*770 MOORE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which QUIST, D. J., joined. BOGGS, C. J., concurred in the judgment only.
OPINION
Defendants-Appellants George Dale (“Dale”), Scott B. Lakin, Carroll Fisher, and Mike Pickens, 1 all commissioners of insurance or the equivalent for their respective states, who were sued in their official capacity as receivers for various insolvent insurance companies (collectively, “Receivers”), appeal from the district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction barring them from pursuing their coercive action originally filed in Mississippi state court in these ongoing declaratory judgment suits brought by Plaintiffs-Appellees AmSouth Bank (“AmSouth”) and First Tennessee Bank (“FTB”) (collectively, “Banks”). The Receivers argue that the district court improperly entertained this action, because it lacked jurisdiction or because it should have declined jurisdiction in its discretion. Because the district court abused its discretion in entertaining these declaratory actions, we DISSOLVE the injunction, REVERSE the district court’s decision, and REMAND the case to the district court with instructions to dismiss the actions.
I. BACKGROUND
This ease concerns the latest effort of the Receivers to recover some of the funds embezzled from a number of southern insurance companies by the infamous Martin Frankel (“Frankel”).
See, e.g., Lakin v. Prudential Sec., Inc.,
Bank accounts used in Frankel’s money-laundering scheme were held by the insurance companies at both AmSouth, from 1991 to 1999, and FTB, from 1997 to 1999. Essentially, the Receivers argue that the Banks were negligent in not realizing the massive fraud that those accounts were being used to commit. In the course of the receivership proceedings, the Receivers concluded they might have claims against AmSouth, and contacted AmSouth to begin settlement discussions. On June 28, 2001, attorneys for AmSouth and the Receivers executed on behalf of their clients a tolling agreement through August 27, 2001. That tolling agreement was extended six times, through July 31, 2002. During the pendency of that tolling agree *771 ment, negotiations were ongoing; on September 27, 2001, explicitly “for settlement purposes,” the Receivers sent draft allegations to AmSouth. Joint Appendix No. 03-5517 (“J.A. AmS”) at 566. On June 28, 2002, the Receivers’ counsel sent a draft complaint that they intended to file “on or before July 31, 2002” if that “effort at compromise [was] unsuccessful,” including a “written, pre-filing demand” that Am-South had “asked [the Receivers] to make,” and indicating that the settlement offer would expire on July 10. J.A. AmS at 567-68. On July 10, 2002, AmSouth’s counsel sent a letter to the Receivers’ counsel indicating that AmSouth’s counsel had discussed settlement and litigation options with their client, but requested 1) a meeting “among the parties and their counsel”; 2) an insuranee-company-by-in-suranee-company breakdown of damages suffered; and 3) an extension of the time for response through July 19. J.A. AmS at 570. A phone conversation between counsel took place on July 15, 2002, the contents of which are contested, but which likely led to some sort of agreement that the extension had been approved. On July 17, 2002, AmSouth’s counsel sent a letter regarding the Receivers’ ongoing concerns with respect to Federal Rule of Evidence 408, governing the disclosure of settlement discussions, in which the last paragraph stated that AmSouth was “still considering” the Receivers’ demand and Am-South’s options, and that counsel would “be in touch in the near future concerning a written response and a possible meeting on July 24.” J.A. AmS at 572. On July 18, 2002, counsel for the Receivers sent a letter formalizing their approval of the extension to July 19, 2002, for a response to their settlement offer, indicating their openness to a meeting on July 24, and including a detailed breakdown of damages by bank account. Unbeknownst to the Receivers, on July 18, 2002, AmSouth had filed a complaint for declaratory relief in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee. On July 19, 2002, AmSouth sent a letter formally rejecting the settlement offer, but failing to mention the suit they had filed the previous day. The Receivers learned of the filing through the call of a newspaper reporter on July 19.
Negotiations with FTB- took place in a shorter period of time, but followed a similar track. In May 2002, the Receivers’ counsel initiated negotiations with FTB through phone conversations; to this end, they signed-a tolling agreement that extended from May 3 through May 31, 2002. This agreement was -extended, once, on May 24, 2002, through July 31, 2002 (the same date as the final date of the AmSouth tolling agreement). In July 2002, FTB requested .a formal settlement demand; while Receivers’ counsel was drafting this demand, they learned that FTB had filed the instant declaratory judgment action in the Middle District of Tennessee.
