On June 1, 1988, the Land Administration of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (the “Commonwealth”) filed papers in the Superior Court of Puerto Rico, seeking to “expropriate” property owned by Duty Free Shop, Inc. (“Duty Free”), under its powers of eminent domain. After receiving an answer, various motions, responses, and after making certain preliminary determinations, the Superior Court set a hearing for October 27, 1988 on Duty Free’s defenses that claimed the expropriation was unlawful. Three days before the hearing, Duty Free filed this action in federal district court, seeking declaratory relief, an injunction against the Commonwealth, an order forbidding the Superior Court to proceed further, and damages — all based on Duty Free’s claim that Puerto Rico’s law of eminent domain violates the federal Constitution’s Fifth Amendment. The district court,
The particular form of “abstention” known as
“Younger
abstention” arises out of the federal courts’ hesitance to interfere with a state’s good faith efforts to enforce its own law in its own courts.
See generally
17A C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper,
Federal Practice & Procedure: Jurisdiction
2d §§ 4251-4255 (1988 & Supp.1989) (discussing abstention under the
Younger
line of cases). (For a discussion of other kinds of federal court abstention, see
Bath Memorial Hospital v. Maine Health Care Finance Comm’n,
In an effort to show that this case somehow falls outside the scope of the
Younger
doctrine, Duty Free makes three arguments. First, it says that it made an
England
reservation, that is, it told the Puerto Rico Superior Court (nine days before the scheduled hearing) that it wished to reserve its right to litigate its federal claim in
*1183
a federal forum.
See England v. Louisiana State Bd. of Medical Examiners,
Second, Duty Free argues that Younger does not apply to state eminent domain proceedings. But, the weight of authority, which we shall follow, indicates the contrary. See cases cited at p. 1182, supra.
Third, Duty Free argues that the Superi- or Court’s proceedings do not offer it an adequate opportunity to raise its federal claim because the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has already rejected similar arguments, which it found unconvincing.
See Commonwealth v. Rosso,
Because we hold that
Younger
abstention was proper in this case, we need not consider whether, as the district court held, abstention was also mandated under the principles enunciated in
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
For these reasons the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
