Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca7-15-02477/USCOURTS-ca7-15-02477-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Egan Marine Corporation
Appellant
United States of America
Appellee

Document Text:

In the 

United States Court of Appeals 

For the Seventh Circuit ____________________

Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff‐Appellee,

v.

EGAN MARINE CORPORATION and DENNIS MICHAEL EGAN,

Defendants‐Appellants.

____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the

Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.

No. 10 CR 33 — James B. Zagel, Judge.

____________________

ARGUED DECEMBER 5, 2016 — DECIDED DECEMBER 12, 2016

____________________

Before EASTERBROOK and ROVNER, Circuit Judges, and

SHADID, District Judge.

*

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Barge EMC‐423 exploded on

January 19, 2005, while under way between Joliet and Chica‐

go with a cargo of clarified slurry oil. The blast threw deck‐

hand Alex Oliva into the water; he did not survive. Contend‐

                                                  * Of the Central District of Illinois, sitting by designation.

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
2 Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485

ing that Dennis Egan, master of the tug Lisa E that had been

pushing the barge, had told Oliva to warm a pump using a

propane torch, the United States obtained an indictment

charging Egan and the tug’s owner (Egan Marine Corp.)

with violating 18 U.S.C. §1115, which penalizes maritime

negligence that results in death, plus other statutes that pe‐

nalize the negligent discharge of oil into navigable waters.

After a bench trial, Judge Zagel found that the prosecu‐

tion had established, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Egan

gave the order to Oliva, that the torch caused the explosion,

that Oliva died as a result, and that the barge released oil as

a further result. That such an order, if given, was negligence

(or worse) no one doubted; open flames on oil carriers are

forbidden by Coast Guard regulations and normal prudence.

The court sentenced Egan to six months’ imprisonment, a

year’s supervised release, and restitution of almost $6.75 mil‐

lion. Egan Marine was placed on probation for three years

and ordered to pay the same restitution, for which it and

Egan are jointly and severally liable.

The criminal prosecution was the second trial of these al‐

legations. Two years before the grand jury returned its in‐

dictment, the United States had filed a civil suit against Egan

Marine seeking damages on the same theory: that Egan di‐

rected Oliva to warm the pump using a torch, whose flame

caused an explosion, a death, and an oil spill. That case, too,

went to a bench trial. And Judge Leinenweber, who heard

the evidence, determined that the United States had not

proved its claim. 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 138087 (N.D. Ill. Oct.

13, 2011) at *11 (“the Government did not prove, by a pre‐

ponderance of the evidence, that Alex Oliva was using a

propane torch on the cargo pump of the EMC 423 at the time

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485 3

of the incident”). The United States did not appeal from that

adverse decision but instead pressed forward with this crim‐

inal prosecution.

Egan and Egan Marine sought the benefit of issue preclu‐

sion (collateral estoppel), arguing that the United States

should not be allowed to contend that they are guilty be‐

yond a reasonable doubt after Judge Leinenweber found that

the proof did not show culpability even by a preponderance

of the evidence. But Judge Zagel rejected this contention.

The Supreme Court has said that the outcome of a civil

case has preclusive force in a criminal prosecution. See Yates

v. United States, 354 U.S. 298, 335–36 (1957). (Burks v. United

States, 437 U.S. 1 (1978), overruled a different portion of Yates

relating to double jeopardy; Burks did not question the por‐

tion of Yates dealing with preclusion.) If the United States

cannot prove a factual claim on the preponderance standard,

it cannot logically show the same thing beyond a reasonable

doubt. The prosecutor maintains that this statement in Yates

was dictum, but we do not think that characterization ap‐

propriate. It was integral to the Court’s rationale—for alt‐

hough the Justices proceeded to conclude that the civil suit

did not block the Yates prosecution under ordinary princi‐

ples of preclusion, it would not have undertaken that exer‐

cise had the Court believed issue preclusion categorically

inapplicable to the civil–criminal sequence.

United States v. Weems, 49 F.3d 528 (9th Cir. 1995), and

United States v. Rogers, 960 F.2d 1501 (10th Cir. 1992), both

took Yates at face value and held that a criminal prosecution

can be blocked by the preclusive effect of a decision in a civil

case. No court of appeals has held otherwise. But the United

States maintains, and Judge Zagel concluded, that our deci‐

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
4 Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485

sion in United States v. Alexander, 743 F.2d 472 (7th Cir. 1984),

means that preclusion is unavailable notwithstanding Yates.

