MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
In this action against the Los Angeles Unified School District (the “District”), District officials and certain State defendants, the District (or local) defendants have moved to dismiss the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, Rule 12(b)(1), Fed.R.Civ.P., and for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted, Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P. In the alternative, District defendants move that this Court abstain from exercising its jurisdiction “in view of the pending state court proceeding in Crawford v. Board of Education (Los *1056 Angeles County Superior Court No. C822854).” The remaining defendants, Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr., Wilson Riles, Superintendent of Public Instruction, California State Board of Education and California Department of Education (collectively the “State defendants”) have also filed motions to dismiss. They join in the local defendants’ motion that this Court abstain. Additionally, they assert two grounds peculiar to themselves, Eleventh Amendment immunity and lack of an Article III justiciable controversy.
Although the complaint refers to pendent state claims without alleging what those claims are, the primary claim here is brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for deprivation of constitutional rights. The federal claim alleged is that defendants have instituted and maintained a system of de jure segregation in the Los Angeles schools in violation of the Fourteenth and other Amendments of the Constitution. Plaintiff membership associations bring this action on behalf of their members and on behalf of a putative class of all black children attending the Los Angeles City schools.
We first address the grounds on which the local defendants’ motion to dismiss is based. These grounds are, first, that this action is barred by the doctrine of res judicata because of prior proceedings in state court and, secondly, that, even if not barred, this Court should abstain from exercising its jurisdiction because of the pendency of ongoing proceedings in state court.
Res Judicata
The District defendants contend that the complaint fails to state a claim and that the action should be dismissed because, under the doctrine of res judicata, the claim here has been previously adjudicated in the California state courts. The judgment pleaded as a bar is the opinion and remittitur
1
of the California Court of Appeal in
Crawford v. Board of Education,
Crawford
was commenced in the Los Angeles Superior Court in 1963, shortly after the landmark decision in
Jackson v. Pasadena City School Dist.,
Crawford was originally brought as a class action on behalf of a limited number of black school children, but the class allegations were later amended to include all black and Mexican school children in the District. Although the state courts appear implicitly to have treated the case as a proper class action, nothing in the record here indicates that any hearing was held or any express determination was ever made that the case was properly a class action, that it should proceed as such, that the class sought to be represented was appropriate or that the representatives were adequate and proper; indeed, there has never been any *1057 determination of who the members of the class are. 2
The action was bifurcated and liability was tried by the late Judge Alfred T. Gitelson for 65 days between October 1968 and May 1969. By stipulation of the parties, approved by the court, evidence as to liability was limited to the period from the filing of the complaint in 1963 to commencement of trial in 1968. On May 12, 1970, Judge Gitelson filed his findings of fact and conclusions of law, finding in favor of plaintiffs, and issued a peremptory writ of mandate. In his findings, Judge Gitelson found de jure segregation.
An appeal was taken and, in 1976, the California Supreme Court modified and affirmed Judge Gitelson’s decision.
Crawford v. Board of Education,
On remand to the Superior Court, extensive hearings were held commencing in early 1977 with respect to the appropriate remedy. A number of plans were proposed and rejected and in February 1978, an interim plan involving mandatory busing, Plan 2, was ordered to be implemented the following September. While hearings were being conducted on whether or not Plan 2 should be continued in effect, the California electorate approved Proposition 1, an initiative measure on the November 6, 1979, ballot, amending Article I, section 7(a), of the California Constitution. Proposition 1 provided that pupil assignment and pupil transportation were available as remedies under the California Constitution only when such a remedy would be available in federal courts for violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Thus, the effect of Proposition 1 was to nullify Jackson and the line of cases following Jackson under which pupil assignment and transportation were available remedies for school segregation “regardless of its cause,” i. e., whether it was de jure or de facto.
Shortly after Proposition 1 was adopted, defendants in
Crawford
applied for modification of Plan 2. In 1980, the Superior Court denied the application under Proposition 1 and adopted Plan 3, involving more extensive mandatory pupil assignment than Plan 2, to be implemented in September of that year. The District appealed and on December 19, 1980, the California Court of Appeal, in
Crawford II,
vacated the order adopting Plan 3 and the case was “remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.”
“In sum, no federal violation of law was established by the 1970 findings, and the trial court’s identification of the then existing racial segregation within the Los Angeles school system as de jure segregation was true only in the Pickwickian sense, and was not true at all in the sense of federal law. Because there was no evidence of acts done with specific segregative intent and discriminatory purpose, there was no federal constitutional violation — regardless of the terminology used by the court.”
Id.
at 646,
As most recently stated by the Supreme Court, “There is little to be added to the doctrine of res judicata as developed in the case law of this court. A final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action.”
