Plaintiff-Appellant Elliott Associates, L.P. (“Elliott”) appeals from the amended final judgments entered by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on September 3 and 15, 1998. The district court, after a bench trial, dismissed with prejudice Elliott’s complaints seeking damages for the nonpayment of certain debt by Defendants-Appellees The Republic of Peru (“Peru”) and Banco de la Nación (“Nación”) (together, the “Debtors”) because it found that Elliott had purchased the debt in violation of Section 489 of the New York Judiciary Law (“Section 489”).
See Elliott
Assocs. v.
Republic of Peru,
BACKGROUND
Elliott is an investment fund with its principal offices located in New York City. Elliott was founded by Paul Singer in 1977 and he remains its sole general partner. One of the primary types of instruments that Elliott invests in is the securities of “distressed” debtors, that is, debtors that have defaulted on their payments to creditors. Singer testified that he invests in debt when he believes that the true or “fundamental” value of the debt is greater than the value accorded by the market. Elliott characterizes its approach to its investments as “activist.” Thus, despite sometimes accepting the terms offered to other creditors, Elliott explains that it frequently engages in direct negotiations with the debtor and argues that, as a result, it has occasionally received a greater return than other creditors.
In August or September of 1995, Singer was approached by Jay Newman to discuss investing in distressed foreign sovereign debt. Newman, an independent consultant, had worked in the emerging market debt field at major brokerage houses Lehman Brothers, Dillon Read, and Morgan Stanley, as well as managing his own offshore fund, the Percheron Fund. The secondary market for such debt first developed in the early 1980s when the original lender banks began selling the non-performing debt of countries that had ceased servicing their external debt to other investors, including brokerage firms, in order to reduce the banks’ exposure and to permit them to lend additional funds to developing countries. The Debtors submitted evidence at trial that, from 1993 *366 onwards, Newman had acted with attorney Michael Straus to solicit investors and provide advice to offshore fund Water Street Bank & Trust Company, Ltd.. (“Water Street”). The Debtors alleged that, at Water Street, Newman and Straus purchased the sovereign debt of Poland, Ecuador, Ivory Coast, Panama, and Congo, and filed lawsuits seeking full payment of the debt with Straus acting as the trial counsel. The Debtors’ contention at trial in the instant case was that Newman and Straus moved to Elliott from Water Street because it was a good “substitute plaintiff’ in that it specialized in the purchase of distressed assets, had funds available to invest, and, unlike Water Street, which had refused in discovery to disclose the names of its individual investors, was unconcerned about exposing the identity of its principals.
I.
At Newman’s recommendation, in October 1995, Elliott'purchased approximately $28.75 million (principal amount) of Panamanian sovereign debt for approximately $17.5 million. In July 1996, Elliott brought suit against Panama seeking full payment of the debt. Elliott obtained a judgment and attachment order and, with interest included, ultimately received over $57 million in payment.
At the-time of Elliott’s purchase of Panamanian debt, Panama was finalizing its Brady Plan debt restructuring program. The term “Brady Plan” derives from a March 1989 speech by Nicholas Brady, then Secretary of the United States Treasury, urging commercial lenders to forgive some of the debt that they were owed by less developed countries, restructure what remained, and continue to grant those countries additional loans. See generally, Ross P. Buckley, The Facilitation of the Brady Plan: Emerging Markets Debt Trading From 1989 to 1998, 21 Fordham Int’l L.J. 1802 (1998). Brady Plans contemplate that, in return for such voluntary partial debt forgiveness, the less developed country will submit to an economic austerity program supervised and monitored by the International Monetary Fund (the “IMF”). The purpose of implementing Brady Plans is to avoid the recurrence of debt defaults by less developed countries that have occurred from 1982 onwards. Typically, the terms of a Brady Plan are negotiated with the debtor country by an ad hoc committee of the nation’s largest institutional creditors, generally known as the “Bank Advisory Committee.” The members of the Bank Advisory Committee commit to restructuring the debt that they hold on the agreed terms and those terms are also offered to other creditors. However, while the members of the Bank Advisory Committee usually agree to be bound by the negotiated terms, the other creditors are under no such obligation to accept those terms.
