Daewoo Electronics America Inc v. Opta Corp. , 875 F.3d 1241 ( 2017 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA               No. 14-17498
    INC., a Florida corporation,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,        D.C. No.
    3:13-cv-01247-VC
    v.
    OPTA CORPORATION, a Delaware              OPINION
    corporation registered to do
    business in California; T.C.L.
    INDUSTRIES HOLDINGS (H.K.)
    LIMITED, a Hong Kong
    corporation; TCL MULITMEDIA
    TECHNOLOGY HOLDING LIMITED,
    a Cayman Islands Company; TCL
    CORPORATION, a Shenzhen,
    China, corporation,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of California
    Vince G. Chhabria, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted December 16, 2016
    San Francisco, California
    Filed November 27, 2017
    2          DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    Before: Jay S. Bybee and N. Randy Smith, Circuit Judges,
    and Leslie E. Kobayashi,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge N.R. Smith;
    Dissent by Judge Bybee
    SUMMARY**
    Claim Preclusion
    The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal of almost
    all of Daewoo Electronics America Inc.’s claims as barred by
    a prior judgment of the United States District Court for the
    District of New Jersey; and remanded for further proceedings.
    Daewoo brought this diversity action to recover unpaid
    debt from four entities affiliated with GoVideo for GoVideo’s
    purchase of DVD players from Daewoo. Daewoo previously
    filed suit in New Jersey federal court seeking to enforce a
    guaranty agreement, and the court ruled against Daewoo.
    The panel held that the summary judgment ruling of the
    federal district court in New Jersey on Daewoo’s prior breach
    of contract claim (based on the guaranty agreement) against
    Opta Corporation and TCL Industries Holdings Limited did
    not preclude Daewoo from bringing the present alter ego and
    *
    The Honorable Leslie E. Kobayashi, United States District Judge for
    the District of Hawaii, sitting by designation.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                   3
    successor liability claims against Opta and TCL Multimedia
    Technology Holding Limited.
    The panel held that because the claims in the present
    action and in the prior guaranty action did not arise from the
    same transaction or occurrence, New Jersey’s version of
    traditional res judicata did not apply. The panel further held
    that although New Jersey’s “entire controversy doctrine” may
    have prevented Daewoo from bringing the present claims in
    New Jersey, this procedural joinder rule did not bar the
    claims from being heard in the federal district court sitting in
    California. The panel concluded that the district court erred
    in ruling that the claims in the present action were precluded
    under New Jersey law.
    Judge Bybee dissented because the majority opinion erred
    in not applying New Jersey law just as New Jersey state
    courts would apply it. Judge Bybee would apply New
    Jersey’s “entire controversy doctrine” which would bar
    Daewoo’s claims, and affirm the district court’s judgment.
    COUNSEL
    Perry Clark (argued), Law Offices of Perry Clark, Palo Alto,
    California, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    Laurence Sandell (argued) and Reece Nienstadt, Mei & Mark
    LLP, Washington, D.C., for Defendants-Appellees.
    4        DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    OPINION
    N.R. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    When it is necessary for a federal district court with
    diversity jurisdiction to determine the preclusive effect of a
    prior decision by a different federal district court sitting in
    diversity, the second court must apply preclusion principles
    according to the law of the initial court’s state. See Semtek
    Int’l Inc. v. Lockheed Martin Corp., 
    531 U.S. 497
    , 508–09
    (2001). Under New Jersey’s traditional res judicata doctrine,
    a claim asserting breach of a contractual guarantee of a third
    party’s debt does not preclude later alter ego and successor
    liability claims to collect the debt directly from entities
    related to the debtor. Further, although New Jersey’s
    procedural joinder rules may require such claims to be joined
    in a single action, New Jersey law declines to impose these
    rules on other courts. See Paramount Aviation Corp. v.
    Agusta, 
    178 F.3d 132
    , 142 (3d Cir. 1999); Mortgagelinq
    Corp. v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins., 
    662 A.2d 536
    , 537,
    540–42 (N.J. 1995). Because the district court failed to apply
    New Jersey law correctly, we reverse.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Underlying this case are the unpaid debts of GoVideo (a
    non-party) for the purchase of DVD players from Plaintiff-
    Appellant Daewoo Electronics America Inc. (Daewoo).
    Daewoo brought the present action to recover this debt from
    four entities affiliated with GoVideo: TCL Corporation
    (TCLC), TCL Industries Holdings Limited (TCLI), TCL
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                            5
    Multimedia Technology Holding Limited (TCLM), and Opta
    Corporation (Opta).1
    GoVideo operated a consumer electronics business in
    which it owned patents on electronics technology, bought
    DVD players from manufacturers (made pursuant to
    GoVideo’s patents), and sold those players to third-party
    retailers. From October 2003 through April 2005, Daewoo
    manufactured DVD players that it sold to GoVideo on credit.
    Shortly after this arrangement began, (on December 4, 2003)
    Daewoo, TCLI, and Opta entered into a guaranty agreement.2
    Under that agreement, TCLI and Opta guaranteed the
    payment of obligations to Daewoo up to $5 million for the
    products Daewoo shipped to GoVideo. The agreement
    provided that it was to “remain in force for the 12 month
    period from the date of [its] execution.” The agreement also
    specified that it was governed by New Jersey law.
    1
    Although Daewoo named all four entities as defendants, only TCLM
    and Opta are proper parties to this appeal. Daewoo voluntarily dismissed
    TCLC prior to appeal. The district court also dismissed all claims against
    TCLI for lack of personal jurisdiction. Daewoo did not contest this ruling
    on appeal. Therefore, the issue is waived. Smith v. Marsh, 
    194 F.3d 1045
    ,
    1052 (9th Cir. 1999).
    Concerning Defendants’ relationships to GoVideo, the record
    indicates that ownership of GoVideo changed substantially during the
    course of the parties’ dealings. However, as alleged in the complaint,
    TCLC wholly owned TCLI. TCLI owned 55% of TCLM and 89% of
    Lotus International Holdings (Lotus). TCLI and Lotus owned,
    respectively, 19% and 32% of Opta. And Opta wholly owned Opta
    Systems LLC, which formerly did business as GoVideo.
    2
    Opta was formerly “Lotus Pacific Inc.” and executed the guaranty
    under that name.
    6        DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    During 2004 and 2005, GoVideo had substantial
    operating losses. As a result, beginning in late December
    2004, GoVideo stopped paying for the DVD players it was
    receiving from Daewoo. As of June 2005, GoVideo owed
    Daewoo $7,775,670.98. In November 2005, GoVideo brought
    suit in the United States District Court for the District of New
    Jersey against Daewoo for breach of contract and other
    claims based on allegations that Daewoo manufactured
    defective products for GoVideo. Daewoo asserted
    counterclaims to collect the unpaid debts GoVideo owed for
    DVD players. In April 2007, after GoVideo had abandoned
    its claims, the district court entered default judgment on the
    counterclaims, awarding Daewoo $8,385,168.84 (the amount
    of the debt, plus interest).
    Unable to collect from GoVideo on this judgment,
    Daewoo filed suit in May 2008 against TCLI and Opta, in the
    United States District Court for the District of New Jersey,
    seeking to enforce the guaranty agreement. In August 2010,
    the district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment in the guaranty action. Applying New Jersey
    contract law, the court found that the effective date of the
    guaranty was December 4, 2003; that such date was “clear on
    [the] face” of the agreement; and that the guaranty expired by
    its terms on December 3, 2004, twelve months from that date.
    Because the default judgment against GoVideo arose from
    debt incurred starting on December 23, 2004—after the
    guaranty expired—the district court held that TCLI and Opta
    never had an obligation to pay this debt under the guaranty.
    In March 2013, Daewoo brought the present suit against
    Opta, TCLM, TCLC, and TCLI in the United States District
    Court for the Northern District of California, asserting
    California state law claims for (1) actual fraudulent transfer,
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                     7
    (2) constructive fraudulent transfer, (3) alter ego liability, and
    (4) successor liability. Defendants moved to dismiss based on
    the res judicata effect of the guaranty action. Judge White
    from the Northern District of California rejected the res
    judicata argument, holding that the actions were not
    sufficiently related so as to arise from the same transaction or
    occurrence. Instead, these California claims for relief relied
    on entirely different facts. Daewoo later voluntarily dismissed
    its claims for fraudulent transfer.
    The case was reassigned to Judge Chhabria in April 2014.
    Shortly thereafter, Judge Chhabria sua sponte ordered the
    parties to brief “whether this lawsuit is barred in whole or in
    part under the doctrine of res judicata,” based on the
    summary judgment in the guaranty action. Defendants then
    moved, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), for
    judgment on the pleadings based on res judicata. In ruling on
    the motion, the district court found that most of the facts on
    which Daewoo bases its present claims were available to
    Daewoo during the period that the guaranty action was
    pending. Thus, the court held that, because Daewoo could
    have asserted the present claims at the same time it brought
    the prior action, Daewoo was barred from bringing those
    claims in the present action. Daewoo now appeals.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review de novo the district court’s ruling on a motion
    for judgment on the pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(c). Lyon v. Chase Bank USA, N.A., 
    656 F.3d 877
    , 883 (9th Cir. 2011). Dismissal under Rule 12(c) is
    warranted when, taking the allegations in the complaint as
    true, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. 
    Id.
     We also review “questions of choice of law” de novo,
    8          DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    Paulsen v. CNF Inc., 
    559 F.3d 1061
    , 1072 (9th Cir. 2009),
    but review for clear error the “factual findings underlying
    [the] choice of law determination,” Zinser v. Accufix
    Research Inst., Inc., 
    253 F.3d 1180
    , 1187 (9th Cir. 2001).
    III. DISCUSSION
    In short, the summary judgment ruling of the federal
    district court in New Jersey on Daewoo’s prior breach of
    contract claim (based on the guaranty agreement) against
    Opta and TCLI does not preclude Daewoo from bringing the
    present alter ego and successor liability claims against Opta
    and TCLM.3
    Semtek International Inc. v. Lockheed Martin Corp., 
    531 U.S. 497
     (2001), provides the framework for our analysis.4
    Under Semtek, “federal common law governs the claim-
    preclusive effect of a dismissal by a federal court sitting in
    diversity.” 
    Id. at 508
    . However, in these circumstances,
    federal common law requires that we determine the
    preclusive effect of the prior decision by reference to the law
    3
    For purposes of our discussion, we refer to the first forum to address
    a particular case as “F1.” The second forum, tasked with determining the
    preclusive effect of an F1 judgment, we refer to as “F2.”
    4
    The present case considers the effect of a federal district court
    judgment rendered by a court sitting with diversity jurisdiction on a
    subsequent adjudication in a different federal district court also sitting in
    diversity. Although Semtek considered the effect of a federal district court
    diversity-jurisdiction judgment on a subsequent adjudication in a state
    court, 
    531 U.S. at
    499–500, we have since applied Semtek’s holding to
    cases where the second court was also a federal diversity court, see Taco
    Bell Corp. v. TBWA Chiat/Day Inc., 
    552 F.3d 1137
    , 1144 (9th Cir. 2009);
    Giles v. Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp., 
    494 F.3d 865
    , 884–85 (9th Cir.
    2007).
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                              9
    of the state where the rendering federal diversity court sits.5
    
