Watchtower v. 20th Judicial District ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                             01/26/2021
    OP 20-0417
    Case Number: OP 20-0417
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2021 MT 13
    WATCHTOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY OF NEW YORK, INC.,
    CHRISTIAN CONGREGATION OF JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES, and
    THOMPSON FALLS CONGREGATION OF JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    MONTANA TWENTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, SANDERS COUNTY, and
    THE HONORABLE ELIZABETH A. BEST, PRESIDING JUDGE,
    Respondents.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING:          Petition for Writ of Supervisory Control
    In and For the County of Sanders, Cause No. DV-16-84
    Honorable Elizabeth A. Best, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Petitioners:
    Bradley J. Luck, Tessa A. Keller, Garlington, Lohn & Robinson, PLLP,
    Missoula, Montana
    Joel M. Taylor, Associate General Counsel, Watchtower Bible and Tract
    Society of New York, Inc., Patterson, New York
    For Alexis Nunez:
    D. Neil Smith, Ross Leonoudakis, Nix, Patterson & Roach, LLP, Dallas,
    Texas
    James P. Molloy, Gallik, Bremer & Molloy, P.C., Bozeman, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: December 22, 2020
    Decided: January 26, 2021
    Filed:
    q3,,---,6mal•-.— 4(
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    2
    Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion and Order of the Court.
    ¶1     Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc., Christian Congregation of
    Jehovah’s Witnesses, and Thompson Falls Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses (the
    “Jehovah’s Witnesses”) seek a writ of supervisory control over the Montana Twentieth
    Judicial District Court, Sanders County, and the Honorable Elizabeth A. Best, presiding
    judge. The Jehovah’s Witnesses maintain the District Court’s June 10, 2020 Order
    Amending Order Granting Leave to Proceed with Common Law Negligence Claim and
    File Second Amended Complaint is in legal error. They ask this Court to direct the District
    Court to enter final judgment for them and terminate the case, because the doctrine of claim
    preclusion1 precludes Alexis Nunez from proceeding to trial with her common law
    negligence claim after remand from this Court in Nunez v. Watchtower Bible & Tract
    Society of New York, Inc., 
    2020 MT 3
    , 
    398 Mont. 261
    , 
    455 P.3d 829
    . For the reasons
    explained in this Opinion and Order, we deny the writ because the District Court is not
    proceeding under a mistake of law.
    PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2     Alexis Nunez2 sued the Jehovah’s Witnesses for negligence, negligence per se, and
    breach of fiduciary duty and sought punitive damages. Before trial, the District Court sua
    1
    Although the parties refer to “res judicata” in their briefing, this Opinion and Order will use the
    term “claim preclusion.” See McDaniel v. State, 
    2009 MT 159
    , ¶ 27 n.2, 
    350 Mont. 422
    , 
    208 P.3d 817
     (“To promote clarity, the trend has been to use the terms ‘claim preclusion’ and ‘issue
    preclusion’ in lieu of ‘res judicata’ and ‘collateral estoppel,’ respectively.”).
    2
    A second plaintiff, Holly McGowan, also brought claims against the Petitioners in the original
    complaint, but on the record before us, it does not appear she has attempted to revive any of her
    causes of action post-remand. Despite language in the District Court’s order purporting to include
    McGowan, we only consider Nunez’s revived and amended claims in this writ of supervisory
    control.
    3
    sponte granted partial summary judgment to Nunez, determining as a matter of law the
    Jehovah’s Witnesses were both negligent per se and the cause of Nunez’s damages for
    failing to report known abuse of other children by Nunez’s perpetrator to the appropriate
    legal authorities. During a pretrial discussion about settling preliminary jury instructions,
    counsel for Nunez indicated Nunez was “fine limiting [her] negligence claim to the
    negligence per se claim.”      The District Court asked to clarify whether Nunez was
    dismissing her common law negligence claim and breach of fiduciary duty claim, to which
    counsel responded “Yes, your Honor.” The Jehovah’s Witnesses did not object. At trial,
    the jury determined Nunez’s damages and awarded punitive damages to Nunez against the
    Jehovah’s Witnesses.     On appeal, this Court determined the District Court erred in
    determining the Jehovah’s Witnesses were negligent per se and “reverse[d] and remand[ed]
    for entry of summary judgment in favor of Jehovah’s Witnesses.” Nunez, ¶ 34.
    ¶3     After remand to the District Court, Nunez moved to amend her complaint to revive
    her common law negligence claims. The District Court granted her motion. Upon Nunez’s
    motion, the District Court amended its order to correct a misstatement of fact in its original
    order. In response to the District Court’s amended order, the Jehovah’s Witnesses filed a
    petition seeking a writ of supervisory control with this Court.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶4     This Court may assume supervisory control, as authorized by Article VII,
    Section 2(2), of the Montana Constitution and M. R. App. P. 14(3) to control the course of
    litigation when the case involves purely legal questions and the district court “is proceeding
    under a mistake of law and is causing a gross injustice.” M. R. App. P. 14(3)(a). Our
    4
    determination of whether supervisory control is appropriate is a case-by-base decision,
    based on the presence of extraordinary circumstances and a particular need to prevent an
    injustice from occurring. Stokes v. Mont. Thirteenth Judicial Dist. Court, 
    2011 MT 182
    ,
    ¶ 5, 
    361 Mont. 279
    , 
    259 P.3d 754
    .
    ¶5     The Jehovah’s Witnesses first argue the District Court erred as a matter of law in
    allowing Nunez to amend her complaint to revive the common law negligence claim
    because claim preclusion precludes such a claim.         Watchtower argues the situation
    presented in this case is no different than if Nunez had filed a separate post-appeal lawsuit
    in which she asserted a common law negligence claim, and had Nunez done so, there would
    be no question claim preclusion applies and would bar the claim. Watchtower argues
    Nunez had the opportunity to place her common law negligence claim in front of a jury
    and she choose not to do so, thereby precluding her from pursuing that claim now.
    ¶6     Nunez argues she is neither bringing forth a new claim nor filing a new lawsuit. She
    characterizes her attempt as seeking “to proceed on the claims that remain following this
    Court’s remand order.” Nunez points out that this Court in Slater v. Central Plumbing &
    Heating Co., 
    1999 MT 257
    , ¶ 24, 
    297 Mont. 7
    , 
    993 P.2d 654
    , explained “a reversal extends
    only to those issues which the appellate court decided in actuality or by necessary
    implication; it does not affect collateral matters not before the court,” and she maintains
    her common law negligence claim remains a live issue that has not been decided in
    actuality or by necessary implication before the District Court or this Court.
