In this case the plaintiffs-appellants charge the appellee with attempting to relitigate in a state court the issues in a suit decided between the same parties in the federal court in 1955; appellants ask for an injunction to restrain the appellee from taking any action in his state court proceeding. The appellee charges that in the instant case appellants are attempting to litigate in the federal court the issues previously raised in a suit between the same parties that appellee has pending in the state courts; appellee asks that the suit be dismissed.
I.
For four or five years the appellee, George Harper, and the appellants, Southern California Petroleum Corporation, Mohawk Petroleum Corporation, and Kewanee Oil Company, oil and gas lessees, have been engaged in a controversy over development of a lease on Harper’s property. 1 In 1955 Harper sued Southern California and Mohawk in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, complaining that the lease had not been *717 properly developed and the wells properly operated. Harper lost the suit.
In October 1958 Harper again filed suit against the oil companies, this time in the District Court of Runnels County, Texas, alleging that the oil companies, negligently or in bad faith, failed to develop the lease as it should have been developed. Harper based his suit primarily on the contention that a water-flood program commenced on his land about August 1, 1958 would destroy the value of the oil and gas under the land and also the value of his royalty interest. Harper asked for damages, for an injunction, and for cancellation of the lease. Appellants removed the suit to the District Court for the Northern District of Texas as Civil Action 781. Ke-wanee removed the suit as Civil Action 782.
In December, 1958 the oil companies filed suit against Harper, characterizing the complaint as an action to remove a cloud on their title and asking for a declaratory judgment in regard to their development of the lease. Harper moved to remand Civil Actions 781 and 782 on the ground of lack of diversity, since some of the defendants were also residents of Texas. He moved to dismiss the instant suit (1) on the ground that the resident operators who had not been joined, were indispensable parties and (2) on the ground that the suit was an attempt to litigate in the federal court the same issues previously presented in his pending suit in the state courts. During the course of the argument on the motions to remand, the oil companies obtained leave of court to file an amended complaint in the instant suit. In the amended complaint the oil companies asked for an injunction restraining Harper from prosecuting his state court action, alleging that he was relitigating issues adjudicated in the suit by Harper against Southern California and Mohawk, decided by the same trial judge who decided the 1955 case. The trial judge refused the injunction, granted Harper’s *718 motion'to'remand actions 781 and 782,- and granted also. Harper’s motion to dismiss the instant suit. We affirm.
II.
Appellants, relying on Section 2283 of the Judicial Code, contend that the 'trial court erred in refusing the injunction to stay' proceedings in the state court. They argue that the injunction is needed “to protect or effectuate” the judgment in the 1955 suit that Harper allegedly is seeking to relitigate.
Section 2283 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2283 provides:
“A court of the United States may ■ not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State court except as * * * authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments.”
In a gloss on this section the Supreme Court declared, “Congress made clear beyond cavil that the prohibition is not to be whittled away by judicial improvisation”. Amalgamated Clothing Workers v. Richman Bros., 1955,
III.
Section 2283 is essentially a rule of comity, and the demand here that a federal court interfere with state court proceedings is directed to the discretion of the federal' court. This discretion should be exercised in the light of the historical reluctance of federal courts to interfere with state judicial proceedings. This Court has often demonstrated such reluctance.
4
“ [Interference with the orderly and comprehensive disposition of
*719
a state court litigation should be avoided”, the Supreme Court admonishes us. Brillhart v. Excess Ins. Co., 1942,
The appellants cite a number of cases in which federal courts, in order to protect a prior federal court judgment, have ■granted an injunction restraining state action. In each instance, however, the action constituted a direct assault on a prior federal court judgment. 6 That is not the case here. Harper does not attack the 1955 federal court judgment in the action in state court. He concedes that the 1955 judgment is fully determinative of any alleged breaches of the .lease occurring prior to October 25, 1955. In the state court suit Harper seeks to litigate events that have occurred subsequent to the 1955 suit.