    Id.
     Because we must determine the preclusive effect of the
    judgment in the guaranty action, rendered by the United
    States District Court for the District of New Jersey sitting
    with diversity jurisdiction, Semtek mandates that we turn to
    New Jersey state preclusion law.
    The parties do not dispute that we begin with New Jersey
    law for the preclusion question; they disagree as to how that
    law operates. Their arguments concern two state law
    doctrines: (1) New Jersey’s version of traditional res judicata,
    and (2) New Jersey’s “entire controversy doctrine.” We
    address the application of each doctrine in turn.6
    5
    However, the state law is not incorporated in cases where “the state
    law is incompatible with federal interests.” Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at 509
    .
    6
    Daewoo argues that Defendants waived their right to raise a
    preclusion defense in the present action, because they failed to plead res
    judicata in the prior guaranty action (based on the preclusive effect of
    Daewoo’s default judgment against GoVideo). Daewoo waived this
    argument by failing to raise it in its opening brief. Martinez-Serrano v.
    I.N.S., 
    94 F.3d 1256
    , 1259 (9th Cir. 1996) (“[A]ppellants cannot raise a
    new issue for the first time in their reply briefs.” (citation omitted)); see
    also Norwood v. Vance, 
    591 F.3d 1062
    , 1068 (9th Cir. 2010) (collecting
    cases demonstrating that a party may waive a waiver argument). In
    addition, it was the district court, not Defendants, who raised the res
    judicata issue. The district court may raise res judicata even where it
    would otherwise have been waived, see Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
    
    514 U.S. 211
    , 231 (1995) (“[T]rial courts may in appropriate cases raise
    the res judicata bar on their own motion.”); see also 18 James Wm. Moore
    et al., Moore’s Federal Practice § 131.51 (3d ed. 2017), so long as the
    parties have the opportunity to sufficiently address the issue, see McClain
    v. Apodaca, 
    793 F.2d 1031
    , 1033 (9th Cir. 1986).
    10       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    A. Res Judicata
    Because there is not substantial overlap of the facts
    material to proving, first, the breach of contract claim in the
    prior guaranty action and, second, the alter ego and successor
    liability claims in the present action, the two actions do not
    grow from the same transaction or occurrence, and res
    judicata does not apply. For res judicata to apply, “[(1)] the
    judgment relied upon must be valid, final and on the merits;
    [(2)] the parties in the two actions must be either identical or
    in privity with one another; and [(3)] the claims must grow
    out of the same transaction or occurrence.” Olds v. Donnelly,
    
    677 A.2d 238
    , 243 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1996), aff’d,
    
    696 A.2d 633
     (N.J. 1997). Only the third element is genuinely
    in dispute.
    Therefore, we turn to whether Daewoo’s alter ego and
    successor liability claims grow out of the same transaction or
    occurrence as the claim on the guaranty contract. To answer
    that question, we must consider four factors:
    (1) whether the acts complained of and the
    demand for relief are the same (that is,
    whether the wrong for which redress is sought
    is the same in both actions); (2) whether the
    theory of recovery is the same; (3) whether
    the witnesses and documents necessary at trial
    are the same (that is, whether the same
    evidence necessary to maintain the second
    action would have been sufficient to support
    the first); and (4) whether the material facts
    alleged are the same.
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                         11
    Culver v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    559 A.2d 400
    , 405 (N.J. 1989)
    (internal citations omitted) (quoting United States v. Athlone
    Indus., Inc., 
    746 F.2d 977
    , 984 (3d Cir. 1984)). “[T]he focal
    points of [the] analysis are whether the acts complained of
    were the same, whether the material facts alleged in each suit
    were the same and whether the witnesses and documentation
    required to prove such allegations were the same.” Athlone,
    
