OPINION AND ORDER
Pending before the Court is the renewed motion of defendant Texaco to dismiss these cases in favor of their being pursued in the courts of Ecuador (or in the courts of Peru by any Peruvian plaintiff who pre *537 fers that forum). Because Texaco has carried its burden on every element of the motion, and because the record establishes overwhelmingly that these cases have everything to do with Ecuador and nothing to do with the United States, the Court grants the motion and dismisses the cases on the ground of forum non conveniens.
Familiarity with the facts and prior proceedings in these cases is here assumed.
See, e.g., Aquinda v. Texaco, Inc.,
Neither lawsuit alleges any injury to persons, property, or commerce in the United States. Instead, plaintiffs allege they “have or will suffer property damage, personal injuries, and increased risk of disease,” Aguinda Compl. ¶ 11, in Ecuador and Peru respectively, as a result of negligent or otherwise improper oil piping and waste disposal practices that were initiated several decades ago, on lands owned by the Republic of Ecuador, by a consortium (the “Consortium”) in which Texaco held an indirect interest. See Ashanga Compl. ¶¶ 6-7; Aguinda Compl. ¶¶ 6-7; Defendant Texaco, Inc.’s Appendix of Affidavits, Documents and Other Authorities in Support of Its Renewed Motions to Dismiss (“Texaco App.”), Ex. 2, Affidavit of Texaco Petroleum Co. (“TexPet Aff.”), at ¶ 7.
No present or former member of the Consortium is a party to these lawsuits. That includes the Government of Ecuador, which, either directly or through the state-owned corporation PetroEcuador, regulated the Consortium from the outset, acquired a minority stake in 1974, acquired full operational control in 1990, and acquired exclusive ownership in 1992.
See, e.g., Jota,
Even before the Government of Ecuador tоok complete control of the Consortium, Texaco’s only interest consisted of its indirect investment in Texaco Petroleum Company (“TexPet”), a Delaware corporation and fourth-tier subsidiary of Texaco, which initially operated the petroleum concession for the Consortium and held varying interests in the Consortium until 1992.
See Jota,
Instead, the sole defendant is Texaco, based on broad but conclusory allegations that Texaco directly controlled the Consortium’s activities from the United States,
see
Aguinda Compl. at ¶¶ 2, 28; Ashanga Compl. at ¶¶ 11, 25. Faced with similar allegations in a parallel action brought against Texaco by some of the same plaintiffs as here, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas dismissed the case in favor of its being pursued in the courts of Ecuador.
See
*538
Sequihua v. Texaco, Inc.,
Nonetheless, the plaintiffs, after taking numerous depositions and obtaining responses to no fewer than 81 document requests and 143 interrogatories, were unable to adduce material competent evidence of meaningful Texaco involvement in the misconduct complained of — to the point that plaintiffs essentially stipulated as much.
See
Texaco App., Ex. 21, Stipulation and Order,
Aguinda v. Texaco Inc.,
93 Civ. 7527, dated July 12, 1995. Accordingly, this judge (to whom the cases were ultimately reassigned following Judge Broderick’s death) dismissed the cases on the ground,
inter alia,
of
forum non con-veniens. See Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc.,
Following remand, Texaco provided the missing commitment to submit to the jurisdiction of the courts of Ecuador (and Peru, as well) and then renewed its motion to dismiss on ground of
forum non conve-niens.
After receiving further briefing from the parties and obtaining clarification from the Government of Ecuador as to its current posturе respecting these lawsuits,
cf. Jota,
After briefing on this issue was completed, the matter was further delayed by plaintiffs’ mandamus petition to the Court of Appeals seeking this Court’s recusal. That petition having now been denied,
see In re Aguinda,
To prevail on a motion to dismiss on the ground of
forum non conveniens,
a defendant must demonstrate (1) that there exists an adequate alternative forum,
see DiRienzo v. Philip Servs. Corp.,
The requirement of an adequate alternative forum “[o]rdinarily ... will be satisfied when the defendant is ‘amenable to process’ in the other jurisdiction.”
Piper Aircraft,
While plaintiffs argue that these commitments by Texaco do not extend beyond the named plaintiffs to other, unnamed members of the putative classes, this is not a reasonable reading of the commitments and the Court does not so construe them. Lest there be any doubt, however, the Court directs that if Texaco does not agree that these commitments extend, mutatis mutandis, to all members of the putative classes, it must so inform the Court in writing within three business days of receiving this Opinion and Order, in which case the Court will re-open the otherwise final dismissal of these eases.
