In Re: Parmalat Securities Litigation ( 2011 )


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  •      09-4302-cv (L), 09-4306-cv (con), 09-4373-cv (con)
    In Re: Parmalat Securities Litigation
    1                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2
    3                           FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    4
    5
    6
    7                              August Term, 2010
    8
    9   Argued: November 2, 2010                  Decided: January 18, 2011
    10                                             Amended: April 12, 2011
    11
    12            Docket Nos. 09-4302-cv (L); 09-4306-cv (con);
    13                           09-4373-cv (con)
    14
    15
    16                    Parmalat Capital Finance Limited,
    17
    18                                                        Plaintiff-Appellant,
    19
    20     Dr. Enrico Bondi, Extraordinary Commissioner of Parmalat
    21    Finanziaria S.p.A., Parmalat S.p.A., and other affiliated
    22   entities, in Extraordinary Administration under the laws of
    23                              Italy,
    24
    25   Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Third-Party-Defendant-Appellant,
    26
    27         Capital & Finance Asset Management S.A., Cattolica
    28    Partecipazioni S.p.A., Hermes Focus Asset Management Europe
    29    Limited, Erste Sparinvest Kapitalanlagegesellschaft m.b.H.,
    30       Solotrat, Societe Moderne des Terrassements Parisiens,
    31    Renato Esposito, Fondazione Italo Monzino, Southern Alaska
    32    Carpenters Pension Fund, on behalf of itself and all others
    33        similarly situated, Cristina Poncibo, Margery Louise
    34    Kronengold, Robert McQueen, Custodian, individually and on
    35     behalf of all others similarly situated, Ferri Giampolo,
    36      Food Holdings Limited, Dairy Holdings Limited, G. James
    37        Cleaver, Gordon I. MacRae, Gerald K. Smith, Laura J.
    38    Sturaitis, Monumental Life Insurance Company, TransAmerica
    39        Occidental Life Insurance Company, TransAmerica Life
    40    Insurance Company, Aviva Life Insurance Company, Principal
    41     Global Investors, LLC, Principal Life Insurance Company,
    42   Scottish Re (US) Inc., Hartford Life Insurance Company, Plan
    1                  Administrator G. Peter Pappas,
    2
    3                                                      Plaintiffs,
    4
    5                              –v.–
    6
    7      Bank of America Corporation, Banc of America Securities
    8     Limited, Bank of America, N.A., Bank of America National
    9   Trust & Savings Association, Banc of America Securities LLC,
    10        Bank of America International, Ltd., Grant Thornton
    11                        International, Ltd,
    12
    13                                            Defendants-Appellees,
    14
    15        Grant Thornton International, Grant Thornton LLP,
    16
    17           Defendants-Third-Party-Plaintiffs-Counter-Claimants-
    18                                                     Appellees,
    19
    20   Deutsche Bank AG, Morgan Stanley & Co., Incorporated, Bonlat
    21         Financing Corporation, Calisto Tanzi, Fausto Tonna,
    22      Coloniale S.p.A., Citigroup Inc., Buconero, LLC, Zinni &
    23       Associates, P.C., Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Deloitte &
    24   Touche S.p.A., a Societa per Azioni under the laws of Italy,
    25    James E. Copeland Jr., Parmalat Finanziaria S.p.A., Stefano
    26       Tanzi, Luciano Del Soldato, Domenico Barili, Francesco
    27       Giuffredi, Giovanni Tanzi, Deloitte & Touche USA, LLP,
    28        Deloitte & Touche L.L.P., Credit Suisse First Boston,
    29    Citibank, Eureka Securitisation plc, Vialattea LLC, Pavia e
    30    Ansaldo, Banca Nazionale Del Lavoro S.p.A., Citibank, N.A.,
    31    Professor Maria Martellini, Banca Intesa S.p.A., Deloitte &
    32       Touche Tohmatsu Auditores Independentes, Credit Suisse
    33     International, Credit Suisse Securities (Europe) Limited,
    34    Credit Suisse, Credit Suisse Group, Grant Thorton S.p.A., a
    35      Societa per Azioni under the laws of Italy, now known as
    36                          Italaudit, S.p.A.,
    37
    38                                                      Defendants,
    39
    40                        Parmatour S.p.A.,
    41
    42                               Defendant-Third-Party-Defendant.
    43
    2
    1
    2
    3   Before:
    4    CABRANES, WESLEY, Circuit Judges, and KOELTL,* District Judge.
    5
    6        Plaintiff-Appellant Parmalat Capital Finance Limited
