(dissenting).
The question in this case is whether the plaintiff; Stroh, should be held liable on its preliminary injunction bond. That depends, of course, on the wording of the condition in the bond triggering the principal’s (Stroh’s) liability. As quoted in the majority opinion, the condition is that “it * * * be finally decided by the Court that [the 1979 law] is valid * * The district court twice decided the law was valid; this Court affirmed one of those decisions; and the question before us now is whether the second decision should be affirmed or should be reversed on the ground that, after all, the 1979 law is not and was not valid.
The majority opinion answers this question in ways that I find wholly unsatisfactory. The majority ignores the purpose of a preliminary injunction bond, indemnifying the Director and the wholesalers from harm they have not suffered and penalizing Stroh for conduct that was entirely lawful and appropriate. The majority reveals a view of the law that I believe is fundamentally wrong and unrealistic. It misapplies the law of the case doctrine, in the face of supervening federal law and in violation of the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution, and decides an issue of federal law — the “retroactivity” of a decision by the United States Supreme Court — in a way that is contrary to any reasoned application of controlling Supreme Court precedents on the retroactivity question. For all of these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
I.
One way to approach the question before us is to consider the purpose of a preliminary injunction bond. Under our Rule 1-066(C), a preliminary injunction bond is given “for the payment of such costs and damages as may be incurred or suffered by any party who is found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained * * *.” SCRA 1986, 1-066(C). Wright and Miller, describing the corresponding federal rule, Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(c), state that the purpose of the rule “is to enable a restrained or enjoined party to secure indemnification for the costs * * * and pecuniary injury that may accrue during the period in which a wrongfully issued equitable order remains in effect.” 11 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2954, at 523 (1973). This gives rise to two further questions: whether the preliminary injunction was wrongfully issued and whether the Director (or anyone else) suffered a pecuniary injury during the period in which the injunction remained in effect.
A conclusion that the Director was wrongfully enjoined in 1979 can only be reached by taking the position that Stroh’s conduct during the pendency of the injunction was contrary to law and that the Director had every right to enforce the statute. Similarly, to say that the Director (or the beer wholesalers, or beer retailers, or beer-consuming public) suffered a pecuniary injury during the 1979-85 period entails the proposition that the 1979 law was valid at that time and somehow became invalid later on when, in 1989, the Supreme Court decided Healy II.1 While it may be begging the question to frame the issue in these ways, doing so highlights for me the illogic and injustice of the majority’s position that Stroh’s conduct, which was perfectly consistent with the Commerce Clause in the Constitution as now authoritatively construed, was somehow wrongful and should not have been undertaken.
Healy II construed the Commerce Clause to mean that, in the present context, state price-affirmation laws like the 1979 law impermissibly burden interstate commerce. Here was a company that took the same position from the very beginning, insisting that the law of this state (and many other states like it) could not require the company to sell its beer at a particular price pegged to the price in other states. The company’s position was consistent with the mandate of the Constitution, and the company proceeded to sell its beer for whatever price it determined in the market. So did all the other brewers, at least as far as we are informed on this appeal. The other brewers ultimately decided that they wanted to buy their peace and get out of the litigation, so they paid some money to the state and then (since the law had been repealed) continued to sell their beer as they had before. Stroh, however, had the courage of its convictions and continued to assert the invalidity of the law, even though it had been upheld by this Court. Events proved that this Court had been wrong and Stroh had been right. Stroh had acted consistently with the Constitution and its conduct had conformed with the policy implemented in the Commerce Clause. To hold now that Stroh should be penalized for this conduct is, to my way of thinking, seriously inconsistent with the constitutional policy spelled out in Healy II.2
Not only does the majority opinion penalize Stroh for conduct that turned out to be completely lawful; it awards a windfall to both the Director and the wholesalers that I believe is entirely unjustified. The Director had no statutory entitlement to collect money (damages, reparations, penalties, or anything else) from a brewer who did not comply with the price-affirmation law. See NMSA 1978, § 60-12-9 (Orig.Pamp.) (repealed July 1, 1981) (violation of Discrimination in Selling Act is violation of Liquor Control Act; violator is also liable for suspension of license); NMSA 1978, § 60-10-39 (Orig.Pamp.) (repealed July 1, 1981) (violation of Liquor Control Act is misdemeanor punishable, if violator is corporation, by fine of not more than $1,000).3 The parties agreed to a bond as a condition for issuance of the preliminary injunction, but there was no potential liability to the Director secured by the bond; it was simply the quid pro quo for the Director’s agreeing to the injunction.