In January 1996, Newman recommended that Elliott purchase Peruvian sovereign debt. Newman testified at trial that he believed that Peruvian sovereign debt was a good investment because of the sweeping economic reforms implemented by President Alberto Fujimori following his election in November 1990 in the wake of a severe six-year recession. Newman testified that he viewed Peru’s Brady Plan, announced in October 1995, as undervaluing Peru’s outstanding debt. In particular, Newman contended that the large commercial bank creditors that made up the Bank Advisory Committee had institutional incentives to accept reduced terms for the debt they held, such as the desire to make additional loans and to operate domestically within the country, and that he believed that the Bank Advisory Committee had not been privy to all material financial information, including Peru’s rumored repurchase of a significant proportion of its debt.
Between January and March 1996, Elliott purchased from international banks ING Bank, N.V. (“ING”) and Swiss Bank Corporation (“Swiss Bank”) approximately $20.7 million (in principal amount) of the *367 working capital debt of Nación and Banco Popular del Peru (“Popular”), a bankrupt Peruvian bank. The debt was sold under a series of twenty-three letter agreements (the “Letter Agreements”). Elliott paid approximately $11.4 million for these debt obligations and all of the debt was guaranteed by Peru pursuant to a written guaranty dated May 31, 1983 (the “Guaranty”). Under their express terms, both the Letter Agreements and the Guaranty were governed by New York law. In connection with this transaction, Elliott executed two separate assignment agreements with ING and Swiss Bank, dated March 29, 1996, and April 19,1996, respectively.
The Peruvian sovereign debt purchased by Elliott was working capital debt, rather than syndicated bank debt. Working capital debt does not involve an agent bank, but instead consists of direct loans between single lenders and borrowers, whereas syndicated bank debt is debt syndicated by a lead bank, which maintains books and records for all holders. Because the buyer has to rely upon the seller, rather than an agent bank, to convey good title, working capital debt typically trades at a discount of several percentage points from syndicated debt. The Debtors argued at trial that Elliott chose to purchase working capital debt because it sold at a greater discount to value than syndicated debt and thus would have more value in a lawsuit seeking full payment of the debt, despite being more difficult to trade on the secondary market due to its illiquidity.
The district court found that the timing of Elliott’s purchases of Peruvian debt and the closing of the assignment agreements paralleled key events in
Pravin Banker Assocs., Ltd. v. Banco Popular del Peru,
On May 1, 1996, Elliott delivered joint notices of the assignments to the Debtors’ reconciliation agent, Morgan Guaranty, to register the debt it had purchased in order that it could obtain its pro rata share of the interest payments the Debtors had promised to make to all creditors. The following day, Elliott notified Nación, Popular, and Peru by letter that it was now one of their creditors and that it wished to initiate discussions regarding repayment. Although a telephone conference call between counsel followed, no negotiations on repayment terms occurred. Rather, the Debtors took the position that Elliott was not a proper assignee because it was not a “financial institution” within the scope of the assignment provision of the Letter Agreements and that Elliott should either transfer the debt to an eligible “financial institution” or else participate in the Brady *368 Plan with the other creditors. 1
On June 25, 1996, after a continued impasse in the parties’ discussions, Elliott formally requested repayment by sending the Debtors a notice of default. The Debtors pointed out at trial that this notice was sent during the voting period on the Term Sheet of Peru’s Brady Plan. The Debtors also noted that, although the Brady Plan negotiations took place from January to June 1996, Elliott did not contact the Bank Advisory Committee to express its views. Ultimately, Peru’s Brady Plan was agreed upon by 180 commercial lenders and suppliers, and entailed, inter alia, an Exchange Agreement under which old Peruvian commercial debt, including the 1983 Letter Agreements, would be exchanged for Brady bonds and cash.
II.
On October 18,1996, ten days before the Exchange Agreement was scheduled to be executed, Elliott filed suit against the Debtors in New York Supreme Court and sought an ex parte order of prejudgment attachment. The Debtors subsequently alleged at trial that the reason for Elliott filing suit at that time was that the collateral for the Brady bonds was United States Treasury bonds, which were held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and thus made suitable assets for attachment. The Exchange Agreement was finally executed on November 8,1996.
