Conitz v. Alaska State Commission for Human Rights , 2014 Alas. LEXIS 24 ( 2014 )


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    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, e-mail
    corrections@appellate.courts.state.ak.us.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    GREGG CONITZ,                                  )
    )        Supreme Court No. S-14357
    Appellant,               )
    )        Superior Court No. 3AN-09-10085 CI
    v.                                       )
    )        OPINION
    ALASKA STATE COMMISSION                        )
    FOR HUMAN RIGHTS, and TECK                     )        No. 6871 - March 7, 2014
    ALASKA INCORPORATED,                           )
    )
    Appellees.               )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
    Judicial District, Anchorage, Philip R. Volland, Judge.
    Appearances: Kenneth L. Covell, Law Offices of Kenneth L.
    Covell, Fairbanks, for Appellant. William E. Milks, Assistant
    Attorney General, Juneau, and Michael C. Geraghty,
    Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee Alaska State
    Commission for Human Rights. Sean Halloran, Littler
    Mendelson, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellee Teck Alaska
    Incorporated.
    Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, and
    Bolger, Justices.
    MAASSEN, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    The Alaska State Commission for Human Rights dismissed Gregg Conitz’s
    complaint against his employer, Teck Alaska Incorporated, alleging discrimination in its
    promotion decisions. The superior court dismissed Conitz’s appeal as moot, finding that
    the same claims had already been decided by a federal court and that the doctrine of res
    judicata would therefore preclude further pursuit of the claims if they were remanded to
    the Commission. Conitz appeals. We affirm the superior court’s decision.
    II.   FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    Over the last seven years, Gregg Conitz has filed a number of claims
    against his employer, Teck Alaska Incorporated (Teck), alleging violations of state and
    federal civil rights statutes. Teck operates the Red Dog Mine in what it characterizes as
    a joint venture with NANA Regional Corporation. Teck has a hiring preference for
    NANA shareholders under which “[f]irst preference for all Red Dog jobs would go to
    qualified NANA shareholders.”1 Conitz, who describes himself as white and as a
    minority in the Northwest Arctic Borough (which is geographically coextensive with the
    NANA Region), contends that Teck’s preference for NANA shareholders is racially
    discriminatory and that it has cost him several opportunities for promotion to supervisory
    positions at the Red Dog Mine.
    In 2006, Conitz filed complaints with both the Alaska State Commission
    for Human Rights (the Commission) and the federal Equal Employment Opportunity
    Commission (EEOC) based on Teck’s failure to promote him in 2004 and 2005 to
    positions as mine operations supervisor and mine trainer, respectively. After the EEOC
    declined to act on Conitz’s claims, he brought suit against Teck on those claims in
    1
    The parties dispute the scope of the preference, but Conitz also asserts that
    the extent of it “is immaterial to the question of law of whether any shareholder
    preference at the Teck mine is illegal.” We agree that the exact parameters of Teck’s
    shareholder preference are immaterial to our decision and therefore do not describe it
    fully here.
    -2-                                      6871
    federal district court. The federal district court dismissed Conitz’s suit, ruling that he had
    failed to demonstrate he was qualified for the positions he sought and that Teck’s
    shareholder preference was “not prohibited by law because it is based on the permissible
    distinction of shareholder status rather than race.”2 The Court of Appeals for the Ninth
    Circuit affirmed, though it limited its holding to Conitz’s failure to show he was qualified
    for the jobs he sought; it did not discuss the legality of Teck’s hiring preference.3
    Between the time of the federal district court’s decision and the Ninth
    Circuit’s affirmance, Conitz filed new complaints with the EEOC and the Commission
    alleging new civil rights violations. In these complaints, Conitz alleged that Teck had
    twice more failed to promote him to the position of mine operations supervisor, once in
    November 2007 and again in July 2008, because of its unlawful shareholder preference.
    The EEOC dismissed Conitz’s complaint on grounds that it was “unable to conclude that
    the information obtained establishes violations of the statutes,” and Conitz again brought
    suit on his claims in federal district court.
    While this second federal suit was pending, the Commission staff issued its
    own determination of Conitz’s second administrative complaint. The Commission found
    that Conitz’s claim based on alleged discrimination in 2007 was untimely and therefore
    “not jurisdictional for the Commission”;4 and it concluded that his claim arising in 2008
    2
    Conitz v. Teck Cominco Alaska Inc., No. 4:06-cv-0015-RRB, slip op. at 4
    (D. Alaska July 21, 2008).
