The parties to this appeal are Cresta Blanca Wine Company, Inc., Schenley Distillers Corporation, each a Delaware corporation, and Eastern Wine Corporation, a New York corporation. For brevity they will be called respectively Cresta, Schenley and Eastern. Cresta is a wholly owned subsidiary of Schenley, and some of the wines put out by Cresta under its registered trade-mark “Cresta Blanca” have been distributed by Schenley. On February 21, 1944 Cresta brought suit against Eastern in the federal court for the southern district of New York. The complaint asserts two causes of action: the first charges trade-mark infringement by the use of “Casa Blanca” for Eastern’s wines; the second asks a declaratory judg *1014 merit of Cresta’s right to continue to use its trade-mark “Cresta Blanca” free from any claim by Eastern of priority in the use of “Casa Blanca”. Shortly thereafter Eastern filed in the federal court for the district of Delaware separate actions against Schenley and Cresta, charging infringement of its mark “Casa Blanca” by the use of “Cresta Blanca” as applied to wines. Thereupon Schenley sought leave to intervene as a party plaintiff in the New York action and joined with Cresta in moving to stay further prosecution of Eastern’s Delaware actions until entry of a final judgment herein. An order refusing intervention and denying the requested stay was entered April 1, 1944. This is the order on appeal. At the time of its entry no answers had been filed in any of the three actions.
The appellants contend that a federal district court which first gets jurisdiction of an equitable action, and particularly of a declaratory judgment action, should preserve its jurisdiction by enjoining proceedings involving the same issues and the same parties commenced thereafter in a federal court of another district. Considerable authority supports this rule. Crosley Corp. v. Hazeltine Corp., 3 Cir.,
There was, however, no abuse of discretion in denying Cresta a stay of Eastern’s action against Schenley. The duty to enjoin the prosecution of a proceeding later instituted in another federal district arises “only if the controversy in each court involves the same issues and the same parties.” Triangle C. & C. Co. v. National Electric Products Corp., 3 Cir.,
There remains for consideration Schenley’s appeal. Schenley was not entitled to intervene as of right under Rule 24(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c. The application was for permissive intervention under Rule 24(b). We see no abuse-, of discretion in denying it. Eastern sued' Schenley in Delaware before Schenley applied for intervention in the New York suit. It can hardly be said that intervention, had it been granted, would have related back to the filing of Cresta’s complaint. Therefore Schenley’s proposed intervention against Eastern would have been the later action between them and the very principle
*1015
Schenley invokes would require staying the New York action rather than the Delaware suit. Moreover, the proposed complaint of intervention is for a declaratory judgment and as such is addressed to the sound discretion of the court. See Samuel Goldwyn, Inc., v. United Artists Corp., 3 Cir.,
