Lead Opinion
OPINION
These cross-appeals arise from the petroleum and oil exploration operations conducted by defendant Occidental Peruana (“OxyPeru”), an indirect subsidiary of defendant Occidental Petroleum Corporation (collectively “Occidental”), along the Rio Corrientes in the northern region of Peru. Plaintiffs, 25 members of the Achuar indigenous group dependent for their existence upon the rainforest lands and waterways along the river, and Amazon Watch, a California corporation, sued Occidental in Los Angeles County Superior Court for environmental contamination and release of hazardous waste. Although Occidental’s headquarters is located in Los Angeles County, Occidental removed the suit to federal district court where it successfully moved for dismissal on the ground that Peru is a more convenient forum. Plaintiffs timely appeal the dismissal of their suit. Occidental cross-appeals from the district court’s determination that its Rule 12 motion to dismiss Amazon Watch for lack of standing is moot.
Because Occidental failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that Peru is a more convenient forum, and the district court gave insufficient weight to the strong presumption in favor of a domestic plaintiffs choice of forum, the district court abused its discretion by dismissing the lawsuit without imposing mitigating conditions for the dismissal.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
We accept as true the facts alleged in the Achuar Plaintiffs’ and Amazon Watch’s (“Plaintiffs”) First Amended Complaint (“FAC”). See Vivendi SA v. T-Mobile USA, Inc.,
Occidental is among the largest oil and gas companies in the United States. Its Peruvian operations began in the early 1970s with the development of a pair of lots near the Ecuadorean border known as “Block 1-AB.” Its subsidiary, OxyPeru, built Block 1-AB into a thriving extraction, processing, and distribution site, providing 26 percent of Peru’s total historical oil production from 1972 to 2000, at which point Occidental sold its stake in Block 1-AB to the Argentine oil company Pluspetrol. The Peruvian government granted Occidental its first concession in the region in 1971; oil was found the next year. The company built dozens of wells, a 530-ki-lometer network of pipelines, refineries, and separation batteries for processing
The Achuar are indigenous people who have long resided along the rivers of the northern Peruvian rainforest. Block 1-AB encompasses significant portions of the Corrientes and Macusari rivers, home to several Achuar communities. The inhabitants use the rivers and their tributaries for drinking, fishing, and bathing. The region is remote, with access typically limited to small planes, helicopters, small boats, and canoes.
The complaint alleges that, during its thirty years in the Achuar territories, Occidental knowingly utilized out-of-date methods for separating crude oil that contravened United States and Peruvian law, resulting in the discharge of millions of gallons of toxic oil byproducts into the area’s waterways. Achuar children and adults came into frequent contact with the contaminants by using polluted rivers and tributaries for drinking, washing and fishing. Tests have shown potentially dangerous levels of lead and cadmium in the blood of a significant number of affected individuals. Achuar Plaintiffs have reported gastrointestinal problems, kidney trouble, skin rashes, and aches and pains that they attribute to the pollution.
Plaintiffs further allege that the pollution led to decreasing yields of edible fish, and that the animals hunted by the Achuar have been turning up dead or diseased after drinking river water. The pollution has also allegedly harmed agricultural productivity and land values. Plaintiffs contend that Occidental was aware of the dangers posed by the contamination but failed to warn residents.
The complaint also details the Block 1-AB-related activities of Amazon Watch, a nonprofit Montana corporation headquartered in San Francisco, California, which began working with the Achuar communities in 2001. Representatives of Amazon Watch traveled to the region several times in the ensuing years and helped produce a documentary film about the contamination. Amazon Watch officials also communicated with Occidental representatives in Los Angeles throughout 2005 and 2006, both at public shareholder events and in private meetings. Amazon Watch organized public relations campaigns in both Peru and Los Angeles designed to respond to statements by Occidental about its Peruvian operations.
Several dozen Achuar adults and children filed a complaint in Los Angeles County Superior Court against Occidental on May 10, 2007. Plaintiffs assert claims for common law negligence, strict liability, battery, medical monitoring, wrongful death, fraud and misrepresentation, public and private nuisance, trespass, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, as well as a violation of California’s Unfair Competition Law. They seek damages, injunctive and declaratory relief, restitution, and disgorgement of profits on behalf of the individual plaintiffs and two proposed classes. On August 3, 2007, Occidental removed the action to United States District Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2). On September 10, 2007, the complaint was amended to name Amazon Watch as a plaintiff.
