This is an appeal from an order entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Charles L. Brieant, Judge, dismissing appellants’ § 1983 action against the judges and, staff of the New York Family Court, who have admittedly threatened appellants with arrest should they fail to appear at support proceedings instituted by their former wives. Judge Brieant held that the basis of appellants’ action — that the state judges had deviated from New York law in that they had notified appellants of the support proceedings solely by mail — involved questions, properly left to the state courts. He further found that appellants’ action was absolutely barred by the doctrine of Younger v. Harris,
I.
Those facts are simple and undisputed. Both appellants are divorced men currently being sued for support by their former wives. Following the filing of the support petitions, the Family Court directed its clerk to mail summonses to the two men pursuant to § 427 of the New York Family Court Act. Appellants concede that they received, but chose to ignore, these notices. Upon their failure to appear, arrest warrants were issued — as had been threatened in the first summons — but were left unexecuted until the reluctant defendants were given a second notice and opportunity to appear. 1 ******At this time, appellants instituted this § 1983 action against the Family Court officials, praying for $20,000 in damages for mental anguish already occasioned by the threats of arrest and injunctive relief against further such harassment.
Appellants concede at the outset that the Family Court could secure in person-am jurisdiction over them at virtually any time by personally serving them at their respective homes or offices. 2 Appellants also apparently have no objection to the fact that incarceration may be the penalty for defying such a summons. Their only objection is that the mailed service of process, which again *490 they admit receiving, was not authorized under § 427 of the Family Court Act:
§ 427. Service of summons
(a) Service of a summons and petition shall be made by delivery of a true copy thereof to the person summoned at least three days before the time stated therein for appearance.
(b) If after reasonable effort, personal service is not made, the court may at any stage in the proceedings make an order providing for substituted service in the manner provided for substituted service in civil process in courts of record.
(e) In a proper ease, service of a summons and petition under this section may be effected by mail.
For their part, the officials of the Family Court admit that what was apparently intended to be the exception of mailed service in § 427(c) has swallowed the x’ule of personal service in § 427(a): They state that the court routinely mails summonses in every case due to the fact that it has neither the staff nor the budget to provide personal service. 3 Judge Brieant found that this rather expansive interpretation of § 427(c) had never been challenged in the state courts; he therefore directed appellants to pursue their essentially statutory objections in those tribunals.
II.
Before we consider the primary question of federal abstention, we must briefly comment upon what appear to be alternative l’ationales for the dismissal below. First, Judge Brieant and both parties assumed that the teaching of Younger v. Harris,
We are, therefore, unwilling to endorse the district court’s view — based solely on rather dated dicta (James v. James,
Secondly, we must disagree with the district court’s suggestion that the exhaustion requirement for federal habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, is applicable here where the federal plaintiffs were merely threatened with arrest. We are, of course, aware that the Supreme Court has recently held that § 1983 cannot be used to circumvent the exhaustion requirement where a state prisoner seeks his immediate release. Prieser v. Rodriguez,
Finally, we must disagree with the district court’s apparent belief that either the anti-injunction provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 2283 or the common law of judicial immunity bars injunctive relief in this case. The Supreme Court has, of course, held that a § 1983 action is within the “expressly authorized by Act of Congress” exception to § 2283 and that injunctions against state judicial proceedings may, therefore, be granted in an appropriate case. Mitchum v. Foster,
III.
Assuming
arguendo
that appellants can maintain this action, we nevertheless believe the district court acted quite properly in abstaining from a question of judicial administration which is undoubtedly best left to the state courts. First, it must be remembered that the New York courts have not yet ruled on the sufficiency of mailed service in the circumstances of this case. It would, therefore, be improper for the federal courts to apply a constitutional standard to such an uninterpreted statute. Askew v. Hargrave,
Moreover, we have no reason to believe that the New York courts will not act to reconcile the statute and practices at issue with the Federal Constitution and state legislative intent. Indeed, one of the cases stressed by appellants, Rodoe v. Noneus,
In the event the New York courts declare that mailed service is always appropriate in Family Court actions — thus at last forcing the federal courts to assess its constitutionality — the correct standard to be applied would be “whether or not the form of substituted service . is reasonably calculated to give actual notice of the proceedings and an opportunity to be heard.” Milliken v. Meyer,
We need not, at this point, decide whether properly addressed first-class mail is so “reasonably calculated” to afford such notice. 8 It will be time enough to reach that constitutional question when it is suitably presented for our consideration. We therefore affirm the dismissal below without prejudice to the assertion of appellants’ claims in the state courts or the renewal of those claims in the federal courts after an adverse state determination.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We are advised that a few days after this appeal was argued, appellant Griese was finally arrested. . While we are at a loss to explain this turnabout by the state — which had previously stressed its good faith in not executing the long-outstanding warrants— appellant’s arrest in no way changes our view that though this action is maintainable, no federal intervention is mandated. On this latter point, we note that Mr. Griese was promptly released after his counsel appeared specially without waiving his jurisdictional objections.
. Appellant Griese is a resident of New York; appellant Blouin, while a resident of New Jersey, maintains a business office in New York.
. Affidavit of Mr. James P. McGrath, Clerk of the Family Court, New York County.
.
See also,
Samuels v. Mackell,
. As the district court noted, the state’s characterization of the proceedings will at least partially determine
Younger’s
applicability.
See,
Gibson v. Berryhill,
. We note that the Court may have already narrowed Prieser v. Rodriquez in _ its subsequent summary affirmance of Miller v. Gomez,
. N.Y. Family Court Act § 525.
. While we thus do not reach appellants’ premature constitutional claim, we should note that United States v. Wiseman,
Similarly, we would merely note that those who have studied the vagaries of personal service in New York have urged that some type of mailed service be substituted. See, e. g., Abuse of Process: Sewer Service, 3 Colum.J.Law & Soc.Prob. 17, 25-27 (1967); Tuerkheimer, supra at 859-60.
