Opinion by Judge BEEZER.
The Bank of Guam (“Bank”) challenges the district court’s denial of its motion for judgment as a matter of law or, alternatively, a new trial pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b) as to Gushi Brothers’ (“the Chutaros”) claim for violation of the Bank Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. §§ 1971-1978.
1
The Bank contends that the court used an improper legal standard and that there was insufficient evidence to support the verdict in the Chutaros’ favor. The Bank also challenges the district court’s exclusion of the deposition of its branch manager, Droteo Espangel, who died
I
Gushi Brothers is a proprietorship registered in the Republic of the Marshall Islands. Gushi Brothers is primarily engaged in wholesale and retail sales and is owned and managed by Chuji and Beverly Chutaro. The Chutaros maintained a commercial account under the Gushi Brothers trade name at the Majuro branch of the Bank of Guam, after the Bank assumed Bank of America’s operations in the Marshall Islands in 1981. The Bank, organized under Guam law, was the only commercial banking facility operating in Majuro.
In August 1986, investigators alerted Bank officers in Guam to the fact that the Chuta-ros’ account was overdrawn 2 by approximately $500,000. On August 24, the Bank’s president, Leon Guerrero, and its general counsel, Arriola, appeared at the Chutaros’ residence in Majuro. According to Mrs. Chutaro’s testimony at trial, Leon Guerrero, through intimidation, required the Chutaros to execute a promissory note for $506,169.82 payable in sixty days. The note was sеcured by real and personal property located in the Republic of the Marshall Islands. The parties at trial identified revenue from sales by Gushi Brothers as the contemplated source of repayment for the loan.
Relations between the Chutaros and the Bank deteriorated in the ensuing months. Mrs. Chutaro testified that the Bank refused to honor those checks most urgently requiring clearance per her request. The Bank also unilaterally drew funds from a Gushi Brothers account as payment for its legal fees and loan installments, causing several checks to be returned for insufficient funds. The Chutaros subsequently opened an account at the newly-established Bank of the Marshall Islands, a local, non-FDIC-insured entity. Citing difficulties meeting their obligations, the Chutaros wrote to the Bank seeking an extension of the loan. By a letter dated September 22 sent from the Bank’s headquarters in Agana, Guam, Leon Guerrero rejected the Chutaros’ offer to renegotiate the note and added: “We also learned that you have opened an account with another bank. This account must be closed immediately. All deposits must be made to our bаnk.”
On November 10, 1988, the Chutaros filed this action on behalf of themselves and Gushi Brothers, alleging, inter alia, violation of § 1972(1)
3
of the Bank Holding Company Act. Finding that the Bank violated the Act, the jury awarded the Chutaros $50,000. This sum was trebled pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1975.
4
The district court entered Judgment on February 26, 1993. The Bank moved for judgment as a matter of law or, alternatively, for a new trial. The court denied relief as to the Bank Holding Company
While the appeal was pеnding, we, by order, requested counsel to address whether Congress intended to extend the reach of the Bank Holding Company Act antitying provisions to transactions occurring wholly within the Republic of the Marshall Islands and, thus, whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over the Chutaros’ claim. Through argument and supplemental authority, the parties disputed whether the Chuta-ros’ claim arose exclusively out of the Bank’s operations within the Republic of the Marshall Islands. They also disputed whether the antitying provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act apply of their own forcе to the Republic of the Marshall Islands and whether the statute or its legislative history reveals an express Congressional intent to apply the Act to the Republic of the Marshall Islands.
II
We have consistently treated the question of whether Congress intended to exercise the full scope of its prescriptive jurisdiction as a question of subject matter jurisdiction.
See, e.g., SEC v. United Fin. Group, Inc.,
III
Thе Chutaros contend that, regardless of the rules governing the application of federal law to the Republic of the Marshall Islands, sufficient actionable conduct occurred within the territory of the United States to invoke the district court’s jurisdiction. They underscore the fact that the Bank is chartered under Guam law, has its headquarters there and, as a member of the Federal Reserve System, is subject generally to extensive Congressional regulation.
Questions involving 'the reach of Congress’ prescriptive jurisdiction are not implicated when the conduct sought tо be regulated occurs within the United States.
Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Massey,
The factors cited by the Chutaros for the proposition that actiоnable conduct did not occur exclusively in the Republic of the Marshall Islands are inapposite. Section 1972(1) of the Bank Holding Company Act proscribes certain anticompetitive tying arrangements, reciprocal agreements and exclusive dealing contracts.
