the
case? [The Fletcher Board] filed a responsive pleading and sought
confirmation of the award. [The] pleadings were clearly directed at the
board—I can’t remember the names, the prior board and all [its] individual
members.
[Mr. Stell]: Yes.
[The court]: And so if I’ve got a lawyer, I mean—I’ve got real
problems with this. If you’re representing these people individually and
11
collectively and you never act otherwise, how is the court supposed to know?
It was never raised. It sounds like a serious waiver problem to me.
[Mr. Stell]: Well, I think as I say, Mr. Threet was representing the
entity and while over time it became apparent there was some question about
whether the entity existed, acknowledged he was representing them
individually to the extent that they were involved in the matter. But, of
course, . . . they themselves had never been . . . named individually, they’ve
never been served, and they’ve never appealed it, individually.
After stating, in line with a good faith requirement contained in the indemnification clause,
that “[t]hese people were not attempting to litigate [the declaratory judgment action] out of
any bad faith, ill will, [or] malice[.]” Mr. Stell also stated:
They had nothing to gain from this and, . . . they had a price to pay. . . . And
so we believe, in the end, whether they were ultimately right or not, they’re
entitled to indemnification from the [A]ssociation for the attorney[] fees
incurred in connection with that. And we think it would just produce sort of
a circuitous exercise if attorney[] fees were assessed and then
indemnification claimed to be back to the [A]ssociation.
{38} Following the hearing, the district court entered an order in March 2009 in which the
court noted that “Mr. Threet was paid by [Association] funds” and that “the fairest way to
handle [the Fletcher Board’s counsel’s] attorney[] fees is for counsel to be paid by [the
Association,]” and the court set aside its judgment that had apparently awarded attorney fees
against the Ewert Board members individually. As noted by the majority Opinion, this order
appears to have ended the declaratory judgment action. Majority Op. ¶ 8.
{39} In my view, the foregoing exchange between counsel and the court represents the
issue that is at the crux of this appeal. That is, at the heart of the res judicata issue is how
to characterize Plaintiffs’ status in the two lawsuits. As members of the ousted board
seeking reinstatement as the legitimate board, Plaintiffs were instrumental in filing the
declaratory judgment action in the name of the Association “by its President, John Ewert.”
It appears obvious that, to the district court involved in the declaratory judgment action as
well as to the court that heard the action now before this Court, Plaintiffs were taking
irreconcilable or conflicting positions as to party status. Specifically, they could not be
individually liable for the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees because they were not parties in the
declaratory judgment action, or if they were parties, it was only in a representative capacity.
And yet they essentially were parties that had to defend against the Fletcher Board’s pursuit
against them personally in the declaratory judgment action.
{40} It seems apparent that, in the courts’ eyes in both actions, the Ewert Board members
were responsible for initiating the declaratory judgment action and were represented
individually and as a board by Mr. Threet, who agreed that he was representing “the prior
12
board and every individual of it.” According to Mr. Stell, Mr. Threet “represent[ed] the
board as an entity,” and he was paid out of Association funds. When the question of
payment of the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees was at issue in the declaratory judgment
action, instead of pinning the fees on the Ewert Board members individually, the court
determined that a fair handling of the issue was to require the Association to pay those fees.
Thus, at the close of the declaratory judgment action, the Ewert Board’s attorney fees
(incurred through June 2008), as well as the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees, incurred in
litigating the merits of the declaratory judgment action, were paid by the Association. At
the close of the declaratory judgment action, however, nothing had specifically been raised
in regard to fees that the Ewert Board’s individual members had incurred to defend against
the Fletcher Board’s pursuit of payment of its attorney fees against the Ewert Board
members individually. And therein lay the problem.