Federated Dep't Stores, Inc. v. Moitie,
- U.S. -, -,
District defendants contend that the remittitur in Crawford II is a final judgment. However, its very words defy characterizing it as final. It remands the case to the Superior Court for further proceedings. As recently noted by the Supreme Court in a slightly different but analogous context:
“Under California law, an appellate court reversal of a trial court decision has the effect of vacating the judgment and returning the case to the trial court for a new trial ‘as if no judgment had ever been rendered.’ See Erlin v. National Fire Ins. Co.,7 Cal.2d 547 , 549 [61 P.2d 756 ] (1936); Salaman v. Bolt,74 Cal.App.3d 907 , 914,141 Cal.Rptr. 841 , 844 (1977). Thus, the losing party on appeal may introduce additional evidence. See Gospel Army v. Los Angeles,331 U.S. 543 , 547-548,67 S.Ct. 1428 , 1430,91 L.Ed. 1662 , quoting Erlin, supra. Although this rule regarding new trials does not apply if the appellate court did not intend a new trial, Stromer v. Browning,268 Cal.App.2d 513 , 518-519,74 Cal.Rptr. 155 , 158 (1968), such as when the appellate court decides a dispositive issue which does not turn on facts which might change on retrial, id., at 519;74 Cal.Rptr., at 160 , the Court of Appeal clearly contemplated a possible retrial here.”
Minnick v. California Dep't of Corrections,
-U.S.-,---,
*1059 In Crawford, pursuant to the Court of Appeal’s remittitur in Crawford II, further proceedings on remand have resumed in the Superior Court. In fact, plaintiffs in Crawford have taken the position that they are entitled to reopen or retry the issue of de jure segregation. Thus, the possibility of a retrial and the taking of additional evidence remains open; certainly, Crawford II does not clearly preclude such a result. There is no final judgment. 5
Finally, with respect to this requirement, the District defendants’ second basis for this motion makes it plain that no final judgment exists. That basis is that this Court should abstain from exercising its jurisdiction because not to do so would interfere with the pending proceedings in
Crawford.
The rhetorical question which immediately comes to mind is, How can there be a final judgment if the proceedings are still pending? To ask the question is to answer it.
E. g., Federated Dept. Stores, supra; Gospel Army v. Los Angeles,
The answer to the second inquiry, identity of parties or their privies, is more easily ascertainable when only individual parties — as opposed to classes — are involved. Here, the problem is even more complicated than in an ordinary class action because the class or classes involved in the prior action have never been defined or determined. The problem arises primarily because under the District defendants’ contention there is no end to the size of and membership in the class. Because the state courts have, at best, only implicitly determined that Crawford is properly a class action, there has never been any determination as to the time period involved or the date after which those black children coming of school age will no longer automatically become co-opted into the class. It was probably intended by the Superior Court that all black and Mexican school children in the District as of the date its writ of mandate was issued in 1970 be treated as members of the class and bound by the judgment. But should those who have come of school age since then be treated as members of this implicit class? Should black children who have come of school age since Crawford II, contended by local defendants to be a final judgment, be treated as implicit class members? If the answer to either of these questions is in the affirmative, should such school children be barred from litigating claimed de jure segregation occurring since 1970 or since 1980?
Because no class was ever formally certified by the trial court in
Crawford,
the scope of the class for res judicata purposes must be determined by implication from Judge Gitelson’s 1970 findings of fact and conclusions of law, which were “final” in at least the same sense as
Crawford II
is claimed to be “final”.
Johnson v. General Motors Corp.,
The claim to be adjudicated here is whether or not de jure segregation exists today in the District schools. The claim adjudicated in Crawford was whether or not, based on evidence limited to the 1963-1968 period, segregation existed in the District schools in 1970, when the liability findings were rendered. No other determination of liability has been made in Crawford. Because of the difference between these claims, 7 those putative members of the class here who were not of school age on May 12, 1970, the date of Judge Gitelson’s findings of fact, but are of school age at this time are not similarly situated to the children who were of school age at the earlier date. For res judicata purposes, then, the class now before the state court includes only those children who were class members in 1970. 8 Conversely, children who have entered the school system since that time are not members of that class, and not barred by res judicata from asserting their rights here.
The doctrine of virtual representation, adopted by some courts, is not applicable to this situation. “Generally speaking, one whose interests were adequately represented by another vested with the authority of representation is bound by the judgment, although not formally a party to the litigation.”
Expert Electric, supra, 554
F.2d at 1233;
Aerojet General Corp. v. Askew,
If there was a final judgment, then, the parties in Crawford and before this Court are not identical. 9
For these reasons, it is concluded that the doctrine of res judicata is inapplicable on the record here.'
