OPINION AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
In order to determine whether this Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action, I must resolve thorny questions of first impression under Russian law. In earlier litigation among these parties, the Second Circuit ruled that plaintiffs Federal Treasury Enterprise So-juzplodoimport (“FTE”) and OAO “Moscow Distillery Crista!!” (“Crista!!”) lacked standing to assert claims under Section 32(1) of the Lanham Act.
Since issuing the August 2014 Opinion, the Court has heard extensive expert testimony, pursuant to Rule 44.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“Rule”), on the relevant Russian law issues impacting Lanham Act standing. In light of this expert testimony, I again address the question of whether plaintiffs have standing to bring their remaining claims.
II. BACKGROUND
A. The Second Circuit Holding and FTE’s Response
This case concerns defendants’ alleged misappropriation of U.S. trademarks— namely the iconic Stolichnaya vodka brand — which FTE claims to own. As noted above, in August 2013, the Second Circuit held that FTE lacked standing to sue for trademark infringement because even though the Russian Federation “entrusted [FTE] with responsibility for using and enforcing the [trademarks], it had not assigned the trademarks to FTE.”
Defendants moved to dismiss FTE’s claims in their entirety pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), arguing, inter alia, that the Assignment and Decree 69 still failed as a matter of Russian law to confer full ownership rights of the trademarks to FTE. The August 2014 Opinion granted defendants’ motion as to plaintiffs’ non-Lanham Act claims on the ground of res judicata; however, the Court denied defendants’ motion as to FTE’s Lanham Act claims for trademark infringement, contributory infringement, rectification of register, and cancellation of registration.
B. Rule 44.1 Expert Testimony
Accordingly, pursuant to Rule 44.1, the parties offered expert reports and two days of expert testimony regarding relevant Russian law. On October 28, 2014, the Court heard summations.
Critical to both of these questions is* an October 2014 amendment to the Russian Civil Code (the “Amendment”), which took effect just days before the expert reports were filed.
III. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Rule 12(b)(1) provides for the dismissal of a claim when a federal court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. A federal court has an independent duty to determine that it has- subject matter jurisdiction and, pursuant to Rule 12(h)(3), may raise the issue sua sponte at any time.
“In reviewing a facial attack to the [C]ourt’s jurisdiction, we draw all facts — which we assume to be true unless contradicted by more specific allegations or documentary evidence — from the complaint and from the exhibits attached thereto.”
B. Foreign Law Expert Testimony Under Rule 44.1
Pursuant to Rule 44.1, “[i]n determining foreign law, the court may consider any relevant material or source, including testimony, whether or not submitted by a party or admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence.”
IY. APPLICABLE LAW
A. Lanham Act Standing
Section 32(1) of the Lanham Act “protects only registered trademarks.”
Courts in the Second Circuit have long held that “a party is not an assign for standing purposes under the Lanham Act unless that party owns the mark at issue.”
B. Relevant Russian Law
Because of the Lanham Act’s requirement that an “assign” own the trademark
1. The Civil Code and Decree 69
'Russia is a civil law country.
The Civil Code itself is divided into four parts.
The Code is divided further into sections, numbered consecutively. Sections 1 and 2 are contained within Part 1 of the Civil Code; Section 7, which includes the Amendment and specific rules regarding trademarks and intellectual property, is contained within Part 4 of the Civil Code.
2. Unitary Enterprises and Operative Management
As explained in Section 1 of the Civil Code, a treasury enterprise, such as FTE, is a “unitary enterprise,” which is defined by Article 113 of the Civil Code as “a commercial organization which has not been granted the right of ownership of the property assigned to it by the owner.”
The limited rights of property ownership in operative management are described in Section 2 of the Civil Code, specifically in Articles 296 and 297.
3. Property Rights and Trademarks
The crux of the experts’ disagreement regarding the Russian law applicable to this case is how to define “property” under the Russian Civil Code. Throughout two days of testimony, none of the experts
Part 4 of the Civil Code addresses intellectual property. Article 1226, entitled “Intellectual Rights,” provides as follows:
Intellectual rights, which include an exclusive right that is a property right, and in instances provided for by the present Code, also personal nonproperty rights and other rights ... shall be deemed results of intellectual activity and means of individualization equated thereto (results of intellectual activity and means of individualization).51
Article 1227, the third paragraph of which constitutes the Amendment, provides that:
(1) Intellectual rights do not depend upon the right of ownership and other rights in things to the physical carrier (or thing) in which the respective result of intellectual activity (or means of individualization) is expressed.
