Ernst & Young v. Depositors Economic ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________

    No. 94-1749

    ERNST & YOUNG,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    DEPOSITORS ECONOMIC PROTECTION CORPORATION, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    _________________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

    _________________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Cyr, Circuit Judge. _____________

    _________________________

    Jerome G. Snider, with whom Daniel F. Kolb, Davis Polk & _________________ _______________ _____________
    Wardwell, Peter J. McGinn, John E. Bulman, Tillinghast, Collins & ________ _______________ ______________ ______________________
    Graham, Kathryn A. Oberly, and J. Andrew Heaton were on brief, ______ __________________ ________________
    for appellant.
    Leonard Decof, with whom Howard B. Klein and Decof & Grimm _____________ _______________ _____________
    were on brief, for appellees.

    _________________________

    January 25, 1995

    _________________________

















    SELYA, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Ernst & SELYA, Circuit Judge. ______________

    Young (E&Y), an accounting firm, asked the United States District

    Court for the District of Rhode Island to strike down R.I. Gen.

    Laws 42-116-40 (1993) (the Depco Act) on constitutional

    grounds. The district court dismissed the complaint because the

    controversy lacked ripeness, and, alternatively, because it

    invited abstention. E&Y appeals. We affirm.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    In January 1991, Bruce Sundlun, newly inaugurated

    Governor of Rhode Island, proclaimed a banking emergency

    precipitated by the collapse of the Rhode Island Share and

    Deposit Indemnity Corporation (RISDIC), a firm that had insured

    deposits at no fewer than 45 Rhode Island-based financial

    institutions.1 Since those institutions could not operate

    legally without deposit insurance, see R.I. Gen. Laws 19-11-9, ___

    the Governor closed them.

    The lockout provoked a financial crisis, preventing

    depositors from withdrawing their funds and causing consternation

    in a myriad of other ways. Over time, many of the affected

    institutions obtained insurance from sources such as the Federal

    Deposit Insurance Corporation, and resumed operations. Others

    were absorbed by insured entities. In the end ten financial

    ____________________

    1The Rhode Island General Assembly chartered RISDIC in 1969
    as a private deposit-insurance corporation. It began operations
    in 1971, subject only to state, not federal, regulation.
    Depositors tended to view RISDIC as a state-sponsored enterprise,
    and its proprietors the banks and credit unions that dealt with
    it did nothing to dispel this misconception.

    2












    institutions were unable to reopen. These financial institutions

    had something in common: each of them had followed uncommonly

    adventurous lending practices, and had become insolvent. They

    were all placed into conservatorship. The Rhode Island General

    Assembly created a public corporation, the Depositors Economic

    Protection Corporation (Depco), to act as the receiver, manage

    the failed banks' estates, marshal and liquidate their assets,

    repay depositors, and seek recovery from those responsible for

    the fiasco.2 In addition, Depco served as the receiver for

    RISDIC.

    A special state commission charged with investigating

    the banking crisis found no shortage of miscreants. The

    commission assigned blame, inter alia, to former officers and _____ ____

    directors of the failed institutions, certain large borrowers,

    the state Department of Business Regulation, the General

    Assembly, and a former governor. The commission reserved some of

    its most stinging criticism for RISDIC and those persons who

    occupied prominent positions in the RISDIC hierarchy. The

    commission included E&Y, which had provided accounting services

    to RISDIC and to many of its insureds, as among the parties

    deserving special opprobrium.

    The banks' collapse proved to be a depositor's

    nightmare but a lawyer's dream, spawning a plethora of lawsuits.

    For the most part, the depositors' and creditors' suits were
    ____________________

    2As of the time the parties' briefs were filed, Depco had
    managed to repay 93% of the affected depositors and to repay 90%
    or more of the amounts owed to the remaining depositors.

    3












    consolidated in a series of master complaints (one for each

    failed institution) docketed in the state superior court. Then,

    in early 1992, Depco and other plaintiffs filed a civil action in

    superior court against E&Y and sundry other defendants. In that

    suit, the plaintiffs charged E&Y with negligence and professional

    malpractice. Among other things, they alleged that E&Y issued

    unqualified (or insufficiently qualified) audit opinions to

    RISDIC and a number of RISDIC-insured institutions despite

    obvious patterns of pervasive lending irregularities and other

    clear portents of impending financial disaster.

    In July of 1993, the General Assembly revised state law

    as it pertained to the RISDIC cases by passing the Depco Act,

    Pub. L. 1993, ch. 85. The Act provides that potentially

    responsible parties who in good faith achieve judicially approved

    settlements with Depco will not be liable for contribution to

    other joint tortfeasors; and that, if a putative defendant

    settles with Depco on this basis, the potential liability of

    other joint tortfeasors will be reduced only by the dollar amount

    of the settlement, not by the settling party's pro rata share of

    the aggregate liability.3
    ____________________

    3The statute reads in relevant part:

    Notwithstanding any provisions of law to the
    contrary, a person, corporation, or other
    entity who has resolved its liability to the
    Rhode Island Depositors' Economic Protection
    Corporation, the receiver of Rhode Island
    Share and Deposit Indemnity Corporation or
    the receiver of any state-chartered financial
    institution in judicially-approved good faith
    settlement shall not be liable for claims for

    4












    The Act transmogrifies the law of contribution for

    purposes of the RISDIC cases. Prior to its passage, a non-

    settling defendant in a negligence action including a non-

    settling defendant in a RISDIC case could, if found liable,

    seek contribution according to proportionate fault from all other

    joint tortfeasors, save only those who had entered settlements

    that explicitly released all claims against all potentially

    responsible parties for the settling tortfeasor's proportionate

    share of the overall liability. See R.I. Gen. Laws 10-6-7, ___

    10-6-8, 10-6-11 (1993). In other words, prior law ensured that,

    if a joint tortfeasor were held responsible for (and paid) more

    than its ratable share of damages, it could seek contribution

    from other joint tortfeasors who had carried less than their fair

    share of the load. Under the Depco Act, however, a non-settling

    tortfeasor can be held liable for more than its pro rata share of

    damages, yet find that it has no remaining right of contribution

    as to some (or, conceivably, all) of the overage paid.

