Elmendorf Grafica, Inc. v. D.S. America (East), Inc.

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                          

No. 94-1695

                   ELMENDORF GRAFICA, INC.,

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

        D.S. AMERICA (EAST), INC. d/b/a SCREEN (EAST),

                     Defendant, Appellee.

                                      

                         ERRATA SHEET
                                     ERRATA SHEET

   The  opinion of this Court  issued on February  21, 1995, is
amended as follows:

   Page 5, line 11:  Change "April 8, 1993" to "April 8, 1994".

                              1


                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-1695

                   ELMENDORF GRAFICA, INC.,

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

        D.S. AMERICA (EAST), INC. d/b/a SCREEN (EAST),

                     Defendant, Appellee.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

        [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                

                                         

                            Before

                    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     
               Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                         
              and Boyle, Senior District Judge.*
                                                          
                                         

Jose  L. Rivero  Vergne, Moredo  & Moredo,  Ramon  Rosado-Vila and
                                                                          
Ramon Rosado-Vila Law Offices on brief for appellant.
                                     
Francisco M.  Troncoso, Troncoso  & Becker,  Edward J.  Underhill,
                                                                             
Steven L.  Katz, and Masuda, Funai,  Eifert & Mitchell, Ltd.  on brief
                                                                    
for appellee.

                                         

                      February 21, 1995
                                         

                
                            

*Of the District of Rhode Island, sitting by designation.


          CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge.  Elmendorf Grafica,
                                                    

Inc. appeals  from an  order of the  district court  granting

D.S. America (East), Inc.'s motion  to stay a pending federal

diversity action until similar litigation in the state courts

of Illinois is  concluded.  The United  States District Court

for the  District of Puerto Rico  accepted the recommendation

of  the  magistrate judge  that  a stay  was  justified under

principles  declared  in  Colorado  River  Water Conservation
                                                                         

District  v. United States, 424  U.S. 800 (1976).   We vacate
                                      

the stay and remand for proceedings in the district court.  

                              I.
                                          I.

          This case arises out of a dispute between Elmendorf

Grafica, Inc.,  a Puerto Rico corporation  with its principal

place  of business  in Puerto  Nuevo, Puerto  Rico, and  D.S.

America  (East),  Inc.,   d/b/a  Screen  (East)  (hereinafter

"Screen"),  an Illinois corporation  with its principal place

of business in Rolling Meadows, Illinois.  On March 20, 1992,

the  parties  entered into  an  equipment purchase  agreement

under which  Elmendorf agreed  to purchase computer  hardware

and  software at a price of $120,000.  Elmendorf paid $84,000

in  advance, leaving a balance due of $36,000.  The equipment

failed  to  perform  to  its   satisfaction,  and  Elmendorf,

claiming ongoing damage to  its business as a result  of this

failure, refused to pay.

          A.   The Illinois Action
                      A.   The Illinois Action

                             -3-
                                          3


          On  November  25, 1992,  Screen sued  Elmendorf for

$36,000 in the Circuit  Court of Cook County, Illinois.   The

summons and complaint in that case were served on Elmendorf's

president  on  December  3,  1992.    Instead  of  answering,

Elmendorf filed a  limited appearance.  On  February 2, 1993,

Elmendorf moved to dismiss  for want of personal jurisdiction

and,  after briefing  and argument,  the Cook  County Circuit

Court  allowed  Elmendorf's  motion  on  May  17,  1993,  and

dismissed Screen's action for want of  personal jurisdiction.

While  the  court modified  its order  on  June 8,  1993, the

dismissal  remained.     Screen  appealed  to   the  Illinois

Appellate Court,  seeking to overturn the  dismissal, on July

8, 1993.

          The parties  thereupon engaged in a  war of motions

in the appellate forum.  On October 14, 1993, Screen  filed a

motion for  stay of  proceedings to  amend record on  appeal,

which included  a  request for  additional time  to file  its

brief.   The appellate court  denied that motion  in February

1994.   Elmendorf, having  strongly opposed Screen's  motion,

filed  its own motion for  leave to supplement  the record on

March 24, 1994, requesting additional time to file its brief.