On April 15, 2008, the district court granted Occidental’s motion to dismiss based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens. It did so without the benefit of oral argument, and while simultaneously denying Plaintiffs the opportunity to conduct limited discovery on the adequacy of Peru as an alternative forum, the current location of witnesses and evidence, and limited depositions to ascertain information about Occidental’s Peruvian operations, which had ceased in 2000. In denying Plaintiffs’
Based on Occidental’s evidence, principally the Declaration of Doctor Felipe Osterling Parodi (“Dr. Osterling”), the district court found that Peru is an adequate alternative forum and that the public and private interest factors pointed toward trial in Peru sufficiently to overcome the strong presumption of a domestic plaintiffs choice of forum. It dismissed the case, concluding that Occidental’s motion to dismiss Amazon Watch’s unfair competition claim was thereby rendered moot.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(d)(2) & 1367. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the district court’s order dismissing the lawsuit on the basis of forum non conveniens for an abuse of discretion. Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno,
III. Discussion
“The principle of forum non conveniens is simply that a court may resist imposition upon its jurisdiction even when jurisdiction is authorized by the letter of a general venue statute.” Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
The doctrine oí forum non conveniens is a drastic exercise of the court’s “inherent power” because, unlike a mere transfer of venue, it results in the dismissal of a plaintiffs case. The harshness of such a dismissal is especially pronounced where, as here, the district court declines to place any conditions upon its dismissal. Therefore, we have treated forum non conveniens as “an exceptional tool to be employed sparingly,” and not a “doctrine that compels plaintiffs to choose the optimal forum for their claim.” Dole Food Co. v. Watts,
To prevail on a motion to dismiss based upon forum non conveniens, a defendant bears the burden of demonstrating an adequate alternative forum, and that the balance of private and public interest factors favors dismissal. See Dole Food Co.,
A. Adequacy of the Forum
The district court abused its discretion in finding that under the unique circumstances of this case Peru provides an adequate alternative forum for Plaintiffs to pursue their claims against Occidental arising from business operations in Peru that ended 7 years previously. An alternative forum is deemed adequate if: (1) the defendant is amenable to process there; and (2) the other jurisdiction offers a satisfactory remedy. See Piper,
1. Whether Occidental is Amenable to Process in Peru
The district court abused its discretion by accepting at face value Occidental’s “stipulation and consent to jurisdiction in Peru” without considering the glaring absence of a waiver of the statute of limitations, which Occidental’s own expert suggests may have run. Dismissal on the basis of forum non conveniens is improper when a lawsuit would be time-barred in the alternative jurisdiction. Moreover, where there is reason to believe that a defendant will seek immediate dismissal based on the foreign forum’s statute of limitations, dismissal should be conditioned on waiving any statute of limitations defenses that would not be available in the domestic forum. See Chang v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
2. Whether Peru Offers a Satisfactory Remedy
The district court also abused its discretion in concluding on this record that Occidental met its burden of proving that Peru could offer Plaintiffs a satisfactory remedy. A “dismissal on grounds of forum non conveniens may be granted even though the law applicable in the alternative forum is less favorable to the plaintiffs chance of recovery,” but an alternate forum offering a “clearly unsatisfactory” remedy is inadequate. Piper,
a. Peruvian Law
The district court failed to address critical issues raised by the parties about the Peruvian legal system. Dr. Osterling’s affidavit provides an in-depth exploration of Peruvian statutory law and civil procedure, and concludes that “Peruvian law has analogies for all the substantive legal theories on which the lawsuit filed in the Los Angeles jurisdiction is based,” while also offering analogous remedies. In contrast, Plaintiffs submitted expert declarations, including that of Peruvian lawyer and professor Dante ApoLin Meza, who cautioned that damages fulfill a purely compensatory — not punitive — function in Peru, and that it may be difficult for an “indeterminate group of persons (or class) such as the ‘Achuar communities’ ” to recover.
