Legal Research AI

Lundborg v. Phoenix Leasing, Inc.

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1996-08-05
Citations: 91 F.3d 265
Copy Citations
20 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 95-2278

                   SUSAN D. LUNDBORG, ETC.,

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

                PHOENIX LEASING, INC., ET AL.,

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

           [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
                                                             

                                         

                            Before

                    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

               Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                         

                  and Lynch, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

Ralph A. Dyer with whom Law Offices of  Ralph A. Dyer, P.A. was on
                                                                       
briefs for appellant.
David M.  Wiseblood with whom Robert  B. Kaplan, Joseph N.  Demko,
                                                                             
Frandzel & Share, Anthony Perkins and Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
                                                                              
were on brief for appellees. 

                                         

                        August 5, 1996
                                         


     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  In this case, the district court
                                      

dismissed claims brought  by Susan  Lundborg against  Phoenix

Leasing,  Inc. ("Phoenix Leasing"),  on the ground  that they

were barred by res judicata.   We affirm the district court's
                                       

judgment of dismissal but are compelled  to do so on a ground

that  leaves open  to Lundborg  the opportunity  to  pursue a

central aspect  of  her claims  by an  independent action  in

Maine state  court.  For  reasons that will  become apparent,

such a suit is not a promising venture.

                              I.

     The facts of the case are complicated and its procedural

history involved; we offer a condensed version here.  Because

the district court dismissed the  claims at issue on a motion

to  dismiss,  the  underlying  "facts"  described  below  are

primarily  drawn  from  the  allegations  of  the  complaint,

Rockwell v.  Cape Cod  Hospital, 26 F.3d  254, 256  (1st Cir.
                                           

1994),  supplemented by pleadings  in related cases  of which

the district court took judicial  notice.  In fact, there are

six other related cases. 
               

     Susan  Lundborg, a  resident of  Florida,  was the  sole

shareholder  of  Community  Cable  Services  of  Maine,  Inc.

("Community Cable"), which  in 1988 became a  general partner

in  Merlin  Cable  Operators  ("Merlin"),   a  Maine  general

partnership.    Soon  after  its  formation,  Merlin  secured

franchises  to construct  and  operate two  cable  television

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systems  in Maine.  The partnership sought to borrow $850,000

of the estimated $1,000,000 cost of these projects.  

     In   early   1989,   Phoenix   Leasing,   a   California

corporation,  agreed to  loan Merlin  that sum  at an  annual

interest rate  of 18  percent.   The terms  of the  loan also

required  Merlin to  pay Phoenix  Leasing 25  percent  of the

value of  the  projects up  to $150,000,  plus an  additional

$50,000 for  each year the  loan was outstanding  after 1990,

amounting to  what Lundborg  claims was  an effective  annual

interest rate in  excess of 40 percent.  The loan was secured

by the  cable systems  and by  Lundborg's personal  guaranty,

itself secured in part by a mortgage on her house in  Suffolk

County, New York.

     In 1990, two additional cable television operators owned

wholly or  in part  by Lundborg agreed  to borrow  money from

Phoenix Leasing.  The loans  to Cable One CATV ("Cable One"),

a  New Hampshire limited  partnership, and Sure Broadcasting,

Inc.  ("Sure"), a  Delaware  corporation, also  imposed  high

rates of interest  and demanding terms.   Lundborg personally

guaranteed  the loans  to Cable  One and  Sure, again  giving

Phoenix Leasing a mortgage on  her Suffolk County house.  The

total of the three loans exceeded $4 million.

     By December 1990, all three borrowers had stopped making

payments  to Phoenix  Leasing  and  in  April  1991,  Phoenix

Leasing   began  court  actions  to  recover  upon  the  loan

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                                         -3-


agreements  and  to  foreclose   on  the  various  properties

securing the loans  and Lundborg's personal guaranty.   These

included  state  court  actions  in  Maine  (against  Merlin,

Community Cable, and others) and New York (against Lundborg),

and federal  suits in New  Hampshire (against  Cable One  and

others)  and Nevada (against  Sure).1  Phoenix  Leasing later

filed  claims in  Merlin's federal  bankruptcy proceeding  in

Maine   and  in  Cable   One's  similar  proceeding   in  New

Hampshire.2

     Phoenix Leasing  has prevailed  in every  case that  has

reached decision.  In May 1991, Phoenix Leasing began a Maine

state court action to recover on the original $850,000  loan.

