Case Information
*1 B EFORE : C HIN and C ARNEY , Circuit Judges, and U NDERHILL , District Judge. ** Appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Nina Gershon, Judge) imposing discovery sanctions against defendant Arab Bank. Plaintiffs are U.S. and foreign nationals pursuing claims under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2333, and Alien Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1350, alleging in relevant part that the Bank knowingly and purposefully supported foreign terrorist organizations between 1995 and 2004 by providing financial services to those organizations. The District Court ordered the Bank to produce certain documents that the Bank argues are protected by foreign bank secrecy laws, and, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37, imposed sanctions for the Bank’s persistent failure to comply. The sanctions order included a jury instruction permitting the jury to infer that (1) the Bank provided financial services to foreign terrorist organizations, and (2) it did so knowingly and purposefully. We conclude *2 that the sanctions order is not a reviewable collateral order, and that accordingly, we lack jurisdiction over the Bank’s appeal. We further conclude that the Bank is not entitled to a writ of mandamus vacating the District Court’s sanctions order. The appeal is therefore DISMISSED, and the petition for a writ of mandamus is DENIED.
S TEPHEN M. S HAPIRO , Mayer Brown LLP, Chicago, IL (Michele L. Odorizzi, Timothy S. Bishop, Jeffrey W. Sarles, Mayer Brown LLP, Chicago, IL; Philip Allen Lacovara, Mayer Brown LLP, New York, NY; Kevin Walsh, Douglas W. Mateyaschuk, II, DLA Piper LLP (U.S.), New York, NY, on the brief), for Defendant-Appellant.
P ETER R AVEN -H ANSEN , Osen LLC, Oradell, NJ (Gary M. Osen, Aaron Schlanger, Osen LLC, Oradell, NJ; Mark S. Werbner, Joel Israel, Sayles Werbner, Dallas, TX; Michael E. Elsner, John M. Eubanks, Vincent I. Parrett, Motley Rice LLC, Mount Pleasant, SC; Steven M. Steingard, Stephen H. Schwartz, Neil L. Glazer, Kohn, Swift & Graf, P.C., Philadelphia, PA; James P. Bonner, Stone Bonner & Rocco LLP, New York, NY; David S. Stone, Stone & Magnanini LLP, Short Hills, NJ, on the brief), for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Christopher M. Curran, White & Case LLP, New York, NY (Nicole E. Erb, White & Case LLP, New York, NY, on the brief), for The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan as amicus curiae in support of Defendant-Appellant.
S USAN L. C ARNEY , Circuit Judge:
This case concerns claims brought by victims and families of victims of terrorist attacks committed in Israel between 1995 and 2004. Proceeding under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2333, and the Alien Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1350, plaintiffs seek monetary damages from Arab Bank, PLC (“Arab Bank” or the *3 “Bank”), a large bank headquartered in Jordan, with branches in New York, throughout the Middle East, and around the world. According to plaintiffs, Arab Bank provided financial services and support to terrorists during this period, facilitating the attacks that caused them grave harm.
At stake in this litigation are interests both wide-ranging and weighty. They include plaintiffs’ and the United States’ interests in seeking redress for and deterring acts of international terrorism; the Bank’s interests in avoiding substantial damages and the stigma of being labeled a supporter of terror; and foreign jurisdictions’ interests in enforcing their bank privacy laws. Although the questions before us implicate some of these broader interests, our analysis turns on our own limited jurisdiction, either through interlocutory appeal or mandamus, to consider issues that have arisen during the course of litigation that is ongoing in the district court.
This appeal is brought by defendant Arab Bank from the District Court’s orders imposing sanctions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b) for the Bank’s failure to comply with several of that court’s discovery-related orders. In a separate action consolidated with the instant appeal, the Bank has also petitioned our Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 for a writ of mandamus directing vacatur of the District Court’s sanctions order.