As for the wholesalers, they became entitled to a share of any potential bond proceeds as the result of a deal they made with the Director, after they intervened, to divide any proceeds Stroh might have to pay under the bond. Absent the bond, the wholesalers would not have been entitled to collect money from Stroh by virtue of any statutory remedy; they would have had to sue for damages resulting from Stroh’s charging a price higher than that prescribed by the 1979 law. Since, as things turned out, Stroh was charging a price permitted by federal law, the wholesalers were not harmed and cannot — in any meaningful sense, apart from the law’s having previously (and erroneously) been declared “valid” — claim to have suffered any damages.
II.
The majority opinion displays a view of the nature of the law that I find altogether unacceptable. That is, the majority opinion treats “the law” as it “existed” in 1979-85 as some kind of immutable object, something like an architect’s blueprint — “a Platonic or ideal existence”4 — against which parties’ conduct is to be measured to see whether that conduct was right or wrong. According to this view, “the law” contained in Seagram5 on the constitutionality of price-affirmation statutes made our own 1979 price-affirmation statute constitutional, Stroh’s conduct unlawful, and the order enjoining the Director wrongful. When Healy II was decided, “the law” was changed — the dimensions and shape of the blueprint were altered — so that, when assessed under the new configuration, Stroh’s position suddenly became correct, even though it previously had been incongruent with the shape of “the law” as it stood prior to Healy II.
I cannot accept this reified conception of “the law” as something that has one shape one day and another the next. The law is not a “brooding omnipresence in the sky,”6 nor is it something chiseled into stone tablets somewhere. It is a set of precepts — of rules, principles, maxims, guidelines — that do change from time to time and that govern the conduct and relationships of citizens. The task of lawyers and judges is to determine which of these changing precepts should be applied to the resolution of a particular dispute and which should not— hopefully for good, policy-based reasons.
The precept laid down by Seagram was that price-affirmation laws were permissible. No one would think of applying this precept today; it has been overruled by Healy II. The precept in the latter case is that another, overarching precept — the “negative implication” of the Commerce Clause — forbids this kind of statute. Whether we should apply the Healy II and Commerce Clause precepts depends on how we view certain other precepts, namely, those predicated on principles of finality, as embodied here in the law of the case doctrine, and those prescribing when a new decision should or should not be given “retroactive” effect.
III.
Turning to the law of the case, I certainly agree that principles of finality of litigation are important and should be applied in the resolution of a dispute — except when there is good reason not to do so. The law of the case doctrine prevents relitigation of issues already determined; the policy underlying the doctrine is to conserve judicial and litigants’ resources by avoiding repetitious litigation. In this case the doctrine does not apply, because no one is attempting to relitigate whether the 1979 law is or is not invalid under the Constitution. All parties concede, as they must, that price-affirmation statutes like the 1979 law are invalid.7 The only question is whether, despite this concession, the 1979 law should be deemed valid now because we held it valid before. In this situation, where a controlling decision by the United States Supreme Court on a matter of federal constitutional law has intervened since our previous decision, I believe that the discretionary policy embodied in the law of the case doctrine should not be invoked on a subsequent appeal in the same case as the one in which the original, erroneous decision was announced.
As we said in Reese8 in an opinion by Chief Justice (then Senior Justice) Sosa,
“The doctrine of the law of the case is not a rule to which we are bound by any legislative enactment. In so far (sic) as we are bound, it is because we have so bound ourselves, or choose so to bind ourselves by our decisions * * *. [W]hen we conclude that a former decision is erroneous, and we still have the opportunity to correct it as affecting those parties whose interests are concerned in the original ruling, we should apply the law of the land rather than the law of the case * * *. [W]e feel that is better and more just to apply in this case what we find to be the law of the land.”
106 N.M. at 506, 745 P.2d at 1154 (quoting Farmers’ State Bank v. Clayton Nat’l Bank, 31 N.M. 344, 355-56, 245 P. 543, 548 (1925)). We went on to say that this was “in keeping with the majority understanding of the doctrine of the law of the case,” which we summarized as follows:
“[Sjince the doctrine of the law of the case is merely one of practice or court policy, and not of inflexible law, so that appellate courts are not absolutely bound thereby, but may exercise a certain degree of discretion in applying it, there are many holdings in which the courts have retreated from any inflexible rule requiring the doctrine to be applied regardless of error in the former decision, and it has been said that the doctrine should not be utilized to accomplish an obvious injustice, or applied where the former appellate decision was clearly, palpably, or manifestly erroneous or unjust.”