    ¶7     The doctrine of claim preclusion “embod[ies] a judicial policy that favors a definite
    end to litigation, whereby we seek to prevent parties from incessantly waging piecemeal,
    5
    collateral attacks against judgments.” Brilz v. Metro. Gen. Ins. Co., 
    2012 MT 184
    , ¶ 18,
    
    366 Mont. 78
    , 
    285 P.3d 494
     (quoting Baltrusch v. Baltrusch, 
    2006 MT 51
    , ¶ 15, 
    331 Mont. 281
    , 
    130 P.3d 1267
    ). The doctrine promotes judicial economy and finality of judgments.
    Brilz, ¶ 18. “Under claim preclusion, a final judgment on the merits of an action precludes
    the parties or their privies from relitigating claims that were or could have been raised in
    that action.” Brilz, ¶ 18 (emphasis added); see also Restatement (Second) of Judgments
    § 19 (Am. Law. Inst. 1982) (“A valid and final personal judgment rendered in favor of the
    defendant bars another action by the plaintiff on the same claim.” (emphasis added)).
    ¶8     We agree with Nunez that Slater involved the question of whether a party could
    litigate certain previously raised claims after this Court reversed and remanded the matter.
    In that case, the general contractor, Edsall, filed an amended crossclaim against its
    subcontractor Central after the district court had determined Edsall was strictly liable to an
    injured worker of one of Central’s subcontractors under statute and the jury awarded the
    injured worker almost $700,000 against Edsall. Slater, ¶¶ 5-8.
    ¶9     The amended crossclaim contained four causes of action, including breach of
    contract and negligence by Central. Slater, ¶ 8. Central moved for summary judgment on
    all claims and Edsall moved for partial summary judgment on the breach of contract claim.
    The District Court ultimately granted Edsall summary judgment on the breach of contract
    claim and denied Central’s motion for summary judgment. The court awarded Edsall over
    $600,000 under the breach of contract claim and Central appealed. Slater, ¶ 11. This Court
    reversed the District Court’s grant of summary judgment on the breach of contract issue.
    After remand, Central moved for judgment to be entered against Edsall; Edsall objected,
    6
    arguing that it was entitled to pursue the other issues raised by its crossclaim. The District
    Court entered judgment in favor of Central and dismissed the crossclaims. Edsall then
    appealed. Slater, ¶ 12.
    ¶10    On appeal, Edsall argued that the negligence claim it had asserted in its amended
    crossclaim was based on an indemnity provision in the contract it had entered into with
    Central that would indemnify Edsall against any loss arising out of Central’s negligence.
    Slater, ¶ 18. Central argued that claim preclusion precluded Edsall from raising this issue
    at this point in the case. Slater, ¶ 25. This Court disagreed. This Court ultimately
    determined claim preclusion did not prevent litigation from resuming on previously
    asserted causes of action after the reversal of a partial summary judgment order on appeal,
    explaining “Edsall has yet to have a full opportunity to present the issue of indemnity based
    on Central’s negligence for a judicial determination.” Slater, ¶ 27. Causes of action that
    were not at issue on appeal were not determined and were not precluded from going
    forward on remand. Like in Slater, ¶ 31, “[t]his is a situation where [Nunez] pleaded all
    of [her] claims to a single court . . .; [she] is not pleading new claims.” Despite its similarity
    in this regard, Slater is distinguishable in that there was never a withdrawal or dismissal of
    any claim—that factual circumstance though was not the basis for this Court’s ruling.
    ¶11    The cases upon which Watchtower relies are cases in which the losing party
    attempted to bring a new cause of action after their initial litigation failed. See Fisher v.
    State Farm Gen. Ins. Co., 
    1999 MT 308
    , 
    297 Mont. 201
    , 
    991 P.2d 452
    ; Orlando v. Prewett,
    
    236 Mont. 478
    , 
    771 P.2d 111
     (1989); Klimpton v. Jubilee Placer Mining Co., 
    22 Mont. 107
    , 
    55 P. 918
     (1899). While Watchtower argues in its petition, “If Nunez had filed a
    7
    separate post-appeal lawsuit asserting her common law negligence claim, all claim
    preclusion elements would clearly be present,” the fact is Nunez did not file a separate
    post-appeal lawsuit. Nunez is seeking to litigate additional claims against the Jehovah’s
    Witnesses in the same suit. Claim preclusion simply does not apply to the continued
    proceedings before the District Court. As Nunez points out, the proper doctrine to apply
    is law of the case.
    The doctrines of law of the case and res judicata often work hand in glove
    but are not identical. Two important policies underlie and are common to
    both principles: judicial economy and finality of judgments. While the law
    of the case is normally decisive, it does not have the same binding force as
    the doctrine of res judicata. The United States Supreme Court has stated,
    concerning the difference between law of the case and res judicata, that “one
    directs discretion, the other supersedes it and compels judgment.”
    State v. Gilder, 
    2001 MT 121
    , ¶ 10, 
    305 Mont. 362
    , 
    28 P.3d 488
     (quoting S. Ry. Co. v.
    Clift, 
    260 U.S. 316
    , 319, 
    43 S. Ct. 126
    , 127 (1922)) (internal citations omitted). As this
    Court has long explained:
    The judgments of appellate courts are as conclusive as those of any other
    court. They not only establish facts, but also settle the law, so that the law
    as decided upon any appeal must be applied to all the subsequent stages of
    the cause, and they are res judicata in other cases as to every matter
    adjudicated.
    Cent. Mont. Stockyards v. Fraser, 
    133 Mont 168
    , 187, 
    320 P.2d 981
    , 991 (1957) (quoting
    2 Abraham Clark Freemen, A Treatise on the Law of Judgments, § 639, 1345-46 (5th Ed.
    1925)) (emphasis added). Under the law of the case, “when a court decides upon a rule of
    law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the
    same case.” Norbeck v. Flathead County, 
    2019 MT 84
    , ¶ 26, 
    395 Mont. 294
    , 
    438 P.3d 811
    (citing Arizona v. California, 
    460 U.S. 605
    , 618, 
    103 S. Ct. 1382
    , 1391 (1983)).
    8
    It refers to instances where rulings made at a stage in litigation that are not
    appealed from when the opportunity to do so exists, become “the law of the
    case for the future course of that litigation and the party that does not appeal
    is deemed to have waived the right to attack that decision at future points in
    the same litigation.”
    Norbeck, ¶ 26 (quoting McCormick v. Brevig, 
    2007 MT 195
    , ¶ 38, 
    338 Mont. 370
    , 
    169 P.3d 352
    ).
    ¶12    Based on our review of the record provided to us, nothing in the law of the case
    prevented the District Court from granting Nunez’s motion to amend her complaint. Our
    decision in the appeal in Nunez I dealt with the issue of whether the Jehovah’s Witnesses
    had violated Montana’s mandatory child abuse reporting statute, § 41-3-201, MCA, and
    were therefore negligent per se. We determined, as a matter of law, the Jehovah’s
    Witnesses had not violated the statute. The issue of common law negligence was not
    resolved in either this Court or the District Court.