    7   and Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Third-Party-Defendant-
    8   Appellant Dr. Enrico Bondi (collectively, “Appellants”)
    9   commenced these actions to recover damages that they contend
    10   are owed to them pursuant to Illinois state law. In this
    11   appeal, Appellants challenge orders of the United States
    12   District Court for the Southern District of New York
    13   (Kaplan, J.) and the Northern District of Illinois
    14   (Castillo, J.) denying Appellants’ motions for remand and
    15   abstention, and granting summary judgment to
    16   Defendants-Third-Party-Plaintiffs-Counter-Claimants-
    17   Appellees Grant Thornton International and Grant Thornton
    18   LLP. We hold that the district courts had proper removal
    19   jurisdiction over these actions. As a matter of first
    20   impression in our Circuit, we set forth the standard for
    21   determining “timely adjudication” for the purposes of 28
    
    22 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(2) abstention. We then VACATE and REMAND
    23   to allow the district court to consider, in light of this
    24   Opinion, whether abstention is mandatory in the
    25   circumstances presented here.
    26
    27        AFFIRMED in part and VACATED and REMANDED in part.
    28
    29
    30
    31             KATHLEEN M. SULLIVAN, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &
    32                   Sullivan, LLP, New York, NY (Peter E.
    33                   Calamari, Terry L. Wit, Sanford I. Weisburst,
    34                   on the brief), for Plaintiff-Counter-
    35                   Defendant-Third-Party Defendant-Appellant
    36                   Bondi.
    37
    38             J. GREGORY TAYLOR, Diamond McCarthy LLP, New York, NY
    39                  (Allan B. Diamond, Richard I. Janvey, J.
    *
    The Honorable John G. Koeltl, of the United States
    District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by
    designation.
    3
    1                Benjamin King, on the brief), for Plaintiff-
    2                Appellant Parmalat Capital Finance Limited.
    3
    4            LINDA T. COBERLY, Winston & Strawn LLP, Chicago, IL
    5                  (Bruce R. Braun, William P. Ferranti, on the
    6                  brief), for Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-
    7                  Counter-Claimant-Appellee Grant Thornton LLP.
    8
    9            JOSEPH B. TOMPKINS JR., Sidley Austin LLP,
    10                  Washington, DC (Alan C. Geolot, Mark P.
    11                  Guerrera, Robert D. Keeling, A. Robert
    12                  Peitrzak, Daniel A. McLaughlin, on the brief),
    13                  for Defendants-Appellees Bank of America et
    14                  al.
    15
    16            JAMES L. BERNARD, Strook & Strook & Lavan LLP, New
    17                  York, NY (Quinlan D. Murphy, Katherine I.
    18                  Puzone, David M. Cheifetz, on the brief), for
    19                  Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Counter-
    20                  Claimant-Appellees Grant Thornton
    21                  International, Inc. and Grant Thornton
    22                  International Ltd.
    23
    24            PARTHA P. CHATTORAJ, Markowitz & Chattoraj LLP, New
    25                  York, NY for Amicus Curiae Guido Alpa.
    26
    27            GEORGE M. PAVIA, Pavia & Harcourt LLP, New York, NY
    28                  for Amicus Curiae the Government of the
    29                  Republic of Italy.
    30
    31
    32
    33   WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
    34       The questions presented are (1) whether the district
    35   court erred in exercising jurisdiction over plaintiffs’
    36   claims, pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b); and (2) whether the
    37   district court properly declined to abstain from exercising
    38   that jurisdiction, pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(2).    This
    4
    1   appeal is taken from judgments of the United States District
    2   Court for the Southern District of New York (Kaplan, J.) and
    3   challenges rulings made by that court and by the United
    4   States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
    5   (Castillo, J.).   The contested rulings include two orders
    6   dated February 25, 2005 and February 16, 2006 finding
    7   federal jurisdiction in the present cases and declining to
    8   abstain from exercising that jurisdiction.     We conclude that
    9   jurisdiction was proper, but remand to allow the district
    10   court1 to consider, in light of this Opinion, whether
    11   abstention is mandatory.
