Meanith Huon is a lawyer representing himself in this appeal. After he was fired from his job as an associate at Johnson & Bell, he initiated two lawsuits against the firm and three of its other attorneys. He filed his first action in state court, asserting state-law claims of defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress resulting from allegedly damaging annual performance evaluations. Huon’s second suit was filed in federal court after his state case had been dismissed and was pending on appeal. In his federal suit Huon brought claims under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, and 42 U.S.C. § 1981 for discrimination on the basis of race and national origin, alleging that he was treated less favorably than white employees because he did not receive the same employment benefits, assignments, salary, or opportunity for probation before his discharge. Huon also threw in a supplemental state-law claim for tortious interference with a prospective economic advantage.
The district court issued a stay based on the abstention doctrine in
Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
I
Huon lost his job at Johnson & Bell on January 9, 2008; shortly thereafter, he filed administrative charges with the Illinois Department of Human Rights and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commis
The state court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss in July 2009. It concluded that Huon’s claims were defective because the allegedly defamatory statements, which the court did not find to be extreme or outrageous, were opinions protected by qualified or absolute privilege. Huon appealed, and almost two years later that case apparently remains pending in the state appellate court.
On September 22, 2009, the EEOC issued Huon a right-to-sue letter, and he followed up on December 21 by filing the federal action now before us, while his state suit was pending on appeal. In his federal complaint, Huon asserted claims of discrimination based on race and national origin, as well as a state-law claim for tortious interference with a prospective business relationship. He named as defendants the firm of Johnson & Bell, firm president William Johnson, and two of the three attorneys from the state suit. The defendants again moved to dismiss both counts for failure to state a claim, this time arguing that Huon’s complaint was long on conclusions and short on facts. Alternatively, the defendants moved to stay the state-law claim under the Colorado River abstention doctrine. The supplemental state claim, the defendants contended, is based on the same factual allegations (the unfavorable performance evaluation) as Huon’s claims in state court and will be barred by res judicata if the state court’s decision is affirmed on appeal.
Before Huon could respond to the defendants’ motion, the district court
sua sponte
ordered supplemental briefing on “the applicability of the doctrines of claim splitting and res judicata to this action.” The defendants responded by now insisting that all of the claims in Huon’s federal and state lawsuits are based on the same transactions or events — the unfavorable evaluation and subsequent termination— and that
res judicata
will bar Huon’s entire federal suit once the defendants have a final (and favorable) state judgment in hand. See 28 U.S.C. § 1738. Noting that Huon included “general allegations of racial discrimination and bias” in his state complaint, the defendants argued that the suits are substantially similar. The defendants also pressed the district court to stay the federal suit under the
Colorado River
abstention doctrine. In his response Huon argued that the defendants should be estopped from drawing any conclusion
The district court decided to stay the federal suit until the state proceedings reached an end. Applying Illinois’s test for res judicata, the court reasoned that Huon’s state and federal claims all arise out of the “same core of operative facts.” The court explained:
[Huon] asserts in both proceedings that at all times he performed his job in a satisfactory manner. In his state proceedings, he asserts that because he performed satisfactorily, the defendants’ performance reviews in which they reported that he performed unsatisfactorily were defamatory and caused him emotional distress. In the instant proceeding, he asserts that because he performed satisfactorily, his termination must have been the result of discrimination, and defendants’ reports that he performed unsatisfactorily tortiously interfered with his expectation of continued employment. Because the claims arise from the same core of operative facts, an identity of causes of action exists.
Because of the lack of a final judgment on appeal in the state suit, however, the district court believed that res judicata could not yet bar Huon’s federal suit. For that reason it turned to the Colorado River abstention doctrine. Citing three of the 10 factors relevant to whether exceptional circumstances warrant a stay, the court concluded that a stay was appropriate. The court provided a brief explanation for its decision, reasoning that allowing the federal case to proceed would result in piecemeal litigation, that the proceedings in state court were at an advanced stage, and that the state litigation had provided Huon an adequate forum to air his claims of discrimination and tortious interference even though he had chosen not to do so.
II
Generally speaking, “the pendency of an action in the state court is no bar to proceedings concerning the same matter in the Federal court.”