    E&Y did not go quietly into this dark night. It
    ____________________

    contribution or equitable indemnity regarding
    matters addressed in the settlement. Such
    settlement does not discharge any other
    tortfeasors unless its terms so provide, but
    it reduces the potential liability of such
    joint tortfeasors by the amount of the
    settlement.

    R.I. Gen. Laws 42-116-40 (1993). The idea behind the statute
    is scarcely original; the Depco Act is modeled on the special
    contribution provisions contained in the Comprehensive
    Environmental Response Compensation & Liability Act (CERCLA), see ___
    42 U.S.C. 9613(f)(2) - (3) (1988); see also United States v. ___ ____ _____________
    Cannons Eng'g Corp., 899 F.2d 79, 91-92 (1st Cir. 1990) _____________________
    (explaining operation of CERCLA contribution provisions).

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    promptly sued in the federal district court,4 seeking a

    declaration that the Depco Act, on its face and as applied to

    E&Y, transgresses the Federal Constitution. Specifically, E&Y

    urged the court to find that the Act violates the due process and

    equal protection clauses, and that it constitutes an unlawful

    bill of attainder.

    In its complaint, E&Y makes various allegations

    designed to highlight the ostensible unfairness of the legal

    predicament it now faces. Stripped of animadversions, the

    complaint brands the Depco Act as special legislation drafted for

    the specific purpose of depriving E&Y of preexisting substantive

    rights in order to intimidate E&Y and thereby force a lucrative

    settlement of Depco's negligence action.5 Depco's strategy, E&Y

    alleges, is to reach early settlements with most potentially

    responsible parties, limited to the face value of their

    respective liability insurance policies, but to treat E&Y as a

    "deep pocket" from whom a huge settlement can be extracted. E&Y

    asserts that the doubts surrounding the viability of this

    strategy, and particularly the profound uncertainties about the

    Act's constitutionality, are currently imposing a substantial

    hardship on E&Y in at least two ways. First, the situation
    ____________________

    4E&Y's complaint named Governor Sundlun, Depco, and Depco's
    executive director as defendants. For simplicity's sake, we
    refer to the defendants, collectively, as "Depco."

    5E&Y adds various details designed to bolster this claim,
    including a charge that Depco's specially retained trial counsel
    lobbied for passage of the Act, telling legislators that changing
    the law of contribution greatly improved Depco's bargaining
    position vis-a-vis E&Y.

    6












    creates coercive pressure on E&Y to settle the pending state

    court suit. Second, it deprives E&Y of the ability adequately to

    appraise its potential exposure.

    The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for want

    of subject matter jurisdiction on the ground that the case lacked

    ripeness,6 and, as a back-up, invoked several abstention

    theories. The district court referred the motion to a magistrate

    judge, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b), who recommended that the ___

    complaint be dismissed for want of subject matter jurisdiction,

    or, alternatively, in the exercise of the court's discretion.

    E&Y objected to the magistrate's report. On de novo review, the __ ____

    district court characterized the complaint as unripe and

    dismissed it under Rule 12(b)(1). See E&Y v. Depco, 862 F. Supp. ___ ___ _____

    709 (D.R.I. 1994). Judge Boyle stressed that since E&Y would

    only be damaged by the Depco Act if a series of contingent events

    occurred in the future, it failed satisfactorily to demonstrate

    that "it has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining

    a direct injury." Id. at 714-15. The judge went on to observe ___

    that, were the case ripe, comity and federalism concerns would

    nonetheless prompt him to abstain.7 See id. at 715-16 (citing ___ ___
    ____________________

    6On appeal, Depco advances the closely related argument that
    E&Y lacks standing. Despite their natural imbrication, these
    asseverations are distinct; the standing doctrine is concerned
    with who may bring a particular suit, while the ripeness doctrine
    is concerned with when a party may bring suit. Because we hold
    that the controversy is not ripe, we eschew any consideration of
    whether E&Y also lacks standing.

    7Judge Boyle also expressed his view that the Depco Act did
    not comprise a bill of attainder. See E&Y, 862 F. Supp. at 716- ___ ___
    17. The court's statements on this score are gratuitous, and we

    7












    Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37 (1971)). This appeal ensued. _______ ______

    II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

    A district court's determination that it lacks subject

    matter jurisdiction because the case before it is not ripe

    usually presents a question of law reviewable de novo in the __ ____

    court of appeals. See Broughton Lumber Co. v. Columbia River ___ _____________________ ______________

    Gorge Comm'n, 975 F.2d 616, 618 (9th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, ____________ _____ ______

    114 S. Ct. 60 (1993); Shea v. Rev-Lyn Contracting Co., 868 F.2d ____ _______________________

    515, 517 (1st Cir. 1989); Felmeister v. Office of Atty. Ethics, __________ _______________________

    856 F.2d 529, 535 n.8 (3d Cir. 1988). This case is no exception

    to the rule.

