Legal Research AI

Gonzalez Abreau v. Banco Central

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-07-05
Citations: 27 F.3d 751
Copy Citations
113 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                             

No.  93-2021

                          OLGA GONZALEZ,
                a/k/a OLGA GONZALEZ ABREU, ET AL.,
                     Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                                v.

                   BANCO CENTRAL CORP., ET AL.,
                      Defendants, Appellees.

                                             

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

          [Hon. Hector M. Laffitte, U.S. District Judge]
                                                       

                                             

                              Before

                      Selya, Circuit Judge,
                                          

                  Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                              

                    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                            

                                             

     Fernando  L. Gallardo, with whom Woods & Woods was on brief,
                                                   
for appellants.
     Luis Sanchez  Betances, with whom Ivonne  Cruz Serrano, Luis
                                                                 
A. Melendez-Albizu,  and Sanchez-Betances & Sifre  were on brief,
                                                 
for appellees.

                                             

                          June 30, 1994

                                             

          SELYA, Circuit  Judge.  This appeal  raises tantalizing
          SELYA, Circuit  Judge.
                               

questions  concerning  the application  of  the  doctrine of  res

judicata  to nonparties.    Because we  conclude that  appellants

cannot lawfully be  precluded from bringing  their action in  the

circumstances  at bar, we  reverse the district  court's order of

dismissal and remand for further proceedings.

I.  BACKGROUND

          In the  1970s, a  consortium of real  estate developers

sold subdivided  lots of undeveloped land  to approximately 3,000

purchasers, most of whom resided in Puerto Rico.  Contrary to the

promoters' glowing representations, the  real estate proved to be

Florida swampland, unsuitable for development.

          In 1982, a  gaggle of duped  purchasers (whom we  shall

call "the Rodriguez plaintiffs") commenced a civil  action in the

United  States District  Court for  the District of  Puerto Rico.

They  sued the sellers, the banks that financed the project,1 and

several related individuals.   The  Rodriguez plaintiffs  alleged

violations  of  the Interstate  Land  Sales  Full Disclosure  Act

("ILSFDA"), 15  U.S.C.    1703,  the Securities  Exchange Act  of

1934,  15  U.S.C.    78j,  Rule  10b-5  thereunder,  17 C.F.R.   

240.10b-5,   and   the   Racketeering  Influenced   and   Corrupt

Organizations  Act ("RICO"), 18 U.S.C.    1961-1964.  Some of the

plaintiffs  then  assisted  in   the  formation  of  the  Sunrise

Litigation Group.   The  group's members  paid  fees that  helped

                    

     1Most of  the financing was  undertaken by  Banco Central  y
Economias and Banco de Economias, the predecessors in interest of
defendant-appellee Banco Central Corp.

                                2

defray the costs of the litigation and exchanged information that

sometimes proved to be of use in pursuing the litigation.

          After   several  years   of   discovery  and   numerous

amendments  to  the  pleadings,  the  Rodriguez  plaintiffs,  152

strong, sought to convert their suit to a class action.  In April

of 1987, the district court refused either to certify  a class or

to permit additional plaintiffs to intervene.  Almost immediately

thereafter, several prospective plaintiffs  who had tried in vain

to join  the Rodriguez  litigation initiated the  instant action.

The  new coalition of claimants (whom we shall call "the Gonzalez

plaintiffs") were represented by the same lawyers who represented

the  Rodriguez plaintiffs.    They sued  the same  defendants and

their  complaint mimicked  a proposed  amended complaint  on file

(but never allowed) in the Rodriguez litigation.

          During  the  next  few  years,  some  of  the  Gonzalez

plaintiffs joined the Sunrise Litigation Group.  In the same time

frame,  they prevailed on no fewer  than five motions to bring in

additional  claimants.   And on  January 16,  1992, the  district

court allowed the Gonzalez plaintiffs to amend their complaint to

include mail  fraud as  a  RICO predicate  act, see  18 U.S.C.   
                                                   

1962(d), and to include  claims for breach of contract  and fraud

under Puerto Rico law, see, e.g., P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31,   3018.
                                

          Despite   strong   evidence   of   skullduggery,2   the

                    

     2Judge Fuste, who presided over the Rodriguez case, believed
the  plaintiffs  "undoubtedly"  had  been wronged.    Even  while
upholding many  of the  defendants' legal arguments,  he lamented
the seeming injustice "in allowing the . . . sellers of swampland
to trusting buyers, to walk from this court without so  much as a

                                3

Rodriguez plaintiffs frittered away much of their case through  a

series  of pretrial  blunders.   See,  e.g.,  Rodriguez v.  Banco
                                                                 

Central Corp., 727 F. Supp. 759, 763-65 (D.P.R. 1989) (dismissing
             

claims under ILSFDA as time-barred), aff'd in part and vacated in
                                                                 

part, 917 F.2d  664 (1st  Cir. 1990); id.  at 769-70  (dismissing
                                         

RICO claims premised on federal securities violations); Rodriguez
                                                                 

v. Banco Central  Corp., 777  F. Supp. 1043,  1047 (D.P.R.  1991)
                       

(discussing  plaintiffs'  failure  to  plead  certain potentially

viable claims).   The  Rodriguez plaintiffs ultimately  lost what

remained of their case  after a seven-week jury trial  when Judge

Fuste directed verdicts for the  defendants on the only surviving

claims  and this court upheld his ruling on appeal, see Rodriguez
                                                                 

v. Banco Central Corp., 990 F.2d 7, 14 (1st Cir. 1993).
                      