After  the  appellate  court's  disposition of  this  motion,

Elmendorf  moved for  clarification on  May 11,  1994.   That

motion  was allowed  on  August 10,  1994,  with yet  another

extension  of time  for  Elmendorf to  file  its brief.    On

                             -4-
                                          4


September  16,  1994, Elmendorf  filed  a  third request  for

additional  time to file  its brief because  its attorney was

preparing for  another trial and  lacked the time  to prepare

its brief.  Insofar as we are aware, the appeal has yet to be

decided.

          B.   The Puerto Rico Action
                      B.   The Puerto Rico Action

          On January  15, 1993, two months  after Screen sued

Elmendorf in Illinois, and a few weeks before Elmendorf moved

to dismiss that action, Elmendorf sued Screen in the Superior

Court of Puerto  Rico, San Juan  Part, alleging, inter  alia,
                                                                        

breach of  contract, false  advertising,  and fraud  stemming

from  the same  equipment  purchase agreement  which was  the

subject of  the Illinois  litigation.  Elmendorf  requested a

declaration that the agreement was  null and void, damages in

the amount  of $684,700  plus interest, and  reimbursement of

the  $84,000 advance payment.  Screen was not served with the

summons  and complaint in  the Puerto Rico  action until June

14, 1993,  one week  after the  Cook  County Circuit  Court's

amended dismissal of the Illinois action for want of personal

jurisdiction.

          On   July   13,   1993,   alleging   diversity   of

citizenship,  Screen removed  the Puerto  Rico action  to the

United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico.

On September 8, 1993, Screen moved to dismiss and/or stay the

Puerto Rico federal proceedings citing principles established

                             -5-
                                          5


by  the Supreme  Court in  Colorado River  Water Conservation
                                                                         

District v. United States, 424 U.S. 800 (1976) and subsequent
                                     

cases.   This motion was referred to a magistrate judge, who,

on October 12, 1993, and in the absence of any  opposition by

Elmendorf,  recommended  a  stay of  proceedings  pending the

outcome  of the  Illinois  litigation.   Elmendorf filed  its

opposition on  October 15, 1993, apparently  before receiving

word of the magistrate judge's  decision, and on October  21,

1993, also filed objections  to the magistrate judge's report

and recommendations, along with  an explanation for the delay

in  filing its opposition.   The district  court referred the

matter to  the magistrate judge for  reconsideration in light

of Elmendorf's objections.

          On  April 8,  1994, the  magistrate judge  issued a

second report,  again recommending  a stay.   Elmendorf filed

objections to this  second report on April 25, 1994.1  On May

                    
                                

1.  Screen states in its brief  that "it is unclear  whether"
Elmendorf's  objections  to  the  April  8,  1994  magistrate
judge's report,  filed on April  25, 1994, were  filed within
the  10-day  period  required  by 28  U.S.C.     636(b)(1)(C)
(1988).    This  seems   to  suggest  that  we   should  deem
Elmendorf's appeal waived.  See, e.g., Henley Drilling Co. v.
                                                                      
McGee, 36 F.3d 143, 150-51 (1st Cir. 1994) (failure to object
                 
within     636(b)(1)(C)'s  ten-day period  waives  claim  for
purposes of appellate review); Fed.  R. Civ. P. 72(b) (same).
However, it  appears that Elmendorf's objections  were timely
filed.  See Fed. R.  Civ. P. 72(b) (allowing service  by mail
                       
of  magistrate's report);  Fed.  R.  Civ.  P.  6(a)  and  (e)
(describing  method of  computing time  period  under federal
rules, and stating that, where period allowed is less than 11
days, intervening  Saturdays, Sundays and holidays  shall not
be counted,  and, where service upon a party is to be made by
mail, adding three days to the period is allowed).

                             -6-
                                          6


5,  1994,  the district  court issued  an order  adopting the

magistrate  judge's conclusions  and ordering  a stay  of the

proceedings.  Elmendorf appeals.