Id. 106 N.M. at 507, 745 P.2d at 1155 (quoting 5 Am.Jur.2d Appeal and Error § 750, at 194 (1962)).
Finally, we said:
It is obvious from the above that we may deviate from the law of the case doctrine in the situation before us if to apply the doctrine would result in a manifest injustice.
Id.; see also Moya,9 107 N.M. at 248, 755 P.2d at 586 (“[W]e will not apply that judicial doctrine [law of the case] here, where doing so might result in a manifestly unjust decision and where the essential facts have been altered by a substantial change in the evidence.”).
Here, there has not been a “substantial change in the evidence”; there has been a substantial — indeed, a dispositive — change in the law. Applying the law of the case doctrine is, I believe, manifestly unjust.
To answer the majority’s rhetorical question, “How could a decision based on the right law at that time now be a ‘manifestly erroneous’ decision?,” I would point out, first, that the question further illustrates the law-as-an-object view criticized above. The “right law” in 1983, when our previous decision was rendered, was not some unchanging corpus of “the law”; it was a correct application of the then controlling constitutional precept handed down in Seagram. But it was nonetheless erroneous— “manifestly erroneous,” if you will — because Seagram turned out to be wrong and Stroh, who lost in 1983, turned out to be right. To say that this Court’s previous decision was wrong is not a criticism of the Court in 1983; it is simply an acknowledgement that sometimes courts reach erroneous decisions by relying on erroneous precedents. This Court cannot, or should not, be faulted for lacking omniscience in 1983, but our lack of prescience then should not be turned into a reason now for refusing to acknowledge what has happened since and for holding that Stroh— even though it was right all along and ultimately was vindicated by the United States Supreme Court — has to pay nearly 20 million dollars for the privilege of being right.
IV.
The majority holds that Stroh is liable on its bond and offers as the primary reason for this result the proposition that Healy II should not be applied retroactively. Once again, this illustrates the vigor with which the majority is willing to apply the reification theory discussed above: “The law” as it stood in 1983 validated state price-affirmation statutes; in order for a statute like the 1979 law to be declared now to have been invalid then, it is necessary to hold that the new decision (Healy II) reached back in time and wrought some kind of change in the old law so as to render the statute invalid instead of valid.10 But we are deciding this case today, not in 1983, and not in 1966 when Seagram was decided. We should apply today’s precepts today — unless there is some good reason for not doing so. To refuse to apply the precept of Healy II because it was not announced until after the statute was repealed in 1985 is simply another application of the approach that “the law” has a certain shape at any given time and that shape cannot be changed by a subsequent event unless that event has “retroactive” effect.
But it is not necessary to philosophize about the nature of the law to reach the conclusion that Healy II should be given retroactive effect in this case; that conclusion follows readily from conventional analysis using accepted forms of legal reasoning. First, the Supreme Court has not held that its decision in Healy II is prospective only; in context, the quotation in the majority opinion (Seagram “is no longer good law”) simply means that, in light of the history recounted in the Supreme Court’s opinion, the decision in Seagram, had to be overruled. Since the question of the retroactivity or nonretroactivity of a Supreme Court decision is an issue of federal law, James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia, — U.S. -, -, 111 S.Ct. 2439, 2443, 115 L.Ed.2d 481 (1991) (opinion of Souter, J.), I agree with the majority’s implicit recognition that this is a point on which the Supreme Court has the last say; but I do not think it has said anything up to now. This Court is deciding this issue of federal law; and, with all respect, I think the majority decides it incorrectly.
Judicial decisions interpreting the Constitution, like most judicial decisions, are usually given retroactive effect. Id. at -, 111 S.Ct. at 2443; United States v. Johnson, 457 U.S. 537, 542, 102 S.Ct. 2579, 2582, 73 L.Ed.2d 202 (1982) (“Before 1965, * * * ‘both the common law and our own decisions recognized a general rule of retrospective effect for the cbnstitutional decisions of this Court * * * subject to [certain] limited exceptions.’ ”) (quoting Robinson v. Neil, 409 U.S. 505, 507, 93 S.Ct. 876, 877, 35 L.Ed.2d 29 (1973)). Nevertheless, in civil cases there are situatins in which a decision interpreting the Constitution will not be applied retroactively. Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson11 lays out the factors or criteria to be utilized in determining when a decision will not be so applied. As Justice Franchini points out in his special concurrence, Chevron Oil was not overruled in the very recent decision in Beam. However, and with utmost respect, I believe that Justice Franchini is seriously mistaken, as is the majority,12 in his attempt to dispel any “conjecture” that Beam supports a result contrary to the one announced by the majority.
