OPINION
Four duplicative class action cases have now been filed arising out of the same securities transaction — one in Ohio state court, one in New York state court, and two in federal district court in Ohio. Plaintiffs, who are represented by the same counsel, apparently want all the duplicative actions to go forward in all of the courts at the same time. This appeal presents the recurring question of whether the district court properly exercised its discretion to abstain from exercising its jurisdiction in deference to the parallel state court proceeding in Ohio. The district court, citing “considerations of ‘[w]ise judicial administration, giving regard to conservation of judicial resources and comprehensive disposition of litigation,’ ” stayed all proceeding in this consolidated federal action pending resolution of the ongoing state proceedings against the defendant.
Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
I.
The abstention questions at the heart of this appeal have little to do with the intricacies of the factual history underlying the controversy. We thus may sketch the background of this case in brief. The instant matter consists of two consolidated federal class actions, both of which were filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, asserting claims for violations of sections 11, 12(a)(2) and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933. Before either of these class proceedings were initiated, a related class action had already been filed in Ohio state court. Plaintiffs are individual investors who purchased shares of common stock in Defendant CompuServe Corporation (“CompuServe”) pursuant to an initial public offering in April 1996. They allege that CompuServe’s IPO prospectus and registration statement contained numerous materially false and misleading statements and failed to disclose vital information about its business strategies and financial outlook. When CompuServe’s stock experienced a precipitous drop in price, several suits were brought against the company.
The first of these suits, styled Greenfield v. Compuserve Corporation, was filed on June *339 28,1996 in the Franklin County (Ohio) Court of Common Pleas. Greenfield brought claims against CompuServe under sections 11, 12(a)(2) and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933 on the grounds set forth above. Greenfield also asserted Ohio statutory Blue Sky and common law claims based upon the same alleged material omissions in the prospectus and registration statement. The Greenfield plaintiff class purports to include all persons who bought CompuServe stock from the initial offering date through July 16,1996.
On July 22, 1996, nearly one month after the Ohio state action was filed, one of the law firms representing plaintiff Greenfield filed a duplicative suit in the district court below, styled Romine v. Compuserve Corporation, asserting the exact same claims under the Securities Act of 1933 against CompuServe and certain of its senior officers and/or directors. While the class period in Romine purports to be exactly the same as that in the Greenfield action, Romine does not include the state statutory and common law claims asserted in the Ohio state action. By contrast, the Ohio state court suit includes both the federal and state claims.
On March 17, 1997, the Defendants moved to dismiss or stay the Romine action, inter alia, on the grounds that because it was duplicative of the Ohio state action, the district court should refer to the first-filed, more comprehensive state proceeding pursuant to the abstention doctrine enunciated by the Supreme Court in Colorado River. Before responding to the Defendants’ motion raising the abstention issue, Plaintiff Ro-mine’s lawyers on April 17, 1997 — nine months after the Greenfield action was filed — filed yet another federal class action in the lower court, this one styled Mitelman v. CompuServe Corporation. Both the underlying factual predicate of and the claims asserted in the Mitelman Complaint are identical to both the Romine federal district court proceedings and to those in the Ohio state court actions. All three putative classes are exactly the same. The single distinguishing feature of Mitelman was that it included the IPO Underwriters — Goldman Sachs & Co., George K. Baum and Company, and Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated — as named Defendants.
On May 20, 1997, Mr. Greenfield initiated yet another class action lawsuit, this one filed in the Supreme Court of the State of New York solely against the Underwriters. On July 15, 1997, Defendants moved to dismiss or stay the Mitelman proceedings, arguing that the Colorado River abstention doctrine counseled deference to the ongoing state proceedings. On September 12, 1997, on Plaintiffs’ motion, the district court consolidated the Romine and Mitelman federal class actions. On March 26, 1998, the district court entered an Opinion and Order staying the federal action pending resolution of the state proceedings. Finally, on April 24, 1988, the Supreme Court of New York entered an order granting the Underwriters’ Motion to Dismiss those proceedings.
II.
In
Colorado River,
the Supreme Court noted that, despite the “virtually unflagging obligation of the federal courts to exercise the jurisdiction given them,”
Both cases arise out of the IPO. The proposed plaintiff classes in both eases are coextensive. The causes of action alleged in this case are-also alleged in the Greenfield Action. The theories of recovery are *340 identical. The Defendants, for the most part, are the same in both cases. The same relief is sought in both cases. Finally, a close companion of the complaints in this consolidated case and the complaint filed in the Greenfield Action reveal word-for-word identical passages.
Opinion and Order of March 26, 1998, at 9. Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the state and federal actions involved in this case do not possess the required identity of parties and issues to warrant abstention under Colorado River. First, the three named Plaintiffs (Ro-mine, Mitelman, and Greenfield) are all different. Second, Plaintiffs maintain that the absence of the Underwriters from the state action potentially precludes Plaintiffs from obtaining complete relief on all possible claims. Third, plaintiffs argue that the district court ignored the fact that no plaintiffs classes have been certified in any of these actions and that therefore, as a matter of law, the only plaintiffs with a stake are Ro-mine and Mitelman in the consolidated federal action and Greenfield in Ohio state court.
