delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a matter of federal practice involving inconsistent positions by litigants in court proceedings. We have often held that under the doctrine of res judicata a judgment entered in an action conclusively *91settles that action as to all matters that were or might have been litigated or adjudged therein.1 But a prior judgment between the parties has been held to operate as an estoppel in a suit on a cause of action different from that forming the basis for the original suit “only as to those matters in issue or points controverted, upon the determination of which the finding or verdict was rendered.” 2 This latter aspect of res judicata is the doctrine of collateral estoppel by judgment, established as a procedure for carrying out the public policy of avoiding repetitious litigation.
Petitioners entered counterclaims in a suit against them by respondent. These counterclaims were dismissed by the trial court upon determination of the original suit for petitioners and against respondents. The cause of action stated in petitioners’ counterclaims is based upon a controverted personal right that had not been adjudged and therefore res judicata is no bar to the claimed right of recovery. Respondent, however, in its original suit had raised an issue, determinative of its cause of action, which had been therein successfully controverted by petitioners to final judgment on the merits. Collateral estop-pel stands as a bar to further litigation by the parties of this issue, and this issue was held by the trial court to be determinative of petitioners’ counterclaims. Petitioners’ argument that the dismissal denied a hearing of issues that might have been but were not determined by the judgment on the merits of the original action *92moved us to grant certiorari, limited to the issue of the counterclaims. 345 U. S. 963.
Although federal jurisdiction was sought only on the ground of diversity, the complaint relied upon a breach of the Sherman Act, and the counterclaims were similarly bottomed on that federal law. Therefore our conclusion is reached on a consideration of federal law and procedure. It will depend upon whether or not any issue of fact or law remained for decision after the primary action was decided.3 The issue reaches us under the following circumstances.
Paramount Pictures Theatres Corp., a subsidiary of Paramount Productions, Inc., and successor to Paramount Pictures, Inc., is a New York corporation engaged in the business of operating motion picture theatres throughout the United States. These three corporations will hereinafter be referred to jointly as “Paramount.” On August 31, 1939, Paramount leased the Paramount Downtown Theatre in Los Angeles, California, for ten years to Partmar Corp., a California corporation, petitioner here, wholly owned by Fanchon & Marco, Inc. This lease was subsequently amended in 1942 and extended to March 18, 1952. A “film franchise agreement” was executed in conjunction with, and for the same period as, the lease. It licensed Partmar to exhibit Paramount pictures at the theatre as first “runs” of the films, required Partmar to exhibit such pictures not less than forty-six weeks each year, and set a scale of license fees. The lease expressly provided that it was terminable at the option of Paramount if the franchise agreement “be can-celled or terminated for any reason whatsoever.” Other provisions of the lease and agreement are not germane to the issue before this Court.
*93On December 31, 1946, a decree was entered in the District Court for the Southern District of New York in an equity action brought by the United States against Paramount and other major companies of the motion picture industry alleging a conspiracy to violate the Sherman Act, 26 Stat. 209, 15 U. S. C. §§ 1-2. United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 70 P. Supp. 53. One provision of that decree defined a “franchise” to be a licensing agreement “in effect for more than one motion picture season and covering the exhibition of pictures released by one distributor during the entire period of agreement” and enjoined each of the defendants in that action “from further performing any existing franchise to which it is a party and from making any franchises in the future.” Id., at 73, Decree, § II, 5.
On March 26, 1947, Paramount notified Partmar that it was cancelling and terminating the franchise agreement because of the injunction, and on April 2, 1947, notified Partmar that it was terminating the lease by reason of the termination of the franchise agreement. Partmar refused to vacate the theatre upon demand, and Paramount instituted this action on May 1, 1947, in the District Court for the Southern District of California, alleging diversity and unlawful detainer of the theatre. The complaint sought, so far as is material here, restitution of possession based on illegality of the franchise under the Sherman Act as construed in the decree in the Southern District of New York, supra, and a declaratory judgment that the lease had been properly terminated.
