Injuries sustained as a result of an automobile collision prompted appellants William A. Burns and Dolores E. Burns to file a complaint against Jamie N. Watler and her parents, Karl and Nancy Watler, in the United States District Court for the District of Maine on August 8, 1989. Jurisdiction was based on the parties’ diverse citi-zenships, as plaintiffs were citizens of the State of Pennsylvania and defendants were citizens of the State of Maine. A day later, the same plaintiffs and Mrs. Rachel Bag-ley, a citizen of the State of Maine, filed a virtually identical suit against the same defendants in the Maine Superior Court in Piscataquis County. Pursuant to stipulations, in February of 1990 defendants Karl and Nancy Watler were dismissed from both the federal and the state suits. On June 5, 1990, Jamie Watler moved for a stay of the proceedings in the federal court due to the pendency of the more comprehensive action in the Maine Superior Court. The United States Magistrate issued a report on August 1, 1990, in which he recommended that an order granting the stay be entered. On August 28, 1990, and over plaintiffs’ objections, the district court *143 adopted the magistrate’s report. The order, in its entirety, read as follows:
[Proceedings in this action are stayed pending further order of court, and the parties will diligently attempt to bring the pending state court action to trial as soon as possible. Counsel shall file with the clerk, not later than November 1, 1990, a written statement with respect to the then current status of the proceedings in Piscataquis County, together with an estimate of when the matter may be reached for trial. Counsel shall file a like statement with the clerk of this court at 60-day intervals thereafter. Counsel may at any time after November 1, 1990, file a motion seeking reconsideration of this order by this court.
Plaintiffs appeal from this adverse ruling. For reasons that follow, we vacate the district court’s grant of a stay and remand for continuation of the proceedings.
I
At the threshold, we must dissipate any existing doubts regarding this court’s jurisdiction to entertain this appeal. Appellee argues that two characteristics of the district court’s order — the fact that it requires counsel to regularly file written statements pertaining to the status of the proceedings in the state court and the fact that it additionally and expressly suggests that a motion for reconsideration may be filed — denote that the federal court has contemplated such further and ongoing involvement in the proceedings as to render the order not final, and hence unappealable, under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
1
Additionally, ap-pellee submits that the order is not appeal-able under the collateral order exception to the final judgment rule recognized in
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
We recently delineated the contours of our appellate jurisdiction over orders granting stays in the federal courts pending resolution of parallel actions in the state courts.
See Rojas-Hernández v. Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority,
All three of these elements are clearly met in the case at bar. We initially note that both plaintiffs in the federal action, and the same defendant, are parties to the state litigation. Consideration of whether “a valid judgment was entered in the prior action” begs the question, since the reasonable certainty that such will actually be the case is precisely what has moved the federal plaintiffs to object to the district court’s granting of the stay. Finally, since the complaint filed in the state court action is virtually identical to the federal complaint and both cases present a straightforward application of state law issues, we must presume that all matters that will be litigated in the one would, in fact, be litigated in the other. Hence, this appeal is properly before our court.
*144
The cases cited by appellee do not warrant a different result. Contrary to her contention, the fact that the order requires periodical reports on the progress of the proceedings in the state court and invites reconsideration does not make it “inherently tentative” so as to fall within the purview of
Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp.,
Appellee’s allegation that the stay order in this case fails to meet the requirements of the
Cohen
exception to the final judgment rule is equally unavailing. In
Moses H. Cone,
To come within the small class of decisions excepted from the final judgment rule by Cohen, the order must conclusively determine the disputed question, resolve an important issue separate from the merits of the action, and be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.
Appellee concedes that the order granting the stay is essentially unrelated to the merits of the main claim and involves a right incapable of vindication on appeal from a final judgment. She vehemently argues, however, that the order does not “conclusively determine the disputed question.”
Appellee’s contention must fail for the following reason. While it is true that the district court requested periodic reports on the progress of the case at the state level and even commented that appellant could seek reconsideration of its order, there is no indication in the record that it intended to take any further action with regard to the case until the state court had given full consideration to the same, at which point the plaintiffs in all probability would be precluded from seeking any further remedy in the federal court.
