Case Information
*1 Before TJOFLAT and EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and KRAVITCH, Senior Circuit Judge.
KRAVITCH, Senior Circuit Judge:
This appeal presents several novel issues regarding appellate jurisdiction and the waiver provisions of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 ("FSIA"), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1330, 1602-11. Defendants/appellants Del Monte Fresh Produce Company, Del Monte Fresh Produce N.A., Inc., and Ciba- Geigy Limited (collectively "appellants") contend that Programa Nacional de Banano ("PNB"), an Ecuadorian government agency, has expressly waived its sovereign immunity from suit under the FSIA. They appeal an order dismissing their third-, fourth- and fifth-party complaints against PNB upon a finding that PNB enjoys sovereign immunity and remanding the cases to state court for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Plaintiffs/appellees (collectively "plaintiffs") and third-party defendants/appellees PNB and the Republic of Ecuador contend that PNB's dismissal is not reviewable on appeal and that the district court correctly determined that PNB had not waived its sovereign immunity. Plaintiffs also have moved for attorneys' fees.
I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Defendants filed six third-party complaints, one fourth-party complaint and one fifth party complaint against PNB in eight actions, which the district court consolidated for pretrial purposes in May 1995.
This action has made its way through the courts of three jurisdictions: the United States, the State of Florida, and the Republic of Ecuador. It originated in 1995 when plaintiffs, commercial shrimp farmers in Ecuador, claimed in a series of Florida state court actions that fungicides and herbicides produced or supplied by the defendants and used on Ecuadorian banana farms had killed their shrimp. The defendants filed third-, fourth- and fifth-party complaints against PNB, a department within the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock of the Republic of Ecuador, which removed the cases to federal court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(d). The only basis for federal subject matter jurisdiction was PNB's presence under 28 U.S.C. § 1330(a), which gives the federal courts jurisdiction over foreign states and their agencies and instrumentalities. PNB then joined in defendants' motion to dismiss the actions on the grounds of forum non conveniens.
Plaintiffs moved to strike the complaints against PNB, arguing, among other things, that the district
court did not have jurisdiction over PNB because PNB had sovereign immunity from suit under the FSIA.
[2]
A flurry of communications ensued from Ecuadorian government officials and legal experts on whether PNB
and the Ecuadorian government had, could, or were required to waive sovereign immunity. First, PNB's legal
counsel filed documents on behalf of PNB that purported to waive PNB's sovereign immunity. PNB's May
4, 1995 Statement of Position stated that "PNB hereby, and for the purposes of this litigation and this
litigation only ... explicitly waives its immunity from the jurisdiction of this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
A typical sovereign immunity inquiry pits a defendant attempting to claim immunity against a
plaintiff who argues that an exception to immunity applies. These cases presented the district court with
more unusual circumstances: the plaintiffs claimed that sovereign immunity existed, while
representatives of the foreign sovereign defendant, PNB, claimed that it did not. On appeal, PNB now
argues that it never waived sovereign immunity after all. This odd state of affairs may have resulted from
Florida's evolving
forum non conveniens
jurisprudence. At the time of the alleged waivers, a federal
court was far more likely than a Florida court to dismiss a case involving events taking place in a foreign
country on
forum non conveniens
grounds. This difference between the federal and state systems
disappeared in January 1996, when the Florida Supreme Court adopted the federal courts'
forum non
conveniens
analysis.
See Kinney Sys., Inc. v. Continental Ins. Co.,
The Republic of Ecuador, acting through its Ambassador to the United States and the undersigned counsel, ha[s] made it clear that any immunity from jurisdiction has been waived with respect to the allegations over the use of fungicides in Ecuador which have been made against PNB, and by extension against the Ministry and the Republic.... PNB hereby affirms that it is the intention of the Republic to waive sovereign immunity from jurisdiction with respect to the subject matter of this litigation. [4]
The district court initially denied plaintiffs' Motion to Strike, but reserved the right to reexamine the issue of PNB's sovereign immunity.