          Following  the interment  of the  Rodriguez litigation,

renewed attention  focused on the Gonzalez  litigation (which was

pending before Judge Laffitte).  By then, the Gonzalez plaintiffs

were pressing  certain claims  that replicated those  pressed and

lost by the Rodriguez plaintiffs,  e.g., claims under the ILSFDA,
                                       

Rule 10b-5, and RICO (premised on securities fraud), and  certain

additional claims  that had  been neglected  or abandoned  by the

Rodriguez plaintiffs,  e.g., RICO claims premised  on mail fraud,
                           

state-law claims for fraud, and claims for breach of contract.

          After  silhouetting  the   Gonzalez  plaintiffs'   suit

against the backdrop of the completed Rodriguez litigation, Judge

                    

scratch."  Rodriguez v.  Banco Central Corp., 777 F.  Supp. 1043,
                                            
1065 (D.P.R. 1991).

                                4

Laffitte, by way of  an unpublished memorandum opinion, dismissed

the  action in  its entirety  on grounds  of res  judicata.   The

Gonzalez plaintiffs appeal.  We have jurisdiction pursuant  to 28

U.S.C.   1291.

II.  ANALYSIS

          Although appellants  were not  parties  to the  earlier

litigation,  the court below applied res judicata in bar of their

claims under a  theory of privity.  The applicability  vel non of
                                                              

the  doctrine of  res judicata  presents a  question of  law over

which we exercise  plenary appellate review.   See E. &  J. Gallo
                                                                 

Winery v. Gallo Cattle Co., 967 F.2d  1280, 1287 (9th Cir. 1992).
                          

Federal law governs the  res judicata effects of a  federal court

judgment in a federal  question case as applied  to a later  case

that again presents a federal  question to a federal court.   See
                                                                 

Blonder-Tongue Labs., Inc. v. University of Ill. Found., 402 U.S.
                                                       

313, 324 n.12  (1971); Kale v. Combined Ins. Co.,  924 F.2d 1161,
                                                

1165 (1st  Cir.), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 69 (1991); see also 18
                                                              

Charles A. Wright, et al., Federal Practice and Procedure   4466,
                                                         

at 617-18 (1981) (hereinafter "Wright & Miller").  Thus,  because

both  the  earlier (ostensibly  precluding)  suit  and the  later

(ostensibly    precluded)    suit   invoked    federal   question

jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C.   1331, the  rule of decision here is
                 

supplied by federal law.

          The accepted formulation  of res  judicata for  federal

court  use teaches that  "a final  judgment on  the merits  of an

action precludes  the parties or their  privies from relitigating

                                5

issues  that  were or  could have  been  raised in  that action."

Allen  v.  McCurry, 449  U.S. 90,  94  (1980).   Accordingly, the
                  

elements of res judicata are  (1) a final judgment on the  merits

in  an  earlier suit,  (2)  sufficient  identicality between  the

causes of action asserted in the earlier and later suits, and (3)

sufficient  identicality between  the parties  in the  two suits.

See Aunyx  Corp. v. Canon U.S.A.,  Inc., 978 F.2d 3,  6 (1st Cir.
                                       

1992), cert.  denied, 113 S. Ct.  1416 (1993); Kale, 924  F.2d at
                                                   

1165.

          In  the present  situation, the  first element  in this

tripartite test provokes no controversy; appellants  concede that

the earlier  (Rodriguez) suit resulted  in final judgment  on the

merits.  Thus, we  concentrate our energies on the  remaining two

prongs of the test.

              A.  Identicality of Causes of Action.
                                                  

          To determine whether sufficient subject matter identity

exists between an earlier and a later suit, federal courts employ

a transactional  approach.  See Kale, 924 F.2d at 1166; Manego v.
                                                              

Orleans  Bd. of  Trade,  773 F.2d  1, 5  (1st  Cir. 1985),  cert.
                                                                 

denied, 475  U.S. 1084 (1986);  see also Restatement  (Second) of
                                                                 

Judgments   24 (1992).  This approach recognizes that a valid and
         

final  judgment in  an action  will extinguish  subsequent claims

"with respect to all or any part of the transaction, or series of

connected transactions,  out of which the action arose."  Manego,
                                                                

773 F.2d at 5 (quoting Restatement   24).

          To   understand  the  transactional   approach,  it  is

                                6

necessary to appreciate  that a single  transaction or series  of

transactions  can   and often does    give rise to a multiplicity

of claims.  Phrased another way, "[a] single  cause of action can

manifest  itself  in an  outpouring  of  different claims,  based

variously  on federal  statutes, state  statutes, and  the common

law."   Kale, 924 F.2d at  1166.  The necessary  identity will be
            

found to exist  if both sets  of claims    those asserted in  the

earlier  action and  those asserted  in  the subsequent  action  

derive from a  common nucleus of  operative facts.  See  id. This
                                                            

principle pertains  no matter how diverse or  prolific the claims

themselves may be.  See 1B J.  Moore, Federal Practice   0.410[1]
                                                      

at 350 (2d  ed. 1993) (explaining that "the  `cause of action' or

`claim' .  . .  is  bounded by  the injury  for  which relief  is

demanded,  and not by  the legal theory").   It  follows that the

omission  of a  particular statement  of claim from  the original

suit is of  no great consequence; if the transaction  is the same

and the other components of the test are satisfied, principles of

res judicata will bar all  claims that either were or  could have

been asserted in the initial action.  See Kale, 924 F.2d at 1166;
                                              

Manego,  773 F.2d  at 5.   The  key is  to define  the underlying
      

injury.

          This definitional  process is  not a  purely mechanical

exercise.   "What factual  grouping constitutes  a `transaction',

and  what  groupings constitute  a  `series',  are [matters  that

should] be determined pragmatically," taking into consideration a

wide  variety of relevant  factors, including but  not limited to

                                7

such things as  "whether the  facts are related  in time,  space,

origin, or motivation, whether they form a convenient trial unit,

and  whether their treatment as  a unit conforms  to the parties'

expectations . . . ."  Aunyx, 978 F.2d at  7 (quoting Restatement
                            

(Second) of Judgments   24).