    746 F.2d at 984
    .7
    With respect to the first factor, Defendants’ acts (of which
    Daewoo complained and for which Daewoo demanded
    corresponding relief) differed in each action. Although
    Daewoo’s claims in both actions could have had the effect of
    satisfying part of the default judgment against GoVideo (as
    both district court judges in the present action
    acknowledged), the underlying bases giving Daewoo a right
    to bring each suit—the wrongs for which Daewoo sought
    redress—did not overlap.
    As Judge White observed, the prior suit was an action for
    “a breach of a guaranty contract.” Daewoo’s complaint in the
    prior action alleged that Defendants became liable to Daewoo
    under the contract for $5 million, that Daewoo demanded
    payment from Defendants, and that Defendants refused to
    pay. It was the breach of the guaranty—Defendants’ refusal
    to fulfill their contractual obligation to pay $5 million—that
    7
    New Jersey’s res judicata standard is very similar to its federal
    counterpart applied by the Third Circuit. See In re Mullarkey, 
    536 F.3d 215
    , 225 (3d Cir. 2008) (“Both New Jersey and federal law apply res
    judicata or claim preclusion when [the same] three circumstances are
    present . . . .”); Interfaith Cmty. Org. Inc. v. PPG Indus., Inc., 
    702 F. Supp. 2d 295
    , 303 (D.N.J. 2010) (“New Jersey and federal res judicata
    have [the] same elements.” (citing Watkins v. Resorts Int’l Hotel &
    Casino, Inc., 
    591 A.2d 592
    , 599 (N.J. 1991))).
    12       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    was the wrong for which Daewoo sought relief. Although
    proof of this claim would require showing that GoVideo was
    in debt to Daewoo, the purpose of suing in the guaranty
    action would not have been to fulfill GoVideo’s obligation to
    pay its debt. Instead, the suit would fulfill Defendants’
    independent contractual obligation under an agreement to
    which GoVideo was not a party. Conversely, Daewoo seeks
    redress in the present action for an obligation to pay a $7.75
    million debt incurred by GoVideo that had nothing to do with
    the guaranty contract. Daewoo seeks to hold Defendants
    directly liable for GoVideo’s unpaid debt, rather than for
    Defendants’ independent obligation.
    The relief available for each cause of action further
    evidences the difference in the underlying wrongs.
    Defendants acknowledge that the amount of damages
    available under the two actions was substantially different. In
    the prior action, Daewoo could have recovered no more than
    Defendants’ independent $5 million obligation under the
    guaranty. However, under the theories asserted in the present
    action, Daewoo could recover $7.75 million, because
    Defendants would be held directly liable for the full amount
    of GoVideo’s debts. See Wady v. Provident Life & Accident
    Ins. Co. of Am., 
    216 F. Supp. 2d 1060
    , 1066 (C.D. Cal. 2002).
    Because Daewoo brought each action to seek redress for
    different underlying conduct, and because the recovery
    available in each action was substantially different, this factor
    weighs against finding that the claims grew from the same
    transaction or occurrence.
    Second, the parties and both of the district court judges
    have acknowledged that the present action involves theories
    of recovery that are legally distinct from those asserted in the
    prior action. The guaranty action concerned liability under an
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                13
    express contract executed by the parties to the litigation and
    governed by New Jersey law. The present action seeks to
    hold Defendants directly liable for a third-party’s debt under
    California actions of alter ego and successor liability, where
    Defendants would otherwise have no independent basis for
    that debt. While this factor does not carry as much weight as
    others in the analysis, see Athlone, 
    746 F.2d at 984
    , it
    nonetheless supports the conclusion that claims in the
    separate actions did not grow from a common transaction or
    occurrence.
    The third and fourth factors are intertwined and both
    weigh in Daewoo’s favor, because there is not significant
    overlap between the material facts or the necessary evidence
    in each action. Daewoo argues that the claims asserted in the
    separate actions involve substantially different facts and
    evidence because the issues in the guaranty action concerned
    only formation and interpretation of the guaranty contract,
    which are irrelevant to the claims of alter ego and successor
    liability. Instead, Daewoo argues, the present action “focuses
    on the conduct of Defendants-Appellees in stripping GoVideo
    of its assets,” which occurred well after formation of the
    guaranty. Daewoo further contends that (although Opta was
    involved in both actions) none of the facts or evidence in the
    guaranty action would have related to TCLM, because TCLM
    was not a party to that case or to the guaranty agreement.
    Defendants argue that Daewoo demonstrated the substantial
    overlap between the two lawsuits by alleging several of the
    same facts in both actions. However, Defendants fail to
    explain why any of these common facts (and their supporting
    evidence) were material to the guaranty action. Judge
    Chhabria’s analysis suffers the same flaw. As Judge White
    found, while some of the contextual background facts may
    overlap, “Daewoo’s alter ego and successor liability claims
    14       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    nonetheless do not directly relate in substance to the guaranty
    contract,” and they rely on an entirely different set of facts. In
    their analyses of res judicata, neither the district court nor the
    parties discuss what specifically must be proved for the
    various claims. Examining the required proof makes it clear
    that the two actions here would not involve significantly
    overlapping facts and evidence.
    New Jersey contract law requires a plaintiff to show that
    (1) the parties formed a contract, (2) the plaintiff performed
    under the terms of the contract, (3) the defendant breached,
    and (4) the breach caused a loss to the plaintiff. Globe Motor
    Co. v. Igdalev, 
    139 A.3d 57
    , 64 (N.J. 2016).
    The theory of “alter ego,” under California law, refers to
    situations where the “owner of a corporation will be held
    liable for the actions of the corporation.” Wady, 
    216 F. Supp. 2d at 1066
     (quoting Roman Catholic Archbishop of S.F. v.
    Superior Court, 
    93 Cal. Rptr. 338
    , 341 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971)).
    Two elements are required: “(1) that there be such unity of
    interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the
    corporation and the individual no longer exist[,] and (2) that,
    if the acts are treated as those of the corporation alone, an
    inequitable result will follow.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Mesler v. Bragg
    Mgmt. Co., 
    702 P.2d 601
    , 606 (Cal. 1985)). “California courts
    emphasize that the alter ego determination is very fact
    specific.” Smith v. Simmons, 
    638 F. Supp. 2d 1180
    , 1191
    (E.D. Cal. 2009), aff’d, 409 F. App’x 88 (9th Cir. 2010).
    In considering whether there is sufficient unity of interest
    and ownership, relevant factors include whether there was
    inadequate capitalization, commingling of
    funds and other assets, holding out by one
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                   15
    entity that it is liable for the debts of the other,
    identical equitable ownership, use of the same
    offices and employees, use of one as a mere
    conduit for the affairs of the other, disregard
    of corporate formalities, lack of segregation of
    corporate records, and identical directors and
    officers.
    
