OPINION
The Plaintiffs filed this § 1983 action against four justices of the Michigan Supreme Court, seeking a declaration that the Defendant justices’ failure to recuse themselves from two cases pending before the Michigan Supreme Court violated their Fourteenth Amendment due process right to a fair hearing before an impartial tribunal because the justices were biased against them. 1 The district court dismissed the action for lack of subject mat *414 ter jurisdiction on the basis of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, holding that since the Plaintiffs had raised the same due process arguments they now raise in this § 1983 claim in motions for recusal filed against the Defendant justices in state court, which the justices denied, it could not conclude that the Plaintiffs suffered a due process violation without concluding that the justices wrongly decided the motions for recusal. In response, the Plaintiffs argued that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine did not apply because they filed this § 1983 claim before the justices denied their motions for recusal. The district court held that, even if the Rooker-Feld-man doctrine did not bar its exercise of jurisdiction when the Plaintiffs filed this action, it nonetheless would have abstained from entertaining the Plaintiffs’ suit on the basis of the Younger abstention doctrine. We agree with the conclusions reached by the district court, and AFFIRM.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Fiеger, a well-known trial lawyer in Michigan, represented Plaintiffs Gilbert, Graves, and Amedure in civil actions filed in the Michigan state court system. Plaintiff Feiger secured a substantial judgment in favor of Plaintiff Gilbert against DaimlerChrysler Corporation, and, in a separate civil action, secured a substantial judgment in favor of Plaintiffs Graves and Amedure against Warner Brothers Corporation. Both judgments were appealed. In
Gilbert v. DaimlerChrysler Corp.,
In the second case,
Graves, et al., v. Warner Bros., et al.,
The Plaintiffs initiated the current action on September 5, 2003, nearly five months after Gilbert filed her motion for recusal, but two weeks before the Dеfendant justices denied this motion. In support of this § 1983 action for violation of their due process right to a fair hearing before an impartial tribunal, the Plaintiffs raise the same arguments that they raised in their motions for recusal, namely, that the Defendant justices were biased against them because they had a pecuniary interest in the
Gilbert
case because the Michigan Chamber of Commerce, appearing before the justices as an
amicus curiae,
donated millions of dollars to their respective campaigns, and because the justices expressed personal and professional animus toward Mr. Fieger. After oral argument on the parties’ respective motions for summary judgment, the district court granted the Defendants’ motion to stay discovery. The Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration of that order, which the district court denied. Thereafter, the district court issued an opinion and order granting the Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
Gilbert,
ANALYSIS
I. Order Staying Discovery
Before considering whether the district court properly dismissed this action, we must first address the Plaintiffs’ complaint concerning the district court’s order to stay discovery. The Plaintiffs argue that this order prevented them from developing the facts necessary to establish subject mattеr jurisdiction. When a defendant challenges a court’s actual subject matter jurisdiction, as opposed to the sufficiency of the allegations of subject matter jurisdiction in the complaint, the parties must be given an opportunity to secure and present relevant evidence to the existence of jurisdiction.
Gould, Inc. v. Pechiney Ugine Kuhlmann,
Here, the Defendants argued that the district court either lacked subject matter jurisdiction on the basis of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine or was required to abstain from exercising its jurisdiction on the basis of the Younger abstention doctrine. Thus, only facts relating to those two issues were relevant for determining the Defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The facts necessary to the former issue dealt with whether the Defendant justices had already decided the same issues presented by the current suit, while the fact necessary to resolve the latter issue dealt with whether there were ongoing state proceed *416 ings involving the same legal and factual issues as those presented in this case. The facts relevant to the analysis of these issues were never in dispute. 4
Not only do the Plaintiffs not articulate any factual issue rеlated to the subject matter jurisdiction issues asserted by the Defendants and considered by the district court on which they were denied an opportunity to secure evidence, the Plaintiffs also had a considerable opportunity to secure and present evidence of jurisdiction. They were able to secure and present evidence relating to jurisdiction after they filed their complаint, during the time they prepared their response to the Defendants’ motion to dismiss, and while they were preparing their motion for summary judgment. Therefore, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering a stay of discovery after the filing of the parties’ motions for summary judgment.
II. Rooker-Feldman Doctrine and Younger Abstention
A. Rooker-Feldman
The district court dismissed the Plaintiffs’ claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the basis of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. It noted that thе Plaintiffs raised the same issues in both their motion for recusal and in their § 1983 claim, namely 1) that the justices had an improper pecuniary interest in the Gilbert case because the Michigan Chamber of Commerce had donated millions of dollars to their election campaigns, and 2) that the justices were unable to perform their judicial duties impartially because they had expressed personal аnd professional animus toward Mr. Fieger. The court concluded, then, that it could not hold that the Plaintiffs had suffered a due process violation on the ground that they would not receive a fair hearing before an impartial tribunal without holding that the Defendant justices wrongly decided the motions for recusal.
We analyze a district court’s conclusion that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine divested it of subject matter jurisdiction under a de novo standard of review.
Anderson v. Charter Township of Ypsilanti,
The Plaintiffs argue that the
Rook-er-Feldman
doctrine does not apply to divest the district court of subject matter jurisdiction here because at the time they filed their complaint in this case (on September 5, 2003) there had been no state judgment or ordеr, and thus nothing that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine prohibited the district court from reviewing.