                             II.
                                         II.

          A.   A Preliminary Matter
                      A.   A Preliminary Matter

          Elmendorf argues that the  district court failed to

perform  a de novo review  of the magistrate judge's proposed
                              

findings, as  required by  28 U.S.C.    636(b)(1)(C) (1988).2

                    
                                

2.  28 U.S.C.   636 states, in pertinent part:

          (b)(1)  Notwithstanding any  provision of
          law to the contrary--
               (A)   a  judge may  designate a
               magistrate    to    hear    and
               determine  any pretrial  matter
               pending   before   the   court,
               except   a  motion  .  .  .  to
               involuntarily dismiss an action
               . . . .
               (B)  a judge may also designate
               a magistrate . . . to submit to
               a judge of  the court  proposed
               findings     of     fact    and
               recommendations     for     the
               disposition, by a judge  of the
               court,  of any  motion excepted
               in subparagraph (A) . . . .
               (C)  the magistrate  shall file
               his   proposed   findings   and
               recommendations           under
               subparagraph (B) with the court
               and a copy  shall forthwith  be
               mailed to all parties.

          Within ten days after being served with a
          copy,  any  party   may  serve  and  file
          written   objections  to   such  proposed
          findings and  recommendations as provided
          by rules of court.  A judge of  the court
          shall make  a  de novo  determination  of
          those portions of the report or specified

                             -7-
                                          7


The district court's order of May 5, 1994 states, "The Court,

having reviewed the conclusions of the U.S. Magistrate in the

two Report and Recommendations filed in this case, finds that

his decisions  are warranted  in  law and  fact."   Elmendorf

argues  that  this statement  is  inconsistent  with    636's

requirement.

          Elmendorf has called no  authority to our attention

holding that, in order to demonstrate compliance with   636's

de  novo  review  requirement,  a district  court  must  make
                    

findings and rulings of its own rather than adopting those of

the magistrate  judge.   The statute authorizes  the district

court  to adopt  in  whole as  well as  in part  the proposed

findings or recommendations of  the magistrate judge.  Where,

as  here,  the  magistrate  judge decided  on  an  undisputed

factual record, the district court was certainly not required

to  rehash the magistrate judge's reasoning.  The role of the

magistrate judge is "to  relieve courts of unnecessary work."

Henley  Drilling Co.  v. McGee,  36 F.3d  143, 151  (1st Cir.
                                          

                    
                                

          proposed  findings or  recommendations to
          which objection is made.   A judge of the
          court  may accept, reject,  or modify, in
                                                               
          whole  or  in   part,  the  findings   or
                           
          recommendations  made by  the magistrate.
          The  judge  may   also  receive   further
          evidence  or recommit  the matter  to the
          magistrate with instructions.

28 U.S.C.   636(b)(1) (1988) (emphasis added).

                             -8-
                                          8


1994), quoting Park Motor  Mart, Inc. v. Ford Motor  Co., 616
                                                                    

F.2d 603, 605 (1st Cir. 1980).

                             III.
                                         III.

          A.   The Colorado River Doctrine
                      A.   The Colorado River Doctrine
                                             

          The Supreme Court in  Colorado River established  a
                                                          

narrow  basis for district courts to  stay or dismiss federal

lawsuits  in deference  to parallel  state proceedings.   The

Court held that, in  "exceptional" circumstances, 424 U.S. at

818,  a federal  court  could decline  jurisdiction based  on

"'considerations of "[w]ise  judicial administration,  giving

regard   to   conservation   of   judicial    resources   and

comprehensive  disposition of  litigation,"'" Moses  H. Cone,
                                                                        

460  U.S.  at 15  (quoting Colorado  River,  424 U.S.  at 817
                                                      

(quoting Kerotest  Mfg. Co. v.  C-O-Two Fire Equip.  Co., 342
                                                                    

U.S. 180, 183 (1952))).

          The   Court  in   Colorado  River   mentioned  four
                                                       

illustrative  factors  for  determining whether  "exceptional

circumstances"  exist: (1)  whether either court  has assumed

jurisdiction over a res; (2) the inconvenience of the federal
                                   

forum; (3) the desirability of avoiding piecemeal litigation,

and (4) the order in  which the forums obtained jurisdiction.

In Moses H. Cone, the Court added two additional factors: (5)
                            

whether state or  federal law controls, and  (6) the adequacy

of the state forum  to protect the parties' rights.   Another

factor,  mentioned but not applied in Moses H. Cone, 460 U.S.
                                                               

                             -9-
                                          9


at  17 n.20, and counted by  some courts, is the vexatious or

reactive nature of the federal lawsuit, see, e.g., Fuller Co.
                                                                         

v. Ramon I. Gil, Inc., 782 F.2d 306, 308-10 (1st Cir. 1986).
                                 

