This court deprecates the practice of filing two suits over one injury — often with an argument based on state law presented to a state court, and an argument arising under federal law presented to a federal court. Multiplication imposes needless costs on one’s adversary, on the judicial system, and on other litigants, who must endure a lоnger queue. Plaintiffs hope that more suits will improve their chances: they seek the better of the outcomes. To discourage the tactic, judges award plaintiffs not the bеtter outcome but the first outcome: whichever suit goes to judgment first is dispositive, and the doctrine of claim preclusion (res judicata) requires the other court to dismiss the litigation. E.g., Davis v. Chicago,
Illinois permits the residents of a school zone to move the territory from the jurisdiction of оne school district to another by petition, provided that two-thirds of the zone’s residents approve, the tract contains 10% or less of the valuation of the ceding district, аnd the resulting new district will be contiguous. 105 ILCS 5/7-2b. Residents of Cherry Hill have voted twice to detach a parcel from School District 204 and annex it to School District 210. The first effort, in 1992, flunked the contiguity requirement, but the second referendum moved only an area that is contiguous with School District 210. Will County’s Regional Board of School Trustees concluded that the second rеferendum is valid and approved the transfer. Plaintiffs (School District 204 and two of its residents) then filed two suits: one in the Circuit Court of Will County contending that the failure of the 1992 effort blocks anоther vote so soon, and that the referendum mechanism violates the Constitution of Illinois; a second in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois contending that the refеrendum permits outlying residents of a school district to remove their children from schools whose racial composition displeases them and therefore violates the Constitution of the United States. They have lost twice: the Circuit Court decided against them on the merits, and the District Court dismissed the suit on the surprising ground that Younger v. Harris,
Plaintiffs’ claim has been decided in the state court, which usually ends matters. Plaintiffs say that the state rules for administrative review, which confine the state court to the record before the аgency (here, the Regional Board), justify a second suit in a court that will compile a new record. They do not describe Illinois law correctly. An administrative review actiоn uses the administrative record, but a party aggrieved by an agency’s decision may join a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and obtain decision of the constitutional issue on an expanded record. Stratton v. Wenona Community Unit District No. 1,
The preclusive effect of a state judgment in federal litigation depends on the rendering state’s law, 28 U.S.C. § 1738, and most states give decisions of the court of first instance preclusive effect whether or not the losing party has takеn an appeal (as District 204 has done). Illinois is among these states, or so State Life Insurance Co. v. Board of Education,
A decade ago the Supreme Court of Illinois announced that the filing of an appeal suspends the collateral estoppel (issue preclusion) effect of a judgment. Ballweg v. Springfield,
Tо be blunt, we have no idea what the law of IUinois is on the question whether a pending appeal destroys the claim preclusive effect of a judgment. Under the circumstanсes, a stay rather than immediate decision is the prudent course. A federal judge confronted with duphcative Utigation need not barge ahead on the off-chancе of beating the state court to a conclusion. It is sensible to stay proceedings until an earher-filed state case has reached a conclusion, and then (but only then) to dismiss the suit outright on grounds of claim preclusion. Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
The judgment is vacated, and the ease is remanded with instructions to stay further proceedings pending decision by the state’s appellate court, and then to proceed as appropriate in light of the final disposition of the state-court action.
