Defendant, Garriga Trading Company (“Garriga”), appeals from a declaratory judgment entered in Superior Court, Penob-scot County. The only issue we need address is whether the Superior Court erred in
Plaintiff, Eastern Fine Paper, Inc. (“Eastern”), is a manufacturer of paper products in Brewer, Maine; Garriga is an importer, distributor, and seller of paper products in Puerto Rico. Sometime in 1974, Garriga became a buyer of Eastern’s products and a distributor for Eastern in Puerto Rico. During 1976 and early 1977, the volume of orders received by Eastern from Garriga dropped substantially. When Eastern complained, Garriga attributed the decline to non-competitive pricing by Eastern. Garriga, in turn, complained that Eastern was selling some of its paper products to another Puerto Rican paper distributor. Thereafter Eastern refused to sell exclusively to Garriga, and the two companies became embroiled in a dispute over whether the distributorship agreement was exclusive, whether it was terminable at will, and whether Eastern or Garriga had been in breach of it.
The parties could not resolve the dispute amicably. In June of 1979, Garriga commenced an action for damages and attorneys’ fees against Eastern in federal district court in San Juan, alleging breach of contract and violation of Puerto Rico’s Dealers Contract Law, Act No. 75 of 1964, P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 10, § 278, which provides in effect that a Puerto Rican dealer’s contract with a manufacturer, regardless of any provision for termination, is renewable indefinitely at the option of the local dealer unless the manufacturer has “just cause” to terminate the arrangement. Eastern’s answer in the Puerto Rican action included affirmative defenses alleging that Act No. 75 is unconstitutional for various stated reasons and that Eastern had just cause to terminate the contractual relationship because of Garriga’s non-performance of essential obligations. Eastern made no counterclaim.
At some point it was agreed between counsel for the two parties in Puerto Rico that the case there be stayed pending decision of a case or cases then pending before the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico involving the construction and constitutionality of Act No. 75. The date of the initial agreement for the stay does not appear in the record in the instant case, but the stay was certainly still operative when the Superior Court heard the present case.
In September of 1979, Eastern filed the present action pursuant to the Declaratory Judgments Act, 14 M.R.S.A. ch. 707 (§§ 5951-5963) (1980), seeking a declaration that (1) the rights and obligations of the contract are governed by Maine law; (2) the contract was terminable at will by either party; (3) Garriga’s failure to market Eastern’s products effectively constituted a breach of contract; and (4) Eastern had “just cause” to contract with others to sell its paper products in Puerto Rico within the meaning of Act No. 75.
Garriga moved to dismiss the action on several grounds, among others that the Superior Court should decline to exercise subject-matter jurisdiction because suit was already pending in Puerto Rico involving the same litigants and issues. The Superior Court denied the motion and later denied a motion, made on the same grounds, to stay the Maine action pending decision by the United States District Court in Puerto Rico. After a trial, the court granted Eastern substantially the declaratory relief it sought.
Generally speaking, whether a declaratory judgment should be issued rests in the sound discretion of the trial court.
The record in the present case gives no clue to why the trial justice thought that a useful purpose would be achieved by granting the declaratory judgment. We must therefore resolve the question of the utility of that judgment by examining the facts revealed by the record. Having done so, we find that the judgment served no useful purpose and was improvidently granted in the circumstances.
The action already brought by Garriga in Puerto Rico involved exactly the same litigants; the issues presented in the Maine action had been raised by the pleadings in Puerto Rico. In effect, Eastern sought merely a declaratory judgment upholding its principal defense to that already pending suit. Ordinarily, when a party has begun an action, “it serves no sensible end to permit his adversary to appear as equitable actor and start the proceedings for an autonomous declaration that he has a good defense to his opponent’s pending ... action.” E. Borchard,
supra,
at 303.
See also Rego Industries, Inc. v. American Modern Metals Corp.,
Pendency of another action involving the same litigants and issues does not automatically require dismissal of a subsequently commenced action.
Howell v. Howell,
On the contrary, there were clear warning signs that comity should have been accorded to the federal court in Puerto Rico and the action there permitted to run its course without the intrusion of a Maine declaratory judgment — no doubt to be introduced in the Puerto Rico action for its res judicata effect — upholding Eastern’s defense.
In its answer to the complaint in Puerto Rico, Eastern attacked the constitutionality of Act No. 75. The Supreme Court of the United States had held in
Fornaris v. Ridge Tool Co.,
Whether the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico would give the same broad sweep to 'just cause’ as did the Court of Appeals is something we do not know. It is conceivable that ‘just cause’ might be judicially confined to a more narrow ambit which would avoid all constitutional questions. We therefore reverse and direct the Court of Appeals to remand the cases to the District Court with instructions to hold its hand until the Puerto Rican Supreme Court has authoritatively ruled on the local law question in light of the federal claims. See
England v. Medical Examiners,
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has followed the admonition in
Fornar-is,
staying appeals
6
and vacating a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico when that court was deemed to have decided a case improvidently on the basis of its own construction of certain Puerto Rican civil service statutes.