    The standard of review that applies to a district

    court's discretionary decision to withhold a declaratory judgment

    is more problematic. Some courts afford plenary review, but

    others affirm unless the trial court's decision constitutes an

    abuse of discretion. Compare, e.g., Allstate Ins. Co. v. _______ ____ ___________________

    Mercier, 913 F.2d 273, 277 (6th Cir. 1990) (utilizing plenary _______

    review) and Gayle Mfg. Co. v. Federal Sav. & Loan Ins. Corp., 910 ___ ______________ ______________________________

    F.2d 574, 578 (9th Cir. 1990) (same) with, e.g., Christopher P. ____ ____ ______________

    v. Marcus, 915 F.2d 794, 802 (2d Cir. 1990) (utilizing abuse of ______

    discretion standard), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1123 (1991), and _____ ______ ___

    Kunkel v. Continental Cas. Co., 866 F.2d 1269, 1273 (10th Cir. ______ ____________________

    1989) (same). We have captured a middle ground, expressing our

    preference for a standard of independent review when passing upon

    a trial court's discretionary decision to eschew declaratory
    ____________________

    express no opinion on them.

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    relief. This standard encourages the exercise of independent

    appellate judgment if it appears that a mistake has been made.

    See El Dia, Inc. v. Hernandez Colon, 963 F.2d 488, 492 (1st Cir. ___ ____________ _______________

    1992); National R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Providence & Worcester ______________________________ _______________________

    R.R. Co., 798 F.2d 8, 10 (1st Cir. 1986). Thus, independent ________

    review invokes a standard more rigorous than abuse of discretion,

    but less open-ended than de novo review. __ ____

    III. THE DECLARATORY JUDGMENT ACT III. THE DECLARATORY JUDGMENT ACT

    The Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. 2201-2202

    (1988), empowers a federal court to grant declaratory relief in a

    case of actual controversy. The Act does not itself confer

    subject matter jurisdiction, but, rather, makes available an

    added anodyne for disputes that come within the federal courts'

    jurisdiction on some other basis. See Franchise Tax Bd. v. ___ __________________

    Construction Laborers Vacation Trust, 463 U.S. 1, 15-16 (1983). ____________________________________

    The Declaratory Judgment Act serves a valuable

    purpose.8 It is designed to enable litigants to clarify legal

    rights and obligations before acting upon them. See Step-Saver ___ __________

    Data Sys., Inc. v. Wyse Tech., 912 F.2d 643, 649-50 (3d Cir. ________________ __________

    1990) (citing legislative history). Because the Act offers a

    window of opportunity, not a guarantee of access, the courts, not

    the litigants, ultimately must determine when declaratory

    judgments are appropriate and when they are not. Consequently,
    ____________________

    8The Declaratory Judgment Act is mirrored by Fed. R. Civ. P.
    57. The statute and the rule are functionally equivalent. See, ___
    e.g., 118 E. 60th Owners, Inc. v. Bonner Props., Inc., 677 F.2d ____ _________________________ ____________________
    200, 205 n.8 (2d Cir. 1982) (treating Rule 57 as implementing the
    remedy authorized by the Act).

    9












    federal courts retain substantial discretion in deciding whether

    to grant declaratory relief. As we have stated, the Declaratory

    Judgment Act "neither imposes an unflagging duty upon the courts

    to decide declaratory judgment actions nor grants an entitlement

    to litigants to demand declaratory remedies." El Dia, 963 F.2d _______

    at 493; accord Green v. Mansour, 474 U.S. 64, 72 (1985); Public ______ _____ _______ ______

    Serv. Comm'n v. Wycoff Co., 344 U.S. 237, 241 (1952). ____________ __________

    Not surprisingly, then, an indigenous jurisprudence has

    sprouted in the fields where the seeds of declaratory actions are

    sown. It is not necessary to harvest this jurisprudence today.

    For present purposes, it suffices to sound a note of caution:

    the discretion to grant declaratory relief is to be exercised

    with great circumspection when matters of public moment are

    involved, see Washington Pub. Power Supply Sys. v. Pacific N.W. ___ __________________________________ _____________

    Power Co., 332 F.2d 87, 88 (9th Cir. 1964), or when a request for _________

    relief threatens to drag a federal court prematurely into

    constitutional issues that are freighted with uncertainty, see El ___ __

    Dia, 963 F.2d at 494. ___

    IV. RIPENESS IV. RIPENESS

    In the first instance, the district court dismissed

    E&Y's action due to ripeness concerns. See E&Y, 862 F. Supp. at ___ ___

    713-15. E&Y assigns error. We discern none.

    A. Examining The Ossature. A. Examining The Ossature. ______________________

    In its seminal opinion on the application of the

    ripeness doctrine in the declaratory judgment context, the

    Supreme Court explained that the doctrine's basic rationale is to


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    "prevent the courts, through avoidance of premature adjudication,

    from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements." Abbott ______

    Labs v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 148-49 (1967). While the doctrine ____ _______

    has a prudential flavor, a test for ripeness is also mandated by

    the constitutional requirement that federal jurisdiction extends

    only to actual cases or controversies, see U.S. Const. art. III, ___

    2; see also Wycoff, 344 U.S. at 242-45. Consequently, although ___ ____ ______

    a court may, within stated limits, dismiss declaratory judgment

    actions in its discretion, a court has no alternative but to

    dismiss an unripe action.