The district court disregarded Plaintiffs’ expert and credited Dr. Osterling’s account, quoting the conclusion that “Peruvian substantive norms on civil liability allow a lawsuit for damages to be processed on the facts set forth in the complaint.” However, the district court did not find— and it appears it could not on this record—
Moreover, the district court did not consider whether Peruvian law provides any remedy at all for Amazon Watch’s California Unfair Competition claim. See Piper,
b. Discrimination and Corruption
While the district court did not err by weighing both sides’ declarations and concluding that discrimination does not make Peru an inadequate forum, it overlooked important evidence related to corruption. Plaintiffs’ experts described unique barriers confronting the Achuar Plaintiffs in Peru due to their ethnicity, poverty, and isolation. Peruvian lawyer and professor Wilfredo Ardito Vega characterized his nation’s judiciary as “one of the governmental institutions that has not only abstained from intervening in cases of discrimination, but it has contributed to reinforcing discrimination.” He stated that, beyond such intentional bias, impoverished and geographically isolated litigants such as the Achuar Plaintiffs are frequently deterred from vindicating their rights in Peruvian courts because of logistical barriers such as filing fees and documentation requirements. The district court properly considered these arguments, but credited Dr. Osterling’s more specific affidavit, which noted the availability of fee waivers for the indigent, as well as outreach programs to indigenous groups and legal doctrines that could address the barriers posed by discrimination and documentation requirements.
To demonstrate that a foreign nation is an inadequate forum due to corruption, a party must make a “powerful showing” that includes specific evidence. Tuazon,
The district court concluded that the evidence contained in Plaintiffs’ expert affidavits was too generalized and anecdotal “to pass value judgments on the adequacy of Peru’s judicial system.” While Plaintiffs’ evidence may fall short of a specific and “powerful” showing of corruption, the most concrete and alarming suggestions of judicial turmoil ironically come from Occidental’s own evidence. Dr. Osterling acknowledged that “[corruption is present in all aspects of government,” including the
The district court correctly noted that “one of the central ends of the forum non conveniens doctrine is to avert ‘unnecessary indictments by our judges condemning the sufficiency of the courts and legal methods of other nations.’ ” (quoting Monégasque de Reassurances S.A.M. (Monde Re) v. NAK Naftogaz of Ukraine,
B. Balance of Private and Public Interest Factors
In weighing the relevant factors, the district court consistently understated Occidental’s heavy burden of showing that the Los Angeles forum results in “oppressiveness and vexation ... out of all proportion” to the plaintiffs convenience. Piper,
1. Deference to Plaintiffs Chosen Forum
When a domestic plaintiff initiates litigation in its home forum, it is presumptively convenient. Id. at 255-56,
In Sinochem, the Supreme Court held that federal district coui'ts may decide fo
Under Sinochem, then, the district court properly ruled on the forum non conveniens motion based on the assumption that Amazon Watch was a proper plaintiff, but without conducting a full standing analysis. Resolving that question would require consideration of both Article III and statutory standing to sue under California’s Unfair Competition Law. Statutory standing is a merits question, not a jurisdictional matter like constitutional standing, which may be considered for the first time on appeal. See Noel v. Hall,
Despite operating under that assumption, the district court explained that because Amazon Watch was but one domestic plaintiff alongside 25 foreign plaintiffs, it was entitled to “only some deference.” The district court cited no legal authority for the application of this vague intermediate standard of deference. Indeed, the district court’s application of that standard is directly contrary to the Piper Court’s clear instruction that when a domestic plaintiff chooses its home forum, “it is reasonable to assume that this choice is convenient,” but a foreign plaintiffs choice deserves “less deference.” Piper,
In Vivendi, the court afforded reduced deference to an American co-plaintiff based on an express finding that the plaintiff had engaged in forum shopping. See Vivendi,
A party’s intent in joining a lawsuit is relevant to the balancing of the forum non conveniens factors only to the extent that it adds to an overall picture of an effort to take unfair advantage of an inappropriate forum. See id. at 695. Vivendi involved litigation between European companies that had no significant connection to the United States. Id. at 694. Vivendi admitted that it sued in the Western District of Washington “because the United States offers ‘proper discovery’ and favorable law.” Id. at 694-95. After defendant T-Mobile filed a motion to dismiss on the basis of forum non conveniens, Vivendi added an American co-plaintiff, Vivendi Holding, which claimed an interest in the litigation as the holder of certain bonds. However, the plaintiffs conceded that Vivendi Holding acquired the bonds after the forum non conveniens motion was filed with the partial motivation of strengthening its connection to the case. Id. at 694. Moreover, the bonds were “related only incidentally” to the fraud allegations at the heart of the litigation. Id.
