Miсhael Gordon appeals the district court’s order dismissing without prejudice his claim against his business partner Herbert M. Luksch and Luksch Equities, Inc. (hereafter Luksch) for contribution on the *497 repayment of a business loan. Luksch and Gordon cross-appeal the court’s denial of their summary judgment motions. The district court abstained from exercising its jurisdiction on the ground that the claim could and should be heard in an action for dissolution and accounting filed earliеr in the superior court of the District of Columbia. We reverse.
I.
Michael Gordon and Herbert M. Luksch had been partners in the District of Columbia in a multi-million dollar business of acquiring real estate properties, developing them and selling them. Gordon and Luksch organized their partnership as a network of partnerships and corporations in which they were stockholders, general partners, and limited partners. They borrowed money to supply working capital and funded their various enterprises with inter-company loans. In 1986, they first opened a $500,000 line of credit with MсLachlen Bank, executing a note with GLM Corporation as maker and themselves individually as guarantors. They regulаrly renewed the promissory note in this manner every six months until September 1987, when McLachlen Bank insisted that Gordon and Luksch be co-makers, jointly and severally liable, although the purpose of the loan remained the same. Thе renewal note dated January 31, 1988, and executed by Gordon, Luksch, and another person not involved in this suit, is at issue in this case.
Despite the success of their partnership, Luksch withdrew from active participation in 1986, leaving control to Gordon of what was called collectively the “GLM Companies.” On August 11, 1988, Luksch and Luksch Equities, Inc. filed a cоmplaint in superior court in the District of Columbia against Gordon, two other individuals, and several GLM entities 1 for damages, injunction, accounting, dissolution and appointment of a receiver.
In the meantime, the January 31, 1988, renewаl note came due, and Gordon paid the entire amount on August 31, 1989. He then filed the present suit in federal district cоurt for the Eastern District of Virginia on October 28, 1988, seeking contribution from Luksch of $166,666.66. The parties filed cross motions for summаry judgment, which the district court denied. Luksch alternatively moved that the court stay proceedings pending resolution of the superior court suit. The court denied the summary judgment motions of both parties, but dismissed the action without prejudice, reasoning that it was appropriate to abstain because the issue could be raised in Luksch’s рending suit in superior court. In our view, the district court properly denied both motions for summary judgment, but erred in abstaining.
II.
The Supreme Court has recognized that in some limited situations, a federal court may dismiss a suit “for reasons of wise judicial administration” when there is a “concurrent state proceeding.”
Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
In assessing the appropriatеness of dismissal in the event of an exercise of concurrent jurisdiction, a federal court may also cоnsider such factors as the inconvenience of the federal forum; the desirability of avoiding piecemеal litigation; and the order in which jurisdiction was obtained by the concurrent fo-rums_ Only the clearest of justifications will warrant dismissal.
The factors must be balanced, however, and “heavily weighted in favor of the exercise of jurisdiction.”
Id.
at 16,
In the present case, it is clear that thе balance of factors does not amount to the exceptional circumstances necessаry to justify the district court’s dismissal. It is true that the superior court action was filed some time prior to Gordon’s actiоn on the note filed in the federal court. However, we must look not only to the formal filing sequence but also consider “how much progress has been made in the two actions.”
Cone,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. In addition to Gordon, defendants included William A. Dietch, Sol Klein, and several GLM entities.
. The other well-settled principles of abstention, of course, do not apply here.
See Railroad Comm'n v. Pullman Co.,
