Lead Opinion
This is аn appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (J. Paul Oetken, Judge) dismissing the plaintiffs claims without prejudice for lack of standing. The plaintiff appeals from that decision and from the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs request to attempt to cure the standing defect by having the real party in interest “ratify, join, or be substituted into the action” pursuant to ' Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a)(3). Because we agree that the plain
BACKGROUND
Cortlandt Street Recovery Corp. (“Cort-landt”), a New York corporation, is attempting to collect approximately €83.1 million allеgedly owed to it under defaulted “Subordinated Notes” (“Sub Notes”) issued in 2006 by a now-dissolved entity, Hellas Telecommunications (Luxembourg) II, S.C.A. (“Hellas II”). Cortlandt alleges that the holders of the Sub Notes, citizens severally of Greece, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, and Gibraltar assigned Cortlandt a portion of the notes in 2011, thereby authorizing Cortlandt to bring the present action.
Cortlandt contends, in substance, that the private equity firms TPG Capital, L.P. (“TPG”) and Apax Partners, LLP (“Apax”), which are not parties to the present suit, used the Sub Notes to defraud their creditors. According to Cort-landt, TPG and Apax owned a group of related foreign companies including Hellas II and defendants Hellas Telecommunications, S.á.r.l. and Hellas Telecommunications I, S.a.r.l., also Luxembourg entities (the “Hellas Defendаnts”). Cortlandt alleges that TPG and Apax issued promissory notes, in the name of one of the Hellas Defendants, pledging TPG’s and Apax’s equity in the company and its subsidiaries as collateral. According to Cortlandt, the firms then used the proceeds from this sale to buy their own collateral, rendering the Hellas entities insolvent.
Cortlandt argues that this process— termed a “bleed-out” — rendered both the Hellas Defendants and several now-dissolved foreign investment funds that owned or financed the Hellas entities
In one of these other actions, Cortlandt brought suit on the Sub Notes against Deutsche Bank AG, London Branch (“Deutsche Bank”), аlleging it to be an underwriter of the Sub Notes. Cortlandt St. Recovery Corp. v. Deutsche Bank AG, London Branch, No. 12 CIV. 9351 JPO,
The district court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss in both cases. In July 2013, the court issued an order and opinion in the Deutsche Bank case concluding that Cortlandt had failed adequately to plead title to claims arising under the Sub Notes and that Cortlandt had thеrefore failed adequately to plead facts on which Article III standing could be based. See Deutsche Bank Op.,
Cortlandt appealed.
DISCUSSION
Cortlandt argues that the district court erred in granting the defendants’ motion to dismiss its complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1). Cortlandt further asserts that the district court erred in failing to grant to it the opportunity to cure any standing defect under Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a)(3), which allows for “the real party in interest to ratify, join, or be substituted into” a pending action. We disagree with both contentions.
I. Standard of Review
A district court properly dismisses an action under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction if the
The plaintiff bears the burden of “alleg[ing] facts that affirmatively and plausibly suggest that it has standing to sue.” Amidax Trading Grp. v. S.W.I.F.T. SCRL,
“[A] district court’s decision whether to dismiss pursuant to Rule 17(a) is reviewed for abuse of discretion.” Stichting Ter Behartiging Van de Belangen Van Oudaandeelhouders In Het Kapitaal Van Saybolt Int’l B.V. v. Schreiber,
II. Standing
“In its constitutional dimension, standing imports justiciability: whether the plaintiff has made out a ‘case or controversy’ between himself and the defendant within the meaning of Art. III.” Warth v. Seldin,
A plaintiff claiming such a stake must establish, first, that it has sustained an “injury in fact” which is both “concrete and particularized” and “actual or imminent,” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Cortlandt does not allege that it has suffered direct injury as a result of
To assign a claim effectively, the claim’s owner “must manifest an intention to make the assignee the owner of the claim.” Id. (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted). A would-be assignor need not use any particular language to validly assign its claim “so long as the language manifests [the assignor’s] intention to transfer at least title or ownership, i.e., to accomplish ‘a completed transfer of the entire interest of the assignor in the particular subject of assignment.’ ” Id. (emphasis added) (citations omitted). An assignor’s grant of, for example, “ ‘the power to commence and prosecute to final consummation or compromise any suits, actions or proceedings,’ ” id. at 18 (quoting agreements that werе the subject of that appeal), may validly create a power of attorney, but that language would not validly assign a claim, because it does “not purport to transfer title or ownership” of one. Id.