    3
    Conitz v. Teck Alaska Inc., 331 F. App’x 512, 513 (9th Cir. 2009).
    4
    The Commission’s governing regulations provide that “[a] complaint
    alleging a discriminatory act or practice not of a continuing nature must be filed no later
    than . . . 180 days after the alleged discriminatory act or practice occurred.” 6 Alaska
    (continued...)
    -3-                                     6871
    was unsupported by substantial evidence, relying on testimony that the employee
    selected over Conitz for the position at issue was “not only a better equipment operator
    than complainant, but . . . , in the foreman’s opinion, had a better safety record, better
    leadership skills, broader experience, and a better attitude than complainant.” The
    Commission’s investigations director approved this determination and dismissed
    Conitz’s case by order dated August 20, 2009.
    Conitz appealed this order to the state superior court. While the appeal was
    pending, the federal district court ruled on Conitz’s second federal suit.5 It relied on the
    doctrine of res judicata to decide that Conitz was precluded from litigating the 2007
    failure to promote, reasoning that he could have pursued the claim in his first federal suit,
    which did not proceed to final judgment until July 2008.6 By separate order the court
    rejected Conitz’s claim based on the 2008 failure to promote, which was too recent to
    have been brought in the earlier suit; the court ruled that Conitz was not qualified for the
    position he sought and that Teck’s shareholder preference was not unlawfully
    discriminatory.7 On appeal the Ninth Circuit affirmed the lower court’s decision that
    Conitz was not qualified for the position he sought but again declined to reach the
    4
    (...continued)
    Administrative Code (AAC) 30.230(b)(2) (2013).
    5
    Conitz v. Teck Alaska Inc., No. 4:09-cv-0020-RRB, slip op. at 12 (D.
    Alaska Nov. 4, 2009).
    6
    Id. at 6-7.
    7
    Conitz v. Teck Alaska Inc., No. 4:09-cv-0020-RRB, slip op. at 13 (D.
    Alaska Jan. 20, 2010).
    -4-                                        6871
    legality of Teck’s shareholder preference, on grounds that “Conitz has failed to
    demonstrate how the policy might have affected him.”8
    Before the Ninth Circuit issued this ruling, the state superior court decided
    Conitz’s administrative appeal from the Commission’s determination to dismiss his
    claims. In a written decision, the court dismissed Conitz’s appeal as moot, reasoning that
    all of his claims had been decided on their merits in his two federal suits, and thus even
    if the superior court reversed the Commission’s determination and remanded the case,
    the doctrine of res judicata would prevent the Commission from prosecuting Conitz’s
    claims to any different resolution.
    Following some procedural difficulties, further described in section IV.A
    below, Conitz filed an appeal to this court. The Commission moved to dismiss the
    appeal on timeliness grounds, and Teck joined in the motion. We declined to dismiss the
    appeal on the Commission’s motion but did order the parties to “include as a point on
    appeal whether the appeal was timely filed.”9 Conitz accordingly amended his points on
    appeal.
    Conitz’s primary argument on appeal is that the superior court erred in
    applying the doctrine of res judicata to dismiss his case. He also asks us to rule that
    Teck’s shareholder preference is racially discriminatory. He further argues that the
    Commission should not have closed his file without holding an adversarial hearing.
    III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    8
    Conitz v. Teck Alaska Inc., 433 F. App’x 580, 581 (9th Cir. 2011).
    9
    Alaska Supreme Court Order No. S-14357 (Oct. 11, 2011).
    -5­                                      6871
    “We independently review the merits of administrative decisions.”10 “We
    review an agency’s factual findings to determine whether they are supported by
    substantial evidence.”11 “We review questions of law not involving agency expertise
    under the substitution of judgment test.”12 Whether res judicata applies is one such
    question of law, reviewed de novo.13
    IV.	   DISCUSSION
    A.	   Conitz’s Appeal Was Untimely, But We Relax The Rules To Decide It
    On Its Merits.
    We agree with Teck and the Commission that Conitz’s appeal to this court
    was untimely.14 The superior court’s decision was distributed on February 17, 2011, and
    10
    Villaflores v. Alaska State Comm’n for Human Rights, 
    170 P.3d 663
    , 665
    (Alaska 2007) (citing Raad v. Alaska State Comm’n for Human Rights, 
    86 P.3d 899
    , 903
    (Alaska 2004)).