On June 13, 1995, the District Court granted plaintiffs' Motions for Reconsideration, directing PNB to provide "convincing proof that the Republic of Ecuador has effected a valid waiver of its sovereign immunity for the purposes of the third, fourth and fifth-party complaints against PNB in these lawsuits." [5]
PNB then presented official documents purporting to waive immunity. The first, the June 16, 1995 affidavit of Edgar Terán, Ecuador's Ambassador to the United States, stated in part that
I respectfully waive PNB's Sovereign Immunity on behalf of PNB and the Government of Ecuador on the following limited basis. Without waiving any other defense of law or fact to the claims asserted against it in this litigation, PNB hereby and for the purposes of these litigations only and in connection with the pending forum non conveniens motions (1) explicitly waives its immunity from the jurisdiction of this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(i) and (2) consents to the exercise of personal jurisdiction by this Court over PNB. [6]
Terán stated that the purpose of the waiver was to support a federal court forum non conveniens dismissal:
The decision by the Ecuadorian Government to submit to the Court's jurisdiction in connection with these cases was not made lightly but is a recognition of the fundamental seriousness with which the Ecuadorian Government defends its sovereignty over its environment and use of natural resources.... 3 R2-14 at 3, 4.
4 May 23, 1995 Reply to Pls.' Mem. in Resp. to PNB's Statement of Position, R2-39 at 8. Order Upon Pls.' Mot. for Recons., and Directing Compliance with Provisional Consolidation Order,
R3-59 at 2. R3-64 Attach., at 1, ¶ 1.
According to Ecuadorian law, conditions relating to the environment ... belong to the sovereignty of each state. [7]
Plaintiffs questioned Ambassador Terán's authority to waive sovereign immunity. At a hearing on June 26, the district judge asked several questions about who, under international and Ecuadorian law, was authorized to waive a country's sovereign immunity. On June 27, 1995, the court entered another order directing the parties to supplement the record, stating that
[g]iven the importance of this issue, the court has only one option. It must become informed of the relevant provisions of Ecuadoran law, determine precisely what is required for an effective waiver of sovereign immunity under that law, and examine the record to determine if there has been an effective waiver. [8]
PNB submitted an Ecuadorian legal expert's opinion that Ambassador Terán was authorized to waive sovereign immunity [9] and an affidavit of Sixto Durán Ballén, President of the Republic of Ecuador, stating that
3. Dr. Edgar Terán ... has acted in the name of the Republic of Ecuador (and therefore of the National Banana Program).
. . . . .
5. I ... know what Ambassador Terán has already stated, and I ratif[ ]y his statement as regards the priority policy of the Republic of Ecuador is that these matters ... should be decided within the Ecuadoran forum.... [10]
In the meantime, plaintiffs submitted letters and affidavits of Ecuadorian legal experts and government officials claiming that (1) only the Attorney General of Ecuador was authorized to act in judicial matters, (2) the Ecuadorian Constitution did not allow anyone to waive Ecuador's sovereign immunity, and (3) Terán had improper motives for waiving sovereign immunity.
7 Id., ¶ 4.
8 Order Directing Parties to Supplement R., R4-74 at 1. See R4-87 Ex. B. Id. Ex. A, at 1 (emphasis omitted).
In an order dated August 28, 1995, the district court dismissed the complaints against PNB. The court found that PNB had not waived sovereign immunity because Ambassador Terán's affidavit was "expressly limited to litigation of the forum non conveniens motion now pending" [11] and President Durán Ballén's affidavit was "similarly qualified." [12] These qualifications meant that "[n]o representative of the Republic of Ecuador ha[d] ever purported to waive the immunity of the Republic with respect to the third, fourth and fifth-party claims against PNB." [13] In the same order, the district court remanded the cases to the state court on the ground that without PNB as a party, it no longer had subject matter jurisdiction over the action.
The defendants filed a Motion for Reconsideration and for Stay and a Motion to Amend. PNB made one more attempt to waive sovereign immunity, filing an affidavit of Ambassador Terán dated August 31, 1995, which stated that
3. In its decision, the Court stated that "[n]o representative of the Republic of Ecuador has ever
purported to waive the immunity of the Republic with respect to the third, fourth and fifth party claims against PNB."
4. I am surprised at the Court's conclusion because the waiver described by the Court ... is precisely
what I intended to effect in my prior affidavits. I hereby reaffirm that intention and that waiver. [14] Plaintiffs, in response, submitted more evidence that Terán was not authorized to waive immunity. In an order dated October 12, 1995, the district court denied the defendants' motions. Citing 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), it held that, because it had already remanded the cases, it was without jurisdiction to review its August 28 order.
Once the cases returned to Florida state court (with PNB no longer a party), the defendants again moved for a forum non conveniens dismissal. After the Florida trial court denied the motion, a Florida 11 Aug. 28, 1995 Order, R5-97 at 3.