{41} The apparent positioning of the Ewert Board members individually in the declaratory
judgment action and Plaintiffs, here, seems to have caused the courts in the two lawsuits to
essentially turn a deaf ear to their positions and arguments. Under a common sense view of
parties, no spin could separate the Ewert Board members and the Fletcher Board members
from their personal involvements and statuses in the two lawsuits, including their apparent
personal obligations to their attorneys for fees in the prosecution and defense of the various
claims in the declaratory judgment action. On appeal, this Court should not reward the
Ewert Board members and their counsel for essentially turning the question of their party-
status in the declaratory judgment proceedings into a moving target.
{42} I do not agree with the Majority’s statement that “[i]t is not entirely clear whether the
parties and the district court focused on the claim preclusion aspect or the issue preclusion
principle of res judicata.” Majority Op. ¶ 18. In the proceedings below, it is clear that the
parties and the court focused on res judicata/claim preclusion, and it is also clear that on
appeal the Ewert Board members limit their argument to res judicata/claim preclusion. I
would strictly adhere to the arguments made by the Ewert Board members on appeal, and
I would affirm the district court’s dismissal on res judicata/claim preclusion grounds. My
analysis of the Ewert Board’s (Plaintiffs’) res judicata/claim preclusion argument follows.
Consideration of Matters Beyond the Complaint
{43} As an initial matter, I respectfully disagree with the Majority that the district court’s
consideration of matters outside the pleadings converted the motion to dismiss in this case
into a motion for summary judgment. Majority Op. ¶ 1. The district court dismissed the
complaint under Rule 1-012(B)(6) and did not treat the motion as one seeking summary
judgment. The Association did not seek summary judgment in the district court, and the
Association does not argue on appeal that Plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss was transformed into
a summary judgment proceeding or that the court’s order of dismissal was an order granting
summary judgment.
{44} Plaintiffs argue that because the complaint alleged that they were not parties in the
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declaratory judgment action, the court’s finding that the first element of res judicata/claim
preclusion was met could not have been based “upon the face of the complaint[.]” See
Valdez v. State, 2002-NMSC-028, ¶ 4, 132 N.M. 667, 54 P.3d 71 (stating the principle that,
in reviewing Rule 1-012(B)(6) motions to dismiss, all well-pleaded factual allegations in a
complaint are accepted as true). In Plaintiffs’ view, res judicata could only apply at the Rule
1-012(B)(6) stage if they had stated in their complaint that they were parties in the
declaratory judgment action.
{45} Plaintiffs’ argument and presumably the Majority’s view that the motion to dismiss
was converted to a motion for summary judgment results from the district court’s
consideration of the record from the declaratory judgment action. In its order on Plaintiffs’
motion for reconsideration, the district court indicated that its res judicata determination was
based on a “review of the [declaratory judgment action] from which this case stem[med.]”
Plaintiffs argue that the court’s consideration of the record from the earlier case erroneously
went beyond the pleadings and erroneously and prejudicially transformed the proceeding
into a summary judgment proceeding without notice to Plaintiffs and with no opportunity
for them to defend against such a proceeding. In making this argument, Plaintiffs appear to
rely on Rule 1-012(C) for the proposition that nothing beyond the bare text of their
complaint may be considered without converting a motion to dismiss to a summary judgment
motion. See id. (stating that “on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, [if] matters outside
the pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as
one for summary judgment”). I would reject Plaintiffs’ arguments.