Cortlandt has not carried its burden of showing a valid assignment of a claim. First, Cortlandt’s complaint does not allege “a completed transfer” of the note-holders’ “entire interest” in any claim arising under the Sub Notes. Id. at 17. The complaint alleges that Cortlandt was assigned “full rights under the assignments to collect principal and interest due and to pursue all remedies,” Pl.’s First Am. Compl. ¶ 12 (J.A. 60), and that Cortlandt is “authorized to sue and collect on the Sub Notes” on behalf of the assignors, id. ¶ 108 (J.A. 82). It does not, however, indicate that Cortlandt was assigned ownership of the claims. Cortlandt argues that an “assignment of full rights to collect is sufficient” to satisfy the injury-in-fact requirement. Appellant’s Br. at 11. But, as we have explained,
[a] provision by which one person grants another the power to sue on and collect on a claim confers on the grantee a power of attorney with respect to that claim. The grant of a power of attorney, however, is not the equivalent of an assignment of ownership; and, standing alone, a power of attorney does not enable the grantee to bring suit in his own name.
Advanced Magnetics,
Nor has Cortlandt pointed tо anything in the assignment, or to other evidence in the record, suggesting that title to claims
The Noteholder hereby assigns to Cort-landt Street Recovery Corp.... full rights to collect amounts of principal and interest due on the Notes, and to pursue all remedies with respect to the Notes against Hellas Finance [or various other related entities] ... and any other person or entity who may be liable to Note-holder. The Noteholder remains the owner of the Notes and person in whose name the Notes are registered.
The Noteholder hereby irrevocably appoints [Cortlandt] its true and lawful attorney and proxy, with full power of substitution, to pursue collection and all remedies with respect to the Notes.... Under this appointment [Cortlаndt] shall have all requisite power and authority ... to make any request or demand or to take any other action under or with respect to the Notes, or under the December 21, 2006 Indenture under which the Notes were issued.
J.A. 109-10. The language of the assignment confirms that Cortlandt was authorized to collect payment on behalf of the noteholders, but it does not so much as hint that title to the claims at issue was being transferred. An assignment such as the one in issue, which does not transfer ownership of claims, is, on its own, “insufficient to permit [a purported assignee] to sue on those claims in its name.” Advanced Magnetics,
Cortlandt urges us to reconsider the approach of Advanced Magnetics in light of Sprint Communications Co., L.P. v. APCC Services, Inc.,
The Court rejected the carriers’ challenge, recognizing the longstanding “historical tradition of suits by assignees, including assignees for collection.” Id. at 285,
Cortlandt argues that “[n]othing in Sprint suggests that ‘title’ or ‘ownership’ must be recited” in an assignment to confer standing upon an assignee. Appellant’s Reply Br. at 4. But Sprint did not focus on the aggregators’ title to the claims because there was “no reason to believe the assignment [was] anything less than a complete transfer to the aggregator[s] of the injury and resulting claim.” Sprint,
If there was any doubt about the continuing relevance of Advanced Magnet-ics in light of Sprint, it was settled by W.R. Huff Asset Management Co., LLC v. Deloitte & Touche LLP,
Cortlandt argues, finаlly on this score, that an assignment of rights to collect payments under the Notes and to pursue all remedies under the notes confers an interest “at least as broad as” that conferred by an assignment of title. Appellant’s Br. at 12. The dispositive inquiry does not go to the breadth of the assignment, however, but rather to its nature. “There is an important distinction between simply hiring a lawyer and assigning a claim to a lawyer.... The latter confers a property right (which creditors might attach); the former does not.” Sprint,
III. Rule 17
Cortlandt further argues that even if it lacked constitutional standing, the district court erred by not providing Cortlandt with the opportunity to cure this deficiency under Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a)(3). As noted above, “a district court’s decision whether to dismiss pursuant to Rule 17(a) is reviewed for abuse of discretion.” Schreiber,
Rule 17(a)(1) requires that an action “be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” In Part II of our opinion, above, we concluded that the district court was correct in deciding that, absent an assignment of the claims in issue, this lawsuit was not brought or prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest. But Rule 17(a)(3) prohibits a court from dismissing an action for failure to comply with subsection (a)(1) “until, after an objection, a reasonable time has been allowed for the real party in interest to ratify, join, or be substituted into the action.”
