We must decide whether the district court erred in issuing a preliminary injunction against proceedings pending before the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (“MCAD”) on the ground that federal law preempted state law claims because the district court was required to abstain from deciding the preemption issue under the doctrine of
Younger v. Harris,
I. Background
Appellant Carolyn Calderon was previously employed by Appellee UMass Memorial Health Care, Inc. (“UMass”). As an employee, she received printed materials from UMass describing various disability benefits for which she was eligible. One such benefit was an optional short-term disability (“STD”) insurance program available to employees expected to work at least twenty hours per week. Under the program, the employee paid the premium and could choose between policies offered by two companies, one of which was Appellee Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company (“Colonial”). Neither UMass’s description of benefits nor Colonial’s policy contained any reference to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., although the description included a section describing an employee’s right to appeal a denial of benefits, which UMass and Colonial now characterize as “the employee’s rights under ERISA.”
Calderon selected and purchased the STD coverage from Colonial. Colonial’s STD policy contained a provision excluding coverage for “psychiatric or psychological condition[s] including but not limited to affective conditions, neuroses, anxiety, stress and adjustment reactions.” When Calderon later submitted a claim for STD benefits due to major depressive disorder, panic disorder, and grief reaction, Colonial denied benefits pursuant to this exclusion.
Calderon then filed a Charge of Discrimination with MCAD. The charge alleged that, by providing STD benefits to persons with physical, but not mental, disabilities, UMass and Colonial violated state anti-discrimination law, specifically, Massachusetts General Laws ch. 151B § 4 and 272 §§ 92A, 98, and 98A, as well as the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. MCAD notified UMass and Colonial of the charge and requested that each submit a written “position statement.”
In response, UMass and Colonial filed this action, seeking a declaratory judgment that Calderon’s state law claims were preempted by ERISA and injunctive relief barring further investigation by MCAD.
2
MCAD and Calderon filed cross-motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction under the Younger abstention doctrine. They argued that preemption could not be “facially conclusive” here, for two reasons. First, they argued that Calderon’s state law claims were not subject to ERISA preemption because they also constituted federal discrimination claims under the ADA. Because the First Circuit has never addressed whether the ADA prohibits discrimination between mental disabilities and physical disabilities in the provision of STD benefits, Calderon and MCAD argued that this constituted a question of first impression; thus, that preemption could not be facially conclusive. Second, they argued that a factual dispute existed as to whether the STD plan at issue actually qualified as an employee benefits plan under ERISA, and that the existence of such a dispute required abstention under Younger, or, at a minimum, a factual determination by the district court.
The district court rejected both arguments and declined to abstain. It reasoned that, although the Younger criteria for abstention were met, it was “facially conclusive” that ERISA preempted the MCAD investigation with regard to Calderon’s state anti-discrimination claims. In order to reach this conclusion, the district court first conducted its own analysis of whether Calderon’s discrimination claims could succeed under the ADA, and thus survive preemption. It concluded that the ADA would not apply to Calderon’s claims and, thus, they were preempted by ERISA.
The district court further concluded that no factual determination regarding the plan’s ERISA status was necessary, reasoning that “factual inquiry [into the ERISA status of plaintiffs plan] is collateral to the issue presented here, and need not be conducted in federal court.” The district court explained:
At this stage of the proceedings, in deciding a motion for preliminary injunction, the Court finds only that the portion of the MCAD investigation applying state anti-discrimination law to a plan covered by ERISA is preempted. If further factual investigation before the MCAD, or future discovery in this action, reveals that the plan at issue here is in fact not covered by ERISA, the preliminary injunction will be modified accordingly.
Accordingly, the district court denied MCAD and Calderon’s motions to dismiss and enjoined MCAD’s investigation of Calderon’s charge pendente lite. This timely appeal followed.
II. “Facially Conclusive” Preemption Under Younger
Ordinarily, we “review the grant of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion.”
Boston Duck Tours, LP v. Super Duck Tours, LLC,
As a matter of comity, federal courts are required to abstain from enjoining ongoing state court proceedings absent extraordinary circumstances.
Younger,
Under
Younger,
a federal court must abstain “if (1) there is an ongoing state judicial proceeding involving the federal plaintiff that (2) implicates important state interests and (3) provides an adequate opportunity for the federal plaintiff to assert his federal claims.”
Id.
at 77,
The district court found that the three criteria for abstention under
Younger
were met here, and we agree. The parties do not dispute two of the criteria, namely, that a state judicial proceeding was pending before MCAD, and that those proceedings provided an adequate opportunity to raise the federal questions at issue. Under the remaining criterion, Colonial and UMass argue that the state proceedings do not implicate important state interests. We disagree — prohibiting unlawful employment discrimination is a “sufficiently important state interest” to warrant abstention.