12 Id. at 4. Id. R5-99 Attach., at 1.
appeals court, relying on the recently decided case of
Kinney Sys., Inc. v. Continental Ins. Co.,
Appellants ask us to reverse the district court's August 28, 1995, dismissal of the complaints against PNB and to return the cases to federal court.
II. APPELLATE JURISDICTION
Before addressing the question of whether PNB effectively waived sovereign immunity, we must determine whether we have jurisdiction to hear this appeal. We must address three questions: whether 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) bars us from considering the appeal; whether the dismissal of the claims against PNB was a "final order" within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291; and whether the appeal is moot. We conclude that none of these considerations leaves us without jurisdiction. [16]
A. Section 1447(d)'s Bar on Review of Remands
Section 1447(d), which states that "[a]n order remanding a case to the State court from which it was
removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise," generally bars a court of appeals from reviewing a district
court's order of remand.
See Thermtron Prods., Inc. v. Hermansdorfer,
589,
Although section 1447(d) has exceptions that allow courts of appeals to review some orders of
remand, none of them applies here. In
Thermtron,
Section 1447(d) does not prevent us from reviewing the district court's order dismissing the
complaints against PNB, however, even though it was made at the same time as the order of remand, because
of the limitation on section 1447(d) recognized in
City of Waco v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co.,
293
U.S. 140, 143,
[I]f the District Court's order stands the cross-action will be no part of the case which is remanded to the state court.... True, no appeal lies from the order of remand; but in logic and in fact the decree of dismissal preceded that of remand and was made by the District Court while it had control of the cause. Indisputably this order is the subject of an appeal; and, if not reversed or set aside, is conclusive upon the petitioner.
Id.
at 143,
Unlike the "matter of substantive law exception" to section 1447(d), which allows courts of appeals
to review only those remand orders that are based on substantive determinations of law, the
Waco
doctrine
allows us to review a district court's jurisdictional determinations. This distinction exists because the
"matter of substantive law exception" and the
Waco
doctrine apply to different types of orders. The "matter
of substantive law exception" applies to the review of a remand order
itself, see Glasser,
district court's jurisdictional findings is that these findings have no conclusive effect upon the state court
action.
See In re Loudermilch,
When a district court enters an order to do something
other than
remand (such as a dismissal of a
claim or a party), and this order changes the contours of the state court action after remand, however, it does
not matter whether the issue of law the court decided when it entered the order was jurisdictional or
substantive; either way, the parties' rights have been altered in a manner that the state court cannot revisit.
See Carr v. American Red Cross,
Here, the district court dismissed the claims against PNB "in logic and in fact" before remanding the
case,
Waco,
B. Finality
Having found that section 1447(d) does not bar our review, we must determine whether the district
court's order was an appealable final order under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Under the collateral order doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
C. Mootness
Finally, we must refuse to hear this appeal if the issue is moot. "A federal court has no authority to
give opinions on moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of law which cannot
affect the matter in issue in the case before it."
John Roe, Inc. v. United States,
(quotation omitted). Whether the parties here have a legally cognizable interest depends on what relief this
court may grant: if intervening events have made it "impossible for [us] to grant any effectual relief whatever
to [the] prevailing party," we must dismiss this appeal.
John Roe, Inc.,
If the parties still were actively litigating these cases in the Florida court system, we could follow
Waco
's example and reverse the order of dismissal while leaving the remand order intact.
See, e.g., Waco,
Because of the unusual procedural posture of the cases before us, however, unlike the
Waco
and
Allen
courts, we cannot correct the effects of an erroneous dismissal simply by reversing the order of dismissal.
The remanded cases remain in an odd limbo, not quite in the Florida courts but not entirely out of them.
Because of a new statute that limits their jurisdiction, the Ecuadorian courts have dismissed most of plaintiffs'
Ecuadorian actions; plaintiffs' pending appeals of these dismissals to higher courts in Ecuador appear to stand
little chance of success. Although the Florida state court has indicated that it may consider reinstating the
cases if the Ecuadorian courts continue to refuse to accept jurisdiction, we do not know if or when such a
One of the reasons underlying the
forum non conveniens
dismissal of the case was the Florida
appeals court's finding that Ecuador was an adequate alternative forum with jurisdiction over the cases.
