OPINION
This is an appeal from the trial court’s order nunc pro tunc dismissing Space Master’s suit for declaratory judgment without prejudice. Space Master International Inc., (“Space Master”), in three points of error, contends the trial court erred in dismissing its suit, because the mere pendency of two other actions, in Massachusetts federal court and New Jersey state court, was not a sufficient basis for dismissal. We affirm.
A dispute arose concerning two contracts entered into between Space Master and Porta-Kamp Manufacturing Company, Inc. (“Porta-Kamp”): one for the construction of modular classroom units in Massachusetts, the other for the construction of modular classroom units in New Jersey. Porta-Kamp, a Texas corporation with its principal place of business in Houston, Texas, sued Space Master for breach of contract and sought money damages, in both the New Jersey state court and the Massachusetts state court. The latter suit was removed to a federal court in Massachusetts. Space Master answered both complaints, asserting by affirmative defenses and a counterclaim that Porta-Kamp had violated the Texas usury statute.
While the suits in Massachusetts federal court and New Jersey state court were pending, Space Master filed suit for declaratory judgment in Texas, alleging the contracts at issue should not be enforced because Porta-Kamp had attempted to charge Space Master usurious interest rates. Porta-Kamp filed a motion to dismiss and a plea in abatement, urging the Texas court to either decline to exercise its jurisdiction or abate the cause of action, in order to avoid interference with litigation involving the same parties and issues in Massachusetts federal court.
Space Master responded to Porta-Kamp’s motions to dismiss in the Texas court by asserting the trial judge of the Massachusetts federal court had indicated he was unwilling to apply Texas usury law, and attached a portion of the transcript from the proceedings in Massachusetts, sworn to by Space Master’s attorney as accurately reflecting the exchange between counsel and the court. When counsel informed the court that Porta-Kamp could forfeit the principal as well as the interest under Texas law, because it had charged an 18 percent interest rate, the trial judge replied:
I mean, it’s ludicrous.... I don’t see any judge any place applying that law because it’s — it’s absolutely inherently ludicrous.... [T]o say that they could *946 forfeit three quarters of a million dollars because they charged you interest which you haven’t paid is just — I mean, you don’t even have to be a Cardoza [sic] to know that it's inherently foolish.
Based on this exchange and the assertion by Space Master that the Massachusetts court might not be able to enforce the usury statute because it was considered punitive, Space Master urged that the Texas court retain jurisdiction over the suit for declaratory judgment.
In its supplemental response in the Texas action, Space Master alleged the New Jersey court would not rule on Porta-Kamp’s motion for summary judgment on Space Master’s usury defense and counterclaim, until the Texas court had construed the Texas usury statute.
By order and order nunc pro tunc, the trial court granted Porta-Kamp’s motion to dismiss, but denied the plea in abatement. The court denied Space Master’s motion for rehearing, or in the alternative, motion for new trial, and this appeal followed.
In essence, Space Master, in its points of error, contends first that the mere penden-cy of this action in federal court involving the same parties and issues was not a valid reason to abate the instant proceeding. Second, it urges that the mere pendency of this suit in another state did not deprive the trial court in this case of jurisdiction to hear the suit for declaratory judgment. Finally, it asserts that the trial court erroneously relied upon
Texas Liquor Control Board v. Canyon Creek Land Corp.,
It is well settled that the mere pendency of an action in federal court involving the same parties and the same issues is not a reason for abating the subsequent state court proceeding.
Williamson v. Tucker,
It is equally well settled that the mere pendency of an action in one state will not be grounds for abating a suit in another state between the same parties and involving the same subject matter.
Badgett v. Erspan,
Space Master’s points of error do not recognize that a declaratory judgment proceeding is unique. An action for declaratory judgment is neither legal nor equitable, but is
sui generis,
i.e. the only one of its kind, peculiar.
Canyon Creek,
Section 37.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code authorizes courts of record, acting within their jurisdiction, to grant declaratory relief, where a judgment or decree will terminate the controversy or remove an uncertainty. TEX. CIV.PRAC. & REM.CODE ANN. § 37.003 (Vernon 1986). The entry of a declaratory judgment rests within the sound discretion of the trial court.
Uvalde County v. Barrier,
In Canyon Creek, the Texas Supreme Court stated:
A.s a general rule, an action for declaratory judgment will not be entertained if there is pending, at the time it is filed, another action or proceeding between the same parties and in which may be adjudicated the issues involved in the declaratory action.
When the plaintiffs in
Canyon Creek
filed suit for declaratory judgment, there were already pending license suspension proceedings before the Texas Liquor Control Board, the outcome of which could turn on the issue that the plaintiffs had raised in the declaratory judgment action.
In so far as plaintiffs are seeking a declaratory judgment for the purpose of overturning the administrative interpretation of the statute so that no fúrther proceedings will be instituted against them, we hold that the facts of these cases do not warrant an exercise of jurisdiction by a civil court.
Id. at 896.
Space Master attempts to distinguish
Canyon Creek
on the ground that it involved the construction of a penal statute and a previously filed administrative action by the Texas Liquor Control Board. While Space Master is correct that the statute to be construed in
Canyon Creek
was penal in nature, the court merely stated that the general rule was even more applicable where the construction of a penal statute
*948
was at issue, and a privilege, rather than a personal or property right was at stake in the pending administrative proceeding.
Another consideration in determining whether the trial court properly dismissed a suit for declaratory judgment is whether the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction in the suit for declaratory judgment would deprive the plaintiff of the ability to select the appropriate forum to hear a suit. In
Abor v. Black,
In
Byrnes v. University of Houston,
Although separate suits including the same parties and issues may be maintained in state and federal courts simultaneously, the applicable declaratory judgment law supports the judicial discretion of the trial court to refuse to entertain jurisdiction of this declaratory action.
See also Kenny v. Starnes,
Space Master, in the case at bar, conceded that the suit for declaratory judgment involved the same parties and issues as the proceedings pending in the New Jersey state court and in the Massachusetts federal court. Space Master should not be allowed to use declaratory relief as a forum-shopping device. Based on considerations of comity, the unique nature of declaratory judgments, and the authorities above-cited, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing Space Master’s suit for declaratory judgment.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