    12                            I. BACKGROUND
    13        These cases arise from the financial collapse of
    14   Parmalat Finanziaria, S.p.A. and many of its subsidiaries.
    15   Twenty-three Parmalat-related corporations are now in the
    16   midst of bankruptcy and reorganization proceedings in Italy.
    17   Italy’s Minister of Finance appointed Dr. Enrico Bondi, here
    18   the Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Third-Party-Defendant-
    1
    Although multiple courts were initially involved in these
    cases, the multidistrict litigation proceedings are now before
    the United States District Court for the Southern District of New
    York (Kaplan, J.). We thus remand to that court. References
    herein to “the district court” refer to the United States
    District Court for the Southern District of New York unless
    otherwise noted.
    5
    1   Appellant, to serve as Extraordinary Commissioner of these
    2   bankruptcy proceedings in a role analogous to a Chapter 11
    3   Trustee.    Parmalat Capital Finance Limited (“PCFL”), a
    4   Parmalat subsidiary headquartered in the Grand Caymans, is
    5   likewise insolvent and currently in liquidation proceedings.
    6   These liquidation proceedings are ongoing in the Grand
    7   Caymans and are overseen by Joint Official Liquidators
    8   appointed by the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands.
    9        In January and June 2004 respectively, PCFL and Bondi
    10   commenced separate proceedings pursuant to former 11 U.S.C.
    11   § 304 in the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of
    12   New York.    Section 304 permitted PCFL and Bondi, as
    13   representatives of the foreign bankruptcy estates, to
    14   commence bankruptcy cases in the United States in order to
    15   enjoin litigation against PCFL and Parmalat in United States
    16   courts.2    Section 304 also empowered PCFL and Bondi to seek
    17   orders from the bankruptcy court regarding turnover of
    18   property in the United States belonging to the respective
    19   bankruptcy estates.
    20        Meanwhile, purchasers of Parmalat’s debt and equity
    2
    Although § 304 was repealed, it remains applicable to
    this case. See Pub. L. 109-8 (enacting Chapter 15 of the
    Bankruptcy Code and repealing 
    11 U.S.C. § 304
     for all ancillary
    petitions filed after October 17, 2005).
    6
    1   securities filed class action lawsuits against Parmalat and
    2   others for securities fraud.     Those cases were consolidated
    3   before Judge Kaplan in the United States District Court.
    4       In August 2004, Bondi filed suit in Illinois state
    5   court against Defendants-Third-Party-Plaintiffs-Counter-
    6   Claimants-Appellees Grant Thornton International and Grant
    7   Thornton LLP (collectively, “Grant Thornton”).     Bondi
    8   alleges claims against Grant Thornton arising under Illinois
    9   state law for professional malpractice, fraud, aiding and
    10   abetting fraud and constructive fraud, negligent
    11   misrepresentation, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary
    12   duty, theft and diversion of corporate assets, conversion,
    13   unjust enrichment, aiding and abetting fraudulent transfer,
    14   deepening insolvency, and unlawful civil conspiracy.       On
    15   September 16, 2004, Grant Thornton removed the case to the
    16   United States District Court for the Northern District of
    17   Illinois on the basis of 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1334
    (b) and 1452.         In
    18   its Notice of Removal, Grant Thornton argued, among other
    19   things, that removal was proper because the Illinois state
    20   law case was “related to” Bondi’s § 304 proceedings in the
    21   Southern District of New York.     The next day, Bondi filed a
    22   “Motion to Remand to State Court.”     Bondi argued therein
    23   that there was no federal jurisdiction over the case and, in
    7
    1   any event, the court should abstain pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2
       1334(c)(2).
    3        On December 9, 2004, the Judicial Panel on
    4   Multidistrict Litigation transferred Bondi’s action against
    5   Grant Thornton to Judge Kaplan in the Southern District of
    6   New York.     On February 25, 2005, Judge Kaplan denied Bondi’s
    7   Motion to Remand to State Court.      The district court found
    8   that it had jurisdiction pursuant to § 1334(b) and that
    9   abstention was not mandatory.3      The district court reasoned
    10   that Bondi failed to file a motion for abstention and, in
    11   the alternative, Bondi failed to demonstrate that his claims
    12   could be “timely adjudicated” in Illinois state court.4      28
    
    13 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(2).