By contrast, Amazon Watch’s involvement in the subject matter of this litigation began in 2001, six years before the case was filed. The complaint includes factual allegations giving rise to claims based on events that took place in Los Angeles involving Amazon Watch, Occidental and the Achuar plaintiffs. Any tactical motivation for Amazon Watch’s presence in this case is outweighed by the organization’s actual long-standing involvement in the subject matter of the litigation and its assertion of actual injury resulting from defendants’ alleged conduct. Moreover, Plaintiffs did not strategically choose a random or only tangentially relevant forum; they chose Occidental’s home forum. And while the case concerns past operations and injury in Peru, the complaint includes claims based on decisions made in and policies emerging from Occidental’s corporate headquarters in Los Angeles.
Concerns about forum shopping, while appropriately considered in the forum non conveniens analysis, are muted in a case such as this where Plaintiffs’ chosen forum is both the defendant’s home jurisdiction, and a forum with a strong connection to the subject matter of the case. See Ravelo Monegro,
Amazon Watch, therefore, was entitled to a strong presumption that its choice of forum was convenient. See Contact Lum
2. Private Interest Factors
The factors relating to the private interests of the litigants include: “(1) the residence of the parties and the witnesses; (2) the forum’s convenience to the litigants; (3) access to physical evidence and other sources of proof; (4) whether unwilling witnesses can be compelled to testify; (5) the cost of bringing witnesses to trial; (6) the enforceability of the judgment; and (7) all other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious and inexpensive.” Boston Telecomms. Grp. v. Wood,
Without analyzing each individual factor, the district court looked generally at the “witnesses and evidence located in Peru” versus the “witnesses and evidence in California” and concluded that the “private interest factors weigh overwhelmingly in favor of dismissal.” In taking this approach, the district court neglected significant relevant evidence and failed to consider an entire factor — the enforceability of the judgment — that together weigh against dismissing this lawsuit.
a. Residence of the Parties
The district court focused on the fact that the contamination allegations at the heart of the complaint took place in the jungles of the Amazon rainforest, but it failed to consider the residence of all of the parties and the true nature of Plaintiffs’ claims. Occidental maintains its headquarters and principal place of business in Los Angeles, California.
Most of Plaintiffs’ claims turn not on the physical location of the injury but on the mental state of the Occidental managers who actually made the business decisions that allegedly resulted in the injury. While the district court mentioned in passing “decisionmakers at Defendants’ headquarters and witnesses with knowledge of
b. Convenience to the Parties
The district court found it “clear [that] the cost and convenience of travel between Peru and Los Angeles supports dismissal on forum no[n] conveniens grounds” because even if all Peruvian witnesses consented to testify in California, airfare from Peru can cost more than $1,000. This reasoning, however, fails to consider the other side of the ledger. California is the home forum of Occidental and Amazon Watch; therefore, local litigation would save witnesses affiliated with those entities the time and expense of traveling to South America. Moreover, the most daunting logistical challenge to this litigation would likely be the extreme isolation of the Achuar territory and Block 1-AB. Travel between the region and Iquitos, the nearest sizable Peruvian city, can take days, presenting a serious obstacle regardless of whether trial takes place in Peru or California. Rather than clearly supporting dismissal, when all of the evidence is considered this is a neutral factor. See Boston Telecomms.,
c. Evidentiary Considerations
The district court placed great emphasis on the fact that “[m]any of the witnesses are located in Peru and thus are beyond the reach of compulsory process” and that “Plaintiffs do not dispute that these witnesses are beyond the reach of compulsory process in the United States.” The district court, however, was focused on the wrong inquiries. “[W]e have cautioned that the focus for this private interest analysis ‘should not rest on the number of witnesses ... in each locale’ but rather the court ‘should evaluate the materiality and importance of the anticipated ... witnesses’ testimony and then determine their accessibility and convenience to the forum.’ ” Boston Telecomms.,
The proponent of a forum non conveniens dismissal is not required to identify potentially unavailable witnesses in exact detail. See Piper,
As far as physical evidence and other sources of proof, the district court failed to consider during the discussion of the private interest factors Occidental’s transfer of Block 1-AB to Pluspetrol. That Occidental withdrew from the site in 2000 undermines its argument that evidence found today at the physical site is much more critical to the litigation than evidence associated with Occidental’s corporate headquarters, which has been in Los Angeles throughout the relevant period. Finally, the district court also failed to consider Amazon Watch in weighing these private factors. As discussed earlier, Amazon Watch’s principal place of business is in California, its executives, key employees and relevant documentary evidence within its control are in California, and many of the events involving the group which form the basis for its claims occurred in the state. Therefore, when all of the evidence is properly considered, these evidentiary factors are neutral.
