Circuit Justice.
Tеxas state officials responsible for the collection of taxes and the regulation of insurance seek a stay of the judgments of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in these two sets of consolidated cases, pending action by this Court on their intended petition fоr certiorari. The judgments at issue upheld decisions by the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, which declared the Texas Administrative Services Tax Act, Tex. Ins. Code Ann., Art. 4.11A
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(Vernon Supp. 1991), to be pre-empted by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 88 Stat. 829, as amended, 29 U. S. C. § 1001
et seq.
(1988 ed. and Supp. I), enjoined its enforcement, and directed the State to issue refunds to the challenging taxpayers.
E-Systems, Inc.
v.
Pogue,
The authority for a single Justice to issue a stay of the sort requested here is conferred by 28 U. S. C. § 2101(f). Before the predecessor to that provision was enacted in 1925, see Act of Feb. 13, 1925, 43 Stat. 940, similar action could be taken by the Court by issuing a supersedeas under the All Writs Act, 28 U. S. C. § 1651. See
Magnum Import Co.
v.
Coty,
The practice of the Justices has settled upon three conditions thаt must be met before issuance of a § 2101(f) stay is appropriate. There must be a reasonable probability that certiorari will be granted (or probable jurisdiction noted), a significant possibility that the judgment below will be reversed, and a likelihood of irreparable harm (аssuming the correctness of the applicant’s position) if the judgment is not stayed.
Times-Picayune Publishing Corp.
v.
Schulingkamp,
The Tax Injunction Act, 28 U. S. C. § 1341, provides: “The district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.” The Fifth Circuit’s holding that this provision does not apply to state taxes that violate ERISA is in apparent conflict with the position taken by the Ninth Cir
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cuit. See
Ashton
v.
Cory,
I also think there is a substantial possibility that the judgment below will be reversed. The Fifth Circuit’s construction of the Tax Injunction Act and ERISA assumes that ERISA’s creation of a private cause of action to enjoin violations of ERISA, 29 U. S. C. § 1132(a)(3), and its provision that this cause of action cаn be brought only in federal court, § 1132(e)(1), implicitly deprive the state courts of jurisdiction to entertain claims for monetary or equitable relief that rest upon the invalidity (under the Supremacy Clause) of a state
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statute that violates ERISA. That is not an inevitable implication, and perhaps not a likely one. The Fifth Circuit’s position on the Eleventh Amendment presumably rests upon the proposition that ERISA has impliedly authоrized suit against States for monetary (as well as injunctive) relief, thus abrogating state sovereign immunity. But ERISA makes no mention of monetary relief, and in any event our cases do not favor implicit abrogation of Eleventh Amendment immunity. See
Dellmuth
v.
Muth,
As to the third condition, the likelihood of irreparable harm: In my view the Tax Injunction Act itself reflects a congressional judgment, with which I agree, that unlawful interference with state tax colleсtion always entails that likelihood. It produces in all cases not merely the possibility of ultimate noncollection because оf the taxpayer’s exhaustion of the funds but also an interference with the State’s orderly management of its fiscal affairs.
“It is upon taxation that the several States chiefly rely to obtain the means to carry on their respective governments, and it is of the utmost importance to all of them that the modes adopted to enforce the taxes levied should be interfered with as little as possible. Any delay in the proceedings of the officers, upon whom the duty is devolved of collecting the taxes, may derange the operations of government, and thereby cause serious detriment to the public.” Dows v. City of Chicago,11 Wall. 108 , 110 (1871).
See also
California
v.
Grace Brethren Church, supra,
at 410, and n. 23. The same may be said of the asserted Eleventh Amendment violation: Directing a priority expenditure from the state treasury “may derange the operations of government, and thereby cause serious detriment to the public.” The conditions that are necessary for issuance of a stay are not necessarily sufficient. Even when they all exist, sound
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equitable discretion will deny the stay when “a decided balance of convenience,”
Magnum Import Co., supra,
at 164, does not support it. It is ultimately neсessary, in other words, “to ‘balance the equities’ — to explore the relative harms to applicant and respondent, as well аs the interests of the public at large.”
Rostker
v.
Goldberg,
The application for stay of the judgments of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals is granted, pending applicants’ timely filing, and this Court’s disposition, of a petition for certiorari.
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