See Ciba-Geigy Ltd. v. Fish Peddler, Inc.,
reinstatement might take place. A reversal of the dismissal that does not alter the order of remand cannot
change the status of the Florida state court cases. Thus, we are able to grant "effectual relief,"
John Roe, Inc.,
Although, at first glance, vacatur of the remand order appears to contradict the instruction of section
1447(d), the language of the statute and precedent from this and other circuits convince us that section
1447(d) does not bar us from vacating a remand when necessary to give effect to our judgment on another
matter. Vacatur of a remand order does not necessarily constitute a forbidden "review" of the remand
decision. To "review" an order, a court must do more than merely cancel it; it must, to some extent, examine
it and determine its merits. A "review" is a "reconsideration; second view or examination; revision;
consideration for purposes of correction."
Black's Law Dictionary
1186 (5th ed.1979). A vacatur does not
necessarily implicate this sort of examination.
See, e.g., U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall
Partnership,
If we order the district court to vacate an order for reasons that do not involve a reconsideration or
examination of its merits, then we have not "reviewed" the order, and therefore have not fallen afoul of
section 1447(d)'s prohibition on review. The Fifth Circuit recently followed this reasoning. In
Tramonte v.
Chrysler Corp.,
[Section] 1447(d) intends to insulate from appellate review a district court's determinations as to its subject matter jurisdiction and compliance with remand procedures.... [W]e may reach and modify a remand order on appeal, so long as we do not engage in the review prohibited by § 1447(d).
Id. at 1027. "[V]acatur of the remand order," the court held, was not "a review of the merits of that order," but "an essentially ministerial task." Id. at 1028. Similarly, vacating a remand to give effect to a judgment on another matter is an "essentially ministerial task," rather than a review.
This circuit has held that a court of appeals may vacate an order of remand when necessary to give
effect to its judgments. In
Flohr v. Mackovjak,
Other circuits similarly have undertaken a
Waco
review of a decision preceding a remand, then
reversed or vacated the remand itself.
See, e.g., Carr,
the order preceding the remand was error. See Beneficial Consumer Discount Co. v. Poltonowicz, 47 F.3d 91, 93 (3d Cir.1995) (reviewing and affirming sovereign immunity decision that preceded remand, but stating that " § 1447(d) bars our review of that portion of the district court's order remanding this case to state court;" noting that case before it was distinguishable from Carr "because without [ Carr 's] review [of the remand order], our decision overturning the district court's order which triggered the remand would have been meaningless").
Were any other option available to us, we would avoid meddling with the order of remand.
Ordinarily, when we pull a remanded case back into the federal courts, we delay the progress of justice and
give parties a tool and an incentive to engage in dilatory tactics.
See Thermtron,
III. WAIVER OF SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
Having established our jurisdiction, we proceed to the merits of the appeal. We hold that PNB waived its sovereign immunity and therefore is not immune from suit under the FSIA.
We review
de novo
the district court's determination that it lacked jurisdiction under the FSIA.
See
Honduras Aircraft Registry, Ltd. v. Government of Honduras,
129 F.3d 543, 546 (11th Cir.1997),
cert.
denied,
--- U.S. ----, 118 S.Ct. 2368, 141 L.Ed.2d 736 (1998) (conducting
de novo
review of FSIA
jurisdictional question);
see also Export Group v. Reef Indus., Inc.,
As a threshold matter, we conclude that the district court correctly determined that it was required
to address the issue of PNB's immunity, despite the fact that Ecuador did not raise the issue. Parties other
than a foreign sovereign ordinarily lack standing to raise the defense of sovereign immunity.
See Wilmington
Trust v. United States Dist. Court,
"The FSIA regulates subject matter jurisdiction and provides the only basis for courts in this country
to acquire jurisdiction over a foreign state. It provides that a foreign state is immune from the jurisdiction
of the United States unless an FSIA statutory exemption is applicable."
Honduras Aircraft Registry,
129 F.3d
at 546;
see also Saudi Arabia v. Nelson,
See 28 U.S.C. § 1603(a), (b). The only exception to the FSIA that is relevant to this appeal [22] is waiver of immunity under section 1605(a)(1), which provides that
A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of courts of the United States or of the States in any case—
(1) in which the foreign state has waived its immunity either explicitly or by implication, notwithstanding any withdrawal of the waiver which the foreign state may purport to effect except in accordance with the terms of the waiver[.]
28 U.S.C. § 1605(a).
We must examine the communications from PNB's lawyers and Ambassador Terán [23] to determine if any of them constituted an express waiver [24] of immunity.