d. Enforceability of the Judgment
Most critically, the district court failed to give any consideration to whether a judgment against Occidental could be enforced in Peru. As Occidental correctly points out, California generally enforces foreign judgments, as long as they are issued by impartial tribunals that have afforded the litigants due process. See Cal.Civ.Proc.Code § 1716(a)-(d). However, the only other authority Occidental cites on the topic is In re B-E Holdings, Inc.,
As discussed earlier, Occidental’s own expert presented compelling evidence of disorder in the Peruvian judiciary. Because the district court did not require Occidental to agree that any Peruvian judgment could be enforced against it in the United States, or anywhere else it held assets, as a condition for dismissal, Occidental remains free to attack any Peruvian judgment on due process grounds under California’s foreign judgments statute. The private factor of the enforceability of judgments thus weighs against dismissal.
3. Public Interest Factors
The public factors related to the interests of the forums include: “(1) the local interest in the lawsuit, (2) the court’s
a. Local Interest
The district court weighed Peru’s stake in a case involving its own “lands and citizens” against California’s “interest in ensuring that businesses incorporated or operating within its borders abide by the law,” and concluded that this factor favored dismissal. It found that a Peruvian tribunal “would be better equipped to handle” the issues raised by the case including “environmental regulation of Peruvian territory, and the allegedly tortious conduct carried out against Peruvian citizens.” This conflates a forum’s interest in resolving a controversy with its ability to do so. The factors regarding familiarity with the applicable law, docket congestion, and costs and other burdens on local courts and juries are all concerned with how well-equipped a jurisdiction is to handle a case (as is the separate adequacy of the forum inquiry). The local interest factor has the different aim of determining if the forum in which the lawsuit was filed has its own identifiable interest in the litigation which can justify proceeding in spite of these burdens. See Piper,
In considering this factor, the district court undervalued California’s significant interest in providing a forum for those harmed by the actions of its corporate citizens. California courts have repeatedly recognized the state’s “interest in deciding actions against resident corporations whose conduct in this state causes injury to persons in other jurisdictions.” Stangvik v. Shiley Inc.,
Therefore, although both forums have a significant interest in the litigation, the local interest factor favors neither side entirely.
The remaining factors all relate to the effects of hearing the case on the respective judicial systems. The district court did not abuse its discretion by concluding that the court congestion and burden factors are neutral because there is evidence that both Peruvian courts and the Central District have similarly crowded dockets. See Creative Tech., Ltd. v. Aztech Sys. Pte., Ltd.,
The district court also properly found the choice of law factor neutral because “both parties have asserted reasonable explanations that either Peruvian or California law applies.” California applies a three-part test to determine choice of law in the absence of an effective choice-of-law agreement. See Wash. Mut. Bank v. Superior Court,
Here the district court acknowledged that Occidental, as the foreign law proponent, presented a choice-of-law analysis that was “lacking,” suggesting that it failed to meet its initial burden for the governmental interest test. However, as part of their effort to demonstrate that Peru is not an adequate alternate forum, Plaintiffs themselves argued that California law is materially different from Peruvian law. Therefore, resolving the conflict of law issue would involve a full blown analysis of the state interests and relative impairment. As the district court noted, forum non conveniens is designed so that courts can avoid such inquiries at this early stage. See Piper,
4. Weighing the Factors
The private factors based on convenience and evidentiary concerns favor neither side, while the residence of the parties and enforceability of the judgment factors weigh against dismissal. All of the public interest factors are neutral. Taken together, the factors fail to “establish ... oppressiveness and vexation to a defendant ... out of all proportion to plaintiffs convenience.” Piper,
C. Absence of Conditions on the Forum Non Conveniens Dismissal
Although the district court dismissed the case without prejudice to Plaintiffs’ right to re-file in the Central District of California in the event that Occidental does not consent to personal jurisdiction in Peru, or a Peruvian court declines to assert personal jurisdiction over Occidental, it did not place any mitigating conditions on its dismissal. Under the circumstances here, this was an abuse of discretion.