    Id.
     (citing VirtualMagic Asia, Inc. v. Fil-Cartoons, Inc.,
    
    121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1
    , 13 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002)). Finding an
    “inequitable result” under the second element of alter ego
    liability “generally require[s] some evidence of bad faith
    conduct on the part of defendants.” Id. at 1192.
    Under a California successor liability claim, a corporation
    acquiring substantially all the assets of another corporation
    may be liable for the debts of the terminated corporation
    where “(1) the purchaser expressly or impliedly agrees to
    such assumption, (2) the transaction amounts to a
    consolidation or merger of the two corporations, (3) the
    purchasing corporation is merely a continuation of the selling
    corporation, or (4) the transaction is entered into fraudulently
    to escape liability for debts.” McClellan v. Northridge Park
    Townhome Owners Ass’n, Inc., 
    107 Cal. Rptr. 2d 702
    , 707
    (Cal. Ct. App. 2001) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Ortiz v. S.
    Bend Lathe, 
    120 Cal. Rptr. 556
    , 558 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975)).
    In analyzing the third and fourth factors to determine
    whether claims grew out of the same transaction or
    occurrence, we consider “the material facts” and the evidence
    necessary to prove them. See Culver, 559 A.2d at 405
    (quoting Athlone, 
    746 F.2d at 984
    ). The existence of many
    common facts between the two actions does not necessarily
    speak to whether the common facts are material to proving
    16       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    either claim. Athlone, 
    746 F.2d at
    985–86. “[T]he overlap of
    irrelevant facts and probably even tangential facts constitutes
    nothing more than surplusage.” 
    Id. at 986
    . As an initial point,
    Daewoo is correct that (because TCLI was dismissed from
    the present action for lack of personal jurisdiction) Opta is the
    only defendant common to both actions, which tends to
    reduce the potential evidentiary overlap. Furthermore,
    because, under the guaranty action, neither party seriously
    disputed the valid formation of the guaranty agreement, that
    Daewoo performed under the agreement, or that Daewoo was
    harmed by Defendants’ non-payment, the only disputed
    question was that of Defendants’ breach. With respect to this
    question, the district court explained that the “central issue”
    was “the date that the guaranty became effective.” Because
    the district court found that this issue was controlled by the
    unambiguous face of the contract, essentially no evidence at
    all was necessary to resolve the contract claim. Yet, even if
    every element were contested, the material facts and
    supporting evidence would revolve exclusively around the
    contract: the parties who formed it, when it was formed, the
    intended interpretation of the terms, whether Daewoo
    performed its obligations under the guaranty agreement,
    whether an obligation for Defendants to pay arose under the
    terms of the contract, whether Daewoo demanded payment,
    whether Defendants refused to pay, whether Daewoo suffered
    damages, and the amount of Daewoo’s damages.
    Comparing this required proof to that necessary for the
    claims in the present action, it is clear there would be very
    little overlap. Because the guaranty contract forms an
    obligation for Defendants to pay that is separate from
    GoVideo’s direct liability for its debt, the guaranty action
    would not require any proof concerning the entities’
    relationships or an inequitable result, as in the alter ego claim.
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                  17
    Likewise, the guaranty action would not have required proof
    of the circumstances necessary to establish successor liability.
    The one area of potential overlap is that both actions would
    require proof that GoVideo had a debt to Daewoo. However,
    Daewoo had a default judgment establishing GoVideo’s debt
    for $7.75 million well before it filed either action. Therefore,
    the only evidence required to establish the existence of the
    debt would be the default judgment. Because the existence of
    the debt is essentially uncontested, the burden imposed (and
    the judicial resources expended) by introducing the default
    judgment in each action would be minimal. Although there
    are some allegations common to the complaints in both
    actions, these allegations concern facts immaterial to the
    guaranty action. In light of the minimal overlap between the
    material facts and evidence necessary to prove the claims in
    each action, the third and fourth factors weigh against finding
    that the actions grew from the same transaction or occurrence.
    Because the two actions asserted distinct theories of
    liability to seek redress for different harms, and because the
    facts and evidence material to each action did not
    significantly overlap, the two actions did not grow from a
    common transaction or occurrence. Therefore, the judgment
    from the guaranty action does not preclude the claims in the
    present action under the New Jersey doctrine of res judicata.
    During a July 2014 hearing, “Daewoo’s counsel stated on
    the record that Daewoo could have brought the claims at issue
    in this case during the [guaranty action] but chose not to do
    so.” Defendants and Judge Chhabria place great weight on
    this point, seeming to argue that it should dispositively
    preclude Daewoo from maintaining the present action.
    However, this argument reflects a misunderstanding of the
    test for res judicata. While res judicata permits claims to be
    18       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    barred where they could have been raised in the prior action
    but were not, the requirement remains that the un-alleged
    claims must be so closely related to those claims on which the
    prior judgment was rendered that they are considered to grow
    from the same transaction or occurrence. The required
    elements of the res judicata doctrine do not cease to apply
    simply because a claim was not alleged when it could have
    been. Even if Daewoo could have brought the present claims
    in the prior action, it was not required to do so, because the
    present claims did not grow from the same transaction or
    occurrence as did the guaranty claim.
    B. Entire Controversy Doctrine
    The present claims are not precluded by New Jersey’s
    entire controversy doctrine.
    In Semtek, the Supreme Court outlined that we must look
    to state law to resolve preclusion issues under the present
    circumstances. The Court acknowledged the possibility that
    a state’s law could have two preclusion rules that applied
    differently (under the same set of facts) depending on the
    jurisdiction in which the F2 action was brought. See 
    531 U.S. at
    503–04 (recognizing a hypothetical situation where
    “California law left [a party] free to sue on [a] claim in
    Maryland even after the [claim was precluded in California
    because the] California statute of limitations had expired”);
    Chavez v. Dole Food Co., 
    836 F.3d 205
    , 225–28 (3d Cir.
    2016) (en banc) (explaining that Semtek alludes to the
    possibility of state preclusion law applying differently
    depending on the F2 jurisdiction). And giving effect to a
    state’s law of preclusion necessarily includes applying any
    exceptions that, under the state’s law, prevent application of
    certain preclusion principles. See Cummins, Inc. v. TAS
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                  19
    Distrib. Co., 
    676 F. Supp. 2d 701
    , 711–13 (C.D. Ill. 2009),
    aff’d, 
    700 F.3d 1329
     (Fed. Cir. 2012).
    The New Jersey court system has a “long-held preference
    that related claims and matters arising among related parties
    be adjudicated together rather than in separate, successive,
    fragmented, or piecemeal litigation.” Kent Motor Cars, Inc.
    v. Reynolds & Reynolds, Co., 
    25 A.3d 1027
    , 1036 (N.J.
    2011). New Jersey gives effect to this preference through
    court rules reflecting the state’s fairly strict approach to
    joinder of claims and parties. For example, New Jersey Rule
    of Court 4:30A, titled “Entire Controversy Doctrine,”
    provides that the “[n]on-joinder of claims required to be
    joined by the entire controversy doctrine shall result in the
    preclusion of the omitted claims to the extent required by the
    entire controversy doctrine . . . .” See also Ricketti v. Barry,
    
    775 F.3d 611
    , 614 n.2 (3d Cir. 2015) (“[L]itigants invoking
    claim joinder as a basis for preclusion must turn to [New
    Jersey Court] Rule 4:30A . . . .”). However, these court “rules
    by definition apply only in the courts of New Jersey.” NJSR
    Surgical Ctr., L.L.C. v. Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of
    N.J., Inc., 
    979 F. Supp. 2d 513
    , 518 (D.N.J. 2013); 
    id.
     at 519
    n.3 (further explaining that the New Jersey Court Rules are
    “confined to the state courts”); N.J. Ct. R. 4:1 (providing that
    the rules in Part IV of the New Jersey Rules of Court—which
    include the entire controversy doctrine—only govern practice
    and procedure in the state courts of New Jersey).
    These joinder rules are distinct from traditional preclusion
    rules like res judicata. Unlike res judicata, the primary
    purpose of the entire controversy doctrine is not to enforce an
    adjudication that has already taken place. See Fioriglio v. City
    of Atl. City, 
    963 F. Supp. 415
    , 420 n.1 (D.N.J. 1997). Instead,
    “New Jersey’s main justification for the doctrine[ is] its
    20       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    interest in preserving its judicial resources,” which the state
    attempts to protect by preventing fragmentation of litigation
    at the outset. Paramount Aviation Corp. v. Agusta, 
    178 F.3d 132
    , 142 (3d Cir. 1999); see also Sutton v. Sutton, 
    71 F. Supp. 2d 383
    , 390 (D.N.J. 1999) (“[The doctrine] seeks to promote
    judicial economy and efficiency by avoiding fragmented,
    multiple and duplicative litigation.” (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted)), aff’d, 
    216 F.3d 1077
     (3d Cir.
    2000); Kent Motor Cars, 25 A.3d at 1036 (“Underlying the
    Entire Controversy Doctrine are the twin goals of ensuring
    fairness to parties and achieving economy of judicial
    resources.”); K-Land Corp. No. 28 v. Landis Sewerage Auth.,
    
    800 A.2d 861
    , 871 (N.J. 2002) (“[T]he entire controversy
    doctrine [is] designed to conserve judicial resources.”).
    For example, in Mortgagelinq Corp. v. Commonwealth
    Land Title Insurance, the New Jersey Supreme Court
    considered whether the state court (sitting as F2) was
    permitted to apply the state’s own entire controversy doctrine
    to preclude claims that could have been (but were not)
    brought in a prior action in Pennsylvania federal court (F1).
    