{46} In oral argument before the district court on Plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider,
Plaintiffs’ counsel acknowledged that “in a [Rule 1-0]12(B)(6) situation” courts “are entitled
to look beyond the pleadings to documents integral to the pleadings[.]” This principle,
though not fully vetted in New Mexico case law, is a staple in the federal system where it
appears to be considered widely acceptable for courts faced with a motion to dismiss to
consider matters of public record when such matters are referenced in the plaintiff’s
pleadings. See, e.g., Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308, 322 (2007)
(explaining that when faced with a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, “courts must consider
the complaint in its entirety, as well as other sources courts ordinarily examine when ruling
on Rule 12(b)(6) motions to dismiss, in particular, documents incorporated into the
complaint by reference, and matters of which a court may take judicial notice”); Navajo
Nation v. Urban Outfitters, Inc., 935 F. Supp. 2d 1147, 1157 (D.N.M. 2013) (recognizing
that no conversion from a motion to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment is required
when a “court takes judicial notice of its own files and records and facts that are [a] matter
of public record”); Katz v. McVeigh, 931 F. Supp. 2d 311, 320 (D.N.H. 2013) (“A court
ruling on a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) may consider not only the complaint but
also facts extractable from documentation annexed to or incorporated by reference in the
complaint and matters susceptible to judicial notice[,] . . . includ[ing] matters of public
record, such as documents from prior state court adjudications.” (internal quotation marks
and citations omitted)). Plaintiffs’ complaint was replete with references to the declaratory
judgment action. That litigation was a matter of public record, and it was available to the
14
court by virtue of its own record of the proceedings. See Lopez v. LeMaster, 2003-NMSC-
003, ¶ 32, 133 N.M. 59, 61 P.3d 185 (permitting the district court to take judicial notice of
its own records). Under these circumstances, I do not believe that it was error, in the context
of the Rule 1-012(B)(6) motion to dismiss, for the court to consider the record of the
declaratory judgment action.
{47} Thus, notwithstanding the fact that the face of Plaintiffs’ complaint did not state that
the parties to the present lawsuit and the declaratory judgment action were the same, it was
not error for the district court to reach that conclusion by considering the record from the
declaratory judgment action. Nor did the court’s consideration of its own record of the
declaratory judgment action, which was referenced in Plaintiffs’ complaint, transform the
motion to dismiss into one for summary judgment.
Same Parties
{48} Plaintiffs argue that the Association—a jural entity in its own right—not the Ewert
Board or its individual members, was the plaintiff in the declaratory judgment action.
Plaintiffs point to the fact that the Association is a non-profit corporation, managed by a
board of directors, and, like other corporations, it may sue and be sued in its own name.
Plaintiffs argue that “[i]n a real sense, [the Association] is a legal entity separate and apart
from its members and directors.”
{49} Relying on the distinction between a board of directors acting on behalf of an
incorporated association and the individual members of the board, Plaintiffs argue that they
were not parties to the declaratory judgment action. As such, they argue that the cases of
Slide-A-Ride of Las Cruces, Inc. v. Citizens Bank of Las Cruces, 1987-NMSC-018, 105 N.M.
433, 733 P.2d 1316, and Kirby v. TAD Resources International, Inc. (Kirby I), 2004-NMCA-
095, 136 N.M. 148, 95 P.3d 1063, support their conclusion that the first element of res
judicata/claim preclusion—requiring the parties to be the same—is not present under these
circumstances. Because the facts of Slide-A-Ride and Kirby I bear no resemblance to the
facts of this case and because Plaintiffs rely on them for legal propositions rather than factual
similarities, I will not engage in a lengthy recitation of their facts.
{50} Plaintiffs rely on Slide-A-Ride for the proposition that just as a corporation is a legal
entity distinct from its shareholders, so too is the board of an association distinct from its
individual members. See 1987-NMSC-018, ¶¶ 22-24 (concluding that a corporation and its
shareholders were not the same party for res judicata purposes). Plaintiffs rely on Kirby I
for the proposition that res judicata/claim preclusion does not bar the present lawsuit because
“[t]o the extent that [they] were even mentioned in the original declaratory judgment suit,
it was only in their representative capacity as board members of [the Association]” and not
in their individual capacities. See 2004-NMCA-095, ¶¶ 1, 26, 28-29 (holding that res
judicata did not bar the plaintiff’s claim against her employee benefits plan, even though
payments would be administered by an insurance company that had been dismissed from an
earlier suit on res judicata grounds, because there existed an attempt to distinguish between
15
the insurer in its capacity as a corporate entity versus its capacity as a fiduciary or
representative responsible for administering the plan).