          In  Colorado  River, the  Supreme  Court emphasized
                                         

that the  stay or dismissal  authorized there should  be used

sparingly.   The  Court  spoke of  the "virtually  unflagging

obligation of the federal courts to exercise the jurisdiction

given  them," 424 U.S. at 817, and cautioned that "[o]nly the

clearest  of justifications will  warrant dismissal,"  id. at
                                                                      

819.   The weight a  court should give  any single factor may

vary greatly depending on  the case, and "[n]o one  factor is

necessarily  determinative;  a carefully  considered judgment

taking  into   account  both   the  obligation   to  exercise

jurisdiction  and  the  combination  of  factors  counselling

against  that exercise  is  required," id.  at  818-19.   The
                                                      

district  court must  weigh the  important factors  "with the

balance  heavily  weighted  in   favor  of  the  exercise  of

jurisdiction," Moses H. Cone, 460 U.S. at 16.
                                        

          The decision whether  to surrender jurisdiction  is

"necessarily  left to the discretion of the district court in

the  first instance,"  id. at  19, and  the district  court's
                                      

decision  may   be  reversed  only  for  an   abuse  of  that

discretion.   Such  discretion must  be  exercised,  however,

within  the  constraints  of  the  "exceptional-circumstances

test."    Id.; see  also Villa  Marina  Yacht Sales,  Inc. v.
                                                                      

                             -10-
                                          10


Hatteras Yachts, 947 F.2d 529 (1st  Cir. 1991), cert. denied,
                                                                        

   U.S.    , 112 S. Ct.  1674 (1992).  In  a discussion which

concluded that it made no  difference in this context whether

the  district court  ordered a stay  or dismissal,  the Court

emphasized the limits of this discretion, saying:

          When a district  court decides to dismiss
          or   stay   under   Colorado  River,   it
                                                         
          presumably  concludes  that the  parallel
          state-court   litigation   will   be   an
          adequate  vehicle  for  the complete  and
          prompt resolution of  the issues  between
          the parties.  If there is any substantial
          doubt as  to this, it would  be a serious
          abuse of discretion to grant the stay  or
          dismissal at all.

Moses H. Cone, 460 U.S at 28.
                         

          B.   The Magistrate Judge's Recommendation
                      B.   The Magistrate Judge's Recommendation

          The   magistrate   judge's   second    report   and

recommendation considered Colorado River, reiterating rightly
                                                    

that the balance  in any  decision to stay  or dismiss  under

that doctrine  should be  "heavily weighted  in favor  of the

exercise of jurisdiction."   The magistrate judge nonetheless

felt that a stay was appropriate here:

          In this case, plaintiff is not seeking to
          obtain possession of a res.  The evidence
          and witnesses are split  between Illinois
          and Puerto  Rico.   No one forum  is more
          convenient  for both parties  at the same
          time.     If  this  court  exercises  its
          jurisdiction,  the  two parties  would be
          litigating  very  similar  issues in  two
          separate  forums.  The Illinois court was
          the first to  assume jurisdiction.  Since
          the  purchase  agreement entered  into by
          the parties provides for  the application
          of  Illinois   law,  it  would   be  more

                             -11-
                                          11


          appropriate  for  the  Illinois court  to
          interpret it.   In  sum, the totality  of
          the circumstances favors the stay pending
          resolution of the Illinois litigation.

Id.  at 3.   As the district court  adopted this analysis, we
               

focus on the magistrate judge's reasoning.

                             IV.
                                         IV.

          In the  first three sentences  of the  above-quoted

reasoning, the magistrate judge concluded that the factors he

was considering favored neither party.  We have no difficulty

with the magistrate judge's assessment of those three items.

          The magistrate judge went  on to conclude, however,

that the next three  factors weighed in favor of  staying the

federal action so that Screen  could go forward in  Illinois.

We disagree.  In  our view, the magistrate judge did not give

appropriate attention to the fact that, at the time the issue

of a stay  was before  the district court  (indeed, up  until

now), the Illinois action consisted of no more than a pending

appeal  from the  order  of  the  Cook County  Circuit  Court

dismissing  the  action for  lack  of  personal jurisdiction.