    Questions of ripeness that arise incident to challenged

    governmental actions in the declaratory judgment context are

    gauged by means of a two-part test. See Abbott Labs, 387 U.S. at ___ ___________

    149. First, the court must consider whether the issue presented

    is fit for review. This branch of the test typically involves

    subsidiary queries concerning finality, definiteness, and the

    extent to which resolution of the challenge depends upon facts

    that may not yet be sufficiently developed. See, e.g., W.R. ___ ____ ____

    Grace & Co. v. EPA, 959 F.2d 360, 364 (1st Cir. 1992). The ____________ ___

    second branch of the Abbott Labs test requires the court to ____________

    consider the extent to which hardship looms an inquiry that

    typically "turns upon whether the challenged action creates a

    ``direct and immediate' dilemma for the parties." Id. (citation ___

    omitted).

    The relationship between these two parts of the test

    fitness and hardship has never been precisely defined. Though


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    some commentators have suggested that either of the two showings

    may suffice to allay ripeness concerns, see, e.g., Laurence H. ___ ____

    Tribe, American Constitutional Law 3-10, at 80 (2d ed. 1987), ____________________________

    the predominant weight of authority supports the opposite view,

    see, e.g., Poe v. Ullman, 367 U.S. 497, 509 (1961) (dismissing ___ ____ ___ ______

    for lack of ripeness despite the predominantly legal nature of

    the question presented and the minimal need for an extensive

    factual record); Cedars-Sinai Medical Ctr., v. Watkins, 11 F.3d __________________________ _______

    1573, 1581 (Fed. Cir. 1993) (holding that a ripe case must meet

    both prongs of Abbott Labs); see also Erwin Chemerinsky, Federal ___________ ___ ____ _______

    Jurisdiction 2.4, at 124 (2d ed. 1994) (deriving examples from ____________

    Supreme Court jurisprudence). In line with the majority view, we

    hold that both prongs of the test ordinarily must be satisfied in

    order to establish ripeness. In so holding, however, we

    acknowledge the possibility that there may be some sort of

    sliding scale under which, say, a very powerful exhibition of

    immediate hardship might compensate for questionable fitness

    (such as a degree of imprecision in the factual circumstances

    surrounding the case), or vice versa.9

    We end this segment of our opinion on yet another

    cautionary note. The ripeness inquiry is often sui generis. ___ _______

    Most litigation has idiosyncratic features, and the various

    integers that enter into the ripeness equation play out quite

    differently from case to case, thus influencing the bottom line.
    ____________________

    9We need not probe this final point, for E&Y has not made a
    sufficiently strong showing under either of the test's two
    prongs. See infra Part IV(C). ___ _____

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    See, e.g., State of Rhode Island v. Narragansett Indian Tribe, 19 ___ ____ _____________________ _________________________

    F.3d 685, 693 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 298 (1994). _____ ______

    B. Putting Flesh on the Bones. B. Putting Flesh on the Bones. __________________________

    Before determining whether E&Y's initiative passes the

    Abbott Labs test, we pause to flesh out the test's two parts. ___________

    1. Fitness. We start with bedrock: "the critical 1. Fitness. _______

    question concerning fitness for review is whether the claim

    involves uncertain and contingent events that may not occur as

    anticipated or may not occur at all." Massachusetts Ass'n of _______________________

    Afro-American Police, Inc. v. Boston Police Dep't, 973 F.2d 18, __________________________ ___________________

    20 (1st Cir. 1992) (per curiam); accord Lincoln House, Inc. v. ______ ____________________

    Dupre, 903 F.2d 845, 847 (1st Cir. 1990). This conclusion _____

    reflects an institutional awareness that the fitness requirement

    has a pragmatic aspect: issuing opinions based on speculative

    facts or a hypothetical record is an aleatory business, at best

    difficult and often impossible. See, e.g., Calif. Bankers Ass'n ___ ____ ____________________

    v. Schultz, 416 U.S. 21, 56 (1974) ("This Court, in the absence _______

    of a concrete fact situation in which competing associational and

    governmental interests can be weighed, is simply not in a

    position to determine [the question presented]."); Socialist _________

    Labor Party v. Gilligan, 406 U.S. 583, 587 (1972) (finding sole ___________ ________

    remaining issue unripe and dismissing appeal because the record

    lacks "the sort of proved or admitted facts that would enable

    [the Court] to adjudicate th[e] claim"). Nevertheless, the raw

    fact that events have not yet fully unfolded is not always fatal

    to justiciability. In such straitened circumstances, courts


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    sometimes exhibit a greater willingness to decide cases that turn

    on legal issues not likely to be significantly affected by

    further factual development. See, e.g., Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. ___ ____ _______________________

    v. State Energy Resources Conserv. & Dev. Comm'n, 461 U.S. 190, ______________________________________________

    201 (1983) (finding fitness for judicial review supported by the

    "predominantly legal" nature of the question presented); Duke ____

    Power Co. v. Carolina Envtl. Study Group, Inc., 438 U.S. 59, 81- _________ __________________________________

    82 (1978) (finding fitness for judicial review supported by the

    fact that further factual development "would not . . .

    significantly advance [the judiciary's] ability to deal with the

    legal issues presented nor aid . . . in their resolution").

