No. 79-1460.United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.Argued March 21, 1980.
Decided August 14, 1981.
Jon David Epstein, Houston, Tex., and Robert A. Klein, Washington, D.C., of the bar of the Supreme Court of California, pro hac vice by special leave of Court, with whom Philip W. Buchen, Washington, D.C. and Dennis O. Barry were on the brief, for appellants.
Paul A. Gaukler, Atty. Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., of the bar of the Supreme Court of North Dakota, pro hac vice by special leave of Court, with whom Alice Daniel, Asst. Atty. Gen., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., at the time the brief was filed. Charles F. C. Ruff, U.S. Atty., Anthony J. Steinmeyer Atty., Dept. of Justice, and David Palmer Atty., Dept. of
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Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for appellee.
Joseph E. Casson, Lee Calligaro and Malcolm J. Harkins, Washington, D.C., were on the brief for Federation of American Hospitals, amicus curiae, urging reversal.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.C. Civil Action No. 77-1921).
Before ROBINSON, Chief Judge, WRIGHT, Circuit Judge and AUBREY E. ROBINSON, Jr.,[*] District Judge.
Opinion filed PER CURIAM.
PER CURIAM:
[1] Appellants — American Medical International, Inc. (AMI), more than thirty of its hospital subsidiaries, and a hospital it manages — challenged in the District Court a decision by the Administrator of the Health Care Financing Administration, a division of the Department of Health and Human Services, denying reimbursement of certain costs that appellants allegedly absorbed while furnishing health care to beneficiaries of the Medicare program.[1] The District Court upheld that ruling and rejected the claim.[2] [2] For reasons amply delineated by the District Court,[3] we agree that the costs in question are not reimbursable because they were not necessarily incurred in the provision of health-care services to Medicare patients, as is required by the Medicare Act.[4] That does not entirely dispose of the case, however, for the court did not address one issue: Whether the Administrator is collaterally estopped from withholding reimbursement of so-called “stock maintenance costs,”[5] the status of which was a question raised by appellant AMI-Chanco[6] and decided against the Federal Government in earlier litigation in the Court of Claims.[7] That problem implicates some of the most difficult and troubling aspects of the law of issue-preclusion, and thus, we believe, demands full treatment.I
[3] The Secretary insists that an estoppel is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decision in Commissioner v. Sunnen[8] three decades
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ago. That argument, at first glance, seems persuasive.[9]
So long as the facts in two cases are formally “separable,” th Sunnen Court declared, it is inappropriate to use a judgment in the first to estop a party on a legal point in the second:
[I]f the relevant facts in the two cases are separable, even though they be similar or identical, collateral estoppel does not govern the legal issues which recur in the second case. Thus the second proceeding may involve an instrument or transaction identical with, but in form separable from, the one dealt with in the first proceeding. In that situation, a court is free in the second proceeding to make an independent examination of the legal matters at issue. . . . Before a party can invoke the collateral estoppel doctrine in these circumstances, the legal matter raised in the second proceeding must involve the same set of events or documents and the same bundle of legal principles that contributed to the rendering of the first judgment.[10][4] This prong of Sunnen has never been popular with commentators — who maintain that formal separability of facts, without some difference pertinent to the first decision, does not justify denial of preclusive effect to the initial adjudication[11] — and has also been less scrupulously applied by the courts.[12]
If valid, however, Sunnen‘s separable-facts doctrine would, as the Secretary suggests, appear to control here, for the Court of Claims’ litigation involved different years — and hence a different, though for all relevant purposes an identical, bundle of facts — from those in the case at bar.[13] [5] There is, however, no need to wrestle with the intricacies of this problem, for the controversial aspect of Sunnen is no longer good law. In one of its most recent analyses of collateral estoppel, the Supreme Court allowed a judgment predicated upon one set of contracts to estop litigation of legal issues in another case dealing with a similar, though unrelated, set of contracts, because there had been no “changes in facts essential to [the] judgment.”[14] The first ruling had not been “predicated”[15] on facts peculiar to the contracts there in issue, so that differences in the documents were not of “controlling significance.”[16] While the Court did not expressly overrule the separable-facts doctrine, it characterize Sunnen as holding simply “that modifications in
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`controlling legal principles’ . . . could render a previous determination inconsistent with prevailing doctrine;”[17]
“unless there have been major changes in the law,” the Court said, Sunnen is inapplicable.[18] Since this cannot be squared with Sunnen‘s declaration that “the legal matter raised in the second proceeding must involve the same set of events or documents” as that involved in the first,[19] it seems clear that “Sunnen was limited by the Court . . . to cases in which there had been a significant `change in the legal climate. . . .'”[20] Plainly that is not the case here.
II
[6] Although it is thus apparent that an estoppel is not inexorably foreclosed by Supreme Court authority, the inquiry cannot end at this point. “[S]pecial circumstances,” the Court has admonished, “warrant an exception to the normal rules of preclusion.”[21]
It remains to inquire whether the circumstances here are so unusual that the administration of justice would best be served by refusing an estoppel in the instant proceeding.