Even though, as mentioned, such submission by a defendant to being sued in a foreign forum is normally sufficient in itself to satisfy the threshold requirement of an adequate alternative forum in a motion to dismiss on grounds of forum non conve-niens, plaintiffs, in their opposition to defendant’s instant motion, raise several additional objections to the adequacy of an Ecuadorian forum. The first is that “Ecuador Is Not An Adequate Forum Because Its Jurisprudence, For All Practical Purposes, Does Not Recognize Tort Claims.” Memorandum in Support of Plaintiffs’ Reply to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Complaint, dated Jan. 25, 1999 (“Pis.’ Jan. 25, 1999 Mem.”) at 5. Rather remarkably, this argument ignores the undisputed evidence that certain members of the putative Aguinda class, as well as three affected Ecuadorian municipalities, have already brought tort actions in the Ecuadorian courts, on some of the very claims here alleged, against TexPet, Petroecuador and other present or former members of the Consortium, and have, in some of these cases, obtained tort judgments in plaintiffs’ favor. See Texaco App., Ex. 14, Affidavit of Dr. Vicente Bermeo Lañas at ¶ 13; Texaco App., Ex. 15, Affidavit of Dr. Rodrigo Perez Pallares (“Perez Aff.”) at ¶ 4 & Ex. A; see also Texaco App., Ex. 13, Affidavit of Dr. Adolfo Callejas Ribadeneira, dated Dec. 28, 1998 (“Callejas Aff. I”) at ¶¶ 2-5 *540 & Exs. A — D; Texaco, Inc.’s Reply Memorandum of Law in Support of Its Renewed Motions to Dismiss Based on Forum Non Conveniens and International Comity (“Def.’s Reply Mem.”), Ex. 1, Affidavit of Dr. Adolfo Callejas Ribadeneira, dated Jan. 22, 1999 (“Callejas Aff. II”) at ¶¶3-4 & Ex. A. Likewise, although unrelated to the particular claims here made, numerous Ecuadorian oilfield workers have brought personal injury suits against TexPet in Ecuador based on claims of alleged negligence and have prevailed in several of these cases. See Perez Aff., Exs. A, B.
More generally, section 2241 of the Ecuadorian Civil Code expressly provides that persons injured in their person or property by another’s negligence or intentional wrongdoing may sue in the Ecuadorian courts for monetary damages and equitable relief.
See
Texaco App., Ex. 10, Affidavit of Dr. Enrique Ponce y Carbo (“Ponce y Carbo Aff.”) at ¶¶ 12-14;
see also Delgado v. Shell Oil Co.,
Here, moreover, any speculation about the Ecuadorian courts’ alleged unrecep-tiveness to tort cases is put to rest by the undisputed evidence,
supra,
that tort claims based on the very occurrences here at issue have been successfully prosecuted in the Ecuadorian courts. Furthermore, several United States courts have previously found Ecuador to be an adequate forum to address similar (and, in some cases, identical) tort claims to those of plaintiffs here.
See, e.g., Delgado,
Plaintiffs’ second objection to the adequacy of an Ecuadorian forum is that “Ecuador is Not an Adequate Forum For This Litigation Because Ecuador Does Not
*541
Recognize Class Actions and Has No Comparable" Procedure to Grant Plaintiffs the Equitable Remedy They Are Principally Seeking.” Pis.’ Mem. at 10. This, again, is unpersuasive. The class action mechanism, added to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1937, is ultimately nothing more than a “convenient procedural device,”
Beamon v. Brown,
It seems doubtful, moreover, that the instant cases would qualify for class actiоn status even if they were to remain in the United States,
see generally Amchem, Prods., Inc. v. Windsor,
Even the bare question of liability could not readily be handled here as a class action, given the multiple causation issues raised by plaintiffs’ claims of indirect injuries extending over hundreds of miles and dozens of years and affecting individual members of the classes (including future claimants) in a multitude of different ways, ranging from the pollution of wells to the development of “pre-cancerous growths.”
See Jota,
While plaintiffs try to skirt some of these objections by claiming in conclusory fashion that they are “principally” seeking equitable, injunctive relief,
see
Pis.’ Mem. at 10, they have in no respect relinquished their claims for billions of dollars in damages and other legal relief,
see Jota,
Even assuming
arguendo
that plaintiffs’ claims for equitable relief could be separated from the rest of the litigation, it is equally doubtful, as the Court of Appeals recognized,
see Jota,
Plaintiffs’ final objection to the adequacy of an Ecuadorian forum is that “Procedural Processes in Ecuador Make It Difficult if Not Impossible to Litigate These Tort Actions There.” Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Complaint, Jan. 11, 1999 (“Pis.’ Jan. 11, 1999 Mem.”) at 9;
see also id.
at 13-14. Under this heading, plaintiffs first argue that claims of environmental contamination commenced in Ecuador must initially be filed with administrative agencies and that these agencies are slow to take action.
See id.
at 9. Plaintiffs’ only support for these assertions is a typically conclusory opinion from Professor Wray, who cites no authority to justify his conclusions in this regard.
See
Wray Aff. ¶ 12. Defendant, by contrast, has adduced detailed affidavits from its Ecuadorian legal experts specifically denying that any such impediment exists to filing these claims directly with the Ecuadorian courts and asserting, instead, that the administrative agencies simply provide an alternative forum for certain of plaintiffs’ claims.
