Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA KAUPTHING EHF.,
Plaintiff,
v. Civil Action No. 17-761 (JEB) BRICKLAYERS AND TROWEL
TRADES INTERNATIONAL PENSION
FUND LIQUIDATION PORTFOLIO, et
al. ,
Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Kaupthing ehf., an Icelandic bank, sold billions of dollars in notes to investors throughout the world. One such investor was Defendant Bricklayers and Trowel Trades International Pension Fund, which owned a series of these notes until Kaupthing bought them back under a repurchase provision. When Kaupthing thereafter went bankrupt, it filed a suit in Iceland to rescind the buy-back and recover the monies expended. The Fund, a resident of the District of Columbia, never appeared overseas to defend itself, and a default judgment resulted. That judgment, however, did not name the Fund as a liable party; instead, the Icelandic court ordered another party – an account owned by the Fund – to pay Kaupthing $422,296.
Plaintiff has come to this Court to enforce the Icelandic Judgment, suing the Account, the Fund, and the Fund’s Board of Trustees. Defendants now move to dismiss, arguing that the Account lacks the capacity to be sued, the Icelandic Judgment does not name the Fund or the Trustees as liable parties, and Defendants, in any event, were not subject to personal jurisdiction in Iceland. Agreeing with all of these contentions, the Court will grant the Motion.
I. Background
The Court treats the facts set forth in the Complaint as true, as it must at this stage, but also draws much of the background from the Icelandic Judgment itself. Plaintiff is an Icelandic corporation. See Am. Compl., ¶ 4. In 2007, it initiated a multi-billion-dollar program in which it sold certain securities – namely, the notes at issue in this case – to investors all over the world. See ECF No. 11, Exh. C (Icelandic Judgment) at 2-3. Although the notes at issue originated with Plaintiff, investors purchased them through a program run by an American clearing house. Id. at 3-4. These notes and their indentures were also to be construed and governed “entirely in accordance with the law of the State of New York.” Id. at 5. Purchase of a note entitled its owner to receive semiannual payments from Plaintiff and to eventually cash out at specified maturity dates. Id. at 3. Plaintiff, however, was empowered by a repurchase provision in the note program’s prospectus to buy back outstanding notes and reduce its liability under the program by extinguishing them. Id. at 5.
In 2008, Plaintiff exercised this power under the repurchase provision and bought back notes owned by Bricklayers and Trowel Trades International Pension Fund – a District of Columba resident. Id. at 6; Am. Compl., ¶ 6. The Fund, before the buy-back, held the notes in an account called the Bricklayers and Trowel Trades International Pension Fund Liquidation Portfolio (Account). See Icelandic Judgment at 7. Management of the Account was entrusted to the Western Asset Management Company – the Fund’s agent – but the Fund maintained ultimate control over the Account and the notes contained therein. Id. Emails exchanged between Plaintiff and WAMC culminated in a “single transaction” whereby Plaintiff transferred payment to the Account, and, in return, its outstanding liabilities under the note program were reduced by the value of the interest purchased. Id. at 6.
Kaupthing went bankrupt shortly thereafter. Id. Its bankruptcy entitled it, under Icelandic law, to rescind its buy-back of the Fund’s notes and to recover the sum paid. Id. at 8. Plaintiff filed a lawsuit in Iceland in June 2012 to pursue that end. Id. at 7-8; Am. Comp., ¶ 10. The complaint named WAMC as “primary defendant,” the Account as “alternative defendant,” and the Fund as “defendant of last resort.” See Am. Compl., ¶ 10. Only WAMC, however, appeared in Icelandic court to defend itself. Id., ¶ 12.
That court ultimately declined to impose liability on WMAC because it “was involved in the transaction only as an intermediary.” Icelandic Judgment at 13, 16; Am. Compl., ¶ 14. Next setting its sights on the Account, the Court held that it was “a legal person capable of having legal rights” and was thus able to “be the defendant in a lawsuit.” Icelandic Judgment at 15. The court also identified the Account as the party that had been “the beneficial owner” of the “note interest” bought back by Plaintiff. Id. The court, accordingly, entered a default judgment ordering the Account to pay Plaintiff $422,296.03 plus interest. Id. at 16; Am. Compl., ¶ 14. The Fund, conversely, was not mentioned in the court’s order. See Icelandic Judgment at 16 (omitting Fund, as defendant of last resort, from “ADJUDICATION” section).
Plaintiff then filed this diversity action to enforce the Icelandic Judgment under the
District of Columbia’s Uniform Foreign-Country Money Judgments Recognition Act. See Am.