2
In fact, the only discernible scenario under which the district court would exercise its judicial power over the instant case would be in the event that the case was not brought to trial in the state court within a reasonable period of time. The reasonable probability that this
*145
would not be so suffices to bring the same within the category of orders which would “conclusively determine the disputed question^],” in this case by decisively leaving them for resolution to the state court. Finally, the passing reference to the possibility of reconsideration,
without more,
is merely an expression of the court’s inherent power to reconsider its orders in light of changed circumstances, which power would have existed even had the statement not been made. It thus renders the order inconclusive “only in the technical sense that every order short of a final decree is subject to reopening at the discretion of the district judge.”
Moses H. Cone,
Summing up, “when the sole purpose and effect of the stay are precisely to surrender jurisdiction of a federal suit to a state court,”
Cone,
II
Turning to the merits, we begin by noting that the principle that federal courts are obligated to determine a case once federal subject matter jurisdiction has been properly invoked was established early in the history of our system of courts. One-hundred and seventy years ago, the Supreme Court stated:
It is most true, that this court will not take jurisdiction if it should not: but it is equally true that it must take jurisdiction, if it should ... With whatever doubts, with whatever difficulties, a case may be attended, we must decide it, if it is brought before us. We have no more right to decline the exercise of jurisdiction which is given, than to usurp that which is not given.
Cohens v. Virginia,
6 Wheat. (19 U.S.) 264,
Before turning to the factors federal courts must consider to determine whether to decline the exercise of jurisdiction when a parallel proceeding is pending in the state court, we follow the
Colorado River
Court in emphasizing the narrowness of the exception that was thus created. “Because federal courts have a virtually unflagging ... obligation to exercise the jurisdiction given them ... the surrender of jurisdiction in favor of parallel state proceedings ... is permissible only in exceptional circumstances.”
Villa Marina Yacht Sales, Inc. v. Hatteras Yachts,
From
Colorado River
and its progeny, six factors have emerged as the core of this brand of jurisdictional analysis. To determine whether the required “exceptional circumstances” exist, a district court must consider: (1) whether either court has assumed jurisdiction over a
res;
(2) the inconvenience of the federal forum; (3) the desirability of avoiding piecemeal litigation; (4) the order in which the forums obtained jurisdiction,
see Colorado River,
The order we are reviewing shows no indication that the district court balanced the factors in favor of dismissal against its obligation to exercise jurisdiction.
Cf. Villa Marina,
Although in the
Villa Marina
and
Gonzalez
cases we recognized that the district court was better positioned to perform the
Colorado River/Moses H. Cone
analysis, such is not the situation in this case. The simplicity of the factual situation now before the court and the potential prejudice the plaintiffs could suffer from any further delay both advise that we perform the evaluation ourselves.
See Villa Marina,
Appellees argue, however, that the balance of the
Colorado River/Moses H. Cone
factors support the district court’s grant of the stay. We are not persuaded. Requiring brief discussion is appellee’s assertion that the two-hour drive from her residence in Greenville, Maine, to the federal court in Bangor, Maine, renders the federal court a particularly inconvenient forum in which to pursue this litigation. “In raising this factor, the Court seemed to be concerned with the physical proximity of the federal forum to the evidence and witnesses.”
Villa Marina,
A final point. There was some concern at oral argument over the situation wherein a plaintiff empowered to file suit in both courts in fact did so with the intention of pursuing more diligently that action which progressed more favorably to his cause. Although there is no precedent directly on point, the situation is somewhat akin to that encountered by federal courts which have focused on the motivation behind the filing of the subsequent federal complaint.
See Fuller Co.,
The district court’s grant of the stay is, therefore,
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. "The courts of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts of the United States.”
. The magistrate’s stated rationale in issuing his recommendation is most illustrative in this regard, as he reasoned that:
[I]t would be a needless duplication of judicial effort to try this case in this court and then try the case in Piscataquis County ... I find that if the case in Piscataquis County can be reached for trial within a reasonable period of time, this action should be stayed pending the trial of the case in state court. The possibility of this court and the state court each having to devote time to the trial of this case would not comport with a judicious use of judicial time.
. There are three other exceptions recognized by the Supreme Court: (1) a federal court should abstain where resolution of an unsettled state law question would render unnecessary the need to decide a federal constitutional question,
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
. The district court's rationale also reveals that its intention in granting the stay was to "wait and see” whether resolution of the state court suit would perhaps make a trial in the federal court unnecessary, monitoring the progress of the state court suit only to determine whether at some point the delay in reaching trial was so significant as to warrant that the federal proceedings continue. See supra, note 2. This is *147 clearly an inappropriate basis for surrendering the exercise of federal jurisdiction.