{51} Neither Slide-A-Ride nor Kirby I support Plaintiffs’ position. I recognize that,
generally, the individual members of a board are legally distinct from the entity that they
represent. See, e.g., NMSA 1978, § 53-8-17 (1975) (“The affairs of a corporation shall be
managed by a board of directors.”); NMSA 1978, § 53-8-25 (1975) (“The directors, officers,
employees[,] and members of the corporation shall not be personally liable for the
corporation’s obligations.”); cf. Wirtz v. State Educ. Ret. Bd., 1996-NMCA-085, ¶¶ 4, 7, 122
N.M. 292, 923 P.2d 1177 (holding that the plaintiff’s petition for a writ of certiorari to the
district court naming the board as the respondent did not render the individual members of
the board parties to the action); Lava Shadows, Ltd. v. Johnson, 1996-NMCA-043, ¶ 7, 121
N.M. 575, 915 P.2d 331 (“The fact that the partnership is a party does not in itself make the
partners parties.”). Nevertheless, under the facts of this case, as indicated in Plaintiffs’
complaint, and as found by the district court in the declaratory judgment action, Plaintiffs’
attempted distinction between the Association and the individual members of the Ewert
Board does not overcome the first element of res judicata/claim preclusion.
{52} According to the Restatement, supra, § 39, “[a] person who is not a party to an action
but who controls or substantially participates in the control of the presentation on behalf of
a party is bound by the determination of issues decided as though he were a party.” This
notion of control over prior litigation as a factor in determining party status for res
judicata/claim preclusion purposes was recognized in Slide-A-Ride, 1987-NMSC-018, ¶ 23,
where the Court reasoned that res judicata did not apply because, among other reasons,
“[t]here was substantial evidence to negate any claim that the corporation controlled the
litigation in the first lawsuit or that the individual [shareholders] controlled the litigation in
[the Slide-A-Ride] suit.” The underlying rationale for taking into consideration one’s control
over litigation to which he or she was not a named party is that
[a] person who assumes control of litigation on behalf [of] another has the
opportunity to present proofs and argument on the issues litigated. Given
this opportunity, he has had his day in court and should be concluded by the
result. Such an assumption of control is often motivated by a direct interest
the controlling party has in the litigation because its outcome will affect his
rights or obligations to the person on behalf of whom he participates or
against whom the litigation is conducted. . . . The fact of his assumption of
control of the litigation is itself indicative that his interest is substantially
equivalent to that of the party on whose behalf he appears.
Restatement, supra, § 39 cmt. a. In my view, the circumstances of this case call for an
application of the foregoing principle.
{53} My view comports with that of the district court. The Ewert Board members (four
of whom are Plaintiffs in the present case) controlled the declaratory judgment action.
16
Plaintiffs’ assumption of control of that litigation was motivated by their “direct interest” in
the outcome because it would determine their right, as the Ewert Board, to act on behalf of
the Association. See id. (stating that “an assumption of control is often motivated by a direct
interest the controlling party has in the litigation because its outcome will affect his rights
or obligations to the person on behalf of whom he participates or against whom the litigation
is conducted”). Having been ousted by the Fletcher Board, Plaintiffs retained counsel and
presumably underwrote the declaratory judgment action in an effort to vindicate what they
believed to be their rightful status as the “duly established, properly existing, and legally
constituted [b]oard of [d]irectors of [the Association.]” To that end, I note that, among other
things, Plaintiffs’ complaint in the present case states the following.
Because there were understandably under the circumstances
significant questions concerning the legitimacy of the [Fletcher] Board, the
[Ewert] Board decided that the proper course of action would be to submit
the matter to an independent court of law for a fair and just adjudication.
Consequently, to address and resolve the matter, the [Ewert] Board filed . .
. a declaratory judgment action[.] . . .
. . . The [declaratory judgment action] sought a judicial determination
as to which of the two boards was in fact the duly established, properly
existing, and legally constituted [b]oard of [d]irectors of [the Association]
and thereby vested with the rights, powers, obligations, and responsibilities
associated therewith.