This  was  not a  case where  the  parallel state  action was

strongly underway, making it perhaps reasonable, depending on

the  facts, to  await the  outcome in  the state  case before

proceeding in the federal  court.  Here, if the  Cook Country

Circuit Court's  dismissal for lack of  personal jurisdiction

should  be affirmed  by the  Illinois Appellate  Court, there

will  be left in existence no state action whatever; while if

                             -12-
                                          12


the lower court's dismissal should be reversed on appeal, the

parties  will merely  be back  at the  very beginning  of the

process of litigating the merits of their controversy.  Under

such  circumstances, the  federal diversity action  in Puerto

Rico,   which   was   not   encumbered   by   any   threshold

jurisdictional question,  was the more  immediately available

vehicle for litigating the dispute.

          The  magistrate  judge said  that  if  the district

court action  were allowed to proceed, "the two parties would

be litigating  very similar  issues in two  separate forums."

But this description suggests a parallelism that did not then

exist, given  that the  Illinois case  had been  dismissed on

jurisdictional  grounds,  leaving  only an  appeal  from  the

dismissal.  Only if  plaintiffs were to win the  appeal would

the Illinois  proceedings become  truly parallel to  those in

the federal  district court.   By then,  were it not  for the

stay,  the district court in  Puerto Rico might  be well into

the merits of the controversy.  To be sure, calling a halt to

the federal case would permit the parties to devote all their

energies  to the  battle  over jurisdiction  in the  Illinois

appellate  court,  and,  depending on  the  outcome,  perhaps

eventually to litigate their  dispute in the Illinois circuit

court.  But forcing the plaintiff in the federal  case to sit

on its hands for so long is not consonant with Colorado River
                                                                         

and  its  progeny, which  describe  the  balance as  "heavily

                             -13-
                                          13


weighted  in  favor  of   the  exercise  of  [federal  court]

jurisdiction.  Moses H. Cone,  460 U. S. at 16.   Those cases
                                        

require   an  affirmative   showing   of  "the   clearest  of

justifications,"  Colorado River,  424 U.S.  at 819,  or some
                                            

"exceptional basis," before a  federal court properly  defers

to a state court proceeding.  Burns  v. Watler, 931 F.2d 140,
                                                          

146 (1st Cir. 1991).

          Here, given the problem with  the state proceedings

we  have mentioned,  we cannot  discern an  exceptional basis

clearly favoring  federal court deference.   Screen's primary

argument  to the district court  was that to  proceed in both

courts would entail a duplication of "the costs and delays of

litigation."    Duplication,  standing alone,  is  rarely  an

exceptional basis  that warrants a  stay or dismissal  of the

federal action.   Rojas-Hernandez v. Puerto  Rico Elec. Power
                                                                         

Auth., 925 F.2d  492, 496 (1st Cir. 1991).  But even assuming
                 

duplication were  an important concern, the  cure is scarcely

to  abandon a viable federal forum in favor of a questionable

state one.

          Nor are  we impressed with Screen's  argument that,

if  forced to proceed in  the federal action  in Puerto Rico,

its  state claim will be  subject to dismissal  because of an

Illinois procedural rule providing for dismissal "where there

is another  action pending between  the same parties  for the

same cause."   Whatever the  force of this  argument in  some

                             -14-
                                          14


different  factual  context,  we see  no  good  reason for  a

federal  court to  defer  to a  problematic state  proceeding

merely because the existence of the federal case may give the

state courts some further reason to dismiss the state action.

Indeed,  if Screen's  argument  is  correctly  premised,  the

duplication of  proceedings which worries Screen  will cease.

And,  of course, Screen  is free to  assert its claim  to the

balance  due  under the  equipment  purchase  agreement as  a

counterclaim in the federal action, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 13.  
                                                   

          We further  disagree that deference  should be paid

to the Illinois court simply because that court was the first

"to assume jurisdiction."   It is true the Illinois  case was

filed first.   But soon after the Illinois case was filed, it

was dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction, and that was

the posture of events when the federal court decided the stay

motion.   In such circumstances, it is hard to understand why

the mere fact of priority in filing would be a point in favor

of a stay.  To be sure, if jurisdiction were found on appeal,

the Illinois case could eventually go  forward on the merits.

