1st Franklin Financial Corporation appeals from the dismissal of its petition to compel Gary McCollum to participate in arbitration, pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. §.§ 3-4. McCollum sued 1st Franklin and one of its former employees, . Kevin Dingle, in the circuit court of Etowah County, Alabama, alleging several fraud-related claims arising from a loan transaction. Eighteen days after McCollum sued, 1st Franklin filed concurrent petitions in the Etowah County circuit court and in federal district court to force McCollum to arbitrate his claims pursuant to an arbitration clause in the loan agreement and a separate arbitration agreement. The district court dismissed the petition without prejudice, abstaining “[ujnder principles of comity and federalism.” (R.-9, at 2.)
1st
Franklin represents that (as of the date of its opening brief) the state court has not ruled on the motion to compel arbitration. 1st Franklin now appeals the dismissal. Abstentions such as this are reviewed for abuse of discretion.
See Moses H. Cone Mem. Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.,
A threshold issue McCollum raises is whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction. As McCollum correctly points out, the FAA alone does not supply jurisdiction,
see id.
at 25 n. 32,
McCollum asserts to the contrary first that diversity jurisdiction is lacking because the state-court action is not removable due to Dingle’s Alabama citizenship. We disagree. As a matter of both § 1332’s language and common sense, whether another action is removable or not does not affect jurisdiction in this, an independent action. Furthermore, McCollum’s sole authority for this proposition is both weak and distinguishable. McCollum relies on a footnote in
Ultracashmere House, Ltd. v. Meyer,
McCollum makes a second, related contention based on a phrase taken out of context fro.m
Moses H. Cone.
There, the Court mentioned that for a federal court to have jurisdiction over a petition to compel arbitration, it must have jurisdiction over the “underlying dispute.”
Once such jurisdiction exists, federal courts have a “virtually unflagging obligation” to exercise it.
Moses H. Cone,
Colorado River
and
Moses H. Cone
identify six factors relevant to whether a federal court should exercise concurrent jurisdiction when a parallel state action is pending.
See American Bankers Ins. Co.,
The second factor, the order- in which the tribunals obtained and exercised jurisdiction, also weighs against discretionary dismissal. . Although McCollum filed the state court action about three weeks before. 1st
*1365
Franklin filed its federal-court petition, there is no suggestion in the record that 1st Franklin could have done so much earlier than that,
cf. id.
at 21,
The third factor, the law to be applied, also points to exercising jurisdiction. The petition was brought pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 3-4, and thus any legal interpretation will be of federal law. As in
Moses H. Cone,
the law to be interpreted does not supply the extraordinary circumstance required for a federal court to refuse to exercise jurisdiction.
See id.
at 26-27,
The fourth factor, the adequacy of the state court to protect 1st Franklin’s rights, brings up what may be the only material difference between this case and
Moses H. Cone.
The
Moses H. Cone
Court noted that state-court procedures there were not adequate to protect the rights of the party seeking arbitration. In particular, the Court worried that the language of 9 U.S.C. § 4, which requires a “United States district court” to compel arbitration in certain circumstances, would on its face seem not to apply in state court.
See id.
at 27,
In short, this case is so close to Moses H. Cone, and the factors here weigh sufficiently against abstention, that the district court abused its discretion in abstaining.
For the foregoing reasons, the dismissal is vacated and the action is remanded for further proceedings.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