          Given  these  criteria,   we  believe  that   there  is

sufficient  identicality  here  between  the  earlier  and  later

actions to  satisfy the  requisite standard.   Without exception,

appellants' claims stem  from the same series  of transactions as

the claims  asserted in  the  initial litigation.   Although  the

individual sales contracts  are different, all of  them arise out

of a  single course  of conduct undertaken  by a  band of  allied

defendants.    By like  token,  while each  purchaser  acquired a

different lot  at a different price, all the lots are part of the

same development and all were sold by means of the same ballyhoo.

At the very least, the two sets of claims are  closely related in

time, origin, and geography.

          Moreover, if merged, the two  sets of claims would form

a  well-integrated unit.  The  same kinds of  land sale contracts

that the Rodriguez plaintiffs attacked under ILSFDA and sought to

characterize as  "securities" for  purposes of their  RICO claim,

see  Rodriguez,  990  F.2d  at 9,  underlie  appellants'  current
              

claims.   To be  sure, appellants have  negotiated the procedural

minefield  more  nimbly   than  their  predecessors,  and   have,

therefore, assembled a more  varied assortment of legal theories;

but  their  claims    including  both  those  that replicate  the

                                8

Rodriguez plaintiffs' claims  and those that  do not    implicate

the same series of interconnected  transactions that gave rise to

the causes of action litigated in the earlier lawsuit.  In short,

both sets of claims, though dressed in different legal garb, grow

out of a common nucleus of operative facts.  No more is exigible.

                   B.  Identicality of Parties.
                                              

          Concluding,  as   we  do,  that  the  district  court's

analysis passes  muster  on  the  first  two  components  of  the

tripartite test, we turn to the third essential ingredient needed

to  invoke the  doctrine of  res  judicata:   the  presence of  a

sufficient identity between the parties  to the earlier and later

actions.  Short of situations in which precisely the same parties

appear  in both suits, this element is almost always difficult to

gauge.

          1.   Nonparty Preclusion.  We step back to gain a sense
          1.   Nonparty Preclusion.
                                  

of perspective.  We are aware that a Supreme Court  dictum can be

read  to suggest that res judicata  is inoperative as a matter of

law insofar as nonparties  are concerned.  See Montana  v. United
                                                                 

States, 440 U.S. 147, 154 (1979) ("Preclusion of . . . nonparties
      

falls under  the rubric  of collateral  estoppel rather  than res

judicata because the latter doctrine presupposes identity between

causes  of action.  And the cause  of action which a nonparty has

vicariously  asserted differs  by definition  from that  which he

subsequently  seeks to litigate in his own right.") (dictum).  We

believe it is highly improbable, however, that the Montana Court,
                                                          

whose primary interest lay in molding the contours of the related

                                9

doctrine of  collateral estoppel,3 meant categorically  to banish

privity    a  time-honored  concept  that collapses  distinctions

between form and substance in respect to party  status   from use

in conjunction with principles of res judicata.

          This  conclusion  is  firmly  supported  not  only   by

respectable  precedent  but  also  by  practical  considerations.

Notwithstanding  the  Montana dictum,  several  courts, including
                             

this court, continue to apply res judicata to nonparties when the

circumstances  warrant.    See,  e.g., Aunyx,  978  F.2d  at  7-8
                                            

(applying res judicata to preclude the alter ego of a corporation

from relitigating); In re Air Crash at Dallas/Fort Worth Airport,
                                                                

861  F.2d 814, 816-18 (5th  Cir. 1988) (applying  res judicata to

bar  decedent's daughter from relitigating); see also Restatement
                                                                 

(Second) of Judgments    40,  41 (endorsing application of  claim
                     

preclusion  to nonparties  in specified  circumstances).   In the

same vein, courts continue routinely to formulate res judicata as

a doctrine that bars parties "or their privies" from relitigating

claims.   See, e.g.,  Allen, 449  U.S. at 94;  Kale, 924  F.2d at
                                                   

1165; In re Air Crash, 861 F.2d at 816; United  States v. Athlone
                                                                 

Indus., Inc.,  746 F.2d 977, 983  (3d Cir. 1984); Lee  v. City of
                                                                 

Peoria, 685 F.2d 196, 199 (7th Cir. 1982).
      

          There  are  also strong  practical  considerations that

counsel against  blind  adherence to  the  Montana dictum.    The
                                                  

                    

     3While the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel
have been said to "share a  distinct family resemblance," Fiumara
                                                                 
v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Cos., 746 F.2d 87, 90 n.1 (1st Cir. 1984),
                           
they are nonetheless distinct, see Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore,
                                                                
439 U.S. 322, 326 n.5 (1979) (delineating differences).

                                10

doctrine of  res judicata serves many desirable  ends, among them

finality and efficiency.   See Montana, 440 U.S.  at 153.   Logic
                                      

suggests  that the  doctrine can  achieve its  goals only  if its

preclusive   effects  occasionally   can   reach   persons   who,

technically,  were  not  parties  to the  original  action.   The

pitfalls of  a more  mechanical rule  are  obvious; making  party

status a sine qua non for the operation of res judicata opens the
                     

door  to countless  varieties of  manipulation, including  claim-

splitting, suits by proxy, and forum-shopping.