Partmar and Panchón & Marco, Inc., answered setting up various defenses and filed three counterclaims seeking treble damages under 38 Stat. 731, 15 U. S. C. § 15, resulting from a conspiracy between Paramount and other motion picture companies in violation of the Sherman Act. The conspiracy was alleged to have resulted in the *94imposition of excessive terms and conditions on Partmar by the lease and franchise agreement.4
By order dated April 26, 1948, the District Court, upon Paramount’s motion, ordered Paramount’s causes of ac*95tion for unlawful detainer and declaratory judgment tried separately from Partmar’s counterclaims. Prior to trial on May 3, 1948, we handed down our decision on Paramount’s and the other defendants’ appeals from the decree of the Southern District of New York. United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 334 U. S. 131. We held inter alia that “we cannot say on this record that franchises are illegal per se when extended to any theatre or circuit no matter how small” and set aside the District Court’s findings relative to such franchises. Id., at 156. Relying on that decision Partmar and Fanchon & Marco, Inc., moved in the Southern District of California for dismissal of Paramount’s action against them. Their motion was denied and the case went to trial without amendment of the pleadings in November 1950, on two issues: whether Paramount was justified in terminating the franchise agreement because of the decree in the New York Paramount case, supra; whether the lease and contract were illegal contracts under the federal antitrust statutes justifying repossession of the theatre by Paramount under California law. See, e. g., Glos v. McBride, 47 Cal. App. 688, 191 P. 67. Thus issue was joined as to the legality of the actions of Paramount and its alleged co-conspirators relative to the lease and franchise agreement, wholly apart from the New York injunction, and Paramount was in the anomalous position of attempting to prove that its agreements with Partmar violated the antitrust laws. Paramount did not limit its contention of illegality of the agreement to nonconspiratorial aspects of the antitrust laws, but argued that if the agreements were illegal in any way it had the right to possession. That Partmar recognized this position is clearly shown by its statement in its brief to the trial court that “after the reversal of that judgment [in the New York case], the plaintiff [Paramount] took the position that the question presented was whether the franchise was violative of the *96Sherman Act, wholly apart from any judgment or the decisions of the District and Supreme Courts.” Partmar vigorously contended in brief and in argument that the lease of the theatre and the franchise for “first-run” exhibitions did not in any way violate the Sherman Act. It clearly recognized that one way the franchise might be illegal would be if it were the result of a conspiracy, for it argued in its brief that:
“There was no allegation or proof of conspiracy. There being no showing of interstate commerce, it is immaterial whether there was conspiracy, unreasonable clearance, fixed admission prices, block booking, or unreasonable restraint. In the absence of interstate commerce, all else was entirely beyond the purview of the Sherman Act. But, assuming that there had been no failure to prove interstate commerce, the absence of conspiracy is equally fatal. Probably the only evidence relative to conspiracy was the statement of Y. Frank Freeman, a witness for Paramount, that there were no conspiratorial arrangements between Paramount and Fox West Coast. . . . Even in a setting of conspiracy, it is doubtful that the franchise would be unlawful. . . . On the evidence in this case the Partmar franchise is neither one of a system, or made by one holding a dominant position, or pursuant to a conspiracy . . . .”
It thus insisted that the remunerative lease and franchise agreements were still valid and subsisting, and that Paramount had no right to possession.
After eighteen days of trial the District Judge on May 2, 1951, filed a memorandum opinion, 97 F. Supp. 552, in which he concluded that the termination “for any reason” clause in the lease meant for any “legal or substantial reason,” and that the 1946 decree of the Southern District of New York “was not a legal cause or reason for terminat*97ing the franchise agreement.” He continued, “there is no evidence to indicate that any third party conspired with either Paramount or Partmar to bring into existence the franchise agreement,” that “a single contract between one film company and one exhibitor is not violative of the Sherman Act,” and that, since the franchise agreement was “not in itself an illegal agreement,” Paramount “had no right to cancel or terminate it because of illegality.” The court went on to hold that “as we find no substantial evidence of a conspiracy in this case on the part of Part-mar or Paramount, we are of the opinion that the counter-claimant cannot recover” on the counts seeking treble damages on the basis of an alleged conspiracy. The opinion directed Partmar to submit proposed findings of fact; both parties submitted such findings and proposed conclusions; and a hearing, upon notice, was held on June 18, 1951. Paramount thereupon submitted Finding No. 20 and conclusion No. 11, infra, thus formalizing its contention that the judgment denying plaintiff’s petition es-topped defendant from recovering on its counterclaims for violation of the Sherman Act. At this hearing Part-mar appeared and expressly objected to the adoption of the proposed finding and conclusion which required the dismissal of its treble-damage counterclaims. Argument was heard on Partmar’s objection, but the court adhered to its position and adopted among its findings No. 20 which provides:
“Paramount, not in conjunction with any other major studio, entered into the franchise agreement which gave to Partmar the right to exhibit the first-run feature pictures of Paramount in the City of Los Angeles. Neither said franchise agreement, nor said lease, nor any amendment to either of them constituted any part of, nor were they or any of them entered into as a result of any agreement, combina*98tion or conspiracy of any kind whatsoever between Paramount and any other person or persons, nor between Partmar and any other person or persons.”
