Thomas A. Warmus appeals from a judgment of the district court dismissing with prejudice his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 damages action against Lewis Melahn, the former director of the Missouri Department of Insurance (MDI), and two of his subordinates, James Oetting and William Hobbs. In dismissing the court acted under the
Younger
abstention doctrine, which is premised oh the “longstanding public policy against federal court interference with state court proceedings.”
Younger v. Harris,
BACKGROUND
Warmus is the owner of American Way Holding, Inc., a holding company comprised of seven insurance companies, including American Way Life Insurance Company (Life), and thrеe non-insurance companies. Prior to 1989, Warmus had been feuding with the Michigan Insurance Bureau over some of the credit-life business generated by Life. Consequently, in May 1989 Warmus directed American Way Holding to purchase American Financial Security Life Insurance Company (AFSLIC), a Missouri-domiciled premium credit-life and disability insurance company. To avoid further conflict with the Michigan bureau, Warmus ordered that Life’s entire block of credit-life business be transferred from Life to AFSLIC, which is regulated by MDI. By early 1992, this transfer of business was complete.
In March 1992, due to the company’s excessive premiums-to-surplus ratio, Melahn, as director of MDI, ordered AFSLIC into administrative supervision. See Mo.Rev. Stat. § 375.1160.2(1)(a-e) (1991). Soon thereafter, AFSLIC attempted to right itself financially by entering into a series of reinsurance treaties. In June 1992, it entered into one such treaty with Lloyds of London (the “Lloyds treaty”). Thе Lloyds treaty was to be in force during the last three quarters of 1992, and, according to projections, was to increase AFSLIC’s reserves by some $8,000,000. This increase in reserves, it was hoped, would improve the company’s premiums-to-surplus ratio to an acceptable regulatory level.
However, before the Lloyds treaty could be finalized, Hobbs, the Melahn-appointed administrative supervisor of AFSLIC, had to approve it. Although Hobbs had some questions about the methodology AFSLIC used to account for the treaty’s reserve impact, he eventually apprоved it in early August 1992. Later, Hobbs’s superiors at MDI, Oetting and Melahn, also approved the Lloyds treaty.
In October 1992, a dispute with MDI arose over a different reinsurance treaty — one AFSLIC had executed with American Trend Life Insurance Company (the “Trend treaty”). MDI contended the Trend treaty was *254 invаlid because American Trend was not an authorized Missouri reinsurer. AFSLIC bowed to this contention and restated its September 30, 1992 financial statement to reflect the elimination of all Trend reserve credits.
The elimination of Trend reserve credits, however, caused a reserve-credit void for the first three quarters of 1992. To remedy this problem, AFSLIC chose to reapply the Lloyds treaty, which, by its terms, was in force during the last three quarters of 1992 to the first three quarters of 1992. In other words, AFSLIC substituted the Lloyds treaty for the Trend treaty. This substitution of reinsurance treaties filled AFSLIC’s reserve-credit void for thе first three quarters of 1992, and allowed it to .report a positive surplus-capital balance for the three quarters ending September 30, 1992.
In December 1992, MDI conducted an examination of AFSLIC. In its examination report, in a seeming reversal from the prior positions of Hobbs, Oetting and Melаhn, MDI revealed that it now disapproved of the methodology AFSLIC was using to account for the reserve impact of the Lloyds treaty. Using what it perceived to be the proper accounting methodology, MDI calculated the Lloyds treaty — at the time being used as a substitute for the Trеnd treaty — to have spawned only a fraction of the reserve credits taken by AFSLIC in its September 30, 1992 financial statement. By MDI’s accounting, AFSLIC was actually insolvent as of September 30, 1992.
In light of the company’s apparent insolvency, on February 1, 1993 MDI filed a petition for rehabilitation against AFSLIC in the Circuit Court of Cole County. See Mo. Rev.Stat. § 375.1165 (1991). The circuit judge referred the matter to a special master. The master found that MDI should be estopped from alleging AFSLIC insolvent on the basis of faulty accounting procedures. However, the master nonetheless concluded that AFSLIC was insolvеnt as of September 30, 1992 because the company had illegally substituted the Lloyds treaty for the Trend treaty. Although the circuit court apparently disagreed with the master’s conclusion that MDI should be estopped from challenging AFSLIC’s accounting methods, it agreed that AFSLIC was insolvent and ordеred it into rehabilitation. In April 1993, AFSLIC appealed the rehabilitation order to the Missouri Court of Appeals.