    662 A.2d 536
    , 540 (N.J. 1995). In concluding that New Jersey
    could apply the doctrine to close its courthouse doors, the
    court did not reason that it was protecting the finality of any
    prior adjudications, as would have been the case with
    traditional preclusion rules such as res judicata. Instead the
    court relied primarily on its interest in “[j]udicial economy
    and efficiency—the avoidance of waste and delay.” 
    Id.
     at
    540–41 (quoting Cogdell v. Hosp. Ctr. at Orange, 
    560 A.2d 1169
    , 1177 (N.J. 1989)). As Mortgagelinq demonstrates, New
    Jersey applies the entire controversy doctrine as a procedural
    housekeeping tool that closes the courthouse doors to prevent
    a party from litigating a claim in New Jersey courts, based on
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                          21
    a specific policy choice that New Jersey made regarding the
    priority of its judicial resources.8
    However, this goal of preserving New Jersey’s judicial
    resources does not benefit from a non-New Jersey court
    (sitting as F2) closing its courthouse doors. Accordingly, New
    Jersey does “not export [its] entire controversy doctrine to
    other jurisdictions.” 
    Id. at 537
    . Rather, given the nature and
    principal goal of the doctrine, the New Jersey Supreme Court
    has indicated that—even if the entire controversy doctrine
    would have precluded an F2 decision in New Jersey—the
    entire controversy doctrine would not preclude a different
    jurisdiction sitting as F2 (whose own procedural rules allow
    the claim) from entertaining the case, because New Jersey
    law does not impose on other jurisdictions its procedural
    joinder requirements or the preclusive effect of those
    requirements. See 
    id. at 537
    , 540–42; see also Paramount,
    
    178 F.3d at
    140–42 (interpreting Mortgagelinq broadly as
    “attempt[ing] to cabin the effect of the [entire controversy]
    doctrine outside of New Jersey courts,” as “herald[ing] an
    awareness of the doctrine’s limits when interjurisdictional
    problems were involved,” and as “ensur[ing] that the doctrine
    will not have untoward extraterritorial effects”); Archbrook
    8
    New Jersey courts and their federal counterparts cannot claim to be
    entirely consistent when it comes to treatment of the entire controversy
    doctrine. Mortgagelinq, itself, acknowledges that “the entire controversy
    doctrine is hardly one of either uniform application or universal
    acceptance.” 662 A.2d at 541. However, our duty in applying New Jersey
    law is to “apply the law as we believe the [New Jersey] Supreme Court
    would apply it.” Astaire v. Best Film & Video Corp., 
    116 F.3d 1297
    , 1300
    (9th Cir. 1997), amended, 
    136 F.3d 1208
     (9th Cir. 1998). And, while there
    are cases with language suggesting other interpretations of the entire
    controversy doctrine, Mortgagelinq provides the most on-point authority
    for how New Jersey applies the doctrine in the extrajurisdictional context.
    22       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    Laguna, LLC v. Marsh, 
    997 A.2d 1035
    , 1042 (N.J. Super. Ct.
    App. Div. 2010) (holding that entire controversy doctrine
    (1) precluded, in a F2 New Jersey state action, claims that
    could have been brought in a prior F1 Georgia action but
    (2) did not limit the plaintiff’s ability to commence an F2
    action in a different jurisdiction).
    The dissent argues that the entire controversy doctrine’s
    exception should not be applied in this case. This is incorrect
    for three reasons. First, the dissent incorrectly applies New
    Jersey law. Although the dissent argues that “[t]he majority
    nevertheless refuses to apply the entire controversy doctrine,”
    it is the dissent which truly implements only half of the
    doctrine. As the dissent correctly notes, we must “implement
    New Jersey preclusion law just as a New Jersey state court
    would.” Indeed, this is the central holding in Semtek. Semtek,
    
    531 U.S. at 508
    . Contrary to the dissent’s conclusion, this
    includes applying any exceptions contained in the doctrine.
    We do not get to pick and choose which parts to apply. The
    entire controversy doctrine is not merely a bar against
    bringing claims that could have been brought in a prior
    proceeding, but it also includes the exception that New Jersey
    does not impose the doctrine outside its state courts.
    Mortgagelinq, 662 A.2d at 538 (“Just as we do not seek to
    export our procedural requirements of party joinder, we do
    not seek to export any preclusive effect to our rules of party
    joinder.”). However, the dissent would have this court
    implement the doctrine as if it were the New Jersey state
    court, not simply applying the New Jersey state court’s law
    as the Ninth Circuit. This means the exclusion applies and we
    cannot impose the entire controversy doctrine.
    Second, the dissent incorrectly reads the import of this
    doctrine. New Jersey’s ability to treat this housekeeping
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                  23
    mechanism as preclusive in its own courts, but not in other
    courts, is supported by analogy to other mechanisms that
    reach a comparable result, such as statutes of limitation or
    forum non coveniens. Semtek foresaw and acknowledged
    situations where state law statute of limitations would be
    preclusive in one state, but not another. Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at
    503–04. The entire controversy doctrine is no different.
    Finally, assuming the dissent is correct that failing to
    apply the entire controversy doctrine as a bar in this case
    would lead to forum shopping and other problems, Daewoo’s
    claims would still not be barred under Semtek. Where
    applying the state law would be “incompatible with federal
    interests,” “[t]his federal reference to state law will not
    obtain.” 
    Id. at 509
    . Forum shopping, as raised by the dissent,
    would certainly implicate “federal interests.” 
    Id.
     at 508–09.
    However, instead of modifying the entire controversy
    doctrine so as to apply it without its inherent exception,
    Semtek’s proffered solution binds the actions of this court. In
    that situation, we simply do not apply New Jersey law, but
    rather, federal res judicata law, which is substantively the
    same as New Jersey’s res judicata law. See supra note 7.
    Thus, this court would still reach the same result: Daewoo’s
    claims are not barred.
    In sum, New Jersey law does not require
    extrajurisdictional application of its entire controversy
    doctrine. This approach complies with the Supreme Court’s
    decision in Semtek, which recognized that a state may have
    preclusion rules that bar certain claims within that state while
    permitting the same claims elsewhere. Therefore, following
    Semtek to give full effect to the preclusion laws of New
    Jersey, we must decline to apply the entire controversy
    doctrine to this case.
    24       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Because the claims in the present action and in the
    guaranty action did not arise from the same transaction or
    occurrence, New Jersey’s version of traditional res judicata
    does not apply. And, although the entire controversy doctrine
    may have prevented Daewoo from bringing the present
    claims in New Jersey, this procedural joinder rule does not
    bar the claims from being heard in the federal district court
    sitting in California. Thus, the district court erred in ruling
    that the claims in the present action were precluded under
    New Jersey law.
    REVERSED          and     REMANDED           for    further
    proceedings.
    BYBEE, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    This case presents a complex issue of interjurisdictional
    preclusion, but it can be solved easily if one adheres to first
    principles. The preclusive effect of a prior judgment in a
    federal diversity action is governed by the law of the state in
    which the rendering court sits. Semtek Int’l Inc. v. Lockheed
    Martin Corp., 
    531 U.S. 497
    , 506–08 (2001). Here, Daewoo
    received a prior judgment in a federal diversity action filed in
    the District of New Jersey. The preclusive effect of that prior
    judgment is therefore governed by New Jersey state law.
    There are two twists. First, New Jersey has an unusually
    robust preclusion rule called the “entire controversy
    doctrine,” and applying that doctrine here would bar
    Daewoo’s claims. Second, the New Jersey Supreme Court
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                25
    has said that only its own courts, not federal or other state
    courts, need apply the entire controversy doctrine.
    Mortgagelinq Corp. v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.,
    
