The Yamaha Motor Corporation (Yamaha) appeals the district court’s order abstaining from, and dismissing without prejudice, Yamaha’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against six members of the Arkansas Motor Vehicle Commission (the Commission). Because we find that the district court erred when it abstained from exercising its jurisdiction ovеr this action, we reverse and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1986, Cycle Center, Inc., (Cycle Center) entered into a dealer agreement (the Agreement) with Yamaha. That Agreement, which furnished the terms of Yamaha’s reimbursement obligation to Cycle Center for warranty work, providеd the catalyst for this action. In 1992, Cycle Center complained to the *795 Commission that Yamaha’s reimbursement terms, memorialized in the Agreement, violated the provisions of the Arkansas Motor Vehicle Commission Act 1 (the Act). Following a hearing, the Commission, voting six to two, found that Yamaha failed to comрly with the Act. Yamaha then Sled suit in federal district court, contending that the Commission’s vote violated its constitutional rights and requested that the district court grant injunctive and declaratory relief.
Under the terms of the Agreement, Cycle Center was entitled to either ten or fifteen percent over dealеr cost for parts replaced pursuant to the warranty policy. The Act, originally passed in 1975, 2 was amended in 1991, 3 adding the emphasized language.
On satisfactory proof that any manufacturer ... has unfairly and without due regard to the equities of. the parties or to the detriment of the public welfare failed to properly fulfill any warranty agreеment or to adequately and fairly compensate any of its motor vehicle dealers for labor, parts, compensation for parts for two wheeled vehicles must be at the manufacturer’s suggested retail price, or incidental expenses incurred by the dealer with regard to faсtory warranty agreements performed by the dealer.
Ark.Code Ann. § 23-112-308(a)(10) (emphasis added).
The language emphasized above formed the basis for Cycle Center’s complaint to the Commission. Cycle Center argued before the Commission that Yamaha had violated the terms of § 23-112-308(a)(10) by compensating it at less than the manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP). Yamaha contended that the Act’s 1991 amendment, requiring that warranty parts be compensated at the MSRP, did not apply to its relationship with Cycle Center because the parties had a preexisting contractual agreement. Citing
Chrysler Motors Corp. v. Thomas Auto.
Co.
4
for the premise that the Act was nоt to be applied retroactively,
Cycle Center contended at the July 29, 1992 hearing that the Agreement had been modified after 1991 and hence, Yamaha must comply with the Act. Essentially, Cycle Center argued that the annual updated price lists distributed by Yamaha to its dealers comprised a yearly modification of its Agreement with Yamaha.
The Commission’s counsel, senior assistant attorney general Thomаs Gay, discussing the retroactivity of a law, stated, “[t]he test is what the law says. If there is some'ambiguity in what the law says, then you determine what the legislature’s intent was in construing and interpreting that particular statute.” Appellant’s App. at 360. Attorney Gay also counseled that,
in Arkansas, statutes are presumed to apply prospectively only, from the date they are enacted forward, not' retroactively. And to have a statute apply retroactively, that meaning going back and apply [sic] to a contract that already exists at the time the law takes place, takes effeсt, there has to be some language in the statute itself to show that that’s what the legislature intended.
Id. at 361. 5
Commissioner Jones, President of the Arkansas Motorcycle Dealer’s Association and a Harley Davidson dealer, advocated applying the 1991 amendment to Yamaha. He stated:
*796 Where this winds up in сourt as far as somebody with a higher pay rate than I, somebody with a black robe on to decide what is amended and what is not amended, the law is very clear as passed by the legislature that says retail on parts. So, if it’s something that pertained to law, we are not lawyers, that’s for lawyers to аrgue, for the court to decide what, in fact, is correct.
Id. at 365-66. After farther discussion, primarily led by Commissioner Jones, Commissioner Whitson 6 stated, “I think we would be remiss as a Commission to go against our legal counsel in what we see in front of us that the law was not written with retroactive •language.” Id. at 369.
The Commission apрeared to understand that in order to apply the Act retroactively, it must find that the Agreement had been substantially changed after the 1991 amendment.