(2) The transfer of the right of ownership to a thing does not entail the transfer or granting of the intellectual rights to the result of intellectual activity or to the means of individualization expressed in this thing, with the exception of the case provided by the second subparagraph of Paragraph 1 of Article 1291 of the present Code.
(3)The rules of Section II of the present Code shall not he applied to the intellectual rights unless otherwise established by the rules of the present Section.52
Article 128, in Part 1, Section 1 of the Civil Code, is entitled “Objects of Civil Law Rights.”
A separate statutory type of law inferior to the Civil Code, Law 161, states that a unitary enterprise “is entitled to hold stamps and blanks with its firm name, its own emblem as well as the trademark registered under the established procedure, and other means of individualization.”
A legal person may possess civil law rights corresponding to the purposes of the activities specified in its foundation documents, and bear the responsibilities associated with these activities. Commercial organizations, with the exception of unitary enterprises and other types of organizations specified by law, may possess civil law rights and bear civil responsibilities necessary for conducting any types of activities not prohibited by law.59
C. The Act of State Doctrine
“[T]he act of state doctrine [] concerns foreign governments’ conduct within their own territory: it holds that generally ‘the courts of this country [will not] inquir[e] into the validity of the public acts [of] a recognized foreign sovereign power committed within its own territory.’ ”
V. DISCUSSION
To determine whether FTE has standing, I must decide one overarching question: does FTE have a sufficient ownership interest in the trademarks at issue pursuant to the Assignment and Decree 69 to qualify as an “assign” under the Lan-ham Act? As will become quickly apparent, the task of answering this question is extremely difficult because it requires a U.S. court, which lacks any familiarity with Russian law, to address issues of first impression under Russian law. After hearing two days of expert testimony and several hours of thorough and thoughtful summations, I have decided that the answers to these novel issues resolve the Lanham Act standing question in favor of defendants, although this is undoubtedly a close call.
Because of the murkiness of Russian law regarding these questions of first impression, it is helpful to frame the Court’s approach to resolving them. The first question is whether, under the Russian Civil Code, trademarks are “property rights” such that they can only be held in operative management. If the answer is no, then the inquiry ends. FTE is the exclusive holder of the trademarks pursuant to Decree 69 and the Assignment, qualifying as an “assign” under the Lan-ham Act, and has standing. If the answer to the first question is yes, the next question is whether, through the Assignment and Decree 69, the Federation effectively consented to dispose of its ownership interest in the trademarks under the operative management consent provisions of Articles 296 and 297. If the answer to this second question is no, then FTE lacks standing; if yes, it has standing. And, if FTE has standing, the final issue, which pertains only to the Allied Domecq and WGS defendants — is whether the Assignment and Decree 69 conferred on FTE the right to sue for past damages. With this framework, I now turn to the experts’ arguments.
A. Overview of Experts’ Arguments
1. FTE’s Expert
Mr. Muranov’s thesis is that the legal regime of rights in rem, which governs physical, tangible property, is not applicable to intellectual property rights.
According to Mr. Muranov, this duality changed with the Amendment, which states that the rules of Section 2 of the Civil Code, a section which, in part, governs the ownership rights of unitary enterprises, do not apply to intellectual property rights.
However, assuming arguendo that FTE could not hold the trademarks outside of operative management, and that the Amendment does not apply, Mr. Muranov believes that the Assignment and Decree-69 give FTE the Russian Federation’s pri- or, irrevocable consent to dispose of trademarks at FTE’s discretion, leaving FTE with sufficient ownership rights in the trademarks at issue to have Lanham Act standing. The basis for his argument is Article 297 of the Civil Code, which states that a unitary enterprise may dispose of its property “with the consent of the owner of the property.”
2. SPI’s Expert
Mr. Gladyshev dismisses Mr. Muranov’s historical perspective and the relevance of the Amendment t'o the trademarks at issue, . instead offering a straightforward, seemingly simplistic structural analysis of certain Civil Code provisions to support his position that FTE still holds the trademarks under operative management. None of these provisions are contained within Section 2 of the Civil Code — the section affected by the Amendment.
Mr. Gladyshev’s argument proceeds as follows. Article 1226 of the Civil Code (in Part 4, which addresses intellectual property rights) defines “intellectual rights” as “including] an exclusive right that is a property right.”