Compl., ¶ 3; Yahoo! Inc. v. La Ligue Contre Le Racisme Et L'Antisemitisme,
II. Legal Standard
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) permits a court to dismiss any count of a
complaint that fails “to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” In evaluating the
motion, a court must likewise “treat the complaint’s factual allegations as true and must grant
plaintiff ‘the benefit of all inferences that can be derived from the facts alleged.’” Sparrow v.
United Air Lines, Inc.,
This pleading standard is “not meant to impose a great burden upon a plaintiff.” Dura
Pharm., Inc. v. Broudo,
In evaluating the sufficiency of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6), a court may consider
“the facts alleged in the complaint, any documents either attached to or incorporated in the
*5
complaint[,] and matters of which [the court] may take judicial notice.” Equal Emp’t
Opportunity Comm’n v. St. Francis Xavier Parochial Sch.,
III. Analysis
In seeking dismissal here, Defendants produce a congeries of arguments. The Court will first address the threshold question of the Account’s capacity to be sued. It will then separately turn to the enforcement and jurisdictional requirements of the D.C. Uniform Foreign-Country Money Judgments Recognition Act. As its analysis of these issues resolves the Motion, the Court does not reach Defendants’ contention regarding service of process in this suit.
A. Capacity of Account
Defendants’ opening position is that the Account has no legal capacity here. In
countering this challenge, Plaintiff first maintains that a party may not raise such an issue on a
motion to dismiss. See Opp. at 11-12. While the relevant rule is silent on the issue, see Fed. R.
Civ. P. 9(a)(2), there is ample case law contrary to Kaupthing’s position. See, e.g., Smartdoor
Holdings, Inc. v. Edmit Industries, Inc.,
In cases such as this, where the party in question is neither an individual nor a corporation, capacity to be sued is determined with limited exceptions by “the law of the state where the court is located.” Fed. R. Civ. P 17(b). While cases like Bellow are thus helpful authority, the District of Columbia Code and common law must govern the issue.
Plaintiff does not allege that the Account is an individual, a corporation, or any other sort
of entity capable of being sued. See Am. Compl., ¶ 5. Rather, it alleges only that the Account is
a “[p]ortfolio . . . created to hold assets under the control and for the benefit of [the] Fund.” Id.
Defendants thus cast a wide net in their pursuit to analogize the Account to other entities that
courts in this district have held lack the capacity to be sued, drawing comparisons to
unincorporated associations, Millennium Square Residential Ass’n v. 2200 M Street LLC, 952 F.
Supp 2d 234, 243 (D.D.C. 2013), partnerships, Pritchett v. Stillwell,
There is no dispute that under D.C. law, “unincorporated divisions of a corporation lack [the] legal capacity to be sued.” Id. at 75-76 (collecting cases). This principle is supported by a “pragmatic” rationale derived from the fact that a division owns no independent assets and is under the control of a larger organization. Id. at 76. As such, “there can be no levy of execution against the division’s assets” unless the controlling organization itself is liable. Id. (quotation omitted). Inversely, “if the [controlling] organization is not liable[, then] none of its assets can *7 be used to satisfy the judgment.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). In St. Francis, for example, the Archdiocese’s exertion of control over the parochial school’s finances, even without directly overseeing the daily expenditures from an independent bank account, extinguished the school’s capacity to be sued. Id. at 78-79.
This rationale applies with full force to the Account, which “was created to hold assets under the control and for the benefit of [the] Fund.” Am. Comp., ¶ 5. The Fund not only benefited from the assets, but it also “owned” them, and it asserted its control by moving the assets around in 2008, as well as by delegating authority to WAMC through various “investment management agreement[s].” Icelandic Judgment at 7. As in St. Francis, the Fund’s exertion of control over the Account limited the latter’s financial independence. Indeed, the degree of control here went far beyond that exercised by the Archdiocese – the Account was under complete control and had no assets of its own. As a result, a judgment obtained against the Account, like one against a corporate division, could not be satisfied without securing an additional judgment imposing liability on the Account’s owner.
The application of this principle does not leave an injured party with nowhere to turn, as the Account’s lack of capacity has no bearing on the liability of its owner. Rather, holding that a bank account lacks the capacity to be sued directs injured parties towards judgments that, if won, could actually be satisfied. The Court, accordingly, finds that a bank account under the circumstances here lacks the capacity to be sued and that the Account must be dismissed from the action.