    11
    
    Id.
     (quoting Raad, 86 P.3d at 903) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    12
    Id. (quoting Raad, 86 P.3d at 903-04) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    13
    Weber v. State, 
    166 P.3d 899
    , 901 (Alaska 2007) (citing Alaska Wildlife
    Alliance v. State, 
    74 P.3d 201
    , 205 (Alaska 2003)).
    14
    The appellees also argue that Conitz waived his right to respond to their
    timeliness argument because he did not address the issue in his opening brief. Our order
    requiring Conitz to include the issue in his points on appeal was somewhat anomalous
    as a procedural matter, given that the lack of timeliness was not his issue but rather the
    appellees’ argument for dismissal. But as the appellees’ argument, it was their obligation
    to brief it or risk waiving it. Conitz could have anticipated the timeliness challenge in
    his opening brief, but he did not waive his right to respond by failing to address it
    preemptively. We note that Conitz’s arguments on the timeliness issue were identical
    to those he raised in opposition to the motion to dismiss, and the appellees were not
    prejudiced by having to brief the issue first.
    -6-	                                     6871
    Conitz therefore had until March 21, 2011, to appeal to this court.15 He did not do so
    until June 20, nearly three months late. In the meantime he had filed a tardy motion for
    reconsideration of the superior court’s decision, had mistakenly filed a notice of appeal
    from that decision in the superior court rather than this court, and had shown some
    confusion as to whether the superior court’s decision was in fact a final judgment for
    purposes of appeal. On June 20, 2011, at the same time that he first filed a notice of
    appeal in this court, he filed a motion with the superior court requesting entry of final
    judgment.16
    Conitz appears to argue that his motion for reconsideration, which he filed
    in superior court on March 4, 2011, extended the time for filing an appeal. It did not.
    Though purportedly brought under Civil Rule 77(k), Conitz’s motion is properly
    considered as a motion for reconsideration under Appellate Rule 503(h), since Part Five
    of the Appellate Rules applies to motions for reconsideration when the superior court
    acts as an intermediate appellate court.17 But the motion was untimely under either
    15
    See Alaska R. App. P. 204(a)(1). March 21, 2011, was actually 32 days
    from February 17, 2011. The thirtieth day was a Saturday.
    16
    The superior court denied Conitz’s motion for entry of final judgment on
    August 4, 2011. Conitz then refiled his appeal in this court; his June 20 notice of appeal
    had been rejected by the clerk’s office for various deficiencies, including a failure to
    include a copy of the final order or judgment from which he was appealing.
    17
    See Alvarez v. Ketchikan Gateway Borough, 
    28 P.3d 935
    , 942 (Alaska
    2001) (applying Appellate Rule 506 to time for rehearing “because the superior court
    acted as an intermediate appellate court by reviewing the Board’s decision”); Childs v.
    Tulin, 
    799 P.2d 1338
    , 1341 (Alaska 1990) (“Appellate Rule 506 controls rehearings by
    the superior court acting as an intermediate court of appeals.”).
    -7-                                      6871
    rule.18 And in any event, a motion for reconsideration filed pursuant to Appellate Rule
    503(h) is not listed in Appellate Rule 204(a)(3) among the “timely motion[s] filed in the
    trial court” that terminate the running of the time for filing an appeal.
    We nevertheless entertain Conitz’s late-filed appeal. Appellate Rule 521
    allows us to relax the rules “where a strict adherence to them will work surprise or
    injustice.” When deciding whether to allow a late-filed appeal we must “balance the
    right to appellate review, the willfulness and extent of the rules violation, and the
    possible injustice that might result from dismissal.”19 We will excuse a late filing when
    it is the result of reasonable confusion about the state of the law and there is no prejudice
    to the opposing party.20
    We have excused late-filed appeals in the past where the appellant
    reasonably believed that a motion for reconsideration would terminate his time for
    18
    See Alaska R. App. P. 503(h)(1) (“A motion for reconsideration must be
    filed within ten days after the date of notice of the order . . . .”); Alaska R. Civ. P. 77(k)
    (“A motion to reconsider the ruling must be made within ten days after the date of notice
    of the ruling . . . .”). The tenth weekday after the date of notice of the order, February
    17, 2011, was February 28, and Conitz filed his motion on March 4. Conitz appears to
    argue that the appellees have waived any objection to the timeliness of his motion for
    reconsideration by failing to object to it in the trial court. We found a similar argument
    to be without merit in Vogt v. Winbauer, and we reject it here as well. 