Merlin  raised several  affirmative  defenses, including  the

defense   of   usury,   and   brought   several    compulsory

counterclaims, see Me. R. Civ. P. 13(a), including claims for
                              

fraud, breach of duty of good faith, negligence, and abuse of

process.  The usury defense was cast in general terms and the

fraud  claims related to  alleged actions of  Phoenix Leasing

quite different than the fraud charges that are now advanced.

                    
                                

     1Phoenix  Leasing Inc. v. Merlin Cable Partners, No. CV-
                                                                
91-343  (Me.Sup.Ct. York Cty.); Phoenix Leasing Inc. v. Susan
                                                                         
Lundborg, No.  91-08094 (N.Y.Sup.Ct.  Suffolk Cty.);  Phoenix
                                                                         
Leasing, Inc. v. Cable One CATV Limited Partnership, Civ. No.
                                                               
91-164-D (D.N.H.); Phoenix Leasing Inc. v. Sure Broadcasting,
                                                                         
Inc., No. CV-N-91-185-ECR (D.Nev.). 
                

     2In   re  Merlin   Cable  Partners,   BK   No.  93-10067
                                                   
(Bankr.D.Me.); In re  Cable One CATV Limited  Partnership, BK
                                                                     
No. 91-12387-JEY (Bankr.D.N.H.).

                             -4-
                                         -4-


     Phoenix Leasing's Maine state  court suit against Merlin

was dismissed  after Merlin  filed for  bankruptcy in  August

1991.   In September  1992, the Maine  state court  entered a

default judgment against Community Cable on Phoenix Leasing's

claims and Community  Cable's counterclaims.  In  early 1994,

the federal bankruptcy court in Maine awarded Phoenix Leasing

cash and  a promissory note  on account of its  claim against

Merlin. 

     Phoenix Leasing also  prevailed in February 1992  in its

suit in New York state court against Lundborg to foreclose on

her  mortgage.     In  New  Hampshire,  Cable   One  declared

bankruptcy after  Phoenix Leasing  brought  suit in  district

court;  but in  the  ensuing  bankruptcy  proceeding  in  New

Hampshire, the court  in December 1992 approved  a settlement

in favor  of Phoenix Leasing  and in July 1993  confirmed the

plan of liquidation.  In  March 1995, Phoenix Leasing won its

suit in  the federal district  court in Nevada to  recover on

the loan to Sure.

     In February  1994, Lundborg  learned that  the loans  to

Merlin,  Cable  One, and  Sure  were  not funded  by  Phoenix

Leasing, but  rather by two limited partnerships,  in each of

which Phoenix Leasing was general partner.  This fact emerged

during  the  deposition of  Gary Martinez,  Phoenix Leasing's

executive  vice president, in the Sure litigation in district
                                                  

court  in  Nevada.    Lundborg  alleges  that  these  limited

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                                         -5-


partnerships,  and  not  Phoenix Leasing,  were  the  "actual

lenders" in the loan transactions.

     This  is said  to matter because  Phoenix Leasing,  as a

licensed personal property broker, was admittedly exempt from

California's  usury laws which cap the  interest rate that an

unlicensed  lender  may  charge.   The  limited partnerships,

Lundborg claims, were not exempt and the loans were therefore

usurious  and fraudulent.  Moreover, Lundborg asserts that by

suing in  its own  name, Phoenix  Leasing misrepresented  its

standing to  recover  upon the  loans  in the  various  court

actions, and Lundborg says this amounted to additional fraud.

     Based  on the Martinez deposition, Lundborg in June 1994

moved in the New York state suit to set aside the judgment on

the  ground that Phoenix Leasing lacked standing to foreclose

on the mortgage because  it was not the true  lender; the New

York  court denied this  motion and Lundborg  did not appeal.

In  the then  pending Nevada  federal action, Sure  moved for

summary  judgment on similar  grounds; in December  1994, the

district  court  rejected  this argument  and  in  March 1995

entered judgment for  Phoenix Leasing, a ruling  later upheld

by the Ninth Circuit in an unpublished opinion.  

     In the  bankruptcy courts  in Maine  and New  Hampshire,

Lundborg  made  somewhat   broader  efforts  to  reopen   the

judgments but  with the  same result.   In January  1995, the

Maine bankruptcy court (in circumstances more fully described

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                                         -6-


hereafter)  rejected   Lundborg's  motion  for   relief  from

judgment  on account  of fraud  and based  upon the  Martinez

deposition.  In  November 1995, the New  Hampshire bankruptcy

court rejected  Cable One's effort  to set aside  the earlier

settlement  of the case, ruling that the limited partnerships

involved  in  the   Cable  One  loan  in  fact  had  licenses

permitting  them  to  exceed  the  usual  usury  limit  under

California law.  At least  one of the limited partnerships in

the  Merlin transaction was  evidently not involved  with the

Cable One loan.