See, e.g., Bruce v. First Fed. Sav. and Loan Ass’n of Conroe, Inc.,
IV
Having determined that the banking transactions occurred exclusively within the Republic of the Marshall Islands, we next consider the conditions upon which the anti-tying provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act could be said to apply to the Republic of the Marshall Islands.
A
The Republic of the Marshall Islands is a former administrative district of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (“Trust Territory”). As a district of the Trust Territory, the Marshall Islands, as they were then known, were administered pursuant to a Trusteeship Agreement (“Agreement”) entered into between the United Nations Security Council and the United States.
5
Porter v. United States,
The transactions underlying the Chutaros’ claim took place in August and September 1986, during the brief transitional interval between the Marshall Islanders’ ratification of free association status and the Compact’s formal entry intо force. We must, therefore, look beyond the terms of the Compact to resolve the question before us. In this respect, the Chutaros underscore the Marshall Islands’ close dependency on the United States under the Agreement and the new Republic’s relative lack of power to protect against abusive banking practices. These factors, in their view, establish that the anti-tying provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act apply of their own force to transactions taking place within the Republic of the
We disagree. We have never considered the Trust Territory as simply a United States territory or insular possession.
See In re Rothstein,
B
The conclusion we reached in
Temengil
is consistent with the deference federal courts have traditionally shоwn to Congress when applying the presumption against extraterritoriality.
See Benz v. Compania Naviera Hidalgo, S.A.,
Our examination of the evolving history of the relations between the Unitéd States and the Marshall Islands reveals that the Republic was in a practical and legal sense a foreign nation when the instant banking transactions occurred. The peculiar legal stаtus of the nascent, constituent states of the former Trust Territory has rendered them re-sistent to simple classification.
Temengil,
We have grappled with the implications of the increasing measure of sovereignty gained by the former Trust Territory districts during this transitional period. In doing so, we have implicitly adhered to the principle that the concept of sovereignty “is a pliable one for purposes of resolving domestic jurisdictional disputes.”
Porter,
We see no contradiction between the conclusions we reached in
In re Bowoon Sangsa
and
Covington.
“Trust Territories are
sui generis.
Eаch one must be viewed independently to determine the rights granted to its citizenry, the rights reserved to itself, and those possessed by the federal government.”
Fleming v. Department of Public Safety,
V
Whether we rely on the rule in
Temengil
or apply the presumption against extraterritoriality does not affect our analysis. In either event, we must determine whether Congress expressly intended to extend the antitying provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act to transactions occurring wholly within the Republic of the Marshall Islands. In
ARAMCO,
the Supreme Court considered whether Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act applied to regulate the employment practices of United States firms that employ American residents abroad.
The methodology adopted by the Supreme Court in
ARAMCO
is conclusive.
9
There is no dispute that the Bank is subject to the antitying provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act.
10
The Chutaros, however, were unable to discern an express statement of Congressional intent to apply the statute to banking transactions within the Trust Territory, the Marshall Islands or to purely foreign banking activities in “the Act itself ... or in its legislative history.”
Foley Bros.,
VI
The Chutaros alternatively contend that the clоse analogy between the Bank Holding Company Act and the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts reflects a Congressional intent to apply its provisions extraterritorially.
The close analogy between the Bank Holding Company Act and the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts has been previously noted.
See, e.g., Parsons Steel v. First Alabama Bank of Montgomery,
We need not decide whether the jurisdictional reach of the Bank Holding Company Act is as broad as that of the Sherman Act because even if it were, the district court lacked jurisdiction over this case. The Chu-taros failed to allege in their pleadings that the Bank’s conduct resulted in any anti-competitive effects within the territory of the United States or to demonstrate any such effects at trial. Although they adopt the position now, we find wholly incredible that an isolated loan had a “substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect ... on ... commerce which is not ... commerce with foreign nations ... or ... on ... export commerce with foreign nations, of a person engaged in such ... commerce in the United States” within the meaning of 15 U.S.C. § 6a or Timberlane,
13
In any event, the Chuta-ros’ failure to establish any anticompetitive domestic effect was jurisdictional.
McGlinchy v. Shell Chemical Co.,
VII
We remand to the district court to dismiss the Chutaros’ Bank Holding Company Act claim and to vacate the award of costs and fees entered pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1975. Because this was the only issue on which the Chutaros prevailed, the court should also vacate costs awarded to the Chutaros as prevailing parties pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d).
