In this diversity action, Dependable Highway Express, Inc. (“Dependable”) appeals from a district court order staying Dependable’s domestic contract dispute against Navigators Insurance Company (“Navigators”) pending resolution of arbitration proceedings in England. We hold that the district court abused its discretion, and we remand for further proceedings.
I
Dependable, a California company, operates a warehouse in Los Angeles and a fleet of trucks to service warehouse customers. Navigators, a New York insurance company, issued indemnity insurance to Dependable for the period of November 1999 to October 2001. As the result of two cargo thefts in 1999 and 2001, Dependable incurred expenses totaling approximately $245,000 (for third-party payments to the aggrieved customers, as well as claims defense costs), which it submitted to Navigators for indemnification. When Navigators refused to reimburse Dependable, Dependable filed a complaint in California superior court on January 8, 2005, alleging breach of thе insurance contract.
Shortly thereafter, Navigators commenced proceedings in the High Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division, Commercial Court, in London, England. Navigators sought a restraining order against Dependable to forbid Dependable from proceeding with litigation in the United States. Navigators asserted that Dependable’s insurance policy was subject to the general terms and standard conditions of its “Columbus Wording” document, which designated English arbitration as the means for resolving disputes between the parties. 1 Aftеr hearing ex parte testimony from Navigators’ English lawyer on two occasions, the English court granted an injunction and assessed court fees of roughly $23,000 against Dependable on March 11, 2005. Despite Navigators’ attempts to notify Dependable of the English proceedings, Dependable never appeared in England.
*1063 Around the same time, Navigators removed the California state case to federal court and answered Dependable’s complaint. As an affirmative defense, Navigators raised the English arbitration provision found in its Columbus Wording document. In response, Dependable filed a motion for summary judgment, which the district court “vacated,” reasoning that a motion for summary judgment was improper before discovery.
On May 20, 2005, Navigators filed a motion to dismiss or stay the federal action in light of the English proceedings. Dependable opposed Navigators’ motion, claiming that the Columbus Wording (and specifically the arbitration provisions) were not part of Dependable’s insurance policy because the schedules summarizing thе policy’s key terms referred only to “Transport Wording.” Thus, in Dependable’s view, the difference between the words “Transport” and “Columbus” established that the English arbitration provision was not part of its insurance policy. 2 The district court granted Navigators’ motion for a stay in a brief minute order that acknowledged the English court’s injunction and stayed the federal proceedings “pending the resolution of the London proceedings, including arbitration.” This timely appeal followed.
II
Before considering the merits, we must first decide whether we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 to review the district court’s stay. Generally, interlocutory orders are not immediately appealable.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1291 (restricting appellate jurisdiction to “final decisions”). However, in certain cases, an interlocutory order may be deemed “final” for jurisdictional purposes.
See Lockyer v. Mirant Corp.,
*1064 A
In
Moses H. Cone,
a federal district court issued a stay so that the parties could resolve an arbitrability issue raised in a concurrent state court action.
The stay in this case presents a strong likelihood that the English proceedings will leave one of the parties “effectively out of court.” If the English arbitrators decide in Navigators’ favor, Dependable will have little recourse back in the United States district court.
See Ministry of Def. of the Islamic Republic of Iran v. Gould, Inc.,
Although the mooting of Dependable’s federal suit is not a foregone conclusion, the stay order provides no indication that the district court
“clearly
[anticipated] and intended] that proceedings [would] resume after the stay has expired.”
Lockyer,
B
Even if the stay did not constitute a final order under
Moses H. Cone,
appellate jurisdiction is established under
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Following the Supreme Court’s lead in
Moses H. Cone,
the
Lockyer
court buttressed its jurisdictional holding with an alternative analysis under
Cohen.
Cohen’s
second criterion is also met. In applying
Cohen,
the
Moses H. Cone
Court held that “[a]n order that amounts to a refusal to adjudicate the merits plainly presents an important issue separate from the merits.”
Finally, the stay satisfies
Cohen’s
third criterion because the “propriety of the stay will be unreviewable on appeal” regardless of whether the English proceedings moot the domestic litigation.
Lockyer,
*1066 III
We review a district court’s stay order for abuse of discretion.
See Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.,
The district court’s stay order is extremely terse. It consists of four paragraphs and contains citations to only two cases:
Landis v. North American Co.,
However, while it is the prerogative of the district court to manage its workload, case management standing alone is not necessarily a sufficient ground to stay proceedings.
See Lockyer,
In addition, the
Landis
Court reversed the lower court decision primarily because the stay would result in undue delay.
Because the stay is likely to do damage to Dependable, and it is unclear when the stay might lift, if at all, the district court misapplied
Landis
and
Leyva,
committing an error of law which rendered the order an abuse of discretion.
See Lockyer,
IV
Having determined that the district court’s stated grounds for issuing the stay were erroneous, we next consider whether the stay nevertheless should be upheld under principles of international comity, as urged by Navigators.
See Forest Guardians v. U.S. Forest Serv.,
Comity is “the recognition which one nation allows within its territory to the legislative, executive or judicial acts of another nation.”
