After being denied coverage for substantial medical expenses, Bradley Romer sued PreferredOne Insurance Company in Minnesota state court claiming it improperly rescinded his insurance policy. The dispute drew in other parties and bred further suits: PreferredOne filed a third-party complaint for indemnification against Envision Healthcare, Inc., in the Minnesota case and days later Envision sued PreferredOne in an Illinois federal court, seeking a declaration that it has no duty to indemnify PreferredOne. The district court exercised its discretion under the WiltonIBrillhart abstention doctrine and dismissed the federal ease. Envision appeals. Because the third-party proceedings in Minnesota are parallel to the federal case and it was not an abuse of discretion for the district court to abstain from hearing the declaratory action, we affirm.
I.
Envision Healthcare, Inc. (“Envision”) is a wholesale insurance broker; it works with health insurance companies to market their products. In that capacity, it also recruits, trains, and oversees retail agents who solicit customers. In 2006, Envision entered into a General Agent Agreement (“GAA”) with PreferredOne, a Minnesota-based insurance company, to market and sell its policies. One of Envision’s agents, Edward Thomas, sold a PreferredOne health insurance policy to Bradley Romer. Some time later, Romer had two knee operations. The first in May 2007, was completed without incident. But after the *985 second in September 2007, Romer contracted a staph infection and was hospitalized for over a week. The cost of the second operation and the subsequent stay exceeded one hundred thousand dollars. The bulk of this expense was attributed to treatment of the staph infection.
After receiving the hospital bill, Prefer-redOne began looking a little deeper into Romer’s policy application and discovered that he had failed to disclose a preexisting condition. And on that basis, PreferredOne rescinded the policy and refused to pay for Romer’s second operation and subsequent stay. Romer then sued PreferredOne in Minnesota state court for breach of contract. In the complaint, he claims that in the application interview with Thomas he truthfully answered all of the application questions and relied on Thomas to accurately complete the form.
Citing the GAA, PreferredOne filed a third-party complaint in the Minnesota action against Envision and Thomas for indemnification from any resulting judgment it suffers. Two days later, Envision filed a declaratory action against PreferredOne in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, seeking a declaration that it has no duty to indemnify PreferredOne under the GAA. The crux of Envision’s argument is that the GAA was executed in 2006 between PreferredOne and what it calls “old” Envision. In May 2007, another company, J.K. Acquisitions, acquired many of the assets of “old” Envision, including the name “Envision Healthcare” and the right to collect commissions owed by PreferredOne. The Envision Healthcare that entered into the 2006 GAA, “old” Envision, was dissolved and “new” Envision began collecting commissions from PreferredOne without the burden of the indemnification clause. Naturally, PreferredOne disputes these claims.
After Envision filed suit in federal court, it filed a motion to dismiss the third-party complaint in the Minnesota case. Among other things, it argued that the Minnesota case was duplicative of the federal case. In its words, they “involve[] the exact same legal issue” and in the interest of judicial economy the third-party suit should be stayed pending the outcome of the federal case. That motion was denied, and the Minnesota case moved forward.
PreferredOne then moved to dismiss the declaratory action in federal court for lack of personal jurisdiction. The district court recognized that the two cases are parallel actions because they involve the same parties and present the same legal issue: whether Envision owes PreferredOne a duty to indemnify. Therefore, the court exercised its discretion and dismissed the case under the
Wilton/Brillhart
abstention doctrine.
Wilton v. Seven Falls Co.,
II.
Before addressing the merits of this appeal, we consider the appropriate standard of review. The parties argue that our review of the district court’s application of the
Wilton/Brillhart
abstention doctrine is de novo. They are correct, in part. Our cases are clear that we review the underlying legal questions de novo.
R.R. Street & Co., Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co.,
As the Supreme Court noted in
Wilton
“a district court is authorized, in the sound exercise of its discretion, to stay
*986
or to dismiss an action seeking a declaratory judgment.”
III.
“Under what is known as the
Wilton/Brillhart
abstention doctrine, district courts possess significant discretion to dismiss or stay claims seeking declaratory relief, even though they have subject matter jurisdiction over such claims.”
R.R. Street & Co.,
As the Supreme Court explained in
Brillhart,
there is no set criteria for when a court should exercise its discretion to abstain.
The question then becomes whether the Minnesota case is parallel to the federal case. Two actions are parallel when substantially the same parties are contemporaneously litigating substantially the same issues in two fora.
Star-Rite Indus., Inc. v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Thus, the district court properly concluded that this case is one that the
Wilton/Brillhart
abstention may be applied to. And we find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in abstaining from reaching the merits of Envision’s suit and needlessly interfering with the ongoing Minnesota state court proceedings.
Brill-hart,
Notes
. Some of our
post-Wilton
cases have reviewed both the applicability of the doctrine and the district court's decision de novo.
See, e.g., Newell Operating Co. v. Int’l Union of United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers of Am.,