    662 A.2d 536
    , 542 (N.J. 1995). None of this, however, alters
    our obligation to implement New Jersey preclusion law just
    as a New Jersey state court would. I would therefore apply
    the entire controversy doctrine and affirm the judgment.
    The majority nevertheless refuses to apply the entire
    controversy doctrine, citing New Jersey’s limitation of the
    doctrine to its own courts. Maj. Op. at 19–23. According to
    the majority, we cannot apply the doctrine “as if [we] were
    the New Jersey state court,” but rather must apply the “state
    court’s law as the Ninth Circuit.” Id. at 22 (emphasis
    omitted). Simply put, this is an aberration. We are required
    to apply the same law New Jersey state courts would apply.
    See Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at 508
    . We do not get to apply the law
    New Jersey state courts would apply if they were federal
    courts. It is not up to New Jersey to “determin[e] the
    extraterritorial effect of [its] own laws and judgments,” and
    we should have declined its invitation to violate fundamental
    principles of interjurisdictional preclusion. Thomas v.
    Washington Gas Light Co., 
    448 U.S. 261
    , 272 (1980)
    (plurality opinion).
    I respectfully dissent.
    I
    This dispute stems from a sour business deal between
    Daewoo and GoVideo. Daewoo obtained a default judgment
    against GoVideo for some $7.78 million. Unable to collect
    from GoVideo itself, Daewoo sued GoVideo’s parent
    companies and other affiliates—entities the majority calls
    26       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    TCLC, TCLI, TCLM, and Opta. Maj. Op. at 4–5.
    Specifically, Daewoo filed two lawsuits, each asserting a
    different theory of liability regarding the affiliate companies’
    responsibility to cover GoVideo’s debt.
    First, Daewoo brought a diversity action against TCLI
    and Opta in the District of New Jersey, alleging that those
    companies had guaranteed repayment of GoVideo’s debt in
    a written agreement. The district court rejected Daewoo’s
    theory and entered summary judgment against it. Second,
    Daewoo filed this diversity action in the Northern District of
    California against all four entities affiliated with GoVideo
    (although only TCLM and Opta remain Defendants).
    Daewoo alleged, inter alia, that Defendants were alter egos
    of GoVideo and liable for its debts. The district court
    dismissed almost all of Daewoo’s claims as barred by the
    prior judgment. Daewoo appealed.
    II
    The majority and I agree that the preclusive effect of the
    prior judgment is governed by New Jersey state law. See
    Maj. Op. at 18. We disagree, however, about how to apply
    that law here. What complicates this case is the unique
    structure of New Jersey’s preclusion rules, which encompass
    both a traditional res judicata doctrine and the entire
    controversy doctrine.
    New Jersey’s res judicata doctrine “requires substantially
    similar or identical causes of action and issues, parties, and
    relief sought.” Wadeer v. New Jersey Mfrs. Ins. Co.,
    
    110 A.3d 19
    , 28 (N.J. 2015) (citation omitted); see also Maj.
    Op. at 10–11 & n.7. The state’s entire controversy doctrine
    is broader. Melikian v. Corradetti, 
    791 F.2d 274
    , 279 (3d Cir.
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                          27
    1986). Unlike res judicata, the entire controversy doctrine
    does not require common legal issues or requested relief but
    only that “the claims against the different parties arise from
    related facts or the same transaction or series of transactions.”
    Wadeer, 110 A.3d at 27 (citation omitted). It is the “core set
    of facts” common to two actions that triggers the entire
    controversy bar. Id.; see also Mystic Isle Dev. Corp. v.
    Perskie & Nehmad, 
    662 A.2d 523
    , 529 (N.J. 1995) (“[I]t is
    the factual circumstances giving rise to the controversy itself
    . . . that triggers the requirement of [claims] joinder to create
    a cohesive and complete litigation.” (citation omitted));
    Oliver v. Ambrose, 
    705 A.2d 742
    , 747 (N.J. 1998) (“The
    entire controversy doctrine encompasses ‘virtually all causes,
    claims, and defenses relating to a controversy.’” (citation
    omitted)).1
    1
    The doctrine is currently enforced through New Jersey Court Rule
    4:30A:
    Non-joinder of claims required to be joined by the
    entire controversy doctrine shall result in the preclusion
    of the omitted claims to the extent required by the entire
    controversy doctrine, except as otherwise provided by
    R. 4:64-5 (foreclosure actions) and R. 4:67-4(a) (leave
    required for counterclaims or cross-claims in summary
    actions). Claims of bad faith, which are asserted against
    an insurer after an underlying uninsured
    motorist/underinsured motorist claim is resolved in a
    Superior Court action, are not precluded by the entire
    controversy doctrine.
    See also N.J. Ct. R. 4:5-1(b)(2) (imposing a duty for parties to disclose
    “the names of any non-party who should be joined in the action”). New
    Jersey courts have not always clearly articulated the distinction between
    res judicata and the entire controversy doctrine, and some have even
    equated the two. See, e.g., Long v. Lewis, 
    723 A.2d 1238
    , 1243 (N.J.
    Super. Ct. App. Div. 1999) (“The claim preclusion aspect of the entire
    28         DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    Applying the correct preclusion doctrine is of critical
    importance in this case. Under New Jersey’s res judicata
    doctrine, there is a strong argument that the prior judgment
    does not bar Daewoo’s claims here. See Maj. Op. at 10–18.
    As the majority notes, the two actions seek slightly different
    relief (Daewoo hopes to recover more here), and involve
    different theories of recovery, allegations, and potential
    evidence. See 
    id.
     at 11–14. The majority and Daewoo appear
    to agree, however, that this action would not survive under
    the entire controversy doctrine. Both actions arise from the
    same core set of facts, which is all that is necessary for the
    entire controversy doctrine to apply. See Wadeer, 110 A.3d
    at 27.
    III
    According to the majority, we can follow New Jersey law
    and yet not apply the entire controversy doctrine because
    New Jersey has limited the doctrine to its own courts. This
    reasoning is both an affront to controlling federal common
    law and an open invitation to forum shopping. To show
    precisely where the majority goes astray, I first discuss
    general principles of interjurisdictional preclusion and then
    explain why the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision in
    Mortgagelinq cannot keep us from applying the entire
    controversy doctrine here. Throughout, I refer to the first
    court to render a judgment as Forum 1 (“F1”) and the second
    court considering whether to give preclusive effect to that
    judgment as Forum 2 (“F2”).
    controversy doctrine is essentially res judicata by another name.”). As the
    most recent New Jersey Supreme Court decision on the subject indicates,
    however, the doctrines are indeed distinct. See Wadeer, 110 A.3d at
    27–28.
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                29
    A
    Interjurisdictional preclusion rules are least complicated
    when F1 is a state court. When a state court enters judgment,
    the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution,
    implemented through the Full Faith and Credit Act, requires
    every subsequent court occupying the role of F2—whether
    state or federal—to protect that judgment by applying the
    preclusion law of F1. U.S. Const. art. IV, § 1; 
    28 U.S.C. § 1738
    . F2 must put itself in the shoes of F1 and give the
    same preclusive effect to F1’s judgment as F1 would. See
    Kremer v. Chem. Const. Corp., 
    456 U.S. 461
    , 466 (1982).
    The rule makes sense: if F2 were permitted to honor or
    ignore F1’s judgment as it pleased, the Full Faith and Credit
    Act would lose its intended function as a “nationally unifying
    force.” Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Hunt, 
    320 U.S. 430
    , 439
    (1943).
    The full faith and credit obligations of F2 have equal
    force even when F1 purports to limit the extraterritorial
    effects of its preclusion rules. It is simply not F1’s
    prerogative to tell other courts to apply its preclusion
    doctrines differently than it itself would. See Thomas,
    