That order was entered following the Bank’s repeated failures, over several years and despite multiple discovery orders, to produce certain documents relevant to plaintiffs’ case. The Bank argues that the documents are covered by foreign bank *4 secrecy laws such that their disclosure would subject the Bank to criminal prosecution and other penalties in several foreign jurisdictions. The sanctions order takes the form of a jury instruction that would permit – but not require – the jury to infer from the Bank’s failure to produce these documents that the Bank provided financial services to designated foreign terrorist organizations, and did so knowingly. The order also precludes the Bank from introducing for the jury’s consideration certain evidence related to the undisclosed materials.
On appeal, the Bank argues primarily that these sanctions are unduly harsh. It contends that the jury instructions will predetermine the outcome of the litigation, and that, in imposing the sanctions order, the District Court assigned inadequate weight to the interests of Lebanon, Jordan, and the Palestinian Monetary Authority in enforcing their banking privacy laws and to the hardship faced by the Bank in addressing competing legal dictates of the United States and foreign authorities. The Bank also submits that entry of the sanctions order constituted an abuse of the District Court’s discretion in that the order is alleged to violate due process and to rest on erroneous factual findings.
Before we may reach the merits of these arguments, however, we must
determine whether our Court has jurisdiction to hear this appeal. Because 28
U.S.C. § 1291 vests us with jurisdiction to review “final decisions” of the district
court, ordinarily a decision or order is appealable only after the district court has
entered judgment. See Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter,
The Bank urges us to conclude, however, that the court’s order falls within
the “small category of decisions that, although they do not end the litigation, must
nonetheless be considered ‘final.’” Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n,
In the alternative, the Bank urges by means of a petition for mandamus that we vacate the District Court’s sanctions order. It contends that the order constitutes such a clear abuse of discretion that it cannot be allowed to stand. Plaintiffs, for their part, dispute that this is a suitable case for granting a writ of mandamus, maintaining principally that the Bank does not have a “clear and indisputable” right to the relief it seeks. See Cheney v. U.S. Dist. Court, 542 U.S. 367, 380-81 (2004).
For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the sanctions order is not a reviewable collateral order, and we therefore dismiss the Bank’s appeal for want of jurisdiction. We conclude, further, that this is not an appropriate case for issuance of the extraordinary writ of mandamus, since we agree with plaintiffs that the Bank *6 has not established (among other factors) that it has a “clear and indisputable right” to such drastic relief or that review after final judgment will not provide adequate relief. See id. at 381. We therefore DISMISS the appeal and DENY the petition for mandamus.
BACKGROUND
1. Plaintiffs’ Claims
Plaintiffs are thousands of individual victims and family members of victims injured or killed in terrorist attacks occurring in Israel and the Palestinian Territories between 1995 and 2004. 1 Arab Bank is headquartered in Jordan and maintains a branch in New York City. Plaintiffs allege that during the relevant period (much of which is commonly referred to as the “Second Intifada”), the Bank knowingly, intentionally, and unlawfully “solicit[ed], collect[ed], transmitt[ed], disburs[ed], and provid[ed] the financial resources that allowed” foreign terrorist organizations operating within Israel and the Palestinian Territories “to flourish and to engage in a campaign of terror, genocide, and crimes against humanity in an *7 attempt to eradicate the Israeli presence from the Middle East landscape.” 2 Providing such financial services to foreign terrorists violates U.S. law. See 18 U.S.C. § 2339A(a) (proscribing the provision of “material support or resources, knowing or intending that they are to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out [any one of a number of expressly prohibited acts of terrorism]”).
Plaintiffs’ claims rest on two factual theories. First, plaintiffs allege that the Bank assisted in administering a “death and dismemberment benefit plan” pursuant to which the Saudi Committee for the Support of the Intifada Al Quds (“Saudi Committee”) made cash payments to terrorists and their families. 3 The payments were allegedly designed to provide an incentive for suicide bombers and others who killed or injured plaintiffs and their kin. Plaintiffs allege that the families of terrorists would “claim this reward by obtaining an official certification of their deceased relative’s status as a martyr, which include[d] an individualized martyr identification number.” 4 Plaintiffs further allege that the Saudi Committee and Arab Bank required that beneficiaries provide this “martyr certificate” or “death certificate” to Arab Bank to demonstrate their entitlement to benefits. 5
Second, plaintiffs allege that the Bank provided financial services to various entities and individuals acting on behalf of Hamas and other State Department- *8 designated foreign terrorist organizations. 6 These services included, for example, maintaining bank accounts, making wire transfers, and otherwise facilitating the movement of funds.