    ¶13    Further, nothing in the colloquy between the District Court and counsel before trial
    prevented the District Court from allowing Nunez to amend her claims later. Nunez’s
    common law negligence claim was never dismissed with prejudice pursuant to M. R. Civ.
    P. 41 because: (a) the parties did not stipulate to such dismissal, (b) the Court did not order
    such dismissal, and (c) the entire action was not dismissed. Rule 41(a) was specifically
    constructed to prohibit voluntary dismissal of an action after an answer or a motion for
    summary judgment has been filed to allow the opposing party input (whether by stipulation
    or by argument to the court) to determine how the action is dismissed. Unless specifically
    stated, voluntary dismissal of an action is without prejudice. See M. R. Civ. P. 41(a).
    Further, Rule 41(a) does not allow for piecemeal dismissals of claims in a multiple claim
    9
    lawsuit. “Instead, withdrawals of individual claims against a given defendant are governed
    by Fed. R. Civ. P. 15, which addresses amendments to pleadings.” Hells Canyon Pres.
    Council v. U.S. Forest Serv., 
    403 F.3d 683
    , 687 (9th Cir. 2005) (citing Ethridge v. Harbor
    House Restaurant, 
    861 F.2d 1389
     (9th Cir. 1988)).3 Thus, although the District Court and
    counsel discussed “dismissing” the common law negligence claim, the withdrawal of the
    claim should be interpreted as an amendment under M. R. Civ. P. 15, rather than as a
    dismissal under M. R. Civ. P. 41.
    ¶14    The Jehovah’s Witnesses argue if claim preclusion does not preclude Nunez from
    moving forward with her common law negligence claim, then M. R. Civ. P. 15 does not
    permit Nunez to amend her complaint post-trial. Under Rule 15(b), the circumstances for
    allowing post-trial amendments to the complaint are limited and not applicable here.
    ¶15    M. R. Civ. P. 15 provides, in relevant part:
    (a) Amendments before Trial.
    .    .    .
    (2) Other Amendments. In all other cases, a party may amend its pleading
    only with the opposing party’s written consent or the court’s leave. The court
    should freely give leave when justice so requires.
    .    .    .
    (b) Amendments During and After Trial.
    3
    We have held under a prior version of the rules that “Rules 41(a) and 41(d) of the Montana Rules
    of Civil Procedure are identical in all respects to Rules 41(a) and 41(d) of the Federal Rules of
    Civil Procedure. Because the language of the state and federal rules is identical, the interpretation
    of the federal rules [has] persuasive application to the interpretation of the state rules.” U.S. Fid.
    & Guar. Co. v. Rodgers, 
    267 Mont. 178
    , 181-82, 
    882 P.2d 1037
    , 1039 (1994). The language of
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(1)(B) is no longer identical, but the relevant portions of Fed. R. Civ. P.
    41(a)(1)(A) and M. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(1)(A) still are identical, so the federal authority remains
    persuasive.
    10
    (1) Based on an Objection at Trial. If, at trial, a party objects that evidence is
    not within the issues raised in the pleadings, the court may permit the
    pleadings to be amended. The court should freely permit an amendment
    when doing so will aid in presenting the merits and the objecting party fails
    to satisfy the court that the evidence would prejudice that party’s action or
    defense on the merits. The court may grant a continuance to enable the
    objecting party to meet the evidence.
    (2) For Issues Tried by Consent. When an issue not raised by the pleadings
    is tried by the parties’ express or implied consent, it must be treated in all
    respects as if raised in the pleadings. A party may move — at any time, even
    after judgment — to amend the pleadings to conform them to the evidence
    and to raise an unpleaded issue. But failure to amend does not affect the result
    of the trial of that issue.
    ¶16    We disagree that M. R. Civ. P. 15(b) governs Nunez’s amendments. After this Court
    reversed the District Court’s pretrial grant of summary judgment on negligence per se, the
    jury verdict against the Jehovah’s Witnesses was effectively vacated. Negligence per se
    was the only cause of action between Nunez and the Jehovah’s Witnesses put to the jury.
    ¶17    Here, the Hells Canyon case is very instructive. In Hells Canyon, the plaintiffs filed
    a complaint alleging the U.S. Forest Service violated both the National Environmental
    Policy Act (NEPA) and the Wilderness Act. During oral argument before the district court
    on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the plaintiff voluntarily abandoned
    its Wilderness Act claim. The district court later rejected the plaintiff’s NEPA claim on
    the merits and, in its order, dismissed the Wilderness Act claim as “moot.” Hells Canyon
    Pres. Council, 
    403 F.3d at 685
    . The plaintiff subsequently brought another action that
    included a claim under the Wilderness Act. The district court dismissed the claim as barred
    by claim preclusion, and the Ninth Circuit reversed.
    ¶18    The Ninth Circuit first observed the prior summary judgment ruling addressed only
    the NEPA claim; then “turn[ed] to the somewhat thorny question whether the Wilderness
    11
    Act claim in [the prior case] was included in the ‘final judgment on the merits’ rendered
    by the district court.” Hells Canyon Pres. Council, 
    403 F.3d at 686
    . The parties both
    argued the application of Rule 41, with the Forest Service arguing Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b)
    compelled a conclusion the dismissal “operate[d] as an adjudication upon the merits” and
    the plaintiff arguing that Rule 41(a)(2)’s voluntary dismissal provisions governed, meaning
    the dismissal was without prejudice because it was not otherwise specified. Hells Canyon
    Pres. Council, 
    403 F.3d at 687
    . The Ninth Circuit did not find either argument convincing,
    holding there was no final judgment on the merits of the Wilderness Act claim in the first
    suit because the district court’s treatment of it “is best construed as approval of an oral
    amendment of the complaint to excise that claim” under Rule 15. Hells Canyon Pres.
    Council, 483 F.3d at 687.
    ¶19    Quoting Moore’s Federal Practice, the Ninth Circuit stated, “Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 15(a) is the appropriate mechanism ‘where a plaintiff desires to eliminate an
    issue, or one or more but less than all of several claims, but without dismissing as to any
    of the defendants.’” Hells Canyon Pres. Council, 483 F.3d at 688 (quoting 5 James W.
    Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 41.06-1, 41-83 to -84 (2d Ed. 1987)). “[W]hat
    the district court should have done [with the plaintiff’s Wilderness Act claim], and what
    we believe it did do, was treat [the plaintiff’s] oral withdrawal of its Wilderness Act claim
    as a motion to amend its complaint under Rule 15(a).” Hells Canyon Pres. Council,
    483 F.3d at 689. Calling the trial court’s failure to so characterize its action as “a technical,
    not a substantive, distinction[,]” the Ninth Circuit held the claim “was already withdrawn
    before the district court entered judgment,” no prejudice attaches to a claim properly
    12
    dropped from a complaint under Rule 15(a) prior to final judgment, and there was no final
    judgment on the merits of the plaintiff’s Wilderness Act claim in the first suit. Hells
    Canyon Pres. Council, 483 F.3d at 690. Because the NEPA claim decided in the first suit
    was not identical to the Wilderness Act claim in the second suit, claim preclusion did not
    bar the claim. Hells Canyon Pres. Council, 483 F.3d at 690-91.
    ¶20    Rule 15(a) operates in similar fashion to the facts shown on the Nunez record. When
    Nunez’s counsel indicated they would move forward only on the negligence per se claim,
    that should have been construed as an oral motion to amend the pleadings. There was no
    objection, and the court granted leave—thus satisfying the requirements of Rule 15(a). The
    claim then was no longer part of the case at the time verdict was rendered. As noted earlier,
    once this Court reversed the District Court, there was no judgment in effect—our opinion
    required entry of summary judgment only on the negligence per se claim. At that point,
    Nunez’s motion to amend the complaint to add the common law claim was not precluded
    as a matter of law but became a matter of discretion under Rule 15.
    ¶21    Upon reversal and remand, the parties were no longer in a post-trial posture and
    Rule 15(a) governs Nunez’s motion to amend her complaint. A district court has discretion
    to grant or deny a motion to amend a pleading and we review a district court’s decision to
    amend for an abuse of discretion. Ally Fin., Inc. v. Stevenson, 
    2018 MT 278
    , ¶ 10,
    
    393 Mont. 332
    , 
    430 P.3d 522
    . Rule 15(a) provides for liberal amendment of pleadings,
    “but does not require amendments in all instances.” Lindey’s, Inc. v. Prof’l Consultants,
    Inc., 
    244 Mont. 238
    , 242, 
    797 P.2d 920
    , 923 (1990).
    [A] a trial court is justified in denying a motion for an apparent reason “such
    as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant,
    13
    repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed,
    undue prejudice to the opposing party by allowance of the amendment,
    futility of the amendment, etc.”
    Lindey’s, Inc., 244 Mont. at 242, 
    797 P.2d at 923
     (quoting Foman v. Davis, 
    371 U.S. 178
    ,
    182, 
    83 S. Ct. 227
    , 230 (1962)). In many cases, these grounds for dismissal would weigh
    heavily against granting a motion to amend post-remand from this Court. In Stanford v.
    Rosebud County, 
    254 Mont. 474
    , 477-78, 
    839 P.2d 93
    , 95-96 (1992), this Court explained
    that even under the liberality doctrine of Rule 15, parties are not entitled to amend their
    pleadings when the motion to amend is made after judgment has been entered against them,
    but rather such motion is left to the sound discretion of the district court. We explained:
    A busy district court need not allow itself to be imposed upon by the
    presentation of theories seriatum. Liberality in amendment is important to
    assure a party a fair opportunity to present his claims and defenses, but “equal
    attention should be given to the proposition that there must be an end finally
    to a particular litigation.”
    Stanford, 254 Mont. at 478, 
    839 P.2d at 95-96
     (quoting Freeman v. Cont’l Gin Co.,
    
    381 F.2d 459
    , 469-70 (5th Cir. 1967)).
    ¶22    In Stanford, the appellants challenged the district court’s denial of their motion to
    amend their pleadings post-remand to add an entirely new theory that had never been raised
    in over fourteen years of litigation. Stanford, 254 Mont. at 477, 
    839 P.2d at 95
    . This Court
    upheld the denial, explaining “the general rule that a court ordinarily will be reluctant to
    allow leave to amend” when a party seeks “to inject a new theory of recovery via a
    post-judgment motion to amend pleadings.” Stanford, 254 Mont. at 478, 
    839 P.2d at 95
    .
    Such amendments are not categorically prohibited, but rather, left to the sound discretion
    of the district court. See Stanford, 254 Mont. at 478, 
    839 P.2d at 96
    .
    14
    ¶23    Given the liberal deference given to the trial court under Rule 15, Jehovah’s
    Witnesses have not shown the District Court abused its discretion in granting Nunez leave
    to amend her complaint. This is especially true in light of the very unique circumstances
    of this case that demonstrate good cause why the common law negligence theory, although
    raised, was not prosecuted in the prior proceedings: This Court reversed a grant of partial
    summary judgment on appeal. Nunez’s amended complaint does not attempt to add a
    completely new cause of action, as occurred in Stanford, but revives a cause of action she
    pleaded in her original complaint. She had withdrawn that claim immediately before trial
    in reliance on the District Court’s sua sponte pretrial grant of partial summary judgment on
    negligence per se and causation, which left only the issue of damages for a jury to consider.
    Given the grant of partial summary judgment, Nunez no longer had to prove to the jury at
    the first trial that the Jehovah’s Witnesses had a duty, breached that duty, and such breach
    caused her damages. Notably, Jehovah’s Witnesses have not made a prejudice argument—
    which would have to be predicated on having to now defend against the common law
    claim.4
    ¶24    It was within the District Court’s discretion to allow Nunez to amend her complaint
    to revive the common law negligence claim post remittitur from this Court in the interest
    of justice.
    4
    Likely because they did not object to the withdrawal of that claim or seek to have the claim
    dismissed with prejudice.
    15
    CONCLUSION
    ¶25    IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED the Petitioner’s Petition for a Writ of Supervisory
    Control is DENIED and DISMISSED.
    ¶26    The Clerk is directed to forward a copy of this Opinion and Order to all counsel of
    record in the Twentieth Judicial District Court, Sanders County, Cause No. DV-16-84, and
    to the Honorable Elizabeth A. Best, presiding judge.
    Dated this 26th day of January, 2021.
    /S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
    We concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ SHANE A. VANNATTA
    District Court Judge Shane A. Vannatta
    sitting in place of Justice Laurie McKinnon
    Justice Dirk Sandefur, dissenting.
    ¶27    I concur that neither equitable claim preclusion (res judicata), nor the related law of
    the case doctrine, apply on their elements to bar revival of Nunez’s common law negligence
    claim. I further concur that M. R. Civ. P. 41 (regarding voluntary dismissal of “actions”)
    does not apply to the claim dismissal at issue here. The Court correctly recognizes that the
    dispositive question is whether the District Court abused its discretion under M. R. Civ. P.