    14        In December 2005, PCFL likewise filed suit against
    15   Grant Thornton in Illinois state court alleging similar
    3
    The district court likewise declined Bondi’s motion to
    abstain pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(1). It concluded that
    permissive abstention was not appropriate because of “the
    importance of coordinating this proceeding with the international
    bankruptcy and the Securities Fraud Action outweighs any interest
    in comity with Illinois courts or Illinois law.” Bondi does not
    challenge this ruling on appeal.
    4
    Shortly after the district court issued its order, Bondi
    filed a motion under 
    28 U.S.C. §1292
    (b) to certify questions of
    law related to remand and abstention. The district court denied
    Bondi’s motion, precluding him from pursuing an interlocutory
    appeal. Accordingly, Bondi’s first opportunity to challenge
    Judge Kaplan’s ruling on remand and abstention arose in the
    present appeal following the entry of judgment below.
    8
    1   claims to those asserted by Bondi.    On January 5, 2006,
    2   Grant Thornton removed the case to the United States
    3   District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on the
    4   basis of 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1334
    (b) and 1452.     In its Notice of
    5   Removal, Grant Thornton argued, as in the Bondi case, that
    6   removal was appropriate because the state law claims were
    7   related to PCFL’s § 304 proceeding.    On January 20, 2006,
    8   PCFL filed a motion titled “Parmalat Capital Finance
    9   Limited’s Motion to Abstain and Remand.”     Like Bondi, PCFL
    10   argued that there was no federal jurisdiction over its case
    11   and that abstention was mandatory pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 12
       1334(c)(2).5   By short order on February 16, 2006, the
    13   Northern District of Illinois denied PCFL’s motion, noting
    14   that it “fully adopt[ed]” the reasoning of the Southern
    15   District of New York’s February 25, 2005 order denying
    16   Bondi’s remand motion.   The case was then transferred to the
    17   United States District Court for the Southern District of
    18   New York for consolidation with Bondi’s case.
    19       Following discovery, the district court entertained a
    20   series of motions to dismiss the complaints or to grant
    5
    In addition, PCFL moved for permissive abstention pursuant
    to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(1). Like Bondi, PCFL does not challenge
    the denial of its motion for permissive abstention on appeal.
    9
    1   judgment in favor of defendants.     Ultimately, the court
    2   resolved the cases in final judgments for defendants,
    3   dismissing the matters on grounds not relevant here.      See In
    4   re Parmalat Sec. Litig., 
    659 F. Supp. 2d 504
     (S.D.N.Y.
    5   2009).
    6       Appellants filed this timely appeal.     This opinion
    7   focuses on the February 25, 2005 and February 16, 2006
    8   orders to determine whether the district courts correctly
    9   determined that those courts had jurisdiction and were not
    10   required to abstain pursuant to § 1334(c)(2).     Although
    11   Appellants also raise other challenges relating to the
    12   summary judgment proceedings in the district court, we need
    13   not reach those claims.
    14                             II. DISCUSSION
    15       Bondi and PCFL challenge the lower federal courts’
    16   exercise of jurisdiction on two grounds.     First, Bondi and
    17   PCFL contend that removal from Illinois state court was
    18   improper because the Illinois actions are based solely on
    19   state law claims and are not “related to” any bankruptcy
    20   cases in federal court.     See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b).   Second,
    21   Bondi and PCFL contend that, even if removal was proper, the
    22   district courts were required to abstain pursuant to 28
    
    23 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(2), which provides that a district court
    10
    1   “shall abstain” from hearing an applicable claim “if an
    2   action is commenced, and can be timely adjudicated, in a
    3   State forum of appropriate jurisdiction.”
    4        We conclude that the cases were properly removed.    As
    5   to the abstention question, the meaning of “timely
    6   adjudicated” is a matter of first impression in this
    7   Circuit.   Our task here then is to set forth a standard for
    8   determining “timely adjudication” for the purposes of 28
    
    9 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(2).   We hold that the district court
    10   employed the wrong standard.   We therefore vacate the
    11   judgment on the abstention issue and remand to allow the
    12   district court to consider, in light of this decision,
    13   whether abstention is mandatory.
    14   A.   Removal Jurisdiction
    15        
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b) provides that “the district courts
    16   shall have original but not exclusive jurisdiction of all
    17   civil proceedings arising under title 11, or arising in or
    18   related to cases under title 11.”   