Plaintiffs’ arguments are flawed in several respects. First,'while it is true that additional claims are made against the Underwriters in the
Mitelman
action, the opposite is also true insofar as only the state court has before it state statutory and common law claims based on the alleged material omissions in the prospectus and registration statement. Thus, in fact, the state action is actually more comprehensive than the consolidated federal eases. “[E]xact parallelism” is not required; “[i]t is enough if the two proceedings are substantially similar.”
Nakash v. Marciano,
Having answered affirmatively the threshold question of whether the federal and state court proceedings here are parallel, we turn now to a formal analysis of the
Colorado River
test enunciated by the Supreme Court. In
Colorado River,
the Court declared that, in deciding whether to defer to the concurrent jurisdiction of a state court, a district court must consider such factors as (1) whether the state court has assumed jurisdiction over any res or property; (2) wheth
*341
er the federal forum is less convenient to the parties; (3) avoidance of piecemeal litigation; and (4) the order in which jurisdiction was obtained.
See
A careful balancing of the factors set forth by the Supreme Court requires us to conclude that in this ease, the district court’s decision to abstain in deference of the paral-lei state court proceedings did not constitute an abuse of discretion. The first factor to be weighed under the Colorado River test— whether the state court has assumed jurisdiction over any res or property—is inappo-site to the instant matter because no property is at issue; this factor thus weighs against abstention. Likewise, we cannot find that the federal forum in this case is any less convenient than the state forum, since both actions are pending in courthouses in the same city: Columbus, Ohio. This second faetor thus also counsels against federal abstention. Thereafter, however, our analysis strongly supports the district court’s decision to stay the consolidated federal class action proceedings pending the resolution of the state court proceedings.
In
Moses H. Cone,
the Supreme Court noted “the consideration that was paramount in
Colorado River
itself—the danger of piecemeal litigation.”
When a case proceeds on parallel tracks in state and federal court, the threat to efficient adjudication is self-evident. But judicial economy is not the only value that is placed in jeopardy. The legitimacy of the court system in the eyes of the public and fairness to the individual litigants also are endangered by duplicative suits that are the product of gamemanship or that result in conflicting adjudications.
Id. at 694.
In addition, the state court proceeding has progressed considerably further than the consolidated federal actions, a fact which *342 weighs strongly in favor of deferring to the former. At the time the district court exercised its discretion to stay its own proceedings, the defendants in the Greenfield Ohio state action had answered the Complaint; the state court had entered an order consolidating three related cases, as well as a confidentiality order; the parties were well into the discovery process, having already answered several sets of discovery requests; and the defendants had produced over thirty boxes of documents for plaintiffs review. By contrast, the consolidated federal actions were still in the initial pleading stage. The Defendants note that since the lower court’s decision to abstain, even further progress has been made in the state action: depositions have been taken; discovery requests and thousands of documents have been exchanged; the state court has placed the case on its complex administrative track; and defendants have moved for summary judgment. See Defendants-Appellees Br. 16-17 n.7. It is also not inconsequential that the state court obtained jurisdiction over Greenfield’s state action one month and nine months, respectively, before Romine’s and Mitelman’s federal actions were filed in the lower court. Moreover, in light of the fact that the state action was not a reactive suit by a defendant attempting to force abstention in order to effect a forum shopping ploy, but rather was filed first by one of the several plaintiffs in the plaintiff counsel’s stable (like both subsequent federal suits), these two factors — the progress made in the state court action and the order of filing — both counsel very strongly in favor of abstention.
The Supreme Court stated in
Moses H. Cone
that “the presence of federal law issues must always be a major consideration weighing against surrender” of federal jurisdiction in deference to state proceedings.
Id.
at 25,
Finally, we review briefly the adequacy of the state court action to protect the rights of the federal plaintiffs and the putative class. There can be no legitimate contention that the Ohio state courts are incapable of safeguarding these rights. On the contrary, Congress expressly provided that state courts have concurrent jurisdiction over 1933 Act claims. The consent to jurisdiction given by the 1933 Act bespeaks a policy that recognizes the availability of comprehensive state systems for adjudication of federal securities actions. Perhaps more importantly, as noted above, defendants cannot defeat a plaintiffs choice of a state forum by removing the action to federal court. We doubt seriously that Congress would have included the state courts as such an integral element of the 1933 Act had it feared that these courts would inadequately protect plaintiffs rights.
Because the balance of relevant Colorado River factors very strongly supports the district court’s decision to stay its proceedings *343 in deference to the state action, we conclude that the court’s decision was not an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