Diaz Gonzalez v. Colon Gonzalez,
When the Maine Superior Court was presented with Garriga’s motion to dismiss in the instant case, nothing in the record gave the court reason to believe Puerto Rican courts had yet ruled on the applicability of Act No. 75 to a situation like that of Garriga and Eastern. A Puerto Rican case drawn to the Superior Court’s attention,
Walborg Corp. v. Tribunal Superior,
By the time the Superior Court heard the present case, the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico had handed down several decisions construing Act No. 75.
E.g., Warner Lambert Co. v. Superior Court,
In short, when the Maine court heard the present case, it knew that the applicability of Act No. 75 involved politically sensitive issues, that the law under the act was in a process of rapid development by the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, and that the federal courts were carefully avoiding any preemption of that process that might lead to unnecessary constitutional complications. In that state of affairs, it was an improvident exercise of discretion for the Superior Court to entertain Eastern’s declaratory judgment action. The Supreme Court’s admonition in
Fornaris
is probably not binding on state courts, to be sure, but a due regard for comity should have cautioned the Maine court not to hear and determine this action when the federal court in Puerto Rico, with the consent of Puerto Rico coun
Eastern has suggested that the delay in progress of the suit in Puerto Rico justified the Maine court in proceeding with the declaratory judgment action. Nothing in the record indicates that Eastern was sustaining any substantial injury as a result of that delay. It was party defendant in Puerto Rico and had not asserted any counterclaim there. Eastern did not show that the delay there threatened to be more injurious to Eastern itself than to Garriga. Moreover, Eastern’s own counsel in Puerto Rico had acquiesced steadily in extensions of the stay of the federal court action. The Superior Court should have abstained from deciding the case, and its judgment must be vacated.
It remains to be determined whether to remand the case for dismissal of the action or for issuance of an order staying further proceedings. While either dismissal or stay would have been appropriate when the case first came under consideration by the Superior Court, we think the action should now be dismissed. Eastern is defendant in the action in the federal court in Puerto Rico; it made no counterclaim in that action. Nothing in the record suggests that it will be injured by further delay in the progress of that litigation. Nothing appears to be gained by keeping the instant suit alive any longer, and it should be dismissed. However, to ensure that the dismissal will have no res judicata effect on the action in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, the judgment of dismissal should be entered expressly without prejudice.
The entry is:
Judgment vacated.
Remanded with instructions to dismiss the complaint without prejudice.
All concurring.
Notes
. Garriga also contends that the Maine court had no personal jurisdiction over it. Because we need not decide that issue, we merely assume for purposes of this opinion that the court properly asserted personal jurisdiction over the defendant.
. Although the exercise of discretion by a trial court in granting or denying declaratory relief, is accorded deference on appeal,
King Resources Co. v. Environmental Improvement Comm’n,
. The implication is not wholly certain because the declaratory judgment does not explicitly state that the “just cause” deemed to excuse Eastern’s termination of the contract is “just cause” within the meaning of Act No. 75. Eastern’s complaint had asked for a declaration that it had just cause to contract with others for the sale of its products in Puerto Rico within the meaning of Act No. 75.
It is not clear why Eastern wanted a declaration that “the rights and obligations of the parties under the contract are governed by
.
See Piasecki AircraFT Corp. v. International Union, U.A.A.A.I.W.,
.
See also Bonet v. Texas Co.,
.
See American Home Assurance Co.,
. More recently, however, the First Circuit has affirmed a judgment of the federal court in Puerto Rico construing and applying the “just cause” provision of Act 75 even though the parties had agreed that there was little, if any,
. Cf.
Pagan Torres v. Negron Ramos,
. In the Statement of Motives of Act No. 75, it is said,
The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico can not remain indifferent to the growing number of cases in which domestic and foreign enterprises, without just cause, eliminate their dealers, or without fully eliminating them, such enterprises gradually reduce and impair the extent of their previously established relationships, as soon as these dealers, concessionaires or agents have created a favorable market and without taking into account their legitimate interests.
The Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico declares that the reasonable stability in the dealer’s relationship in Puerto Rico is vital to the general economy of the country, to the public interest and to the general welfare, and in the exercise of its police power, it deems it necessary to regulate, insofar as pertinent, the field of said relationship, so as to avoid the abuse caused by certain practices.
.But
cf. Ledee
v.
Ceramiche Ragno,