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b)
    19   (emphasis added).   Grant Thornton removed the present
    20   actions from Illinois state court as actions “related to”
    21   the 
    11 U.S.C. § 304
     proceedings in the Southern District of
    11
    1   New York.6   PCFL and Bondi press a novel argument: they
    2   contend that removal was improper because § 304 proceedings
    3   are not “cases” within the meaning of the removal statute.
    4   In the alternative, they argue that the state law claims are
    5   not “related to” the § 304 proceedings.     We disagree on both
    6   counts.
    7        1.   A Section 304 Proceeding is a “Case”
    8        One need not look far to find substantial support for
    9   Grant Thornton’s contention that a § 304 proceeding is a
    10   “case” within the context of the bankruptcy statute.      The
    11   Bankruptcy Code repeatedly refers to § 304 proceedings as
    12   “cases” and Section 304 itself is titled “Cases ancillary to
    13   foreign proceedings.”    
    11 U.S.C. § 304
     (emphasis added).
    14   The Bankruptcy Code also defines “petition” as a “petition
    15   filed under section 301, 302, 303, or 304 of this title, as
    16   the case may be, commencing a case under this title.”       11
    
    17 U.S.C. § 101
    (42) (emphasis added).      The statutory language
    18   is clear: a § 304 proceeding is a case for the purposes of
    19   subject matter jurisdiction under § 1334(b).
    20        2.   State Law Claims may be “Related to” a Section 304
    6
    Grant Thornton also removed on the ground of relation to
    the United States bankruptcy of a subsidiary of Parmalat.
    Because of our resolution of the appellees’ principal claim, it
    is unnecessary to reach this argument.
    12
    1              Proceeding
    2       For the purposes of removal jurisdiction, a civil
    3   proceeding is “related to” a title 11 case if the action’s
    4   “outcome might have any ‘conceivable effect’ on the bankrupt
    5   estate.”   In re Cuyahoga Equip. Corp., 
    980 F.2d 110
    , 114 (2d
    6   Cir. 1992).   In the Illinois state law actions at issue
    7   here, Bondi and PCFL are attempting to recover damages that
    8   they contend are due the respective bankruptcy estates in
    9   Italy and the Grand Caymans.   If either Bondi or PCFL is
    10   successful in their claims against Grant Thornton, the funds
    11   they recover will benefit the respective bankruptcy estates.
    12   See In re Boston Reg’l Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    410 F.3d 100
    , 107
    13   (1st Cir. 2005) (“[The liquidating entity’s] success or lack
    14   of success in securing a share of the trust corpus will
    15   directly impact the amount of the liquidating dividend
    16   eventually paid to [the debtor’s] creditors.   That is a
    17   matter intimately connected with the efficacy of the
    18   bankruptcy proceeding.”)   It is not difficult to conclude
    19   that the “conceivable effect” test is satisfied.   The
    20   present actions are therefore “related to” the § 304
    21   proceeding.
    22       The fact that a § 304 proceeding, by definition,
    23   involves a bankruptcy estate located abroad does not short
    13
    1   circuit the “related to” analysis.    In the context of §
    2   1334(b), there is no need to distinguish between estates
    3   administered principally in foreign forums and those
    4   administered principally in domestic forums.     As the
    5   district court explained below, “[t]here is no reason why a
    6   state law action designed to recover some of those assets
    7   [of the foreign debtor] . . . and thus increase the size of
    8   the estate involved in the Section 304 case is not ‘related
    9   to’ the Section 304 Proceeding within the meaning of Section
    10   1334.”   Bondi v. Grant Thorton Int’l, 
    322 B.R. 44
    , 48
    11   (S.D.N.Y. 2005).   So long as the estate at issue in a § 304
    12   proceeding, wherever located, may conceivably be affected by
    13   the state law actions, those state law actions are “related
    14   to” the § 304 case.7
    15        The district court properly exercised removal
    16   jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b).
    17   B.   Section 1334(c)(2) Abstention
    7
    We disagree with another court’s approach in a similar
    case involving state law claims related to the Parmalat
    bankruptcy. In Bondi v. Citigroup, Inc., No. 04 CV 4373 (D.N.J.