To the extent that Decree 69, the Assignment, and the Amendment conflict with the above provisions, Mr. Gladyshev believes that the proper method of inter
As for the Amendment, Mr. Gladyshev testified that the only published legal analysis regarding FTE’s ownership rights in intellectual property since the enactment of the Amendment clarifies that FTE does not, and cannot, own state property, tangible or intangible.?
Mr. Gladyshev also rejects FTE’s alternative argument regarding consent. At bottom, Mr. Gladyshev contends that there is no such concept in Russian law as “a blanket consent.”
3. Allied Domecq’s and WGS’ Expert
On behalf of Allied Domecq and WGS, Mr. Newcity offers an additional argument: even if the Assignment effectively transferred exclusive rights to the trademarks at issue to FTE, the Assignment did not transfer to FTE the right to sue for past damages on those trademarks. Mr. Newcity offers several arguments in support of this contention, but they all boil down to this: regardless of the law regarding rights to trademarks, the right to sue
B. FTE Cannot Hold Trademarks Outside of Operative Management
Based on the evidence before the Court, I find that FTE cannot hold exclusive rights to trademarks outside of operative management. This has not been an easy decision. I am somewhat uncomfortable telling a foreign government that a validly enacted decree cannot achieve the result that was clearly intended by its passage. I am also uncomfortable interpreting various sections of the laws of a foreign country — which I can only review in imperfect translation' — when those sections have not yet been addressed and defined by the courts of that country. But Rule 44.1 requires me to determine the relevant foreign law in a dispute pending in a U.S. court: While I can rely on all available sources, and credit whatever expert testimony I choose, there is one thing I cannot do which would be the most helpful. I cannot certify these unsettled questions of Russian law to the Russian courts.
1. Mr. Muranov’s Argument Lacks Sufficient Support
Mr. Muranov’s argument, which hinges on a distinction between rights in rem and the legal regime of intellectual property, while persuasive at first blush, lacks sufficient support in Russian case law and the Civil Code. Because the instant case is factually distinguishable from all of the Russian cases Mr, Muranov and Mr. Gla-dyshev cite in support of their respective arguments regarding FTE’s ownership rights in trademarks, I must rely predominantly on the Civil Code.
There is indeed some support in the Civil Code for Mr. Muranov’s core argument. Article 128, the all-important “bridge” defendants must cross from Arti-
The problem for Mr. Muranov and FTE, though, is that there is little or no support in case law and other provisions of the Civil Code for this distinction. While Article 1478 and Law 161 suggest that a unitary enterprise can hold trademarks, the context of Law 161 undermines Mr. Mura-nov’s argument. At most, I can conclude that FTE may be entitled to hold a trademark representing its own identity.
2. The Amendment Does Not Clarify or Confirm FTE’s Legal Capacity to Hold Trademarks Outside of Operative Management
To that end, Mr. Muranov argues that the distinction is codified — at least as of October 1, 2014 — in the Amendment. The Amendment does state that the rules of Section 2 do not apply to intellectual rights.
Unfortunately for FTE, there is no concrete evidence, case law, or statutory language supporting Mr. Muranov’s stance on the purpose of the Amendment. Section 2 of the' Civil Code contains many provisions that have nothing to do with unitary enterprises. And, while Mr. Muranov’s report notes that in 2009 a Russian Federation commission recommended that legislators more clearly distinguish between intellectual property and rights in rem regimes, there is no evidence that the Amendment was drafted in response to this recommendation. Nor is there any evidence that the legislative body — the drafters and revisers of the Civil Code — ever considered the recommendation, which emanated from the American equivalent, roughly, of the executive branch.
Also harmful to Mr. Muranov’s position is the Rosalcohol Note. To the extent a major scholarly debate exists — and that I should read the Amendment as contributing to the resolution of it — the only official Russian legal position regarding unitary enterprises’ ownership rights in trademarks published after the Amendment took effect still states that a unitary enterprise cannot own physical property or intellectual property, including trademarks. Mr. Muranov’s only response is that the drafters of it were mistaken.