See
Ponce y Carbo Aff. at ¶ 17; Callejas Aff. I at ¶ 5; Callejas Aff. II at ¶¶ 3-5. Moreover, even if Professor Wray were right and plaintiffs had to first pursue their administrative remedies, such an “exhaustion” requirement, commonplace to much United States litigation, is hardly a ground for deeming the Ecuadorian forum inadequate.
See generally DiRienzo,
Plaintiffs’ other argument under their third heading essentially consists of listing some of the differences between United
*543
States procedures and those of civil law systems like Ecuador’s that make the former a more favorable forum for plaintiffs generally. Such differences include, for example, Ecuador’s tighter restrictions on discovery, its denial of oral cross-examination in certain circumstances, and its preference for court-appointed experts over party-retained experts.
See
Wray Aff. ¶¶ 4-7. Some would argue that these features of civil law systems render those systems more, not less, adequate to the fair determination of justice; and certainly in recent years the United States has itself moved in the direction of imposing more limits on discovery and giving courts more control over expert testimony. But whatever the merits of these debates, the notion that any of these differences renders “inadequate” in any fundamental sense the civil law system employed by Ecuador, by most other nations in South America, and by most of the nations of Europe is insulting to those nations and absurd on its face.
1
See generally DiRienzo,
Further still, the asserted procedural difference between the United States and Ecuadorian legal systems of which plaintiffs most complain,
i.e.,
the supposed inability of an Ecuadorian court to compel discovery from Texaco even if Texaco submits to the court’s jurisdiction,
see
Pis.’ Jan. 11, 1999 Mem. at 13, not only is chаllenged by Texaco’s legal expert as an inaccurate assertion,
see
Ponce y Carbo Aff. at ¶ 18, but also is, in any event, rendered largely irrelevant by the fact that Texaco has expressly stipulated that the very substantial discovery plaintiffs have already obtained from Texaco in these cases,
see Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc.,
In sum, none of the objections to the adequacy of an Ecuadorian forum that plaintiffs have specifically raised in response to the instant motion has merit.
Earlier in this litigation, plaintiffs also appeared to raise, and then abandon, the further objection that the Ecuadorian courts were subject to corrupting influences and outside pressures, especially from the military, that rendered them inadequate to dispense independent, impartial justice in these cases. Compare, e.g., Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Opposition to Texaco, Inc.’s Motions to Dismiss, dated Feb. 20, 1996 (“Pis.’ 1996 Mem.”) at 40 n. 72 (“Even since the military junta relinquished power in 1979, corruption has tainted the Ecuadorian judiciary.”) with id. at 42 (“Plaintiffs do not rely on any such assumption [that Ecuadorian courts are unable to dispense justice].”). When the instant motion was renewed on remand from the Court of Appeals, plaintiffs, in their memoranda in opposition, made no mention of this issue whatever.
*544
Nevertheless, in late January 2000, after members of the Ecuadorian military joined protestors (including indigenous dissidents) in what ultimately proved to be an abortive coup, this Court,
sua sponte,
invited renewed consideration of this issue,
see
Memorandum Order dated Jan. 31, 2000. In response, submissions were eventually received not only from the parties but also from the U.S. Department of State and the Government of Ecuador. Unfortunately, most of these papers proved of little use to the Court, since they largely consisted (perhaps understandably) of broad, conclu-sory assertions as to the relative corruptibility or incorruptibility of the Ecuadorian courts, with scant reference to specifics, evidence, or application to the instant cases. As Judge Broderick pointed out early in this litigation, “the courts of the United States are properly reluctant to assume that the courts of a sister democracy are unable to dispense justice,”
Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc.,
When one looks beyond gross generalizations to relevant particulars, one finds the following:
(1)There is not the slightest indication, in any of the papers submitted on this issue, of any impropriety on the part of Texaco or any of its affiliates, or indeed on the part of any present or former member of the Consortium, with respect to any judicial or administrative proceeding of any kind in Ecuador. Indeed, as previously mentioned, TexPet and PetroEcuador have already been sued in Ecuador on some of the same or related claims by some of the same or related plaintiffs as are involved here, and several of these suits have resulted in judgments involving substantial payments to certain of the plaintiffs. See Callejas Aff. I at ¶¶ 2-5 & Exs. A-K; Texaco, Inc.’s Appendix of Rebuttal Exhibits in Support of Its Reply Memorandum of Law (“Texaco Rebuttal App.”), Ex. 22, Affidavit of Dr. Ricardo Vaca Andrade (“Vaca Aff.”), at ¶ 1.