But in Moses  H. Cone  the Supreme Court  indicated that  the
                                 

order in  which jurisdiction  was taken  is not  a mechanical

concept automatically favoring the party who files first, but

rather  a concept  that  favors the  case  that is  the  more

advanced at  the time the  Colorado River balancing  is being
                                                     

done.  Moses H. Cone, 460 U.S. at 21.   Courts are instructed
                                

                             -15-
                                          15


by  the Supreme Court to measure  which action    the suit in

the federal court or that  in the state court    is  the more

advanced in a "pragmatic, flexible manner, with a view to the

realities of the case at hand."  Id.  Here  the dismissal for
                                                

lack of personal  jurisdiction in the Illinois  case made the

federal action  the front-runner.   Hence, having  regard for

"the  realities of the case at hand," the Illinois action did

not enjoy priority  in time  over the federal  case, and  the

magistrate  judge erred in citing this factor as a reason for

the stay.  

          The  magistrate judge  was also impressed  with the

fact  that Illinois  law  is likely  to  be involved  in  the

present contract  dispute.  We will concede  the expertise of

an Illinois court in its own law, and that federal law is not

in  issue here,  but we do  not believe  that this  factor is

entitled  to  much  weight  for present  purposes.    Nothing

suggests that the parties' claims present particularly novel,

unusual  or  difficult  questions  of  legal  interpretation.

Federal courts are used to researching  and analyzing the law

of different  jurisdictions.   The federal district  court in

Puerto  Rico will be able to apply Illinois law to the extent

required.   See Gonzalez  v. Cruz,  926 F.2d  1, 5  (1st Cir.
                                             

1991)  ("The  mere  fact that  the  outcome  of  the case  is

governed by state law  does not warrant dismissal     to hold

otherwise would  undermine the  purpose and reach  of federal

                             -16-
                                          16


diversity jurisdiction."); Rojas-Hernandez,  925 F.2d at  496
                                                      

(reversing  a  stay  where the  issues  of  state  law to  be

considered by  the federal court were  "neither unsettled nor

complex").    

          A further  factor, which  the magistrate judge  did

not mention, and which strongly counsels against a stay here,

is  whether  the  state  forum  can  adequately  protect  the

parties' rights.   Moses H. Cone, 460 U.S. at 26.3  Given the
                                            

fact that when the district court was considering the request

for a stay,  it was entirely  uncertain whether the  Illinois

courts had jurisdiction over the person of the defendant, the

protection available  to the parties' rights  in Illinois was

necessarily  problematic.    The  Illinois  court  would,  of

course, be  as well able as  the federal court to  dispose of

the case if  it had  jurisdiction, but unless  and until  the

personal   jurisdictional  question   was  resolved   by  the

appellate  court  in  favor  of  plaintiff,  the  utility  of

Illinois as a forum remained in grave doubt.4 

                    
                                

3.  As we have  previously mentioned, the  Court in Moses  H.
                                                                         
Cone also spoke of the need to find "that the parallel state-
                
court litigation will be an adequate vehicle for the complete
and  prompt resolution  of the  issues between  the parties."
460 U.S. at 28.  Should there be doubt of this,  it would be,
the  Court said, "a serious  abuse of discretion"  to grant a
stay.  Id.
                      

4.  We also note Screen's  contention that the federal action
is vexatious and reactive.  See Moses H. Cone, 460 U.S. at 17
                                                         
n.20; Fuller, 782  F.2d at 308-310.  We do  not find merit in
                        
this argument.  Elmendorf's action was filed two months after
Screen's, but  Elmendorf waited to serve  process upon Screen

                             -17-
                                          17


          We  hold,  therefore,  that  the   balance  of  the

Colorado   River  factors  favored   denying  the  stay,  and
                            

certainly did  not favor granting  it, having regard  for the

uncertain status of the Illinois litigation.  The exceptional

circumstances that Colorado River calls  for in order to stay
                                             

or dismiss an action brought in a  federal court, in favor of

proceedings  in  a state  tribunal,  were not  present.   The

district court should expeditiously proceed with the action.

     Stay vacated and case remanded to the district court for
                                                                         

continued  proceedings  consistent   herewith.    Costs   for
                                                                         

appellant.
                     

                    
                                

until after the circuit court's dismissal of the state action
for want of personal  jurisdiction over Elmendorf.   In these
circumstances, Elmendorf's decisions to fight jurisdiction in
Illinois  and sue in its  home court in  Puerto Rico were not
improper tactics such as to weigh in favor of a stay.

                             -18-
                                          18