A possible explanation is that Rosalcohol never considered the Amendment as having any impact on the debate, in the same way that Mr. Gladyshev did not consider the Amendment in his expert report. Maybe the Rosalcohol Note’s post-Amendment release was simply fortuitous timing for defendants. However, the Rosalcohol Note could just as easily, if not more easily, be viewed as additional evidence in support of the Amendment’s irrelevance. Rosalcohol and Mr. Gladyshev never considered the Amendment because the Amendment did not influence the debate. If this debate was prevalent prior to the Amendment — and for Mr. Muranov’s argument to carry the day, then it must have been prevalent — why would the Russian legislature not address the issue directly? I am not convinced that the legislative body would draft the Amendment to resolve a major debate with significant historical underpinnings regarding the rights of unitary enterprises without so much as using the term “unitary enterprises” in the language of the Amendment, or even referencing a specific article or set of artides in the Civil Code governing unitary enterprises. All that the Amendment offers in this regard is a broad reference to Section
Finally, the structure of the Civil Code lends additional support to Mr. Gladysh-ev’s position. Even if the provisions of Section 2 have been affected by the Amendment, the provisions of Section 1, which the Amendment does not affect, are essentially the building blocks of the Civil Code and control all other parts of it.
C. The Assignment Is Not a Blanket Consent
The question of whether the Assignment could operate as blanket consent for FTE to dispose of the trademarks at will is somewhat easier to resolve. While Articles 296 and 297 of the Civil Code undoubtedly contemplate giving a unitary enterprise enough ownership rights in property to dispose of such property with proper consent, the legal .sufficiency of such consent is governed by Article 157.1.
FTE cannot dodge the weight of authority and the Civil Code to find legally effective blanket consent. Mr. Muranov attempts to cherry-pick language for the relevant Russian case interpreting Article 157.1, noting that the omission of certain terms of the transaction for which consent is sought may be permissible depending upon the relationship of the parties.
D. The Assignment Did Not Transfer to FTE the Right to Sue for Past Damages
FTE has not provided the Court with any convincing evidence that the right to sue for past damages can be held outside of operative management. Mr. Neweity’s testimony elucidates that this right can only be held in operative management. Likely anticipating such a conclusion, FTE submitted a post-summations letter asking the Court for leave to brief the issue of whether holding the right to sue for past damages in operative administration is sufficient for Lanham Act standing.
Further briefing is unnecessary. When the Second Circuit issued its decision, the only claims against Allied Domecq and WGS, held in the context of operative management, were for past damages, yet the court upheld the dismissal of those claims.
E. The Act of State Doctrine Does Not Apply
The Act of .State Doctrine does not apply to this case. The law is straightforward: the doctrine “does not prevent examination of the validity of an act of a foreign state with respect to a thing located ... outside of its territory.”
During summations, counsel for FTE avoided well-settled case law regarding the doctrine’s inapplicability to acts of state concerning U.S. trademark rights, relying instead on the very general pronouncement in Underhill v. Hernandez, the 1897 Supreme Court decision from which the doctrine sprung.
F. A Final Thought
I conclude this discussion section as I started it. This case presents the difficult challenge of interpreting a new foreign law that has not yet been addressed by the courts in that country. In the short run, the parties to this action could benefit from a de novo appellate review of this decision — I have little doubt that FTE will seek such review. But in the long run, a better system should exist tó address the problem of U.S. courts .interpreting issues of first impression under foreign law.
VI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, this case is dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. See Federal Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. SPI Spirits Ltd. (“FTE IV"),
. See Compl. ¶¶ 7, 66.
., See Federal Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. SPI Spirits Ltd.,
. See id. at 408-09,
. See Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp.,
. A detailed factual background and long history of this case is found in this Court's August 2014 Opinion. See
. FTE IV,
. See Compl. ¶ 66.
. See id.
.See
. See id. at 408-09,
. See 10/28/14 Hearing Transcript (“Summations Tr.”) (Dkt. 88).
. See 10/6/14 Legal Opinion of Alexander I. Muranov ("Muranov Rep.”), expert for FTE (Dkt. 64); 10/6/14 Declaration of Vladamir Gladyshev ("Gladyshev Decl.”), expert for SPI (Dkt. 65); 10/13/14 Amended Declaration of Michael Newcity ("Newcity Decl.”), expert
. See Muranov Rep. ¶ 70.
. Russian Civil Code art. 1227(3).
. See Muranov Rep. ¶ 70.
. See 10/15/14 Hearing Transcript ("Day 1 Tr.”) (Dkt. 81); 10/21 Hearing Transcript ("Day 2 Tr.”) (Dkt. 79); Summations Tr.
. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3); Arbaugh,
. CP Investors Grp., LLC v. Deutch, No. 13 Civ. 5228,
. See Luckett v. Bure,
. Amidax Trading Grp. v. S.W.I.F.T. SCRL,
. APWU v. Potter,
. Burfeindt v. Postupack,
. See City of Harper Woods Emps. Ret. Sys. v. Olver,
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 44.1.