On July 31, 2002, at the end of the tolling period, the Receivers filed an action in Mississippi state .court against both Am-South and FTB (“the Mississippi litigation”). . AmSouth removed the action. to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi with FTB’s consent on September 5, 2002, based on alleged improper joinder of FTB, and asserted complete preemption of the Receivers’ claims under Federal Reserve Board Regulation J, 12 C.F.R. § 210.25 et seq. (“Regulation J”), governing wire transfers. FTB then filed a motion to dismiss for improper venue, or in the alternative to transfer the case, on September 26, 2002. On October 7, 2002, the Receivers filed a remand motion. When the Middle District of Tennessee (“district court”) decided in the instant actions to enjoin the further prosecution of the Mississippi litigation, *772 the Mississippi litigation was stayed by the federal district court in Mississippi.
In the instant actions (collectively, “the Tennessee litigation”), AmSouth and FTB ask for declaratory relief that they are not liable to the Receivers, relying both on federal law and state law defenses, and both complaints ask the district court to enjoin the Receivers from bringing any future lawsuits and require them instead to bring all claims as counterclaims in the Tennessee litigation. The Receivers filed motions to dismiss both FTB’s and Am-South’s actions on August 23, 2002. A hearing was held on that motion on January 13, 2003, and the district court issued its decision and orders denying the motions to dismiss and enjoining further prosecution of the Mississippi litigation on March 31, 2003. A timely notice of appeal was filed in each case on April 4, 2003.
Subsequently, the Mississippi litigation was stayed on April 16, 2003. In mid-2003, apparently out of concern for risking mounting legal fees for a limited potential recovery, Paula Flowers, Commissioner of Commerce and Insurance for the State of Tennessee, then a defendant in the Tennessee litigation and a plaintiff in the Mississippi litigation, decided that Tennessee should withdraw from the Mississippi litigation, and in response, FTB and Am-South agreed to dismiss her from the Tennessee litigation. See Getahn Ward, Tennessee Pulls Out of Suit Against 2 Banks, The Tennessean, July 29, 2003, at 4E. On June 23, 2003, Flowers filed a motion to dismiss her appeals in this court which we granted on June 25, 2003; on June 26, 2003, Flowers’s claims in the Mississippi litigation were dismissed with prejudice; on July 18, 2003, FTB and Am-South’s claims against Flowers in the Tennessee litigation were dismissed in the district court. Finally, in the district court below, which has continued proceedings during this interlocutory appeal, having denied Receivers’ motions to stay same, FTB and AmSouth have moved for summary judgment, and oral argument on the motion was held on May 26, 2004.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Appellate Jurisdiction
1. Whether the Injunction is Appeal-able under § 1292(a)(1)
The Banks argue that this court lacks appellate jurisdiction over the district court’s order enjoining the Receivers from further prosecution of the Mississippi litigation. FTB argues first that the district court’s order was not an “injunction” within the meaning of the statute, and therefore, as merely an order with the practical effect of an injunction, subject to the “serious, perhaps irreparable, consequence” limitation under
Carson v. American Brands, Inc.,
“Section 1292(a)(1) ... provide[s] appellate jurisdiction over orders that grant or deny injunctions and orders that have the practical effect of granting or denying injunctions and have “ ‘serious, perhaps irreparable, consequence.’ ” ”
Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp.,
Next, FTB argues that this circuit should go against the weight of authority and adopt the Third Circuit’s outlier opinion in
Hershey. Hershey
held that an injunction, issued in a coercive trademark action in the Middle District of Pennsylvania, against prosecution of a “motion for order construing and enforcing” an earlier consent judgment between the parties in the Southern District of New York, was not appealable under the earlier Third Circuit en banc decision in
Cohen v. Board of Trustees of the University of Medicine and Dentistry,
2. The Scope of This Court's Review
On appeal, the Receivers argue that the reasons given in their motion to dismiss each independently require dissolution of the injunction. See infra note 3. The Banks object on the basis of this court's limited appellate jurisdiction, arguing that this court can oniy narrowly evaluate the propriety of the injunction, without reference to the Receivers' arguments. This seems deliberately to misunderstand the nature of those arguments: because each of them goes to the power of the district court to exercise jurisdiction over these actions or its discretionary responsibility to decline to do so, they all go to the "merits" of the injunction issued by the district court, which was premised on the proper assumption of jurisdiction. The Banks' admonition that this court should only review the propriety of the injunction, without examining whether the case was properly in the district court in the first place, defies logic. While not all of the Receivers' arguments are strictly jurisdictional in the sense of attacking the bare power of the district court to hear the case, they are all jurisdictional in the sense that they attack the propriety of the district court's assumption of jurisdiction. 3 The injunction is only proper as preventing duplicative litigation if the declaratory judgment action should have been allowed to proceed. The "harm or effect" of the preliminary injunction that FTB faults the Receivers for not identifying and arguing is precisely what the Receivers are in fact arguing: that for a plethora of reasons, their coercive action, the Mississippi litigation, is the proper vehicle for this dispute-the litigation which they were specifically prohibited from pursuing.