     No comparable effort was made  by Lundborg to reopen the

earlier  Maine state  court default judgment  entered against

Community  Cable in  September 1992.    Instead, in  December

1994,   Lundborg  filed the  present  action against  Phoenix

Leasing and others  in the federal  district court in  Maine,

both on her own behalf and as successor in interest to Merlin

and Community Cable.  The gravamen was the same  set of fraud

allegations  stemming from  the  Martinez deposition  but the

complaint set forth a welter of claims.

     Lundborg's complaint  included nine counts:  a statutory

claim for perjury arising under Maine law (count I); abuse of

process in connection with the  litigation in New York (count

II); common  law conversion, fraud,  breach of  duty of  good

faith,  and  interference with  economic  opportunity (counts

III-VI); violation of California's usury statute (count VII);

                             -7-
                                         -7-


unjust  enrichment (count VIII); and violation of the federal

civil  RICO statute (count  IX).  Additional  defendants were

the limited  partnerships  that allegedly  funded the  Merlin

loan,  Gus Constantin (the  chairman of Phoenix  Leasing) and

Martinez. 

     All  defendants in  the Maine  district  court moved  to

dismiss.    Adopting  the able  recommended  decision  of the

magistrate judge, the  district court granted this  motion on

September 6, 1995, without a separate  opinion.  The district

court found  that Lundborg  had failed to  articulate a  RICO

claim; in the  absence of that claim  the court held that  it

had no personal  jurisdiction over the  individual defendants

as to  any of  the counts.   Lundborg  does not appeal  these

rulings.

     The  district court further held that the September 1992

judgment in Maine state court barred all of Lundborg's claims

on  res  judicata  grounds and,  further,  that  Lundborg was
                             

estopped by judgments in New York and in the Maine bankruptcy

court from relitigating the issue of Phoenix Leasing's fraud.

Lundborg appeals this ruling as to counts I, III, IV,  V, VII

and VIII  with respect  to  Phoenix Leasing  and the  limited

partnerships.

                             II.

     As an initial matter, Lundborg argues as a matter of law

that her count I claim for perjury, pursuant to 14 Me. R.S.A.

                             -8-
                                         -8-


  870, cannot  be precluded by the earlier  judgment in Maine

state court.  Section 870 creates a cause of action "[w]hen a

judgment has been obtained against  a party by the perjury of

a  witness introduced  at trial  by the  adverse party,"  and

provides that "the  judgment in the former action  is no bar"

to such a suit.  Phoenix Leasing insists that Lundborg waived

this  argument by failing  to articulate  it in  the district

court.  

     We affirm  the dismissal  of the  perjury count  because

Lundborg has not stated a  claim under the statute.  Lundborg

alleges  that pleadings and affidavits submitted in the Maine

state court action were perjurious.  But section 870  applies

only to testimony "introduced at trial by the adverse party,"

and the Maine action was  decided prior to trial.  The  Maine

Supreme Judicial Court has made  clear that section 870 is to

be construed strictly,  Spickler v. Greenberg, 644  A.2d 469,
                                                         

472  (Me. 1994); and we have  no qualm in holding Lundborg to

"the terms of the statute."  Id. (quoting Milner v. Hare, 135
                                                                    

A. 522 (Me. 1926)). 

     This  brings us  to the  heart  of Lundborg's  remaining

claims.   California  law, which  governed  the Merlin  loan,

limits  the amount  of interest  that can  be charged  on any

loan; the  law exempts certain  classes of loans  and lenders

from its  provisions.   Cal. Const.  Art. 15,    1.   Phoenix

Leasing was a "personal property broker" and therefore exempt

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                                         -9-


from the usury statute.  Former Cal. Fin. Code   22009.  (The

current version of the statute refers to lenders like Phoenix

Leasing as "finance lenders" but the change appears to be one

of name only.)

     Lundborg alleges that the Merlin loan was funded  by two

limited partnerships, Phoenix Leasing  Cash Distribution Fund

III and Phoenix Leasing Income  Fund 1975 ALP, and that these

partnerships  were not  then  licensed  as personal  property

brokers.   Lundborg insists  that the  partnerships were  the

actual lenders in the Merlin transaction, that Phoenix either

assigned the  loan to  the partnerships or  held it  as their

agent  and  that  the  loan  was  therefore  usurious.    The

complaint seeks actual damages of over $6 million.