Elliott’s suit was subsequently removed to federal district court pursuant to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(d) (1994), where the district court denied Elliott’s motion for prejudgment attachment on December 27, 1996, and its motion for summary judgment on April 29, 1997. After discovery, the case was tried in a bench trial from March 17 to March 25, 1998, and final argument was heard on May 26, 1998.
On August 6, 1998, the district court issued its opinion dismissing Elliott’s complaint on the ground that Elliott’s purchase of the Peruvian debt violated Section 489 of the New York Judiciary Law. The district court found as a fact that “Elliott purchased the Peruvian debt with the intent and purpose to sue.”
Elliott Assocs.,
After making its “Findings of Fact,” the court set forth its “Conclusions of Law.” Applying basic contract law principles, the court first concluded • that Nación had breached the Letter Agreements by failing *369 to pay Elliott the amounts due and owing and that Peru had breached the Guaranty by not paying Elliott the amounts due and owing under the Letter Agreements following Nacion’s default. See id. at 344.
The court then turned to the Debtors’ defense that Elliott’s claim should be dismissed because the assignments were in violation of Section 489 of the New York Judicial Law, which prohibits the purchase of a claim “with the intent and for the purpose of bringing an action or proceeding thereon.” The court explained that while “Elliott’s position is strong as a matter of policy in the world of commerce ... the Court’s role here is not to make policy assessments — to rank its preferences among contract, property, and champerty doctrines.” Id. at 345. The court noted the case law holding that the intent to sue must be primary, not merely contingent or incidental. See id. at 345-46. Examining the legislative history, the court explained that, while Section 489 was originally aimed at attorneys, subsequent revisions indicated an intent to cover “corporations” and “associations.” See id. at 349-50. Moreover, the court observed that “[Section] 489’s roots in the Medieval law of champerty and maintenance provides support for the conclusion that, while not all assignments with the intent to bring suit thereon are barred, assignments taken for the purpose, or motive, of stirring up litigation and profiting thereby are prohibited.” Id. at 351.
The district court then rejected Elliott’s arguments that the statute was only aimed at: (1) suits which have the purpose of obtaining costs; or (2) suits where corporations engage in the unauthorized practice of law by taking claims with the intent to sue on them pro se without hiring counsel. See id. at 351-54. The court also rejected Elliott’s argument that the statute does not apply when all right, title, and interest are conveyed by the assignor. See id. at 354. Finally, the court rejected as without merit Elliott’s arguments that: (1) Elliott, as a limited partnership, is not an “association” within the meaning of the statute; (2) the Debtors’ interpretation of the statute would render it in violation of the Commerce Clause; and (3) the Debtors lacked standing to raise the Section 489 defense because they were not parties to the assignment agreement. See id. at 356 n. 20. Consequently, because Elliott purchased the debt with the intention to bring suit thereon, the court concluded that Elliott’s contracts violated Section 489 and were unenforceable. See id. at 356.
Turning to other arguments and defenses, although Section 3 of Peru’s Guaranty provided that Peru shall pay all guaranteed amounts “regardless of any law, regulation or order now or hereafter in effect in any jurisdiction,” the court rejected Elliott’s argument that this waived Peru’s Section 489 defense, reasoning that Section 489 is a penal law directed at the public interest that cannot be waived. See id. at 356-58. Finally, although not necessary to its disposition, the court rejected Nacion’s argument that it was excused from performance due to impossibility as a result of a Peruvian government decree purportedly removing Nación as a debtor under the Letter Agreements. See id. at 358-60.
The district court entered its judgment dismissing Elliott’s complaint on August 26, 1998. Amended judgments were then issued on September 3 and 15, 1998. Elliott timely filed its notices of appeal on September 18 and 24,1998. After briefing from the parties, as well as the filing of five amicus curiae briefs, this appeal was submitted for our decision following oral argument on May 5, 1999. We have jurisdiction to decide this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1994).
DISCUSSION
I.
A.
As an initial matter, while in agreement that the district court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error,
see
Fed.
*370
R.Civ.P. 52(a), the parties dispute the appropriate level of deference to be given to the district court’s interpretation of Section 489 of the New York Judiciary Law. The Debtors urge that we follow this court’s statement in
Ewing v. Ruml,
In determining the law of the State of New York, “we will consider not only state statutes but also state decisional law.”