The Banks assert that the issues argued by the Receivers can only be recognized by this court under "pendent appellate jurisdiction," which allows unap-pealable orders to be reviewed only when they are "inextricably intertwined" with appealable orders; they then argue that the grant of the preliminary injunction is
*775
not so intertwined with the motion to dismiss.
See Brennan v. Township of Northville,
B. Subject Matter Jurisdiction in the District Court
The district court’s jurisdiction over AmSouth’s action was premised on both federal question and diversity jurisdiction, whereas its jurisdiction over FTB’s action was premised solely on federal question jurisdiction. In determining whether federal question jurisdiction was properly determined to exist in the district court, we look to the Receivers’ threatened coercive action. Because the Banks’ actions are declaratory judgment actions “seeking] in essence to assert a defense to an impending or threatened state court action, it is the character of the threatened action, and not of the defense, which will determine whether there is federal-question jurisdiction in the District Court.”
Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. Wycoff Co.,
*776
Instead, FTB defends the district court’s finding of subject matter jurisdiction entirely on the basis of the so-called “complete preemption” of Regulation J. Complete preemption is a narrow exception to the well-pleaded complaint rule, whereby plaintiff is master of his complaint and can choose to assert only state law claims, in situations where Congress has indicated an intent to occupy the field so completely that any ostensibly state law claim is in fact a federal claim for purposes of arising-under jurisdiction.
See Beneficial Nat’l Bank v. Anderson,
The district court erred in holding that Regulation J, a federal regulation promulgated by the Federal Reserve Board, a federal agency, could completely preempt the Receivers’ state law claims; only Congress can completely preempt a state cause of action.
See Beneficial Nat’l Bank,
Therefore, the proper inquiry in determining complete preemption is directed to the enabling statute, here the Federal Reserve Act, ch. 6, 38 Stat, 251 (1913) (codified as amended at 12 U.S.C. § 221 et seq.). The regulations in question govern wire transfers on Fedwire, the wire transfer system of the Federal Reserve Banks. The regulations were promulgated pursuant to the authority granted by four different sections of the Act: § 11© and (j) (12 U.S.C § 248® and ©); § 13 (12 U.S.C. § 342); paragraph fourteen of § 16 (12 U.S.C. § 248(o)); and § 19(f) (12 U.S.C. § 464). None of these sections provide specific authority for the Fedwire system — instead, they are general provisions — and none of them reference causes of action having to do with the Federal Reserve system, or any of the markers associated with complete preemption. This argument is unavailing.
The district court also relied upon the Bank Secrecy Act (“BSA”) in determining that federal jurisdiction existed, reasoning that “Defendants’ factual allegations and claim implicate the BSA,” and therefore, since the BSA did not create a private right of action, “FTB’s complaint raises a federal question, if FTB’s [presumably, should be Receivers’] claims are, in effect, asserting an implied right of action under the Bank Secrecy Act.”
