The Republic of Congo appeals from Judge Preska’s order directing it to post security for the costs and expenses of plaintiff Kensington International Limited. The Congo argues that the order violates the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act. 28 U.S.C. § 1602-1611 (“FSIA”).
We dismiss the appeal because the order is not appealable under the collateral order doctrine. Construing the appeal as a petition for a writ of mandamus, we deny the petition.
BACKGROUND
Kensington holds overdue Congolese debt. It sought payment on the debt in England, and, in 2002, an English court ordered the Congo to pay approximately $57 million plus interest.
Kensington then sought to have the English judgment recognized in the United States, and it filed a complaint against the Congo in New York state court. On the Congo’s motion, the case was removed to the Southern District of New York. Kens-ington’s complaint asserted five claims for relief. First, Kensington sought recognition of the English judgment. In the alternative, Kensington alleged, second, breach of the loan agreement and sought recovery of the unpaid principal and interest. Third, it sought injunctive relief based on the Congo’s violation of the
pan passu
and negative pledge provisions in the loan agreement. Fourth, it requested a declaratory judgment that two particular
On September 30, 2004, Judge Preska granted summary judgment to Kensington on its claim for recognition of the English judgment. On March 18, 2005, Judge Preska granted Kensington’s motion to require the Congo to post security for costs and attorneys’ fees. The Congo had argued that it was protected from such an order by the FSIA, which establishes that the property of foreign states are immune from “attachment^] arrestf,] and execution.” 28 U.S.C. § 1609. Judge Preska concluded that in the loan agreement the Congo had explicitly waived any protection against prejudgment attachment under the FSIA. The Congo appeals.
DISCUSSION
a) Appealability of the Order
The threshold issue is whether Judge Preska’s order is appealable. We conclude that it is not.
“Orders denying or requiring security are obviously interlocutory, and questions regarding their appealability turn on the applicability of the so-called collateral order doctrine established in
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
We have held that orders granting security are not appealable because they fail to satisfy the third prong of the collateral order doctrine test: The party ordered to post security may obtain complete relief on appeal from final judgment.
See Seguros Banvenez S. A. v. S/S Oliver Drescher,
Since
Caribbean Trading, Banque Nordeurope, S.A v. Banker,
After
Banque Nordeurope,
we took up this issue again in
Result Skipping Co., Ltd. v. Ferruzzi Trading USA, Inc.,
Thus, rulings are appealable as collateral orders when they (i) satisfy
Cohen
and (ii) present an important question of law. This is the only consistent reading of the cases because both
Banque Nordeu-rope
and
Result Shipping
involved orders that otherwise satisfied the
Cohen
doctrine.
Banque Nordeurope
was an appeal from a dissolution of a prejudgment attachment,
The Congo argues that Caribbean Trading is distinguishable because Judge Pres-ka’s order here would require the Congo to bring immune assets into the jurisdiction, thereby vitiating the immunity of those assets and making them attachable under the FSIA. This harm, it argues, would be irreparable and effectively unre-viewable.
We are not persuaded. There is no unreviewable harm here because Judge Preska’s order does not have the breadth the Congo attributes to it. Her order requires the Congo to “either 1) pay into the Court ... the amount of $450,000, or 2) post a bond in a form acceptable to plaintiffs counsel in the amount of $450,000 as security for the costs, including attorneys’ fees, that Kensington has incurred and likely will incur in obtaining judgment in this action.” The Congo suggests that it has been “ordered to transfer into the jurisdiction $450,000 from its treasury,” but Judge Preska’s order requires no such thing. It requires only that the Congo produce $450,000 in security.
United States v. Jaffe,
There is thus no harm unreviewable on appeal from final judgment sufficient to distinguish this case from Caribbean Trading. We therefore dismiss the Congo’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
b) Construing appeal as a petition for a writ of mandamus
We may treat appeals dismissed for lack of jurisdiction as petitions for a writ of mandamus.
Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. v. Turner & Newall, PLC,
The Congo points out that we have held that a pre-judgment security order is indistinguishable from an order of attachment.
See Stephens v. Nat’l Distillers &
A waiver of immunity from prejudgment attachment under Section 1610 “does not require recitation of the ‘precise words “prejudgment attachment” in order to waive immunity.’ ”
Banco de Seguros del Estado v. Mutual Marine Office, Inc.,
The Congo has clearly waived its immunity under the FSIA. The Loan Agreement states that, “[t]o the extent that [the Congo] may in any jurisdiction claim for itself or its assets immunity from suit, execution, attachment (whether in aid of execution, before judgment or otherwise) or other legal process ... [the Congo] agrees not to claim and waives such immunity to the full extent permitted by the laws of that jurisdiction intending, in particular, that in any proceedings taken in New York the foregoing waiver of immunity shall have effect under and be construed in accordance with the United States Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976.” This language is easily sufficient to trigger the exemption under Section 1610.