    376 P.2d 1007
    ,
    1009 (Alaska 1962).
    19
    Cook v. Aurora Motors, Inc., 
    503 P.2d 1046
    , 1049 (Alaska 1972) (internal
    footnotes omitted).
    20
    See, e.g., McCarrey v. Comm’r of Natural Res., 
    526 P.2d 1353
    , 1354-55
    (Alaska 1974) (holding that plaintiff’s failure to bring timely appeal of administrative
    decision in superior court was forgiven where “a great deal of confusion existed
    concerning the method and procedures by which appeals from an administrative decision
    might be taken to the superior court”).
    -8-                                        6871
    appeal21 and where the appellant was reasonably confused about whether the superior
    court’s order was an appealable final judgment.22 Conitz’s counsel made both these
    errors. But before today we had never expressly held that motions for reconsideration
    filed in the superior court under Appellate Rule 503(h), unlike motions for
    reconsideration filed under Civil Rule 77(k), do not terminate an appellant’s time to file
    a further appeal (though the language of the rule is arguably explicit enough). Further,
    when Conitz’s time to appeal expired we had not yet explicitly stated that a separate final
    judgment is not required before a party may appeal a superior court’s appellate decision.
    We resolved this issue three months later in Griswold v. City of Homer, but in doing so
    we stated that we were clarifying an otherwise confusing area of the law.23
    Finally, the appellees do not allege that they were prejudiced by the delay
    caused by Conitz’s procedural errors. Conitz served all of his erroneous filings on the
    appellees, and there is no question but that they were on notice of his intent to appeal the
    superior court’s decision. When the clerk of the superior court informed Conitz that no
    separate judgment would be forthcoming absent a motion requesting one, Conitz
    21
    Anderson v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n, 
    654 P.2d 1320
    ,
    1320-22 (Alaska 1982) (late-filed appeal accepted because appellant’s incorrect belief
    that motion for reconsideration terminated time to appeal was “far from untenable”).
    22
    Mattfield v. Mattfield, 
    133 P.3d 667
    , 674 n.7 (Alaska 2006) (late-filed
    appeal accepted “given the brief period of delay, the general confusion surrounding the
    proceedings on reconsideration, the uncertainty that might have arisen because the order
    . . . was not expressly identified as a final judgment, and the lack of any discernible
    prejudice”).
    23
    
    252 P.3d 1020
    , 1027 (Alaska 2011) (“We . . . clarify that where the superior
    court acts as an intermediate appellate court, under Appellate Rule 507(a) its opinion or
    decision on appeal is the ‘judgment’ to which Appellate Rule 204(a)(1) refers” for
    purposes of commencing the time for appeal.).
    -9-                                       6871
    immediately filed both a motion requesting a final judgment in the superior court and a
    notice of appeal in this court. Given the element of confusion in the law, the various
    efforts, albeit faulty, of Conitz’s counsel to preserve his client’s appellate rights, and the
    lack of prejudice to the appellees, we exercise our discretion under Appellate Rule 521
    to relax the rules and hear Conitz’s appeal on its merits.24
    B.	    Conitz’s Appeal Is Moot Because Further Pursuit Of His Claims On
    Remand Would Be Barred By Res Judicata.
    The superior court dismissed Conitz’s appeal as moot, finding that the
    decisions in the federal cases barred him from litigating his claims any further. The
    doctrine of res judicata precludes a party from relitigating “a cause of action that has
    already been litigated and decided.”25        The elements necessary to the doctrine’s
    application are “(1) a final judgment on the merits, (2) from a court of competent
    jurisdiction, (3) in a dispute between the same parties (or their privies) about the same
    cause of action.”26 Conitz pursued claims in federal court alleging that Teck had
    discriminated against him in 2007 and 2008 by twice failing to promote him to mine
    24
    The appellees argue that Conitz’s first improper attempt to appeal, when he
    filed a notice of appeal in the superior court in April 2011, demonstrated that he was not
    truly awaiting a final judgment from the superior court and that his further delay was
    willful. Conitz’s counsel later asserted in correspondence with the superior court clerk
    that he believed this initial appeal to have been premature. We resolve the issue in favor
    of deciding the appeal on its merits.