    2. Hardship. The second half of the Abbott Labs 2. Hardship. ________ ____________

    inquiry focuses on the hardship that may be entailed in denying

    judicial review. In general, the greater the hardship, the more

    apt a court will be to find ripeness. See, e.g., Pacific Gas, ___ ____ ___________

    461 U.S. at 201 & n.13. Though the hallmark of cognizable

    hardship is usually direct and immediate harm, other kinds of

    injuries occasionally may suffice. For example, if the operation

    of a challenged statute is inevitable, ripeness is not defeated

    by the existence of a time delay before the statute takes effect.

    See Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, 419 U.S. 102, 143 ___ ________________________________________

    (1974). And, moreover, even when the direct application of a

    statute is to some degree remote or contingent, its collateral

    effects may inflict present injuries that, though indirect, are

    adequate to support a finding of ripeness.

    Thus, in Duke Power, the plaintiffs, some of whom ___________


    14












    resided near a nuclear power plant, sought a declaration as to

    the unconstitutionality of the Price-Anderson Act (which set a

    monetary cap on damages recoverable in consequence of nuclear

    accidents). Even though the Court thought the possibility of a

    nuclear accident speculative, it nonetheless found the

    controversy ripe. The Justices reasoned that the statute made

    feasible the construction of the plant, which, in turn, posed

    risks (such as fear of an accident, exposure to radiation, and

    thermal pollution) that would not otherwise exist. See Duke ___ ____

    Power, 438 U.S. at 81. In the Court's view, these injuries were _____

    sufficient to support a finding of ripeness. See id. at 81-82; ___ ___

    see also McCoy-Elkhorn Coal Corp. v. EPA, 622 F.2d 260, 263-65 ___ ____ ________________________ ___

    (6th Cir. 1980).

    Pacific Gas illustrates that, in special circumstances, ___________

    an injury sufficient to impute ripeness may also be found when a

    plaintiff must presently decide to expend substantial resources

    which may turn out to be wasted, depending on later clarification

    of the law. There, the Court determined that a group of

    utilities could challenge a state law imposing a moratorium on

    the construction of nuclear power plants. See Pacific Gas, 461 ___ ___________

    U.S. at 197-200. Noting the long lead time and the millions of

    dollars that had to be expended simply to proceed to the

    licensing stage in the course of developing a nuclear power

    plant, see id. at 201 n.13, the Court envisioned enormous ___ ___

    hardship were it to require the industry to chart a course of

    action without knowing whether the moratorium was valid.


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    Once again, we end with watchful words. A court's

    assessment of hardship need not be phrased solely in negative

    terms. The key question involves the usefulness of a declaratory

    judgment, that is, the extent to which the desired declaration

    "would be of practical assistance in setting the underlying

    controversy to rest." Narragansett Tribe, 19 F.3d at 693. ___________________

    Hence, courts should not become mired in the frequently sophistic

    distinction as to whether refusing declaratory relief will

    actually impose a hardship or merely fail to confer a benefit.



    C. Applying the Test. C. Applying the Test. _________________

    Using Abbott Labs as the compass by which we must ____________

    steer, we conclude, as did the district court, that E&Y's claims

    are unripe. First, the claims are not now fit for federal

    judicial review.10 Second, postponing an adjudication will not

    work a substantial hardship.

    ____________________

    10State judicial review is, however, in the offing. Shortly
    before we heard oral argument, Depco asked the state superior
    court to certify questions anent the constitutionality of the
    Depco Act to the state supreme court. Depco made the motion in a
    tort case it had commenced involving the collapse of the Brown
    University Employees Credit Union, a RISDIC-insured institution.
    Over E&Y's objection E&Y is a third-party defendant in the suit
    the superior court granted Depco's motion. The state supreme
    court received the certified questions, paired them with a
    strikingly similar set of constitutional issues limned by the
    Governor in a pending request for an advisory opinion, see R.I. ___
    Const. art. X, 3 (authorizing the governor to request such
    advisory opinions from the state supreme court), and promulgated
    a consolidated briefing schedule. Although E&Y correctly
    maintains that announcing a briefing schedule is not tantamount
    to reaching the merits of the certified questions, it appears
    likely that the Rhode Island Supreme Court will soon hear oral
    arguments.

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    1. Fitness. On the fitness prong, E&Y points to the 1. Fitness. _______ fact that its complaint challenges the Depco Act both on its face
    and as applied. The former claim, it tells us, is

    quintessentially legal in nature, and, therefore, suitable for

    immediate judicial review. See, e.g., Pacific Gas, 461 U.S. at ___ ____ ___________

    201; Duke Power, 438 U.S. at 81-82. We believe that this is too __________

    simplistic a view, for it focuses narrowly on the claim's

    susceptibility to resolution and turns a blind eye to the related

    but equally important matter of whether judicial resolution

    is appropriate here and now.

    The notion that disputes which turn on purely legal

    questions are always ripe for judicial review is a myth. Even

    when the "legal" emphasis of a particular claim is sufficient to

    mask gaps in the factual record, a court will find ripeness

    lacking if the anticipated events and injury are simply too

    remote to justify contemporaneous adjudication. See Hodel v. ___ _____

    Virginia Surface Mining & Reclam. Ass'n, Inc., 452 U.S. 264, 304 ______________________________________________

    (1981); Lincoln House, 903 F.2d at 847; Benson v. Superior Court, _____________ ______ ______________

    663 F.2d 355, 360-61 (1st Cir. 1981). Put bluntly, the question

    of fitness does not pivot solely on whether a court is capable of

    resolving a claim intelligently, but also involves an assessment

    of whether it is appropriate for the court to undertake the task.