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alarming are the Supreme Court’s relatively recent estoppel decisions doing away with mutuality,[25] sanctioning application of offensive estoppel,[26] and generally broadening the permissible uses of issue-preclusion when questions of law are involved.[27]
[8] This court has not yet faced squarely the problem whether, given the new estoppel rules, federal relitigation of questions of national law with new parties in new circuits should be permitted.[28] Three other courts, however, have addressed that question,[29] and each has concluded that no collateral estoppel should arise in such circumstances.[30] They all bottom their decisions on one central policy argument: that “in the context of agency relitigation of legal issues with substantial public policy implications,”[31] “inquiry by other circuits should not be foreclosed; indeed, a conflict among the circuits could be a healthy matter.”[32] And whatever might be said of the technical legal arguments made by these courts,[33]the policy they adopted is valid and, we believe, ultimately persuasive. [9] It can hardly be gainsaid that complex questions of national import can wholesomely and profitably be explored by more than a single court. And it is a truism that proposed legal rules can be improved through repeated examination by a variety of legal minds. Rigorous analysis of the law and concomitantly its healthy development would thus be hampered were an estoppel indulged in a case such as this. By the same token, independent reconsideration of legal issues by the circuits can facilitate Supreme Court review by highlighting their complications and controversial aspects,[34] and thus make for better informed
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decisions. Indeed, the Court itself has acknowledged the value of such a shifting process in the courts of appeals. In a recent case presenting a problem dividing the circuits, the Court noted that “[t]his litigation exemplifies the wisdom of allowing difficult issues to mature through full consideration by the courts of appeals. By eliminating . . . many subsidiary, but still troubling, arguments . . . these courts have vastly simplified our task, as well as having underscored the reasonableness of the [ultimately prevailing] view.”[35]
[10] This conclusion draws support from the treatment traditionally accorded decisions of sister circuits by the courts of appeals themselves. When cases presenting legal questions with national implications have arisen, this court has always considered itself obligated to subject the analyses of coordinate tribunals to close scrutiny, with the aim of producing a sound and well-reasoned decision.[36] More generally, while the courts of appeals consistently recognize the importance of uniformity,[37] they have never considered themselves hidebound by other circuits on legal questions involving federal-agency defendants,[38] perhaps because “[i]ssue preclusion has never been applied to issues of law with the same rigor as to issues of fact.”[39] Moreover, relitigation of legal questions across the circuits has been the policy of many federal agencies.[40] To an extent, of course, the vitality of these practices has been threatened by the Supreme Court’s recent decisions on collateral estoppel. But the earlier law cannot be dismissed out of hand; the policies undergirding it[41] are the very sort of countervailing factors[42] that, absent clear Supreme Court authority to the contrary, may justify a refusal to apply estoppel. [11] This is not to say that arguments opposing relitigation of issues lose all force in cases like the one at bar. Duplicative litigation has its own irreducible minimum of waste,[43] and there is much to be said in favor of invariable sameness and resulting certainty in the law. That it is more important to have a sure rule than to have the right rule is a dictum noted with such frequency that it has evolved from truism to cliche.[44]And there is an element of inequity in a special rule applicable only in litigation against the Government, particularly since federal agencies are in a better position than most litigants to petition the Supreme Court or Congress to modify what they believe to be erroneous interpretations of national law.[45]
But all that these considerations suggest is that the courts should be cautious in declining to apply estoppel to
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previously litigated questions of law, not that they should never do so.
III
[12] The foregoing analysis intercepts only parties who did not participate in the initial suit. If the Government is litigating with the same adversary in both cases, an estoppel will petrify the law only as to that one party — obviously not an unjust result — and accordingly will work no preclusion generating national shockwaves.[46] What has been said up to this point, then, does not apply to AMI-Chanco, which was directly involved in the Court of Claims litigation.[47]
On the basis of Memorial, Inc. v. Harris, 655 F.2d 905 (9th Cir. 1980), and Pacific Coast Medical Enterprises v. Harris, 633 F.2d 123 (9th Cir. 1980), decided after rendition of the District Court’s opinion herein, appellants also argue that the Secretary is collaterally estopped on the issue of reimbursement of certain “stock acquisition costs.” The plaintiffs in those cases had bought 100% of the capital stock of Medicare-provider corporations and shortly thereafter had liquidated the corporations. The Ninth Circuit held that, for purposes of Medicare reimbursements, the plaintiffs were entitled to treat the corporate acquisitions as purchases of assets and to revalue those assets. Neither decision, however, bars the Secretary from litigating the question whether in the case before us the purchase of stock of Medicare providers is to be treated as a purchase of assets. In the Ninth Circuit cases there were immediate liquidations and revaluations, but in the instant case there has never been a liquidation of the acquired hospitals, and attempted revaluation was delayed until a subsequent merger between the purchasing corporation and an independent entity. Inasmuch as the facts and the resulting legal issue in Memorial
and Pacific Coast Medical Enterprises differ entirely from those here, collateral estoppel cannot be invoked against the Secretary on the basis of those cases.
n. 1 (9th Cir. 1979), and cases cited with Carr v. District of Columbia, supra note 9, 207 U.S.App.D.C. at 273 n. 47, 646 F.2d at 608 n. 47 and United States v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry., 537 F.2d 312, 316-317 (8th Cir. 1976) (estoppel allowed though different tax years involved).
(D.D.C. 1977).
144 U.S.App.D.C. 326, 446 F.2d 1327, aff’d per curiam, 403 U.S. 713, 91 S.Ct. 2140, 29 L.Ed.2d 822 (1971); City Stores Co. v. Lerner Shops, Inc., 133 U.S.App.D.C. 311, 410 F.2d 1010 (1969) Eli Lily Co. v. Brenner, 126 U.S.App.D.C. 171, 375 F.2d 599
(1967); Waters v. American Auto Ins. Co., 124 U.S.App.D.C. 197, 363 F.2d 684 (1966).
55 N.C. L.Rev. 123, 141-159 (1976) (survey of the circuits).
(9th Cir. 1979).