     This  set of  allegations and  arguments  gives rise  to

Lundborg's remaining claims.   Counts III,  IV, V, and  VIII,

while  variously  styled,  all  charge that  Phoenix  Leasing

defrauded  Merlin and  Lundborg by  failing  to disclose  the

identity of  the "actual  lenders" at the  time the  loan was

negotiated and thereafter,  particularly when Phoenix Leasing

pursued legal claims  against Merlin and Lundborg  in its own

name.   Count  VII is  a claim  for treble damages  under the

civil remedy provision of California's  usury law.  Cal. Civ.

Code   1916-3.

     It  is far  from  clear  that  the  funding  arrangement

alleged by Lundborg was illegal  under California law.   See,
                                                                         

                             -10-
                                         -10-


e.g., Strike  v. Trans-West  Discount Corp.,  155 Cal.  Rptr.
                                                       

132,  139  (Cal.Ct.App.),  appeal  dismissed,  444  U.S.  948
                                                        

(1979).  Phoenix  Leasing points out  that a licensed  lender

may assign a high-interest loan to an unlicensed third party;

elsewhere   Phoenix  Leasing  has  argued  that  despite  the

internal accounting  arrangements that  it made, it  remained

the  holder of  the Merlin  note  under California  law.   An

argument by Sure  that challenged the funding  arrangement of

its own  loan was  rejected by the  Nevada district  court in

Phoenix Leasing Inc. v. Sure Broadcasting, Inc., CV-N-91-185-
                                                           

ECR, slip op. at 8-9 (D. Nev. Dec. 18, 1994):

             Phoenix's continued possession  of the
          promissory note  appears to  preclude any
          negotiation  of   the  promissory   note.
          Cal.Comm.   3201.   Regardless of whether
          Phoenix  transferred  ownership   or  the
          right to  receive monies under  the note,
          Phoenix  may  remain  the  holder of  the
          note.  Cal. Comm    3201 & 3203.  Phoenix
          may also enforce  the note even if  it is
          not the owner  of the note.   Cal.Comm.  
          3301.

     But it is  not certain  that the  facts surrounding  the

Sure  loan are identical to those respecting the earlier loan

to Merlin and  the facts concerning the Merlin  loan were not

developed in the  district court.   Indeed, in briefing  this

case Phoenix Leasing has  devoted relatively little attention

to California law,  understandably relying  primarily on  the

res  judicata rationale  of the  district court.    Thus, the
                         

question for us is whether the district court's rationale can

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                                         -11-


be  sustained, a  matter  we  review de  novo.   Apparel  Art
                                                                         

Internat'l,  Inc. v. Amertex  Enterprises Ltd., 48  F.3d 576,
                                                          

582 (1st Cir. 1995).  

     Were it  not for  Lundborg's allegations  of fraud,  the

application  of res  judicata doctrine  to  bar this  present
                                         

action  would be  straightforward.   Under  Maine law,  which

governs  the preclusive  effect  of  the  Maine  state  court

judgment, e.g., Diversified  Foods, Inc. v. First  Nat'l Bank
                                                                         

of Boston,  985 F.2d 27, 30 (1st  Cir.), cert. denied, 113 S.
                                                                 

Ct. 3001 (1993), a valid  prior judgment in an action between

the  same parties  or their  privies  bars relitigation  with

respect to the same claims of "all issues that were tried, or

may have been tried"  in the prior action.   Currier v.  Cyr,
                                                                        

570 A.2d 1205, 1208 (Me. 1990).

     Functionally, this familiar doctrine--known  in the past

as the merger and bar branch of res judicata and now as claim
                                                        

preclusion--prevents  a  plaintiff  or  counterclaimant  from

splitting  its related claims  among several suits.   Apparel
                                                                         

Art, 48 F.3d at 583.  Such a policy responds to  the parties'
               

interest in repose  and the courts' desire  to avoid needless

litigation.  Maine  follows the modern  rule and defines  the

claims  that  must be  brought  in  one action  by  use  of a

transactional test, so that

     a  subsequent  suit  that arises  out  of  the same
     aggregate of  operative facts shall be  barred even
     though the second  suit relies upon a  legal theory
     not  advanced in  the first  case, seeks  different

                             -12-
                                         -12-


     relief  than that  sought in  the  first case,  and
     involves  evidence  different   from  the  evidence
     relevant to the first case.

