This appeal involves an ordinary commercial dispute over the loss of cargo consisting of a sealed carton of gold and jewels, which was transformed, as if by alchemy, into a bag of lead by the end of its international journey. The district court, relying upon
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
In
Colorado River,
the Supreme Court restated the fundamental principle that absent “exceptional circumstances,” federal courts have an obligation to exercise their jurisdiction concurrently with other courts.
Colorado River,
In
Moses H. Cone Hospital v. Mercury Constr. Corp.,
In this case, as in
Moses H. Cone,
there are no “exceptional circumstances” justifying the invocation of the
Colorado River
abstention doctrine. What we have here is an unexceptional commercial dispute involving the owner of a lost cargo, the consignee of the cargo, the cargo’s insurer, and the air carrier to whom the cargo was entrusted. The district court pointed to no circumstances warranting a refusal to exercise jurisdiction except that “there have been certain procedures taken there over and above what has been ... happening here.” Reporter’s Transcript at 8. Even if the litigants had made somewhat more progress in Geneva than in the district court by the time the stay motion was heard, the mere fact that parallel proceedings may be further along does not make a case “exceptional” for the purpose of invoking the
Colorado River
exception to the general rule that federal courts must exercise their jurisdiction concurrently with courts of other jurisdictions. As we said in
Tovar v. Billmeyer,
A correct evaluation of this factor involves considering whether exceptional circumstances exist which justify special concern about piecemeal litigation. [Appellant] argues that there are no such circumstances here. It points out that no federal legislation evincing a federal policy to avoid piecemeal litigation is applicable. This case involves ordinary contract and tort issues and is thus unlike Colorado River where important real property rights were at stake and where there was a substantial danger of inconsistent judgments. Here there is no ‘vastly more comprehensive’ state action that can adjudicate the rights of many parties or the disposition of much property.
Finally, the fact that the parallel proceedings are pending in a foreign jurisdiction rather than in a state court is immaterial. We reject the notion that a federal court owes greater deference to foreign courts than to our own state courts.
Accord, Ingersoll Milling Mach. Co. v. Granger,
The district court’s stay order is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
Notes
. The district court had federal question jurisdiction under the Warsaw Convention. 49 U.S.C. § 1502 (1976), note, Article 14. The district court's order staying the action is a final order appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Constr. Corporation,
. We review the stay order for abuse of discretion, which “ 'must be exercised within the narrow and specific limits prescribed by the particular abstention doctrine involved.’
” American Int’l Underwriters v. Continental Ins.,