    Federal courts cannot and should not spend their scarce

    resources in what amounts to shadow boxing. Thus, if a

    plaintiff's claim, though predominantly legal in character,

    depends upon future events that may never come to pass, or that

    may not occur in the form forecasted, then the claim is unripe.

    See Mass. Ass'n of Afro-American Police, 973 F.2d at 20; Lincoln ___ ____________________________________ _______

    17












    House, 903 F.2d at 847; see also Maryland Cas. Co. v. Pacific _____ ___ ____ __________________ _______

    Coal & Oil Co., 312 U.S. 270, 273 (1941) (admonishing that a _______________

    declaratory action is not ripe unless "the facts alleged, under

    all the circumstances, show that there is a substantial

    controversy . . . of sufficient immediacy and reality"). For

    this reason, the mere fact that E&Y asserts a challenge to the

    Depco Act on its face, without more, cannot carry the day.

    Here, there is very little more: E&Y's claim lacks the

    needed dimensions of immediacy and reality. The challenge is not

    rooted in the present, but depends on a lengthy chain of

    speculation as to what the future has in store. Tracing the

    links in this chain demonstrates their fragility. In order for

    E&Y to be harmed by the operation of the statute, these events

    must come to pass: (1) at least one person, firm, or corporation

    other than E&Y must admit fault, or be found to have been at

    fault, and must have caused recoverable damages arising out of

    the banking crisis;11 (2) that other party must settle with

    Depco; (3) the settlement must be entered into in good faith and

    approved by a competent court; (4) under the bargained terms, the

    settlor must pay less than its pro rata share, measured by

    relative fault; (5) perhaps most critically, E&Y which, to this

    ____________________

    11Depco apparently has reached one settlement that is
    expressly conditioned on the constitutionality of the Depco Act
    being upheld by the Rhode Island Supreme Court. See supra note ___ _____
    10. In the settlement papers the settling defendants disclaim
    any wrongdoing, and Depco agrees not to treat the fact of
    settlement as an admission of liability. The more widespread
    this pattern of settlement becomes, the more arduous it will be
    to fulfill the "other tortfeasor" requirement.

    18












    date, has steadfastly denied fault must be found to have been

    negligent, and its negligence must be found to have caused or

    contributed to the damages; (6) Depco must attempt to collect an

    amount greater than E&Y's pro rata share of the damages; (7) a

    court must find E&Y liable for, and order it to pay, the tribute

    demanded; and (8) E&Y must then seek contribution from one or

    more of the "underpaying" joint tortfeasors (who, presumably,

    will interpose the statute as a defense). This is a long string

    of contingencies so long that E&Y's assertion of fitness for

    judicial review trips over it and falls.

    Courts should always be hesitant to answer hypothetical

    questions. See Poe, 367 U.S. at 503. That hesitancy does not ___ ___

    evaporate merely because a suit is couched as a plea for

    declaratory relief. See, e.g., Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth, ___ ____ ____________________ _______

    300 U.S. 227, 240-41 (1937) (explaining that courts, in the guise

    of declaratory judgment, should not issue opinions "advising what

    the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts"). The

    manifold uncertainties that attend this case in its present

    posture bring to mind this principle: even though the legal

    question presented by E&Y's facial challenge to the Depco Act is

    not likely to be placed in sharper focus by further factual

    development, the claim is unripe because any application of the

    challenged statute to E&Y depends on serendipitous events that

    may not occur as anticipated or may not occur at all. The case

    that E&Y argues is, at this stage, largely hypothetical, and such

    cases are seldom fit for federal judicial review. Cf. William ___


    19












    Shakespeare, Macbeth, act I, sc. iii, ll. 133-34 (1605) _______

    (reminding readers that "present fears are [often] less than

    horrible imaginings").

    This recital does not come close to exhausting E&Y's

    problems on the fitness prong of the Abbott Labs test. Over and ___________

    beyond the potential waste of judicial resources that

    entertaining a remote and speculative claim would risk, there are

    other telltale signs that a finding of fitness is not warranted

    here. We mention two such indicators.

    The first telltale has a prudential cast. Were we to

    permit E&Y's action to be decided now, we would be setting in

    motion a constitutional adjudication that not only could have a

    thunderous impact on important state interests but that might

    well prove to be completely unnecessary (if, say, E&Y were later

    found to have exercised due care, or if the parties settled for

    an amount that did not exceed E&Y's pro rata share of the

    recoverable damages). Courts should strive to avoid gratuitous

    journeys through forbidding constitutional terrain. See Poe, 367 ___ ___

    U.S. at 502-04; see also El Dia, 963 F.2d at 494 (counselling ___ ____ ______

    that "[u]ncertain questions of constitutional law should be

    addressed only when absolutely necessary").

    A second disincentive to a finding of fitness relates

    to the absence of other parties having a stake in the

    controversy. E&Y has sued a stage agency and two state

    officials. See supra note 4. While we do not doubt that these ___ _____

    parties will defend the Act's constitutionality, E&Y's suit lacks


    20












    full adverseness. See generally Narragansett Tribe, 19 F.3d at ___ _________ __________________

    692-93 (discussing adverseness requirement).12 We explain

    briefly.

    The real parties in interest are presumably the other

    joint tortfeasors (if any there be). After all, because

    tortfeasors are jointly and severally liable under Rhode Island

    law, Depco can collect the total amount of damages from E&Y

    regardless of what regime governs tortfeasors' rights of

    contribution. Thus, Depco's only interest in the Act relates to

    its efficacy as a negotiating tool.

