The plaintiffs, who brought this suit in 1981 under the federal civil rights laws to challenge the constitutionality of Indiana’s compulsory-schooling law, have appealed from the district judge’s order, entered after trial in 1984, “that all further proceedings in this matter are hereby stayed for the purpose of allowing the plaintiffs to present their claims in the state courts of Indiana.” A better word than “allowing” would be “compelling.” The plaintiffs do not want to litigate their claims in state court, but the district judge, believing that there are unresolved issues of state law the resolution of which might moot the plaintiffs’ federal claims, decided to abstain under the doctrine of
Railroad Comm’n v. Pullman Co.,
We asked the parties to brief the question whether such a stay is appealable. The usual route by which stays are appealed, the
Enelow-Ettelson
doctrine, is unavailable to the plaintiffs. The doctrine allows a stay on equitable grounds of an action at law to be appealed as an interlocutory injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). Whether or not
Pullman
abstention is equitable in nature, an issue we need not address, the plaintiffs here are seeking equitable as well as legal relief, and equitable relief that is more than incidental to legal relief. Since for purposes of the
Enelow-Ettelson
doctrine a mixed law-equity suit is equitable unless equitable relief is being sought merely as an incident to legal relief,
Medtronic, Inc. v. Intermedies, Inc.,
This leaves as the only possible route of appeal the final-judgment rule itself, 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Is a stay for
Pullman
abstention a final decision? It is not
*627
clear that this question can be answered in gross. There are two types of
Pullman
abstention. In one, the federal court dismisses the suit before it, and the plaintiffs then prosecute all their claims, state and federal, in the state court in favor of which the federal court has abstained. In such a case there is nothing left of the matter in the federal court, and the dismissal is final. The fact that the matter is being pursued before another tribunal is irrelevant. For example, when a suit in federal court is dismissed on the ground that a state court, or an arbitration board, or an administrative agency has exclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suit, the order of dismissal is a final and appealable order, even though it contemplates further proceedings on the plaintiffs claim in another forum. It is the same when a federal court orders complete abstention in the sense we have described. And it does not matter whether the order is formally called a dismissal rather than a stay. (Unfortunately the words are often used interchangeably.) If the order contemplates that the suit will never return to the federal court, the fact that it is called a “stay” will not change its character as a final order, appealable immediately.
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Corp.,
In the other kind of
Pullman
abstention, however, "the plaintiff goes to state court just to pursue his state claims; the state court decides no federal questions; if any are left after the state court has finished, the plaintiff comes back to federal court to finish his suit. See
Migra v. Warren City School Dist.,
- U.S.-,
Although a characteristically powerfully reasoned statement of its distinguished author,
Goldberg v. Carey
is in conflict with our earlier en banc decision in
Drexler v. Southwest Dubois School Corp.,
The Supreme Court’s recent
Moses H. Cone
decision, upholding the appealability under section 1291 of a stay of a federal
*628
suit based on a parallel state proceeding, contains a broad hint that stays for
Pullman
abstention are similarly appealable, see
In the circumstances, we think we should stick with the established approach in this circuit, especially in light of the practical consideration that it will often be unclear at the time the district court orders abstention, and before the plaintiff has brought his suit in state court, whether the plaintiff intends to reserve his federal claims. Of course the plaintiff could be required to elect as soon as a motion to abstain is made or granted; but this could induce the defendant to make such a motion just in order to accelerate the plaintiff’s strategic decision-making, and we are not sure we should create such inducements. At all events we are disinclined to reexamine our approach in a case like this where abstention is ordered after the trial —indeed, nearly three years after the case was brought. If the order is erroneous, the plaintiff will have been subjected to enormous delay, especially if he elects to return to federal court for decision of his federal claims after the state court proceedings have been completed. An immediate appeal need not delay those proceedings, moreover, because the pendency of the appeal does not prevent the plaintiff from beginning his action in state court. A stay issued so late in the game — a stay that, if it contemplates a return to the federal court (and if it does not, it is tantamount to a dismissal, and is uncontroversially appealable forthwith), promises enormous delay in the resolution of the entire controversy — could well be thought in any event to inflict the kind of irreparable harm that would warrant an immediate appeal under the collateral-order doctrine, the issue whether to abstain being collateral to (i.e., separate from) the merits of the complaint. Cf.
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Co., supra,
Hence, although we cannot tell from the papers before us which type of Pullman abstention the plaintiffs elected and the district court ordered (or whether the plaintiffs have even decided yet), we conclude that their appeal properly invokes our jurisdiction. Hence the appeal will not be dismissed, but will be scheduled for briefing and argument in the normal fashion.
SO ORDERED.
