Elite Erectors, which installed skylights, was obliged under collective bargaining agreements to contribute to the Sheet Metal Workers’ National Pension Fund and other trusts covered by erisa. When Elite went out of business it owed plaintiffs (collectively “the Funds”) about $18,-000. erisa allows litigation “in the district where the plan is administered, where the breach took place, or where a defendant resides or may be found”. 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e)(2). Plaintiffs, which are administered in Alexandria, Virginia, filed their suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. Elite Erectors defaulted. Before the district court entered judgment, the Funds amended their complaint to name Skylight Consultants of America, Inc., and Mary Lowry as Elite’s alter egos. Skylight and Lowry also defaulted, and the district court eventually entered judgment holding all three jointly and severally liable to the Funds.
Just as they had ignored the suit, Elite, Skylight, and Lowry ignored the judgment: they neither appealed nor paid. After registering the judgment in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, where Lowry lives and Skylight carries on a business, see 28 U.S.C. § 1963, the Funds initiated collection proceedings. At last stirred to action, Skylight and Lowry (who, unlike Elite, are solvent) filed a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(4), asking the district judge in Indiana to declare the Virginia judgment void because, they asserted, the Eastern District of Virginia lacked personal jurisdiction over them. Skylight and Lowry did not deny that they had been served with process but observed that neither carried on any business in Virginia. This much the Funds concede; they rely, however, on another portion of § 1132(e)(2), which says that in a collection action by a pension or welfare plan “process may be served in any other district where a defendant resides or may be found.” That nationwide-service clause enabled the Eastern District of Virginia to acquire personal jurisdiction, the Funds contended, and required Skylight and Lowry to litigate in Virginia whether they were Elite’s alter egos. But the district judge in Indiana concluded that Skylight and Lowry could be defendants in Virginia only if they actually were Elite’s alter egos. Just as Sky
*1034
light and Lowry had declined to join issue on that subject in Virginia, the Funds declined to join issue in Indiana, deeming the subject foreclosed by the Virginia judgment. Considering ‘only the arguments and evidence presented by Skylight and Lowry, the district judge in Indiana concluded that they were not Elite’s alter egos and therefore had notbeen subject to suit in Virginia.
Logically the first question is whether a district court in which a judgment is registered under § 1963 may modify or annul that judgment under Rule 60(b). Some courts have .held .that the final sentence of § 1963 ¶ 1—“A judgment so registered shall have the same effect as a judgment of the district court of the district where registered and may be enforced in like manner.”—means that the original judgment
becomes
a judgment of the court in which it has been registered, and therefore may be modified or set aside by the court of registration. See
Rector v. Peterson,
None of the parties alerted the district judge to
Fuhrman
and similar cases; the Funds did not question the employment of Rule 60(b)(4), only the district court’s conclusion that the Eastern District of Virginia lacked jurisdiction over Skylight and Lowry. Still, the Southern District of Indiana was free to disregard the judgment, without formally annulling it under Rule 60(b)(4), if the rendering court lacked jurisdiction.
Adam v. Saenger,
“A party that simply refuses to appear may contend in a later case that the first tribunal lacked jurisdiction—though jurisdiction is the
only
issue thus preserved, and if the first court had jurisdiction then the judgment must be enforced. See
Earle v. McVeigh,
The district judge in Indiana concluded that personal jurisdiction could be established in Virginia only if Skylight and Lowry were Elite’s alter egos, as the Funds’ complaint asserted. This interprets § 1132(e)(2) as if it allowed nationwide service (and thus personal jurisdiction) only with respect to “employers” or, more generally, “persons liable under erisa” — a step that would conflate jurisdiction with the merits. Section 1132(e)(2) does not say this; it provides nationwide service to bring “a defendant” into the action. Whether the defendant is liable under erisa is the subject to be litigated following service; it is not a condition precedent to personal jurisdiction. The Indiana judge gave an unnatural reading to § 1132(e)(2) in order to avoid what he perceived to be a constitutional problem. Ambiguous language that is constitutional when read one way and unconstitutional when read another properly may be understood the first way; judges assume that Congress did not set out to transgress constitutional limits. But the constitutional penumbra is large; - almost any statute can be. thought to raise “constitutional issues,” and treating these as license to rewrite the law would divest Congress of effective lawmaking power. Judges therefore must not manufacture ambiguity or disregard- straightforward language.
United States v. Marshall,
Three other circuits have held that § 1132(e)(2) and its counterpart 29 U.S.C. § 1451(d) (which applies exclusively to multi-employer plans such as the Funds) comport with all constitutional requirements.
United Electrical Workers v. 163 Pleasant Street Corp.,
One court of appeals recently disagreed. Relying principally on a passage in
Omni Capital International v. Rudolf Wolff & Co.,
Linking personal jurisdiction to a defendant’s “contacts” with the forum developed in state litigation. Due process limitations on adjudication in state courts reflect not so much questions of convenience as of jurisdictional power. Barrow, Alaska, is farther from Juneau than Indianapolis is from Alexandria, and travel from Barrow to Juneau is
much
harder than is travel from Indianapolis to Alexandria (there are no highways and no scheduled air service from Barrow to anywhere), yet no one doubts that the Constitution permits Alaska to require any of its citizens to answer a complaint filed in Juneau, the state capital, just as the United States confines some kinds of federal cases to Washington, D.C., on the eastern seaboard. Conversely Kentucky’s proximity to southern Indiana (Louisville would be more convenient for residents of New Albany than tribunals in Indianapolis) does not permit Kentucky to adjudicate the rights of people who have never visited that state or done business there; its sovereignty stops at the border. Limitations on sovereignty, and not the convenience of defendants, lie at the core of cases such as
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
No limitations on sovereignty come into play in federal courts when all litigants are citizens. It is one sovereign, the same “judicial Power,” whether the court sits in Indianapolis or Alexandria.
Peay
did not deny this. Instead it relied on the observation in
Omni Capital,
Congress has not sought to throw litigants’ convenience to the winds or use transportation costs to resolve small-stakes cases by default. Venue under 28 U.S.C. § 1391 usually respects defendants’ interests. See
Stafford v. Briggs,
444 U.S.
*1037
527,
Although Skylight and Lowry persuaded the Indiana court that the Virginia court lacked personal jurisdiction over them, their arguments on appeal center on subject-matter jurisdiction. Invoking
Peacock v. Thomas,
Peacock
concludes that efforts to hold corporate officers vicariously liable for their firms’ pension debts arise under state rather than federal law, and that an effort to “pierce the corporate veil” to collect a judgment under erisa therefore belongs in state court. Several of our decisions remark that this conclusion does not affect supplemental jurisdiction under § 1367. Thus federal courts may entertain vicarious-liability theories in a single suit.
Peacock
is limited, we have held, to successive litigation.
Wilson v. Chicago,
*1038
Efforts to pierce the corporate veil ask a court to hold
A
vicariously liable for
B’s
debt. If federal law does not establish vicarious liability, then the request must rest on state law; what other source could it have? But a contention that
A
is
B’s
“alter ego” asserts that
A
and
B
are
the same entity;
liability then is not vicarious but direct.
Varity Corp. v. Howe,
Consider,. for example, the situation in
United States v. Bestfoods,
Skylight and Lowry have one final sally: even if a contention that defendants are alter egos of an employer (and thus employers themselves) arises under erisa, the Funds’ complaint in Virginia did not allege all components of alter ego status. This .supposes that complaints must allege each “element” of a “cause of action,” the norm in code pleading. But we have rejected this proposition for federal litigation in general, and erisa in particular.
Bartholet v. Reishauer A.G. (Zurich),
REVERSED AND REMANDED