    It follows that, if E&Y is harmed at all, the parties

    most directly adverse to it will be underpaying tortfeasors

    those who settle for less than their proportionate shares and who

    would, without the prophylaxis of the Depco Act, face liability

    to overpaying tortfeasors for contribution. These persons cannot

    be made parties to this litigation now because there is no way of

    predicting at this early date who they will be or even if they

    will exist. Hence, E&Y's action, under current conditions, is

    incompletely adverse. This is a serious indictment, for a

    lawsuit that is hobbed in this manner is much less likely to be
    ____________________

    12E&Y touts Narragansett Tribe, a case in which we found __________________
    disputed issues ripe, as directly applicable precedent. We do
    not agree. There, unlike in this case, the state's suit fully
    satisfied the adverseness requirement. See Narragansett Tribe, ___ __________________
    19 F.3d at 692-93. Other distinctions abound; the arguably
    unripe issues in that case were not of constitutional stature,
    the public interest favored immediate adjudication, comity was
    not a problem (as, there, unlike here, the state urged the
    federal court to proceed), the hardship that would flow from non-
    adjudication was starkly apparent, and the utility of a prompt
    decision was more easily discernible.

    21












    ripe for judicial review.13 See Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. ___ _______________________________

    v. Moore, 333 U.S. 541, 549-50 (1948) (considering the absence of _____

    affected parties relevant to ripeness).

    We think it is reasonably plain from what we have said

    that E&Y's claim, as it now stands, is not only incompletely

    adverse, but also remote, speculative, premature, and lacking in

    practical value. These factors, coupled with E&Y's desire to

    hurry the federal courts toward a tangled constitutional

    adjudication that may, in the end, prove to be inutile, render

    its suit inappropriate for immediate judicial review. Ergo,

    E&Y's challenge fails to satisfy the fitness prong of the Abbott ______

    Labs test.14 ____

    2. Hardship. By like token, we do not think that 2. Hardship. ________

    E&Y's case passes muster under the hardship prong of Abbott Labs. ___________

    E&Y alleges that it is currently suffering two kinds of adverse

    effects from the Act, namely, increased pressure to settle

    Depco's suit and an inability to evaluate its exposure therein.
    ____________________

    13The absence of affected parties also has implications for
    the hardship vel non of denying review, see infra Part IV(C)(2). ___ ___ ___ _____
    Even if E&Y were to prevail in the instant action, it seems
    likely that settling joint tortfeasors, not parties here, would
    be entitled to relitigate the Depco Act's constitutionality in
    defending subsequent contribution actions brought by E&Y. See ___
    NLRB v. Donna-Lee Sportswear Co., 836 F.2d 31, 33-34 (1st Cir. ____ ________________________
    1987) (explaining requirements for collateral estoppel); E.W. ____
    Audet & Sons, Inc. v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 635 A.2d 1181, ___________________ ________________________
    1186-87 (R.I. 1994) (similar; elucidating Rhode Island law).

    14We have discussed only E&Y's challenge to the
    constitutionality of the Depco Act on its face. To go further
    would be supererogatory. Because the facial challenge is unfit
    for review, it follows a fortiori that the "as applied" challenge _ ________
    to a freshly minted statute that has yet to make its maiden
    voyage is also unfit.

    22












    These harms are indirect. And although it is true that present

    indirect effects occasionally may wreak a sufficient hardship to

    support a finding of ripeness, see, e.g., Pacific Gas, 461 U.S. ___ ____ ____________

    at 201, the effects of which E&Y complains are not so pernicious.

    There is quite a difference between increasing the risk of

    exposure to radiation, Duke Power, 438 U.S. at 81-82, and ___________

    increasing the difficulty of evaluating a money damages claim for

    settlement purposes.

    The uncertainty of which E&Y complains in this case

    arises in the context of bilateral negotiations, not yet under

    way, in which opposing parties will explore the possibility of

    settling a hotly disputed case based partly on the expected

    results of the litigation. That situation presents a type of

    hardship that is qualitatively different than those displayed in

    Pacific Gas and Duke Power, for resolving the challenge to the ___________ __________

    Depco Act will help the challenger only marginally. Either way,

    E&Y still will be faced with the incubus of pending litigation.

    Either way, E&Y still will have to make an evaluative judgment

    anent the desirability of settlement on various terms a

    judgment that depends on many factors other than its right to

    contribution (and, accordingly, on many factors that will not be

    clarified by an immediate determination of the statute's

    constitutionality). The usefulness that may satisfy the hardship

    prong of Abbott Labs is not met by a party showing that it has ___________

    the opportunity to move from a position of utter confusion to one

    of mere befuddlement.


    23












    This is not to deny that a declaratory decree might

    have some utility. If the declaratory action proceeds to a

    conclusion, the parties will obtain an additional piece of

    information that will help them to determine a settlement

    strategy. The point, however, is that E&Y though it will be

    better informed still will not be spared the need to make the

    very sort of evaluative judgment that it tells us it is striving

    to avoid. What is more, E&Y still will not control its own

    destiny in respect to settlement, for Depco might (or might not)

    be willing to settle on E&Y's terms, and other tortfeasors might

    (or might not) leave themselves open to contribution claims,

    regardless of whether the declaratory judgment action proceeds.