{54} In bringing the declaratory judgment action, although they purported to act on behalf
of the Association and although they named the Association as the plaintiff in that action,
the Ewert Board members were acting in their own interests to question the validity of the
divestiture of their position and power, and their attack engine was fueled by hiring legal
counsel and controlling the legal action. Viewed in this manner, it is clear that in bringing
the declaratory judgment action, the only interests that the Ewert Board members sought to
vindicate or protect were their own interests in regaining their status as the “legitimate
board” with the power to act on behalf of the Association. That the litigation was brought
in the Association’s name does not change the implicit if not obvious fact that the
declaratory judgment action was brought by and for the benefit of the individual Ewert
Board members. See id. (explaining that the “assumption of control of the litigation is itself
indicative that [one’s] interest is substantially equivalent to that of the party on whose behalf
he appears”).
{55} The indistinguishability of interests of the Ewert Board members and the Association
on whose behalf they purportedly appeared in the declaratory judgment action was noted by
the district court in that action. For example, in the post-judgment hearing the district court
explained to the Ewert Board’s counsel that after the Fletcher Board was elected, “[e]very
action [the Ewert Board] took . . . they did as individuals[,]” including filing the declaratory
judgment action. Additionally, as I indicated earlier, the district court in the declaratory
17
judgment action viewed the Ewert Board’s counsel as “representing the entity and each
individual member of it”; that is, he was representing the Association and to the same extent
he was representing the individual members of the Ewert Board. From the foregoing, the
court reasonably viewed the individual members of the ousted Ewert Board to be in control
of the litigation—a view that is fully supported by their counsel’s agreement in the
declaratory judgment action that he “represent[ed] the prior board and every individual of
it.”
{56} By virtue of their control over the declaratory judgment action, the Ewert Board
members had “the opportunity to present proofs and argument on the issues litigated.” Id.
In fact, beyond a mere “opportunity” to weigh in on the indemnification issue, the record
reflects that the indemnification issue was brought into the declaratory judgment action by
the Ewert Board members’ counsel, Mr. Stell, the same counsel who is involved in their
representation in the current lawsuit. At the post-judgment hearing, in regard to the Fletcher
Board’s claim for attorney fees, Mr. Stell argued, on behalf of the individual Ewert Board
members, that “each of the[] individuals as a . . . present or past board member, would
ultimately be entitled under the by[-]laws to indemnification for being involved in a lawsuit
arising from conduct [in which] they engaged in good faith.” Having thus raised the issue
of the individual Ewert Board members’ indemnification right in relation to the Fletcher
Board’s claim, I see no rational basis for Mr. Stell to have refrained from pursuing the issue
further on behalf of the individual Ewert Board members during that hearing in regard to
indemnification for their own fees incurred in defending against the Fletcher Board’s claim.
Having had and having foregone the opportunity to argue indemnification in that regard,
Plaintiffs had their day in court and their claim should be precluded based on res
judicata/claim preclusion by the result. See id.
{57} Based on their control of and interest in the declaratory judgment action, Plaintiffs
are as much bound by the prior adjudication as if they had been named parties. See Montana
v. United States, 440 U.S. 147, 154 (1979) (“[T]he persons for whose benefit and at whose
direction a cause of action is litigated cannot be said to be strangers to the cause. . . . One
who prosecutes or defends a suit in the name of another to establish and protect his own
right, or who assists in the prosecution or defense of an action in aid of some interest of his
own . . . is as much bound . . . as he would be if he had been a party to the record.”
(omissions in original) (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)). Under
these circumstances, I believe that the same-parties element of res judicata/claim preclusion
was met. Plaintiffs’ argument to the contrary provides no basis for reversal.
Ripeness of the Indemnification Claim
{58} Plaintiffs also claim that res judicata/claim preclusion does not apply because their
indemnification claim was not ripe for review until the declaratory judgment action had been
resolved. Plaintiffs’ ripeness claim rests upon their argument that, having been billed by
their attorney two months after the declaratory judgment action ended, they did not know
at the time the litigation ended how much they owed to their attorneys and, therefore, they
18
could not have asserted a claim for that debt in that litigation.
