United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USF & G) appeals the District Court’s 1 decision to stay USF & G’s declaratory judgment action brought in that court against Murphy Oil USA, Inc., in favor of a similar action, filed by Murphy Oil, pending in state court. We affirm.
In 1991 USF & G filed an action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama seeking a declaration that its insurance contracts with Murphy Oil do not provide coverage for four environmental claims against Murphy Oil. A few months later, Murphy Oil filed a similar action in state court in El Dorado, Arkansas, Murphy Oil’s headquarters and principal place of business. The state action named all of Murphy Oil’s primary and excess insurance carriers, including USF & G, that might be obligated to indemnify Murphy Oil on six underlying environmental claims, including the four in the federal action. There is no dispute that both eases require the application of Arkansas state insurance law. 2 The day after Murphy Oil filed suit in state court, it moved to dismiss or to stay or, in the alternative, to transfer USF & G’s federal aetion, and by the end of the year the case was transferred to the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas in El Dorado. Shortly thereafter, Murphy renewed its motion to dismiss or stay the federal action. In January 1993 the Magistrate Judge recommended the motion be denied, but the District Court rejected the Magistrate’s Findings and Recommendations on April 1, 1993, and ordered the federal action stayed. This appeal followed.
Initially we must resolve a dispute between the parties regarding the applicable law and appropriate standard of review, and at the same time reconcile what might appear to be conflicting decisions from this Court on the same issues.
USF & G’s suit is for a declaratory judgment and was brought under the District Court’s diversity jurisdiction. Years ago, the Supreme Court noted that district courts are “under no compulsion to exercise” their jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202 (1988).
Brillhart v. Excess Ins. Co. of America,
After
Brillhart,
the Supreme Court announced two decisions that elaborated upon the discretion vested in the district court to abstain from the exercise of federal jurisdiction when a parallel state action is pending, in essence articulating a new abstention doctrine.
3
See Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
Neither
Colorado River
nor
Moses H. Cone,
however, were declaratory judgment actions brought under diversity jurisdiction, so the applicability of the “exceptional cir-. eumstances” test to declaratory judgment diversity actions remained an unanswered question. In 1990 a panel of this Court applied the
Colorado River-Moses H. Cone
factors to a declaratory judgment diversity jurisdiction case and determined that the district court had not abused its discretion by refusing to abstain in favor of a pending state action.
Government Employees Ins. Co. v. Simon,
We think
Syntex
and
Jefferson Trust
are reconcilable. The discretionary nature of the district court’s exercise of jurisdiction in' declaratory judgment actions does not mean that the decision to abstain can be máde “as a matter of whim or personal disinclination.”
Public Affairs Assocs., Inc. v. Rickover,
It is clear to us that
Brillhart
survives
Colorado River
and
Moses H. Cone
in declaratory judgment actions, and that
Syntex
does not hold otherwise. After
Colorado River
was decided (but before the decision in
Moses H. Cone),
a divided Supreme Court had occasion to consider “the virtually unflagging obligation of the federal courts to exercise the jurisdiction given them,”
Colorado River,
As is readily apparent, crucial to this Court’s approval of the District Court’s dismissal of the suit in Brillhart were two factors absent here. First, because the federal suit was founded on diversity, state rather than federal law would govern the outcome of the federal suit. Second, and more significantly, the federal suit was for a declaratory judgment. Under the terms of the provision empowering federal courts to entertain declaratory judgment suits, the assumption of jurisdiction over such suits is discretionary.... It was primarily because federal jurisdiction over declaratory judgment suits is discretionary that Brillhart found the District Court’s deference to state-court proceedings permissible.
Calvert Fire Ins.,
We turn now to our review of the District Court’s decision to stay the federal court proceedings. The
Colorado River-Moses H. Cone
factors are as follows: (1) whether there is a res over which one court has established jurisdiction, (2) the inconvenience of the federal forum, (3) whether maintaining separate actions may result in piecemeal litigation, unless the relevant law would require piecemeal litigation and the federal court issue is easily severed, (4) which case has priority — not necessarily which case was filed first but a greater emphasis on the relative progress made in the cases, (5) whether state or federal law controls, especially favoring the exercise of jurisdiction where federal law controls, and (6) the adequacy of the state forum to protect the federal plaintiffs rights.
GEICO,
Factors 1 and 2 have no relevance here. The District Court noted the special importance of having jurisdiction over all parties in a declaratory judgment action involving multiple insurers and overlapping coverage and thus found factor 3 supported staying the federal action. As for factor 4, the federal action was filed first, but the state action has made more progress (in part, we acknowledge, because of the District Court’s stay order). State law will control this case, and the District Court found that the case presented difficult questions of state law on a matter of great public interest, thus farther justifying a stay of the federal court action in favor of the state action. USF & G argues that factor 6 is important here and supports the exercise -of federal jurisdiction. But USF & G points to nothing in the record to indicate that the insurer would not receive a fair hearing in state court, and there is no presumption that a state court is biased or otherwise inadequate to protect the federal plaintiffs rights.
We cannot say the District Court abused its discretion in staying the federal court *264 action in this case. The order of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Jimm Larry Hendren, United States District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas.
. USF & G states in its reply brief that the choice of law issue has not been decided. Reply Brief of Appellant at 19 n. 7. Nevertheless, USF & G does not suggest that something other than Arkansas law would apply and apparently has assumed (if not conceded) as much throughout this litigation, most recently in its main brief. We think it rather disingenuous of USF & G to intimate now that the choice might be other than Arkansas law.
. This " ‘fourth type’ of abstention ... concerns whether a federal court may stay or dismiss an action on the sole ground that there is a similar action pending in state court in which the controversy between the parties can be resolved.” 17A Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 4247, at 116-17 (1988) (footnote omitted).
. We are not the only circuit to have arrived at a hybrid sort of "abstention” for cases such as this one, drawing upon both
Brillhart
and
Colorado River-Moses H. Cone.
The First Circuit applied the
Colorado River
test in a case similar to this one, but quoted
Brillhart
at some length and applied the abuse of discretion standard.
Fuller Co. v. Ramon I. Gil, Inc.,
The remaining circuits that have considered the question are split. The Second Circuit has said that
Colorado River
abstention applies to declaratory judgment actions, but cited as support First and Ninth Circuit cases that are no longer viable.
Lumbermens Mut. Casualty Co. v. Connecticut Bank & Trust Co.,
. This Court has implied that we review de novo a district court's decision whether to abstain.
See Century Indem. Co. v. McGillacuty’s, Inc.,