First Tenn. Bank v. Dale,
No. 3:02-0683, slip op. at 28 (M.D.Tenn. Mar. 21, 2003), Joint Appendix No. 03-5521 (“J.A.FTB”) at 76. The court then stated, “To the extent that Plaintiffs complaint raises this issue, clearly this is a legal question that gives rise to federal jurisdiction.” J.A. FTB at 76 (Mem. Op. at 28). These statements mischaracterize the nature of the inquiry under the well-pleaded complaint rule and the
Shelly Oil
rule: the question to be asked is whether, under the hypothetical state-law action of the Receivers, a well-pleaded federal question would appear on the face of the complaint. This question must be answered in the negative under
Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Thompson,
FTB argues on appeal that as Flowers, the only non-diverse defendant, has been dismissed from the case, diversity subject matter jurisdiction now exists. Although normally jurisdiction depends upon the facts as they are at the time of filing, curing a jurisdictional defect through dismissal of a party that destroys diversity “ha[s] long been an exception to the time-of-filing rule.”
Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Global Group, L.P.,
No. 02-1689, 541
*778
U.S. -, -,
The Receivers make three arguments in an attempt to distinguish the instant case from this clear precedent. They first argue that under the authority of
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Thomas Solvent Co.,
We are reluctant to expand this narrow exception to the time-of-filing rule (the post-filing jurisdiction cure through dismissal of a party) in light of
Grupo Dataf-lux’s
rejection of an expansion of the exception to a change in citizenship of a partnership based on individuals leaving the association. However, we also take note of the
Grupo Dataflux
Court’s characterization of the dismissal of a non-diverse party as an “established exception” to the time-of-filing rule. Op. at 772,
In
Grupo Dataflux
and
Caterpillar,
the Court indicated that the cure of jurisdiction accomplished by the dismissal of a nondiverse party can also serve to cure the statutory defect existing where a case is removed at a time when it is not in the original jurisdiction of the district courts of the United States within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a).
Grupo Dataflux,
— U.S. at -,
Title 28 U.S.C. § 1658 provides, “Defective allegations of jurisdiction may be amended, upon terms, in the trial or appellate courts.” Relying upon this section, courts have often reached beyond the specific statutory sections cited by the complaint to reach a different basis for jurisdiction — albeit one that exists on the face of that complaint.
See, e.g., LeBlanc v. Salem (In re Mailman Steam Carpet Cleaning Corp.)
Because we decide that this action should be dismissed because it is an inappropriate declaratory action, we do not need to decide whether, when such a jurisdictional defect is raised in an interlocutory appeal, we have discretion to disallow a post-filing jurisdiction cure, or, if we do have such discretion, if we should exercise it in such a situation. Instead, we hold subject matter jurisdiction exists and exercise it for the limited purpose of remanding this action for dismissal with prejudice.
C. McCarran-Ferguson Act and Bur-ford Abstention
In their AmSouth appeal, the Receivers argue that McCarran-Ferguson Act reverse preemption and Burford abstention form independent grounds for the district court to have found it lacked jurisdiction. The district court did not address the McCarran-Ferguson Act argument, but it was raised by the Receivers below. Reviewing the lines of cases cited by the parties, it becomes clear that often when faced with suit in the federal courts, a state commissioner of insurance as receiver or liquidator of an insurance company placed under the state’s care will rely on one or both of these doctrines to attempt to defeat federal court jurisdiction. Because state liquidation proceedings of insolvent insurers are exactly the sort of intricate state regulation on behalf of state-resident policyholders that these doctrines are intended to protect, these arguments have some force when angry creditors attempt to sue insolvent insurance companies in federal court to jump ahead in the queue of claims, but they have less force here, where the insurance companies are themselves the natural plaintiffs, as Receivers vociferously argue. This dispute involves the Receivers’ attempt to recover money in an ordinary common-law-damages suit; the Banks do not here attempt to disrupt a coherent state scheme in favor of enriching their own pockets.
First, the Receivers claim that the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1012(b), which provides that “[n]o Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance ... unless such Act specifically relates to the business of insurance,” reverse-preempts the Declaratory Judgment Act in this case. They argue that if the Declaratory Judgment Act allows this action against them, it impairs the operation of state laws providing for the liquidation of insurance companies, including those providing for antisuit injunctions. Antisuit injunctions were issued as part of the liquidation proceedings for each of the insolvent insurance companies controlled by the Receivers. See, e.g., Tenn. ex rel. Sizemore v. Franklin Am. Life Ins. Co., No. 99-1326-II (Tenn. Ch. Oct. 25, 1999) (Consent Final Order of Liquidation; Finding of Insolvency; and Permanent Injunction, at 4) (“[N]o action at law or equity or in arbitration shall be brought against the insurer or liquidator.”), J.A. FTB at 812, 815. Those injunctions bar suits against the insurance companies in any court; both parties agree on appeal that the injunctions of their own force *781 cannot limit federal judicial power, but the Receivers argue that McCarran-Ferguson gives them that power.