Cf. Woodhaven Homes v. Kennedy Sheet Metal,
On September 8,1992, Yamaha filed suit in federal district court, naming the six Commissioners whо determined that Yamaha had violated the Act, and requesting the court to grant either a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction, or a permanent injunction preventing entry of the Commission’s Order to fine Yamaha (the Order). On September 16, 1992, the Commission held a public meeting allowing argument regarding the Commission’s Order. At that time, Cycle Center, now represented by Stephen Bil-heimer, 7 Commissioner Jones’ nephew, and Yamaha both appeared before the Commission arguing the retroactivity issue once again. During that meeting, the Commission voted to memorialize its Order from July 29, 1992. 8
Sometime between the July 29, 1992 hearing and the September 16, 1992 meeting, a group of motorcycle dealers, including Commissioner Jones, met to discuss the implications of the Cycle Center-Yamaha dispute. Id. at 422. These dealers ultimately decided to aid Cycle Center financially in its legal dispute. Id. at 418. Although Commissioner Jones maintаins that he did not financially contribute to the legal fund, in his capacity as the President of the Arkansas Motorcycle Dealer’s Association, he did serve as a conduit for the accumulated monies. Id. at 416-19. After collecting monies for Cycle Center’s 9 legal fund, Commissioner Jones signed the legal retainer checks for Bilheimer in his *797 capacity as President of the Arkansas Motorcycle Dealer’s Association. Id. at 414-15.
The district court set trial for May 10, 1993; however, on May 3, 1993, the district court entered an order abstaining from, and dismissing without prejudice, this action. The district court found that abstention was warranted by
Middlesex County Ethics Comm. v. Garden State Bar Ass’n,
II. DISCUSSION
A federal court’s obligation to аdjudicate claims within its jurisdiction is “virtually unflagging.”
Deakins v. Monaghan,
In
Younger,
the Supreme Court, articulating a “sensitivity to the legitimate interests of both State and National Governments,”
A “necessary predicate for a
Younger
dismissal ... is, ‘the opportunity to raise and have timely decided by a competent state tribunal the féderal issues involved.’ ”
Huffman v. Pursue, Ltd.,
We
hold that the district court’s finding that there was no evidence of bias in the state proceeding is clearly erroneous. The district court erred when it dismissed this action pursuant to
Younger
abstention because the state proceeding was before an
*798
incompetent tribunal. Adjudication by an incompetent state tribunal precludes a federal court from abstaining on
Younger
grounds.
11
Gibson,
We find there was ample evidence of bias on the part of Commissioner Jones, and this bias rendered the Commission incompetent to decide the issues before it.
See Hicks v. City of Watonga,
An adjudicator is presumed to be unbiased; to overcome that presumption, a litigant must make a “showing of conflict of interest or some other specific reason for disqualification.”
Schweiker v. McClure,
Commissioner Jones’ presence on this tribunal rendered it incompetent to decide the issues before it.
See Hicks,
Jones had conflicting interests. For example, he suggested that Cycle Center obtain an attorney and then proceeded to suggest to his nephew, attorney Stephen Bilheimer, that he contact Cycle Center as a potential client. Jones also participated in the meeting in which the motorcycle dealers discussed the Yamaha-Cyele Center dispute, and he acted as a conduit for Cycle Center’s legal funds. We find that these facts taken together caused Jones to be incompetent to have rendered an opinion and voted on the Cycle Center complaint.
See Hicks,
Because Yamaha did not receive a hearing before a competent tribunal in the state proceedings, we hold that Yamaha lacked Younger ’s necessary opportunity to raise constitutional challenges in the state proceeding. As a result, the district court lacked the discretion to abstain from this action.
III. CONCLUSION
The district court erred when it abstained from exercising its jurisdiction over this action because - the state administrative proceeding lacked a necessary predicate for Younger abstention. Accordingly, wе reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
. Ark.Code Ann. § 23-112-101 to -707 (Michie 1992).
. 1975 Ark. Acts No. 388.
. Ark.Code Ann. § 23-112-308 (1991 Ark.Acts No. 411, § 1).
.
Chrysler
examined the application of the Act to the terms of a dealer agreement which was entered into in 1969.
.Gay added in reference to the retroactive effect of the Act, “[i]f we look at the Act that was passed in '91 ... trying to find any language in that Act that would evidence an intent to apply it retroactively, I do not see it.” Id. at 363.
. Commissioner Whitson was one of the twо Commissioners who voted against fining Yamaha.
. Bilheimer first learned about the Cycle Center-Yamaha case from Commissioner Jones, who suggested that the case might be something Bil-heimer was interested in. Appellant’s App. at 419.
. Although this vote apparently took place, the Order was not enterеd until July 26, 1993.
. Cycle Center intervened in this action on September 25, 1992.
. There is some dispute in the case law whether the absence of a competent tribunal implicates the third prong of the
Middlesex
test or whether the absence of such a tribunal is an extraordinary circumstance preventing abstention.
See Partington v. Gedan,
. Because our decision rests on the absence of the third prong for Middlesex, or Younger, abstention, we find it unnecessary to decide whether the Commission hearing constituted an ongoing state proceeding implicating important state interests. See supra p. 797.