*1061 Abstention
The District defendants next contend that this Court should abstain from exercising its jurisdiction and dismiss the action. They are joined in this contention by the State defendants. Defendants rely on
Younger v. Harris,
The law regarding abstention was recently reviewed and restated in L.
H. v. Jamieson,
“Younger and its progeny share two principal characteristics: (1) the plaintiffs sought to enjoin continuation of a state proceeding or sought to enjoin state officials from enforcing a state statute, and (2) the basis for federal relief could have been raised as a complete or partial defense to a pending or ongoing state enforcement action during the normal course of the state proceeding. When these two characteristics are present, the argument for employing equitable restraint is compelling ....
“When these characteristics are not present, however, the Supreme Court has refused to find the Younger concerns sufficiently compelling to warrant federal equitable restraint, even where a plaintiff could have raised his claim in a pending state proceeding.”
Id. at 1352-54 (footnotes and citations omitted).
Neither of the conditions required for the application of Younger -type abstention is present here. Plaintiffs do not seek to enjoin either.continuation of a state proceeding or the enforcement of a state statute by state officials. Since there is or never has been any state “enforcement” action, plaintiffs could not have raised the basis for federal relief here as a complete or partial defense to such a pending state enforcement action.
Under L. H. v. Jamieson, supra, the most recent and controlling Ninth Circuit authority, Younger -type abstention is inapplicable.
Colorado River Dismissal
The next ground for dismissal raised by the District defendants and joined in by the State defendants is that this action should be dismissed in order to avoid duplicative litigation. Defendants primarily rely on
Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
The lower federal courts have long held that a federal district court has the power to stay an action where there is a pending state action presenting the same issues in order to foster the interests of judicial administration: comprehensive disposition of litigation, conservation of judicial resources; and fairness to parties.
E. g., Weber v. Consumer's Digest, Inc.,
In
Colorado River,
the Court articulated the controlling legal standard justifying the stay or dismissal of an action in federal court because of a concurrent state court proceeding, even though federal jurisdiction is properly invoked.
10
The general
*1062
rule is that the pendency of an action in state court is no bar to proceedings concerning the same matter in federal court.
McClellan v. Carland,
Thus, the focus under
Colorado River
is “upon whether exceptional circumstances exist which indicate that concurrent jurisdiction by state and federal courts is likely to cause piecemeal litigation, waste of judicial resources, inconvenience to the parties, and conflicting results.”
Tovar v. Billmeyer,
Dismissal, however, is proper only when, in the judgment of the court, any adverse consequences outweigh in a given situation the “unflagging obligation” of the federal courts to exercise the jurisdiction given to them.
Id.
at 817-18,
In
Tovar v. Billmeyer, supra,
the Ninth Circuit indicated that in cases where the plaintiffs assert a right to relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the obligation of the federal courts to exercise the jurisdiction given to them is “particularly weighty.”
“Under such circumstances conflicting results, piecemeal litigation, and some duplication of judicial effort is the unavoidable price of preserving access to the federal relief § 1983 assures. While we need not conjecture whether there exist circumstances that could outweigh the ‘unflagging obligation’ in section 1983 cases, we are convinced that they do not exist in this case.”
Id.
As in
Tovar v. Billmeyer, supra,
the circumstances here militate against deference to pending state court proceedings. First, there is no exceptional circumstance, such as the McCarran Amendment, 43 U.S.C. § 666, which
Colorado River
found embodied a clear federal policy of avoiding the piecemeal adjudication of water rights in a river system.
Based on all the circumstances, I conclude that dismissal of this case under Colorado River would be inappropriate. I, therefore, decline to dismiss this case in deference to Crawford. 12
The Eleventh Amendment
We turn now in this and the succeeding sections to the two additional grounds raised by the State defendants for dismissal of this action against them. As stated earlier, the State defendants include Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr., Wilson Riles, the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the California State Board of Education and the California Department of Education.
All of the State defendants contend that this action is barred by the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution. It would serve no purpose to set forth here the history of the development of Eleventh Amendment immunity since
Ex parte Young,
Under the Eleventh Amendment, therefore, this action must be dismissed as against defendants California State Board of Education and California Department of Education. 13
Case or Controversy
It has long been held that the “ease or controversy” requirement of Article III of the Constitution is jurisdictional.
E. g., Warth v. Seldin,
In this action alleging generally that defendants have created the conditions of de jure segregation in the Los Angeles schools, nowhere in the complaint is there any allegation of any intentional act by either the Governor or Superintendent of Public Instruction which proximately contributed to the current segregated state of the schools. In fact, the only mention of the Governor anywhere in the complaint is the allegation that the members of the State Board of Education are appointed by the Governor.