5
Dubuc v. Mich. Bd. of Law Examiners,
*418 The district court, in response to the Plaintiffs’ argument that a state order issued subsequent to the filing of a federal complaint cannot divest a district court of its jurisdiction, made two arguments. First, it noted, the Plaintiffs, on September 4, 2003, specifically requested the district court to enter an emergency restraining order to enjoin the Michigan Supreme Court from taking any further action in the pending case to prevent the triggering of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. Specifically, the Plaintiffs asserted, “If the [Michigan] Supreme Court denies [the motions], any federally protected rights that [the district court] might be able to intervene and safeguard will be lost under the Rook-er-Feldman doctrine.” The district court further noted that the Plaintiffs’ fears were realized shortly thereafter when the Michigan Supreme Court ruled on Plaintiff Gilbert’s motion for recusal on September 17, 2003. The district court concluded: “Therefore, taking Plaintiffs’ own argument at face value, the Rooker-Feldman doctrine divested the Court of subject matter jurisdiction once the Michigan Supreme Court denied the motions.” We would not conclude, however, simply beсause the Plaintiffs expressed concern that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine might apply to divest the district court of its jurisdiction once the motions to recuse were decided, that the Plaintiffs were therefore either bound by that opinion or waived their right to argue that, since the motions to recuse were decided after they filed their complaint in federal court, the Rook-er-Feldman doctrine did not divest the district court of its jurisdiction.
The district court also noted, and we agree, that once the Michigan Supreme Court decided the motions to recuse, this suit became a de facto appeal of those decisions, regardless of when the Plaintiffs filed the present action. Plaintiffs raised the same due process arguments in their motions for recusal as they do in this suit, so that the district court could not conclude that the Plaintiffs suffered a due process violation without finding that thе motions to recuse were decided incorrectly. The
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine forbids this action.
Executive Arts,
[W]ere we to find that the Rooker-Feld-man [doctrine] ... did not apply to federal actions filed prior to the state court’s final judgment, we would be encouraging parties to maintain federal actions as “insurance policies” while their state court claims were pending. This defeats an “elementary principle” underpinning the Rooker-Feldman doctrine— ‘that a party’s recourse for an advеrse decision in state court is ... ultimately [to] the Supreme Court under § 1257, not a separate action in federal court.
*419 Id. (citations omitted). 6
B. Younger Abstention
Even if we were to conclude that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine did not divest the district court of its jurisdiction when the motions to recuse were decided in state court, we would still affirm the dismissal of the Plaintiffs’ claim on the district court’s alternative theory,
Younger
abstention. Generally, the
Younger
abstention doctrine counsels a federal court to abstain from adjudicating a matter properly before it in deference to ongoing state proceedings.
Tindall v. Wayne County Friend of the Court,
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.
Notes
. The Plaintiffs also named John Ferry, Jr., the State Court Administrator of Michigan, as a defendant. The Plaintiffs requested an injunction mandating Ferry to remove the two cases at issue from the Michigan Supreme Court’s docket and to re-assign them to a special docket to be heard by a panel of Michigan Court of Appeals judges. The district court correctly concluded that Ferry, who is responsible for regulating the Michigan Supreme Court's calendar, is absolutely immune from injunctive relief under the judicial immunity doctrine.
Gilbert, et al., v. Ferry, Jr., et al.,
. The Plaintiffs allege that Justices Young, Marltman, and Taylor received approximately three million dollars in campaign contributions from one, or more, of their amicus curiae. They allege that receipt of these funds, and the expectation of future, similar, campaign contributions, constitutes a direct pecuniary interest in the outcome of Gilbert’s case.
. For instance, during an address made at the August 2000 GOP State Convention, Justice Robert Young is alleged to have stated: “[W]e support personal accountability. That means that if you’re stupid enough to put hot coffee between your legs ... and get burned, you don’t come to the Michigan Supreme Court for relief.... Geoffrey Fieger, and his trial lawyer cohorts hate this court. There's honor in that.”
. The Plaintiffs' complaint filed in this matter alleged that Plaintiff Gilbert had an ongoing appeal pending before the Michigan Supreme Court; that the Defendants were members of that court and in a position to decide the appeal; that they had granted a motion for the Michigan Chamber of Commerce to participate as an amicus curiae in that case; and that plaintiff Gilbert had filed a motion for recusal, requesting these Defendants to recuse themselves from hearing the case for the same reasons as set forth in this federal complaint.
. The Plaintiffs’ argument that a state court’s order that is issued after the filing of a federal complaint cannot divest a district cоurt of its jurisdiction on the basis of the
Rooker-Feld-man
doctrine was the only argument that they raised in their main brief concerning the application of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine. However, in their reply brief, the Plaintiffs raise two additional arguments as to why the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine does not divest the district court of its jurisdiction in this case. First, they repeat an argument presented to the district court, namely, that a denial of a motion to recuse is not a "final” judgment, and therefore, the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine should not apply. However, as the district court correctly noted, this court in
Pieper v. American Arbitration Association,
. The concern that a party may attempt to maintain her federal action as an insurance policy while her state court proceedings were pending is especially acute here where the Plaintiffs filed this federal claim nearly five months after they filed their motions to recuse in state court.