Plaintiffs are U.S. and foreign nationals. The U.S.-national plaintiffs assert claims arising under the Anti-Terrorism Act (“ATA”), 18 U.S.C. § 2333, and the foreign-national plaintiffs request relief under the Alien Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1350, also known as the Alien Tort Statute (“ATS”). Each group of plaintiffs seeks monetary damages.
2. The Discovery Disputes and Arab Bank’s Limited Document Productions Early in the litigation, in 2005, plaintiffs requested that the Bank produce documents related to various specified accounts maintained at the Bank. The material sought concerned primarily organizations designated as “foreign terrorist organizations” by the United States government, and entities and individuals allegedly affiliated with those organizations. 7 During 2005, Magistrate Judge Victor V. Pohorelsky, to whom this case was referred for discovery, issued a series of focused production orders that required Arab Bank to turn over specific banking information concerning known or suspected terrorists. For example, in November *9 2005, the Magistrate Judge ordered that Arab Bank produce information related to a specific account at the Bank’s Lebanese branch, into which a website allegedly affiliated with terrorist groups had purportedly requested that funds be transferred. 8 Arab Bank asserted that the request was subject to bank secrecy laws in Lebanon and that permission to produce the relevant material was required from Lebanese regulatory authorities. In 2006, Arab Bank received permission from Lebanon to disclose information related to this account, and did so. 9
In February 2006, plaintiffs moved the District Court to compel the Bank to
produce a much broader swath of previously-requested documents. Later that year,
the Magistrate Judge granted plaintiffs’ motion, and in March 2007, the District
Court affirmed the production order. 10 Among the various materials the Magistrate
Judge ordered Arab Bank to disclose were documents related to alleged transfers
from the Saudi Committee to terrorists, including “documents identifying the
account numbers and account holders of the accounts from which the payments
were disbursed” and “documents identifying the account numbers and account
holders of the accounts into which the payments were disbursed.” 11
*10
In deciding the motion to compel, the Magistrate Judge and District Court
analyzed several factors. Most critically, they balanced (on the one hand) the
interests of foreign governments in enforcing their laws and the potential hardship
created for the Bank by its conflicting legal obligations, with (on the other hand) the
interests of the United States in enforcing its laws and plaintiffs’ need for the
material in pursuing their claims. The balancing analysis followed the guidance
provided by § 442 of the Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law of the
United States (1987) (the “Restatement”), which has long provided the courts a
thoughtful source of authority for addressing discovery issues in this context. See,
e.g., In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
[i] the importance to the . . . litigation of the documents or other information requested; [ii] the degree of specificity of the request; [iii] whether the information originated in the United States; [iv] the availability of alternative means of securing the information; and [v] the extent to which noncompliance with the request would undermine important interests of the United States, or compliance with the request would undermine important interests of the state where the information is located.
Restatement § 442(1)(c). Using this framework, the court here determined that the *11 importance of the documents to the litigation and the substantial public interest in compensating victims of terrorism and combating terrorism – interests shared by the United States and foreign sovereigns – outweighed the foreign sovereigns’ interests in banking privacy. 12
Before entering its production order, however, the Magistrate Judge invited Arab Bank to seek permission from the cognizant authorities in the relevant foreign states 13 to produce the responsive material. See Restatement § 442(2)(a) (“[A] court or agency in the United States may require the person to whom the order is directed to make a good faith effort to secure permission from the foreign authorities to make the information available.”). As discussed above, a similar waiver had been granted by Lebanese authorities earlier in 2006. 14
Arab Bank sought such a waiver, but in September 2007, the authorities in Jordan, Lebanon, and the Palestinian Territories denied the Bank’s request. 15 Pointing to this denial, the Bank continued to refuse to produce the materials assertedly covered by foreign bank secrecy laws. Plaintiffs continued to contend that the materials at issue were necessary to their case.
