Oрinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
FG Hemisphere Associates seeks to execute a default judgment against two Washington, DC dwellings owned by the Democratic Republic of Congo (“DRC”). DRC diplomatic officials resided in these properties by virtue of their official capacities up until the mid-1990s, when political disruption led to their removal from office but not from the properties. (In 2005-06, the DRC succeeded in recovering the properties for use as diрlomatic residencies.) FG Hemisphere’s predecessor-in-interest obtained a default judgment against the DRC for breach of a credit agreement unrelated to the properties. FG Hemisphere then sought writs of execution against the two properties — their first mention in the litigation. The DRC again defaulted. Some two months later, the DRC filed a Rule 60(b) motion to quash the execution order, arguing, among other things, that its failure to respond earlier was due to “еxcusable neglect” and that the two properties were immune from execution under 28 U.S.C. § 1609 as “property in the United States of a foreign state.” The district court denied the motion. The DRC appeals, and we reverse and remand the district court’s order. The DRC’s neglect in the delay of its response to the motion to execute was excusable.
* * *
In 1980 the DRC (then the Republic of Zaire) and its state-owned electric company Société Nationale d’Élеctricité (“SNEL”) entered into a credit agreement with Energoinvest to finance the construction of an electric power transmission facility in Zaire. The DRC failed to repay, and in 2003, after an arbitration at which the DRC failed to appear, Energoinvest obtained an arbitration award of roughly $11.7 million. After providing the DRC *837 with formal diplomatic service, Energoin-vest in September 2004 obtained a default judgment from the U.S. district court for the District of Columbia confirming the arbitral award. Energoinvest assigned its rights in the award to FG Hemisphere, a company that identifies itself as “financial advisor and investor specializing in sovereign debt obligations in emerging markets.”
FG Hemisphere then moved to execute on the DRC’s “commercial property ... in the United States.” Motion for Permission to Execute on Judgment and Memorandum in Support Thereof at 5 (Nov. 30, 2004). The motion mentioned no specific “commercial” properties. On March 14, 2005, FG Hemisрhere filed an amended motion (“Motion to Execute”) seeking to execute on two pieces of DRC real property in Washington, DC: 4001 Linnean Avenue, NW, and 5015 Glenbrook Road, NW. Zaire had originally bought both properties to serve as diplomatic residences. The DRC’s Ambassador, Oscar Tatanene Manata, lived in the Linnean property during his ambassadorship (1990-95) and continued there after he lost his position, leaving only in 2005. The DRC Military Attaehé lived in the Glenbrook рroperty until 1993, when he was dismissed and moved out; at that point the similarly dismissed DRC Deputy Military Attaehé (1988-1993), Elinga Simoke Atembina, either continued to live there or moved in. Compare Decl. of Faida Mitifu ¶ 6 (May 31, 2005) (“Atembina refused to vacate the Glenbrook .property when his services were terminated”) with Appellant’s Br. at 7 (“[Ajfter the Glenbrook property was vacated by the Congolese Defense and Army Forces Attaehé, Mr. Atembina and his family moved into the residence”). Both Manata and Atembina remained as squatters for over ten years, at least in part as leverage to secure past salaries for diplomatic service. See Manata’s Motion to Intervene at 3-4 (May 2, 2005) (noting DRC judicial judgment that Manata family has a “right of occupancy [in the Linnean property] until the full payment of their salaries and benefits”); Aff. of Manata at 2 (Apr. 29, 2005) (noting that “I [Manata] have not been paid in fourteen years .... I must and will remain in this home until the [DRC] settles with me”); Atembina’s Motion to Intervene at 2 (May 9, 2005) (noting that “Atembina Family’s occupancy is employment right as long as [the DRC] will keep them abroad until the full payment of their salaries and benefits [sic]”); Mem. Order at 2, Democratic Republic of Congo v. Atembina, No. LTB05-18459 (D.C.Super.Ct., Jan. 3, 2006) (filed in DRC’s Rule 28(j) Letter, Feb. 7, 2006) (noting that Atembina asserts “a right to remain in the Glenbrook property until he is paid salary that he claims is due him”). Over the years the DRC made some efforts to evict them, including a request that the power company cut off electricity for the Linnean address. It finally regained possession of the Linnean property from Manata in 2005 and obtained an eviction order against Atembina in 2006.
On filing the Motion to Execute, FG Hemisphere arranged to deliver it by DHL courier service to the DRC. On March 22 — eight days after the motion was filed — the mail department in the DRC Foreign Ministry’s Office of Protocol received and signed for the DHL package in Kinshasa, the DRC capital. As delivered, the motion was in English; the DRC’s official language is French. Two days later, the district court granted the Motion to Execute (“March 24 Order”).