          Finally,  reading  Montana's  dictum  as  categorically
                                    

eliminating res judicata whenever there are  technically distinct

parties is at  loggerheads with the hoary concept  of privity   a

concept  long  since  integrated   into  the  legal  lexicon  and

routinely applied in analogous situations.   See, e.g., Stacy  v.
                                                             

Thrasher, 47  U.S. 44, 51  (1848) (applying privity  to determine
        

the binding  effect of  court judgments); Wallingsford  v. Larcon
                                                                 

Co.,  237  F.2d 904,  906 (8th  Cir.  1956) (applying  privity to
   

determine  the extent  of  the res  judicata  effect of  a  prior

judgment).   We are loath  to assume  that the Court  intended to

wrest  this concept from the  jurisprudence of res  judicata by a

casual  observation,  bereft  of  any  meaningful  discussion  or

explanation.  As  a rule, appellate courts  do not operate in  so

Delphic a fashion.   See, e.g., United States  v. Zapata, 18 F.3d
                                                        

971, 977  (1st Cir. 1994) (rejecting argument that "an unheralded

dictum"  in  a  Supreme  Court  opinion  altered  settled  Fourth

Amendment concepts and thereby "worked a sea change in the law").

                                11

          We  find this  combination  of  precedent, policy,  and

practicalities to  be irresistible.  Consequently,  we hold that,

under  federal law, res judicata can sometimes operate to bar the

maintenance of an  action by persons  who, technically, were  not

parties to  the  initial action  (to which  preclusive effect  is

attributed).   Nonetheless,  we appreciate  that this is  a murky

corner  of the  law  and caution  the  district courts  to  tread

gingerly in applying res judicata to nonparties.4

          2.  Privity.  The most familiar mechanism for extending
          2.  Privity.
                     

res   judicata   to   nonparties   without   savaging   important

constitutional  rights is the concept of privity   a concept that

furnishes a  serviceable framework for  an exception to  the rule

that res judicata only bars relitigation of claims by persons who

were parties to  the original  litigation.  See  Meza v.  General
                                                                 

Battery Corp., 908 F.2d 1262, 1266 (5th Cir. 1990); see also NLRB
                                                                 

v.  Donna-Lee Sportswear  Co., 836  F.2d 31,  34 (1st  Cir. 1987)
                             

(applying same exception in connection with issue preclusion).

          Although  privity can  be elusive,  this case  does not

require us to build four walls around it.  Here, the res judicata

defense is based not  on some exotic doctrinal refinement  but on

commonly  accepted principles  of how  privity operates  to bring

about  nonparty preclusion.   The  theory underlying  defendants'

                    

     4The  perils of  nonparty  preclusion are  real.   Prominent
among them is the  prospect that an overly expansive  arrangement
of  the  concept,   or  too   free  use  of   it,  may   endanger
constitutional rights.   See Meza v.  General Battery Corp.,  908
                                                           
F.2d 1262, 1266 (5th Cir. 1990) (approving concept but noting the
due  process concerns  implicit in  the  ideal that,  in general,
every party is entitled to her own "day in court").

                                12

iteration of the defense is that privity exists (and,  therefore,

nonparty  preclusion potentially  obtains) if  a nonparty  either

substantially  controlled  a party's  involvement in  the initial

litigation  or,  conversely, permitted  a  party  to the  initial

litigation to  function  as his  de  facto representative.5    We
                                          

accept   defendants'  theoretical   premise,  but,   after  close

perscrutation  of the record as a whole, we conclude that neither

stripe of privity exists here.

                       Substantial Control
                                          

          The  doctrine of  res judicata  rests upon  the bedrock

principle that, for  claim preclusion to apply,  a litigant first

must have had a full and fair opportunity to litigate his  claim.

See Fiumara v.  Fireman's Fund  Ins. Cos., 746  F.2d 87, 92  (1st
                                         

Cir. 1984);  see also 18 Wright  & Miller, supra,    4449, at 417
                                                

(noting  "[o]ur  deep-rooted  historic  tradition  that  everyone

should  have his own day in court"); cf. Blonder-Tongue, 402 U.S.
                                                       

at 328 (commenting that it is sufficient to afford a litigant one

"full  and  fair  opportunity   for  judicial  resolution"  of  a

particular issue).  If a nonparty either participated vicariously

in the  original litigation  by exercising  control over  a named

party  or had  the opportunity  to exert  such control,  then the

nonparty  effectively  enjoyed  his  day  in  court,  and  it  is

appropriate to impute to him the legal attributes of party status

for purposes of claim  preclusion.  See United States  v. Bonilla
                                                                 

                    

     5The sobriquet  "virtual representation" frequently  is used
to  describe this  type  of de  facto  representation.   It  fits
                                     
equally well under the label "representation by proxy."

                                13

Romero, 836 F.2d  39, 44 (1st Cir. 1987),  cert. denied, 488 U.S.
                                                       

817 (1988);  see also 18 Wright  & Miller, supra,    4451, at 430
                                                

(arguing  that "[p]reclusion is fair so  long as the relationship

between the nonparty and  a party was such that  the nonparty had

the same  practical  opportunity to  control  the course  of  the

proceedings that  would be available  to a party");  cf. Montana,
                                                                

440  U.S.  at 154  (finding  issue  preclusion appropriate  "when

nonparties  assume control over  litigation in which  they have a

direct  financial  or  proprietary  interest  and  then  seek  to

redetermine issues previously resolved"); Restatement (Second) of

Judgments   39 (similar).6

          Substantial control  means what the  phrase implies; it

connotes the  availability of  a significant degree  of effective

control  in the prosecution  or defense  of the  case    what one

might term, in the  vernacular, the power   whether  exercised or

not    to call the shots.7   See Rumford Chem.  Works v. Hygienic
                                                                 

Chem. Co., 215 U.S. 156, 160 (1909) (holding that  the concept of
         

                    

     6We do not think  that comment b to section  39, Restatement
                                                                 
(Second)  of Judgments   39, comment b, at 383-84 (limiting scope
                      
of section to issue  preclusion, not claim preclusion), indicates
that  substantial  control can  never serve  as  the basis  for a
finding  of privity  when res  judicata is in  play.   Rather, we
interpret the comment as  suggesting that substantial control has
somewhat  different dimensions for  purposes of  issue preclusion
than  for purposes of claim preclusion   a proposition with which
we agree.