*12 During these protracted proceedings, plaintiffs acquired numerous documents related to their discovery requests, some from the Bank and some from other sources. The quality and quantity of the documents bear on both plaintiffs’ need for additional discovery and the likely effect of the sanctions order. The material was produced in the following ways.
First, after initially resisting their motion to compel, the Bank disclosed to plaintiffs documents regarding certain fund transfers effected through the New York branch of Arab Bank. 16 The Bank had earlier disclosed these documents to two divisions of the United States Department of the Treasury – the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (“OCC”) and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network – in the course of investigations by those divisions of Arab Bank’s New York branch for the Bank’s alleged failure to monitor fund transfers adequately for suspicious activity. 17
Second, through sources independent of Arab Bank but not apparent from the record, plaintiffs obtained documents that the Bank initially produced to the United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”) during its prosecution of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (“Holy Land Foundation”) in the Northern District of Texas on money-laundering charges. 18 Originally established as the “Occupied Land Fund,” the Holy Land Foundation has described itself as “the *13 largest Muslim charity in the United States,” but in the early 2000s the Treasury Department found that it was “closely linked” with Hamas. 19 Plaintiffs allege in this suit that Arab Bank laundered money for the Holy Land Foundation as part of the Foundation’s efforts to raise funds for Hamas. 20 The documents obtained by plaintiffs include documents formerly located at Arab Bank-Palestine and Arab Bank-London that are responsive to plaintiffs’ initial discovery requests. 21
Third, after numerous production orders, Arab Bank obtained permission from the Saudi Committee to disclose documents “relating to transactions handled by [Arab Bank] on the Saudi Committee’s behalf.” 22 Pursuant to the Saudi Committee’s permission, Arab Bank now claims to have produced for plaintiffs approximately 180,000 “documents” reflecting “payment instructions for every payment originated by the Saudi Committee and made to a beneficiary by Arab Bank . . . [, including] the date, value and currency of the transfer; the name and number of the transferring bank; the name and number of the covering bank; the name of the transferor; and the name and address of every beneficiary.” 23 The Bank further contends that it has produced every internal document in its custody or *14 possession, in any branch, that relates to the Saudi Committee. According to Arab Bank, these documents include internal correspondence related to transfers the Saudi Committee made to recipients located in the Palestinian Territories. They also contain information related to 122 transfers through the Saudi Committee that were especially probative, in plaintiffs’ view, because they identified the beneficiary of the transfer solely by his or her relationship to another individual (i.e., “father of ____”). Before performing these transfers, Arab Bank received further information about each of the beneficiaries but – the Bank asserts – never requested “death certificates” or “martyr certificates” from beneficiaries. Arab Bank asserts that in discovery it produced the documents that these beneficiaries had provided to the Bank to establish their entitlement to payment, with the names of the beneficiaries redacted.
Fourth, as mentioned above, Arab Bank received permission from the Lebanese Special Investigation Commission to disclose, and in fact later did disclose to plaintiffs, documents relating to one account at a Lebanese branch of Arab Bank that was apparently “held in the name of an individual who has been identified as a high-ranking member of Hamas.” 24
Plaintiffs thus acquired a substantial volume of relevant material. Arab Bank continued, however, to refuse to produce documents responsive to several requests of critical importance to plaintiffs’ case. These included records regarding *15 ten specific accounts the Bank is alleged to maintain for certain named foreign terrorist organizations; general account records for other named organizations that, according to plaintiffs, are linked to terrorism; and, finally, account records for the beneficiaries of Saudi Committee transfers. 25 Regarding the last category of records, Arab Bank has argued that even though the Saudi Committee may provide permission to Arab Bank to disclose documents related to payments “originated by the Saudi Committee,” Arab Bank may not disclose “account records” – including account numbers, account statements, and certain account-holder identifying information – “of all the tens of thousands of Saudi Committee beneficiaries” without violating bank secrecy laws. 26
3. The Sanctions Order
In late December 2007, over two years after their initial discovery request, plaintiffs moved for sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b). Rule 37(b) authorizes district courts to impose sanctions upon a party for failure to comply with a discovery order, so long as those sanctions are “just.” The Rule identifies potential sanctions for disobeying discovery orders. These include: “directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated facts be taken as established for purposes of the action”; “prohibiting the disobedient party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses”; and “rendering a default judgment.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2).
