Court Opinion

ID: 9427301
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 23:20:22.090662+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:23:06.025421
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Blackmun,
concurring in the judgment.
The plurality’s opinion, ante, at 662-663, appears to me to indicate that it now regards as fully compatible the Court’s decisions in Brillhart v. Excess Ins. Co., 316 U. S. 491 (1942), a diversity case, and Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States, 424 U. S. 800 (1976), a federal-issue case. I am not at all sure that this is so. I — as were Mr. Justice Stewart and Mr. Justice Stevens — was in dissent in Colorado River, and if the holding in that case is what I think it is, and if one assumes, as I do not, that Brillhart has any application here, the Court cut back on Mr. Justice Frankfurter’s rather sweeping language in Brillhart, 316 U. S., at 494-495.*
*668Because Judge Will’s stay order was issued prior to this Court’s decision in Colorado River, and he therefore did not have such guidance as that case affords in the area, I join in the Court’s reversal of the Court of Appeals’ issuance of a writ of mandamus. The issuance was premature. The Court of Appeals should have done no more than require reconsideration of the case by Judge Will in light of Colorado River.

“Although the District Court had jurisdiction of the suit under the Federal Declaratory Judgments Act, it was under no compulsion to exercise that jurisdiction. The petitioner’s motion to dismiss the bill was addressed to the discretion of the court. . . . The motion rested upon the claim that, since another proceeding was pending in a state court in which all the matters in controversy between the parties could be fully adjudicated, a declaratory judgment in the federal court was unwarranted. The correctness of this claim was certainly relevant in determining whether *668the District Court should assume jurisdiction and proceed to determine the rights of the parties. Ordinarily it would be uneconomical as well as vexatious for a federal court to proceed in a declaratory judgment suit where another suit is pending in a state court presenting the same issues, not governed by federal law, between the same parties. Gratuitous interference with the orderly and comprehensive disposition of a state court litigation should be avoided.”