The Congo rightly points out that, even with a waiver, the district court’s authority is still limited. It may order an attachment only of assets that are (i) in the United States and (ii) used for commercial purposes. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1610(a)(1) & (d)(1). The Congo argues that Judge Preska’s order is an attachment of assets that are protected by the FSIA. As we have discussed, that argument fails because it overstates the breadth of Judge Preska’s order.
The Congo argues that, under the FSIA, the district court may not require the posting of assets to serve as security without identifying specific commercial assets in the United States. It calls the Court’s attention to
Olympic Chartering S.A. v. Ministry of Industry & Trade of Jordan,
Kensington responds with
Banco Seguros del Estado v. Mutual Marine Office,
Ultimately, we need not resolve this disputed issue in the instant appeal. On this record, there is ample reason to place the burden on the Congo, rather than on Kensington or the district court. The Congo has refused to provide discovery to Kensington. In particular, it did not respond to Kensington’s interrogatory to “[i]dentify separately each Asset that is currently being used by Defendant for Commercial Activity in the United States or expected to be used by Defendant for Commercial Activity in the United States during the next thirty-six (36) months.” Any burden of identification was therefore properly placed on the Congo.
Finding no violation of the FSIA, we likewise find no abuse of discretion. In ordering security, Judge Preska considered (i) the Congo’s ability to pay; (ii) whether the Congo was present in the United States; (iii) the Congo’s compliance with past court orders; (iv) the extent and scope of discovery; (v) the expected legal costs; and (vi) the merit of the underlying claims.
The Congo argues that Judge Preska failed to consider the merit of the remaining underlying claims. Her decision does focus on the merits of Kensington’s claim to recognize the English judgment, which the court had granted six months earlier. Nevertheless, Kensington’s likelihood of success on its other claims — particularly Count V, seeking costs under this loan agreement — on the face of the record itself justifies the security for costs. The Congo argues that Counts III and IV, which seek injunctive and declaratory relief, will fail. Even if that is the case, however, Count V has a high likelihood of success.
The Congo also contends that Judge Preska wrongly took judicial notice that “Congo is a[n] oil-rich nation with more than sufficient assets to pay its debts but one of the world’s most notorious debtors.” The Congo argues that, because it does not have funds to pay all of its debts, taking judicial notice that the Congo may nevertheless pay this debt is error. In other words, the Congo claims that it is unwilling to pay its debts in the name of restructuring its entire debt portfolio, and thus “paying Kensington or other similarly situated individual creditors would have the perverse effect of encouraging the Congo’s other creditors to litigate their claims in hopes of securing a windfall, rather than participating in an equitable restructuring process.” While it may be in the Congo’s interest to seek a global settlement, Judge Preska was quite right to conclude — and the Congo does not squarely dispute — that the Congo has sufficient funds to pay here. This is not a bankruptcy proceeding.
The Congo also disputes Judge Preska’s reliance on the Congo’s not being present in the United States as a factor weighing towards her decision to grant the security order. The Congo points out that, by her
The Congo protests Judge Preska’s conclusion that the Congo has not complied with past court orders, suggesting that its refusal to pay past judgments is due to inability to pay and that its refusal to attend court proceedings cannot justify security. The Congo also argues that its resistance to discovery requests should not count against it. Further, it argues that it should not be faulted for increasing the costs of litigation, since the Congo is the defendant, and it is plaintiff Kensington that escalated costs by advancing legal claims against the Congo to which it must respond.
The district court’s contrary conclusions are all reasonable and supported by the evidence. The Congo has refused to comply with court orders; it has resisted supplying Kensington with its discovery requests; and its intransigence has forced Kensington to pour more resources into litigation. Each factor indicates that the Congo is not acting in good faith in this litigation or in other cases, and thus requiring it to post security is reasonable.
Because Judge Preska did not abuse her discretion in ordering the Congo to post security, there is no basis for us to consider mandamus.
The Congo finally requests that we reassign this matter to a different judge on remand because of Judge Preska’s “hostility towards the Congo.” This argument is of no merit whatsoever, as the Congo does not contend that Judge Preska’s “hostility” arises from an extrajudicial source, nor can the Congo satisfy the onerous burden of proving that Judge Preska “display[ed] a dep-seated favoritism or antagonism that would make fair judgment impossible.”
Liteky v. United States,
CONCLUSION
The order to post security is not appeal-able under the collateral order doctrine. We therefore dismiss the appeal. Construing the appeal as a petition for mandamus, we deny the petition.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has since held that even the avoidance of trial is not, by itself, sufficient to satisfy the “effectively unreviewable” prong of the collateral order test. "[I]t is not mere avoidance of a trial, but avoidance of a