The real party in interest principle embodied in Rule 17 ensures that only “a person who possesses the right to enforce [a] claim and who has a significant interest in the litigation” can bring the claim. Schreiber,
If a party successfully moves for ratification, joinder, or substitution, “the action proceeds as if it had been originally commеnced by the real party in interest.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a)(3). Crucially for statute of limitations purposes, the claim of the real party in interest therefore dates back to the filing of the complaint. Cortlandt argues that although its lawsuit was dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the dismissal was based solely on the fact that Cortlandt was not the real party in interest. It should therefore have been permitted either to amend the complaint to substitute the parties who actually held the claims at issue as plaintiffs in the lawsuit, or to amend its agreement with the real parties in interest to transfer title to the claims to Cortlandt, thereby making it the real party interest.
The defendants’ first argument to the contrary is that Cortlandt forfeited any Rule 17(a)(3) objection by failing to raise the issuе before the district court. “[I]t is a well-established general rule that an appellate court will not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal.” Bogle-Assegai v. Connecticut,
Cortlandt did not explicitly refer to Rule 17 or specify a means by which it hoped to remedy any standing deficiency in the action as filed. But it did invoke Rule 17 in the context of the defendant’s standing objection in the Deutsche Bank action, arguing that it should have been given the oppоrtunity to substitute the noteholders as the real parties in interest or to obtain a new assignment. Deutsche Bank Op.,
The question then is whether the district court abused its discretion in denying an amendment request under Rule 17. We have had few occasions on which to address this issue. See Schreiber,
We nonetheless returned the case to the district court directing “that leave to file the proposed amended complaint substituting the [assignors] as plaintiffs to pursue their own claims [be] granted under Rule 17(a).” Id. at 21. We reasoned that such substitution was warranted for three reasons: First, “[t]he complaint’s only pertinent flaw was the identity of the party pursuing those claims.” Id. at 20. In other words, the proposed amended complaint sought only to substitute one name for another; the factual and legal allegations of the complaint would remain unaltered. Second, there was no indication of “bad faith or ... an effort to deceive or prejudice the defendants.” Id. at 21. Finally, the proposed substitution did not threaten to prejudice the defendants, who had timely notice of the substance of the allegations, the relevant parties, and their claims. Id.
But the facts underlying our decision in Advanced Magnetics differ from those in the case at bar in at least one significant respect: There, unlike here, the named plaintiff had standing irrespective of any amendment under Rule 17 tо pursue at least some of its claims against the defendants; Cortlandt did not. The district court here followed the lead of several other district courts in this Circuit by distinguishing Advanced Magnetics based on that difference.
In Cortlandt’s case, absent a complete assignment of the only claims on which the lawsuit was based, there was no valid lawsuit pending before the district court in which to permit an amended complaint. The district court reasoned that “[standing ... ‘is to be determined as of the commencement of suit.’ Lujan,
The question whether a plaintiff may use Rule 17(a)(3) to remedy a standing deficiency when it lacks standing as to all of its claims — as is the case here — appears to be an issue of first impression in this Court, if not the district courts in this Circuit. See W.R. Huff,
We need not, however, resolve this question to dispose of Cortlandt’s request to attempt to cure the standing defect under Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a)(3). We affirm because neither of the requests made by Cortlandt in its. effort to cure the standing problem would have been consistent with Rule 17(a)(3). Therefore, the district court’s decision to deny relief under that rule was not an abuse of discretion.
Cortlandt made two specific, alternative requests: first, to substitute the notehold-ers for it-as plaintiffs, or, seсond, for leave to obtain a new assignment from the note-holder vesting in Cortlandt sufficient title to maintain this lawsuit.