It is true that some of the allegations in Harper’s complaint in the state court action refer to issues raised in the 1955 litigation, but we see no objection to referring to such matters for background purposes. Basically, in the state court action Harper’s complaint is grounded on the waterflood recovery program and its effect on his royalty interest. Full scale waterflood operations were not begun until 1955 and not authorized until March 18, 1957. Taken as a whole, the complaint is principally concerned with actions taken by the appellants after the 1955 suit, and is not an attempt to relitigate matters determined by the 1955 suit. 7
We take the view that a complainant must make a strong and unequivocal showing of relitigation of the same issue in order to overcome the federal courts’ proper disinclination to intermeddle in state court proceedings. If we err, all is not lost. A state court is as well qualified as a federal court to protect a litigant by the doctrines of res adjudi-cata and collateral estoppel.
On the showing made by the appellants in this case, even the most liberal view of implied exceptions to Section 2283 would not justify reversal of the court below. The trial judge was the same trial judge who sat on Harper’s 1955 suit. He was peculiarly qualified to compare the issues, determine the question of relitigation, and decide the propriety of an injunction. He did not *720 abuse his discretion and he was consistent with the guiding principle underlying Section 2283 — avoidance of federal-state frictions.
IV.
Similar reasons underlie our affirmance of the district court’s dismissal of appellants’ suit. “Ordinarily it would be uneconomical as well as vexatious for a federal court to proceed in a declaratory judgment suit where another suit is pending in a state court presenting the same issues, not governed by federal law, between the same parties. Gratuitous interference with the orderly and comprehensive disposition of a state court litigation should be avoided.” Brillhart v. Excess Insurance Company of America, 1942,
The policy against federal interference with a state suit previously filed is of long standing and is a necessary objective in maintaining a balanced federal-state relationship. It is particularly applicable in a case such as the instant case when apparently the complaint filed in the federal court seeks to use the declaratory judgment statute and the equitable remedy of injunction as substitutes for a non-existent right of removal. Kaufman Rudeman, Inc. v. Cohn and Rosenberger, 2 Cir., 1949,
The trial judge had the motions to remand Civil Actions 781 and 782 before him at the same time he considered the motion to dismiss the instant suit. He determined that the appellants’ federal action raised the same issues as the ap-pellee’s pending state action. Dismissal of the instant suit would avoid unseemly parallel proceedings by two sets of courts in which the results on the same cause might be conflicting. The issues involve state law in a field of law with which the Texas courts have long been familiar. Trial of the case in the state courts, unfettered by the shackles of diversity jurisdiction, would enable every interested party to have his day in court. 8
We consider the result reached below legally correct, directed to avoiding federal-state frictions, and in the interests of justice.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
Notes
. In Amalgamated Clothing Workers v.Richman Bros.,
. “The [third exception] overrules the holding of the Toucey case and adopts the theory of the ‘relitigation’ cases, which Toucey had rejected. In other words where a federal court has adjudicated a matter, this Court can protect or effectuate its judgment, whether in personam or in rem, by enjoining, at the instance of the prevailing party, relitigation of the matter.” Moore, Commentary of the U. S. Judicial Code (1949), p. 410,
. “Federal Courts will enjoin proceedings in State Courts with reluctance * * ” Red Rock Cola Co. v. Red Rock Bottlers, 5 Cir., 1952,
. In that case the liability of an insurer was an issue in a garnishment proceedings in state court. The insurer sought a preliminary determination of this issue by bringing a declaratory judgment action in federal district court. The Supreme Court held that the petitioner’s motion to dismiss was addressed to the discretion of the federal district court, and, reversing the Circuit Court of Appeals, remanded the case so that the district court could properly exercise its discretion.
. Riverdale Cotton Mills v. Alabama & Georgia Mfg. Co., 1905,
. In his state action Harper alleged that the pilot waterflood program destroyed every well in the vicinity of the injection wells within a matter of months and that the unit operator had deliberately and with wrongful intent varied from the plan which called for .peripheral injection around the external boundaries of the unit. He alleged that the unit operators wore injecting water into wells along internal boundaries; that this deprives him of offset production on two sides of his lease; that he has lost the value of good oil well converted by the operators into salt water injection wells; that the water injection will destroy other good wells in close proximity to the injection wells; and, that it will build a salt water bank between the developed ■ and undeveloped portions of his lease, rendering it impossible for the ultimate value of the oil and gas in his land to be realized. These allegations do not appear in the 1955 suit *720 nor were these issues in any manner adjudicated by the judgment in the 1955 suit.
. In view of this holding we consider it unnecessary to discuss the question of indispensable parties.