(2) There are presently pending in Ecuador’s courts numerous cases against multinational corporations. See Callejas Aff. I at ¶ 5; Texaco Rebuttal App., Ex. 25, Supplemental Aff. of Dr. Alejandro Ponce Martinez, at ¶ 2. None of the submissions here alleges corruption of the judiciary or the judicial process on the part of any of these corporations. On the contrary, the Chairman of Ecuador’s judicial disciplinary committee, who while in private practice successfully litigated numerous cases against TexPet, affirms that Ecuadorian courts do not give preferential treatment to multi-national companies like Texaco. See Vaca Aff. at ¶¶ 1,6.
(3) The failure of the military coup of January 21, 2000 reaffirmed Ecuador’s insistence on democratic, civilian control of its institutions. While no one claims the Ecuadorian judiciary is wholly immune to corruption, inefficiency, or outside pressure, the present Government of Ecuador, headed by a former law school dean, has taken vigorous steps to further the independence and impartiality of the judiciary, see Texaco Rebuttal App., Ex. 34, Declaration of Dr. Ramon Jiménez-Carbo, Ecuador’s Attorney General, dated Apr. 5, 2000. As summarized by the U.S. Department of State in its most recent Human Rights “Country Report” on Ecuador, dated February, 2000 (“2000 Country Report”), available at http://www.state.gov, at 5:
The Supreme Court that took office in 1997 publicly recognized the shortcomings of the judicial system and pledged *545 to improve the quality and training of judges. In May 1998, the Supreme Court supervised the selection by open competition of all appellate judges. A Judicial Council, charged with administering the court system and disciplining judges, took office in the fall of 1998. In November 1999, the Council’s disciplinary committee fired two judges and two court employees for their role in the release of suspected drug traffickers. All four faced criminal charges. During the year, the Judicial Council removed at least two judges and a number of minor officials from their jobs.
See also
Letter to A.U.S.A. Edward Scar-valone from U.S. Dept. of State, dated June 8, 2000, Ex. A (1999 Country Report for Ecuador) at 6 (to same effect);
Bridgeway Corp.,
(4) While the State Department nonetheless continues to describe Ecuador’s legal and judicial systems as “politicized, inefficient, and sometimes corrupt” so far as certain “human rights” practices are concerned,
see
2000 Country Report at 1, this is based, as the Country Reports make clear, on cases largely involving confrontations between the police and political protestоrs.
Id.
By contrast,
not one
of the cases described by the 1999 and 2000 Country Reports as evidence of such conclusions remotely resembles the kind of controversy here at issue.
See
1999 and 2000 Country Reports;
see also Diaz v. Aerovias Nacionales De Colombia,
(5) As previously noted, in the past decade alone numerous United States courts have found Ecuador to be an adequate alternative forum for the determination of civil disputes involving United States companies,
see, e.g., Patrickson v. Dole Food Co.,
Civil No. 97-01516 (D.Haw.1998) (slip op. at 41-51),
available at
Texaco App., Ex. 25;
Espinola-E v. Coahoma Chem. Co.,
Civil No. 96cv360RR (S.D.Miss.1998) (slip op. at 5-9),
available at
Texaco App., Ex. 26;
Delgado,
(6)Finally, the underlying claims here in issue have been and continue to be the subject of public scrutiny and political debate in Ecuador, a fact made prominent even by the Government of Ecuador’s own statements to this Court, see, e.g., Plaintiffs’ Supplemental Submission In Further Response To This Court’s January 31, 2000 Memorandum Order And This Court’s May 2, 2000 Conference, Ex. 46, Letter from Ecuador’s Attorney General to Nina Pacari Vega, Second Vice-President of the Ecuadorian National Congress, dated Apr. 26, 2000. 2 Given such public scrutiny in Ecuador, even the possibility that corruption or undue influence might be brought to bear if this litigation were pursued in Ecuador seems exceedingly remote. See Texaco Rebuttal App., Ex. 23, Affidavit of Dr. Fabian Corral Burbano de Lara at ¶ 9.
Accordingly, the Court is satisfied on the basis of the record before it that the courts of Ecuador can exercise with respect to the parties and claims here presented that modicum of independence and
*546
impartiality necessary to an adequate alternative forum.
See Bridgeway Corp.,
While Ecuador therefore provides an adequate alternative forum for these cases, the United States, by contrast, is a palpably inadequate forum for these cases in some notable respects. As Judge Broder-ick stated in indicating, at the very outset of this litigation, his preliminary belief that dismissal on
forum non conveniens
grounds might well be appropriate: “[disputes over class membership, determination of individualized or common damages, and the need for large amounts of testimony with interpreters, perhaps often in local dialects, would make effective adjudication in New York problematic at best.”