Currier, 570  A.2d at 1208;  see Beegan v. Schmidt,  451 A.2d
                                                              

642, 645 (Me. 1982) (citing Restatement (Second), Judgments  
                                                                       

24 (1982)).

     Lundborg's claims  at issue  here all  arise out of  the

alleged  wrongdoing  of  Phoenix   Leasing  and  the  limited

partnerships in connection with the making and enforcement of

the Merlin loan.   But Merlin and Community  Cable previously

brought  claims against Phoenix  Leasing arising out  of that

same loan as  counterclaims in the Maine  state court action.
                                       

Although Merlin  was dismissed from the action  when it filed

for  bankruptcy,  a  default  judgment  was  entered  against

Community Cable  in that action,  and a default  judgment has

the same claim-preclusive effect as a judgment on the merits.

Irving Pulp  & Paper Ltd.  v. Kelly,  654 A.2d 416,  418 (Me.
                                               

1995).  

     Lundborg asserts in conclusory fashion that the  default

judgment was  never  made final  but  offers no  argument  in

support of this  claim, nor do  we detect any  basis for  it.

Nor can  Lundborg seriously deny  that she and Merlin  are in

privity  with  Community  Cable, which  was  wholly  owned by

Lundborg  and was a general partner  of Merlin.  Restatement,
                                                                        

supra,     59(3), 60(2).  Under the circumstances, Lundborg's
                 

present claims  arise  out of  the  same transaction  as  the

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                                         -13-


counterclaims in  the earlier  action and are  barred by  res
                                                                         

judicata, absent some exception to the general rule.
                    

                             III.

     Thus  far our view is  the same as  that of the district

court.   Where we part company--with  some reluctance for the

issue  is very close--concerns  a possible escape  hatch from

res  judicata  invoked by  Lundborg  in  this  case.   It  is
                         

Lundborg's position  that the  1992 default  judgment against

Community Cable in the Maine state court cannot be considered

a valid judgment for purposes  of res judicata because it was
                                                          

tainted by an aspect of the  same fraud that is the basis  of

Lundborg's present claims,  namely, the alleged fraud  in the

litigation   to  enforce   the  original   loan   to  Merlin.

Otherwise,  claim  preclusion  applies  to  underlying  fraud

charges no less than to other tort theories.

     This contention takes us to  a body of doctrine that has

few peers  in the common  law as  a source  of confusion  for

lawyers  and  judges  alike, namely,  the  rules  that govern

independent   actions  that   collaterally  attack   a  prior

judgment.     Partly,  the   problem  is  one   of  confusing

terminology,  see Restatement, supra, ch. 5 intro. note, and,
                                                

in  addition, the  law in  this area  is neither  uniform nor

stable.   But so far  as the law permits  collateral attacks,

the rules  are  effectively  a set  of  exceptions  to  claim

preclusion.

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                                         -14-


       In the past  some courts have been unwilling  to treat

all litigation fraud as an  exception to res judicata; it has
                                                                 

sometimes  been said that  only special categories  of fraud,

such as bribery of a judge, would permit a collateral attack.

See Restatement, supra,     68 cmt. a, 70 cmt. c.  The modern
                                  

approach has been  to lower the substantive bar to collateral

attack  while insisting on severe conditions to the assertion

of such a claim, due diligence  in the discovery of the fraud

in the original action  and clear and convincing  evidence of

fraud in the collateral one.  Id.   70 cmt. d.;  cf. Spickler
                                                                         

v. Greenberg, 644 A.2d 469, 471 (Me. 1994).
                        

     In  considering Lundborg's  claim to a  fraud exception,

our  concern is  with Maine  law because  a federal  district

court in Maine  has been asked to permit  a collateral attack

on a Maine state court  judgment.  7 Moore, Federal Practice,
                                                                        

  60.37[3],  at 60-395 (2d ed.  1995).  Maine law,  in accord

with  the Restatement,  no  longer  rigidly  adheres  to  the
                                 

traditional  labels  of  extrinsic  and  intrinsic  fraud  in

determining which  circumstances justify overturning  a prior

judgment.  Society  of Lloyd's v. Baker, 673  A.2d 1336, 1339
                                                   

(Me. 1996).  We read Kradoska  v. Kipp, 397 A.2d 568-69  (Me.
                                                  

1979), to suggest  that Maine is more interested  in  whether

the fraud claim was  known or should  have been known at  the

time of the earlier  action.  See 11  Wright, Miller &  Kane,
                                             

Federal  Practice and Procedure,    2868,  at 400-01  (2d ed.
                                           

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                                         -15-


1995).