Bank of New York v. Amoco Oil Co.,
B.
Besides arguing for reversal, Elliott has moved for the alternative relief of certifying the issue of the interpretation of Section 489 to the New York Court of Appeals pursuant to Second Circuit Rule § 0.27.
See also
New York Court of Appeals Rule 500.17 (permitting that court to accept and decide such certified questions). This court has explained that “issues of state law are not to be routinely certified to the'highest court[] of New York ... simply because a certification procedure is available. The procedure must not be a device for shifting the burdens of this Court to those whose burdens are at least as great.”
Kidney v. Kolmar Labs., Inc.,
*371 II.
A.
The pivotal issue upon which this appeal necessarily turns is whether, within the meaning of Section 489 of the New York Judiciary Law, Elliott’s purchase of Peruvian sovereign debt was “with the intent and for the purpose of bringing an action or proceeding thereon,” thereby rendering the purchase a violation of law. Because the proper interpretation of Section 489 is at the heart of our decision, we quote it in its entirety below:
§ 489. Purchase of claims by corporations or collection agencies
No person or co-partnership, engaged directly or indirectly in the business of collection and adjustment of claims, and no corporation or association, directly or indirectly, itself or by or through its officers, agents or employees, shall solicit, buy or take an assignment of, or be in any manner interested in buying or taking an assignment of a bond, promissory note, bill of exchange, book debt, or other thing in action, or any claim or demand, with the intent and for the purpose of bringing an action or proceeding thereon; provided however, that bills receivable, notes receivable, bills of exchange, judgments or other things in action may be solicited, bought, or assignment thereof taken, from any executor, administrator, assignee for the benefit of creditors, trustee or receiver in bankruptcy, or any other person or persons in charge of the administration, settlement or compromise of any estate, through court actions, proceedings or otherwise. Nothing herein contained shall affect any assignment heretofore or hereafter taken by any moneyed corporation authorized to do business in the state of New York or its nominee pursuant to a subrogation agreement or a salvage operation, or by any corporation organized for religious, benevolent or charitable purposes.
Any corporation or association violating the provisions of this section shall be liable to a fine of not more than five thousand dollars; any person or co-partnership, violating the provisions of this section, and any officer, trustee, director, agent or employee of any person, co-partnership, corporation or association violating this section who, directly or indirectly, engages or assists in such violation, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
N.Y. Jud. § 489 (McKinney 1983) (emphasis added).
In interpreting Section 489, we are guided by the principle that we “look first to the plain language of a statute and interpret it by its ordinary, common meaning.”
Luyando v. Grinker,
B.
Parsing the plain language of Section 489 offers little helpful guidance as to the intended scope of the provision. The statutory language simply provides that certain types of people or entities are prohibited from soliciting, buying or taking by assignment, particular types of debt instruments “with the intent and for the purpose of bringing an action or proceeding thereon.” On its face, this statutory command might appear to be remarkably broad in scope, forbidding essentially all “secondary” transactions in debt instruments where the purchaser had an intent to enforce the debt obligation through litigation. However, ambiguity resides in the term “with the intent and for the purpose of bringing an action or proceeding thereon.” The nature of the proscribed intent and purpose is unclear. After reviewing the pertinent New York state decisions interpreting Section 489, we are convinced that, if the New York Court of Appeals, not us, were hearing this appeal, it would rule that the acquisition of a debt with intent to bring suit against the debtor is not a violation of the statute where, as here, the primary purpose of the suit is the collection of the debt acquired. Consequently we must reverse the judgment of the district court.
C.
The predecessor statute to Section 489 of the New York Judiciary Law was enacted at least as early as 1813. However, its origins are even more archaic. New York courts have recognized that “ § 489[is] the statutory codification of the ancient doctrine of champerty.”
Ehrlich v. Rebco Ins. Exch., Ltd.,
While New York courts have not been unwilling to characterize Section 489 as a champerty statute, it is apparent that they have consistently interpreted the statute as proscribing something narrower than merely “maintaining a suit in return for a financial interest in the outcome.” Indeed, far from prohibiting the taking of a financial interest in the outcome of a lawsuit, payment of attorneys by fees contingent upon the outcome of litigation is expressly permissible in New York by statute and court rule. See N.Y. Jud. Law § 474-a (McKinney 1986) (setting forth maximum permissible contingent fees in medical, dental, or podiatric malpractice claims); N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 22. § 603.7 (1999) (setting forth maximum permissible contingent fees in personal injury, wrongful death, and certain other claims).