    Nov. 18, 2004), the United States District Court for the District
    of New Jersey concluded that although the state law claims were
    related to the Parmalat estate, “related to” jurisdiction was
    nevertheless lacking because the Parmalat estate is located
    abroad. As explained above, we disagree with this conclusion.
    State law claims are “related to” § 304 proceedings so long as
    they satisfy our Court’s “related to” test set forth in Cuyahoga,
    
    980 F.2d at 114
    . Nothing more is required.
    14
    1       The jurisdiction-conferring statute covering bankruptcy
    2   cases and proceedings provides:
    3            Upon timely motion of a party in a
    4            proceeding based upon a State law claim
    5            or State law cause of action, related to
    6            a case under title 11 but not arising
    7            under title 11 or arising in a case under
    8            title 11, with respect to which an action
    9            could not have been commenced in a court
    10            of the United States absent jurisdiction
    11            under this section, the district court
    12            shall abstain from hearing such
    13            proceeding if an action is commenced, and
    14            can be timely adjudicated, in a State
    15            forum of appropriate jurisdiction.
    16
    17   
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (c)(2) (emphasis added).   The district
    18   courts determined that abstention pursuant to § 1334(c)(2)
    19   was not mandatory here because PCFL and Bondi failed to move
    20   for abstention and, in the alternative, PCFL and Bondi
    21   failed to show that their actions could be “timely
    22   adjudicated” in state court as required by statute.    We
    23   review these holdings in turn.
    24       1.   Motion for Abstention
    25       Bondi filed a motion titled “Plaintiff’s Motion for
    26   Remand to State Court” and explicitly argued that the court
    27   should abstain pursuant to § 1334(c)(2).   PCFL filed a
    28   motion titled “Parmalat Capital Finance Limited’s Motion to
    29   Abstain and Remand.”   In that motion, PCFL likewise
    30   explicitly argued that the court should abstain pursuant to
    15
    1   § 1334(c)(2).    Based on these filings, the district courts
    2   clearly erred in their determinations that PCFL and Bondi
    3   failed to file motions for abstention.
    4       2.   Timely Adjudication
    5            i.     Standard of Review
    6        As explained above, § 1334(c)(2) abstention is
    7   mandatory when, among other things, the matter can be
    8   “timely adjudicated” in state court.     Whether an action can
    9   be timely adjudicated in state court is a mixed question of
    10   law and fact.    The factual inquiry focuses on how quickly a
    11   case can be adjudicated in state court; the legal inquiry
    12   asks if this pace is sufficiently swift.     Given this mixed
    13   question of law and fact, we review the court’s
    14   determination de novo.    See McCarthy v. Dun & Bradstreet
    15   Corp., 
    482 F.3d 184
    , 204 (2d Cir. 2007).
    16            ii. What Constitutes ‘Timely’
    17       Four factors come into play in evaluating § 1334(c)(2)
    18   timeliness: (1) the backlog of the state court’s calendar
    19   relative to the federal court’s calendar; (2) the complexity
    20   of the issues presented and the respective expertise of each
    21   forum; (3) the status of the title 11 bankruptcy proceeding
    22   to which the state law claims are related; and (4) whether
    23   the state court proceeding would prolong the administration
    16
    1   or liquidation of the estate.        See In re Georgou, 
    157 B.R. 2
       847, 851 (N.D. Ill. 1993).
    3        The first two factors require a court to consider
    4   timely adjudication in light of the particular factual and
    5   procedural circumstances presented in the two courts being
    6   compared.   Timeliness cannot reasonably be defined as a
    7   fixed period of time.    Instead, timeliness is a case- and
    8   situation-specific inquiry that requires a comparison of the
    9   time in which the respective state and federal forums can
    10   reasonably be expected to adjudicate the matter.       The
    11   inquiry does not turn exclusively on whether an action could
    12   be adjudicated most quickly in state court.       It is, however,
    13   informed by the comparative speeds of adjudication in the
    14   federal and state forums.    A court should therefore consider
    15   the backlog of the state court’s calendar (if any) relative
    16   to the federal court’s calendar.       Where the legal issues in
    17   a case are especially complex, the forum with the most
    18   expertise in the relevant areas of law may well be expected
    19   to adjudicate the matter in a more timely fashion relative
    20   to the other forum.8    On the other hand, when the facts in a
    8
    The district court may find that this factor particularly
    favors abstention here because one of the key issues in this case
    – the defense of in pari delicto – is a matter of Illinois state
    law and there is some doubt as to the nature and reach of the
    17
    1   case are especially complex, the forum with greater
    2   familiarity with the record may likewise be expected to
    3   adjudicate the matter more quickly.     Ultimately, the
    4   relative adjudication times are not solely determinative,
    5   but do shed light on whether the state court can timely
    6   adjudicate the matter.