     7Some  courts and  commentators  have suggested  that, at  a
minimum,  substantial  control  is  the  quantum  of  involvement
expected  of a  co-party.   See,  e.g.,  American Postal  Workers
                                                                 
Union,  Etc. v. U.S.  Postal Serv., 736  F.2d 317,  319 (6th Cir.
                                  
1984); 1B Moore, supra,   0.411[6],  at 456.  With respect, we do
                      
not find this mode  of measurement particularly enlightening and,
hence, we decline to install it.

                                14

substantial control refers  to "the right  to intermeddle in  any

way in the conduct of  the case"); Hy-Lo Unit & Metal  Prods. Co.
                                                                 

v.  Remote Control Mfg.  Co., 83  F.2d 345,  350 (9th  Cir. 1936)
                            

(stating that substantial control means the "right to participate

and control  such prosecution or  defense"); Restatement (Second)
                                                                 

of  Judgments   39, comment c,  at 384 (stating that control, for
             

purposes of issue  preclusion, refers  to the  right to  exercise

"effective  choice  as to  the legal  theories  and proofs  to be

advanced," as  well as  "control over  the opportunity  to obtain

review"); see generally 1B Moore, supra,   0.411[6] at 456-58.
                                       

          As the proverb suggests, a picture is sometimes worth a

thousand words.  Along  these lines, we suspect that  the concept

of substantial control can be illustrated better by examples than

by linguistic constructs.   For instance, substantial control has

been  found in the case  of a liability  insurer that assumes the

insured's defense, see, e.g., Iacaponi v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co.,
                                                                

379 F.2d  311, 312 (3d  Cir. 1967), cert.  denied, 389  U.S. 1054
                                                 

(1968),  an indemnitor  who participates  in defending  an action

brought  against the indemnitee, see,  e.g., Bros, Inc.  v. W. E.
                                                                 

Grace Mfg. Co.,  261 F.2d 428,  430-31 (5th Cir.  1958), and  the
              

owner of  a close corporation  who assumes control  of litigation

brought against  the firm,  see, e.g.,  Kreager v. General  Elec.
                                                                 

Co., 497 F.2d 468, 471-72 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 419 U.S.  1041
                                                 

(1974).   Conversely,  courts  have refused  to find  substantial

control  merely  because a  nonparty  retained  the attorney  who

represented  a party to the earlier action, see Freeman v. Lester
                                                                 

                                15

Coggins  Trucking, Inc., 771 F.2d 860, 864 (5th Cir. 1985); Ramey
                                                                 

v. Rockefeller, 348 F. Supp. 780, 785 (E.D.N.Y. 1972), or because
              

the  nonparty  assisted  in  financing the  earlier  action,  see
                                                                 

Rumford  Chem.,  215 U.S.  at  159-60;  General  Foods  Corp.  v.
                                                             

Massachusetts  Dep't of Pub.  Health, 648  F.2d 784,  787-88 (1st
                                    

Cir. 1981), or because the nonparty testified as a witness in the

earlier action, see Benson  & Ford, Inc. v. Wanda  Petroleum Co.,
                                                                

833 F.2d 1172, 1174-75 (5th Cir. 1987); Ponderosa Devel. Corp. v.
                                                              

Bjordahl, 787 F.2d 533,  536-37 (10th Cir. 1986), or  because the
        

nonparty procured witnesses or  evidence, see Carl Zeiss Stiftung
                                                                 

v.  V.E.B.  Carl Zeiss,  Jena, 293  F.  Supp. 892,  921 (S.D.N.Y.
                             

1968), modified, 433 F.2d  686 (2d Cir. 1970), cert.  denied, 403
                                                            

U.S. 905 (1971), or because the nonparty furnished his attorney's

assistance,  see Cofax Corp.  v. Minn. Mining  & Mfg.  Co., 79 F.
                                                          

Supp. 842, 844 (S.D.N.Y. 1947).

          In the last analysis, there is  no bright-line test for

gauging substantial control.   The inquiry must be case-specific,

see  1B Moore,  supra,   0.411[6]  at 458, and  fact patterns are
                     

almost endlessly variable.  The critical judgment cannot be based

on  isolated  facts.    Consequently,  an  inquiring  court  must

consider the  totality of the circumstances  to determine whether

they justify a  reasonable inference of a nonparty's potential or

actual involvement as a  decisionmaker in the earlier litigation.

The nonparty's  participation may  be overt  or  covert, and  the

evidence  of it may be direct or  circumstantial   so long as the

evidence as a  whole shows that the nonparty  possessed effective

                                16

control  over  a party's  conduct  of the  earlier  litigation as

measured from  a practical, as  opposed to a  purely theoretical,

standpoint.   The burden of persuasion  ultimately rests with him

who asserts that control (or the right to exercise it) existed to

such a degree as would warrant invoking nonparty preclusion.  See
                                                                 

id.
   

