Mannheim Video, Inc. appeals the decision of the district court to dismiss its lawsuit sua sponte in favor of a parallel state court action. The defendant County of Cook cross-appeals the district court’s decision not to impose sanctions under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. We affirm the district court’s decisions in both respects.
I. Procedural History
Mannheim Video (“Mannheim”) operates a video arcade and gift shop within Cook County, Illinois. A portion, less than half, of Mannheim’s business is comprised of sexually explicit materials, including books, magazines and novelties. The Mannheim video arcade houses individual, coin-operated booths, which feature sexually explicit selections.
Mannheim initiated this lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Cook County’s zoning ordinance, Adult Use Provisions of the County’s Zoning Ordinance, C.B. No. 107756 (1981). The zoning ordinance regulates establishments “having as a substan *1044 tial or significant portion of its stock” materials that are sexually explicit in nature. The ordinance also includes particularized regulations for “adult mini motion picture theatres.” Mannheim’s three-count complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief and alleged that: (1) the term “substantial or significant portion of its stock” is unconstitutionally vague; (2) its video viewing booths are not theatres within the definition of the zoning ordinance; and (3) the zoning ordinance otherwise impermissibly infringes upon Mannheim’s First Amendment rights.
When Mannheim filed this suit in May 1988, it was already defending a state action brought by the County in April 1987. The state action alleged various infractions of the County’s building ordinances. The state action did not allege any violations of the adult use zoning ordinance, presumably because
County of Cook v. Renaissance Arcade and Bookstore,
Cook County responded to Mannheim’s complaint by moving to dismiss each of the three counts contained in the complaint for failing to state a claim upon which relief could be granted pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Judge Marshall dismissed the second count, finding that Mannheim’s video booths fell squarely within the ordinance’s definition of a mini theatre. He stayed the third count pending the Supreme Court’s disposition of
Renaissance Arcade.
Finally, Judge Marshall held that the first count stated a valid claim under
Conley v. Gibson,
On October 11, 1988, the Supreme Court summarily dismissed the appeal in
Renaissance Arcade,
sub nom.
Mannheim Books v. County of Cook,
— U.S. -,
II. Younger Abstention
In
Younger v. Harris,
When the state proceedings follow the initiation of the federal action the district court should look to two factors before deciding whether to abstain. First,
*1045
the court should consider whether the federal plaintiff will have an adequate opportunity to raise its constitutional challenges in the state proceedings.
Middlesex County Ethics Committee v. Garden State Bar Ass’n,
Neither party contends that Mannheim would not have the opportunity to raise its constitutional challenges in the state action, so that only the second criterion under Younger is in dispute. 2 Mannheim argues that its federal action had progressed beyond an embryonic stage, see Doran, swpra, and that substantial findings on the merits of its constitutional claim had been reached. We disagree.
Mannheim’s contention is put to rest by this Court’s previous decision in Ciotti, as Judge Marshall recognized. In Ciotti too, a bookstore challenged the constitutionality of the Cook County adult use zoning ordinance. The County unsuccessfully moved to dismiss the case for want of a case or controversy, specifically arguing that the plaintiff lacked standing. The County then filed an action against the federal plaintiff in state court alleging violations of the ordinance. This Court affirmed the district judge’s decision in that case to dismiss the federal action under Younger abstention grounds, noting that:
The district court’s decision that plaintiffs presented a case or controversy went to the issue of plaintiffs’ standing, but it was not a decision relating to the merits of the underlying issue in the case — the constitutionality of the ordinance.
Ciotti,
Reasoning analogous to
Ciotti
applies to this case. Mannheim, however, contends that Judge Marshall’s consideration of the County’s motion to dismiss somehow “reached the merits of Mannheim’s constitutional claims” (Br. 12). The federal action had yet to consider anything approaching the merits. All Judge Marshall decided was that the third count was directly dependent upon the Supreme Court’s disposition of the
Renaissance
appeal, that the second count was too insubstantial to merit trial,
3
and that the first count — the only viable count at the time of dismissal — merely satisfied the liberal stan
*1046
dards of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6). As for the only remaining viable issue, Judge Marshall’s determination not to dismiss the first count merely meant the County was unable to show “beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which could entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
As in
Ciotti,
apart from the district court’s decision on the County’s motion to dismiss the second count, “the record indicates no other proceedings — for instance, depositions taken, discovery completed, or briefs filed on the issues — that would suggest advancement toward a determination on the merits. The federal proceeding was still in an embryonic stage.”