A strong indication of the limited scope of the statute is provided by several early New York cases discussing Section 489’s predecessor statutes. In
Baldwin v. Lat-
*373
son,
The statute was also at issue in
Mann v. Fairchild,
14 Barbour 548,
An even clearer indiction of the limited purpose of the statute is provided by the opinions of the two justices writing in
Goodell v. The People,
5 Parker Crim. R. 206,
That the law of 1818, and previous laws on the subject, were intended to reach a class of men who make a practice, either directly or indirectly, of buying small notes of fifty dollars and upwards, and then prosecuting them in courts of record, in the old common pleas, or in the Supreme Court, and make the defendants pay large bills of costs, even when the suit was undefended, there can be, I think, no doubt. Hence, it was entitled an act to prevent abuses, and to regulate costs. The law was aimed at attorneys in courts of record, who were the parties receiving the costs, and who thus oppressed debtors by unexpected and unnecessary prosecutions.
Id. at 207 (emphasis in original). Justice Parker, writing separately, agreed that the statute was intended to prevent attorneys from buying debts as an expedient vehicle for obtaining costs. As he explained:
The purchasing of debts by attorneys, with the intent to bring suits upon them in justices’ courts, does not seem to me to be within the mischief which the statute was intended to guard against. No costs being allowed to an attorney in a justice’s court, he has no object in buying debts to sue in that court, and I can see neither opportunity nor temptation for him to advance his pecuniary interests by so doing. As he has no temptation to litigate, as a party, in justices’ courts, no litigation is induced by his freedom from restraint in that direction ....
Id. at 211.
The seminal New York Court of Appeals case of
Moses v. McDivitt,
to compel the defendant, as a condition of the extension of the time of payment, to assign to him certain stock in a publishing company in which he was interested, in order that the plaintiff might thereby control an election of directors of the company, which was about to take place, or to elect plaintiff president of the company at such election.
Id. at 66-67. The trial judge charged the jury, as paraphrased by the Court of Appeals:
that if the plaintiff purchased the bond simply for the purpose of obtaining the control of the stock, and not for the purpose of bringing suit upon it, he had not violated the statute; but that, if they found that he had bought it with the intention of bringing suit upon it, then, whatever else there might be about it, or however necessary he might have considered it that he should thus fortify himself, he violated the statute.... [Moreover,] if his intention in buying it was to use it to compel the defendant to do a particular thing, as to assign stock for instance, and if he would not comply with his wishes to sue [on] it, that would be a violation of the statute.
Id. at 67. The Court of Appeals reversed, explaining that:
a mere intent to bring a suit on a claim purchased does not constitute the offense; the purchase must be made for the very purpose of bringing such suit, and this implies an exclusion of any other purpose. As the law now stands, an attorney is not prohibited from ... purchasing bonds ... or other choses in action, either for investment or for profit, or for the protection of other interests, and such purchase is not made illegal by the existence of the intent on his part at the time of the purchase, which must always exist in the case of such purchases, to bring suit upon them if necessary for their collection. To constitute the offense the primary purpose of the purchase must be to enable him to bring a suit, and the intent to bring a suit must not be merely incidental and contingent. The object of the statute ... was to prevent attorneys, etc., from purchasing things in action for the purpose of obtaining costs by the prosecution thereof, and it was not intended to prevent a purchase for the purpose of protecting some other right of the as-signee.
Id. at 65 (emphasis added). Consequently, even though the “primary purpose” of the plaintiff was to induce the defendant to assign his stock, the court concluded that:
[t]his purpose, whether honest or reprehensible, was not within the prohibition of the statute. The intent to sue upon the bond was secondary and contingent. ... Under these circumstances it cannot be said that the purpose of the purchase of the bond was to bring a suit upon it. This purpose did not enter into the purchase any more than it would have done had the plaintiff bought the bond as an investment, but with the intention of collecting it by suit if compelled to resort to that means for obtaining payment. The real question upon which the case turned was, whether the main and primary purpose of the purchase was to bring a suit and make costs, or whether the intention to sue ivas only secondary and contingent, and the suit was to be resorted to only for the protection of the rights of the plaintiff, in case the primary purpose of the purchase should be frustrated.
