Plаintiff El-Sayed Dahman brought this age-discrimination suit against both his former employer, the Embassy of Qatar, and the State of Qatar, alleging that they violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act and the District of Columbia Human Rights Act in terminating him from his position as an accountant. Defendants never appeared, and Dahman successfully moved for a default judgment on liability. Finally arriving on the scene, Defеndants now move on several grounds both to vacate the default and to dismiss the case. Agreeing that the suit does not belong here, the Court will grant the Motion.
I. Background
As the Court has already treated in detail the facts of this dispute, see Dahman v. Embassy of Qatar,
On December 12, 2017, having received a right-to-sue notice from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commissiоn, Dahman brought this action against the Embassy and the State of Qatar (which, for ease of reference, the Court will refer to jointly as "Qatar") for age discrimination in his termination in violation of the ADEA and the DCHRA.
Three days before the damages hearing set for September 13, 2018, Defendants finally appeared, see ECF Nos. 19-20, and the Court permitted them to file a motion to vacate the liability judgment. See Minute Order of Sept. 13, 2018. Defendants now so move on three grounds: lack of subject-matter jurisdiction pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(4), forum non conveniens pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6), and for several additional reasons having to do with immunity for the State of Qatar and whether Dahman exhausted EEOC remedies. See ECF No. 22 (Motion to Vacate Default). Because the Court will vacate the default judgmеnt on laibility and dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds, it need not address the other two bases for the Motion.
II. Legal Standard
Rule 60(b) provides "[g]rounds for [r]elief from a [f]inal [j]udgment, [o]rder, or [p]roceeding." It enumerates in the first five subsections specific reasons that "[o]n motion and just terms, the court may relieve a party" from final judgment. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(1)-(5). Finally, it stipulates that the court may also do so for "any other reason that justifies relief." Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6). Under this рrovision, the Court has "broad" discretion to grant relief from judgment under "extraordinary circumstances." Salazar v. Dist. of Columbia,
III. Analysis
While courts must typically assure themselves of their own jurisdiction before proceeding to any other determination, see Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
*4Plaintiff rejoins that the Court must begin with jurisdiction because forum non conveniens can only be considered first where jurisdiction "is difficult to determine, and ... forum non conveniens considerations weigh heavily in favor оf dismissal." ECF No. 23 (Opp.) at 13 (quoting Sinochem,
In asserting forum non conveniens here, Qatar argues that the forum-selection clause in Dahman's contract - namely, an arbitration clause - necessitates dismissal. See Atlantic Marine Constr. Co. v. U.S. Dist. Ct.,
The Court, accordingly, will proceed through the two-step examination the Supreme Court has enumerated for a forum non conveniens motion based on a forum-selection clause. See Atlantic Marine,
A. Validity
Dahman's employment contract is a seven-page document that comprehensively covers the terms of his work for the Embassy. It includes provisions for, inter alia , his appointment, medical insurance, schedule, leave, obligations, and termination and associated payments. In addition, it includes an arbitration clause that reads as follows:
All disputes arising under this Local Employment Contract shall first be brought before the Administrative Officer of the Embassy. The Employee shall have the right to appeal any decision by the Administrative Officer to the Ambassador at the Embassy of the State of Qatar ... The decision of the Ambassador shall be final. After exhausting the foregoing dispute resolution procedure, any remaining dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Local Employment Contract, or the *5breach, termination or invalidity thereof, shall be settled exclusively by arbitration... The number of arbitrators shall be three; the place of arbitration shall be Doha, Qatar.
Employment Contract, ¶ 9.1 (emphasis added). In addition, a separate clause stipulates that the "Local Employment Contract, and any related dispute, shall be governed by the laws of the State of Qatar." Id., ¶ 9.6. On its face, then, the contract requires that Dahman's claims be submitted to arbitration in Qatar under the laws of that country. Dahman, however, contests such an interpretation.
He raises two arguments to undermine the validity of the arbitration clause for the purpose of this dispute: first, when he was terminated, the contract had already expired, and the clause thus has no effect; and second, the clause is not applicable to his particular claims here. As to the first, Plaintiff maintains that the "entire discussion of the arbitration clause is inapplicable" because no contract was in force at the time he was terminated. See Opp. at 15. He elaborates that the cоntract "by its own terms necessarily expired when [Dahman] reached the age of 64" in February 2011. Id. (citation omitted); see also Employment Contract, ¶ 7.1 (providing that contract "shall renew automatically, and continue from month-to-month unless terminated in accordance with" procedures in contract, "provided, however, that this [contract] shall expire when [Dahman] reaches the age of 64 years"). Beсause "the contract expired," Plaintiff concludes, for the "several years" he worked after turning 64, "local law necessarily governed the parties' relationship." Opp. at 16.