    15(a) in allowing Nunez to revive her previously abandoned common law negligence claim
    under the particular circumstances of this case. However, the Court’s holding that the
    District Court did not abuse its discretion here is patently erroneous because it is based on
    16
    a gross mischaracterization of the pertinent record colloquy between the trial court and
    counsel before opening statements at trial. The Court’s sanitized characterization of the
    record glosses over what really happened here, and what the Court is reluctant to recognize,
    i.e., that Nunez, through extraordinarily experienced and competent counsel, aggressively
    made a knowing, voluntary, and intelligent decision to abandon her alternatively-pled
    common law negligence claim to go all-in on her chosen negligence per se claim, based on
    an unexpected summary judgment that conveniently relieved her of having to prove that
    the Jehovah’s Witnesses acted unreasonably under the circumstances and, if so, that any
    such negligence was the actual cause of her sexual abuse, rather than the criminal conduct
    of her step-grandfather. In the wake of the unfortunate failure of that purely tactical gambit,
    Nunez and the District Court sheepishly assert, inaccurately, that it would have been
    senseless, impossible, and/or unduly confusing for her to have continued to prudently
    prosecute both claims, as she alone pled them, and to then have the jury appropriately
    instructed in the alternative, as would have occurred in the ordinary course but for her
    tactical decision. Thus, before even reaching the issue of resulting prejudice to the
    Jehovah’s Witnesses, no good cause existed to allow Nunez to backup and try the case
    again on a previously discarded legal theory after her chosen theory failed on appeal.
    1. Pretrial and Trial Proceedings on Plaintiffs’ Alternative Negligence and
    Negligence Per Se Claims.
    ¶28    In 2004, based on the separate disclosures of two siblings (20-year-old Holly and
    17-year-old Peter), elders in the local Thompson Falls Congregation of Jehovah’s
    Witnesses believed that the siblings’ stepfather, who was also a local church elder, had
    sexually abused them several years earlier in private settings away from church grounds
    17
    and apart from church activities. Nunez v. Watchtower Bible & Tract Soc’y of New York,
    Inc. (Nunez I), 
    2020 MT 3
    , ¶¶ 2-4, 
    398 Mont. 261
    , 
    455 P.3d 829
    . Upon solicited advice
    from the legal department of a national affiliate (Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of
    New York, Inc.) that Montana law did not require them to report the alleged sexual abuse
    to law enforcement under an express statutory exception to the otherwise applicable
    mandatory duty, the local elders, in accordance with the doctrinal practices of their religion,
    instead formed a local church “judicial committee” that confronted the stepfather/elder and
    ultimately concluded that the sexual abuse allegations were true. Nunez I, ¶¶ 4-5. Based
    on that determination, the elders formally banished the abused siblings’ stepfather from the
    congregation, with notice in the ordinary course to the church’s chartering national affiliate
    (Christian Congregation of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, Inc.). Nunez I, ¶ 5. A year later,
    however, the elders relented and reinstated the abusing stepfather as a member of the
    congregation. Nunez I, ¶ 5.
    ¶29    As subsequently alleged, but then unbeknownst to the local elders, the banished and
    later reinstated stepfather had also been similarly sexually abusing his minor
    step-granddaughter (Nunez) since 2002. Nunez I, ¶ 6. The abuse of Nunez allegedly
    started when she was five years old and continued until 2007 when she was ten. Nunez I,
    ¶ 6. Though not aware of the alleged sexual abuse of Nunez until sometime around 2014,
    the local elders were aware that her step-grandfather had previously abused his
    step-children and that Nunez was frequently present in his company at weekend church
    services after his reinstatement in 2005. Nunez I, ¶ 6.
    18
    ¶30      In 2016, Nunez and her aunt (Holly) sued the local Jehovah’s Witnesses
    congregation, and above-referenced national affiliates, for compensatory and punitive
    damages based on the local elders’ alleged tortious failure to take sufficient action to
    protect them from sexual abuse by their stepfather/step-grandfather. As their predicate
    legal theories, they each asserted, in the alternative, separately-pled claims of negligence
    (breach of common law duty to use reasonable care under the circumstances) and
    negligence per se (breach of statutory reporting duty1) against the local Jehovah’s
    Witnesses congregation, inter alia.2
    ¶31      Pursuant to M. R. Civ. P. 56, both sides subsequently filed various pretrial motions
    for summary judgment. As pertinent here, the Jehovah’s Witnesses moved for summary
    judgment on the plaintiffs’ respective negligence per se claims on the asserted ground that
    they were exempt from the otherwise applicable statutory reporting duty based on an
    express exception applicable to the doctrinal reconciliation practices of their religion. The
    plaintiffs opposed the motion but did not separately seek affirmative summary judgment
    to the contrary. After entry of a stipulated final pretrial order, but prior to trial, the District
    Court not only denied summary judgment on the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ motion, but further
    affirmatively granted the plaintiffs summary judgment that the statutory exemption did not
    apply and that local church elders were thus negligent per se based on a violation of the
    Montana       statutory    duty   to   report    the   suspected     sexual     abuse    by    the
    1
    See § 41-3-201, MCA.
    2
    They further asserted that named national affiliates of the local congregation were liable for the
    alleged negligence of the local congregation.
    19
    stepfather/step-grandfather.3     Without reference to the separately-pled common law
    negligence claim not at issue on the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ motion, the District Court’s
    written judgment noted that the only matters left for jury determination on the plaintiffs’
    respective negligence per se claims were proof of the amounts of their respective
    compensatory damages claims.4 The case was thus postured for jury trial on the plaintiffs’
    respective negligence per se and common law negligence claims, as pled in the alternative.
    ¶32    However, at trial, upon inquiry from the District Court before opening statements
    as to necessary preliminary jury instructions, the plaintiffs unequivocally, without
    qualification or reservation of right, “dismissed their common law negligence claims” and
    proceeded on their respective negligence per se claims, as significantly narrowed by the
    prior summary judgment ruling. Nunez I, ¶ 8. At the close of trial, the jury rejected Holly’s
    negligence per se claim and awarded her nothing. It returned a favorable verdict on
    Nunez’s negligence per se claim, however, thus awarding her $4 million in compensatory
    damages, with an additional $31 million in punitive damages. We later reversed the verdict
    on appeal, holding that, based on the record material facts not subject to genuine dispute,
    the Jehovah’s Witnesses were statutorily exempt as a matter of law from the otherwise
    3
    Nunez did not object, nor does she assert here, that the District Court either lacked discretion to
    grant her summary judgment sua sponte under these circumstances, or that it abused its discretion
    under M. R. Civ. P. 56 in doing so.
    4
    The District Court’s imprecise/ambiguous written summary judgment ruling erroneously
    indicated that the ruling not only relieved the plaintiffs of their burden of proving that the
    defendants were negligent, based on breach of the statutory reporting duty but also, as to Nunez,
    relieved her of her related burden of proving to the jury that the Jehovah’s Witnesses failure to
    report their suspicions regarding the prior abuse was a compensable cause of her step-grandfather’s
    subsequent abuse, and resulting harm, rather than his criminal conduct.