Meanwhile, in Kinshasa the DHL package made its bureaucratic rounds. It went first to the Bureau of Translation, and after translation into French, on to SNEL. SNEL forwarded the package to the Office of Protocol, from which it went first to the *838 Office of Legal Affairs and then, in late May, to the Foreign Minister’s Chief of Staff. For reasons that aren’t entirely clear, ex-аmbassador Manata learned of the Motion and phoned to alert the Chief of Staff before it arrived' in his Kinshasa office. On May 4, evidently no more than a day after the alert from Manata, the current Ambassador of the DRC, Faida Mitifu, was directed to secure counsel. This was more than 40 days after the district court granted the Motion to Execute and, of course, before receipt of the Motion by the Chief of Staff.
The DRC then (1) moved to quash the writs of exеcution on May 31, (2) filed a Rule 60(b) motion to vacate the March 24 Order on July 7, and (3) filed a Rule 62 motion to stay the execution on July 8. On August 11 — the same day that the United States filed a Statement of Interest — the district court denied the DRC’s three motions without opinion. The DRC appeals, arguing that the district court erred because (1) the March 24 Order was void under Rule 60(b)(4) for lack of jurisdiction and/or notice, and (2) the DRC’s delay in its response to the Motion to Execute qualified as excusable neglect under Rule 60(b)(1).
We review the district court’s denial of the Rule 60(b) motion for abuse of discretion. See
Hall v. C.I.A,
Rule 60(b)(1) provides that a court may relieve a party from a final judgment for “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(1). In
Pioneer Investment Services Co. v. Brunswick Associates Ltd. Partnership,
The factors listed by
Pioneer
are of course not exclusive. See
Pioneer,
Apart from the United States’s interest in assuring foreign nations’ ability to rely on the U.S. courts, the express Pioneer factors favor the DRC. The duration of the delay, to be sure, is hard to calculate because of uncertainty over when the starting shot was fired — that is, when the DRC received the relevant notice. FG Hemisphere suggests that delay should be measured from September 2004, when the DRC defaulted in the action to enforce the arbitral award' — a point in time, of course, when there had been no mentiоn of executing on the diplomatic properties. It relies on Rule 5, which says “[n]o service need be made on parties in default for failure to appear except that pleadings asserting new or additional claims for relief against them shall be served upon them in the manner provided for service of summons in Rule 4.” Fed. R. Crv. P. 5(a). The DRC and the United States as amicus want to use the March 14, 2005 filing of the Motion to Execute as the starting point. They argue, moreover, that the attempt to execute against the diplomatic properties is a new claim for relief within the meaning of Rule 5(a), thus triggering the rule’s reference to Rule 4 (and thus, under Rule 4(j)(1), to the service provisions of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1608).
We do not here decide whether the attempt to reach the diplomatic residences qualifies as a new claim under Rule 5(a). In resolving the equitable question under Rule 60(b)(1), however, we think it appropriate to use the time the Motion to Execute was filed, as that represented the first time that the DRC received the slightest hint that its diplomatic properties were in jeopardy. As we said in
Practical Concepts,
quoting language drawn from the brief of the United States in that case, when a foreign government “has appeared and asserts legal defenses, albeit after a default judgment has been entered, it is important that those defenses be considered carefully and, if possible, that the dispute be resolved on the basis of ... all relevant legal arguments.”
With the Motion to Execute as the starting point, the roughly two month delay between the deadline to respond to the Motion and the DRC’s response (and two- and-а-half month delay between the Motion’s filing and DRC’s response) was relatively short, especially in light of the distance between the DRC and the U.S. On brief amicus United States, Br. at 26-27, *840 and FG Hemisphere, Br. at 19 n.7, appear to assume that the DRC was entitled to 14 days to respond to the March 14, 2005 motion. 1 Of those 14 days, it took eight simply for the DHL package to be delivered to the DRC. Had the DRC used the same courier service, its response could easily have taken another eight days, until well after the district court ruled. Moreover, the DRC secured counsel only one day after receiving its first actual notice, filing its motion to quash less than four weeks later.
In light of the difficulties, the delay period doesn’t seem long in relation to the benchmarks of the rather limited set of cases (none of which, so far as we’ve discovered, involves comparable international distance complications). See, e.g.,
Bateman v. U.S. Postal Service,
Second, there is no danger of prejudice to FG Hemisphere. Prejudice under Rule 60(b)(1) appears typically and properly to contemplate costs that reconsideration of the final judgment would inflict on the non-moving party
independent of the chance of reversal.
See, e.g.,
Bateman,
Here, FG Hemisphere used the delay period to appraise and make arrangements to auction off the properties. But these costs appear negligible — FG Hemisphere’s brief makes no effort to quantify them or otherwise shpw their significance. Besides, the DRC in the trial court offered to compensate FG Hemisphere for its expenses in having the writs executed and the properties appraised. See Defendant the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Reply to Plaintiffs Response to Emergency Motion to Quash March 24, 2005, Writs of Execution at 18-19 (July 30, 2005). Cf.