. Ancile Inv. Co. v. Archer Daniels Midland Co.,
. FTE IV,
. Id. (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1114(1)).
. Id. (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1127).
- Id- at 75-
. Id. at 76 (citing DEP Corp. v. Interstate Cigar Co.,
. In' this section, I review the Russian law applicable to the standing issue. The Court’s understanding of the applicable law is drawn
. See Gladyshev Decl. ¶ 29.
. Id.
. See id. at ¶ 33.
. See id.
. See Russian Civil Code. art. 5(3); Muranov Rep. ¶ 23. ’
. See Gladyshev Deck ¶ 31
. See id. ¶ 37.
. See id. ¶ 31.
. See generally Summations Tr.
. See generally id.
. Decree 69, Ex. 1 to Gladyshev Deck
. Russian Civil Code art. 113.
. Id. "Operational administration” is the same as "operative management,” which is discussed in greater detail below.
. See id. art. 115 ("The rights of a budget-supported state enterprise to the property assigned to it shall be defined in accordance with Articles 296 and 297 of the present Code and the law on state and municipal enterprises.”).
. Id. art. 296.
.Id.
. Id. art 297. Article 299 also states that "[t]he ... property acquired by a unitary enterprise ... by contract or other grounds, are subject to ... operational administration ... in accordance with the procedure specified by the present Code, other laws and legal acts for acquisition of the right of ownership.” Id. art. 299.
. Id. art 157.1. In interpreting Article 157.1, Russian courts require effective consent to include specific information about the transaction for which consent is sought, including the basic terms and conditions of the transaction, such as the price and parties. See Day 1 Tr. at 103:19-25, 102:16-21, 154:10-11.
. Russian 'Civil Code art. 1226 (emphasis added).
. Id. art. 1227 (emphasis added). The Amendment went took effect on October 1, 2014. It does not apply retroactively. See Muranov Rep. ¶ 72.
. Russian Civil Code art. 128.
. Id. (emphasis added).
. Id. art. 113.
. Law 161 art. 2. However, Law 161 also defines “unitary enterprise” as "a commercial organization not having the right of ownership of the property given to it.” See also Day
. Russian Civil Code art. 1478.
. Id. art. 48.
. Id. art. 49 (emphasis added).
. Republic of Iraq v. ABB AG,
. Restatement (Second) of Foreign Relations § 43(1) (1965). Accord Zwack v. Kraus Bros. & Co.,
. Films by Jove, Inc. v. Berov,
. Id. at 207 (quoting
. See Zwack,
. See generally Muranov Rep.
. See generally id.
. Mr. Muranov insists that in Russian law, the English term "own” is used not in reference to owning trademarlcs, but to tangible
. See Day 1 Tr. at 43:1-45:14.
. Id. at 43:7.
. See id. at 43:1-45:14. Mr. Muranov stated that in Soviet times, a unitary enterprise could unquestionably be "the exclusive holder of a trademark.” Id. at 44:20-44:22.
. Id. at 45:7. However, Mr. Muranov later acknowledged on cross-examination that the real divide concerned distinguishing rules about rights in rem from intellectual property rights. Mr. Muranov could not cite any case that squarely held that a' unitary enterprise could hold a trademark outside of operative management. See id. at 78:9-79:16. Nor, in fairness, could Mr. Gladyshev find a case squarely holding the opposite. See id. at 176:23-177:5.
. See id. at 44:15-16. Mr. Muranov also points to a trademark registration in Chatka, a brand name for a Russian canned crab company, to show, allegedly, that FTE can and has held other trademarks outside of operative management. See id. at 54:16-55:10.
. In support 'of the Amendment’s relevance to the issues in this case, Mr. Muranov states that in 2008, former Russian president Dmi-try Medvedev created a commission to recommend major changes to the Civil Code. In 2009, the commission recommended "excluding any confusion of the[ ] two legal regimes [of intellectual property and rights in rem].” Muranov Rep. ¶ 69. However, Mr. Muranov does not provide any evidence linking this general 2009 recommendation to the passage of the Amendment.
. See id. at 46:25-47:7.
. See id.
. Russian Civil Code art. 297.
. See Summations Tr. 73:11-73:16. Mr. Gladyshev disputes Mr. Muranov's translation of the Assignment, reading the phrase triggering consent not as "full rights,” but as rights "to the full extent.” Day 1 Tr. 114:18-115:8. Mr. Gladyshev therefore contends that, because of the legal restrictions of operative management, the "full extent” of FTE’s rights falls short of full, exclusive rights to the trademarks. See id.