Although there was no majority opinion in Beam, six of the nine Justices voted to hold the earlier decision in Bacchus13 retroactive to disputes arising and conduct occurring before the date of that decision. Justice Souter, writing for himself and Justice Stevens, took the position that principles of equality and stare decisis dictated application of a new rule, applied to the litigants in the case in which the rule is announced, to other, similarly situated litigants whose conduct antedated announcement of the new rule. They thus rejected the concept of “modified” or “selective” prospectivity. (They refused, however, to “speculate as to the grounds or propriety of pure prospectivity.” — U.S. at-, 111 S.Ct. at 2448.) Since the parties’ conduct in Healy II occurred in 1981-84 and that of the litigants in this case in 1979-85, applying the rule in Healy II to the former set of litigants but not the latter would appear to work just the kind of discrimination disfavored by Justices Souter and Stevens in Beam. I therefore assume that they would apply Healy II retroactively in this case to hold that the 1979 law was invalid.
Justice White concurred in the judgment in Beam, agreeing with Justice Souter that the litigants in Beam should have the benefit of the same rule as those in Bacchus, but he reaffirmed his view that “pure” prospectivity is proper in some cases. Id. — U.S. at-, 111 S.Ct. at 2449. Justice's Blackmun, Marshall, and Scalia also concurred in the judgment, expressing the view that both selective prospectivity and pure prospectivity are beyond the Court’s power, id. at-, 111 S.Ct. at 2451 — that all decisions adjudicating a constitutional controversy should be applied retroactively.
The dissent in Beam, authored by Justice O’Connor and joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Kennedy, would have applied the Chevron Oil analysis in deciding the retroactivity question before them. But the dissent’s reasoning in Beam, consistent with Justice O’Connor’s approach in American Trucking Ass’ns v. Smith,14 placed considerable — indeed, to my mind, controlling — emphasis in reaching this result on the desirability of respecting parties’ reliance on an old rule of law and not upsetting settled expectations that may have arisen based on the old rule. In the present case, as I shall explain below in connection with American Trucking Ass’ns v. Smith, this factor of reliance — of respecting settled expectations that may have grown up around Seagram — is altogether lacking. I surmise, therefore, that the dissenters in Beam (who, with Justice White, also composed the plurality in Smith) would apply the usual rule of full retroactivity in this case and find any exceptions, predicated on Chevron Oil, inapplicable.
As to Chevron Oil, I concede that two of the three factors it prescribed for determining when a new rule will be given prospective-only effect are partially satisfied by Healy II: The case did establish a new principle of law by overruling clear past precedent, and (since our price-affirmation laws were repealed in 1985) retrospective application of Healy II will not have any particular effect in furthering or retarding operation of the rule in that case (that price-affirmation laws act as an impermissible burden on interstate commerce). However, Chevron Oil’s first factor is not fully satisfied, because the element of the parties’ reliance is missing. See 404 U.S. at 106, 92 S.Ct. at 355 (“[T]he decision to be applied nonretroactively must establish a new principle of law, either by overruling clear past precedent on which litigants may have relied * * *.”) (emphasis added). Likewise, I cannot concede that Chevron Oil’s second factor is fully satisfied, because, while holding Stroh liable on its bond may not deter other states from enacting price-affirmation laws, such action is flatly inconsistent with the policy expressed in the Commerce Clause as construed in Healy II.