22 A commonly litigated exception to the FSIA, the commercial activity exception, does not apply here. This exception to sovereign immunity applies to lawsuits
based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state; or upon an act performed in the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere; or upon an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States[.]
28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2). Although PNB's activities appear to have been "commercial" in nature, defendants do not claim that their effect within the United States was sufficient to bring them within section 1605(a)(2). President Durán Ballén's affidavit did not purport to effect a waiver; it merely confirmed
Ambassador Terán's authority. See R4-87 Ex. A. PNB did not waive its immunity by implication. The House Report on the FSIA gives three
examples of an implied waiver:
[T]he courts have found [implicit] waivers in cases where a foreign state has agreed to arbitration in another country or where a foreign state has agreed that the law of a particular country should govern a contract. An implicit waiver would also include a situation where a foreign state has filed a responsive pleading in an action without raising the defense of sovereign immunity.
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, at 18 (1976),
reprinted in
1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6617. The courts,
loath to broaden the scope of the implied waiver provision, rarely have found that an action that
does not fit one of the above three examples constitutes an implicit waiver.
See Shapiro v.
Republic of Bolivia,
PNB filed two statements of its lawyers with the district court that purported to waive sovereign immunity. Plaintiffs ask us to hold that these documents did not constitute valid waivers under section 1605(a)(1) because a document signed only by a private attorney never can serve to waive the immunity of the attorney's sovereign client. Although we decline to adopt such a rule, we determine that, in this action, PNB's lawyers failed to effect a waiver of sovereign immunity on behalf of the Republic.
Congress, in enacting the FSIA, contemplated that a private attorney representing a foreign state
could waive sovereign immunity implicitly by filing, on behalf of the state, a responsive pleading that did
not raise the defense.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, at 18 (1976),
reprinted in
1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6617;
see also supra
note 24. It follows that Congress contemplated that a state's legal representative could use a
different tool, an express waiver of the state's immunity from a legal proceeding, to accomplish the same goal.
This and other courts have given effect to private attorneys' express waivers of the sovereign immunity of
their clients.
See Hercaire Int'l, Inc. v. Argentina,
credit to judgment entered after an attorney waived a foreign state's immunity by entering a general appearance on behalf of the sovereign). [25]
Assuming that PNB's attorneys could waive sovereign immunity on behalf of Ecuador, they did not
do so in the May 1995 statements. An express waiver under section 1605(a)(1) must give a "clear, complete,
unambiguous, and unmistakable" manifestation of the sovereign's intent to waive its immunity.
Aquinda v.
Texaco, Inc.,
26 R2-14 at 3-4. May 31, 1995 Omnibus Order, R3-48 at 5. Id. at 6.
The second document stated that "[t]he Republic of Ecuador ... ha[s] made it clear that any immunity from
jurisdiction has been waived.... PNB hereby affirms that it is the intention of the Republic to waive sovereign
immunity...."
[29]
This statement is not a "clear, complete, unambiguous, and unmistakable" waiver.
Aquinda,
B. The June 1995 Terán Affidavit
The district court found that Ambassador Terán's June 1995 affidavit did not effect a valid waiver of sovereign immunity because its language was not sufficiently complete. After remanding the case, the court also suggested that it was not convinced that Terán had the authority to waive Ecuador's immunity before the courts of the United States. We disagree with both conclusions.
Terán stated that PNB and the Government of Ecuador waived PNB's immunity "[w]ithout waiving any other defense of law or fact to the claims asserted against it ... for the purposes of these litigations only and in connection with the pending forum non conveniens motions." [31] The district court found that Terán's language was "expressly limited to litigation of the forum non conveniens motion now pending." [32] This holding was error; although Terán could have chosen his words more carefully, the affidavit waives immunity completely and unambiguously, if somewhat awkwardly. The word "only," in the phrase "for the purposes of these litigations only and in connection with the pending forum non conveniens motions," modifies the expression "these litigations," but not the words "in connection." Although we rely on Terán's 29 R2-39 at 8.
30 Plaintiffs also claim that these waivers were invalid because PNB had not hired the attorneys who filed the statements. Because we hold that the waivers were insufficient on other grounds, we need not reach this argument. R3-64 Attach., at 1, ¶ 3. R5-97 at 3.
June 1995 affidavit to find a waiver of sovereign immunity, we note that his August 1995 affidavit, which states that he intended his earlier affidavit to "waive the immunity of the Republic with respect to the third, fourth and fifth party claims against PNB," [33] confirms our understanding of the June 1995 waiver.