{59} “Generally, the purpose of ripeness is to conserve judicial machinery for problems
which are real and present or imminent, not to squander it on abstract or hypothetical or
remote problems.” ACLU v. City of Albuquerque, 2007-NMCA-092, ¶ 7, 142 N.M. 259, 164
P.3d 958 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted), aff’d, 2008-NMSC-045, 144 N.M.
471, 188 P.3d 1222. “The ripeness doctrine exists to prevent the courts, through avoidance
of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements.” City of
Sunland Park v. Macias, 2003-NMCA-098, ¶ 23, 134 N.M. 216, 75 P.3d 816 (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted). “[A]n issue may be ripe where the threat of harm [is]
sufficiently direct and immediate as to render the issue appropriate for judicial review at this
stage.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
{60} Plaintiffs rely on Casanova v. Marathon Corp., 256 F.R.D. 11, 14 (D.D.C. 2009), for
the proposition stated in that case that “there appears to be a general rule that an indemnitor
cannot be sued until the indemnitee is first held liable.” (Internal quotation marks and
citation omitted.) Further, Plaintiffs rely on Invensys Inc. v. American Manufacturing Corp.,
No. Civ.A. 04-3744, 2005 WL 600297, at *3 (E.D. Pa. March 15, 2005), for the proposition
stated in that case that “the mere expenditure of counsel fees does not constitute the accrual
of a cause of action for indemnification.” (Internal quotation marks and citation omitted.)
And Plaintiffs also rely on Smith International, Inc. v. The Egle Group, LLC, 490 F.3d 380
(5th Cir. 2007), and Bellevue v. Kafka, Nos. 92 C 4589, 92 C 6663, 1994 WL 127213 (N.D.
Ill. April 7, 1994), to support their argument that “courts have repeatedly held that an
indemnity claim for attorney[] fees is not barred by res judicata when the indemnity claim
is asserted in a different lawsuit from the suit where the fees are incurred.”
{61} Neither Casanova nor any other case cited by Plaintiffs supports their ripeness claim.
Plaintiffs’ reliance on the general rule stated in Casanova is misplaced. As explained by the
Casanova court, the application of the principle that an indemnification claim is not ripe
until the indemnitee is held liable is appropriate where the claim for indemnification is
contingent upon future events, that is, the adjudication of the indemnitee’s liability to a third
party. 256 F.R.D. at 13-14. A related principle, applied in Invensys Inc., is that “an
indemnitee may recover attorney[] fees and costs incurred during the underlying litigation
along with the actual judgment from the indemnitor.” 2005 WL 600297, at *3-5 (alteration,
internal quotation marks, and citation omitted) (dismissing, as premature, an indemnitee’s
claim for attorney fees associated with the ongoing litigation, the liability for which would
be the subject of a later indemnification claim). Similarly, in Smith International and
Bellevue, in another iteration of the same principle, the courts noted that until an underlying
suit is resolved and financial liability settled, a claim for indemnification is premature. See
Smith Int’l, 490 F.3d at 389 (explaining that the plaintiff’s “cause of action [for indemnity]
did not accrue until . . . after the . . . court entered its judgment against [it]”); Bellevue, 1994
WL 127213, at *2 (explaining that where a partnership agreement provided that the
prevailing party would be entitled to recover attorney fees, the claim for attorney fees was
premature until the original suit was adjudicated and the prevailing party was named).
19
{62} In this case, unlike Casanova and cases similar to it, Plaintiffs’ request for attorney
fees was not contingent upon the resolution of an unresolved lawsuit pursuant to which
judgments were entered against Plaintiffs or where Plaintiffs might be entitled to
reimbursement from a third-party indemnitor. The lawsuit that gave rise to Plaintiffs’
attorney fees, the declaratory judgment action, did not end in a judgment against Plaintiffs
for which Plaintiffs could seek to be reimbursed by the Association under its indemnification
clause. Thus, I am not persuaded by Plaintiffs’ argument that because they had yet to
receive a final bill from their attorney, their claim for indemnification was premature or not
yet ripe.