    20
    applicable mandatory reporting duty because they were acting in accordance with the
    doctrinal reconciliation practices of their religion. Nunez I, ¶ 33. We thus remanded for
    entry of summary judgment in favor of the Jehovah’s Witnesses on the plaintiffs’
    negligence per se claims. Nunez I, ¶ 33. The implication of our narrow holding and
    reversal, i.e., whether it ended the case in light of Nunez’s prior voluntary abandonment of
    her co-pled alternative common law negligence claim, was not at issue on appeal.
    2. Proceedings On Remand—Nunez’s Motion for Leave to Amend to Restate and
    Revive Previously Abandoned Common Law Negligence Claim.
    ¶33    On remand, Nunez moved for leave to amend her complaint pursuant to M. R. Civ.
    P. 15(a) to restate and revive her previously abandoned common law negligence claim.
    She asserted that:
    the record in this case establishes that . . . [she] did not dismiss her common
    law negligence claim with prejudice. To the contrary, she proceeded to trial
    with a judicial finding that [the Jehovah’s Witnesses] were negligent as a
    matter of law based on [violation of statutory reporting duty]. To have
    pursued the common law negligence theories, after the [c]ourt had already
    determined that [the Jehovah’s Witnesses] were negligent, would have
    created confusion at trial, and would have made no practical sense because
    the jury was instructed at the outset that . . . the[y] . . . were negligent as a
    matter of law and . . . the [only] issue to be decided was the amount of
    damages to which . . . Nunez was entitled to recover . . . Nunez is entitled on
    remand to proceed to trial on her common law negligence claim.
    Over objection of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, and in a written judgment amended to correct
    a noted factual error in its original Rule 15 ruling, the District Court granted Nunez leave
    to amend her complaint to restate and revive the previously-abandoned common law
    negligence claim. The court reasoned that:
    It is clear from the record, that Nunez [detrimentally] relied on the
    correctness of the District Court [grant of summary judgment on her
    negligence per se claim], but carefully dismissed her common law claim
    21
    without prejudice, so that she could reassert it. Because the [court
    previously] granted summary judgment for Nunez on the per se claim, there
    was no need to pursue the common law claim. Nunez clearly relied on the
    legal correctness of the District Court’s summary judgment order in deciding
    to dismiss the common law claim. The parties narrowed the issues for trial
    but took care to dismiss the common law claim without prejudice, leaving the
    door open for Nunez to reassert it if necessary.
    (Emphasis added.)       The Jehovah’s Witnesses immediately petitioned this Court for
    exercise of supervisory control and reversal of the District Court ruling on extraordinary
    review.
    3. Supervisory Control—District Court Abuse of Rule 15(a)(2) Discretion.
    ¶34    Though an extraordinary remedy and no substitute for direct appeal in the ordinary
    course, supervisory control is necessary and proper here because the District Court is
    proceeding under a manifest mistake of procedural law for which ordinary appeal is
    inadequate and which will surely result in gross injustice if not immediately corrected. See
    M. R. App. P. 14(3); Montana State Univ.-Bozeman v. Mont. First Judicial Dist. Ct., 
    2018 MT 220
    , ¶ 18, 
    392 Mont. 458
    , 
    426 P.3d 541
    ; Stokes v. Mont. Thirteenth Judicial Dist. Ct.,
    
    2011 MT 182
    , ¶¶ 6-8, 
    361 Mont. 279
    , 
    259 P.3d 754
    ; Truman v. Mont. Eleventh Judicial
    Dist. Ct., 
    2003 MT 91
    , ¶ 15, 
    315 Mont. 165
    , 
    68 P.3d 654
    ; Park v. Mont. Sixth Judicial Dist.
    Ct., 
    1998 MT 164
    , ¶ 13, 
    289 Mont. 367
    , 
    961 P.2d 1267
    ; Plumb v. Mont. Fourth Judicial
    Dist. Ct., 
    279 Mont. 363
    , 370, 
    927 P.2d 1011
    , 1015-16 (1996).5 Regardless of the liberal
    5
    The Court’s deviation from our usually strict avoidance of unnecessary use of supervisory control
    is puzzling here given its conclusion that the District Court is not proceeding under a mistake of
    law, thus begging the question of why or on what basis ordinary appeal will not be an adequate
    remedy (i.e. why the Court is exercising supervisory control to comment on this issue) if the
    Jehovah’s Witnesses have indeed failed to show that the District Court is acting under a mistake
    of law.
    22
    amendment standard of M. R. Civ. P. 15(a), the factual and legal rationales asserted by the
    District Court and this Court for not holding Nunez to her purely tactical decision to
    abandon her alternative common law negligence claim are unsound and indefensible under
    the particular circumstances of this case.
    ¶35       After the initial 21-day deadline for the opposing party to file a responsive pleading,6
    a party may amend a pleading only upon written consent of the opposing party or prior
    leave of court.       M. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). Although the court should “freely” allow
    amendment “when justice so requires,” M. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2); Hobble-Diamond Cattle
    Co. v. Triangle Irrigation Co., 
    249 Mont. 322
    , 325, 
    815 P.2d 1153
    , 1155 (1991),
    Rule 15(a)(2) does not warrant free amendment as a matter of right in every case. Allison
    v. Town of Clyde Park, 
    2000 MT 267
    , ¶ 20, 
    302 Mont. 55
    , 
    11 P.3d 544
    ; Stundal v. Stundal,
    
    2000 MT 21
    , ¶ 13, 
    298 Mont. 141
    , 
    995 P.2d 420
    . Rather, the party seeking amendment
    must make an affirmative showing of good cause: (1) as to how or why, upon reasonable
    diligence, the party could not have earlier asserted or maintained the claim as subsequently
    requested; (2) why the amendment is warranted in the interests of justice; and (3) that the
    amendment will not cause unfair prejudice, burden, or expense to the opposing party. See
    Geil v. Missoula Irrigation Dist., 
    2004 MT 217
    , ¶ 22, 
    322 Mont. 388
    , 
    96 P.3d 1127
    ;
    Hawkins v. Harney, 
    2003 MT 58
    , ¶ 39, 
    314 Mont. 384
    , 
    66 P.3d 305
    ; Stundal, ¶ 12; Peuse
    v. Malkuch, 
    275 Mont. 221
    , 227, 
    911 P.2d 1153
    , 1156-57 (1996); Lindey’s, Inc. v.
    Professional Consultants, Inc., 
    244 Mont. 238
    , 242, 
    797 P.2d 920
    , 923 (1990) (citing
    6
    See M. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(1).
    23
    Foman v. Davis, 
    371 U.S. 178
    , 182, 
    83 S. Ct. 227
    , 230 (1962) in re Fed. R. Civ. P. 15); 6
    Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Wright & Miller’s Federal Practice & Procedure,
    § 1487 (2004). We review grants or denials of leave to amend a complaint under M. R.