Hilton v. Guyot,
there are limitations to the application of comity. When the foreign act is inherently inconsistent with the policies underlying comity, domestic recognition could tend either to legitimize the aberration or to encourage retaliation, undercutting the realization of the goals served by comity. No nation is under an unremitting obligation to enforce foreign interests which are fundamentally prejudicial to those of the domestic forum.
Laker Airways,
Laker Ainvays, a seminal case on anti-suit injunctions and international comity, involved an antitrust action initiated by Laker against several domestic and international air carriers. Id. at 917. In response to Laker’s U.S. lawsuit, several of the foreign defendants sought an anti-suit injunction in British court as a means to bar further domestic action. Id. at 918. The British court granted the injunction, *1068 prompting Laker to seek its own anti-suit injunction in the United States. Id. The district court granted Laker’s injunction barring further British proceedings, id., and on interlocutory appeal the D.C. Circuit held, in part, that the U.S. court was not bound by principles of international comity, id. at 915-16. The court nоted that, “[w]hen the availability of an action in the domestic courts is necessary to a full and fair adjudication of the plaintiffs claims, a court should preserve the forum.” Id. at 929. Moreover, domestic courts should be wary of enforcing foreign injunctions where the “clear thrust of the requested relief was the termination of the United States ... claim.” Id. at 930. The Laker Airways court further emphasized that Laker’s suit “was first instituted in the United States,” and thus the “initial opportunity to exercise comity ... was put to the United Kingdom courts.” Id. at 939. Because the defendants’ “clаims of comity now asserted in United States courts come burdened with the failure of the British to recognize comity,” the district court did not err by refusing to extend comity to the later-filed British action. Id.
More recently, we addressed the comity doctrine in
E. & J. Gallo Winery v. Andina Licores S.A.,
On appeal, we held that the district court abused its discretion when it declined to grant a preliminary injunction. Highlighting the strong domestic policy favoring enforcement of forum selеction clauses, and noting that neither party disputed the validity of the contract’s clause naming California as the forum, we concluded that “[a]n anti-suit injunction is the only way Gallo can effectively enforce the forum selection clause.” Id. In doing so, we rejected the district court’s application of the comity doctrine. Although the Ecuadorian action was filed first, the parties had “previously agreed to litigate their disputes” in California, and thus respecting the Ecuadorian proceedings would frustrate “United States policy favoring the enforcement of forum selection clauses.” Id. at 994. We therefore declined to extend comity to a foreign action instituted solely in an effort to “evade the enforcement of an otherwise-valid forum selection clause.” Id.
In light of the principles applied in
Laker Airways
and
E. & J. Gallo,
we conclude that invoking the international comity doctrine would be inappropriate on the inadequate record before us. Dependable filed suit in a U.S. forum before Navigators brought its anti-suit injunction action in the English court. The English court thus had the “initial opportunity to exercise comity,”
Laker Airways,
To be sure, Navigators’ actions are far less egregious than those of the defendants in
Laker Airways
and
E. & J. Gallo. See Laker Airways,
If the record were clear that the parties agreed to foreign arbitration, or if the district court made such a determination, we would have little trouble upholding the stay on grounds of international comity.
See Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
In sum, because the district court never addressed the parties’ dispute over the substance of the contract — specifically, the contested arbitration clause — we decline Navigаtors’ invitation to defer to the English anti-suit injunction obtained in Dependable’s absence.
See Laker Airways,
*1070 V
We hold that the district court’s indefinite
Landis
stay was an abuse of discretion. Furthermore, upholding the stay under the doctrine of international comity would be inappropriate at this stage based on the limited record before us. We remand so the district court can develop the record in order to determine whether Dependablе and Navigators agreed to arbitrate disputes arising from the insurance contract.
See Nagrampa v. MailCoups, Inc.,
The stay order in No. 05-56346 is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The petition for a writ of mandamus in No. 05-75033 is DISMISSED as moot. The parties shall bear their own costs.
Notes
. Apparently, Navigators and Dependable never directly negotiated the tеrms of insur-anee coverage. Instead, Navigators asserts that Dependable’s insurance broker procured coverage on Dependable’s behalf.
. Dependable's position is somewhat puzzling because it claims never to have received a copy of the Transport Wording. Thus, Dependable concedes that it entered into a contract, the general terms and conditions of which it has never actually seen. The parties did not include the original contract documents in the excеrpts of record, making it difficult for us to evaluate the argument. We leave to the district court on remand the resolution of that dispute.
. The parties’ jurisdictional statements miss the mark. Dependable asserts that the district court’s stay was an example of
Colorado River
abstention.
See Colo. River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
For its part, Navigators construes the district court’s stay as an appealable exercise of
*1064
international comity.
See JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Altos Hornos de Mexico,
. To the extent that the FAA allows a district court to refuse to enforce a foreign award, thus rendering the foreign decision somewhat less binding than an analogous state court decision, the
Idlewild
Court established that the possibility of further review by the district court is not a bar to appealability.
See
. Because jurisdiction is proper under Moses H. Cone or Cohen, if not both, Dependable's petition for a writ of mandamus is moot, and we must dismiss it.
. During oral argument, counsel for both parties acknowledged that London arbitration had yet to commence.