     In the present  case, the district court  assumed, as we

do, that fraud in the course of the earlier Maine state court

litigation  might  give   rise  to  an  exception   to  claim

preclusion.   But it  held that the  issue whether  fraud had
                                                              

occurred had itself been resolved on the merits, adversely to

Lundborg,  in  the  New  York  state  court   and  the  Maine

bankruptcy  court.    As already  noted,  after  the Martinez

deposition, Lundborg sought  in 1994 to reopen  the judgments

in both of  those courts based on some of the same assertions

that are the  bases for Lundborg's affirmative  claims in the

district court.

     The district  court's ruling  that the  fraud issue  had

earlier been  resolved rested upon  the other  branch of  res
                                                                         

judicata known  as collateral  estoppel or  issue preclusion.
                    

This  doctrine bars the relitigation between the same parties

of  any issue  of fact  or  law that  was actually  litigated

between them, was  determined and was  necessary to a  final,

valid judgment  in a prior  case.  Restatement, supra,    27;
                                                                 

Spickler v.  York, 505 A.2d 87, 88  (Me. 1986).  Unlike claim
                             

preclusion, this doctrine requires an actual determination of

the issue.  

     We  do not  share  the district  court's  view that  the

decision of the New York state court that Phoenix Leasing had

standing  to  enforce  Lundborg's loan  guaranties  precludes

                             -16-
                                         -16-


Lundborg's  claims here.   As  far  as we  can tell  from the

papers  submitted to  us, Lundborg  did not  raise her  usury

claims and the related fraud  claims in seeking to reopen the

New  York action;  and  a holding  that  Phoenix Leasing  had

standing  to enforce the loan is not necessarily inconsistent

with  the possibility that  the loans' terms  were originally

made by the  partnerships and were usurious  under California

law, and that Phoenix Leasing concealed this information from

the Lundborg entities in prior litigation.

     The  Maine bankruptcy decision is a closer call.  Merlin

filed for bankruptcy in August 1991; a plan of reorganization

was confirmed in May 1994, awarding Phoenix Leasing $900,000.

In November 1994, Lundborg filed  a motion under Fed. R. Civ.

P.  Rule 60(b)  for relief  from  the judgment  based on  the

February  1994  deposition,   arguing  that  the   deposition

testimony  revealed  that  the  Merlin loan  was  fraudulent,

usurious, and not enforceable by Phoenix Leasing.  Lundborg's

Rule  60(b)  motion thus  raised the  same factual  and legal

arguments that she asserts in this case.

     Phoenix  Leasing opposed  the  motion  on  two  grounds:

first,  that the  motion  was  untimely  under  the  one-year

limitation  on  Rule  60(b) motions  grounded  in  fraud; and

second, that  on the  merits the loan  was not  fraudulent or

usurious  and  could be  collected  by Phoenix  Leasing.   In

denying Lundborg's  Rule 60(b) motion,  the bankruptcy  court

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                                         -17-


found  tersely  that  Lundborg  had  stated  "no  basis"  for

granting  the motion.   The  result  is that  we cannot  tell

whether the bankruptcy court rested on lack of timeliness  or

on the merits in denying the motion to reopen.

     Thus Phoenix  Leasing cannot  carry its  burden, as  the

party claiming the  benefit of issue preclusion, to show that

the fraud issue was actually decided in the prior case by the

Maine bankruptcy  court.  See  Dowling v. United  States, 493
                                                                    

U.S. 342, 350  (1990).  Lundborg may therefore  be free under

Maine law to press her collateral attack on the earlier Maine

state judgment,  assuming that  she can  prove her  charge of

fraud in the prior proceeding and meet the other requirements

for  such an  attack.    At least,  this  possibility is  not

foreclosed by issue preclusion.

                             IV.

     To  say  that  the  claims may  survive  a  res judicata
                                                                         

defense is  not to say  that the district court  was wrong in

dismissing  the case.   In order  to reach the  merits on the

counts in question  (e.g., fraud, conversion),  Lundborg must
                                     

first succeed  in her  collateral attack  on the  Maine state

court  judgment.   Although in  form she  does not ask  for a

declaration  or injunction, in substance this is a collateral

attack  because  the  relief  sought  would  undo  the  Maine

judgment and because  res judicata bars the claims unless the
                                              

Maine judgment is held to be vitiated by fraud.  See Griffith
                                                                         

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v. Bank of New York, 147 F.2d 899, 901 (2d Cir. 1945).
                               