    Civ. P. 15(a)(2) for an abuse of discretion. Harrington v. Energy W., Inc., 
    2017 MT 141
    ,
    ¶ 10, 
    387 Mont. 497
    , 
    396 P.3d 114
    ; Edgewater Townhouse Homeowner’s Ass’n v.
    Holtman, 
    256 Mont. 182
    , 187, 
    845 P.2d 1224
    , 1227 (1993). As pertinent here, an abuse of
    discretion occurs if a court exercises granted discretion arbitrarily without conscientious
    judgment, or in excess of the bounds of reason, resulting in substantial injustice.
    Harrington, ¶ 10.
    ¶36       Here, in a twenty-five paragraph opinion, the Court gives amazingly short-shrift to
    the critical record colloquy between court and counsel before opening statements at trial,
    to wit:
    During a pretrial discussion about settling preliminary jury instructions,
    counsel for Nunez indicated Nunez was “fine limiting [her] negligence claim
    to the negligence per se claim.” The District Court asked to clarify whether
    Nunez was dismissing her common law negligence claim and breach of
    fiduciary duty claim, to which counsel responded “Yes, your Honor.”
    [Watchtower] did not object.
    Opinion, ¶ 2. Based on that summary characterization, the Majority holds that “nothing in
    the colloquy between [court] and counsel before trial prevent[ed] the District Court from
    allowing Nunez to amend” her complaint to revive her common law negligence claim after
    losing on her negligence per se claim on appeal. Opinion, ¶ 13. However, neither the
    Court’s summary characterization, nor the manifest after-the-fact mischaracterization of
    the record by Nunez and the District Court, are consistent with, much less supported by,
    the pertinent record, to wit:
    24
    [Court]:        I'm going to read some preliminary instructions . . . and then
    opening statements. I am inclined to read plaintiffs’ proposed
    [i]nstruction . . . which gives [the jury] notice that . . . the Court
    has already determined . . . as a matter of law the duty was
    breached and as to causation. The only concern I have with
    that instruction is there are still causes of action for common
    law negligence and for breach of fiduciary obligation. And I'm
    not sure . . . how that would be communicated to the jury so –
    [Plaintiffs]: Your Honor, . . . my understanding is [that] if you found
    negligence per se . . . You found negligence. We don’t have a
    desire to submit any other negligence theories as to 2004.
    [Court]:        . . . [But], as I understand it, there is still an outstanding common
    law negligence and breach of fiduciary obligation causes of
    action that the plaintiff continues to maintain.
    [Plaintiffs]:    Your Honor, yes. . . However, we are fine limiting our
    negligence claim to the negligence per se claim. So . . . our
    theory is [t]hat the mandatory reporter law [was] violated.
    [Court]:        And let me just ask a question about that. All right. . . . [B]ut
    what I understand you’re saying is you’re dismissing . . . the
    common law negligence cause of action?
    [Plaintiffs]:    Yes, your Honor.
    [Court]:         You’re just resting on the negligence per se cause of action.
    [Court]:         That’s correct, your Honor.
    .    .   .
    [Defendants]: . . . So you’re dismissing your . . . negligence [claim] . . .
    .    .   .
    [Plaintiffs]:   . . . [O]ur sole negligence theory is negligence per se. And
    we're happy to tell the Court that that's our sole negligence
    theory.
    [Court]:         That certainly simplifies it. And does that go with regard to
    one or both of the plaintiffs, though?
    25
    [Plaintiffs]:   Both.
    [Defendants]: So my understanding, your Honor, . . . is that -- regardless of
    how it’s characterized, they’re dismissing negligence . . . and
    proceeding on a per se with both plaintiffs.
    Trial Tr. 140:14-143:15 (emphasis added).
    ¶37    The District Court’s assertion that Nunez “carefully dismissed her common law
    claim without prejudice, so that she could reassert it” and that the “parties narrowed the
    issues for trial but took care to dismiss the common law claim without prejudice, leaving
    the door open for Nunez to reassert it if necessary,” are clearly erroneous, without any basis
    in the contemporaneous record.       Nunez said absolutely nothing, either expressly or
    implicitly, indicating any intent or reservation of right to reassert the abandoned negligence
    claim in the event that her favored negligence per se claim might ultimately fail. Nor did
    the Jehovah’s Witnesses in any regard expressly or implicitly acquiesce, much less agree,
    that Nunez reserved the right to later revive the abandoned negligence claim if unsuccessful
    on her chosen negligence per se claim. To the contrary, fairly read as a whole, the actual
    record clearly indicates that both parties were under the impression that Nunez was
    intentionally abandoning her common law negligence claim, without reservation of right,
    to go all-in on her negligence per se claim.           Nothing in the record supports a
    characterization that Nunez “carefully” stated any intent other than to unequivocally,
    absolutely, and unconditionally abandon her alternative common law negligence claim,
    without recourse.
    ¶38    Equally erroneous as justifications for allowing Nunez to revive the abandoned
    negligence per se claim are Nunez’s assertions, echoed by the District Court, that, in light
    26
    of the favorable negligence per se ruling, it was senseless and would be confusing to the
    jury to continue to prosecute the negligence per se claim because the court would be
    instructing the jury “at the outset that the [Jehovah’s Witnesses] were negligent as a matter
    of law” and that the only “issue to be decided was the amount of damages to which . . .
    Nunez was entitled to recover.” As a preliminary matter, the District Court had yet to give
    any instruction to the jury when Nunez voluntarily abandoned the common law negligence
    claim before opening statements at trial. If Nunez had elected to prosecute both claims at
    trial in the alternative, as originally pled and still postured to proceed under the final pretrial
    order, the court necessarily would have had the task, as it had from the outset, to properly
    instruct the jury on the alternatively pled claims, thereby providing the jury a guide for
    navigating through the outstanding factual issues under both of the alternatively pled
    claims. Any difficulty or complexity in that task was solely the consequence of the tactical
    pleading and litigation strategy unilaterally chosen by Nunez, not the Jehovah’s Witnesses
    or the court. Even in that regard, other than cursory assertion, neither Nunez, nor the
    District Court, have articulated how or why the court could not have adequately instructed
    the jury on both alternative claims as in any other case where a plaintiff elects to plead
    alternative claims or theories of liability.