Ciotti,
III. Motion For Sanctions
The County also appeals Judge Marshall’s refusal to award the County attorneys’ fees as sanctions under Rule 11. The County argues that on two occasions attorneys Michael Null and Adam Bourgeois, counsel for Mannheim, failed to cite a relevant case which was adverse to their position. In both of the cases which Mannheim failed to cite, one or both of its present counsel were listed as attorneys of record. The County urges reversal based upon Judge Marshall’s failure to engage in a thorough analysis as well as his ultimate decision not to impose sanctions.
In the first count of its complaint, Mannheim claimed that the term “substantial portion” as used in the ordinance can only be constitutionally interpreted to mean more than fifty percent. Later, in response to the County’s motion to dismiss, Mannheim cited favorable state cases from Washington and California and federal district cases from Colorado and Michigan, but stated that “the precise constitutional question raised in the challenge presented here has not been squarely addressed by the Court” (R. Item 1 at 4). Mannheim’s counsel failed to note that they had litigated and lost that exact issue in state court in
City of Chicago v. Scandia Books,
The second omission occurred when Mannheim filed its motion for a restraining order to enjoin the County from prosecuting the state action. Mannheim’s accompanying memorandum of law failed to address or mention Ciotti, although one of Mannheim’s attorneys of record at the time represented the plaintiff in Ciotti.
Judge Marshall felt that neither omission merited sanctions, and this Court reviews such decisions under a deferential standard. See
Mars Steel Corp. v. Continental Bank N.A.,
We decline to hold that Judge Marshall’s decision to forgo developing lengthy findings and pronounced analysis regarding attorneys’ fees as sanctions was an abuse of discretion. In
Szabo Food Service, Inc. v. Canteen Corp.,
Although we decline to hold that Judge Marshall abused his discretion, this should in no way be interpreted as condoning the conduct of Mannheim’s counsel. They argue that under our adversary system they are not required to make the County’s argument. That may well be true, but the “ostrich-like tactic of pretending that potentially dispositive authority against a litigant’s contention does not exist is as unprofessional as it is pointless.”
Hill v. Norfolk and Western Ry.,
Since our review in this area is not de novo, the County had the burden of showing that Judge Marshall, who had a firsthand account of the events and was familiar with the surrounding context, abused his discretion by declining to impose sanctions. Regardless of our own displeasure with plaintiffs’ counsel, the County failed to carry this burden.
IV. Conclusion
The district court was compelled to abstain from conducting further proceedings in light of Younger. Judge Marshall correctly dismissed the action, still in the embryonic stage of development, in favor of the parallel state proceeding. That state proceeding will afford Mannheim an adequate opportunity to press its federal constitutional claims, as well as preserve any possible appeal to a federal forum, if necessary. Furthermore, it has not been demonstrated that Judge Marshall’s decision to decline sanctioning Mannheim under Rule 11 was an abuse of discretion.
The decisions of the district court are affirmed.
Notes
. Mannheim Books bears no relation to the plaintiff in this case. The dismissal in Mannheim Books automatically resulted in the dismissal of the third count in the present complaint which had been stayed until then.
. Of course following an adverse decision in state court relating to its federal constitutional challenge, Mannheim could seek review in the Supreme Court of the United States.
. Mannheim argues that Judge Marshall’s rejection of its second count compelled him to retain and decide the remaining first count. This argument fails. A federal plaintiff cannot defeat abstention by tacking onto its complaint an insubstantial count (like the second count) that falls out well before trial. Judge Marshall’s complete analysis of Mannheim’s second count was simply:
In Count II of its complaint, plaintiff claims that its individual viewing booths are not "the-atres" as defined by the ordinance. This claim lacks merit. Plaintiffs booths fall squarely within the plain language of the definition of "adult mini motion picture theatres.” Defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted as to Count II.
When deciding on abstention, a federal court should not look simply at what issues are no longer a part of the case, but also what issues are left to decide and the progress of the court in deciding the remaining issues. Here only the first count remained and it was still in an early stage.
. The motion in Ciotti resembles the motion here to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Although Mannheim seeks to distinguish the former as an issue of standing and the latter as touching upon the merits, both motions demand that the court determine whether a live case exists, a controversy that the judiciary can remedy. In Ciotti, the district court’s analysis was limited to whether that plaintiff was a proper party to prosecute the suit. Here, Judge Marshall only determined whether a possible case with a legal remedy existed. Neither analysis casts any light or carries res judicata effects on the merits of a cognizable claim, here the first count.