It is over the third Chevron Oil factor, however, that I disagree most strenuously with the majority opinion. That third criterion is “the inequity imposed by retroactive application * * * [in order to avoid] the ‘injustice or hardship’ by a holding of nonretroactivity.” 404 U.S. at 107, 92 S.Ct. at 355. In Chevron Oil, the plaintiff at least arguably had relied on the then current law in failing to file suit within the time prescribed by the state statute of limitations that was applicable as a result of a new Supreme Court decision, Rodrigue v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 395 U.S. 352, 89 S.Ct. 1835, 23 L.Ed.2d 360 (1969). The Court gave Rodrigue prospective effect only, because it would have been inequitable to deprive the plaintiff of his cause of action when he relied on the old law in failing to timely file his lawsuit. Similarly, in American Trucking Ass’ns v. Smith the Court held that a decision15 invalidating a highway use equalization tax would not be applied with full retroactivity, because “invalidation of the State’s HUE tax would have potentially disruptive consequences for the State and its citizens.” 496 U.S. at-, 110 S.Ct. at 2333. Justice O’Connor’s plurality opinion focused on the possibility that retroactive invalidation of the tax might, if a refund were required, “deplete the state treasury, thus threatening the State’s current operations and future plans,” and entail “potentially significant administrative costs.” Id. “[T]he inequity of unsettling actions taken in reliance on those precedents [i.e., previously established precedents overruled by a later decision] is apparent.” Id. Justice O’Connor employed the same rationale in her dissent in Beam. See — U.S. at-, 111 S.Ct. at 2452 (“By not applying a law-changing decision retroactively, a court respects the settled expectations that have built up around the old law.”).
This factor is altogether absent in the present case. At oral argument, counsel for the Director conceded that the only instance of reliance in this case was that our state legislature presumably relied on Seagram in enacting the 1979 law. (And, of course, this Court relied on Seagram in upholding that law.) But I do not believe that the reliance of a legislative body (or a court) is the kind of reliance American Trucking is talking about. In protecting the reliance interests of parties to a transaction or a lawsuit — in refusing to upset settled expectations of litigants or others— the courts are concerned about protecting the rights (or interests, or hopes, or desires) of the parties to a transaction or a dispute, which may include governmental bodies but does not include (except as reflected in actions taken in reliance on a former law, such as collection of taxes) law-prescribing assemblies or tribunals.
As I have said, there is no suggestion in this case that anyone relied on the 1979 price-affirmation law in doing anything. Stroh’s predecessor sued for a declaration that the law was invalid; the Director defended; the parties worked out an agreement under which the Director would not enforce the law pending a determination of its validity and on condition that the plaintiffs would pay the difference between what they might charge under the injunction and what they could charge under the law if it were valid. No one changed his, her, or its conduct in reliance on anything that anyone else did — except, of course, that the wholesalers paid the brewers more for beer than they would have paid in the absence of the injunction, assuming the law was valid. All of this is long past; the law was repealed after a few years and ultimately held not valid, and so it turned out that the wholesalers paid a permissible price for their beer, even though they still complain that the price charged by the brewers in the 1979-85 timeframe was in some way unfair.
None of this is reviewed or analyzed by the majority in any way. Instead, the opinion offers the wholly speculative possibilities (1) that the wholesalers who decided to settle rather than litigate would somehow be treated unjustly if Stroh’s position that the 1979 law was invalid were now upheld by this Court, and (2) that the state might somehow be liable to the settling wholesalers if, notwithstanding the fact that the 1979 law is now clearly invalid, Stroh were exonerated from liability on its bond.
I reject as entirely unfounded the notion that the state could incur any liability whatsoever to the brewers who settled their potential liability under the preliminary injunction bonds by paying money to the state in exchange for a release from any further liability and in order to avoid the expenses, hazards, and inconveniences of continued litigation. The McKesson case16 does not even come close to suggesting that such a settlement (especially where, as here, the state has no authority under the statute to collect any money from the settling parties in the first place) might give rise to liability on the part of the state or otherwise result in inequitable consequences to other parties. As for those other parties, I regard it as highly dubious to suggest that parties who voluntarily settled litigation to get a contingent liability off their books (and for whatever other reasons they may have settled) would somehow be treated unfairly if we recognized that the party who persisted in its constitutional challenge and who ultimately was vindicated was not liable for the penal sum in its bond.
V.
In the words of both Moya and Reese, the majority has reached a result that is “manifestly unjust.” It has done so by declaring that a statute, the 1979 law— which the majority itself says has clearly been “finally invalidated” by an intervening decision of the United States Supreme Court — is and was valid because we previously ruled it so, even though “[tjhere is no question but that [our prior ruling] is now ‘bad law.'” By so holding, the majority not. only misapplies the law of the case doctrine; it does so in a way that contravenes supervening federal law and thus violates the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution. See Henry v. City of Rock Hill, 376 U.S. 776, 84 S.Ct. 1042, 12 L.Ed.2d 79 (1964); Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1, 78 S.Ct. 1401, 3 L.Ed.2d 5 (1958); State v. Lewis, 543 N.E.2d 1116 (Ind.1989); Brunner Enters. v. Department of Revenue, 452 So.2d 550 (Fla.1984); Townsend v. Clover Bottom Hosp. & School, 560 S.W.2d 623 (Tenn.), cert. denied, 436 U.S. 948, 98 S.Ct. 2854, 56 L.Ed.2d 790 (1978).