    25
    Smith v. CSK Auto, Inc., 
    132 P.3d 818
    , 820-21 (Alaska 2006) (citing
    Alderman v. Iditarod Props., Inc., 
    104 P.3d 136
    , 141 (Alaska 2004)).
    26
    Angleton v. Cox, 
    238 P.3d 610
    , 614 (Alaska 2010) (citing Smith, 132 P.3d
    at 820); see also Alaska Pub. Interest Research Grp. v. State, 
    167 P.3d 27
    , 44 (Alaska
    2007) (“[T]he principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel apply in administrative
    proceedings.”).
    -10-	                                       6871
    operations supervisor, claims he also pursued before the Commission. The federal
    district court entered final judgment on the merits of these claims and the Ninth Circuit
    affirmed its judgment on appeal.27         The federal court was a court of competent
    jurisdiction.28 Thus the superior court was correct in deciding that Conitz’s claims,
    having once been decided against him, would be barred by res judicata in any subsequent
    proceeding.29
    A claim is moot if the party pursuing it would not be entitled to relief even
    if he prevails.30 Had Conitz persuaded the superior court that the Commission erred in
    its determination of his claims, a remand to the Commission would have been pointless,
    as res judicata would have prevented the Commission from pursuing Contiz’s individual
    claims in an adjudicatory proceeding.31 The superior court correctly decided that
    27
    Conitz v. Teck Cominco Alaska Inc., No. 4:09-cv-0020-RRB, slip op. at 13
    (D. Alaska Jan. 20, 2010); Conitz v. Teck Alaska Inc., 433 F. App’x 580, 581 (9th Cir.
    2011). See Patterson v. Infinity Ins. Co., 
    303 P.3d 483
    , 497 (Alaska 2013) (“A dismissal
    based on summary judgment constitutes a final judgment on the merits.”).
    28
    See, e.g., Smith, 132 P.3d at 820 (“There is no question that the federal
    court is a court of competent jurisdiction.”).
    29
    The doctrine of res judicata applies in administrative proceedings. See
    Robertson v. Am. Mech., Inc., 
    54 P.3d 777
    , 780 (Alaska 2002) (holding that employee’s
    amended claim before workers’ compensation board was barred by res judicata).
    30
    Fairbanks Fire Fighters Ass’n, Local 1324 v. City of Fairbanks, 
    48 P.3d 1165
    , 1167 (Alaska 2002) (citing Gerstein v. Axtell, 
    960 P.2d 599
    , 601 (Alaska 1998)).
    31
    We are not presented in this case with the issue of whether an adverse
    decision in an employee’s individual discrimination suit would have any res judicata
    effect on the Commission’s ability to pursue public-interest litigation against the same
    employer in the exercise of its broad statutory mandate to “eliminate and prevent
    (continued...)
    -11-                                      6871
    Conitz’s appeal from the Commission’s determination of his claims was therefore moot.
    Conitz argues unconvincingly that the elements of res judicata are not met
    here. He contends first that there would be no identity of parties between his second
    federal suit and a proceeding before the Commission on remand. He necessarily
    concedes that he and Teck were the parties in his second federal suit,32 but he contends
    that there were different parties before the Commission, one of which is the Commission
    itself, “effectively [acting as] the judge and the prosecutor.” But the Commission
    identifies the parties to its proceedings as Conitz, “complainant,” and Teck,
    “respondent.” We have previously referred to the complainant in the Commission’s
    complaint process as “the real party in interest.”33 And even if Conitz were not a party
    himself to the Commission proceeding, we would still find that he was in privity with the
    Commission at least for purposes of its later pursuit of the claims, seeking individual
    relief, that he had already lost once. “Privity ‘is a shorthand way of expressing assurance
    that the non-party has had adequate notice and opportunity to be heard, and that its rights
    31
    (...continued)
    discrimination in employment,” see AS 18.80.200(b). See, e.g., E.E.O.C. v. Jefferson
    Dental Clinics, PA, 
    478 F.3d 690
    , 696-99 (5th Cir. 2007) (holding that E.E.O.C. is not
    in privity with losing individual litigants when it seeks injunctive and other equitable
    relief in pursuit of its mandate to eliminate workplace discrimination but is in privity
    with those litigants for purposes of recovering “make-whole” or “victim-specific” relief
    for their benefit.)
    32
    See Conitz v. Teck Alaska Inc., 433 F. App’x 580, 581 (9th Cir. 2011).