    448 U.S. at 270
    . As the Supreme Court has emphasized:
    To vest the power of determining the
    extraterritorial effect of a State’s own laws
    and judgments in the State itself risks the very
    kind of parochial entrenchment on the
    interests of other States that it was the purpose
    of the Full Faith and Credit Clause and other
    provisions of Art. IV of the Constitution to
    prevent.
    30         DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    Thomas, 
    448 U.S. at 272
    .2 All F1 can do “to determine the
    extraterritorial effect of its judgment” is prescribe “the effect
    of its judgments within the State.” 
    Id. at 270
    .
    In accord with the Supreme Court’s guidance, federal and
    state courts sitting as F2 have consistently applied New
    Jersey’s entire controversy doctrine where F1 was a New
    Jersey state court. For example, in Rycoline Products, Inc. v.
    C & W Unlimited, the Third Circuit addressed whether a
    federal court presented with a mix of federal and state claims
    should apply the entire controversy doctrine when a New
    Jersey state court had previously issued a judgment on the
    same subject matter. 
    109 F.3d 883
    , 887 (3d Cir. 1997). The
    Third Circuit held that it was “bound by New Jersey’s Entire
    Controversy Doctrine, an aspect of the substantive law of
    New Jersey, by virtue of the Full Faith and Credit Act.” Id.;
    see also Zahl v. Warhaftig, 655 Fed. App’x 66, 75 & n.8 (3d
    Cir. 2016) (applying the entire controversy doctrine as F2);
    Chrystal v. New Jersey Dep’t of Law & Pub. Safety, Div. of
    State Police, 535 Fed. App’x 120, 122–23 (3d Cir. 2013)
    (same). Other courts have followed suit. See Stochastic
    Decisions, Inc. v. DiDomenico, 
    995 F.2d 1158
    , 1170 (2d Cir.
    1993); Hammel v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    114 F. Supp. 2d 478
    , 481 (W.D.N.C. 2000), aff’d, 6 Fed. App’x 169
    (4th Cir. 2001).
    2
    Although Thomas’s discussion of the extraterritorial effects of state
    judgments appears in a plurality opinion, at least six Justices agreed with
    the principle. See 
    id.
     at 290–91 (Rehnquist, J., dissenting). The remaining
    three Justices conceded that the states’ attempts to dictate how their
    preclusion rules are to be applied in other jurisdictions “rest on
    questionable foundations.” Id. at 289 (White, J., concurring in the
    judgment).
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                   31
    B
    The rules are slightly more complex when F1 is a federal
    court. In that scenario, the Full Faith and Credit Act offers no
    guidance because it protects only judgments of state courts.
    See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1738
    . The Supreme Court, however, has
    addressed this doctrinal gap and filled it with federal common
    law. See Taylor v. Sturgell, 
    553 U.S. 880
    , 891 (2008);
    Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at
    506–08.
    The federal common law takes two forms depending on
    whether F1 exercises federal-question or diversity
    jurisdiction. If the former, F2 applies federal preclusion
    rules. See Taylor, 
    553 U.S. at 891
    . If the latter, F2 applies
    “the law that would be applied by state courts in the State in
    which [F1 sits].” Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at 508
    . This rule
    promotes “nationwide uniformity” by ensuring that “the same
    claim-preclusive rule . . . appl[ies] whether the dismissal has
    been ordered by a state or a federal court.” 
    Id. at 508
    .
    “[A]ny other rule would produce the sort of ‘forum-shopping
    . . . and . . . inequitable administration of the laws’ that Erie
    seeks to avoid.” 
    Id.
     at 508–09 (quoting Hanna v. Plumer,
    
    380 U.S. 460
    , 468 (1965)).
    C
    Deferring to the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision in
    Mortgagelinq—as the majority does here, Maj. Op. at
    20–21—contravenes these fundamental principles of
    interjurisdictional preclusion.   Mortgagelinq addressed
    whether federal law or New Jersey’s entire controversy
    doctrine governs the preclusive effect of a judgment by a
    Pennsylvania federal court (F1) on claims subsequently
    32       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    brought in New Jersey state court (F2). 662 A.2d at 540.
    Indeed, the court summarized the issue before it as follows:
    Had Mortgagelinq I and Mortgagelinq II been
    brought successively in New Jersey courts,
    there would be little doubt that application of
    the entire controversy doctrine would
    preclude the omitted claims. The issue is
    whether the non-joinder of parties in a related
    action in the Pennsylvania federal court
    results in the same party preclusion in New
    Jersey.
    Id. The New Jersey Supreme Court concluded that the entire
    controversy doctrine applied, but only as a bar to “successive
    actions in New Jersey” and not as “a barrier elsewhere.” Id.
    at 542. The court therefore affirmed dismissal of the action
    based on the entire controversy doctrine, but without
    prejudice, inviting the plaintiffs to file their claims elsewhere.
    Id. (“Maintaining a cohesive federal system . . . does not
    require that the other parts of the federal system honor our
    entire controversy doctrine.”).
    A vigorous dissent noted the perversity of this “untoward
    result,” preferring a straightforward application of traditional
    interjurisdictional preclusion rules:
    Under established choice-of-law principles,
    the preclusive effect of a judgment is
    determined by the law of the jurisdiction that
    rendered it. . . . Restatement (Second of
    Judgments) § 87 (1982) (“Federal law
    determines the effects under the rules of res
    judicata of a judgment of a federal court.”).
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                           33
    “If [a] plaintiff would be precluded from
    maintaining . . . a second action in the
    [jurisdiction] of rendition, he will similarly be
    barred from maintaining such an action in
    other [jurisdictions].” Restatement (Second of
    Judgments) § 95 comment e (1971). Federal
    law would not preclude plaintiffs from
    maintaining an action against these defendants
    in federal courts. Consequently, I would not
    bar plaintiffs from pursuing the defendants in
    the courts of this State.
    Id. at 543 (Pollock, J., dissenting) (all but the first alteration
    in original).3
    Not surprisingly, Mortgagelinq attracted considerable
    controversy among federal-courts scholars almost
    immediately after it was issued. See generally Stephen B.
    Burbank, Where’s The Beef? The Interjurisdictional Effects
    of New Jersey’s Entire Controversy Doctrine, 28 RUTGERS
    L.J. 87 (1996); Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss & Linda J.
    Silberman, Interjurisdictional Implications of the Entire
    3
    Mortgagelinq was decided pre-Semtek.             Neither opinion
    distinguished the two types of federal preclusion rules discussed above.
    In fact, at the time, there was considerable debate over what rule applied
    to protect the judgment of a federal court sitting in diversity as F1.
    Compare Stephen B. Burbank, Interjurisdictional Preclusion, Full Faith
    and Credit and Federal Common Law: A General Approach,
    71 CORNELL L. REV. 733, 805–17 (1986) (arguing in favor of the rule that
    Semtek eventually adopted), with Ronald E. Degnan, Federalized Res
    Judicata, 85 YALE L.J. 741, 750–55 (1976) (arguing in favor of uniform
    federal res judicata rules irrespective of the source of F1’s jurisdiction).
    It is not clear which federal preclusion rule should have applied in
    Mortgagelinq because the decision does not mention the basis for
    jurisdiction in F1.
    34       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    Controversy Doctrine, 28 RUTGERS L.J. 123 (1996); Perry
    Dane, Sovereign Dignity and Glorious Chaos: A Comment on
    the Interjurisdictional Implications of the Entire Controversy
    Doctrine, 28 RUTGERS L.J. 173 (1996) . More importantly, it
    led directly to the majority’s error in this case.
    D
    The majority followed Mortgagelinq’s two-system
    approach: apply one rule if F2 is a New Jersey state court;
    apply a different rule if F2 is a federal court. That principle
    flatly contradicts Semtek. Under Semtek, we must, as F2,
    apply “the law that would be applied by state courts in the
    State in which [F1 sits].” 
    531 U.S. at 508
    . Because F1 here
    sits in New Jersey, we must apply the law “that would be
    applied by [New Jersey] state courts,” id.—i.e., the entire
    controversy doctrine. The answer is that easy; our analysis
    should have begun and ended there.
    As noted at the outset, the majority responds that we
    cannot apply “the [entire controversy] doctrine as if [we]
    were the New Jersey state court,” but rather must apply “the
    New Jersey state court’s law as the Ninth Circuit.” Maj. Op.
    at 22. This simply makes no sense. Our task is to put
    ourselves in the New Jersey state court’s shoes and to give
    the same preclusive effect to New Jersey’s judgments as New
    Jersey would. It is not for New Jersey to tell any other court,
    including our own, to apply the entire controversy doctrine
    differently than it itself would. See Thomas, 
    448 U.S. at 270
    (“[A] State is permitted to determine the extraterritorial effect
    of its judgment; but it may only do so indirectly by
    prescribing the effect of its judgments within the State.”).
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                          35
    The majority also contends that the entire controversy
    doctrine is a mere “procedural housekeeping tool” meant only
    to “‘preserv[e] [New Jersey’s] judicial resources.’” Maj. Op.
    at 19–21 (quoting Paramount Aviation Corp. v. Agusta,
    