    7        As to the third factor — the status of the “related to”
    8   title 11 bankruptcy proceeding — a court must consider
    9   whether the litigants in a state proceeding need the state
    10   law claims to be quickly resolved as a result of the status
    11   of the ongoing title 11 bankruptcy proceeding.      For
    12   instance, a trustee in a chapter 11 reorganization may
    13   require expeditious resolution of the state law claims in
    14   order to determine what resources are available to fund the
    15   chapter 11 reorganization.    For this reason, courts have
    16   found that what might be timely in the Chapter 7 context is
    17   not necessarily timely in Chapter 11 cases where time is of
    18   the essence.   See In re Leco Enters., 
    144 B.R. 244
    , 251
    19   (S.D.N.Y. 1992).   In the Chapter 7 context, some courts have
    defense. Notably, Illinois does not permit our Court to certify
    questions of Illinois state law to the Illinois Supreme Court.
    Ill. Sup. Ct. R. 20 (permitting certification only from the
    Supreme Court of the United States and the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit).
    18
    1   even suggested that “in deciding whether a matter may be
    2   timely adjudicated, perhaps the single most important factor
    3   is the nature of the underlying chapter proceeding.”      Id.
    4   (citation omitted).9
    5        Finally, the fourth factor asks whether the state court
    6   proceeding would prolong the administration or liquidation
    7   of the estate.   A matter cannot be timely adjudicated in
    8   state court if abstention and remand of the state law claims
    9   will unduly prolong the administration of the estate.      Thus,
    10   in a case like the WorldCom bankruptcy, “the close
    11   connections between the defendants in [the] action and the
    12   debtor, and the complexity of [the] litigation” may suggest
    13   that “remanding to the state court could slow the pace of
    14   litigation dramatically” by leading to duplicative motions
    15   practice, repetitious discovery, and parallel adjudication
    16   of common issues.   In re Worldcom, Inc. Sec. Litig., 293
    
    17 B.R. 308
    , 331 (S.D.N.Y. 2003).
    18        In the present case, the district courts emphasized
    9
    Because a court overseeing a § 304 case is not tasked with
    overseeing reorganization or liquidation of the estate, we see no
    reason why, as a result of the § 304 proceeding, the litigants in
    a state law proceeding would require swift resolution of the
    state law claims. A court may, however, find that a particular
    § 304 proceeding does create a need for urgency among the
    litigants in the state law proceeding.
    19
    1   that remand would not promote timely adjudication because
    2   this case is a “complex bankruptcy-cum-securities fraud
    3   multidistrict litigation[]” such that “the importance of
    4   coordinating this proceeding with the international
    5   bankruptcy and the Securities Fraud Action outweighs any
    6   interest in comity with Illinois courts or Illinois law.”
    7   We disagree with this approach.     The impact of the state
    8   court proceedings on the securities class action itself,
    9   absent evidence of prolonging the administration or
    10   liquidation of the foreign estates, is immaterial to the
    11   question of timely adjudication.10    Unlike Worldcom, the
    12   district court here is not charged with administration of a
    13   bankruptcy estate.   As a result, the possibility that remand
    14   of the state court claims will slow down the § 304
    15   proceeding is insufficient to show that state court
    16   adjudication would be untimely.     The inquiry’s proper focus
    17   is on the timely administration of the estate, not the § 304
    18   proceeding.
    10
    It bears noting that Bondi and the Joint Official
    Liquidators, appointed by the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands
    and charged with overseeing PCFL, selected Illinois state court
    as the forum in which to prosecute their claims against Grant
    Thornton. Presumably, Bondi and the Joint Official Liquidators
    were well versed in the timeliness concerns of their respective
    foreign bankruptcy proceedings when they selected the state
    forum.
