Plaintiff brought an action challenging, on federal constitutional grounds, Boston Police Department Rule 111, which authorizes urinalysis drug testing of Department employees. After a trial on the merits, the district court decided
sua sponte
to abstain from the exercise of federal jurisdiction, on the authority of
Railroad Comm’n v. Pullman Co.,
*1081 I.
In April of 1986, the defendant, Police Commissioner of the City of Boston, issued Rule 111, which authorized urinalysis drug testing of Department employees on both a reasonable-suspicion and a random basis. A positive test result would lead to the employee’s being charged with unauthorized use of illegal drugs and conduct unbecoming an employee. If the Department could prove the violations were knowing, the employee would be subject to discipline, including discharge.
See Guiney,
Plaintiff is president and a member of the Boston Patrolmen’s Association, Inc., a labor organization consisting of some 1500 Boston police patrolmen. He brought an action for declaratory and injunctive relief in the district court, claiming that Rule 111 permitted unreasonable searches and seizures in violation of the fourth and fourteenth amendments to the federal constitution. Defendant agreed not to enforce Rule 111 pending the district court’s ruling.
After a trial on the merits, the district court decided, sua sponte, to abstain on Pullman grounds. The court reasoned, first, that the Massachusetts courts might be able to resolve the case on state constitutional grounds and, second, that the Massachusetts courts were better suited to resolve certain factual issues in the case. We consider each of these points in turn and then conclude by addressing additional arguments advanced by defendant in favor of dismissal.
II.
We start with the proposition that “[ajbstention from the exercise of federal jurisdiction is the exception, not the rule.”
Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
Sometimes
Pullman
abstention is appropriate because the federal claim is “entangled in a skein of state law that
must
be untangled before the federal case can proceed.”
McNeese v. Board of Education,
The district court’s decision to abstain relied not upon any ambiguity in Rule 111 itself, but upon a variant of the
Pullman
doctrine holding that abstention may be appropriate when “the uncertain status of local law stems from the unsettled relationship between the state constitution and a statute.”
Harris County Comm’rs Court v. Moore,
We think the district court construed too broadly the circumstances in which abstention is appropriate for the purpose of obtaining an authoritative interpretation of a state constitutional provision. In
Harris County,
Under
Harris County, Reetz,
and
City of Meridian,
it is not the uniqueness
per se
of a state constitutional provision that makes abstention appropriate. These cases merely demonstrate that state constitutional provisions that are unique are, for that very reason, less likely to have been authoritatively construed by the state’s highest court and less likely to be familiar to federal courts than are state constitutional provisions that are directly parallel to federal constitutional guarantees. In other words, where the state constitutional provision bearing on a case is unique, there is more likely to be an “unsettled relationship between the state constitution and a statute.”
Harris County,
This doctrine of abstention has its corollary in the rule that “abstention is
not
required for interpretation of
parallel
state constitutional provisions.”
Hawaii Housing Auth. v. Midkiff
In the instant case, the relevant provision of Article 14, the state constitutional provision that led the district court to abstain, is almost exactly parallel to the fourth amendment, on which plaintiff predicated his claim.
3
We are unaware of any case in which these two provisions have been interpreted differently. True, the Supreme Judicial Court has held that Article 14 “provides more substantive protection to criminal defendants than does the Fourth Amendment
in the determination of probable cause. ” Commonwealth v. Upton,
We note, moreover, that in a
post-Upton
decision involving claims under both Article 14 and the fourth amendment, the Supreme Judicial Court has held that “[ajlthough the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights may afford greater protection to an individual than the protection afforded by the United States Constitution, ... the same factors are material to a consideration of the constitutionality under either document of a roadblock stop of motor vehicles for the purpose of detecting drunk drivers.”
Commonwealth v. Trumble,
We find
Trumble
particularly significant because the Article 14 and fourth amendment questions raised in that case are similar to the fourth amendment questions at issue in the instant case. Broadly speaking, both cases involve balancing the individual’s right to be free of arbitrary searches and seizures against the public
*1084
interest in detecting substance abuse in situations where such abuse could be particularly dangerous to the rights — indeed, the lives — of others.