As to Cortlandt’s first request, substitution of the noteholders as plaintiffs would cure the standing defect. Simultaneously and necessarily, though, it would create a different, fatal jurisdictional defect. Cortlandt conceded at oral argument that the noteholders, foreign citizens, are not diverse from the defendants, also foreign entities. While
diversity is present when the action is between “citizens of a State and citizens or subjects of a foreign state,” 28 U.S.C.§ 1332(a)(2), or between “citizens of different States and in which citizens or subjects of a forеign state are additional parties,” id. § 1332(a)(3)[,] diversity is lacking within the meaning of these sections where the only parties are foreign entities.
Universal Licensing Corp. v. Paola del Lungo S.p.A.,
If Cortlandt’s second request — fol-ie ave to obtain a new assignment — were pursued, diversity jurisdiction would not appear to present a barrier. The diversity jurisdiction that now obtains between the plaintiff and the defendants would survive. But while granting Cortlandt’s request to create and execute a new assignment' transferring complete title and ownership of the claims in issue to Cortlandt might theoretically create a claim litigable by Cortlandt, it would not enable Cortlandt to alter its complaint in the district court pursuant to Rule 17(a)(3) to reflect the contents of the revisеd transfer.
As we have discussed, Cortlandt’s First Amended Complaint alleges that it was assigned “full rights under the assignments to collect principal and interest due and to pursue all remedies.” PL’s First Am. Compl. ¶ 12 (J.A. 60). In order to have standing, however, Cortlandt would have to allege that it was assigned title to the claims, not merely a power of attorney. A new assignment-would “alter[ ] the original complaint’s factual allegations as to the events or the participants,” Advanced Magnetics,
We have ordinarily allowed amendments under Rule 17 only “when a mistake has been made as to the person entitled to bring suit and such substitution will not alter the substance of the action.” Park B. Smith, Inc.,
We cannot rule out the possibility that Cortlandt might have avoided these challenging procedural pitfalls through a request for leave to obtain a valid assignment under some other rule of civil
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the district court did not err in concluding that the plaintiff lacked standing nor did the court abuse its discretion in denying the plaintiff relief under Rule 17(a)(3). It therefore did not err in dismissing the complaint without prejudice. The judgment of the district court is therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The only evidence of assignment that is in the record pertains to a tranche of notes unrelated to the Sub Notes. Cortlandt asserts here, as it did before the district court, however, that the language of this assignment is identical to the language of the Sub Notes assignment. We assume that to be true for purposes of this appeal. The relevant portion of the assignment reads:
The Noteholder hereby assigns to Cortlandt Street Recovery Corp.-... full rights to collect amounts of principal and interest due on the Notes, and to pursue all remedies with respect to the Notes against Hellas Finance [or related entities] ... and any other person or entity who may be liable to Noteholder. The Noteholder remains the owner of the Notes and person in whose name the Notes are registered.
The Noteholder hereby irrevocably appoints [Cortlandt] its true and lawful attorney and proxy, with full power of substitution, to pursue collection and all remedies with respect to the Notes.... Under this appointment [Cortlandt] shall have all requisite power and authority ... to make any request or demand or to take any other action under or with respect to the Nоtes, or under the December 21, 2006 Indenture under which the Notes were issued.
J.A. 109-10.
. These funds are Hellas Telecommunications Co-Invest Ltd., Hellas Telecommunications Employees Ltd., TCW HT-Co-Invest I L.P., and TCW HT-Co-Invest II L.P.
. "PIK” is an acronym for “payment-in-kind.” See In re TPG Troy, LLC,
. Defendant Giancarlo Aliberti was voluntarily dismissed from the action.
. As noted above: “In resolving a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1), a district court may refer to evidence outside the pleadings.” Makarova,
. Advanced. Magnetics did not explicitly rely on the fact that the plaintiff had standing on some claims to reach the plaintiffs Rule 17 objection as to the other claims, nor did it examine the relationship between constitutional standing requirements and Rule 17.