Terán's phrase "in connection with the pending forum non conveniens motions," which the district court read as a limitation on the waiver of immunity, actually shed light on his reasons for filing the waiver. Terán's affidavit went on to explain that the Republic of Ecuador believed that the cases should be litigated in Ecuador. The affidavit urged the court to dismiss the actions on the ground of forum non conveniens, suggesting that Terán's purpose was to keep the case in federal court, where a forum non conveniens dismissal might be more likely. The fact that the waiver may have been a tactical move does not alter our analysis. Nothing in the FSIA prohibits a foreign sovereign from effecting a waiver of immunity for strategic purposes. The courts need not approve the reasons underlying a foreign state's waiver of its immunity; indeed, to second-guess motivations and litigation strategy might signal a disrespect for a sovereign's autonomy that is at odds with the policies underlying the FSIA.
The district court stated that one of the reasons for its finding that Terán had not explicitly waived sovereign immunity was that "little evidence existed to prove who in the Republic of Ecuador ... had the authority to waive immunity." [34] To reach this conclusion, the court conducted an inquiry into the law of Ecuador, attempting to "become informed of the relevant provisions of Ecuadoran law [and] determine precisely what is required for an effective waiver of sovereign immunity under that law." [35] Although we commend this diligent effort to resolve the waiver issue correctly, we conclude that the district court should have accepted Terán's authority to waive sovereign immunity on behalf of Ecuador.
33 R5-99 Attach., at 1. Oct. 12, 1995 Order, R6-113 at 2. Order Directing Parties to Supplement R., R4-74 at 1.
Neither the FSIA nor its legislative history clearly states whether federal or state law controls
questions relating to the authority of a person who purports to waive the immunity of a foreign sovereign
under the FSIA. Because the FSIA "was not intended to affect the substantive law determining the liability
of a foreign state or instrumentality,"
First Nat'l City Bank v. Banco Para El Comercio Exterior,
462 U.S.
611, 620,
Our interpretation of the FSIA, the Congressional policies underlying that statute, and other concerns that arise in cases relating to foreign affairs lead us to conclude that when, as here, a duly accredited [37] head of a diplomatic mission (such as an ambassador) [38] files a waiver of his or her sovereign's immunity in a judicial proceeding, the court should assume that the sovereign has authorized the waiver absent extraordinary circumstances.
We may look to international law as a guide to the meaning of the FSIA's provisions. We find the
FSIA particularly amenable to interpretation in light of the law of nations for two reasons. First, Congress
intended international law to inform the courts in their reading of the statute's provisions. Prior to enactment
of the FSIA, the U.S. State Department usually determined whether a foreign sovereign would be immune
from suit in a U.S. court.
See Verlinden,
The FSIA was enacted not so much to change the rules as to "transfer the determination of sovereign immunity from the executive branch to the judicial branch...." In transferring this responsibility, the FSIA was primarily codifying pre-existing international and federal common law.
Id.
at 1234 (quoting H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, at 7 (1976),
reprinted in
1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6606).
Congress, therefore, indicated that courts should look to international law when interpreting the FSIA's terms.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, at 7 (1976),
reprinted in
1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6605 (noting that FSIA "would
codify the so-called 'restrictive' principle of sovereign immunity, as presently recognized in international
law");
id.
at 14, 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 6613 ("[T]he central premise of the bill [is that] decisions on claims
by foreign states to sovereign immunity are best made by the judiciary on the basis of a statutory regime
which incorporates standards recognized under international law.");
see also In re Estate of Ferdinand E.
No party contends that Terán was not duly accredited.
We use the terms "ambassador" and "diplomatic representative" interchangeably.
*23
Marcos Human Rights Litig.,
Second, the FSIA's purposes included "promot[ing] harmonious international relations,"
Pere v.
Nuovo Pignone, Inc.,
We look to a number of sources to ascertain principles of international law, including international
conventions, international customs, treatises, and judicial decisions rendered in this and other countries.
See
Malcolm N. Shaw,
International Law
59 (1991) (citing article 38(1) of the Statute of the International Court
of Justice);
Siderman de Blake v. Republic of Argentina,
Under international law, ambassadors have broad powers to bind the countries they represent. "In
virtue of their functions and without having to produce full powers, the following are considered as
representing their State: ... (b) heads of diplomatic missions, for the purpose of adopting the text of a treaty
between the accrediting State and the State to which they are accredited...." Vienna Convention on the Law
of Treaties,
opened for signature
May 23, 1969, art. 7(2), 1155 U.N.T.S. 331;
see also Restatement (Third)
of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States
§ 311 cmt. b (1986). Some countries have codified a rule
that a diplomatic representative always has authority to waive sovereign immunity on behalf of his or her
"Although the United States is not a party to the Vienna Convention, it regards the substantive
provisions of the Vienna Convention as codifying the international law of treaties."