Plaintiffs requested that the district court condition its dismissal by requiring that: (1) any Peruvian judgment be satisfied; (2) Occidental waive any statute of limitations defense in Peru that would not be available in California; (3) Occidental agree to comply with United States discovery rules; and (4) Occidental translate documents from English to Spanish. District courts are not required to impose conditions on forum non conveniens dismissals, but it is an abuse of discretion to fail to do so when “there is a justifiable reason to doubt that a party will cooperate with the foreign forum.” Leetsch,
Here, there is justifiable reason to suspect that Occidental will move to dismiss this lawsuit based on the Peruvian statute of limitations. And as Plaintiffs note, Occidental has agreed to waive statute of limitations defenses in the past when a forum non conveniens dismissal was conditioned on such waiver. See Kinney v. Occidental Oil & Gas Corp.,
Similarly, the district court failed to consider evidence about the difficulty of enforcing Peruvian judgments and the unique obstacles posed by Occidental’s withdrawal from the country and the resulting uncertainty regarding its Peruvian assets. Occidental’s own expert provided evidence of corruption and turmoil in the Peruvian judiciary that could become the basis for a challenge to the enforceability of a judgment based on the procedural deficiencies of a Peruvian proceeding. When there is reason to think that enforcing a judgment in a foreign country would be problematic, courts have required assurances that a defendant will satisfy any judgment as a condition to a forum non conveniens dismissal. See Contact Lumber,
As for discovery, the district court overemphasized Peruvian geography and lost sight of the importance of California-based witnesses and evidence to resolving the claims alleged in the complaint. Plaintiffs argue that without a condition requiring Occidental to cooperate with discovery requests pursuant to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, they might be denied access to important domestic evidence once the case is in a Peruvian court. Where a plaintiff would “have greater access to sources of proof relevant to” its claims if trial were held in the original forum, “district courts might dismiss subject to the condition that defendant corporations agree to provide the records relevant to the plaintiffs claims.” Piper,
Once again the parties offered dueling expert affidavits as to the sufficiency of Peruvian discovery procedures to ensure that California-based evidence can be obtained and witnesses procured should this case proceed in Peru. While a thorough analysis might reasonably conclude that Peru offers discovery rules that would satisfy Plaintiffs’ concerns, the district court erred by rejecting this condition without addressing those legitimate concerns at all. However, the district court did not err by declining to condition the dismissal on Occidental’s agreeing to translate all documents into Spanish, as Plaintiffs failed to produce sufficient evidence to show justifiable reason to doubt that such translations would otherwise be available.
IV. Conclusion
Where a district court “has considered all relevant public and private interest factors, and where its balancing of these factors is reasonable, its decision deserves substantial deference.” Boston Telecomms.,
Here the district court erroneously relieved Occidental of its burden of showing that Peru is an adequate alternative forum. It accepted a flawed stipulation to Peruvian jurisdiction and overlooked strong evidence, including evidence from Occidental’s own expert, calling into question the ability of the Peruvian courts to satisfactorily handle this case. The district court failed to consider all relevant private and public interest factors, entirely overlooking the enforceability of judgments factor, which weighs heavily against dismissal. It correctly assumed that Amazon Watch was a proper domestic plaintiff, but erroneously afforded reduced deference to its chosen forum and ignored the group entirely in the analysis of numerous factors. These errors led the district court to misconstrue factors that are neutral or weigh against dismissal, and to strike an unreasonable balance between the factors and the deference due a domestic plaintiffs chosen forum. Finally, the district court abused its discretion by failing to impose conditions on its dismissal that were warranted by facts in the record showing justifiable reasons to doubt Occidental’s full cooperation in the foreign forum.