Alexander held that the outcome of an administrative pro‐

ceeding cannot be invoked to block the resolution of a crimi‐

nal indictment. The opinion observed that many administra‐

tive systems are designed to be informal and expeditious,

and that when the agency loses an administrative adjudica‐

tion it may not be entitled to judicial review. 743 F.2d at 477.

Making the administrative process reliable enough to justify

preclusive effect in a criminal prosecution might require a

substantial investment of prosecutorial resources—if that

were even possible under the statute in question. The United

States’ alternative might be to forego the administrative pro‐

ceeding, which could have bad consequences of its own.

When using these considerations of public policy to de‐

cide whether to give preclusive effect to administrative ad‐

judications, Alexander drew on Standefer v. United States, 447

U.S. 10 (1980), which had concluded that it would be unwise

to apply nonmutual preclusion from one criminal prosecu‐

tion to another. Standefer and Niederberger had been

charged with joint criminal activity. Niederberger was tried

first and acquitted; Standefer maintained that he was enti‐

tled to the benefit of that adjudication, because it takes two

to tango. The Court held not, observing (447 U.S. at 21–23)

that nonmutual preclusion (that is, using the result in A’s

case to determine the result in B’s) is designed largely to re‐

duce litigation costs in civil suits, while the criminal process

has different and more important goals. The Justices added

that acquittals in criminal prosecutions are unreasoned and

cannot be reviewed (given the Double Jeopardy Clause);

they may reflect compromise or misunderstanding rather

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485 5

than a determination of contested facts. That’s why incon‐

sistent verdicts within a single criminal prosecution do not

work in a defendant’s favor. See, e.g., Bravo‐Fernandez v.

United States, No. 15–537 (U.S. Nov. 29, 2016).

Standefer did not cast doubt on Yates. The considerations

that led the Court to abjure nonmutual preclusion in the

criminal–criminal sequence do not pertain to mutual preclu‐

sion in the civil–criminal sequence. Many a civil decision is

fully explained (as Judge Leinenweber’s was), and all are re‐

viewable on appeal. The Supreme Court understands mutu‐

al preclusion not just as a judicial work‐saving device but as

a matter of right for the litigants involved. See, e.g., Federated

Department Stores, Inc. v. Moitie, 452 U.S. 394 (1981).

This is so even when one of the litigants is the United

States. See, e.g., Montana v. United States, 440 U.S. 147 (1979);

United States v. Stauffer Chemical Co., 464 U.S. 165 (1984). The

prosecutor’s brief in our case tells us that allowing Judge

Leinenweber’s decision to foreclose the criminal charges

would cause the United States either to pour extra resources

into civil suits, disrupting its litigation strategy, or to forego

or postpone such suits pending the outcome of criminal cas‐

es. Similar arguments were made by the Solicitor General in

Montana and Stauffer Chemical, where the United States

maintained that the outcome of a poorly litigated civil case

(perhaps pursued by a single Assistant United States Attor‐

ney in some remote outpost) should not be allowed to block

a new suit that has the Department of Justice’s full attention

and may be designed to serve a vital public goal. But the Jus‐

tices had none of this. They concluded that ordinary rules of

preclusion apply to the United States and that the Depart‐

ment of Justice must navigate around established legal rules,

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
6 Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485

rather than the rules giving way to bureaucratic conven‐

ience. (The Court made an exception for offensive nonmutu‐

al issue preclusion in United States v. Mendoza, 464 U.S. 154

(1984), again reflecting Standefer’s conclusion that nonmutual

preclusion is a matter of wise policy rather than of litigants’

entitlements.)

There is of course a potential for nonmutuality in the civ‐

il–criminal sequence—but it is the United States that prefers

a situation in which it can win but not lose. The United

States filed the civil suit seeking damages and hoped to en‐

joy the fruits of victory. But it tells us that a loss meant little,

because after losing it could pursue the criminal prosecution

and ask a different judge or jury to reach a different out‐

come. The principal stakes in both the civil and criminal cas‐

es are money. Six months in prison are not to be sneezed at,

but the main contest has been about recompense for Oliva’s

death and the oil released from the barge. What would have

been labeled “damages” in the civil case is called “restitu‐

tion” in the criminal case, but the money covers the same

losses either way. And had the criminal case gone to trial

first and defendants been acquitted, the United States doubt‐

less would be arguing that it could still pursue civil remedies

because of the different burdens of persuasion. See, e.g., One

Lot Emerald Cut Stones v. United States, 409 U.S. 232, 234–35

(1972); Helvering v. Mitchell, 303 U.S. 391, 397–98 (1938).