Kreimerman v. Casa
Veerkamp, S.A. de C.V.,
sovereign. See, e.g., Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 1985, ch. 31(5) (Austl.) ("In addition to any other person who has authority to waive [immunity] on behalf of a foreign State ... the person for the time being performing the functions of the head of the State's diplomatic mission in Australia has that authority."); State Immunity Act, 1978, § 2(7) (U.K.) (same).
International courts traditionally have assumed that an ambassador's powers include the authority to present his or her country's position before foreign tribunals. A country's diplomatic representative may, for example, sign an application to initiate proceedings before the International Court of Justice on the country's behalf; unlike other agents, the diplomatic representative does not need to authenticate his or her signature. See I.C.J. Rules of Court, art. 38 ("If the application bears the signature of someone other than [the] diplomatic representative [to the forum country], the signature must be authenticated by the latter or by the competent authority of the applicant's foreign ministry."). The United Nation's International Law Commission has explained that courts should assume the authority of an ambassador to effect a waiver of diplomatic immunity. [41]
In [a draft of the waiver provision of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations], paragraph 2 read as follows: "In criminal proceedings, waiver must always be effected expressly by the Government of the sending State." The Commission decided to delete the phrase "by the Government of the sending State", because it was open to the misinterpretation that the communication of the waiver should actually emanate from the Government of the sending State. As was pointed out, however, the head of the mission is the representative of his Government, and when he communicates a waiver of immunity the courts of the receiving State must accept it as a declaration of the Government of the sending State. In the new text, the question of the authority of the head of the mission to make the declaration is not dealt with, for this is an internal question of concern only to the sending State and to the head of the mission.
Commentary of the U.N. International Law Commission, [1958] 2 Y.B. Int'l L. Comm'n 78, 99, reprinted in 7 Whiteman Digest § 43, at 422 (emphasis added).
Diplomatic immunity, like sovereign immunity, belongs to the foreign state and may only be waived by the state itself. Compare FSIA, 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a) ("A foreign state shall not be immune ... in any case ... in which the foreign state has waived its immunity ....") with Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, Apr. 18, 1961, art. 32(1), 23 U.S.T. 3227, 500 U.N.T.S. 95 ("The immunity from jurisdiction of diplomatic agents ... may be waived by the sending State.").
The opinions of our own courts similarly reflect the presumption that an ambassador has authority to represent his or her state in legal proceedings.
It has been recognized that diplomatic agents of one state, while in another, may commence and maintain actions on behalf of their state while they are recognized as such.... Proof of the agency or of the diplomat is dependent entirely upon the political fact of the recognition by the political department of the government.
Lehigh Valley R.R. Co. v. State of Russia,
The U.S., foreign and international courts' custom of presuming that an ambassador has authority to speak for his or her country probably stems from practical needs. A state's embassy ordinarily is more *27 accessible than members of its home government to litigants and courts in a forum state. Perhaps for this reason, the transmission of a state's decision whether to invoke or claim immunity is one of the traditional functions of an embassy.
Waivers of diplomatic immunity have been accomplished in a variety of ways.... [W]aivers of immunity have been formally communicated by the Ambassador of the mission concerned to the Department of State.... In U.S. practice, waivers of immunity are only made by the chiefs of mission of our diplomatic missions abroad, pursuant to an authorization from the Department of State.
Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations: Hearing Before the Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Foreign
Relations,
89th Cong. 75 (1965) (questions and answers supplied by the State Department);
see Sea Hunt,
Inc. v. Unidentified, Shipwrecked, Vessel or Vessels,
We find additional support for our holding that a court usually should accept an ambassador's
authority to waive immunity in the Congressional intent underlying the FSIA. Responding to problems
created by the political nature of sovereign immunity inquiries, Congress passed the FSIA in order to create
uniform and predictable standards for litigation involving foreign governments.
