In an era of continually expanding federal judicial power, the Supreme Court has fashioned and employed several devices designed to delegate certain classes of federal question litigation to the state court systems. Among these devices are the doctrines of abstention, comity, and exhaustion of state remedies. Implementation of these doctrines has enabled the Supreme Court to maintain state judicial presence in federal question litigation and retain at least the appearance of a manageable federalized judicial structure. This article will attempt to analyze the function of the abstention doctrines as judicially-created tempering devices. Following a brief discussion of the factors that led to the evolution of an abstention doctrine, the four ...
The Younger abstention doctrine limits the ability of a federal court to enjoin a pending state proc...
Considerations of comity often require federal courts to defer to state courts when federal issues c...
The American judicial system is founded on several policies which act as guideposts for the courts. ...
The U.S. Supreme Court has given federal courts the authority to abstain from hearing certain cases ...
This Article focuses upon abstention in the context of the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act ( FDJA )...
This article offers a straightforward model for identifying cases in which abstention threatens fede...
Equitable abstention refers to the deference a federal court will give a state tribunal to determine...
State courts decide claims based on federal or sister-state law every day. Although the applicable c...
Suppose a federal district court faces a challenge to state action that presents an unsettled issue ...
Most critics of the Supreme Court\u27s abstention doctrines have attacked the substantive merits of ...
The lower federal courts have been invoking “international comity abstention” to solve a range of pr...
The Supreme Court held that federal judicial abstention may be inappropriate where violation of firs...
It is the thesis of this article that the growing trend in the federal courts to refuse to exercise ...
The abstention doctrine articulated by the Supreme Court in 1941 in Railroad Commission of Texas v. ...
The federal courts have long viewed domestic relations litigation as beyond their competence, even t...
The Younger abstention doctrine limits the ability of a federal court to enjoin a pending state proc...
Considerations of comity often require federal courts to defer to state courts when federal issues c...
The American judicial system is founded on several policies which act as guideposts for the courts. ...
The U.S. Supreme Court has given federal courts the authority to abstain from hearing certain cases ...
This Article focuses upon abstention in the context of the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act ( FDJA )...
This article offers a straightforward model for identifying cases in which abstention threatens fede...
Equitable abstention refers to the deference a federal court will give a state tribunal to determine...
State courts decide claims based on federal or sister-state law every day. Although the applicable c...
Suppose a federal district court faces a challenge to state action that presents an unsettled issue ...
Most critics of the Supreme Court\u27s abstention doctrines have attacked the substantive merits of ...
The lower federal courts have been invoking “international comity abstention” to solve a range of pr...
The Supreme Court held that federal judicial abstention may be inappropriate where violation of firs...
It is the thesis of this article that the growing trend in the federal courts to refuse to exercise ...
The abstention doctrine articulated by the Supreme Court in 1941 in Railroad Commission of Texas v. ...
The federal courts have long viewed domestic relations litigation as beyond their competence, even t...
The Younger abstention doctrine limits the ability of a federal court to enjoin a pending state proc...
Considerations of comity often require federal courts to defer to state courts when federal issues c...
The American judicial system is founded on several policies which act as guideposts for the courts. ...