      But  "[t]he  principle"  is  that,  where  possible  in

collateral  attacks, "relief should  ordinarily be  sought in

the  court that rendered the judgment" being thus challenged.

Restatement, supra,   79, cmt. b:  see also id.   79 cmt.  d.
                                                           

This preference  is not  merely a matter  of comity  but also

reflects  practical  considerations:  here, the  Maine  state

court  has  the  advantage over  all  other  courts,  both in

deciding  whether fraud occurred in its own prior proceedings

and  in  determining   whether  Lundborg  adequately  pursued

discovery efforts in that case.

     Maine's own Rule  60, like the federal  rule, recognizes

that  an independent  collateral attack  based  on litigation

fraud may  be brought  even after the  one-year period  for a

motion to reopen has passed.  Me. R. Civ. P. 60(b); Lewien v.
                                                                      

Cohen,   432  A.2d  800   (Me.  1981).     Quite  apart  from
                 

administrative reasons for this distinction between reopening

and  collateral attack,  the conditions  on  relief are  more

severe when it  is made by independent action.   Restatement,
                                                                        

supra,    78 cmt.  c.   The Maine  state courts  are thus  an
                 

available forum.

     The Supreme Court has warned that federal courts are not

lightly to relinquish jurisdiction, and that even a difficult

issue of state  law or parallel  pending state litigation  is

not automatically a warrant to abstain.   See Wright, Federal
                                                                         

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Courts   52  (5th ed. 1994)(collecting the  pertinent cases).
                  

Yet the Court has said  that its own abstention decisions are

not "rigid pigeonholes,"  Pennzoil v. Texaco, Inc.,  481 U.S.
                                                              

1, 11 n.9,  107 S. Ct. 1519,  1526 n.9 (1987), but  reflect a

skein  of considerations  that  vary with  the facts  of each

case.  See Moses H. Cone Hospital v. Mercury Construc. Corp.,
                                                                        

460  U.S. 1,  19-26 (1983).   And  no Supreme  Court decision

deals  directly   with  a  case  such  as  ours  involving  a

collateral attack under  state law upon  a prior state  court

judgment.3 

     Here, we  think that  in the  peculiar circumstances  of

this case, abstention  is appropriate.   There is a  complete

assurance   that  relief,  if  available  at  all,  is  fully

available  in the Maine state court;  indeed, Maine's own law

controls on this issue.  Conversely, and of great importance,

there is no direct federal  interest nor any issue of federal

law  presented either  by  the collateral  attack  or by  the

underlying claims in the complaint.  Compare Cone, 460 U.S at
                                                             

23,  26 (noting the  pertinence of an  available state remedy

(or lack thereof) and of  federal issues) with Colorado River
                                                                         

Water Cons. Dist. v. United  States, 424 U.S. 800, 819 (1976)
                                               

                    
                                

     3Similarly, federal appellate decisions in this area are
sparse and the few cases we  have found are divided.  Compare
                                                                         
Lapin v.  Shulton,  Inc.,  333  F.2d 169  (9th  Cir.),  cert.
                                                                         
denied,  379  U.S.  904  (1964),  and  Carr  v.  District  of
                                                                         
Columbia, 543 F.2d 917, 927 (D.C. Cir. 1976), with Locklin v.
                                                                      
Switzer Bros.,  Inc., 335 F.2d  331, 334-35 (7th  Cir. 1964),
                                
and Wohl v. Keene, 476 F.2d 171 (4th Cir. 1973).
                             

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(emphasizing the existence of a state remedy).

     Further, this suit  is effectively an attempt  to undo a

preexisting,  final  judgment  of a  state  court  based upon

matters  pertaining solely to the conduct of prior litigation

in that court.  While there is no flat bar to conducting this

autopsy in a federal court, the considerations of "comity and

orderly  administration of  justice"  that  point toward  the

rendering court as the  preferable forum, Lapin, 333 F.2d  at
                                                           

172,  may have  special weight  where the  latter is  a state

court.  Cf.  Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37, 43-45 (1971); 28
                                          

U.S.C.     2283  (ordinarily  barring  federal  courts   from

enjoining state proceedings).