See Verlinden,
Requiring the courts to look to a sovereign's local law to determine the authority of any agent who
purports to waive sovereign immunity, even if that agent is an ambassador, would hinder the goals of the
FSIA and its waiver provision. Such a rule at best would create a roadblock to all FSIA actions, requiring
*28
lengthy, unpredictable, and frequently inconclusive inquiries into conflicting interpretations of foreign law
(such as that undertaken by the district court in this action). At worst, both foreign sovereigns and the parties
involved in litigation with them could abuse such a rule. The foreign state would have "the opportunity of
raising immunity perhaps even after it has unsuccessfully defended on the merits." George Kahale III,
State
Loan Transactions: Foreign Law Restrictions on Waivers of Immunity and Submissions to Jurisdiction,
37
Bus. Law.
1549, 1561 n. 70 (1982). Thus, it could "reap the benefits of our courts while avoiding the
obligations of international law."
First Nat'l City Bank,
Other concerns, uniquely related to the courts' role in the sensitive area of international relations, mitigate against questioning an ambassador's representations on behalf of his or her country before the courts. A judicial inquiry into a foreign ambassador's authority to perform traditional diplomatic functions can infringe upon the authority of our own executive and legislative branches to manage the foreign relations of the United States.
Who is the sovereign ... of a country is a question for the political departments of the government. It is not a judicial question.... In the same way the question who represents and acts for a foreign sovereign or nation in its relations with the United States is determined, not by the judicial department, but exclusively by the political branch of the government.
Agency of Canadian Car,
We do not hold that the courts should deem an ambassador to be authorized to waive a sovereign's
immunity under all circumstances; an ambassador may so clearly lack authority that his or her representations
to a court do not bind the sovereign. In
First Fidelity,
apparent authority where lack of authority is not obvious to outside parties"). Accordingly, we hold that, under the FSIA, courts should assume that an ambassador possesses the authority to appear before them and waive sovereign immunity absent compelling evidence making it "obvious" that he or she does not.
We see no evidence in this action making it "obvious" that Terán lacked authority to waive Ecuador's
sovereign immunity. First, filing a court document on Ecuador's behalf was the type of task a diplomat
traditionally performs on behalf of his nation, rather than a commercial transaction that Terán might have
entered for his own purposes. The nature of Terán's activities distinguishes these cases from
First Fidelity,
in which an ambassador borrowed funds (ostensibly to pay for renovations to Antigua's U.S. property),
invested them in a casino, ceased loan payments, and finally signed a consent order purporting to waive
Antigua's sovereign immunity.
See
Second, the affidavits and letters that plaintiffs produced did not make it "obvious" that Terán lacked
authority to effectuate the waiver. None of these documents alleged that Terán was not an accredited
representative of Ecuador or that he lacked authority to act on behalf of Ecuador under other circumstances.
Indeed, Ecuador's highest elected official, President Durán Ballén, filed an affidavit stating that Terán had
been authorized to act as he did. Plaintiffs countered with experts' opinions stating that no Ecuadorian
government official had the legal authority to waive sovereign immunity. We do not find the legal authorities
plaintiffs cite particularly convincing, especially in light of the fact that several U.S. courts have noted
Ecuador's waiver of sovereign immunity in other transactions.
See, e.g., Ortega Trujillo v. Banco Central,
*31
Plaintiffs also alleged that under the Ecuadorian Constitution, only the Attorney General was authorized to act in judicial matters; they presented an affidavit of the Attorney General stating that he had not authorized Terán to waive immunity. Coincidentally, in Jota, an unrelated case, the Second Circuit recently rejected a similar argument relating to representations made by Ambassador Terán.
An ambassador generally has the power to "bind the state that he represents," unless he purports to enter into an agreement without the power to do so and in collusion with a contracting party that knows he lacks such power. To this point, the Republic responds that under Ecuadoran law, only the Attorney General is authorized to make representations on behalf of the Republic in a judicial proceeding. See Ecuador Const. art. 139 ("The Attorney General will be the only judicial representative of the State...."). However, the quoted language seems best understood to make the Attorney General the sole representative of the state before the Ecuadoran judiciary, without disturbing the traditional authority of ambassadors to represent the state's position before foreign courts.
Jota,
Because we hold that Ambassador Terán's June 1995 waiver of Ecuador's sovereign immunity was complete and effective, we do not reach the question of whether Terán's August 1995 affidavit also effected a waiver.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the order of the district court dismissing PNB, VACATE the order of the district court remanding the case to state court, REMAND to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion, and DENY plaintiffs' Motion for Attorneys' Fees and Costs.