          Applying this  standard, there is no  principled way in

which it can  be said that the Gonzalez  plaintiffs substantially

controlled  the Rodriguez  plaintiffs in  regard to  the original

litigation.  The only  facts to which the district  court alluded

in ruling that nonparty  preclusion loomed involve the similarity

of the complaints at one point in time, the parties' common legal

representation, and the planned  use of some discovered materials

in both  litigations.  In our  view, these facts do  not begin to

show that the Gonzalez plaintiffs exercised any meaningful degree

of control over the course of  the Rodriguez litigation.  Nor did

they  have either  the right  or the  opportunity to  demand such

control.8

          Moreover,  the record contains much additional evidence

indicating the absence of substantial control.  No useful purpose

                    

     8Admittedly, some  plaintiffs in each camp  also belonged to
an informal litigation group that helped to finance the Rodriguez
litigation  and  disseminated  information relevant  to  members'
claims.  Yet this link, whether taken by itself or in combination
with  the circumstances noted by  the district court,  is far too
fragile  to support a finding of substantial control.  See, e.g.,
                                                                
Jenkins v. Hartford  Acc. & Indem. Co., 733 F.2d  1090, 1091 (4th
                                      
Cir. 1984) (holding  that limited participation  will not bind  a
nonparty); General  Foods, 648 F.2d  at 788  (noting that  merely
                         
helping  to finance litigation will not bind a nonparty); McKeown
                                                                 
v. Wheat, 231 F.2d 540, 543 (5th Cir. 1956) (similar).
        

                                17

would  be served by marshalling  this evidence.   We do, however,

remark the  most telling  datum:   that the  Rodriguez plaintiffs

sought to amend their complaint to add those who later became the

Gonzalez plaintiffs  a full  half-decade after  the start of  the

litigation   a datum strongly  suggesting that appellants had  no

involvement in the initial  five years of litigation.   This lack

of participation at the early stages  of the Rodriguez litigation

is particularly  probative on  the issue of  substantial control,

for  it  was  during  this period  that  many  pivotal  strategic

decisions were made, resulting in the virtual forfeiture of  some

especially promising  causes of action (including  the mail fraud

and state-law  claims).  Obviously,  appellant had  no chance  to

share in this decisionmaking.

                      Virtual Representation
                                            

          The defendants also attempt  to sustain the application

of res judicata by employing principles of virtual representation

to  demonstrate  that  privity   exists.    The  attempt  stalls.

Following  defendants' itinerary  would require  us to  imbue the

theory  of virtual  representation with  a much  greater cruising

range than either the law or the facts permit.

          Although  rooted  in  the  eighteenth  century  law  of

estates, virtual  representation has  only recently emerged  as a

vehicle  for general nonparty  preclusion.   See Robert  G. Bone,
                                                

Rethinking the `Day in  Court' Ideal and Nonparty Preclusion,  67
                                                            

N.Y.U. L. Rev. 193,  206-219 (1992).  Its  recent jurisprudential

history has been characterized by breadth of initial articulation

                                18

followed  by abrupt  retrenchment in  actual application.   These

pererrations,  and  the  competing  centrifugal  and  centripetal

forces that  account  for  them,  are most  easily  explained  by

reference  to the due process analyses that must guide any effort

to place  the theory into practice.  See, e.g., Meza, 908 F.2d at
                                                    

1266.

          The  courts that  first  rode the  warhorse of  virtual

representation  into battle  on the  res judicata  front invested

their steed  with near-magical  properties.  They  suggested that

mere identity  of interests between party  and nonparty warranted

application  of  the  theory  and,  hence,   authorized  nonparty

preclusion.  See, e.g., Aerojet-General Corp. v. Askew,  511 F.2d
                                                      

710, 719 (5th Cir.)  (holding that, under federal law,  "a person

may be bound by a  judgment even though not a party if one of the

parties to the suit  is so closely aligned with  his interests as

to be his  virtual representative"), cert.  denied, 423 U.S.  908
                                                  

(1975).   Despite such sweeping generalities, courts soon came to

realize that, though virtual representation  was not the old gray

mare, neither should it be confused with Pegasus; finding virtual

representation based  solely on  identity of interests,  and then

deploying the  theory to justify  nonparty preclusion in  a broad

spectrum   of  cases,   would   threaten   the  core   principles

underpinning  the due process equation.  See Martin v. Wilks, 490
                                                            

U.S.  755,  761-62 (1989);  Meza, 908  F.2d  at 1266.    For this
                                

reason,  contemporary caselaw  has placed  the theory  of virtual

representation on  a short tether,  significantly restricting its

                                19

range.   See Benson & Ford, 833  F.2d at 1175 (observing that the
                          

theory  of  virtual representation  must  be  kept within  strict

confines); Pollard v. Cockrell, 578 F.2d 1002, 1008-09  (5th Cir.
                              

1978) (explicitly  limiting  Aerojet holding);  see generally  18
                                                             

Wright  & Miller, supra,    4457 at 355  (Supp. 1994) (discussing
                       

"narrow role" that remains for virtual representation).

          The upshot is that,  today, while identity of interests

remains   a   necessary   condition   for    triggering   virtual

representation,  it is not alone a sufficient condition.  More is

required to bring  the theory to bear.9   See General  Foods, 648
                                                            

F.2d at 789 (holding that "identity of interests" between a party

and a nonparty "does  not bind [the nonparty] to  the judgment");

Griffin v. Burns, 570 F.2d 1065, 1071 (1st Cir. 1978) (explaining
                

that   "[m]ere  similarity   of  interests   and  a   quantum  of

representation"    is    insufficient    to    trigger    virtual

representation);  Petit v. City of Chicago, 766 F. Supp. 607, 612
                                          

(N.D. Ill. 1991) (holding that "identity of interests alone . . .

is  not  sufficient to  yield a  finding  of privity");  see also
                                                                 

Benson  & Ford, 833 F.2d  at 1174-76 (declining  to find nonparty
              

preclusion anent an antitrust claim growing out of the same facts

where  the nonparty plaintiff testified at  the earlier trial and

had  the same attorney); see generally 18 Wright & Miller, supra,
                                                                

                    

     9This remains  the modern rule despite  an occasional dictum
that  a determined  advocate might  read to  the contrary.   See,
                                                                
e.g.,  In re Medomak  Canning Co.,  922 F.2d  895, 901  (1st Cir.
                                 