*16 In June 2009, in the absence of any further substantial production by Arab Bank, the Magistrate Judge issued a Report & Recommendation addressing sanctions. Initially, the Magistrate Judge recommended that the District Court, among other sanctions, should “deem[ ] established . . . [that] between 2000 and 2004 the defendant provided financial services on behalf of the Saudi Committee” to various terrorists and terrorist organizations. 27 The Magistrate Judge later amended this recommendation, having concluded that he had initially overlooked that documents produced by Arab Bank regarding the Saudi Committee transfers indeed included “information about the identity of each recipient of such a payment, the amount and timing of each payment, and other information concerning each payment transaction.” 28 For this reason, the Magistrate Judge recommended that the District Court instruct the jury that it could but need not infer that Arab Bank provided financial services to the Saudi Committee and FTOs. 29 The Magistrate Judge declined to recommend, however, either that the District Court deem established that Arab Bank knowingly and intentionally provided financial services to terrorist organizations or that the District Court instruct the jury that it could infer knowledge and intent from Arab Bank’s failure to produce certain documents. The Magistrate Judge explained that, in his view, “There has been no showing that *17 the withheld evidence would be likely to provide direct evidence of the knowledge 1 and intent of the Bank in providing the financial services at the heart of this case.” 30 2 In July 2010, the District Court adopted the Magistrate Judge’s Report & 3 Recommendation in part and imposed the sanctions order now at issue in this 4 Court. The sanctions order took the form, first, of instructions the District Court 5 ruled it will give to the jury. The court will instruct the jury that, based on Arab 6 Bank’s failure to produce documents, the jury may – but need not – conclude both 7 that Arab Bank provided financial services to foreign terrorist organizations and 8 that it did so knowingly and purposefully. 31 The Bank’s actions and intent, of 9 *18 course, lie at the core of its ATA and ATS liability. 32
The District Court carefully explained its decision to impose this sanction. It noted that many of the documents that plaintiffs had already obtained tended to support the inference that Arab Bank knew that its services benefited terrorists. 33 According to the District Court, these documents included (1) Saudi Committee spreadsheets listing beneficiaries of transfers and the dates and causes of the related deaths; and (2) documents from Arab Bank’s Lebanon branch that suggested that “on at least three occasions in 2000, Arab Bank officials approved the transfer of funds into [an account at that branch] despite the fact that the transfers listed” known terrorists as beneficiaries. 34 As a consequence of the evidentiary gap created by Arab Bank’s non-disclosure, the court reasoned, plaintiffs would be “hard-pressed to show that . . . [these] transfers were not approved by mistake, but instead are representative of numerous other transfers to terrorists.” 35 The permissive inference instruction will, according to the District Court, help to rectify this evidentiary imbalance.
*19 Additionally, the District Court precluded Arab Bank from using as evidence at trial any material that the Bank withheld on bank secrecy grounds, and from making arguments with respect to its state of mind that “would find proof or refutation in the withheld documents.” 36 The District Court observed in support of its decision that the Bank “cannot argue that it had no knowledge a certain Bank customer was a terrorist if it did not produce that person’s complete account records. To permit the Bank to make such an argument would allow it to profit from evidentiary gaps that it chose to create.” 37
After the District Court denied Arab Bank’s motions to reconsider the sanctions order and to certify an interlocutory appeal, Arab Bank noticed the appeal and filed the petition for mandamus that are before us now.