Id. at 67-68 (emphasis added).
The continuing vitality of the distinction drawn in
Moses
between cases involving
*375
an impermissible “primary” purpose of bringing suit and those where the intent to sue is merely “secondary and contingent” is confirmed by the post-Moses case law. There are only two Court of Appeals cases decided after
Moses
discussing the interpretation of Section 489 or any of its predecessors.
2
In
Sprung v. Jaffe,
The
Moses
approach was again followed in
Fairchild Hiller Corp. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
In
Limpar Realty Corp. v. Uswiss Realty Holding, Inc.,
Other First Department cases are similarly consistent with
Moses
and its progeny.
See, e.g., 1015 Gerard Realty Corp.,
The Second Department has similarly been consistent in adhering to the interpretation of Section 489 set forth in
Moses. See, e.g., G.G.F. Dev. Corp. v. Andreadis,
Although offering fewer precedents on the issue than the Appellate Divisions of the other two Departments, the Appellate Divisions of the Third and Fourth Departments have also been consistent in interpreting Section 489 and its predecessors in conformity with
Moses.
Thus, for example in
Beers v. Washbond,
D.
The cases, spread over more than a century, are not always entirely clear or plainly consistent. Thus the district court found some basis for its construction of the coverage of Section 489 to include Elliott’s purchase of the Peruvian debt. We do not agree, however, with this interpretation.
*378
Furthermore, in light of the case law surveyed above, we do not agree with the district court that
Moses
in conjunction with later New York case law “provides little guidance for construing the statute’s proper scope.”
Elliott Assocs.,
Even accepting as correct the facts as found by the district court, we see no meaningful distinction between Elliott’s conduct and the conduct
Moses
expressly states to be outside of the scope of the statute. Here, the district court found that Elliott was the lawful assignee of Nacion’s Letter Agreements, that Peru had guaranteed those Letter Agreements, and that both Peru and Nación are liable to Elliott as a result of Nacion’s failure to pay the amounts due and owing under the Letter Agreements.
See Elliott Assocs.,
In purchasing the Peruvian debt the district court found that Elliott’s principal aim was to obtain full payment. As it expressly found, “Elliott’s primary goal in investing in Peruvian debt was to be paid in full.” Id. at 339. Moreover, the district court found that if the Debtors did not pay in full, it was Elliott’s intent to sue for such payment. Thus, the district court quotes twice the statement of Singer, Elliott’s president, that “Peru would either ... pay us in full or be sued.” Id. at 335, 339. The district court reasoned that Elliott’s “investment strategy ... to be paid in full or sue ... equated to an intent to sue because [it] knew Peru would not, under the circumstances, pay in full.” Id. at 343. We cannot agree with the district court’s equating of Elliott’s intent to be paid in full, if necessary by suing, with the primary intent to sue prohibited by Sec *379 tion 489 as delineated by Moses and the related case law.
First, any intent on Elliott’s part to bring suit against the Debtors was “incidental and contingent” as those terms are used in Moses and the New York case law. It was “incidental” because, as the district court acknowledges, Elliott’s “primary goal” in purchasing the debt was to be paid in full. That Elliott had to bring suit to achieve that “primary goal” was therefore “incidental” to its achievement. Elliott’s suit was also “contingent” because, had the Debtors agreed to Elliott’s request for the money that the district court found Elliott was owed under the Letter Agreements and the Guaranty, then there would have been no lawsuit. Elliott’s intent to file suit was therefore contingent on the Debtors’ refusal of that demand. Although the district court found that Elliott “knew Peru would not, under the circumstances, pay in full,” id. at 343, this does not make Elliott’s intent to file suit any less contingent. As acknowledged by counsel at oral argument, the Debtors could have paid but chose not to pay in order to avoid jeopardizing Peru’s Brady Plan.