     In  addition, the  Maine state  court  is obviously  the

forum  that can most readily determine  whether in fact fraud
                                                                   

occurred  in its own  prior proceedings and  whether diligent

discovery  by the plaintiff  in those proceedings  would have

uncovered  in a  more  timely  fashion  the  information  now

claimed to be vital.  This appraisal is likely to be informed

not only  by the records  possessed by the Maine  state court

but  also  by that  court's  superior  knowledge of  how  its

proceedings are  customarily conducted and what  discovery is

available.   

     Finally, in deciding to defer to the Maine state courts,

it is significant,  see Quackenbush v. Allstate Ins. Co., 116
                                                                    

S.  Ct. 1712,  1721-22 (1996),  that  the implicit  threshold

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                                         -21-


relief   required   to   entertain   Lundborg's   claims--the

collateral  attack  on  the  Maine   judgment--is  itself  an

equitable  remedy within the  sound discretion of  the court.

Despite  some limited common law antecedents, equity has been

the main source of collateral relief from judgments,  and the

independent  action  is  treated as  equitable  in character.

Wright, Miller & Kane, supra,    2868, at 396 (citing cases);
                                        

see, e.g., Lewien v. Cohen, 432 A.2d at 805.
                                      

     This appraisal leads us to affirm the dismissal of count

I on the  merits but to affirm  the dismissal of  counts III,

IV, V, VII and  VIII on a ground different than  that adopted

by the district  court and with  different consequences.   In

principle, Lundborg may pursue these counts by filing suit in

Maine state  court and by  persuading the state court  that a

collateral  attack on  the 1992  Maine  state court  judgment

should be allowed.

                              V.

     It may be of help to the parties, and to any Maine state

court that  may  grapple with  this  matter, to  explain  our

concerns  about Lundborg's collateral attack.  Our problem is

not with Lundborg's attempt to avoid on technical grounds the

loan  obligations that  she or  her  companies took  on in  a

commercial  venture.     Technical  defenses   are  sometimes

narrowly  read, but Lundborg is as free  to argue for them as

she would be to invoke  a statute of limitations to avoid  an

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otherwise just debt.

     Rather, our concern is primarily with the timing of this

defense.    It  is  uncertain  whether  the  news  that   the

partnerships were  involved came  as a  complete surprise  to

Lundborg  in  1994.    Cf.  In  re  Cable  One  CATV  Limited
                                                                         

Partnership,  BK  No.  91-12387-JEY, slip  op.  at  6 (Bankr.
                       

D.N.H.,  Nov.  29,  1995)  ("[I]t is  difficult  to  find any

misrepresentation since  the  principal  [Lundborg]  had  the

checks involved and was on notice as to who was advancing the

monies.").   But assuming  surprise, it  is doubtful  whether

Lundborg can  be excused  for not  discovering this  possible

defense in the course of lawsuits brought in 1992.

     This is  not a  case of forged  documents or  bribery of

jurors or  other kinds of  litigation fraud uniquely  hard to

imagine  or uncover.  Phoenix  Leasing was licensed to exceed

the usury  restriction and it  is a  fair guess that,  if the

Merlin  loan ran  afoul  of the  restriction  because of  the

limited partnerships, which is far  from clear, it was due to

routine planning decisions  made for tax or  similar reasons.

Lundborg  knew full  well of  the  usury laws--a  boilerplate

defense bearing this label was actually asserted--and she was

free  in  the  Maine  state   court  action  to  explore  the

underpinnings of the loan.

     It is possible,  but we think unlikely, that a potential

usury claim based on the role of the limited partnerships was

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so substantial but  at the same time so  thoroughly concealed

that  it  would  have  escaped  even  a  diligent  effort  at

discovery.   Under the  Restatement, the failure  to exercise
                                               

due diligence  to unearth  such a claim  in the  earlier case

would itself  bar a  later collateral  attack.   Restatement,
                                                                        

supra,   70 cmt. d.   In sum, even assuming that  there was a
                 

usury defense, we are very  doubtful that the possible  usury

defense was diligently  pursued or that fraud can  be said to

infect the Maine state judgment.

     Our substantial doubts are not a legal defense against a

new state  court action.   But given the  sanctions available

for  unfounded  lawsuits,  Lundborg  ought  to  give  careful

consideration to her  own position--and to her  succession of

seven straight  litigation defeats  in related  cases--before

she embarks upon  an eighth lawsuit  bearing a strong  family

resemblance.   "The law  abhors fraud and  perjury.   It also

abhors interminable litigation."   Cole v. Chellis,  119 A.2d
                                                              

623, 625 (Me. 1923).

     Affirmed.
                         

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