Trumble
thus indicates that the Massachusetts courts would likely approach an Article 14 challenge to Rule 111 in much the same way that a federal court would approach a challenge to Rule 111 under the fourth amendment. And where federal and state approaches are harmonious, there is little risk of “needless friction with state policies,”
Pullman,
Even if we could not look to Trumble for reassurance that Article 14 and the fourth amendment operate in parallel fashion as to plaintiff's challenge to Rule 111, we would still conclude that the two provisions are sufficiently parallel so as to render abstention inappropriate. Where the constitutional provisions at issue are facially parallel, as here, we do not think abstention justified by the mere possibility of divergence from parallelism, or by the fact that the provisions have diverged in another context, as exemplified here by Upton. 4 We think the logic of Pullman requires some more specific indication that state law is genuinely unsettled before a federal court should stay its hand. A plaintiff’s choice to pursue a federal remedy in a federal forum should not be lightly overturned.
III.
The district court offered a second reason for abstention. In the court’s view, Rule 111 could survive a federal constitutional challenge only if defendant could show a compelling need outweighing the fourth and fourteenth amendment interests at stake. The court noted that
[t]his burden might arguably be satisfied either (1) by evidence offered in the case sub judice that supports a fact finding that such a compelling need exists because of circumstances distinctive to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or the Boston Police Department, or (2) by a showing that such a compelling need exists in police departments generally throughout the United States because of facts common to such departments generally.
Guiney,
The question whether Rule 111 should be judged against conditions at the national, state, or local levels has not been briefed on this appeal, and we express no opinion upon it. Assuming without deciding that the district court was correct in framing the constitutional inquiry in terms of compelling need, we conclude that whatever *1085 the proper assessments involved in that inquiry, the district court should have undertaken them.
Assuming arguendo that the proper focus is on national conditions, we are not persuaded that “to address nationwide non-adjudicative fact issues incident to adjudication of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims,” id., is to do anything other than to adjudicate those same claims. This is because the type of finding about which the district court was concerned was not a purely factual finding that a drug problem of a given magnitude exists at the national level, but instead a “non-adjudicative fact finding of compelling need that outweighs intrusions on privacy....” Id. at 1301. We have difficulty distinguishing such a “finding,” which clearly involves legal as well as factual assessments, from an actual resolution of the federal constitutional claims. Thus the possibility of resolving this case on state constitutional grounds no more justified avoidance of nationwide non-adjudicative factfindings than it justified abstention on the federal constitutional claims themselves.
Alternatively, assuming that the proper focus in adjudicating the federal claims is on the particular nature and extent of the drug problem at the state or local levels, we do not share the court’s concerns about its potential insensitivity to conditions at those levels. We are unaware of any case in which a state court’s assertedly greater sensitivity to state or local conditions has been held to justify federal abstention. Moreover, federal courts are frequently called upon to weigh the strength of state interests, and the care with which the state has crafted the means to vindicate those interests, against the resulting burdens on individual rights. We do not think it can fairly be said that in so doing they have consistently either undervalued or overvalued the state interests at issue. The efforts of the district court in this case to identify possible sources of state-federal friction demonstrate an acute sensitivity to the federalism concerns underlying Pullman. We are confident that this same sensitivity will enable the court, on remand, to focus on assessing the relevant conditions without being distracted by what the court determines to be extraneous considerations and overbroad assumptions.
IV.
Defendant offers two additional reasons, not relied upon by the district court, in support of dismissal; we dispose of these summarily. First, defendant suggests that abstention is appropriate based upon the principles first announced in
Younger v. Harris,
Second, defendant suggests that dismissal is appropriate because an action raising similar issues is currently pending in state court. We assume defendant’s argument is based on
Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. Although the district court was concerned that some ambiguity remained as to the consequences under Rule 111 of a positive test result,
Guiney,
. Even if there is substantial question as to how parallel state and federal provisions affect a given case, the fact that they are parallel suggests that there is little to be gained by a federal court’s abstaining simply to permit resolution of the case on state constitutional rather than federal constitutional grounds. This is because parallelism, in practice, means that state courts will look to federal precedent in interpreting parallel state constitutional provisions; abstention would thus mean only that the result would hang on a state rather than a federal peg. We question whether the policies of avoiding unnecessary federal constitutional decisions and state-federal friction would really be served by resorting to such a time-consuming sleight-of-hand.
. Article 14 declares in relevant part that ‘‘[e]very subject has the right to be secure from all unreasonable searches, and seizures, of his person....” The fourth amendment declares in relevant part that ”[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons ... against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated....”
. The Supreme Court has frequently stressed that abstention is not justified by the mere possibility that a state court
might
interpret a state statute so as to alter or moot a federal constitutional question; abstention is only appropriate where state law is genuinely unsettled.
E.g., Hawaii Housing Auth.
v.
Midkiff,