    178 F.3d 132
    , 142 (3d Cir. 1999)); 
    id.
     at 22–23. This makes
    no difference. Irrespective of New Jersey’s reasons for
    adopting the entire controversy doctrine, the doctrine is
    clearly a rule of preclusion. See, e.g., Kent Motor Cars, Inc.
    v. Reynolds & Reynolds, Co., 
    25 A.3d 1027
    , 1036 (N.J. 2011)
    (stating that the entire controversy doctrine is a “claim
    preclusion rule”); McNeil v. Legislative Apportionment
    Comm’n, 
    828 A.2d 840
    , 858–59 (N.J. 2003) (“The concept
    that a party is required to bring all possible claims in one
    proceeding is embodied in the closely linked concepts of res
    judicata and the entire controversy doctrine.”).4 Even New
    Jersey Rule of Court 4:30A, which enforces the entire
    controversy doctrine, refers to “preclusion” as a sanction for
    “omitt[ing] claims.”
    Indeed, the New Jersey Supreme Court has stated, time
    and time again, that the purpose of the entire controversy
    4
    Accord Prevratil v. Mohr, 
    678 A.2d 243
    , 246 (N.J. 1996) (“[The
    entire controversy doctrine] stems directly from the principles underlying
    the doctrine of res judicata or claim preclusion.”); Paulus, Sokolowski &
    Sartor, LLC v. Darden, No. A-4004-13T2, 
    2015 WL 6456124
    , at *4 (N.J.
    Super. Ct. App. Div. Oct. 27, 2015) (characterizing the entire controversy
    doctrine as a “claim-preclusion device”); VW Credit, Inc. v. Coast Auto.
    Grp., Ltd., No. A-0553-04T3, 
    2005 WL 3750752
    , at *5 (N.J. Super. Ct.
    App. Div. Feb. 14, 2006) (describing res judicata and the entire
    controversy doctrines as “rules of claim preclusion”); Accident Fund Ins.
    Co. v. PML Holdings Grp., L.L.C., No. A-3436-08T1, 
    2009 WL 4724804
    ,
    at *6 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Dec. 11, 2009) (“[The entire controversy
    doctrine] is a preclusionary device, intended to prevent fractionalized
    litigation by requiring the assertion of all claims arising from a single
    controversy in a single action.”).
    36       DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    doctrine is threefold: “(1) the need for complete and final
    disposition through the avoidance of piecemeal decisions;
    (2) fairness to parties to the action and those with a material
    interest in the action; and (3) efficiency and the avoidance of
    waste and the reduction of delay.” Wadeer, 110 A.3d at 27;
    DiTrolio v. Antiles, 
    662 A.2d 494
    , 502 (N.J. 1995); Cogdell
    by Cogdell v. Hosp. Ctr. at Orange, 
    560 A.2d 1169
    , 1173
    (N.J. 1989). These three goals are virtually identical to those
    of res judicata, and the New Jersey Supreme Court has said
    so:
    Res judicata, like the entire controversy
    doctrine, serves the purpose of providing
    “‘finality and repose; prevention of needless
    litigation; avoidance of duplication; reduction
    of unnecessary burdens of time and expenses;
    elimination of conflicts, confusion and
    uncertainty; and basic fairness[.]’”
    Wadeer, 110 A.3d at 27–28 (citation omitted); see also VW
    Credit, Inc. v. Coast Auto. Grp., Ltd., No. A-0553-04T3, 
    2005 WL 3750752
    , at *4 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Feb. 14, 2006)
    (“The entire controversy doctrine in our State advances the
    policies of mandatory joinder and claim preclusion associated
    with the more widely known doctrine of res judicata.”); In re
    Crispino, 
    160 B.R. 749
    , 756 (Bankr. D.N.J. 1993) (“The
    purposes of the entire controversy are similar if not identical
    to the purposes of res judicata.”).
    Because the entire controversy doctrine is a rule of
    preclusion, we must apply it here. We do not look to whether
    New Jersey harbors especially warm feelings for its
    preclusion rules or could not care less about preclusion
    generally. All that matters is that New Jersey has a rule that
    DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA                          37
    applies in its courts. Federal common law requires us to
    honor that rule, and that is the end of the matter.5
    Finally, if there is an arch-principle overlaying
    interjurisdictional preclusion, it is one of fairness to all
    parties. When we sit in diversity, we sit in the place of state
    courts and do not want parties to game the system by
    choosing a forum based on what preclusion rules will apply.
    The majority ignores this principle and, in doing so, not only
    facilitates forum shopping but approves it in this case. Cf.
    Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at
    508–09 (noting that having different
    preclusion rules in federal versus state court “would produce
    the sort of ‘forum-shopping . . . and . . . inequitable
    administration of the laws’ that Erie seeks to avoid”) (citation
    omitted)).
    * * *
    Interjurisdictional preclusion can be complex, but this
    case boils down to a few simple premises. New Jersey gets
    to decide its preclusion law. It does not get to dictate how
    federal courts apply that law. We apply New Jersey law just
    as New Jersey state courts would apply it. The majority did
    not do that.
    5
    Even if New Jersey’s reasons for adopting the entire controversy
    doctrine were relevant, would not preserving federal judicial resources be
    an equally valid reason to apply the same rule New Jersey courts would?
    That is, even granting that New Jersey is not concerned with our
    time—“this goal of preserving New Jersey’s judicial resources does not
    benefit from a non-New Jersey court (sitting as F2) closing its courthouse
    doors,” Maj. Op. at 21—we still care about our time as much as New
    Jersey courts care about theirs. The majority’s contention that applying
    New Jersey’s doctrine here would be “incompatible with federal
    interests,” Maj. Op. at 23, is both unsupported and inapplicable.
    38        DAEWOO ELECTRONICS AMERICA V. OPTA
    I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-17498

Citation Numbers: 875 F.3d 1241

Filed Date: 11/27/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (37)

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