This appeal from the dismissal of a suit seeking an order to arbitrate requires us to consider the intersection of class actions, arbitration, and Colorado River (parallel-proceeding) abstention. Underlying the appeal is a dispute between a group of affiliated corporations (CIGNA for short) and 288,000 (!) physicians, hospitals, and other providers of health care with which CIGNA, an administrator of employee health-benefits plans, has contracts for the provision of health care to the participants in the plans. Under these “managed care” contracts, as they are known, CIGNA reimburses its contract partners for the health-care services that they provide in fulfillment of its obligations to participants in the plans that it administers. The providers claim that after making these contracts CIGNA installed a computer program for calculating the amount it owed them that has resulted in systematic under-payment, in breach of their contracts.
In May 2000 the providers filed a class action in an Illinois state court against CIGNA which CIGNA wanted to but could not remove to federal court because one of the named plaintiffs was a citizen of Texas, as is one of the CIGNA affiliates named as defendants. However, many of the managed-care contracts contain an arbitration *851 clause, and in July 2001, just days after the end of the period for providers to opt out if they wanted from the state court suit, CIGNA filed suit in federal district court against the named plaintiffs in the state court suit minus the Texas physician and the rest of the class. It based federal jurisdiction on diversity of citizenship and sought an order under section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act (Title 9 of the U.S.Code) to compel arbitration of all disputes arising under managed-care contracts with members of the class that contain an arbitration clause. These are not all the disputes between CIGNA and the class. A number of the managed-care contracts (we don’t know how many) do not contain an arbitration clause. But some or all of the providers that had such contracts may have received from CIGNA a document called “Program Requirements” that, CIGNA argues, grafted an arbitration clause onto the contract. Because the ar-bitrability of the disputes under these contracts would have to be determined on a contract-by-contract basis, CIGNA argues that the arbitrability of those disputes cannot be decided in a class action and so must be resolved by the state court. CIG-NA’s position is inconsistent, since the suit in the state court, the suit in which it concedes that the issue of the arbitrability of these other disputes must be resolved, is itself a class action. However that may be, a few days after filing its federal class action suit CIGNA moved the state court to order arbitration of the arbitrable disputes not encompassed by the federal suit.
In January 2002 the district judge dismissed the suit on the basis of the abstention doctrine created by
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
The providers’ position on that issue is unclear, but clearly they are not yet prepared to concede that all their contractual disputes, or even all that arise out of managed-care contracts that contain an arbitration clause, are arbitrable. The issue of arbitrability is at present before the state judge with briefs due this month.
A federal court is authorized to stay proceedings in a lawsuit before it because parallel proceedings are pending in another court, either federal or state.
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Corp.,
Abstention in favor of a parallel proceeding in another court is disfavored, because it deprives the plaintiff of his choice of forum in the likely event that, as just noted, the effect of abstention is to make the decision in the parallel proceeding res judicata in the proceeding that has been stayed. See also
Evans Transportation Co. v. Scullin Steel Co.,
CIGNA points out that no federal appellate court has ever upheld a decision to abstain in a suit seeking an order to compel arbitration. The reason may just be, however, that such decisions are rare.
In re Mercury Construction Corp.,
CIGNA’s principal argument against abstention, as distinct from its futile invocation of inapposite authority, is that the providers’ state court suit was an effort to derail its contractual right to arbitration. It points out that “federal courts will not ‘permit a party to a contract to circumvent an arbitration clause by commencing litigation in a state court.’ ”
In re Mercury Construction Corp., supra,
The arbitration clauses do more than provide a potential defense, however. Because CIGNA can satisfy the requirements for diversity jurisdiction with respect to a suit against the named plaintiffs (minus the Texan) and the rest of the class, it was entitled to bring this suit for an order under 9 U.S.C. § 4 to compel arbitration. (And if CIGNA was playing games in not naming the Texan, the class lawyers in the state suit may have been playing games in naming him, in order to prevent removal to federal court.) If, however, CIGNA is seeking relief equally available from the state court, the district court had compelling reasons of judicial economy to abstain, because the procedure favored by CIGNA involves an awkward split of'the issue of arbitrability between contracts that contain an arbitration clause and contract's claimed to incorporate such a clause by reference in another document, and also because while the issue of arbitrability is about to be briefed in the state court there has been no movement in CIGNA’s federal suit. There hasn’t even been a determination that the suit can be maintained as a class action — and suits against defendant classes,- though authorized, Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a) (a class may ‘‘sue or be sued”);
Kaucky v. Southwest Airlines Co.,
The arbitration clause incorporated by reference (if it is incorporated by refer *854 ence and thus made applicable to disputes arising under the contracts that do not contain an arbitration clause) may, for all we know, be identical to the clause contained in the contracts, and that would mean that two judges, one state and one federal, would be addressing the identical issue. And given, the state court’s head start, the state proceeding would probably wind up before the federal and preclusion would attach, and then CIGNA would have gained nothing but delay frojn its maneuvers. Delay may be what it wants; sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
For all these reasons, we do not think the case governed by the refusal of the Supreme Court in
Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. v. Byrd,
Granted, there is more to the Federal Arbitration Act than the creation of a remedy in federal district courts for breach of a contractual undertaking to arbitrate a dispute. With regard to contracts in interstate commerce, which CIGNA’s managed-care contracts are acknowledged to be, the Act makes arbitration clauses “valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.” 9 U.S.C. § 2. This provision forbids a state to discriminate against arbitration clauses; the state must give them the same respect it gives ordinary contracts.
Doctor’s Associates, Inc. v. Casarotto,
CIGNA has one good point: the state judge’s refusal to stay discovery on the merits of the providers’ breach of contract claims until the issue of arbitrability is resolved puts the cart before the horse. If a dispute is arbitrable, responsibility for the conduct of discovery lies with the arbitrators — indeed, for the sake of economy and in contrast to the practice in adjudication, parties to an arbitration do not conduct discovery; the arbitrators do. 9 U.S.C. § 7;
Amgen, Inc. v. Kidney Center of Delaware County, Ltd.,
This is all speculation; it is enough that we emphasize — and we do emphasize — that if down the road the state court judge proves unwilling or unable to enforce CIGNA’s valid rights if any to arbitration and CIGNA cannot get prompt relief from the state appellate courts, it can ask the district judge to lift the stay; and under the posited conditions, which were not the conditions when he ruled, CIGNA would receive a sympathetic hearing. But for now we think it best (more precisely, we think the district judge did not abuse his discretion in thinking it best) to allow the federal suit to be stayed at least until the state judge rules on CIG-NA’s motion to compel arbitration — provided that ruling is not too long delayed. Nor would that ruling necessarily preclude further proceedings in the district court, for in the “event that the state court action proves inadequate to protect the parties’ federal rights, ordinary principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel would not prevent them from bringing their claims back before a federal court. ‘Redetermination of issues is warranted if there is reason to doubt the quality, extensiveness,
*856
or fairness of procedures followed in prior litigation.’ ”
Lumen Construction, Inc. v. Brant Construction Co., supra,
The judgment is modified to convert dismissal of the suit into a stay of the suit and so modified is
AFFIRMED.