. As the district court described it:
During a recent telephone conference, Cort-landt suggested that, were the [c]ourt to hold that Cortlandt lacked standing, it should be permitted to cure the deficiency by "intervening] the real party ... or establishing] authorization” through a new agreement. (Trans, at 5:16-18; see also id. at 5:18-22 (Plaintiff’s Counsel: "If [Defense Counsel] is questioning whether the authorization is sufficient, rather than to say that this is sufficient where he says it isn’t, he is just giving me language that he wants to see, why don’t I just go out and get it?”).
Deutsche Bank Op.,
. We have apparently never, in a precedential opinion, adopted a rule to the effect "that even when [a] claim is not assigned until after [an] action has been instituted, the assignee is the real party in interest and can maintain the action." 6A Charles Alan Wright et ah, Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 1545 (3d ed.2014); see, e.g., Dubuque Stone Prod. Co. v. Fred L. Gray Co.,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Unsurprisingly, I concur in the foregoing opinion — I am, after all, its author. I add this brief concurrence, though, to explain my view that a decision referred to in that opinion, Zurich Insurance Co. v. Logitrans, Inc.,
In Zurich Insurance Co., the Sixth Circuit affirmed the denial of a motion that had been brought in an attempt to cure a standing defect under Fed.R.Civ. P.17(a)(3). An insurance company subsidiary, Zurich Switzerland, initially thinking itself to be the subrogee of certain claims, requested leave of the district court to substitute the proper subrogee of all of those claims, a parallel subsidiary
An attorney made a mistake and filed the action in the name of Zurich Switzerland, when Zurich Switzerland had no claims whatsoever against the defendants, and no Article III standing to sue. American Guarantee, a totally separate entity, which was not vigilant in protecting its claims, cannot now benefit from Zurich Switzerland’s mistake.
As our opinion notes, some courts and commentators have criticized Zurich Insurance Co. See ante at 423. I think this criticism has some merit. It was undisputed in Zurich Insurance Co. that an entity, waiting in the wings and willing to become a party to the aсtion, had a claim that could be “appropriately resolved through the judicial process.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
To be sure, the Supreme Court has frequently said that а federal court’s constitutional authority to hear the merits of a case must be established at the outset of the litigation. See, e.g., Mollan v. Torrance,
But the jurisdiction-at-commencement rule is not absolute. “In cases where the plaintiff lacked initial standing or the case suffered from some other jurisdictional defect at the time suit is сommenced, the Supreme Court’s cases are less than clear as to whether and how a jurisdictional defect can be remedied in the course of litigation.” Schreiber Foods, Inc. v. Beatrice Cheese, Inc.,
Moreover, in the case of a substitution request such as in Zurich Insurance Co., allowing substitution may be “‘the wiser answer to the problem of expediting trials and avoiding unnecessary delay and expense of requiring an action to be started anew where a substitution is desired though the subject matter of the actions remains identical.’ ” Park B. Smith, Inc. v. CHF Indus. Inc.,
Any other rule would be highly technical without meaningful purpose. The complaint alleged injury at the- hands of the defendants. The suit was to recover therefor. That the recovery, if made, would inure not to the benefit of the nominal plaintiffs, but to that of the [subrogees] ... did not deprive the suit of a status which enabled the [subro-gees] to substitute themselves as plaintiffs and continue the suit in their own names.
Id.
Of course, jurisdictional requirements imposed by the Constitution cannot be cast aside because they are onerous or require expense, or because the results of their application appear unfair or unduly technical. But here the concerns animating a constitutional principle are absent, so it seems to me that praсtical considerations may ultimately prevail.
Concededly, the plaintiffs request in the case at bar to obtain a post-commencement assignment may implicate different concerns than the type of substitution request at issue in Zurich Insurance Co. The latter entails a change in name only, while the former seems to involve a change in the status quo ante, in that Cortlandt would have to obtain title to claims to which it currently lacks title. Even so, having considered this issue in the course of reaching a result on other legal grounds, I have come to doubt that our Court should, when directly confronted by the issue, adopt the categorical approach taken the by the Sixth Circuit.
A separate opinion explained that Zurich Switzerland and American Guarantee were "sister companies under the common ownership of a single corporate entity.” Zurich Insurance Co.,