Aguinda,
Although not strictly an issue of “adequacy,” mention should also be made under this rubric of the fact that in early 1998 Ecuador, apparently in reaction to the fact that certain disputes between Ecuadorian shrimp farmers and an Anerican pesticide manufacturer were the subject of parallel litigation in both the Ecuadоrian courts and the state courts of Florida, see Tr. at 17-18, passed Interpretive Law 55, which reads in pertinent part as follows:
Without prejudice to the meaning of its literal tone let articles 27, 28, 29 and 30 of the Code of Civil Procedure be interpreted in the sense that when dealing with concurrent international competency, the claimant will be able to choose freely between filing the lawsuit in Ecuador or abroad ... Should the lawsuit be filed outside Ecuadorian territory, this will definitely terminate national competency as well as any jurisdiction of Ecuadorian judges over the matter.
Exhibits In Support of Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Complaint, Ex. 1.
Plaintiffs argue that, under Law 55, their filing of these suits in the United States has deprived the Ecuadorian courts of jurisdiction. This argument, however, rests on two doubtful assumptions. The first is that Law 55 is retroactive and applies to lawsuits, like these, that were filed prior to the enactment of Law 55 in 1998. This seems dubious on its face, *547 since it posits that such plaintiffs would be conclusively held to a choice of forum made before they had any reason to believe either that such a choice wоuld be conclusive or that it would forever deprive them of even the possibility of an alternative forum. The second assumption is that Law 55 applies even after a case is dismissed on grounds like forum non conve-niens. This also seems highly doubtful, since the ostensible purpose of the law is to require plaintiffs to proceed in a single forum, not to be deprived of any forum whatever (let alone the forum found most relevant). See Ponce y Carbo Aff. at ¶ 32.
While the Ecuadorian courts have yet to resolve these issues, see Tr. at 59-61; see also Callejas Aff. II at ¶¶ 6-11 & Ex. B, and while the Government of Ecuador has taken no position as to applicability vel non of Law 55 to the instant case, see Tr. at 59-61, the unlikelihood that Ecuadorian courts would ultimately adopt both these dubious assumptions makes Law 55 an insufficient basis for concluding that the Ecuadorian forum is unavailable. See Pat-rickson v. Dole Food Co., slip op. at 43-44. Nevertheless, as a safeguard, this Court, like the Court in Patrickson, supra, will qualify the dismissals here to provide that in the event that a court of last review in Ecuador finally affirms the dismissal for lack of jurisdiction pursuant to Law 55 of any action raising the claims here at issue pursued in good faith in Ecuador by any of the plaintiffs here, this Court, upon motion made within 60 days, will resume jurisdiction over that action.
Having carried its burdеn of proving that an adequate alternative forum exists, defendant must next “demonstrate that the ordinarily strong presumption favoring the plaintiffs chosen forum is countered by the private and public interest factors set out in
Gilbert,
which weigh so heavily in favor of the foreign forum that they overcome the presumption for plaintiffs’ choice of forum.”
DiRienzo,
In weighing this balance, the Court must consider the “private interest” and “public interest” factors set out in
Gilbert,
as well as other relevant factors special to the case.
See Gilbert,
Under
Gilbert,
the “private interest” factors include the relative ease of access to sources of proof, the cost of obtaining the attendance of willing witnesses, the availability of compulsory process for obtaining attendance of unwilling witnesses, the possibility of viewing the relevant premises, and other such practical concerns.
Gilbert,
By contrast, what, if anything, occurred in the United States? While plaintiffs continue to allege in conclusory fashion that Texaco directed the Consortium’s oil operations from the United States, they have wholly failed, despite years of discovery, to adduce competent evidence to support this assertion. On the contrary, the record before the Court, when scrutinized in terms of admissible evidence, establishes overwhelmingly that Texaco’s only meaningful involvement in the activities here complained of was its indirect investment in its fourth-tier subsidiary, TexPet, which is not a party here and which conducted its participation in the activities here complained of almost exclusively in Ecuador. See, e.g., TexPet Aff. at ¶¶ 3-10.
The record before the Court also clearly establishes that all of the Consortium’s key activities, including the decisions and practices here at issue, were managed, directed, and conducted by Consortium employees in Ecuador, see, e.g., Texaco App., Ex. 5, Deposition of William P. Doyle (“Doyle Dep.”) at 101, 104, 109; Texaco App., Ex. 6, Deposition of Robert M. Bischoff (“Bischoff Dep.”) at 219; Texaco App., Ex. 8, Deposition of Robert C. Shields (“Shields Dep.”) at 57, 136, 142, 184-85; Benton Dep. at 202, 206. By contrast, no one from Texaco or, indeed, anyone else operating in the United States, made any material decisions as to the Consortium’s activities and practices that are at issue here, id.; see also, e.g., Benton Dep. at 170-84; Texaco App., Ex 11, Deposition of Richard K. Meyers (“Meyers Dep.”) at 149-51; Bischoff Aff. at 219; Texaco App., Ex. 9, Deposition of Denis York Lecorgne at 72-73.