    The limited utility of the judgment that E&Y seeks here

    is highlighted by the fact that the "value" of a case for

    settlement purposes is always a moving target. Phrased another

    way, settlement value is at best an estimate, subjective in

    nature, reflecting the worth that the parties themselves, for

    myriad reasons, attach to their case. See Mathewson Corp. v. ___ ________________

    Allied Marine Indus., Inc., 827 F.2d 850, 855 (1st Cir. 1987). ___________________________

    It follows inexorably that the settlement value of Depco's claim

    against E&Y will not be determined by the incidence of rights of

    contribution alone. See generally Note, Private Settlement as ___ _________ ______________________

    Alternative Adjudication: A Rationale for Negotiation Ethics, 18 ________________________ __________________________________

    U. Mich. J. L. Ref. 503, 515 n. 16 (1985) (explaining that one

    cannot "presum[e] that projected legal rights are the principal _____

    determinants of negotiated agreements. . . . [O]ther


    24












    considerations incident to bargaining power, such as relative

    financial strength and eagerness to avoid trial, are often

    vitally important to both the process and ultimate content of

    private settlements"). Because settlement evaluations typically

    "are the product of intangible criteria which defy

    quantification," Mathewson, 827 F.2d at 855, the present _________

    uncertainty will only be lessened somewhat, not avoided, should

    the action proceed.15

    Of course, a litigant's plaints of hardship cannot be

    assessed in a vacuum. Rather, a claim of hardship demands an

    assessment of the complainant's position in light of all the

    attendant circumstances. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. ___ _______________________________

    Dole, 802 F.2d 474, 479 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (noting that application ____

    of Abbott Labs is not "a matter of weaving complicated legal ___________

    distinctions divorced from reality," but, rather, requires the

    exercise of "practical common sense") (internal quotation marks

    omitted), cert. denied, 480 U.S. 951 (1987); cf. Narragansett _____ ______ ___ ____________

    Tribe, 19 F.3d at 692-93 (explaining that the inquiry into _____

    adverseness likewise requires an assessment of all the attendant
    ____________________

    15It perhaps bears noting that the lack of certitude both
    helps and hurts E&Y. On one hand, the uncertainty admittedly
    generates pressure on E&Y to pay more by way of settlement. But
    on the other hand, the uncertainty also encourages Depco to
    settle for less than it would demand if it knew beyond any
    peradventure of doubt that the Act would withstand constitutional
    scrutiny. By the same token, a resolution of the constitutional
    question would cut both ways. If a court upholds the Depco Act,
    E&Y probably will be faced with the prospect of paying more for a
    release, whereas, if a court invalidates the Act, E&Y probably
    will be able to pay less. This shifting array of possibilities,
    tilting first in one direction and then in the other, further
    dilutes E&Y's claim of an intolerable hardship.

    25












    circumstances). Here, three facts soften the sharp edges of

    E&Y's professed hardship, and, therefore, counsel restraint.

    First, the contingent nature of E&Y's claim has

    implications for hardship as well for fitness. Given the

    stretched chain of events that must transpire before the Act can

    harm E&Y, and the speculative nature of many of those events, we

    remain unconvinced either that E&Y's ability to negotiate is

    unfairly handicapped or that its ability to settle will be

    substantially enhanced by an immediate decision about the

    constitutionality of the Act. Second, E&Y is not without other

    options. Proceedings are underway in the state court that offer

    a vehicle for the expedited constitutional adjudication that E&Y

    seeks, unaccompanied by the disadvantages that deter us in this

    case. See supra note 10. E&Y is already a party to the ___ _____

    underlying state-court litigation and can, if it chooses to do

    so, participate in the proceedings before

    the Rhode Island Supreme Court. Finally, as some other

    defendants reportedly have done, E&Y can enter into negotiations

    with Depco aimed at fashioning a settlement that is contingent on

    an adjudication of the Act's constitutionality. See supra note ___ _____

    11.

    In sum, the Depco Act does not work a sufficient

    hardship, gauged by present effects, to justify a finding of

    ripeness. Though E&Y may feel some discomfiture over the

    threatened impairment of its anticipated right to contribution,

    the burden of which it complains is for the most part indigenous


    26












    to the litigation process, and, thus, it cannot be made weightless by the desired declaratory relief.
    V. CONCLUSION V. CONCLUSION

    We need go no further.16 E&Y yearns for the blossom

    when only the bud is ready. Because its challenge to the

    constitutionality of the Depco Act satisfies neither the fitness

    nor the hardship prong of the Abbott Labs test, it is not yet ____________

    ripe for federal judicial review. Accordingly, the district

    court's dismissal of E&Y's complaint for lack of subject matter

    jurisdiction must be





    Affirmed. Affirmed. ________














    ____________________

    16Although lack of ripeness is dispositive here, we do not
    in any way suggest that the lower court's alternate ground for
    dismissal abstention lacks force. In particular, to the
    extent that the court's abstention ruling rests on the discretion
    provided by the Declaratory Judgment Act, see, e.g., El Dia, 963 ___ ____ ______
    F.2d at 493-95, it appears fully sustainable. As we have
    indicated, the constitutional questions presented by a challenge
    to the Depco Act are of great import to Rhode Island, and lie at
    the core of the massive litigation that is proceeding glacially
    in its court system. Even if no individual abstention doctrine
    requires federal courts to forgo review a matter on which we do
    not opine the comity and federalism concerns that animate the
    various doctrines strongly suggest that dismissal of E&Y's
    declaratory action mirrors the course of prudence.

    27