Plaintiffs were unable to answer at oral argument what specific relief, if any, could be ordered against these defendants, were plaintiffs to prevail at trial. In fact, plaintiffs’ written opposition to the State defendants’ motion to dismiss is tantamount to an admission that no case or controversy exists:
“Contrary to the assumption of the state defendants, which is incorporated as a premise to their Article III dismissal motion, plaintiffs would not immediately proceed to preliminarily enjoin the described future conduct of state defendants (e. g. reduction of appropriations in aid of desegregation) until that conduct was clearly and manifestly threatening irreparable injury to plaintiffs’ class.”
(Plaintiffs’ Opposition to State Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, p. 14.) This admission also highlights an additional reason why no case or controversy exists as between plaintiffs and these defendants. What plaintiffs seek from the State defendants is funding in aid of desegregation. Even assuming education is a matter of statewide concern, plenary authority over education, including funding, is constitutionally vested in the state legislature. Cal.Const., Art. IX, §§ 1 & 6.
For these reasons, I conclude that the complaint fails to state a claim against defendants Governor Brown and Superintendent Riles and that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. However, because this is plaintiffs’ first attempt, leave will be granted, if plaintiffs so choose, to file an amended complaint as against these defendants. In granting such leave, I am mindful that another court has reached a different conclusion on apparently similar allegations, although the Eleventh Amendment and Article III issues appear not to have been raised there.
San Francisco NAACP v. San Francisco Unified School Dist.,
Order
For the foregoing reasons,
IT IS ORDERED:
1. The motion to dismiss of the District defendants is denied.
2. The motion to dismiss of the defendants California State Board of Education and California Department of Education is granted without leave to amend and the action is hereby dismissed as against said defendants.
3. The motions to dismiss of defendants Governor Brown and Superintendent Riles are granted with 20 days’ leave.to file an amended complaint.
Notes
. Under California law the remittitur of an appellate court is its final judgment. Rule 25(a), Cal. Rules of Court. It is equivalent to the mandate in federal practice. See Rule 41(a), Fed.R.App.P.
. The District defendants correctly point out that at the time
Crawford
was filed and through the trial on liability there were no formalized procedures in California akin to Rule 23, Fed.R.Civ.P., for the determination of class issues, although class actions have long been recognized under California law. Cal. Code Civ.Proc. § 382 (enacted in 1872);
see, e. g., Daar v. Yellow Cab Co.,
. Apparently because no issue with respect to the class aspects of the case was raised, the only reference by the California Supreme Court to any class aspect of the case was the passing statement that, “plaintiffs .. . filed this class action” shortly after
Jackson. Id.
. For this reason alone, collateral estoppel is also inapplicable to this case.
Commissioner v. Sunnen,
. Although it is unnecessary to reach the issue, it should be noted that
Crawford II
may not meet the final judgment requirement for another reason. In
Federated Dep't Stores, supra,
- U.S. at --,
. It is doubtful that in 1970, Judge Gitelson expected remedy to still be at issue 11 years later.
. Because the claims are different, the issues in this case are not the same as the issues that were before the state trial court in 1970. The test for determining whether claims are duplicative is:
“[W]hether a different judgment in the subsequent action would impair the rights created pursuant to the judgment rendered in the prior action; whether the evidentiary basis of the first and second actions is the same, or whether the essential facts and issues were similarly presented in both cases.”
Expert Electric, Inc. v. Levine,
. Although Crawford II, contended by the local defendants to be a final judgment, was not decided until 1980, it merely reversed Judge Gitelson’s 1970 findings of de jure segregation and, therefore, did not alter the class.
. It requires no discussion to conclude that they also are not privies in any legal sense. See Restatement of Judgments § 83.
. In
Colorado River,
the Court also analogized to cases involving disputes over the disposition of specific property, in which the court first obtaining jurisdiction over the property may exercise its jurisdiction to the exclusion of other courts, citing,
inter alia, Princess Lida v. Thompson,
. If this action is dismissed and if such reopening and relief are not sought or not permitted, plaintiffs here will have been deprived of the opportunity to have their constitutional claims fully presented.
. Nothing in Colorado River indicates that a declination to dismiss in deference to a state court proceeding at this early stage of the case is not subject to reconsideration upon a showing of changed circumstances. Obviously, a determination not to exercise a Colorado River dismissal can be based only on the circumstances as they now exist.
. Because the case or controversy requirement, infra, is dispositive as to them and because other factors not now before the Court may require consideration if an amended complaint is filed as to them and the Eleventh Amendment is again raised as a bar, it is unnecessary to and the Court declines to reach the Eleventh Amendment issue with respect to defendants Governor Brown and Superintendent Riles at this time.