McCarran-Ferguson reverse preemption depends upon the policies that undergird state law. Where a state law protects state insurance-policyholders, it is a “law enacted ... for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance”; when it protects other interests, for instance, those of stockholders in those insurance companies, it is not such a law within the meaning of the Act.
See SEC v. Nat’l Sec. Inc.,
Of course, every preference accorded to the creditors of an insolvent insurer ultimately may redound to the benefit of policyholders by enhancing the reliability of the insurance company. This argument, however, goes too far: “But in that sense, every business decision made by an insurance company has some impact on its reliability ... and its status as a reliable insurer.” [Group Life & Health Ins. Co. v. Royal Drug Co.,440 U.S. 205 , 216-17,99 S.Ct. 1067 ,59 L.Ed.2d 261 (1979) ]. Royal Drug rejected the notion that such indirect effects are sufficient for a state law to avoid pre-emption under the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
Fabe,
This court has previously rejected a claim that an Ohio law, Ohio Rev.Code § 3927.05, requiring the insurance commissioner to revoke the license of any foreign insurance company that removes an action initiated by a citizen of Ohio to federal court, was saved from its otherwise conceded unconstitutionality by the operation of the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
See Int’l Ins. Co. v. Duryee,
Two cases cited by the Receivers concluded that McCarran-Ferguson reverse
*782
preemption protects state insurer-liquidation courts’ antisuit injunctions. In
Munich American Reinsurance Co. v. Crawford,
On the other side is a different line of cases refusing to find reverse preemption. In
Gross v. Weingarten,
Where the insolvent insurer is itself a plaintiff in an ordinary contract or tort action, courts tend to look unfavorably on claims of McCarran-Ferguson preemption of the FAA or the removal statutes so as to insulate that action from the federal courts. That seems to be motivated as much by frustration over the attempts by parties to evade federal jurisdiction as by reasoned doctrinal analysis, but one way to cast it in a favorable doctrinal light is to extend the rule of Humana — that impairment must be defined with respect to the particular cause of action — to the question of purpose. That is, an ordinary suit against a tortfeasor by an insolvent insurance company implicates a “regulation of the business of insurance” only in the attenuated fashion rejected in Fabe; an anti-suit injunction would only be a regulation of the business of insurance to the extent it protected the assets of the insurance company from suit. Here, of course, the Banks seek only declaratory judgment, based in turn on a threatened ordinary common-law action against them, and the assets of the insurance companies are up for grabs only in that attenuated fashion. A second wrinkle is the narrow or broad definition of “impair”: in Munich American, impairment was defined ultimately quite broadly, in that any suit which was in violation of the antisuit provision would have impaired that provision. The Gross court, looking to the purpose of the anti-suit provision, held that impairment does not occur unless the integrity of the core liquidation proceedings is attacked. Here those core proceedings are not implicated. Ultimately, we conclude that it would be an overly expansive reading of the case law and the purposes of the doctrine to find McCarran-Ferguson reverse preemption here. The threatened declaratory judgment actions against insolvent insurance companies for the purpose of evading liability in a threatened common-law coercive action by the insurance companies have only an attenuated connection to regulating the business of insurance.
Burford
abstention is similarly inapplicable here. First invoked in
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
Gonzalez v. Media Elements, Inc.,
D. Appropriateness of Declaratory Relief
“This court reviews the district court’s exercise of discretion under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a), for abuse of discretion.”
Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Roumph,
This court has adopted a five-factor test to determine when a district court should exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment:
(1)whether the judgment would settle the controversy;
(2)whether the declaratory judgment action would serve a useful purpose in clarifying the legal relations at issue;
(3)whether the declaratory remedy is being used merely for the purpose of “procedural fencing” or “to provide an arena for a race for res judicata”;
(4)whether the use of a declaratory action would increase the friction between our federal and state courts and improperly encroach on state jurisdiction; and
(5)whether there is an alternative remedy that is better or more effective.