Second,
Moses
specifically states that conduct not proscribed by the statute includes where “the plaintiff bought the bond as an investment, but with the intention of collecting it by suit if compelled to resort to that means for obtaining payment.”
Moses,
As is often the case in complex and well-argued appeals such as this, there are competing policy interests at stake. However, in
Pravin Banker Associates, Ltd. v. Banco Popular Del Peru,
First, the United States encourages participation in, and advocates the success of, IMF foreign debt resolution procedures under the Brady Plan. Second, the United States has a strong interest in ensuring the enforceability of valid debts under the principles of contract law, and in particular, the continuing enforceability of foreign debts owed to United States lenders. This second interest limits the first so that, although the United States advocates negotiations to effect debt reduction and continued lending to defaulting foreign sovereigns, it maintains that creditor participation in *380 such negotiations should be on a strictly voluntary basis. It also requires that debts remain enforceable throughout the negotiations.
Id. at 855 (citations omitted). The district court’s statutory interpretation here would appear to be inconsistent with this analysis. Rather than furthering the reconciled goal of voluntary creditor participation and the enforcement of valid debts, the district court’s interpretation of Section 489 effectively forces creditors such as Elliott to participate in an involuntary “cram-down” procedure and makes the debt instruments unenforceable in the courts once the Bank Advisory Committee has reached an “agreement in principle” in the Brady negotiations. Undermining the voluntary nature of Brady Plan participation and rendering otherwise valid debts unenforceable cannot be considered to be in New York’s interest, as made plain by this court in Pravin Banker.
Given the mandate that “whenever possible, statutes should be interpreted to avoid unreasonable results,”
Dougherty v. Carver Fed. Sav. Bank,
The interpretation posited by the district court would also create “a perverse result” because it “would permit defendants to create a champerty defense by refusing to honor their loan obligations.”
Banque de Gestion Privee-Sib v. La Republica de Paraguay,
Although all debt purchases would be affected by the district court’s expansive reading of Section 489, high-risk debt purchases would be particularly affected because of the increased likelihood of nonpayment in such transactions leading to the likely necessity of legal action to obtain payment. As ably pointed out by Elliott and the various amici curiae, such increased risks could be expected to increase the costs of trading in high-risk debt under New York law and thereby encourage potential parties to such transactions to conduct their business elsewhere. Moreover, the increased risks are particularly onerous because they premise the validity of the transaction on no more than the buyer’s subjective intent, which intent is not always readily ascertainable by the seller, and can only be conclusively resolved by ex post facto litigation. While the Debtors argue that the district court’s interpretation of Limpar creates an “on-going dis *381 pute safe harbor” that would limit these effects, as explained above we do not find this interpretation of Limpar compelling and, in any event, such a safe harbor would not eliminate the enhanced risks but merely reduce them.
E.
Elliott has also raised three other grounds for reversing the district court’s judgments. First, that, as a limited partnership, it is not an entity covered by Section 489; second, that the district court’s fact findings were clearly erroneous; and, third, that Peru’s Guaranty was erroneously misinterpreted not to be a permissible waiver of its Section 489 defense. Because we reverse the district court for the reason that it erroneously interpreted Section 489, we need not reach any of these issues. Consequently, we neither express nor imply any view as to any of these issues.
CONCLUSION
We hold that, in light of the pertinent New York precedent and compelling policy considerations, the district court erroneously interpreted Section 489 of the New York Judiciary Law. In particular, we hold that Section 489 is not violated when, as here, the accused party’s “primary goal” is found to be satisfaction of a valid debt and its intent is only to sue absent full performance. Given that, notwithstanding the Section 489 issue, the district court found the Letter Agreements and Guaranty to have been breached by the Debtors, we remand only for the purpose of calculating damages more accurately than the approximate figures given in the district court’s opinion and the possible resolution of other attendant damages-related issues.
Accordingly, the judgments of the district court are reversed and the case is remanded.
Notes
. The Debtors’ arguments regarding the interpretation of the "financial institutions” clause in the assignment provision of the Letter Agreements had previously been rejected by the district court in
Prnvin Banker,
which ruling was subsequently affirmed by this court.
See Pravin Banker Assocs., Ltd. v. Banco Popular Del Peru,
. In
Wetmore v. Hegemon,