Occidental had a substantial burden to persuade the district court to invoke the “exceptional tool” of forum non conveniens and deny Plaintiffs access to a U.S. court. See Ravelo Monegro,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
. The district court could have cured this problem by imposing appropriate conditions. We have affirmed forum non conveniens dismissals that addressed statute of limitations concerns by requiring waiver in the foreign forum. See, e.g., Loya v. Starwood Hotels &
. We therefore deny Plaintiffs’ petition to certify the statutory standing question to the California Supreme Court. See Cal. R. Ct. 8.548(a)(1) (limiting certification from the United States Court of Appeals to questions which “could determine the outcome of a matter pending in the requesting court’’); see also Couch v. Telescope, Inc.,
. There appears to be a difference of opinion about whether it is appropriate to compare the state interests, or whether this factor is solely concerned with the forum where the lawsuit was filed. Compare Tuazon,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part, dissenting in part:
I agree that conditions on dismissal might be appropriate. However, I would not re-analyze whether to dismiss on grounds of forum non conveniens from scratch, because dismissals for forum non conveniens may be reversed only when there has been a clear abuse of discretion. Creative Tech., Ltd. v. Aztech Sys. Pte, Ltd.,
I
In light of that standard, Cariajano has not persuaded me that the district court made a clear error of judgment when it determined that Peru is an adequate alternative forum. “[A] forum will be inadequate only where the remedy provided is ‘so clearly inadequate or unsatisfactory, that it is no remedy at all.’ ” Tuazon v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
In short, Occidental is amenable to service of process in Peru, and furnished evidence that Peru provides “some remedy” for the wrong at issue. Lueck v. Sundstrand Corp.,
Although Cariajano notes that Peru has no cause of action identical to his UCL claim, this is not necessary so long as that country provides some remedy for the alleged wrong. See Lueck,
In a similar vein, Cariajano faults the district court for having failed to find that Amazon Watch would lack standing in Peru. But there was no evidence that Amazon Watch would not have standing, or would otherwise be unable to pursue its
As the Supreme Court stated in Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno, only in “rare circumstances” would a “remedy offered by the other forum [be] clearly unsatisfactory.”
Because a forum will only be deemed inadequate in “rare circumstances,” once a defendant has demonstrated he is amenable to process and “some remedy” exists for the alleged wrong, “[a] litigant asserting inadequacy or delay must make a powerful showing.” Tuazon,
Cariajano maintains that the district court failed to support the weight it gave to unpredictability of the law as a factor. However, the court was persuaded by Osterling’s affidavit that, although Peru is a civil law country, precedent is respected in the overwhelming majority of cases.
After analyzing Cariajano’s purported evidence of corruption, the district court concluded that it falls short of the “powerful showing” necessary to defeat a forum non conveniens motion. See Tuazon,
Nor did the district court believe that claims of discrimination can never render a forum inadequate, as Cariajano submits; rather, it simply held that Cariajano’s conclusory allegations and claims of discrimination were not sufficient to render a Peruvian forum inadequate. Although Cariajano argues that some plaintiffs lacked identity papers necessary to bring suit and would be unable to afford filing fees, the district court credited Osterling’s opinion that Peru had taken substantial steps to protect indigenous rights, including waiving filing fees and allowing plaintiffs to bring suit if they demonstrate their inability to obtain identity papers. Altmann v. Austria,
Cariajano further contends that Occidental’s contract clauses that explicitly
II
I cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in weighing the public and private interest factors. It took into account that 25 out of the 26 plaintiffs are Peruvian and that Amazon Watch is only one plaintiff on one out of the 12 causes of action. Amazon Watch was not originally a plaintiff in California state court, having been added only after the Peruvian plaintiffs learned that Occidental was going to move for dismissal based on forum non conveniens. The court could find that these circumstances lessen the deference due to the plaintiffs’ choice of forum.
The district court could also find, as it did, that the facts of the case center primarily on Peruvian lands and Peruvian people. It found that many witnesses, including family members and community leaders, physicians, and consultants, are beyond the reach of compulsory process in the United States. Cariajano asserts the court abused its discretion by not specifically stating which witnesses would be unwilling to travel to the United States, but it can be “difficult to identify” specific individuals when many witnesses “are located beyond the reach of compulsory process.” Piper Aircraft,
The district court considered the strong interest of both Peru and California in this dispute, but weighted Peru’s more heavily given that the suit involves Peruvian land and citizens. This is not a clearly erroneous assessment as both the alleged tort, and injury, occurred there.
III
Cariajano suggests that more discovery may have mattered, but has not made a clear showing of actual and substantial prejudice sufficient to demonstrate the district court abused its discretion by denying additional discovery. Cariajano simply argues that the parties produced contradictory evidence and speculates that additional discovery might have helped its case. But Cariajano’s extensive recitation of the evidence it presented in district court demonstrates the court did have enough information to balance the parties’ interests. Even when it’s possible that discovery might have provided more detail, a district court does not abuse is discretion in denying discovery if the parties have provided “enough information to enable the District Court to balance the parties’ interests.” Cheng,
IV
While conditions on dismissal are generally not necessary in a forum non conveniens dismissal, they may be necessary to