Colorado River,
To determine whether a stay is appropriate, a district court must first evaluate whether the federal and state cases are parallel.
Adkins v. VIM Recycling, Inc.,
Huon argues that the district court erred in concluding that his two suits are parallel. He points out that the named defendants are slightly different in each one and the discrimination claims were not litigated in state court. In response the defendants, applying the test for res judicata, argue that the same parties are involved because firm president Johnson, the only new defendant in the federal suit, is in privity with the defendant firm. The defendants also suggest that the cases involve the same claims because, they contend, Huon’s federal discrimination claims arise out of the “same core of operative facts.”
Huon has the better of this argument. Given the rigorous standards for this form of abstention, the district court’s explanation for its findings is insufficient to support a stay. The court was probably misled by the defendants’ emphasis on the test for
res judicata,
under which the central question is whether the federal and state claims arise from the same core of operative facts.
Colorado River
abstention, in contrast, focuses on the more practical question whether the state case is likely to dispose of the discrimination and tortious interference claims that Huon brought in federal court. Had the court marched through all of the considerations that inform a
Colorado River
decision, it is possible that this error might have been avoided. See
Colorado River,
Moreover, even under the arguably more liberal analysis for claim preclusion, the district court’s reasoning falls short. The court concluded that the two cases arise from the same facts because Huon alleges in both suits that he performed his job satisfactorily; thus, the common theme underlying all of his claims is that the defendants’ defamatory statements or other adverse actions must be actionable. This explanation is a bit too telegraphic for us; we cannot see exactly what factual overlap the court found to exist between
Returning to the district court’s actual
rationale
— Colorado
River
— we explain why this case is not a proper candidate for abstention. The first question, as we already have indicated, is whether the two suits are “parallel.” One important factor is whether both cases would be resolved by examining largely the same evidence.
Fru-Con Constr. Corp. v. Controlled Air, Inc.,
Even assuming that Huon’s suits are parallel, the district court also should have considered whether exceptional circumstances justified abstention.
Tyrer,
(1) whether the state has assumed jurisdiction over property; (2) the inconvenience of the federal forum; (3) the desirability of avoiding piecemeal litigation; (4) the order in which jurisdiction was obtained by the concurrent forums; (5) the source of governing law, state or federal; (6) the adequacy of state-court action to protect the federal plaintiffs rights; (7) the relative progress of state and federal proceedings; (8) the presence or absence of concurrent jurisdiction; (9) the availability of removal; and (10) the vexatious or contrived nature of the federal claim.
Id.
(quoting
Tyrer,
Here, the district court’s consideration of these factors was inadequate. After restating the test, the court addressed only the problem of piecemeal litigation, the advanced stage of the state litigation, and the adequacy of the state court as a forum for Huon’s federal discrimination claims. But none of these factors was given more than a one-sentence explanation, and so even if the district court was correct that these factors weigh strongly in favor of abstention, the court failed to explain why they matter in this particular case.
Huon challenges each of the district court’s reasons, arguing that an Illinois circuit court is not an adequate forum because it will not hear “independent actions for civil rights,” that the state proceeding was not advanced because his suit was dismissed on the complaint, and that he was forced to split his claims because he had not yet received a right-to-
sue letter when the statute of limitations on one of his state claims was about to expire. But Huon is wrong on all three counts. Illinois circuit courts have concurrent jurisdiction over claims arising under Title VII and § 1981.
Yellow Freight Sys., Inc. v. Donnelly,
Even if these three factors weigh in favor of abstention, however, we are still missing the necessary explanation from the district court’s decision justifying the relinquishment of its jurisdiction. See
Tyrer,
It appears that the real motivation behind the district court’s decision was its guess that
res judicata
would eventually preclude all of Huon’s claims in federal court. But this lay in the future; the court’s anticipation of the outcome in the state appellate court was not enough to justify abstention. See
Woodford,
It may be that Huon eventually will face the possibility that his federal suit is barred by claim preclusion, if the dismissal of his state complaint is upheld on appeal. See
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp.,
Huon’s federal case has been languishing for almost two years on the assumption that the Illinois circuit court’s judgment will someday be affirmed, but that outcome is far from certain. We therefore Vacate the district court’s stay and Remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this order.