    20
    1       c.   Remand to Assess Timely Adjudication
    2        Nearly six years has passed since Appellants sought
    3   federal abstention in this matter. The record tells us
    4   nothing of the current status of the domestic and foreign
    5   bankruptcy proceedings.   Similarly, the record is silent as
    6   to whether remanding these cases to Illinois state court
    7   would prolong the administration of the foreign estates.
    8   Accordingly, we cannot resolve the issue of “timely
    9   adjudication” based on the record before us.
    10       On remand, the district court should determine whether
    11   these cases can be timely adjudicated in Illinois state
    12   court at the present time.   Although Bondi preserved for
    13   appeal the question of whether this case could have been
    14   timely adjudicated in Illinois state court at the time the
    15   district court declined to abstain in February 2005 (and
    16   indeed sought to appeal the issue at that time), much may
    17   have changed in the intervening years.   It would be futile
    18   for the district court on remand to consider only the facts
    19   known to it at the time of its initial order.   Accordingly,
    20   the district court should allow the parties to supplement
    21   the record with current information to allow it to assess
    22   timely adjudication in the present tense.   See generally
    23   Stoe v. Flaherty, 
    2006 WL 2927272
     (W.D. Pa. Oct. 11, 2006)
    21
    1   (considering “timely adjudication” following a remand order
    2   from the Third Circuit and noting that prior resolution of
    3   the case on the merits in federal court was not dispositive
    4   in the timely adjudication analysis).
    5       On remand, the district court should also consider
    6   which party should bear the burden to show that these
    7   matters cannot be timely adjudicated in state court.
    8   Although many courts have required the movant to
    9   affirmatively show that a matter can be timely adjudicated
    10   in state court, few cases have analyzed the question in
    11   detail.   See, e.g., Stoe v. Flaherty, 
    436 F.3d 209
    , 219 n.5
    12   (3d Cir. 2006); but see XL Sports, Ltd. v. Lawler, 
    49 Fed. 13
       App’x 13, 20 (6th Cir. 2002) (“Nothing in the record
    14   indicates that the Tennessee courts would not adjudicate the
    15   claim in a timely fashion . . . .”).        Typically, a party
    16   seeking relief bears the burden to show he is entitled to
    17   that relief.   See, e.g., In re the City of New York, 607
    
    18 F.3d 923
    , 944 (2d Cir. 2010).        Placing the burden on the
    19   party seeking remand may nevertheless be inconsistent with
    20   the mandatory nature of abstention under § 1334(c)(2) as
    21   well as the principles of comity, which presume that a state
    22   court will operate efficiently and effectively.        See Younger
    23   v. Harris, 
    401 U.S. 37
    , 44 (1971).        Accordingly, when
    22
    1   examining this issue, the district court should consider
    2   these significant competing concerns.
    3       A mandate shall issue forthwith remanding these cases
    4   to the district court to hold such proceedings as are
    5   necessary to assess whether § 1334(c)(2) abstention is
    6   mandatory.   If the district court elects to abstain pursuant
    7   to § 1334(c)(2) and remands these cases to the appropriate
    8   Illinois state court, we will have no jurisdiction over an
    9   appeal.   See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (d); In re Cathedral of the
    10   Incarnation, 
    90 F.3d 28
    , 32-34 (2d Cir. 1996) (holding that
    11   a decision to remand based on mandatory abstention is not
    12   reviewable on appeal).    If, however, the district court
    13   determines that abstention is not mandatory, any party to
    14   this appeal may restore jurisdiction to this court within 30
    15   days by letter to the Clerk’s Office seeking review, without
    16   need for a new notice of appeal.    See United States v.
    17   Jacobson, 
    15 F.3d 19
    , 22 (2d Cir. 1994).    The Clerk’s Office
    18   will then set a briefing schedule and refer the appeal to
    19   this panel for disposition.
    20                            III. CONCLUSION
    21       The Southern District of New York’s February 25, 2005
    22   order denying Bondi’s motion for remand and the Northern
    23   District of Illinois’s February 16, 2006 order denying
    23
    1   PCFL’s motion to abstain and remand are hereby AFFIRMED in
    2   part and VACATED and REMANDED in part.   We affirm the
    3   district courts’s determinations that these cases were
    4   properly removed under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b).   We VACATE the
    5   district courts’s abstention holdings and REMAND to the
    6   Southern District of New York for proceedings consistent
    7   with this Opinion.   The mandate shall issue forthwith.
    24