B. Enforcement Against Fund and Trustees
The Motion next argues that Plaintiff cannot enforce the judgment against the remaining Defendants – viz. , the Fund and the Trustees – because they are not parties to such judgment. To *8 understand this argument, the Court begins with the requirements of the D.C. Uniform Foreign- Country Money Judgments Recognition Act, D.C. Code § 15-361, et seq . The D.C. UFMJRA is an enactment of the Foreign-Country Money Judgments Recognition Act promulgated by the Uniform Law Commission. See Unif. Foreign-Country Money Judgments Recognition Act, §§ 1-13 (Unif. Law Comm’n 2005). The most recent version of the Act has been adopted in half of the states for the “purpose of establishing uniform and clear standards under which . . . courts will enforce the foreign-country money judgments that come within [the Act’s] scope.” Id., Refs & Annos (West).
While the Uniform Act is widely adopted, there is little caselaw construing D.C.’s
version. See, e.g., Commissions Imp. Exp., S.A. v. Republic of Congo,
With this background in mind, the Court turns to one of the Act’s requirements – namely, that a foreign judgment may be enforced in D.C. only “between the parties” to the original judgment. The Act places on the party seeking enforcement the burden of showing that the judgment is final, conclusive, and enforceable. See D.C. Code § 15-363. If these requirements are met, the foreign judgment is “[c]onclusive between the parties to the same extent as the *9 judgment of a sister state entitled to full faith and credit in the District of Columbia would be conclusive.” Id. § 15-367. Defendants argue that the Icelandic Judgment is not conclusive “between” Plaintiff and the Fund – and therefore cannot be enforced against the Fund – because the Icelandic Court ordered only the Account to pay Plaintiff. (The Trustees, in fact, were not even parties to the Icelandic suit in the first place.)
In support of this position, Defendants point to a case interpreting the same “between the
parties” language in an older version of the UFMJRA. See Mot. at 9 (citing Novae Corp.
Underwriting Ltd. v. Atl. Mut. Ins. Co.,
The Novae court first construed the phrase “between the parties” to mean that the UFMJRA “applies only as between the identical parties to the judgment which transfer and enforcement is sought.” Id. at 494. It then held that the U.K. judgment was unenforceable against the parent company because (1) the parent company was not named as a liable party in the U.K. judgment; (2) the U.K. court recognized that the parent and subsidiary companies were distinct entities; and (3) extending liability to the parent company would creep into the “underlying merits” of the foreign action, impermissibly extending its scope. Id. at 494-95.
All three of these justifications are present in this case, too. First, the Icelandic Judgment imposed no liability on the Fund or the Trustees and ordered only the Account to pay Plaintiff. *10 See Icelandic Judgment at 16-17. Second, the Icelandic court viewed the Account and the Fund as distinct entities, the former of which it held was a “legal person capable of having legal rights” and of being a “defendant in a lawsuit.” Id. at 15; see also SerVaas Inc. v. Republic of Iraq, 540 F. App’x 38, 40-41 (2d Cir. 2013) (foreign judgments enforceable under New York UFMJRA only against named parties or parties that foreign court views as “indistinguishable” or the “same” as named parties). Finally, as a result of this recognized distinction, enforcing the judgment against the Fund would delve into the underlying merits of the Icelandic Judgment and extend the scope of that court’s ruling.
Plaintiff does not dispute that Novae, although clearly not binding precedent, should guide the Court’s analysis. Instead, it argues that refusing to extend liability to the Fund would sanction the closing of an account “as a mechanism to frustrate potential creditors.” Opp. at 12- 13 (citing D.C.’s fraudulent-transfer laws). This argument puts the cart before the horse. Prohibitions on fraudulent transfers exist to prevent a party that has already been found liable from hiding its assets and becoming judgment proof. In such a scenario, however, the necessary prerequisite is that the evading party has a judgment against it. As discussed above, there is no judgment against the Fund. What Plaintiff asks the Court to do is to create one. Refusing to do so does not sanction fraud, but it does adhere to the limitations imposed by the D.C. UFMJRA.
As that Act may only be used to enforce a judgment “between the parties” actually named in it, the Icelandic Judgment cannot be enforced against the Fund or the Trustees. The Complaint must therefore be dismissed against these Defendants.