And conclusion No. 11 which provides:
“Inasmuch as the said lease and said franchise agreement and all amendments to each of them were in all respects lawful and were not entered into nor performed as a result of any combination or conspiracy of any kind whatsoever on the part of either plaintiffs, defendants, third party plaintiff or third party defendants, with any person or persons; inasmuch as said lease, said agreement and amendments thereto have neither the purpose or effect of restraining or monopolizing trade or commerce among the several states in the production, distribution, transportation, sale or exhibition of motion pictures; and inasmuch as each was an agreement solely between plaintiff and defendants, or defendants and third party plaintiffs and third party defendants dealing solely with the Paramount Theatre Los Angeles alone and the exhibition of pictures thereat; third party plaintiffs, and each of them, cannot recover upon the first, second and fourth counterclaim, or any of them.” 5
The court simultaneously entered an order giving judgment for Partmar on Paramount’s two counts of unlawful detainer, declaring the rights and duties of the parties under the franchise and the lease, and dismissing with prejudice Partmar’s three treble-damage counterclaims.
Partmar, apparently not wishing to jeopardize its valuable lease and franchise, took no appeal from parts of *99the District Court’s judgment declaring the lease and franchise to be valid and subsisting and the theatre not to be unlawfully detained.6 Therefore those parts of the judgment must be accepted as valid and binding on the parties. Partmar did, however, serve timely notice of appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit from so much of the District Court judgment as dismissed with prejudice the treble-damage counterclaims. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in a per *100curiam, opinion on December 16, 1952, 200 F. 2d 561, noted agreement with the opinion of the District Court and affirmed the District Court judgment. As heretofore indicated, our consideration is “limited to the issue of the counterclaims.”
Partmar contends that the District Court erred in dismissing its counterclaims with prejudice without a separate trial as to their merits, which the trial court had previously ordered, and that such dismissal deprived it of due process of law. In particular, it argues that it was denied the valuable property right of having admitted in evidence during a trial the judgment in the case of United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 334 U. S. 131, which, it argues, would provide, under § 5 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 731, 15 U. S. C. § 16, prima facie evidence of the conspiracy on which the counterclaims were based. We think these contentions are without merit. The power remained in the trial court until the entry of his final judgment to set aside, for appropriate reasons, the former order for separate trial of the counterclaims.
Each of Partmar’s counterclaims for treble damages was predicated upon allegations that Paramount and its alleged co-conspirators engaged in a conspiracy in restraint of trade and commerce, and that the allegedly “excessive terms, conditions and charges for the photo-plays made and released by them” and the exaction of fifty percent of the net receipts, imposed by the lease and franchise agreement, were part of such conspiracy. The District Court found in the principal action, which decision was not appealed and is not before us, that neither the lease nor the franchise was the result “of any agreement, combination or conspiracy of any kind whatsoever.” Of course, if this finding were not material to the principal action, the doctrine of collateral estoppel would not apply. But this finding was ob*101viously necessary to the court’s judgment that the agreements were not illegal. Partmar had ample opportunity upon trial to present evidence and to contest the conspiracy finding, and argument was heard prior to adoption of the findings. This finding, binding all of the parties, determined the key ingredient of Partmar’s counterclaims contrary to its allegations and thus precluded recovery upon such claims. A separate trial on the counterclaims would have been improper procedure, as the judgment entered on the complaint was a final disposition of the determinative issue on the counterclaims — whether or not the terms of the lease were a product of an illegal conspiracy.7
The allegations of the counterclaims charge that as a result of “the same conspiracy stated in the complaint” in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 334 U. S. 131, Partmar was damaged in the terms of its lease from Paramount. Yet this very lease was sustained by the judgment in. this case on the ground that it was not viola-tive of the Sherman Act. Partmar moved to dismiss the complaint in this case after this Court’s decision in the Paramount Pictures case on the ground that it “had become moot by the demonstrated nonexistence of the basic fact,” i. e., the illegality of the lease. In its brief in the trial court, petitioner stated its position clearly:
“The effect of the opinion seems to be that franchises are not unlawful per se, that is, apart from con*102spiracy, and that on the record in that case they were not shown to have been parts of the conspiracy.
