Alitalia is the defendant in a breach of contract suit in the federal district court in Chicago, having been removed by Alitalia to that court from state court under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1602-1611; see
id.,
§ 1330(a), at a time when Alitalia’s majority shareholder was the Italian government. The Act entitles the instrumentality of a foreign government to a nonjury trial. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(d);
In re Air Crash Disaster Near Roselawn, Indiana,
Alitalia may well be right.
Dole Food Co. v. Patrickson,
But that affront, as it would be rendered harmless by denying any effect to the jury’s verdict if indeed the defendant was entitled by statute to a nonjury trial, is not an
irreparable
harm. And as for the possibility that denying mandamus would result in two trials, jury and bench, and thus in added cost to Alitalia, such additional cost, even if unrecoverable and so in a literal sense irreparable, is not the kind of irreparable harm that justifies mandamus.
First Nat’l Bank of Waukesha v. FDIC,
However, after the foregoing opinion was drafted and approved by the panel, but before it was issued, the jury trial (which had not been stayed) concluded with an $8.5 million verdict in favor of the respondents. They ask us to dismiss the mandamus proceeding as moot, on the ground that Alitalia has an effective remedy at law, namely an appeal from the judgment entered on the verdict. Alitalia opposes their motion, arguing that the case in the district court is not yet concluded because Alitalia has filed postjudgment motions — one of which asks the district court to vacate the judgment and order a bench trial.
Entry of final judgment in the district court ordinarily provides a compelling reason for denying a petition for mandamus to correct a preliminary ruling, in this case the grant of a motion for trial by jury. (For an exception, however, see
In re Austrian, German Holocaust Litigation,
Denied.