. See Day 1 Tr. at 106:6-106:8.
. Russian Civil Code art. 1226 (emphasis added).
. Id. art. 113 (emphasis added).
. See Gladyshev Decl. ¶¶ 37-39.
. See October 2014 Rosalcohol Explanatory Note, SPI Hearing Ex. 4 ("Rosalcohol Note”) ("Because foreign courts find it difficult to understand the essence of the Russian state unitary enterprises which, not being the owners of the state property and. state intellectual property, act to protect it and use it on their own behalf ....”) (emphasis added). Rosal-cohol, the organization that published the note, is itself an arm of the Russian Federation, its rough U.S. equivalent being the Food and Drug Administration. See Day 1 Tr. at 146:24-147:1.
. Id.
. See Day 1 Tr. 117:9-117:21.
. Id. at 155:4-5.
. See id. at 156:10-156:15. See also Russian Civil Code art. 157.1.
. SeeDaylTr. at 105:12-17.
. Id. 114:18-115:8.
. See Newcity Deck ¶ 27.
. During opening statements, I inquired about the applicability of forum non conve-niens, a doctrine potentially helpful to courts facing similar predicaments. See Day 1 Tr. at 13:22-14:15. In response, FTE represented that because it seeks an order directing the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to change trademark registrations — relief an alternative Russian forum could not grant — forum non conveniens does not apply. See id. Based on this representation, I decline to pursue the applicability of forum non conveniens further. See Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno,
. Terra Firma Investments (GP) 2 Ltd. v. Citigroup Inc.,
. Both Mr. Muranov and Mr. Gladyshev agree on the Civil Code’s supremacy relative to governmental decrees and other sources, including scholarship. See, e.g., Muranov Rep. ¶ 24; Gladyshev Deck' ¶ 39.
. Russian Civil Code art. 128.
. Id.
. See Law 161 art. 2 (noting that a unitary enterprise, which is defined as "a commercial organization not having the right of ownership of the property given to it,” can have a “round seal with its full corporate name ... is entitled to hold stamps and blanks with its firm name, its own emblem as well as the trademark ...”).
. The Chatka trademark that Mr. Muranov focuses on merely shows that a trademark can be registered in FTE's name — not that FTE can hold an exclusive right to it outside of operative management. See Summations Tr. 60:3-60:9. '
. See Russian Civil Code art. 1227.
. However, there are numerous other provisions in other sections of the Civil Code governing these rights as well, including Section 1, which the Amendment does not affect.
. Muranov Rep. ¶ 69.
. See Day, 1 Tr. at 35:4-35:18.
. Perhaps owing to the flimsiness of the connection in his report, Mr. Muranov never elaborated on it during his testimony at the hearing. Mr. Gladyshev briefly addressed this connection and summarily dismissed it. 150:24-151-8.
.SeeDaylTr. at 98:3-98:14.
. This is not to say that I fully accept defendants’ argument regarding the Amendment’s impact on remedies available under Section 2. But ultimately, defendants do not need to prove the Amendment's purpose — FTE has the burden of proving it has standing.
. See Gladyshev Decl. ¶ 37.
. See Muranov Rep. ¶ 123. '
.See Day 1 Tr. at 103:19-104:2.
. Muranov Rep. ¶ 123.
. See Day 1 Tr. at 106:6-106:8.
. See FTE IV,
.During the cross-examination of Mr. Newcity, counsel for FTE argued that the 2002 Decree, by which the Russian Federation assigned the trademarks to FTE via operative management, contained the language "without right to assignment” — language that even Mr. Newcity acknowledged would be surplusage if it was not possible to give FTE prior consent to dispose of the trademarks. See Day 2 Tr. at 41:16-43:2. However, the significance of that clause, and whether it is surplusage, is not fully clear, nor is it enough to persuade me that blanket consent could be given. It may be, as Mr. Newcity points out, that the Russian Federation desired to reinforce that it was not granting consent as to a specific transaction at that time. See id. In addition, the Russian case interpreting Article 157.1 is from 2014, twelve years after the issuance of the 2002 decree. Therefore, current Russian law appears to prohibit prior blanket consent in this context.
. See FTE Post-Summations Ltr.
. See FTE IV,
. Restatement (Second) of Foreign Relations § 43(1). Accord Boland,
. See Films by Jove,
. Decree 69, Ex. 1 to Gladyshev Decl. (emphasis added).
. See
. See