    ¶39    Negligence and negligence per se are distinct claims or theories of liability
    predicated on distinct factual breaches of distinct legal duties. Thus, contrary to Nunez’s
    overly-simplistic argument to the District Court, negligence per se and common law
    negligence are entirely different strains of negligence, even though either establishes the
    liability elements necessary to prove the otherwise similar causation and damages of each
    27
    type of claim. Under modern rules of pleading and practice, plaintiffs may, and commonly
    do, plead such alternative claims or theories of liability in pursuit of compensatory damages
    for the same resulting harm compensable under either. See M. R. Civ. P. 8(d)(2); Folsom
    v. Mont. Pub. Employees’ Ass’n, Inc., 
    2017 MT 204
    , ¶ 21, 
    388 Mont. 307
    , 
    400 P.3d 706
    (internal citations omitted). Whether, or to what extent, the pleading and ultimate
    prosecution of alternative tort claims makes good sense or is optimal in a given case is
    unquestionably a strategic or tactical decision in the sole discretion of the plaintiff—not
    the court or the defendant. To the extent that alternatively pled claims may complicate jury
    instruction, or be more potentially confusing to a jury than a single liability theory, the
    party solely responsible for that choice if it goes bad is the plaintiff—not the court or the
    defendant. Accordingly here, Nunez certainly had the right to tactically abandon her
    alternative common law negligence claim at the last minute to simplify her theory of
    liability and burden of proof before the jury. However, it is simply inaccurate and
    disingenuous for her and the District Court to suggest that she was unfairly prejudiced by
    that decision, that the decision was unfairly thrust upon her, or that she had no other
    reasonable choice. In that regard, the District Court’s cursory Rule 15(a)(2) rationale that
    Nunez had a right to rely on the court’s negligence per se ruling and, after losing on appeal,
    was thus entitled to backup and retry the case on a different legal theory is wholly
    unsupported by any legal citation or analysis here. Thus, without exception, none of the
    reasons asserted by Nunez, and echoed or amplified by the District Court, as justification
    for allowing her to revive her abandoned common law negligence claim after her chosen
    28
    theory of liability failed on appeal were valid or defensible under the law or circumstances
    of this case.
    ¶40    Thus, in affirming the District Court, this Court does not even reference the lower
    court’s rationale for granting leave to amend, much less endorse or affirm its correctness.
    So handicapped, the Majority similarly resorts to cursory reference to the district court’s
    broad discretion under M. R. Civ. P. 15(a), and then conspicuously skips over to an
    attempted distinction of this case from our holding in Stanford v. Rosebud County, 
    254 Mont. 474
    , 
    839 P.2d 93
     (1992) (affirming denial of leave to amend to add new theory of
    liability after prior theory failed on appeal) on the stated ground that Jehovah’s Witnesses
    did not specifically make a “prejudice argument” here. Opinion, ¶¶ 20-22. The attempted
    distinction is ineffectual, however, because we did not affirm the denial of leave to amend
    in Stanford based on resulting prejudice. Stanford, 254 Mont. at 476-78, 
    839 P.2d at 94-96
    .
    We affirmed the denial of post-appeal leave to amend “based on the time at which the
    motion [to amend] was made and the lack of a showing of good cause why” the alternative
    legal theory “was not raised prior to the [adverse] ruling” that defeated the plaintiffs’
    chosen claim. Stanford, 254 Mont. at 478, 
    839 P.2d at 96
     (emphasis added). Stanford thus
    does not serve the purpose for which it is cited. To the contrary, it analogously manifests
    a similarly conspicuous lack of good cause for post-appeal amendment here. As in
    Stanford, Nunez has made no showing of good cause for her abandonment of her co-pled
    alternative negligence claim to aggressively go all-in on her negligence per se claim, except
    for a purely tactical decision that unfortunately did not pan-out.
    29
    ¶41    Under these circumstances, it is sheer pedantic nitpicking for this Court to ignore
    the glaring lack of good cause for allowing the post-appeal revival of a previously
    abandoned alternative claim based solely on the hyper-technical ground that the Jehovah’s
    Witnesses “have not made a prejudice argument.” As a threshold matter of law, prejudice
    is not a relevant consideration under M. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2) unless and until the movant
    first shows good cause in the interests of justice, upon the exercise of reasonable diligence,
    for not earlier pleading the new legal theory or predicate fact at issue. Here, this Court has
    neither endorsed the District Court’s erroneous good cause rationale, nor articulated any
    other. Beyond that technical nicety, the resulting prejudice to the Jehovah’s Witnesses of
    allowing Nunez to retry the case on a different legal theory after her chosen theory failed
    on appeal is clear, obvious, and indisputable without requirement for magic words or
    further explanation—the exorbitant cost and burden of unnecessarily having to again
    defend themselves in a second trial in a relatively-complex, high-dollar civil tort action for
    no reason other than their opponent’s unnecessary tactical decision gone-bad.
    ¶42    Based on the record in Nunez I and here, I presume that Nunez’s allegations of
    sexual abuse by her step-grandfather are absolutely true. I thus have nothing but sincere
    empathy for her, and sickening disdain and condemnation for his inexcusably horrible
    conduct and the resulting irreparable harm that he has caused her to suffer to date, and in
    the future. But the questions of whether the Jehovah’s Witnesses failed to use reasonable
    care under the circumstances to protect her from her step-grandfather and, whether and to
    what extent any such failure was a compensable cause of the trauma he caused, remain
    genuinely disputed questions of fact to which Nunez has already had a full and fair
    30
    opportunity to litigate before a jury. Empathy is not a legal basis upon which to disregard
    the governing Rules of Civil Procedure, universally adopted for the purpose of ensuring
    fair and equal treatment and protection to all civil litigants, plaintiffs and defendants alike.
    While understandable, the Court’s empathy-driven, result-oriented holding today is not
    only erroneous and indefensible under the circumstances of this case, but further
    establishes terrible precedent that will surely foster similar unfair civil trial practice until
    we are inevitably forced to reverse or limit it as anomalous in the future under a less
    emotionally-gripping fact pattern. This is a classic case of the old adage that bad facts
    make bad law. I dissent.
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    Justice Jim Rice joins in the Dissenting Opinion of Justice Sandefur.
    /S/ JIM RICE
    Justice Jim Rice, dissenting.
    ¶43    I join Justice Sandefur’s dissenting opinion and would add that Plaintiff’s
    reinstituted claim should also be barred under the doctrine of judicial estoppel. See Big
    Sky Civ. & Envtl., Inc. v. Dunlavy, 
    2018 MT 236
    , ¶ 30, 
    393 Mont. 30
    , 
    429 P.3d 258
    (“Judicial estoppel is an equitable principle that bars a party from taking inconsistent
    positions of fact and law at different points in the same litigation[.]”). Given the particular
    actions and statements of the Plaintiff and the circumstances of the litigation, as well
    31
    outlined by Justice Sandefur, judicial estoppel is also an appropriate equitable remedy here
    to protect fundamental fairness.
    /S/ JIM RICE
    Justice Beth Baker, dissenting.
    ¶44    Though I do not join the Dissents in full, I agree that on the state of this record and
    the order appealed, the District Court abused its discretion in allowing amendment to
    reinstate the common law negligence claim. I would grant the petition and reverse.
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    32