“The Supreme Court seems at least to have clearly indicated that a franchise with one exhibitor for one theatre, like that with Partmar, was not involved in the case. It said in effect that only franchises with defendants and franchises for theatres in a circuit were involved.”
Nor would unlimited admission in evidence of the final decree in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., supra, have aided Partmar. We had reversed the only finding in that case pertaining to the illegality under the Sherman Act of franchise agreements between exhibitors and producers, and the final consent decree as to Paramount entered on March 4, 1949, contains no findings on such subject. Cf. United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 85 F. Supp. 881, 897. Since final judgments or decrees in Government antitrust actions are admissible under § 5 of the Clayton Act as prima facie evidence only of issues actually determined in the prior adjudication,8 the Government judgments provide no proof of the indispensable element to Partmar’s counterclaims, that the lease and *103franchise were part of or the result of a conspiracy. From the decree there would have been prima facie evidence of a conspiracy but no evidence that the Partmar lease was a result of that conspiracy so as to overturn the trial court’s finding in this very proceeding that no illegality tainted the lease. Partmar, therefore, was not prejudiced by the fact that the District Court did not consider either the judgment or the decree as evidence of the conspiracy alleged in the counterclaims. As we have pointed out, the conclusion of the trial court went beyond the lawfulness of the “franchise,” as distinguished from the lease of which it was a part, and held that the lease was not secured by conspiracy. See p. 96, supra. This was res judicata of that fact, if it be considered a fact, and nonetheless res judicata if it is a decision on the law, binding in another cause of action arising from the same controversy or claim.9
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice Jackson and Mr. Justice Clark took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.[For dissenting opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Warren, joined by Mr. Justice Black, see p. 104.]
Cromwell v. County of Sac, 94 U. S. 351, 352; Fayerweather v. Ritch, 195 U. S. 276, 300, 308; Gunter v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 200 U. S. 273, 290; Stoll v. Gottlieb, 305 U. S. 165.
Cromwell v. County of Sac, supra, at 353; United States v. Moser, 266 U. S. 236, 241; Treinies v. Sunshine Mining Co., 308 U. S. 66, 74; Commissioner v. Sunnen, 333 U. S. 591, 597-601. Cf. Federal Trade Commission v. Cement Institute, 333 U. S. 683, 706, where the rule is recognized but its application denied because the issues differed.
See Scott, Collateral Estoppel by Judgment, 56 Harv. L. Rev. 1 ; Note, Collateral Estoppel by Judgment, 52 Col. L. Rev. 647.
Petitioner’s first counterclaim alleged:
“27. Paramount Pictures Theatres Corporation, Paramount Pictures, Inc., Paramount Film Distributing Corporation, . . . and the defendants in United States of America v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., et al., Equity No. 87-273, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, and other persons to the defendants unknown, were, at the time of the acts and transactions stated in the complaint herein, and they now are, engaged in a conspiracy in restraint of trade and commerce among the States, in the distribution and exhibition of motion pictures, in violation of the Act of July 2, 1890, that is to say, the same conspiracy stated in the complaint in that case.
“32. This action has been brought by the plaintiff in pursuance of the aforesaid conspiracy, arrangements and agreements, and to evade and defeat the purpose to end the aforesaid conspiracy and restraint of trade for which United States of America v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., et al., Equity No. 87-273, was instituted.
“33. As part of the aforesaid conspiracy, the plaintiff and the third-party defendants arranged and agreed among themselves, to require Partmar Corporation to license for exhibition at the Paramount Theatre for 46 weeks of each year, only photoplays made and released by Paramount Pictures, Inc., and, for any failure upon the part of Partmar Corporation to obey that requirement, to evict it from Paramount Theatre. The plaintiff, and the third-party defendants have been able to impose, and they have in fact imposed, upon Partmar Corporation, excessive terms, conditions and charges for the photo-plays made and released by them and exhibited at the Paramount Theatre, from March 2, 1933, to the present time.”