    33
    Alaska State Comm’n for Human Rights v. Yellow Cab, 
    611 P.2d 487
    , 488
    (Alaska 1980).
    -12-                                      6871
    and interests have been protected.’ ”34 Alaska follows the Restatement rule that privity
    exists when a party to a suit represents a non-party.35 In its list of such representatives
    the Restatement includes “[a]n official or agency invested by law with authority to
    represent the person’s interests.”36 Conitz admits that during the initial investigation of
    his claim, the Commission had “an alignment with Conitz and essentially [was] his
    representative” (though he asserts that on remand the Commission would be “aligned
    with Teck” now that it has decided against pursuing his claim).
    In Beegan v. State, Department of Transportation & Public Facilities, we
    held that a complainant could not be barred by res judicata from pursuing a claim that
    could have been, but was not, raised in an earlier Commission investigation because he
    lacked control over the Commission process.37 But the situation here is the reverse:
    whereas the complainant in Beegan lacked the “full and fair opportunity to litigate his
    claims” that res judicata requires of the first case to reach final judgment (because the
    first case was the Commission investigation which the complainant did not control),38
    here the first case to reach final judgment was the federal lawsuit, which Conitz did
    34
    Stewart v. Elliott, 
    239 P.3d 1236
    , 1241 (Alaska 2010) (quoting Alaska
    Foods, Inc. v. Nichiro Gyogyo Kaisha, Ltd., 
    768 P.2d 117
    , 121 (Alaska 1989)).
    35
    See 
    id.
     (quoting Powers v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 
    6 P.3d 294
    , 298
    (Alaska 2000); RESTATEMENT (SECOND ) OF JUDGMENTS § 41(1)(d) (1982)).
    36
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND ) OF JUDGMENTS § 41 cmt. d.
    37
    
    195 P.3d 134
    , 139 (Alaska 2008).
    38
    
    Id.
     (quoting Sengupta v. Univ. of Alaska, 
    21 P.3d 1240
    , 1253 (Alaska 2001)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    -13-                                      6871
    control and in which he clearly had a “full and fair opportunity to litigate his claims.”
    A litigant is entitled to one such “full and fair opportunity,” not two.39
    Conitz also argues that the application of res judicata here is foreclosed by
    comment o to the Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 27.40 But this section of the
    Restatement describes issue preclusion, not claim preclusion (res judicata).41 The
    comment discusses how to decide if a trial court’s determination of an actually litigated
    issue is conclusive after an appeal;42 but it is not a requirement of res judicata that an
    issue was actually litigated, only that there was an opportunity to litigate it.43 The same
    analysis disposes of Conitz’s added claim that there was no identity of issues between
    the federal lawsuits and the Commission proceedings because the federal court did not
    decide his state law claims. This is incorrect — Conitz alleged both state and federal
    39
    See Stewart, 239 P.3d at 1241 (“In the past we have found privity only
    where the relationship allowed significant and unhampered control over the earlier
    litigation.”) (emphasis added).
    40
    Conitz supports his argument with a citation to “Comment O of the
    Restatement of the Judgments,” without specifying an edition or a section of the
    Restatement. Because he also cites to the federal district court’s decision, which refers
    to comment o to § 27 of the R ESTATEMENT (SECOND ) OF JUDGMENTS , we assume this is
    the section to which he refers.
    41
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND ) OF JUDGMENTS § 27 (1982).
    42
    Id. at cmt. o.
    43
    See Patterson v. Infinity Ins. Co., 
    303 P.3d 493
    , 497 (Alaska 2013) (“[A]
    fundamental tenet of the res judicata doctrine is that it precludes relitigation between the
    same parties not only of claims that were raised in the initial proceeding, but also of
    those relevant claims that could have been raised then.” (alteration in the original))
    (quoting Calhoun v. Greening, 
    636 P.2d 69
    , 72 (Alaska 1981)) (internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    -14-                                       6871
    claims and the federal courts dismissed them all — but it is also irrelevant; identity of
    issues, like actual litigation of the claims, is an element of issue preclusion but not res
    judicata.44
    Finally, Conitz argues that he had no opportunity to address the issue of res
    judicata in the superior court because the judge raised it sua sponte. This is again
    incorrect. Teck filed a motion in the superior court arguing that Conitz’s appeal was now
    “barred by the doctrine of res judicata” after the federal court had rejected Conitz’s
    claims. Conitz filed an opposition, arguing cursorily that preclusion doctrines did not
    apply. The issue of res judicata was raised by Teck, briefed by both parties, and
    correctly decided by the superior court.