Scottsdale Ins. Co.,
1. Whether the Judgment Would Settle the Controversy?
The district court did not consider this factor in its analysis, but the parties dispute on appeal whether it weighs in favor of entertaining the actions or dismissing them. The crux of the argument between *786 the parties is whether or not the ability of the Receivers to file counterclaims that will dispose of all issues in the declaratory-judgment actions can be considered in determining whether the judgments would settle the controversy. Each side argues that the rule the other proposes will swallow this factor, as counterclaims will so often be possible or even compulsory that all declaratory judgments will either be able to or not be able to settle the controversy. We conclude only that in this case, this first factor does not weigh heavily in favor of or against allowing these actions.
2. Whether the Declaratory Judgment Action Would Serve a Useful Purpose in Clarifying the Legal Relations at Issue?
This factor weighs heavily in favor of dismissing the declaratory judgment suit. The only “useful purpose” these declaratory-judgment actions could serve is an ultimate determination of liability on an already-accrued damages claim. Its usefulness is therefore severely undercut by the presence of the Mississippi litigation. This is not a situation in which a declaratory plaintiff will suffer injury unless legal relations are clarified; the Banks do not currently “act at their peril.”
See Tempco Elec. Heater Corp. v. Omega Eng’g, Inc.,
Normally, when a putative tortfeasor sues an injured party for a declaration of nonliability, courts will decline to hear the action in favor of a subsequently-filed coercive action by the “natural plaintiff.”
See
10B Wright, Miller
&
Mary Kay Kane § 2765 at 638 (3d ed.1998) (“The courts have also held that it is not one of the purposes of the declaratory judgments act to enable a prospective negligence action defendant to obtain a declaration of nonliability.”). This general rule is subject to exception when some additional harm, not merely waiting for the natural plaintiff to sue, will befall the declaratory plaintiff in the meantime. That is, a party who wants, for example, to embark on a marketing campaign, but has been threatened with suit over trademark infringement, can go to court under the Declaratory Judgment Act and seek a judgment that it is not infringing that trademark, thereby allowing it to proceed without the fear of incurring further loss. Similarly, a party with an ongoing contractual relationship who has been accused of breach can go to court and have the contract definitively interpreted, thus allowing it to conform its behavior to the law and stop the potential accrual of damages. The “useful purpose” served by the declaratory judgment action is the clarification of legal duties for the future, rather than the past harm a coercive tort action is aimed at redressing. Here, the Banks incurred no further loss while settlement negotiations continued, and at the time they filed, even the “uncertainty” of awaiting suit on past behavior would have extended less than two weeks, from the filing dates of July 18 and 19 to the end of the tolling period on July 31. While AmSouth describes the two-year settlement negotiations as a “danse macabre” in which a “Damoclean sword hung over its head,” all AmSouth ever had to do to stop this “danse macabre” was to refuse to renew the tolling agreement or to cease settlement negotiations, at which time, if the Receivers did not file suit promptly, a declaratory suit may have been appropriate.
See Hyatt Int’l Corp. v. Coco,
The district court characterized the settlement negotiations engaged in by FTB and the Receivers as “ ‘continuous[ ] accusations]’ ” for “at least several months before FTB brought this suit ‘to secure an adjudication of its rights.’ ” J.A. FTB at 63 (Mem. Op. at 15). The district court relied on
Eli’s Chicago Finest, Inc. v. Cheesecake Factory, Inc.,
FTB also argues on appeal that many of the claims advanced by the Receivers are not torts, but instead contract claims, and therefore, FTB does not fit into the category of “putative tortfeasor.” At most, this can only undermine reliance on those cases that rely on that particular formulation of the type of declaratory plaintiff at issue here. In any case, it is irrelevant to the policy considerations that underly the doctrine: Where a pending coercive action, filed by the natural plaintiff, would encompass all the issues in the declaratory judgment action, the policy reasons underlying the creation of the extraordinary remedy of declaratory judgment are not present, and the use of that remedy is unjustified. This is true whatever the nature of the coercive action underlying the declaratory action — the important distinction in the case law is between situations where some uncertainty beyond the possibility of litigation exists (i.e., trademark infringement) and those where the injury is already complete. Contract claims can sometimes fall into the first category because of the ongoing nature of a contractual relationship, whereas tort claims will often fall into the second because they are dependent on historical occurrences rather than ongoing conditions. All of the claims extended by the Receivers fall into the second category, in that they allege no present or con *788 tinual wrongdoing on the part of the Banks that would require immediate clarification of the parties’ respective rights. While the Banks might have a continuing contractual relationship. with the insurance companies and the Receivers, the historical incidents giving rise to liability are finished. Ultimately, this factor weighs heavily against the exercise of jurisdiction over these declaratory actions, where a pending coercive action exists.