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Because we treat the issues raised by the Chu-taros in their cross-appeal in a separate memorandum disposition, we omit the issues pertinent to their cross-appeal here.
. The Gushi Brothers account was subject to a continuing overdraft facility or line of credit secured by a $100,000 Certificate of Deposit. At trial, the parties contested the proper characterization of this banking feature and disputed whether the arrangement permitted drafts above the amount of the collateral Certificate of Deposit. This dispute is not relevant to the issues on appeal.
. 12 U.S.C. § 1972(1) provides, in pertinent part, that:
[a] bank shall not in any manner extend credit ... on the condition or requirement
(A) that the customer shall obtain some additional credit, property, or service from such bank other than a loan, discount, deposit, or trust service;
... or
(E) that the customer shall not obtain some other credit, property, or service from a competitor of such bank, ... other than a condition or requirement that such bank shall reasonably impose in a credit transaction to assure the soundness of the credit.
.12 U.S.C. § 1975 provides, in pertinent part, that:
[a]ny person who is injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in section 1972 ... shall be entitled to recover three times the amount of the damages sustained by him, and the cost of suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee.
. The Agreement was ratified by a joint Congressional resolution on July 18, 1947.
Porter v. United States,
. This conclusion is inescapable when we contrast § 171 of the Compact with § 502(a)(2) of the Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Political Union with the United States of America ("Covenant”). A result of separate negotiations between the United States and the former Trust Territory district of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Covenant expressly made applicable to the Commonwealth “those laws ... which are applicable to Guam and which are of general application to the several States as they are applicable to the several States.”
Temengil,
. We have on occasion analogized the Trust Territory to the territories or possessions of the United States for purposes of determining the applicability of particular federal legislation. In
People of Saipan v. Department of Interior,
The Trust Territory’s resistance to simple classification is reflected in the decisions of other
. In fact, the Trusteeship Agreement remained in effect for Palau until the late 1980s.
Temengil,
. The fact that
ARAMCO
has been superceded by statute in the Title VII context,
see, Arno v. Club Med, Inc.,
. 12 U.S.C. § 1972 provides that the antitying provisions apply to "a bank....” The chapter's definitional provisions at 12 U.S.C. § 1971 provide that “the term[] "bank” ... [has] the meaning ascribed to [this] term[] in [12 U.S.C. § 1841].” Sections 1841(c)(1)(A) and (c)(1)(B), in pertinent part, define "bank” as including "[a]n insured bank as defined in section 3(h) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act [12 U.S.C. § 1813(h)] [i.e. "any bank (including a foreign bank having an insured branch)....]" and "any institution organized under the laws of the United States, any State of the United States, the District of Columbia, any territory of the United States, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, or the Virgin Islands ...," respectively. Section 1841(c)(2)(A) excepts from the definition of "bank,” "[a] foreign bank which would be a bank within the meaning of paragraph (1) solely because such bank has an insured or uninsured branch in the United States.”
Because the Bank of Guam is organized under the laws of Guam, it is a “bank” within the purview of the Act by virtue of § 1841(c)(1)(B).
.With the passage of the International Banking Act of 1978, 12 U.S.C. § 3101 et seg., Congress extended the antitying provisions of the Act to “any foreign bank that maintains a branch or agency in a State....” 12 U.S.C. § 3106. Section 3101(10) defines "State” narrowly to mean "any State of the United States or the District of Columbia.” The express exclusion of foreign banks without branches in a State or the District of Columbia from the reach of the Act reflects a concern for international comity.
Although the question is not now before us, in response to the Chutaros' contention that the Republic of the Marshall Islands is virtually powerless to protect against abusive banking practices, we note that the Bank of the Marshall Islands, an apparent "victim” of the Bank's conduct under the Chutaros’ theory of liability, was orga
. The statute provides, in pertinent part, that:
[The Sherman Act] shall not apply to conduct involving trade or commerce ... with foreign nations unless — (1) such conduct has a direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect— (A) on trade or commerce which is not trade or commerce with foreign nations ... or (B) on export trade or export commerce with foreign nations, of a person engaged in such trade or commerce in the United States....
. Under the
Timberlane
standard, we look to whether there is some effect on American foreign commerce, to whether the effect is sufficiently large "to present a cognizable injury to the plaintiffs” and to whether the "interests of, and links to, the United States ... are sufficiently strong ... to justify an assertion of extraterritorial authority."