In response, plaintiffs rely on conjecture or irrelevancy — as well as misstate *549 ment and misdtation 4 — to try to supplant what their evidence wholly fails to show. For example, plaintiffs emphasize certain indications that the president of TexPet reported as a general matter to the president of Texaco’s Latin American/West Africa division (“LAWA”), based in Coral Gables, Florida, and that the budgets of TexPet, along with those of many other subsidiaries, were reviewed by LAWA. See Pis.’ 1996 Mem. at 11-14; see also Pis.’ App., Ex. 21, Doyle Dep. at 32-33, 47-51. Plaintiffs also provide some evidence that certain unbudgeted and other contracts by TexPеt were required to receive LAWA approval, largely for financial, legal, and tax purposes. See Pis.’ 1996 Mem. at 15-17; see also, e.g., Pls.’ App., Ex. 20, Benton Dep. at 31-33, 48-49, 92-93. But at most this evidence simply establishes the obvious fact that Texaco, as a corporate parent, exercised some general oversight over the expenses and revenues of its subsidiaries. None of these procedures indicates any parental control or direction over the pipe design, waste disposal, and other allegedly negligent practices of the Consortium that are at issue in this case.
Plaintiffs also emphasize that the Consortium from time to time went beyond TexPet to contract with various other U.S.-based subsidiaries of Texaco (also non-parties here) for technical and other assistance, largely with regard to specific issues or in response to special requests. For example, the U.S.-based Texaco Marine Department and the Central Offshore Engineering Department provided advice, pursuant to contracts with the Consortium, regarding offshore oil installations and equipment, see Pis.’ App., Ex. 20, Benton Dep. at 150-51, 158-60, and the Consortium also received technical assistance from the U.S.-based Texas Pipeline Company, also a subsidiary of Texaco, for certain pipeline problems, see, e.g., Pis.’ App., Ex. 2, Shields Dep., at 157-58. Some technical advice was even procured from Texaco’s U.S.-based Environmental Health and Safety Division. See, e.g., Pis.’ App., Ex. 20, Benton Dep. at 159-60. However, the record is clear that all these services were limited to providing specific technical anal-yses requested by the Consortium to help implement design and other decisions previously reached in Ecuador, and it is the design and other decisions reached in Ecuador that are challenged in these lawsuits. Conversely, there is no evidence that any of these service contractors exercised any authority or direction, or engaged in any decision-making whatever, as to the Consortium’s activities here at issue. For example, while plaintiffs allege that chemical analyses of samples used for environmental monitoring were performed in the United States, see Pls.’ 1996 Mem. at 28 n. 57; Pls.’ App., Ex. 54, Meyers Dep. at 68-71, they offer no evidence to rebut defendant’s evidеnce that the analyses themselves were neutral and accurate and that the decisions of what actions to take on the basis of these analyses were made solely by the Consortium in Ecuador, see, e.g., Texaco App., Ex. 3, Benton Dep. at 174-77; Texaco App., Ex. 5, Doyle Dep. at 155-57, 168, 251-52.
*550 In similar fashion, while plaintiffs allege in conclusory fashion that “Texaco personnel in the United States directed the response to [some] environmental problem[s] in Ecuador,” the only evidence they adduce in support of this statement is an indication that some U.S.-based Texaco personnel provided technical information requested by TexPet on such topics as the maximum safe levels of salt and oil in water and how to clean up oil spills, see Pis.’ 1996 Mem. at 29, which was then forwarded to the Consortium for its use and decision-making. Thus, far from “directing” the response, Texaco simply provided some data for a decision made in Ecuador by the Consortium. Furthermore, while plaintiffs emphasize that another Texaco subsidiary, the Texas Pipeline Company, received contractor bids for a planned expansion of the main Ecuadorian pipeline and recommended a contractor for the project, see Pis.’ 1996 Mem. at 23-24; Pis.’ App., Ex. 45, they offer no evidence that Texas Pipeline Company personnel decided the design or specifications of the proposed expansion or that such decisions caused any portion of the environmental harms that are the subject matter of this litigation. ■ Indeed, they concede that they do not even know whether the proposed expansion was ever built in accordance with these specifications, see Pis.’ 1996 Mem. at 23 n. 48; and, in fact (as the defendant has now shown) it was not, but rather was built in accordance with different specifications decreed by the Ecuadorian Government. See Texaco App., Ex. 4, Executive Decree No. 925, at § 18.2.
The simple fact of the matter is that, after having deposed numerous Texaco witnesses and reviewed tens of thousands of Texaco documents in an effort to establish a meaningful nexus between the United States and the decisions and practices here complained of, plaintiffs have come up bone dry. 5 Indeed, on July 11, 1995, after much of this discovery had been completed, plаintiffs stipulated that they had:
no knowledge, information or documents having any tendency to prove or disprove (or otherwise lead to the discovery of information or documents that might tend to prove or disprove) the existence or non-existence of any facts relating to...