In May 1993, at the behest of Warmus, AFSLIC filed a “Motion for Authority to File Suit on Behalf of Defendants” in the Circuit Court of Cole County. In that motion, AFSLIC sought authority to file a section 1983 damages action against appellees. The motion was denied, and AFSLIC did not appeal the denial.
While AFSLIC’s appeal of the rehabilitation order was pending, in June 1993, as “beneficial owner, president and director” of AFSLIC, Warmus filed this section 1983 action in the district court against appellees in еach’s personal capacity. Seeking money damages only, Warmus challenged appellees’ conduct during AFSLIC’s administrative supervision. Among other things, Warmus alleged that while AFSLIC was in administrative supervision, appellees, acting in violation of his federal constitutional rights, conspired with the Michigan Insurance Bureau to drive AFSLIC out of business.
Appellees subsequently moved to dismiss on the basis of
Younger
abstention. Applying the three factors set forth in
Middlesex County Ethics Comm. v. Garden State Bar Ass’n,
457
U.S.
423, 432,
*255 DISCUSSION
I.
We begin with basic
Younger
principles. The
Younger
abstention doctrine is grounded both in federalism and comity, which dictates that “ ‘[t]he National government, anxious though it may be to vindicate and protect federal rights and interests, always endeavors to do so in ways that will not unduly interfere with the legitimate activities of the States.’ ”
Alleghany Corp. v. McCartney,
From these basic principles, it becomes clear that some measure of potential undue federal interference is a
Younger
prerequisite.
See Davis v. Lansing,
In challenging the district court’s decision to invoke Younger abstention in this case, Warmus seizes upon what he perceives to be an absence of potential undue federal interference. He maintains that his federal action, since it seeks money damages only and neither injunctive nor declarаtory relief, did not interfere with AFSLIC’s appeal of the rehabilitation order and will not interfere with AFSLIC’s rehabilitation currently pending in the Circuit Court of Cole County, i.e., the two ongoing state proceedings.
The Supreme Court has not decided the question whether
Younger
is applicable to a federal action like Warmus’s “seeking only monetary relief.”
Deakins v. Monaghan,
Acknowledging our Lamían “substantial relationship” test, or something close to it, Warmus contends that the issues comprising his federal damages claim are not substantially related to either of the two ongoing state proceedings. He observes that his damages action only challenges the personal conduct of three Missouri insurance officials which occurred during AFSLIC’s administrative supervision. In contrast, he asserts AFSLIC’s appeal strictly “concerns whether AFSLIC was operating in a hazardous condition as of September 30, 1992 and whether rehabilitation wаs warranted.” Likewise, AFSLIC’s rehabilitation, he further asserts, merely concerns “the condition or status of an insurance company in rehabilitation.”
We agree with Warmus that his federal damages action is generally confined to challenging appellees’ personal conduct. We disagree, however, with the notion that appel-lees’ personal conduct bears no substantial relationship to either of the ongoing state proceedings. First, appellees’ conduct was clearly in issue in AFSLIC’s appeal inasmuch as AFSLIC argued that MDI should be equitably estopped from disallowing the full nine months of Lloyds treaty reserve credits.
See Angoff v. American Financial Security Life Ins.,
Warmus’s federal damages action therefore beаrs a substantial relationship to AFSLIC’s appeal of the rehabilitation order, as well as to its rehabilitation currently pending in state circuit court.
See Lannan,
Regarding the first
Middlesex
factor, Warmus argues that since he was not a party to either AFSLIC’s appeal or its rehabilitation, no ongoing state proceedings еxisted with respect to him at the time he filed his federal complaint.
See Middlesex,
Warmus cannot, and does not, seriously dispute that the second
Middlesex
factor can
*257
be satisfied. Both AFSLIC’s appeal and its rehabilitation involved the subject matter of insurance regulation. We have twice held, for purposes of
Younger!Middlesex,
that states have an important interest in regulating their domestiс insurers.
See Alleghany Corp. v. Pomeroy,
Finally, with regard to the third
Middlesex
factor, Warmus maintains that he had no opportunity to bring a civil rights action against appellees within the confines of AFSLIC’s rehabilitation proceeding.
See Middlesex,
We therefore hold that the third Middle-sex factor, like the first two such factors, is satisfied, and conclude the district court did not abuse its discretion by choosing to abstain under Younger.
II.
Alternatively, appellees ask this court to affirm the judgment of the district court on grounds of qualified immunity, a defense which was raised but not addressed in the district court. Because we hold the district court properly abstained on the basis of Younger, we decline to reach the topic of qualified immunity.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