While appealing at first glance, this position does not accurately reflect the law. Rather, "general principles of contract law teach ... that when a contract lapsеs but the parties to the contract continue to act as if they are performing under a contract, the material terms of the prior contract will survive intact unless either one of the parties clearly and manifestly indicates, through words or through conduct, that it no longer wishes to continue to be bound thereby, or both parties mutually intend that the terms not survive." Luden's Inc. v. Local Uniоn No. 6 of Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco Workers' Intern. Union of Am.,
The rationale for the rule, which applies with full force here, is that "when parties to an ongoing, voluntary, contractual relationship ... behave as before upon the lapse of the contract, barring contrary indications, each party may generally reasonably expect that the lapsed agreement's terms remain thе ones by which the other party will abide." Luden's,
Plaintiff's second contention - namely, that the arbitration clause, by its terms, does not cover his statutory age-discrimination claims - fares no better. He makes a cluster of related points: 1) the arbitration clause does not apply to his "non-contractual based statutory сlaims"; 2) it cannot encompass this "dispute ... precisely governed by U.S. law" because the parties did not "contemplat[e]" "Defendants' violation of U.S. and D.C. statutes"; and 3) it is drafted too narrowly to encompass his discriminatory-termination claim. See Opp. at 16-20.
The first two contentions are easily dispatched because Dahman points to no authority suggesting arbitration clauses do not cover statutory claims as a general matter or that claims arising under U.S. law cannot be submitted to foreign arbitration. Nor does he cite any support for the proposition that the parties here did not intend to arbitrate the violation of these or other statutes. In fact, case law makes clear that arbitration clauses can encompass non-contractual claims, including statutory ones. See Crescent Intern., Inc. v. Avatar Communities, Inc.,
It is equally clear that disputes presenting questions of U.S. law need not necessarily *7be decided in U.S. courts. See Omron Healthcare, Inc. v. Maclaren Exports Ltd.,
The final point - that the arbitration clause is drafted too narrowly to encompass the instant claims - requires a bit more ink. Plaintiff contends that, because the clause provides for arbitration of a dispute "arising under" the contract rather than "arising out of or relating to" it, the clause is comparatively cabined. See Opp. at 15-16 (citing Dowley v. Dewey Ballantine, LLP,
As an initial matter, the Court notes that the arbitration clause in fact contains both"arising under" language and"arising out of or relating to" language. See Employment Contract, ¶ 9.1. Specifically, it provides that "[a]ll disputes arising under this [contract] shall first be brought before the Administrative Officer of thе Embassy." Id. Once the intra-Embassy decisional process is exhausted, then "any remaining dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this [contract], or the breach, termination, or invalidity thereof, shall be settled exclusively by arbitration." Id. To the extent, therefore, that Dahman hangs his hat on the argument that the clause contains only - in his view, comparatively narrow - "arising under" language, that emphasis is puzzling, since the provision contains both phrases. If Plaintiff is making an argument that the initial "arising under" language limits the subsequent "arising out of and relating to" provision, the Court is not persuaded. The addition of the "relating to" language reflects an intent for a potentially broader range of claims to be brought before the arbitrator than could be brought in the intra-Embassy process; othеrwise, the language is superfluous. Likewise, while the contract provides that "[a]ll disputes" must go through the exhaustion procedure, "any remaining dispute, controversy or claim"- a broader class of issues - goes to arbitration. Id. (emphases added).
To give these textual additions meaning, the Court must conclude that any controversy "arising out of or relating to" the contract must be submitted to arbitration. Far from being a narrow mandate, the clause in Dahman's contract therefore has expansive reach. See Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
*8Finally, his insistence that his сlaim is not about his termination, but rather about discrimination, is at best a stretch. The whole thrust of his suit is that Qatar terminated him for improper reasons. The ending of his employment is unquestionably related to his employment and the contract that governed it.
B. Public-Interest Factors
The Court turns next to the second inquiry: whether Dahman, as the party opposing enforcement of a valid forum-selection clause, has "[borne] the burden of showing that public-interest factors overwhelmingly disfavor a transfer." Atlantic Marine,
As an initial matter, Plaintiff has not carried his burden to show that his claims would not be addressed adequately in Qatar. He asserts without citation that "Defendants' discrimination ... inside [D.C.] would not be held to the same high standard of social justice in Qatar as it would here in Washington." Opp. at 26. This falls short of an actual showing that he could not bring and receive relief for a substantially similar claim in the foreign forum. Plaintiff elaborates that "[f]orcing the parties ... to arbitrate [the] age discrimination claim in Qatar ... would directly contravene the ADEA's goal of deterring the setting of arbitrary age limits and the DCHRA's strong public policy of ending age discrimination in [D.C.] and thе legislative intent of the statute." Opp. at 26. As he has never shown that these claims could not be vindicated in Qatar, the conclusion that dismissal would contravene the purposes of ADEA and DCHRA does not follow.
As Qatar may potentially consider the age-discrimination claim, Dahman has not shown that the public interest would "overwhelmingly disfavor" dismissal. Cf. Gilmer,
IV. Conclusion
For these reasons, the Court will grant Defendants' Motion for Vacatur and to dismiss the case. A separate Order so stating will issue this day.