Smith,
Third, the failure to file a timely response was in considerable measure out of the DRC’s control. The movant’s use of
*841
English rather than French virtually guaranteed the DRC’s inability to file a timely response. Although we do not rule on the argument that service should have been governed by FSIA’s service provision, 28 U.S.C. § 1608(a), we note that § 1608(a) calls for translation by the serving party, thus facilitating the sovereign’s ability to make a timely response and tending in part to overcome what
Practical Concepts
recognized as the “perils of converting the legal terms and concepts of one system into those of another.”
FG Hemisphere points to the facts that the DRC sold electricity to neighboring countries, that DRC President Kabila visited East Asia with аn entourage of 200 people, and that the DRC sent a delegation to Pope John Paul II’s funeral, arguing that each of these supports a finding that DRC’s neglect was inexcusable. But a polity’s ability to fund foreign travel for its chief executive and other officials is hardly evidence of the sort of general state capacity that would make for swift and efficient handling of a DHL package with English-language materials. The delay here,, then, seems like the sоrt of innocent neglect that in the absence of prejudice or bad faith commonly qualifies as excusable. See, e.g.,
Walter v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wisconsin,
FG Hemisphere itself seems virtually to admit as much, see Oral Arg. Tape at 49:02 (conceding that “it is a record ... [from] which one could conclude that it was excusable neglect.”), in the end relying mainly on a number of points apparently thought to show the DRC’s bad faith — the fourth express
Pioneer
factor. See
Pioneer,
Along the same lines FG Hemisphere argues that the DRC has engaged in a *842 systematic litigation strategy aimed at frustrating creditors by artificial claims of diplomatic immunity. It points to the Belgian suit, where the court found immunity for a property formerly used by diplomatic personnel and allegedly under renovation to serve as the ambassador’s residence. Two months after the court’s ruling the DRC sold the property. We have no basis for trying to sort out the merits of this Belgian conflict, and fail to see how, even on the worst assumptions, it could show strategic behavior in the DRC’s defaulting in its response to the Motion to Execute.
FG Hemisphere also espies chicanery in the contrast between the DRC’s hiring of attorneys within one day of ex-ambassador Manata’s telling the foreign ministry of the order to execute, and its earlier failure to participate in the litigation. FG Hemisphere doesn’t explаin why this might show bad faith rather than (at worst) rather chaotic neglect. And even if there was “strategy” in defaulting on the merits' but resisting the execution, the strategy may have been simply to fight on issues where its merits position was strong; this is hardly reprehensible.
Finally, our cases (and those of other circuits) antedating
Pioneer
generally required a party seeking relief on grounds of excusable neglect to assert a potentially meritorious defense. See, e.g.,
Lepkowski,
The DRC has met easily’that standard. Under the FSIA thе property of a foreign state is immune from execution subject to certain exceptions, 28 U.S.C. § 1609, the one asserted by FG Hemisphere being use of the property “for a commercial activity in the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1610(a). See also 28 U.S.C. § 1603(d) (defining commercial activity as “a regular course of commercial conduct or a particular commercial transaction or act”);
Republic of Argentina v. Weltover, Inc.,
We are unconvinced. The fact that former diplomats squatted on the properties says little. FG Hemisphere’s labeling the DRC as canny is implausible; the DRC entirely failed to collect rent on the properties for over a decade. FG Hemisphere counters that this was a payoff to the former diplomats and hence a form of imputed rent to the DRC. But the far more likely explanation for the failure to pursue the squatters is that the DRC’s political condition (including civil war) disabled its government from effectively protecting the state’s interests. It appears undisputed that the Glenbrook and Linnean sites have been and are intended to be used as diplomatic rеsidencies of DRC officials. Both the State Department and the District of Columbia have recognized the properties as diplomatic — and do so to this day. While the holdover diplomats may have invoked non-payment of wages to justify squatting, there is nothing to show that the DRC conceived of the relation as an indirect way of providing compensation. (We pass no judgment on whether, if such a relation existed, it would qualify as commercial.) So far as the record now appears, there is thus no evidentiary basis for believing that the properties have been “used for a commercial activity.”
Because we find that the DRC’s neglect was excusable and that the DRC’s claim of immunity is potentially meritorious, we reverse the district court’s denial of the DRC’s Rule 60(b) motion and vacate the March 24 Order. As the DRC’s neglect is excused, the district court must consider the merits as it would have if the DRC had filed a timely response. We thus rеmand for further proceedings on the merits.
So ordered.
Notes
. Local rules call for response to a motion, within "11 days of the date of service [of a motion] or at such other time as the Court may direct, an opposing party shall serve and file a memorandum of points and authorities in opposition to the motion.” LCvR 7(b) (emphasis added). Assuming in favor of FG Hemisphere that service occurred at dispatch rather than delivery, and adding three days under Rule 6(e) for cases where service has been by mail under Rule 5(b)(2)(B), would yield March 28, 2005 as the due date for a response.