In the second counterclaim, the third-party plaintiffs (petitioners) reiterated their allegations of conspiracy and based their claim for damages on an addition to the lease that required Partmar “to pay an additional sum; that is to say, fifty per cent of the net receipts of Partmar Corporation at the Paramount Theatre.”
The other counterclaim is not in the record but the briefs indicate that it contained substantially the same allegation as numbers one and two.
Partmar had brought in other parties as third-party defendants under Fed. Rules Civ. Proc. 14. Their presence is not important in this phase of the controversy.
While Partmar did not appeal, it might have. The finding and conclusion of law just quoted were essential to the determination of Paramount’s claim for possession of the theatre. Paramount’s position after this Court’s reversal'of the franchise portion of the New York decree, was that the agreements were invalid under the federal antitrust statutes as the product of an illegal conspiracy. It is only when a finding of law or fact is not necessary for a decree that the prevailing party may not appeal and the finding does not form the basis for collateral estoppel. This is shown by the case cited to support the statement as to appeal in Lindheimer v. Illinois Bell Telephone Co., 292 U. S. 151, 176. See New York Telephone Co. v. Maltbie, 291 U. S. 645, and cases cited. Electrical Fittings Corp. v. Thomas & Betts Co., 307 U. S. 241, stated the practice negatively. “A party may not appeal . . . findings . . . not necessary to support the decree.” Professor Scott, note 3, supra, at 12, concurs in this view. Restatement, Judgments, §68 reads: “(1) Where a question of fact essential to the judgment is actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment, the determination is conclusive between the parties in a subsequent action on a different cause of action, except as stated in §§ 69, 71 and 72.” Section 69 (2) [“Where a party to a judgment cannot obtain the decision of an appellate court because the matter determined against him is immaterial or moot, the judgment is not conclusive against him in a subsequent action on a different cause of action.”] is immaterial because the conspiracy determination was essential for Partmar’s defense to Paramount’s claim. See Galloway v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 106 F. 2d 466. The paucity of cases in this field is explainable by the infrequent happening of a need of a prevailing party to set aside a determination necessary to a judgment in his favor.
Southern Pacific R. Co. v. United States, 168 U. S. 1, 48-49:
“The general principle announced in numerous cases is that a right, question or fact distinctly put in issue and directly determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, as a ground of recovery, cannot be disputed in a subsequent suit between the same parties or their privies; and even if the second suit is for a different cause of action, the right, question or fact once so determined must, as between the same parties or their privies, be taken as conclusively established, so long as the judgment in the first suit remains unmodified.”
Emich Motors Corp. v. General Motors Corp., 340 U. S. 558, 568-569:
“We think that Congress intended to confer, subject only to a defendant’s enjoyment of its day in court against a new party, as large an advantage as the estoppel doctrine would afford had the Government brought suit.
“The evidentiary use which may be made under § 5 of the prior conviction of respondents is thus to be determined by reference to the general doctrine of estoppel. . . . Accordingly, we think plaintiffs are entitled to introduce the prior judgment to establish prima facie all matters of fact and law necessarily decided by the conviction and the verdict on which it was based."
See Theatre Enterprises v. Paramount Corp., 346 U. S. 537; Monticello Tobacco Co., Inc. v. American Tobacco Co., 197 F. 2d 629.
United States v. Moser, 266 U. S. 236, 242:
“The contention of the Government seems to be that the doctrine of res judicata does not apply to questions of law; and, in a sense, that is true. It does not apply to unmixed questions of law. Where, for example, a court in deciding a case has enunciated a rule of law, the parties in a subsequent action upon a different demand are not estopped from insisting that the law is otherwise, merely because the parties are the same in both cases. But a fact, question or right distinctly adjudged in the original action cannot be disputed in a subsequent action, even though the determination was reached upon an erroneous view or by an erroneous application of the law.”
Emich Motors Corp. v. General Motors Corp., 340 U. S. 558, 569; Cf. United States v. Stone & Downer Co., 274 U. S. 225, 230.