    C.     Conitz’s Broad Civil Rights And Public Policy Arguments Fail.
    Conitz asks this court to rule on the legality of Teck’s shareholder
    preference even though the superior court did not, arguing that regardless of the policy’s
    application to his own personal circumstances, its mere existence is a civil rights
    violation that demands our attention. But we “do not lightly issue advisory opinions,”45
    and it is not our place to make a finding of discrimination in the first instance.46
    Conitz also argues that we are required by AS 44.62.570(g) to rule on the
    legality of Teck’s shareholder preference. The cited statute provides that a stay should
    44
    See 
    id.
    45
    Larson v. State, 
    254 P.3d 1073
    , 1078 (Alaska 2011) (citing State v. ACLU
    of Alaska, 
    204 P.3d 364
    , 368-69 (Alaska 2009)).
    46
    See State, Dep’t of Fish & Game, Sport Fish Div. v. Meyer, 
    906 P.2d 1365
    ,
    1377 (Alaska 1995) (holding that the existence of discrimination is a factual question that
    cannot be resolved without a hearing), superseded by statute, AS 18.80.112(b).
    -15-                                        6871
    not be imposed if “it is against the public interest.” There is no stay at issue here. Conitz
    may be arguing that the public interest exception to the mootness doctrine applies. We
    have recognized an exception to the mootness doctrine where a matter of grave public
    concern would otherwise evade review.47 But we have never applied the public interest
    exception in order to allow relitigation of a private employment dispute that was already
    decided and reviewed on appeal elsewhere, and we decline to do so here.48
    V.     CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the decision of the superior court.
    47
    Doe v. State, 
    487 P.2d 47
    , 53 (Alaska 1971).
    48
    The remaining issue that Conitz raises — whether he was entitled to an
    adversarial hearing before the Commission — is mooted by our decision of the other
    issues.
    -16-                                       6871
    In the Supreme Court of the State of Alaska
    Gregg Conitz,                               )
    )     Supreme Court No. S-14357
    Appellant,          )
    v.	                              )               Order
    )         Petition for Rehearing
    Alaska State Commission for                 )
    Human Rights, et al.,                       )
    )
    Appellee.              )       Date of Order: 3/07/2014
    Trial Court Case # 3AN-09-10085CI
    Before:	      Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, M aassen and Bolger,
    Justices
    On consideration of the Petition for Rehearing filed on 9/20/2013,
    IT IS O RDERED :
    1.     The Petition for Rehearing is G RANTED .
    2.     Opinion No. 6830, issued on September 20, 2013, is W ITHDRAWN .
    3.     Opinion No. 6871, is issued on this date in its place.
    The revised opinion changes two sentences at pages 11-12, as noted below (added
    language in bold), and adds a new footnote 31.
    Had Conitz persuaded the superior court that the Commission
    erred in its determination of his claim, a remand to the
    Commission would have been pointless, as res judicata would
    have prevented the Commission from pursuing Conitz’s
    individual claims in an adjudicatory proceeding.
    And even if Conitz were not a party himself to the
    Commission proceeding, we would still find that he was in
    privity with the commission at least for purposes of its later
    pursuit of the claims, seeking individual relief, that he had
    already lost once.
    Conitz v. Alaska State Comm’n for Human Rights, et al.
    No. S-14357
    Supreme Court Order March 7, 2014
    Page 2
    Entered by direction of the court.
    Clerk of the Appellate Courts
    /s/
    Marilyn May
    cc:	   Supreme Court Justices
    Judge Volland
    Trial Court Appeals Clerk
    Publishers
    Distribution:
    Kenneth L Covell
    Attorney At Law
    712 8th Ave
    Fairbanks AK 99701
    Sean Halloran
    Littler Mendelson PC
    310 K St Ste 400
    Anchorage AK 99501
    W illiam Milks
    Attorney General’s Office
    PO Box 110300
    Juneau AK 998110300
    Thomas M Daniel
    Perkins Coie
    1029 W 3rd Ave Ste 300
    Anchorage AK 99501
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 6871 S-14357

Citation Numbers: 325 P.3d 501, 2014 WL 895205, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 24

Judges: Fabe, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, Bolger

Filed Date: 3/7/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024