Plaintiff-appellant Rachel Ehrenfeld appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Richard C. Casey, J.) granting defendant-appellee Khalid Salim Bin Mahfouz’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs action against him for lack of personal jurisdiction under N.Y. C.P.L.R. §§ 302(a)(1) and 302(a)(3) and denying plaintiffs request for jurisdictional discovery.
This case has had an unusual procedural background. Ehrenfeld is the author of Funding Evil: How Terrorism, Is Fi *104 nanced — and How to Stop It, published in 2003, in which she alleged that Mahfouz financially supported terrorism. In 2004, Mahfouz sued Ehrenfeld in London and obtained a default libel judgment against her enjoining the further publication of the statements about Mahfouz in England and Wales. Thereafter, Ehrenfeld sought a declaratory judgment under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, against Mahfouz in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, that (1) Mahfouz could not prevail on a libel claim against her under federal or New York law; and (2) the English judgment would not be enforceable in the United States, and New York in particular, on constitutional and public policy grounds. The district court, sitting in diversity jurisdiction, granted defendant Mahfouz’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs declaratory judgment action for lack of personal jurisdiction over him.
Subsequently, plaintiff appealed to this Court. In June 2007, we affirmed the district court’s judgment as to N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 302(a)(3) and the denial of jurisdictional discovery.
See Ehrenfeld v. Mahfouz,
The New York Court of Appeals accepted certification and in a thorough opinion, filed in December 2007, answered the certified question in the negative.
See Ehrenfeld v. Mahfouz,
The Court of Appeals also declined to assert jurisdiction over defendant on the basis of his refusal to waive the right to enforce the English judgment in New York. The court pointed out that the future implications of potential enforcement of that judgment would “not arise from [defendant’s] invocation of the privileges” of New York laws, but “from an English remedy and plaintiffs unilateral activities in New York.”
Id.
at 511,
Thereafter, we afforded the parties and the amici curiae an opportunity to comment in letter briefs on the decision of the New York Court of Appeals. In response, defendant simply requested that we affirm the district court’s judgment in accordance with the decision of the New York Court of Appeals. By contrast, plaintiff urged us to assert personal jurisdiction over defendant on the ground that the construction of N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 302(a)(1) by the Court of Appeals violates the First Amendment. According to plaintiff, this constitutional issue is not resolved by the Court of Appeals’ answer to the certified question and deserves further analysis by this Court. Alternatively, plaintiff invites us to postpone issuing a final decision until the end of the current New York state legislative session, in deference to the state legislature’s current consideration of a bill that would provide for jurisdiction over Mahfouz.
For a number of reasons, plaintiffs arguments are legally unavailing. First, plaintiff filed her complaint in the district court in December 2004 and up to this point has apparently not raised a federal constitutional challenge to a reading of N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 302(a)(1) that would deny jurisdiction over defendant.
To be sure, plaintiff sought a declaration from the district court that enforcement of the English judgment in the United States would contravene the First Amendment.
Ehrenfeld v. Mahfouz,
No. 04 civ. 9641,
Plaintiff, however, has not made the argument that the First Amendment would compel us to assert jurisdiction over defendant in any case, regardless of the reading by the Court of Appeals of the state long-arm statute. Plaintiff had the opportunity to make the argument to Judge Casey in the district court and in this Court. Her failure to mount an attack on First Amendment grounds against denial of personal jurisdiction over defendant Mahfouz at any prior stage of this prolonged litigation in the federal courts amounts to a waiver of the claim.
See United States v. Braunig,
Finally, we must decline plaintiffs invitation to refrain from disposing of the remaining issue in this appeal until the New York state legislature has had an opportunity to act upon a proposed amendment to New York’s long-arm statute that could confer jurisdiction over defendant. Whether the bill will be passed, and what the provisions of the new section of the longarm statute may be if the bill is passed, “are entirely in the field of uncertain speculation.”
Moore v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue,
Conclusion
Plaintiff asks us to disregard the decision of New York’s highest court on a controlling jurisdictional issue that requires us to interpret and apply New York law. This we cannot do. “[T]he interpretation placed by the highest court of the state upon it statutes is conclusive here.”
Smiley v. Kansas,
Judgment Affirmed.