The majority compounds this error by determining incorrectly a question of federal law: whether the Supreme Court’s decision in Healy II should be limited to prospective-only effect and not applied in the circumstances of this case. While not a violation of the Supremacy Clause, this is simply an erroneous ruling on an issue of federal law which does a grave injustice to the losing party before us and confers an unwarranted windfall on the parties who have prevailed.
I therefore dissent.
RANSOM, J., concurs.. Healy v. Beer Inst., 491 U.S. 324, 109 S.Ct. 2491, 105 L.Ed.2d 275 (1989).
. The Supreme Court said, for example: "[T]he practical effect of this affirmation law, in conjunction with the many other beer pricing and affirmation laws that have been or might be enacted throughout the country, is to create just the kind of competing and interlocking local economic regulation that the Commerce Clause was meant to preclude." Healy II, 491 U.S. at 337, 109 S.Ct. at 2500.
.The Director apparently did not know what to do with the money collected from the other brewers when they settled with him, so the settlement agreements provided simply that the settlement proceeds were to be held in trust by the Attorney General and distributed "for the benefit of the citizens of New Mexico as the Attorney General may deem appropriate."
. Great Northern Ry. v. Sunburst Oil & Ref. Co., 287 U.S. 358, 365, 53 S.Ct. 145, 148, 77 L.Ed. 360 (1932) (Cardozo, J.).
. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons v. Hostetter, 384 U.S. 35, 86 S.Ct. 1254, 16 L.Ed.2d 336 (1966).
. Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U.S. 205, 222, 37 S.Ct. 524, 531, 61 L.Ed. 1086 (1917) (Holmes, J., dissenting).
. See the majority opinion, ante, footnote 9.
. Reese v. State, 106 N.M. 505, 745 P.2d 1153 (1987).
. Moya v. Catholic Archdiocese, 107 N.M. 245, 755 P.2d 583 (1988).
. The anomaly in this assertion was manifested by the Director’s position in the court below, in which he conceded that the 1981 law was unconstitutional and yet, in practically the same breath, argued that the 1979 law was valid! He took this glaringly inconsistent position because, by affirming the invalidity of the 1981 law with its 1979-law repealer, he could claim that the earlier law remained in effect until its later repeal in 1985 and thus, as the district court ruled, "provided a continuing basis for Stroh’s liability.” Like the majority, I do not reach the questions whether the severability clause in the 1981 law left the repealer intact and whether, assuming the later law was invalid, the earlier law "revived" when the later law fell. For all practical purposes, as reflected in both the majority opinion and this dissent, Stroh’s liability under its bond is the same under either the 1979 law or the 1981 law.
. 404 U.S. 97, 92 S.Ct. 349, 30 L.Ed.2d 296 (1971).
. The majority’s reliance on Linkletter v. Walker, 381 U.S. 618, 85 S.Ct. 1731, 14 L.Ed.2d 601 (1965), is puzzling. The rationale of that case was severely undercut in Griffith v. Kentucky, 479 U.S. 314, 107 S.Ct. 708, 93 L.Ed.2d 649 (1987), in which the Court held that a new constitutional rule, in criminal cases, applies retroactively to all cases pending on direct review or not yet final. See id. at 320-22, 107 S.Ct. at 711-13.
. Bacchus Imports, Ltd. v. Dias, 468 U.S. 263, 104 S.Ct. 3049, 82 L.Ed.2d 200 (1984).
. 496 U.S. 167, 110 S.Ct. 2323, 110 L.Ed.2d 148 (1990).
. American Trucking Ass’ns v. Scheiner, 483 U.S. 266, 107 S.Ct. 2829, 97 L.Ed.2d 226 (1987).
. McKesson Corp. v. Division of Alcoholic Beverages & Tobacco, 496 U.S. 18, 110 S.Ct. 2238, 110 L.Ed.2d 17 (1990).