1990)   (suggesting  that   "privity   may   be  established   by
identification of  interests, even where  representation of those
interests is not authorized").

                                20

  4457, at 500.

          To    say   that   a    litigant   advocating   virtual

representation,  and  seeking thereby  to  preclude  a nonparty's

suit,  must show more than  an identity of  interests is to state

the nature of the problem,  not to solve it.  Many of the ensuing

questions   questions like  "how much more?" and "what  comprises

`more'?"     seem   to  have   no  categorical   answers.     Not

surprisingly, then, the cases in which courts have dealt with the

doctrine,  taken   as  an  array,  are   resistant  to  doctrinal

rationalization  in  the  form   of  a  single  elegant  limiting

principle of the "one size fits all" variety.  There is no black-

letter rule.   See Colby v. J.C. Penney Co.,  811 F.2d 1119, 1125
                                           

(7th Cir. 1987)  (commenting that "no uniform pattern has emerged

from the  cases");  Ethnic Employees  of Library  of Congress  v.
                                                             

Boorstin, 751 F.2d 1405,  1411 n.8 (D.C. Cir. 1985)  (noting that
        

the  virtual  representation  doctrine has  a  "highly  uncertain

scope");  see  also  Bone,  supra,  67  N.Y.U.  L.  Rev.  at  220
                                 

(acknowledging absence  of clear  organizing framework).   In the

end, virtual  representation is  best understood as  an equitable

theory rather  than as a crisp rule  with sharp corners and clear

factual predicates, see 18 Wright & Miller, supra,   4457 at 502,
                                                 

such  that  a party's  status as  a  virtual representative  of a

nonparty must be determined on a case-by-case  basis, see Bonilla
                                                                 

Romero, 836 F.2d at 43.
      

          Although the need for individualized analysis persists,

a common thread  binds these variegated cases together:   virtual

                                21

representation  has  a  pronounced equitable  dimension.    Thus,

notwithstanding  identity  of  interests, virtual  representation

will not serve to bar a nonparty's claim  unless the nonparty has

had actual  or constructive  notice of the  earlier litigation,10

and  the  balance  of the  relevant  equities  tips  in favor  of

preclusion.   For  example, courts  have applied the  doctrine in

situations  in  which  a nonparty  has  given  actual or  implied

consent to  be bound by the results in a prior action, see, e.g.,
                                                                

Boyd v. Jamaica Plain  Co-op Bank, 386 N.E.2d 775,  778-81 (Mass.
                                 

App. Ct. 1979); see also Benson & Ford, 833 F.2d at 1176 (finding
                                      

"tacit agreement[s]" to be bound characteristic of cases applying

virtual  representation), or in which there  has been "an express

or  implied legal relationship in which parties to the first suit

are accountable to non-parties who file a subsequent suit raising

identical  issues," Pollard,  578 F.2d  at 1008;  see also  In re
                                                                 

Medomak  Canning  Co.,  922  F.2d  895, 900-01  (1st  Cir.  1990)
                     

(holding  that  creditors  were  represented by  the  trustee  in

bankruptcy,  who had  a fiduciary  relationship to  them), or  in

which certain  types of  familial relationships link  parties and

nonparties,  see, e.g., Eubanks v.  FDIC, 977 F.2d  166, 170 (5th
                                        

Cir.  1992) (holding wife bound by  outcome of bankrupt husband's

prior action); Stone v. Williams, 970 F.2d 1043, 1058-61 (2d Cir.
                                

                    

     10Notice is  a very  important factor.    With the  possible
exception of  Aerojet, 511 F.2d 710  (a case that has  since been
                     
narrowed by the Fifth Circuit), counsel have cited  us to no case
in which a  court has precluded a nonparty, based  on a theory of
virtual  representation,  where  the  nonparty  had  not received
timely notice (actual or constructive) of the initial litigation.

                                22

1992)  (binding  decedent's  son  to a  prior  ruling  concerning

legacies), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 2331, or in which courts have
                       

detected  tactical  maneuvering   designed  unfairly  to  exploit

technical nonparty status  in order to  obtain multiple bites  of

the litigatory apple, see,  e.g., Petit, 766 F. Supp.  at 611-13;
                                       

Crane v. Comm'r of Dep't of  Agric., 602 F. Supp. 280, 286-88 (D.
                                   

Me. 1985); see also 18 Wright & Miller, supra,   4457, at 498-99;
                                             

Bone, supra,  at 222.   Implicit  in all  these scenarios  is the
           

existence of actual or constructive notice.11

          We  have considered,  and  rejected,  another  possible

common characteristic.  Some  courts have suggested that adequacy

of  representation  is also  a  condition  precedent to  nonparty

preclusion  grounded  upon virtual  representation.   See,  e.g.,
                                                                

Clark v. Amoco Prods. Co.,  794 F.2d 967, 973-74 (5th Cir.  1986)
                         

(suggesting  that virtual  representation "closely  resembles the

common law  theory of concurrent privity  . . . which  in turn is

really only [an] adequate representation of interests analysis");

Delta Air Lines, Inc.  v. McCoy Restaurants, Inc., 708  F.2d 582,
                                                 

587 (11th  Cir. 1983) (finding no  virtual representation because

nonparty  was  not "adequately  represented");  cf.  18 Wright  &
                                                   

Miller,  supra,     4457,  at  355-58  (1994  Supp.)  (suggesting
              

somewhat  cryptically that "adequate litigation" should "remain[]

                    

     11To be sure, the Restatement does not require actual notice
when nonparty preclusion  stems from  a preexistent  relationship
between  party  and  nonparty.     See  Restatement  (Second)  of
                                      
Judgments    41,  at 393.   We  suggest that  the requirement  is
omitted  in  such  a  situation  because  the  formation  of  the
underlying relationship, in and  of itself, embodies what amounts
to constructive notice of all ensuing litigation.