3. Whether the Declaratory Remedy is Being Used Merely for the Purpose of Procedural Fencing or to Provide an Arena for a Race for Res Judicata?
Courts take a dim view of declaratory plaintiffs who file their suits mere days or weeks before the coercive suits filed by a “natural plaintiff’ and who seem to have done so for the purpose of acquiring a favorable forum. Allowing declaratory actions in these situations can deter settlement negotiations and encourage races to the courthouse, as potential plaintiffs must file before approaching defendants for settlement negotiations, under pain of a declaratory suit. This also dovetails with the previous factor: where a putative defendant files a declaratory action whose only purpose is to defeat liability in a subsequent coercive suit, no real value is served by the declaratory judgment except to guarantee to the declaratory plaintiff her choice of forum — a guarantee that cannot be given consonant with the policy underlying the Declaratory Judgment Act.
See Hyatt Int’l,
The district court found “that this declaratory judgment action 6 was not *789 filed in Tennessee for procedural fencing.” J.A. FTB at 65 (Mena. Op. at 17). We conclude that the factual determination underlying this finding was clearly erroneous, as were the legal standards used to reach this conclusion. The district court first found that the Receivers had continuously accused FTB for several months before FTB’s action was brought to secure an adjudication of its rights; then that Tennessee was a logical forum for this dispute; and finally that a controversy was presented by the Receivers’ threat of suit. Taking up this last conclusion first, we note that the presence of a controversy is a prerequisite for the district court’s initial power to hear a declaratory judgment action; its absence strips the district court of jurisdiction, and its presence therefore should have no weight in determining whether a declaratory-judgment action is appropriate. Next, whether the forum chosen by the declaratory plaintiff is “logical” can have only a minimal value in determining whether procedural fencing has occurred. 7 The question is not which party has chosen the better forum, but whether the declaratory plaintiff has filed in an attempt to get her choice of forum by filing first. That a particular forum is better or worse is irrelevant in answering that factual question.
Instead, we conclude that a review of the factual record leads to the unavoidable conclusion that procedural fencing has occurred. The Receivers, alerted to the possibility of claims against the Banks in the course of litigation against other parties, notified the Banks of their exploration of those claims and initiated settlement negotiations. The Banks indicated their willingness to consider settlement, most notably by signing a number of tolling agreements, and in AmSouth’s case,
*790
through correspondence indicating that those negotiations were ongoing. FTB requested a settlement demand, and while that demand was being prepared, filed this action. Just one day before filing its declaratory action, AmSouth’s counsel sent a letter stating that AmSouth was “still considering” the Receivers’ demand and its options, and that counsel would “be in touch in the near future concerning a written response and a possible meeting on July 24.” J.A. AmS at 572. It seems clear that the Banks filed declaratory actions not to resolve issues of liability that were hindering their normal behavior, but instead to gain procedural advantage.
See Zide Sport Shop of Ohio, Inc. v. Ed Tobergte Assocs., Inc.,
No. 00-3183,
We conclude that the practical effect of FTB’s and AmSouth’s participation in settlement negotiations and affirmative representations of that participation was to lull the Receivers into believing that amicable negotiation was still possible, and that the filing of these declaratory actions was an effort to engage in procedural fencing to secure the Banks’ choice of forum. The district court clearly erred in concluding otherwise. This factor weighs heavily against entertaining these actions under the Declaratory Judgment Act.