See Ohio Civil Rights Comm’n v. Dayton Christian Sch., Inc.,
Because the three criteria of
Younger
are satisfied, abstention would be required unless an exception applies.
See Local Union No. 12004,
B.
The Court has acknowledged that, “even assuming the state proceedings ... are the sort to which
Younger
applies,” abstention may not be appropriate “if the federal plaintiff will ‘suffer irreparable injury’ absent equitable relief.”
NOPSI,
Because the Court concluded that the proceedings there at issue would not meet such a standard, it stopped short of determining whether such an exception actually existed.
Id.
That observation, however, has provided a sufficient basis for several circuits, including the First Circuit, subsequently to recognize an exception to abstention where preemption is “facially conclusive.”
See Chaulk Servs., Inc. v. Mass. Comm’n Against Discrimination,
Calderon and MCAD argue that these principles preclude application of the “facially conclusive” exception here. We turn first to Calderon’s argument that ERISA preemption was not facially conclusive because a question of first impression existed regarding her claims under the ADA.
1.
As the district court correctly noted, ERISA preempts “any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan described in section 1003(a) of this title and not exempt under section 1003(b) of this title.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a);
Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
Calderon argued before the district court that her state law claims allege acts that are prohibited by the ADA, thus barring preemption. She further argued that, because the ADA’s applicability to her claims presents a question of first impression in this circuit, preemption was not facially conclusive and that abstention was required. Colonial and UMass responded by arguing that, where preemption turns on the scope of another federal law, district courts have the authority to weigh novel arguments about that scope in order to determine the scope of preemption.
We have not had occasion to decide whether the ADA prohibits as discriminatory an employer’s decision to provide short-term disability benefits to individuals with physical disabilities, but not to those with mental disabilities. 3 Therefore, this constitutes a question of first impression in our circuit.
That, however, is not the question before us today. Rather, we must decide
We consider first whether
Shaw,
indeed, requires a district court to undertake such an analysis and conclude that it does not, for the simple reason that
Shaw
was a straightforward preemption case and did not address abstention under
Younger. See Shaw,
Indeed, the Supreme Court has already rejected such an approach to the abstention inquiry. In
NOPSI,
the Court expressly rejected NOPSI’s argument that “a district court presented with a preemption-based request for equitable relief should take a quick look at the merits; and if upon that look the claim appears substantial, the court should endeavor to resolve it.”
See NOPSI,
In sum, the district court’s need to conduct a “detailed analysis,” including resolving interjurisdictional differences, demonstrates that ERISA preemption of Calderon’s state law claims was not, in fact, “facially conclusive.”
See GTE Mobilnet,
The same principles of comity and federalism that proscribe the district court’s jurisdiction likewise prohibit our consideration of the merits of Calderon’s ADA claims in the first instance. See id. at 476-78. “In fact, to decide this preemption issue would require us to enter into a detailed analysis of state [and federal] law, a task in which we will not engage.” Id. at 478. MCAD has jurisdiction to conduct this analysis in the first instance, and must be permitted to do so.
2.
Because the existence of a question of first impression regarding the ADA’s ap
First, contrary to the district court’s assertion that it did not need to resolve this question, ERISA only preempts state laws to the extent that they “relate to any employee benefit plan” governed by ERISA. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). Thus, “[e]xpress ERISA preemption analysis ... involves two central questions: (1) whether the plan at issue is an ‘employee benefit plan’ [within ERISA] and (2) whether the cause of action ‘relates to’ this employee benefit plan.”
Hampers v. W.R. Grace & Co., Inc.,
III. Conclusion
Because we conclude that preemption cannot be facially conclusive if it requires the district court’s detailed analysis of a question of first impression, we reverse the district court’s entry of a preliminary injunction, and direct that it either dismiss the action or stay further proceedings until MCAD has entered a final ruling on the charges pending before it. Appellants shall recover their costs on appeal from Appellees.
REVERSED and REMANDED with directions.
Notes
. We have jurisdiction of this appeal from the district court’s grant of an interlocutory injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
. UMass and Colonial acknowledged that ERISA would not preempt Calderon’s claims under the ADA. They argued, however, that if the state law claims were preempted, MCAD would lack authority to adjudicate the re
. The district courts in this circuit are divided on the issue.
Compare Witham v. Brigham & Women's Hosp., Inc.,
. Curiously, the district court conducted this analysis, and resolved it in favor of Colonial and UMass, despite that fact neither Colonial nor UMass briefed the merits of the ADA claims raised by Calderon.