(a) “events relating to the harm alleged by plaintiffs occurring in the United States, including specific or generalized directions initiating events to be implemented elsewhere, communications to and from the United States and discussions in the United States concerning, or assistance to or guidance for events occurring elsewhere; and
(b) events occurring outside the United States to the extent the information can be furnished or secured voluntarily or through directives to parties in the United States to secure the information; and
(c) the extent, if any, to which conduct in the United States caused actionable harm under the criteria discussed in [Judge Broderick’s April 11, 1994 discovery Order].”
Texaco App., Ex. 21 (quoting
Aguinda,
Finally, in any fair balancing here of the relevant “privаte interests,” reference *551 must again be made to the glaring facts that neither the Government of Ecuador nor PetroEcuador, the state-run oil company that owns the Consortium and had primary control of it through much of the relevant time period, are parties to the instant suits, whereas they could be joined in any similar suit brought in Ecuador, see Bermeo Aff. at ¶ 11. Indeed, Petroecua-dor was in fact so impleaded in one of the similar suits brought against TexPet in Ecuador. See Callejas Aff. I at ¶ 2.
Accordingly, the balance of the
Gilbert
“private interest” factors heavily supports dismissal of this case in favor of Ecuador (and, if any Peruvian resident prefers, Peru).
See, e.g., Stewart v. Dow Chemical Co.,
The
Gilbert
“public interest” factors include local interest in the controversy, court congestion, avoidance of unnecessary problems in application of foreign law, and avoidance of imposing jury duty on residents of a jurisdiction having little relationship to the controversy.
See Gilbert,
The Ecuadorian local interest in the controversy is, on plaintiffs’ own shоwing, very substantial, whereas the public interest of the United States is much more modest. According to plaintiffs, the acts complained of resulted in environmental pollution of Ecuador’s rainforest regions and other property, and thereby injured tens of thousands of Ecuadorian and Peruvian citizens in their property and/or persons. While, if these allegations are true, the United States still has an interest in not permitting its companies to participate in such misconduct, the uncontested role of the Government of Ecuador in authorizing, directing, funding, and profiting from these activities necessarily lessens the United States’ interest in the litigation while further increasing that of Ecuador.
On any fair view of the evidence so far adduced in this case, the alleged preference given by the Consortium to oil exploitation over environmental protection was a conscious choice made by the Government of Ecuador in order to stimulate its economy. 6 The public interest of the United States in second-guessing those decisions is modest indeed. While plaintiffs allege that the piping and waste disposal practices used to implement this choice were “negligent” (in the sense of causing more environmental harm than other, more expensive alternatives available to the Consortium would have caused), they have not adduced anything but conclusory statements to suggest that the Government of Ecuador was unaware of the trade-off; and, in any case, whether or not the Government of Ecuador was or was not aware of these alleged consequences can only be determined, in any meaningful way, if the litigation is brought in Ecuador, where (as noted) the Government of Ecuador can be joined as a party.
*552 While bringing these suits in Ecuador and/or Peru may impose material burdens on the courts there, the well-known congestion of American dockets is undoubtedly greater than that of less litigious societies like Ecuador and Peru. Indeed, in terms of engendering inordinate delays, the history of mass tort class litigation in the United States is not such as to inspire confidence, see Judicial Conference Report, supra. On its face, it seems more likely that the individual plaintiffs in the instant cases would obtain any recovery to which they are entitled much faster by bringing the kind of individualized actions that have already been brought against TexPet in Ecuador, and successfully prosecuted to completion there, than by serving as named plaintiffs in the massive lawsuits the U.S.-based plaintiffs’ counsel here propose.
As to applicable law, it follows from the facts that Ecuadorian lands and Ecuadorian people are the primary focus of this case that Ecuador’s interests in this case vastly outweigh those of New York and that Ecuadorian law will therefore apply to most, if not all of, the claims raised in these cases.
See Zurich Ins. Co. v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.,
Finally, as already discussed, the notion that a New York federal jury is better equipped than an Ecuadorian judge to apply Ecuadorian law to Spanish-language testimony and documents relating to 30 years’ of activities by an Ecuador-sponsored Consortium in an Amazonian rain forest is preposterous.
Plaintiffs argue, however, that this balance of Gilbert factors heavily favoring dismissal needs to be re-weighed in light of the fact that, in addition to their more conventional claims, they have also alleged а claim under the Alien Tort Claims Act (“ATCA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1350, which provides a federal forum for aliens suing United States entities for violations of the law of nations. Whatever the abstract merits or demerits of this argument, discussed infra, it is of little relevance to this case, for two reasons.
First, the specific claim plaintiffs purport to bring under the ATCA — that the Consortium’s oil extraction activities violated evolving environmental norms of customary international law,
see, e.g.,
Pis.’ Jan. 11, 1999 Mem. at 18-19; Pis.’ 1996 Mem. at 64-68 — lacks any meaningful precedential support and appears extremely unlikely to survive a motion to dismiss.