C. Personal Jurisdiction
There is, moreover, another independent reason why the Court cannot enforce the
Judgment: the Icelandic court’s lack of personal jurisdiction over Defendants. Courts here “may
*11
not recognize a foreign-country judgment if the . . . [f]oreign court did not have personal
jurisdiction over the defendant.” D.C. Code § 15-364(b); see Congo,
Plaintiff, in fact, does not argue that any of the specific grounds listed by the Act for
establishing personal jurisdiction have been satisfied. See D.C. Code § 15-365(a). It asserts,
however, that this list is not exhaustive and that the Court may recognize other bases of
jurisdiction. See Opp. at 14 (citing D.C. Code § 15-365(b)). While this is true, the Court may
do so only if the asserted jurisdiction comports with both the Constitution’s Due Process Clause
and D.C.’s long-arm statute. See Congo,
The Due Process Clause permits courts to exercise two different kinds of personal
jurisdiction, each related to a defendant’s frequency and degree of contact with a forum. General
jurisdiction, the first kind, permits a court to “hear any and all claims against” a defendant, even
if they did not arise from its contacts with the forum. Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A.
v. Brown,
Specific jurisdiction, on the other hand, permits a court to adjudicate those “issues
deriving from, or connected with, the very controversy that establishes jurisdiction.” Goodyear
Dunlop,
The Due Process Clause, in turn, permits a court to exercise specific jurisdiction over a
non-resident defendant only if there are sufficient “minimum contacts” between the defendant
and the forum “such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair
play and substantial justice.” International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
Here, Defendants originally procured their notes, which were issued in U.S. Dollars and
governed by New York law, through a program run by The Depository Trust Company (a New
York corporation) and an American subsidiary of Deutsche Bank. See Icelandic Judgment at 2-
4. The only contact Defendants had with Iceland was that Kaupthing, an Icelandic resident, had
issued the original notes and then bought them back. Selling goods to or entering a contract with
a state’s resident cannot alone create the minimum contacts needed to establish specific personal
jurisdiction. See, e.g., World Wide Travel,
Yet, beyond Kaupthing’s residency, no other aspect of the sale implicated the foreign
jurisdiction. There was nothing about the notes themselves that suggested a special relationship
to Iceland or Icelandic law, as they were issued in U.S. Dollars, controlled and distributed by
non-resident third parties, and governed by New York law. Cf. Hardy v. Northern Leasing
Systems, Inc., No. 13-0362,
Plaintiff responds with three arguments, none of which contests that Defendants lacked
minimum contacts. Kaupthing first asserts that “it is not required to plead with specificity the
Icelandic Court’s jurisdiction.” Opp. at 13 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(e)). Courts have identified,
however, that a party seeking enforcement under the Act “bears the burden of making a
prima
facie
showing that the mandatory grounds for nonrecognition –
i.e
., due process and personal
jurisdiction – do not exist.” Wimmer Canada, Inc. v. Abele Tractor & Equipment Co., Inc., 750
N.Y.S.2d 331, 332 (N.Y. App. Div. 2002); see Ackerman v. Levine,
The best Plaintiff can muster is that proper service “allowed the Icelandic Court to
establish personal jurisdiction over the Fund.” Opp. at 16. While proper “service is [a]
necessary” part of bringing a defendant to court, it is by itself “not sufficient to allow a court to
*15
exercise personal jurisdiction.” Magowan v. Lowery,
Kaupthing next argues that the Icelandic court “concluded” it had jurisdiction. See Opp.
at 14. This Court and others, however, have read the UFMJRA to place an obligation on
enforcing courts to determine for themselves whether a foreign judgment was accompanied by
the requisite personal jurisdiction. See, e.g., Congo,
Plaintiff’s final shot at enforcement is that the doctrine of comity requires this Court to ignore the Icelandic Judgment’s constitutional defects. See Opp. at 13-14. This argument misunderstands the doctrine. “It is clearly established that in order to grant comity to a foreign court's award of a money judgment against a defendant, the foreign court must have obtained valid personal jurisdiction over the defendant.” Cunard S.S. Co. v. Salen Reefer Servs. AB , 773 F.2d 452, 457 (2d Cir. 1985) (citations omitted); see Int’l Trading & Indus. Inv. Co. v. DynCorp Aerospace Tech., 763 F Supp. 2d 12, 24 (D.D.C. 2011) (“[C]omity will be granted to the decision or judgment of a foreign court” only “if it is shown that the foreign court is a court of *16 competent jurisdiction.”) (internal quotations omitted). Comity, accordingly, cannot compensate for a lack of jurisdiction.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. A separate Order consistent with this Opinion will be issued on this day. /s/ James E. Boasberg
JAMES E. BOASBERG United States District Judge Date: December 1, 2017