4. Whether allowing the action would cause friction between state and federal courts?
This is a factor that, as noted above, would have at the outset of this litigation been dispositive under the Anti-Injunction Act, and before the dismissal of Flowers from the suit weighed heavily against entertaining this action in favor of allowing the Mississippi litigation to proceed. It seems unfortunate that happenstance and procedural maneuvering by the Banks should serve to undercut this particularly important factor in the balance, but at this point it is difficult to say that requiring the district court to dismiss the action will decrease the friction between the state and federal courts.
*791 5. Whether there is an alternative remedy that is better or more effective?
The Receivers argue that the Mississippi litigation presents a better remedy, because a coercive action is an inherently more effective litigation vehicle, because the Receivers proceed in one action in the Mississippi litigation, rather than the two actions in the district court and this court, and because the parties are naturally aligned in the Mississippi litigation, noting with respect to this last point the evident misstatements in the district court’s opinion switching the two sets of parties. Am-South notes that the material witnesses reside in Tennessee, the underlying events occurred in that state, relevant documents are located in Tennessee, and Tennessee law will likely govern. The Receivers reply that Tennessee and Mississippi are adjacent, reducing the burden of travel, that two-thirds of the total loss suffered was by Mississippi insurance companies, and that the scheme was nationwide, with documents in numerous fora.
The existence of a coercive action is important to our determination that this declaratory action would serve no useful purpose.
See, e.g., Albie’s Foods, Inc. v. Menusaver, Inc.,
Ultimately, then, two factors, that the declaratory judgments would serve no useful purpose and that FTB and Am-South are using these actions for the purpose of procedural fencing, weigh heavily in favor of declining jurisdiction over these declaratory actions, with no factors weighing in favor of proceeding with the declaratory-judgment action. 8 The district court therefore abused its discretion in entertaining these actions.
*792 III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we DISSOLVE the injunction, REVERSE the district court’s decision, and REMAND the case to the district court with instructions to dismiss the actions.
Notes
. Mike Pickens is a defendant only in the action brought by First Tennessee Bank, and not that brought by AmSouth Bank, and therefore is a party only to Appeal No. 03-5521.
. Coleman v. American Red Cross,
. The Receivers argue a lack of federal question jurisdiction and McCarran-Ferguson reverse preemption of the Declaratory Judgment Act, both of which would render the district court's injunction void for lack of jurisdiction over these actions, and that Burford abstention was proper and that these are not proper declaratory actions, which doctrines go to the discretionary assumption of jurisdiction and would render the injunction below an abuse of the district court's discretion.
. The district court specifically stated, "Thus, clearly federal questions are present here and the Court concludes that a federal scenario is presented in which Defendants' state law claims could be completely preempted by Regulation J.” First Tenn. Bank v. Dale, No. 3:02-0683, slip op. at 28 (M.D.Tenn. Mar. 31, 2003), Joint Appendix No. 03-5521 ("J.A. FTB”) at 76. As the Receivers note, this formulation misunderstands the narrowly drawn nature of complete preemption and the necessity of looking to the character of the threatened action on its face in determining federal question jurisdiction in a declaratory action.
.
Faysound Ltd. v. United Coconut Chemicals, Inc.,
. The district court issued a memorandum decision in FTB’s action against the receivers making findings only as to FTB's action, but then denied the Receivers' motion to dismiss in the AmSouth action "[f]or the reasons stated in the First Tennessee action.” AmSouth Bank v. Dale, No. 3:02-0677 (M.D.Tenn. Mar. 31, 2003) (order denying motion to dismiss and granting injunction), Joint Appendix No. 03-5517 ("J.A. AmSouth”) at 42. We find it *789 to be clear on the record that AmSouth engaged in procedural fencing, and therefore we do not need to remand for separate factual findings to evaluate the propriety of each of these actions.
. It is unclear whether the propriety of Tennessee as a forum was weighed by the district court as part of the "procedural fencing” analysis, or as a separate factor in determining whether the declaratory judgment was appropriate. The parties vigorously contest whether the district court appropriately considered the logic of the forum. The Receivers cite
Essex Group, Inc. v. Cobra Wire & Cable, Inc.,
. The district court also relied on the first-filed rule in denying the Receivers’ motion to dismiss, which was likely improper, in that the first-filed rule only applies to two cases filed in separate federal courts,
see Zide Sport Shop of Ohio, Inc. v. Ed Tobergte Assocs., Inc.,
No. 00-3183,