Every litigant would like multiple chances to win; that’s

what the United States is claiming, while it contends that for

Egan and Egan Marine any one loss would be dispositive (at

least for financial issues). And, by bringing the civil case

first, the United States received the benefit of civil discovery,

which is more extensive than that allowed in criminal prose‐

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485 7

cutions by Fed. R. Crim. P. 16—discovery that it could put to

use in the criminal case as well as the civil one. We under‐

stand why the United States seeks these advantages but do

not think it entitled to them, without the detriment of being

bound by the civil judgment if it loses. If it fails to show

some fact in the civil suit by a preponderance of the evi‐

dence, it is precluded from trying to show the same thing

beyond a reasonable doubt.

Judge Zagel stated that, even if issue preclusion applies

in the civil–criminal sequence (as we have concluded it

does), he would exercise discretion not to use that doctrine

in this prosecution. He did not say where that discretion

comes from or address the significance of decisions such as

Federated Department Stores that reject judicial efforts to treat

rules of preclusion as dispensable whenever judges prefer

another outcome. See 452 U.S. at 399–402.

Normal rules of preclusion have some flex. For example,

“[a] new determination of the issue [may be] warranted by

differences in the quality or extensiveness of the procedures

followed in the two courts”. Restatement (Second) of Judgments

§28(3). In other words, if the first forum’s procedures do not

conduce to sufficiently reliable decisions, the second forum

may decide that it is best to determine the issue anew. This is

what Alexander said about the difference between adminis‐

trative adjudication and criminal litigation. But Judge Zagel

did not conclude that Judge Leinenweber had conducted the

civil trial unreliably or that any of the other exceptions in Re‐

statement §28 had been established; he simply announced

that he would disregard the civil judgment because that

course seemed best to him. That’s not an appropriate way to

treat the outcome of a properly conducted federal civil trial.

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
8 Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485

Egan Marine was the only defendant in the civil suit. The

United States maintains that Egan therefore cannot receive

the benefit of the judgment, which it sees as the sort of non‐

mutual issue preclusion forbidden by Standefer. (The United

States also contends that Egan forfeited his entitlement to the

benefit of issue preclusion, but he preserved his position by

telling the district court that he was adopting Egan Marine’s

arguments on issue preclusion.)

Standefer used the word “nonmutual” to refer to the use

of preclusion across different persons, so that A’s victory

over C in one case would imply B’s victory over C in another.

But the law of preclusion has long recognized that if A and B

are in a contractual relation (“in privity” as judges often say)

then they are entitled to the same treatment under normal

principles of mutual preclusion. Egan and Egan Marine were

in such a relation. Indeed, in the civil suit the United States

contended that Egan Marine was vicariously liable for Egan’s

acts precisely because of their employment relation. The civil

suit was about Egan’s conduct, which was attributed to his

employer, and Judge Leinenweber’s core finding (which we

quoted earlier) was that the United States had not shown

that Oliva was using a propane torch at all, let alone that in

using a torch he was following Egan’s directive. When a

court rejects a claim of vicarious liability based on a worker’s

conduct, the worker is as much entitled to the benefit of that

judgment as is the employer. Muhammad v. Oliver, 547 F.3d

874 (7th Cir. 2008); Restatement §51. Cf. Taylor v. Sturgell, 553

U.S. 880, 893–95 (2008) (canvassing situations in which a

nonparty gets the benefit of a judgment). Having argued in

the civil suit that Egan Marine was liable for Egan’s conduct,

the United States cannot now treat Egan and the corporation

as strangers to each other.

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9
Nos. 15‐2477 & 15‐2485 9

Another way to see this is to recall that Standefer dealt

with considerations unique to nonmutual preclusion in

criminal litigation: acquittals are unexplained and unreview‐

able on appeal. Judge Leinenweber’s decision, by contrast,

was accompanied by an opinion and reviewable in this

court—though the United States chose not to appeal. It is

much easier to see why a reviewable civil finding that X has

not been shown by a preponderance of the evidence should

foreclose a contention that X is true beyond a reasonable

doubt than it is to carry one criminal acquittal over to a dif‐

ferent case.

Because both Egan and Egan Marine are entitled to the

benefit of the civil judgment, we need not discuss any of the

remaining issues. The convictions are reversed, and the case

is remanded for the entry of judgments of acquittal.

Case: 15-2477 Document: 65 Filed: 12/12/2016 Pages: 9