{63} The subject of the post-judgment hearing was the Fletcher Board’s claim against the
individual Ewert Board members for attorney fees. The court ruled that the fair approach
was to require the Fletcher Board’s attorney fees to be reimbursed by the Association since
the Association had paid the Ewert Board’s attorney fees until the arbitration determined
which board was properly seated. I see no reason why the Ewert Board members,
individually, could not have also pursued indemnification of their own attorney fees during
this hearing. As indicated by the district court in its order on motion for reconsideration, in
this case, the court in the declaratory judgment action had “specifically addressed the issue
of indemnification,” and “[t]he opportunity existed for the parties to further address the issue
of indemnification, but they acted at their own peril in acting otherwise.”
The Two Causes of Action
{64} In their fifth subpoint, Plaintiffs argue that because the present lawsuit does not
involve “the same cause of action” as the declaratory judgment action, their complaint is not
barred by res judicata/claim preclusion. See Kirby II, 2010-NMSC-014, ¶ 61 (stating that
the second element of res judicata is that “the cause of action must be the same” (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted)). Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that the claims at issue
in the two lawsuits differ because “[t]here was no claim by Plaintiffs for indemnity of their
own individual attorney[] fees in the prior declaratory judgment suit.”
{65} In determining whether a lawsuit addresses the same “cause of action” as an earlier
lawsuit, we consider whether “the claim extinguished by a first judgment 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.” Anaya, 1996-
NMCA-092, ¶ 7 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). The “concept
of a transaction . . . connotes a natural grouping or common nucleus of operative facts[,]”
and it involves considerations such as “whether the facts are related in time, space, origin,
or motivation, [and] whether they form a convenient trial unit[.]” Id. ¶¶ 7-8 (internal
quotation marks and citations omitted).
{66} Plaintiffs’ claim for attorney fees in this case originated from their involvement in
the declaratory judgment action. The scope of the Association’s indemnification clause
coverage was at issue in the February 2009 hearing; and the provision itself was presented
20
as evidence at that hearing. Because Plaintiffs’ individual liability for the Fletcher Board’s
attorney fees was also at issue in that hearing, I see no rational basis, nor do Plaintiffs
provide one, on which to conclude that Plaintiffs’ claim for attorney fees can be said to have
risen from a different “transaction” than the legal dispute between the Fletcher and the Ewert
Boards that underlay the issues raised in the declaratory judgment action. Under the
circumstances of this case, the district court properly determined that the second element of
res judicata/claim preclusion was met. The third and fourth elements of res judicata/claim
preclusion are not at issue in this appeal. See, e.g., Kirby II, 2010-NMSC-014, ¶ 61 (setting
out the four required elements of res judicata).
Whether the District Court Erred in Denying Plaintiffs’ Motion for Leave to Amend
Their Complaint
{67} Plaintiffs argue, in the alternative, that “at a minimum” the district court should have
permitted them to amend their complaint. The denial of a motion to amend is reviewed for
an abuse of discretion. See Stinson v. Berry, 1997-NMCA-076, ¶ 9, 123 N.M. 482, 943 P.2d
129.
{68} Because I would hold that Plaintiffs’ claim for attorney fees is barred by res
judicata/claim preclusion, I would conclude that an amendment to the complaint would be
futile. Cf. id. ¶ 11 (holding that where the plaintiffs’ “amended complaint could not
withstand a motion to dismiss, the amendment would have been futile”). Owing to the
futility of permitting the amendment, the district court cannot be said to have abused its
discretion by denying Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend the complaint. See id.
Accordingly, I would determine that this issue presents no basis for reversal.
{69} For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the district court’s order.
____________________________________
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
Topic Index for Tunis v. Country Club Estate Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., No. 31,280
APPEAL AND ERROR
Right for Any Reason
Standard of Review
CIVIL PROCEDURE
Dismissal
Failure to State a Claim
Motion to Dismiss
Res Judicata
Standing
Summary Judgment
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PROPERTY
Attorney Fees
Home Owners Association
22