Reliance Electric Company (Reliance), defendant below, appeals from the District Court’s dismissal without prejudice of plaintiffs’ action pursuant to the “exceptional circumstances” test set forth by the Supreme Court in
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
Plaintiff Raymond Fiedler, a Minnesota resident, brought this action in Minnesota state court on behalf of his daughter, Janet Fiedler, when Janet lost four fingers in a Reliance vacuum pump motor used on the Fiedlers’ farm. The action was premised on Minnesota state law, with the complaint stating strict liability, breach of warranty, and negligence claims against Reliance. Reliance, a Delaware corporation, removed the case to federal district court in Minnesota pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. The removal was based on diversity jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Following removal, plaintiffs’ attorneys determined that an additional defendant, the distributor of the Reliance motor, Frank Colton, should be named in the action. Because joinder of Colton, a Minnesota resident, in the federal action would have destroyed the diversity jurisdiction of the District Court, plaintiffs filed a new action in state court, naming Reliance and Colton as defendants. The complaint restated plaintiffs’ claims against Reliance and added breach of warranty and negligence claims against Colton. Reliance sought an order from the District Court staying the state court action. Plaintiffs countered by moving for voluntary dismissal of the federal court action. The District Court, sua sponte, applied the “exceptional circumstances” test and dismissed the federal action without prejudice.
In
Colorado River,
the Supreme Court set forth the conditions under which a court could stay or dismiss a pending federal suit in order to promote judicial economy. The Court emphasized that federal courts have a “virtually unflagging obli
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gation ... to exercise the jurisdiction given them.”
The Court listed several factors pertinent to a determination of whether dismissal of a federal action because of the pendency of a related state action is appropriate. The factors to be considered include “the inconvenience of the federal forum; the desirability of avoiding piecemeal litigation; and the order in which jurisdiction was obtained” by the courts.
Id.
at 818,
In deciding to dismiss the present case, the District Court carefully balanced its obligation to exercise jurisdiction against the factors weighing in favor of dismissal and found that exceptional circumstances justified dismissal of the action. Specifically, it found that “[t]he federal forum in this case deprives plaintiffs of joining a proper, and likely necessary, party. By proceeding with this action in federal district court, the parties and the courts would be forced to litigate this product liability matter piecemeal. The resulting inconvenience to both parties and the courts would be considerable. Also militating in favor of dismissal is the absence of any issue of federal law.” Order at 2.
We may reverse the District Court’s decision that exceptional circumstances warrant dismissal of the federal action only if we find an abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Lumen Construction, Inc. v. Brant Construction Co.,
Notes
. Reliance contends that it has not been permitted to argue before the District Court its claim that plaintiffs’ assertion of a cause of action against Colton was a sham, intended only to deprive the federal court of diversity jurisdiction. In support of this claim, Reliance argues that plaintiffs’ decision to seek relief against Colton came only after removal and that plaintiffs have failed to state new or substantial state law claims against Colton. Reliance, however, placed its claim before the District Court in its memorandum in support of its motion to stay the state court action. Appendix at 20. It seems plain to us that the District Court has addressed this claim in its dismissal order and has concluded that Colton is in fact "a proper, and likely necessary, party" under Minnesota law. Order at 2.
With respect to determinations of state law, this Court will defer to the conclusions of a district court regarding the law of the state in which the district court sits unless those conclusions are shown to be " 'fundamentally deficient in analysis or otherwise lacking in reasoned authority.’”
Kifer v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