See Beanal v. Freeport-McMoran, Inc.,
Second, even if the ATCA claim had greater facial promise, the discovery already taken in this case has established overwhelmingly that no act taken by Texaco in the United States bore materially on the pollution-creating activities of which plaintiffs complain. This is not a case, then, where the United States was specially used as a base from which to direct violations of international law visited on some foreign site. Conversely, the actions in question occurred overwhelmingly in Ecuador, where courts are fully capable of interpreting alleged violations of international law. The United States therefore has no special public interest, under the ATCA or otherwise, in providing a forum for plaintiffs pursuing an international law action against a United States entity that plaintiffs can adequately pursue in the place where the violation actually occurred.
As a more general matter, moreover, the presence of a claim under the ATCA does not alter the standard
forum non conveniens
analysis to anything like the degree suggested by plaintiffs. While “the original purposes of the ATCA remain the subject of some controversy... the most learned exposition of the statute’s original purposes ... suggests] that the statute was originally motivated by a desire to insure that claims by an alien against U.S. citizens or for incidents occurring in the United States wеre litigated in federal court rather than state court, so as to prevent the states from mishandling such cases and creating international incidents.”
Wiwa,
Accordingly, courts have applied
forum non conveniens
analysis to cases involving claims brought under the ATCA in essentially the same manner as applied to all other cases.
See, e.g., In re Estate of Ferdinand E. Mаrcos Human Rights Litig.,
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In support of their contrary position that the ATCA materially alters
forum non conveniens
analysis, plaintiffs point to
Flatow v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
More importantly, the Second Circuit recently had occasion to review the entire issue in comparing the wording of the original ATCA, here applicable, with the wording of an amendment to the ATCA, known as the Torture Victims Protection Act (“TVPA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1850 App., that extends jurisdiction under the ATCA to cases brought, not by aliens but by U.S. residents, who have been victims of foreign torture.
See Wiwa, supra.
Based on the wording differences between the original ATCA and the amendment, the Court divined a special United States receptivity to TVPA suits not necessarily present in the case of other ATCA suits.
See Wiwa,
Accordingly, even if one assumes for the sake of argument the hypothesis that Texaco participated in a violation of international law that would support the claim here brought under the ATCA, neither that assumption nor any of the other considerations special to these cases materially alters the balance of private and public interest factors that, as previously discussed, “tilt[s] strongly in favor of trial in the foreign forum,”
Wiwa,
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant’s motion to dismiss these eases on grounds of forum non conveniens is hereby granted. Clerk to enter judgment in both cases.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Following remand from the Court of Appeals, the Government of Ecuador expressly confirmed to this Court, at a hearing attended not only by its counsel but also by its Procura-dor General and its United Nations Ambassador, that it believed that, whilе its legal procedures were different from those of the United States, it nonetheless could provide an adequate forum for this litigation. See Xr. at 63.
. Pacari is the leader of Pachakutik, an Ecuadorian political party of substantial and increasing power having its primary support among indigenous groups in the Amazon and Sierra regions of Ecuador. See U.S. Dept, of State, FY 2001 Country Commercial Guide: Ecuador ("2001 Ecuador Commercial Guide”) at 18, available at http:// www.state.gov.
. 'While plaintiffs claim the Ecuadorian courts are biased against Peruvians, they adduce no competent evidence of this allegation but simply make reference to the border dispute between the two countries that was settled in 1998.
. For example, even though plaintiffs state that "TexPet required the approval of Texaco personnel regarding the merits of all proposed wells in Ecuador,” Pis.' 1996 Mem. at 17 (emphasis in original), the evidence they cite in support of this statement shows only that Texaco provided some funding and occasional technical assistance. See Pis.’ App., Ex. 2, Shields Dep. at 77-80, 326; Pls.' App., Ex. 35. Indeed, the witness whose deposition plaintiffs cite in support of their statеment actually testified to the contrary, affirming that "Texaco, Inc. had no involvement in drilling wells in Ecuador.” Pls.' App., Ex. 2, Shields Dep. at 325.
. It should also be noted that, to the extent any of this discovery taken from Texaco is even arguably relevant to any action brought in any Ecuadorian or Peruvian court by any plaintiff here, Texaco has agreed to its admissibility there. See Def.'s Mem. at 13; Texaco App., Exs. 18 & 19, at§ B.4.
. According to the U.S. State Department, "Until the 1970’s, Ecuador was an agrarian country dependent on commodity exports.... Starting in 1972, oil development in the Amazon basin fueled a decade of rapid growth, averaging 9 percent annually, that financed expanded public services, state enterprises, infrastructure, and import-substitution manufacturing." 2001 Ecuador Commercial Guide at 4.
. Similarly, ordinary
forum non conveniens
analysis has been held to apply to claims under a variety of other federal statutes providing for special federal jurisdiction and/or special venue rules.
See, e.g., Capital Currency Exch. v. National Westminster Bank PLC,
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