                                23

the  central  requirement"  for   nonparty  preclusion  based  on

principles of virtual representation).  Properly viewed, however,

adequacy  of   representation  is  not  itself   a  separate  and

inflexible  requirement  for   engaging  principles  of   virtual

representation,12 although  it  is one  of  the factors  that  an

inquiring  court  should  weigh  in  attempting  to  balance  the

equities.13

          Based  on  these  benchmarks,  the  Gonzalez plaintiffs

cannot plausibly  be said to  have been virtually  represented by

the   Rodriguez  plaintiffs   notwithstanding  the   identity  of

interests between  the two  groups.   Here, the  equities counsel

very   strongly  against   deploying   the  theory   of   virtual

representation.   In the first  place, there has  been no showing

that the  Gonzalez  plaintiffs had  timely  notice of  the  first

                    

     12A contrary view would fly in the teeth of the general rule
that, in civil litigation,  the sins of the lawyer  routinely are
visited upon the  client.   See, e.g., Link  v. Wabash R.R.,  370
                                                           
U.S. 626, 633-36 (1961); Thibeault v. Square D Co., 960 F.2d 239,
                                                  
242 (1st  Cir. 1992).   We do not  understand why a  nonparty who
comes within the doctrinal framework for virtual representation  
a  framework   in  which  party  and   nonparty  share  identical
interests,  and  that  provides  for  notice  and  a weighing  of
equitable considerations    should be treated  differently from a
party in this regard.

     13We are confident that  the cases discussing the importance
of adequate representation can  be reconciled with this analysis.
For  instance,  in  McCoy,   the  prior  action  was  voluntarily
                                                                 
dismissed, not determined on the merits as res judicata requires.
         
See McCoy Restaurants, 708 F.2d at 587.  And in  Clark, the court
                                                      
pointed out  that the nonparties  whose suit defendant  sought to
preclude did not have  fair notice of the prior  litigation.  See
                                                                 
Clark, 794 F.2d at 973-74.
     

                                24

suit.14  In  the second  place, the parties'  independence    the

inescapable fact  that the Rodriguez plaintiffs  were not legally

responsible for, or in any other way accountable to, the Gonzalez

plaintiffs     weighs  heavily   against  a  finding  of  virtual

representation.15  See Benson &  Ford, 833 F.2d at 1176.   In the
                                     

third place, the  lack of  a special type  of close  relationship

between the two groups of plaintiffs (who are, for the most part,

unrelated  lambs  purportedly  fleeced   by  the  same  cadre  of

unscrupulous  sheepherders)  also  weighs against  a  finding  of

virtual representation.  See  Eubanks, 977 F.2d at 170.   Fourth,
                                     

the  fact that  the Gonzalez  plaintiffs never  consented, either

explicitly or constructively, to  be bound by the verdict  in the

earlier action is  significant, see  Benson & Ford,  833 F.2d  at
                                                  

1176, especially  since they actually initiated  the later action

while  the earlier action was  still pending.   And, finally, far

from  engaging in  tactical maneuvering  aimed at  gaining unfair

advantage, appellants sought  to join the Rodriguez action    and

were thwarted in  the effort because the  defendants objected and

the   district  court,   siding   with  the   defendants,  barred

                    

     14The  first  explicit  reference  to any  of  the  Gonzalez
plaintiffs  in the papers of the Rodriguez case occurred on April
10,  1987, when the Rodriguez plaintiffs sought leave to add them
as  parties.  The district court  denied this motion on April 27,
1987.  See supra p.3.   There is nothing to indicate  that, prior
                
thereto,  any of  the Gonzalez plaintiffs  either knew  about the
pendency of  the Rodriguez action  or had retained  the Rodriguez
plaintiffs' lawyers as their counsel.

     15In  this  connection,  it  must  be  emphasized  that  the
district  court, in the person of Judge Fuste, refused to certify
the Rodriguez case as a class action.

                                25

appellants' path.

          Of course, given the discretionary character of virtual

representation, see 18 Wright & Miller, supra,    4457 at 502, we
                                             

would not conclude that a case falls outside the theory's purview

solely because  it  does not  fit snugly  into some  preconceived

niche  or mirror some established  fact pattern.   But, here, the

sequence  of events  itself  confirms  the  inappropriateness  of

bringing  virtual representation to the  fore in this  case.  The

district  court, after  refusing to  certify a  class, prohibited

appellants  from  joining  the  original   suit,  yet  thereafter

precluded  them  from  prosecuting  their  own  action.16    This

whipsawing placed appellants in an untenable position.   Short of

a class action,  with all the  concomitant safeguards that  class

certification portends, see, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P.  23, we do not
                                 

think  that the  Due Process  Clause comfortably  can accommodate

such a paradigm.   In any  event, on the  facts of this case  the

prospect  of depriving  these plaintiffs  of  their day  in court

offends  our   collective  sense   of  justice  and   fair  play.

Consequently, we  hold that the theory  of virtual representation

cannot  be  galvanized to  preclude  appellants from  maintaining

their suit.

III.  CONCLUSION

          We  need go no  further.   Because the  appellants were

neither parties to  the initial  action nor in  privity with  the

                    

     16Though two different judges  made these rulings, that fact
is not of legal  consequence.  We might add  parenthetically that
it is also cold consolation to appellants.

                                26

plaintiffs therein, the district  court erred in dismissing their

suit under principles of res judicata.

Reversed  and  remanded  for   further  proceedings.    Costs  to
                                                                 

appellants.
          

                                27