DISCUSSION
I. Collateral Order Review
Federal courts of appeals “have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions
of the district courts of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Ordinarily, we have
jurisdiction to consider only those appeals brought after the district court has
entered final judgment. Cunningham v. Hamilton County,
The class of collateral orders as to which interlocutory review is permitted
under § 1291 must remain “narrow and selective in its membership,” so that the
collateral order doctrine does not “overpower the substantial finality interests [that]
§ 1291 is meant to further.” Will,
We have identified only one instance in which the Supreme Court has
directly addressed the appealability of a district court’s imposition of Rule 37
sanctions. In Cunningham, the Court held that the court of appeals lacked
jurisdiction to consider an attorney’s interlocutory appeal of the district court’s
monetary sanction, imposed under Rule 37(a)(5), 39 requiring that the attorney pay
the opposing party’s fees and costs related to a discovery dispute.
In analyzing whether the sanctions order there was immediately appealable, the Court applied the three-pronged Cohen test. The respondent conceded the first prong of the Cohen test, that “the sanctions order was conclusive.” Id. at 205. As to the second, the Court noted that “a Rule 37(a) sanctions order often will be inextricably intertwined with the merits of the action,” reasoning that an *22 “evaluation of the appropriateness of sanctions may require the reviewing court to inquire into the importance of the information sought or the adequacy or truthfulness of a response.” Id. at 205. While acknowledging that “[p]erhaps not every discovery sanction will be inextricably intertwined with the merits,” it declined to undertake a particularized review of the facts in the case before it, observing instead that it had “consistently eschewed a case-by-case approach to deciding whether an order is sufficiently collateral” in favor of a categorical approach in which it focused on classes of orders in determining reviewability. Id. at 206. As to the third prong, the Court held that “[e]ven if the merits were completely divorced from the sanctions issue,” the order would be unappealable as an interlocutory matter because it could be effectively reviewed after the case had finally been resolved in the district court. Id. at 206-09.
Although the metes and bounds of the category established by Cunningham
have yet to be firmly set, we have to date treated Cunningham as prohibiting
interlocutory appeals of Rule 37 sanctions, at least in cases where those sanctions’
primary component is attorney’s fees or costs imposed against an attorney under
Rule 37(a). See, e.g., New Pac. Overseas Grp. (U.S.A.) Inc. v. Excal Int’l Dev. Corp.,
Even were we unconstrained by Cunningham’s “categorical” holding, we
conclude that the established hurdles to interlocutory review bar the Bank’s appeal.
Regarding the first prong of the Cohen test, the District Court appears to have
conceived of its order as “conclusive.” See, e.g., Linde V,
With respect to the second prong, the sanction imposed here is “inextricably
intertwined with the merits of the action.” Cunningham,
In fact, the sanctions order in this case is intertwined with the merits of the
litigation to an even greater degree than the sanctions order in Cunningham. The
Supreme Court determined that the order in that case was unreviewable on
interlocutory appeal because the appellate court would likely have had to consider
the importance of the information sought relative to the merits of the case. But the
sanction itself – a monetary penalty imposed against an attorney and not one of the
*25
parties – was ancillary to the resolution of the litigation. By contrast, here the
District Court imposed a sanction that bears directly on the resolution of the merits
of this case, and in determining on appeal whether the District Court abused its
discretion, we would likely take into account the probable effect of the sanction on
the jury’s verdict. See id. at 147 (considering propriety of default judgment as
sanction). For example, Arab Bank particularly objects to the sanction in that it
permits the jury to infer that Arab Bank provided aid to terrorist organizations
“knowingly and purposefully.” See Linde V,
As for the third prong of the Cohen test, this is not a case in which the order
from which Arab Bank seeks interlocutory appeal is “effectively unreviewable on
appeal from the final judgment in the underlying action.” Swint,
The Bank argues, however, that even if on an appeal from an adverse verdict
this Court were to find error in the District Court’s sanctions order, it would be too
late to reverse the substantial financial consequences resulting from the
reputational harm the Bank would sustain as a consequence of an adverse jury
finding. But this concern hardly compels review under the collateral order doctrine.
The possibility of reputational harm to the sanctioned attorney was also at stake in
Cunningham, but the Supreme Court reasoned nonetheless that any interest the
attorney may have had in resolving the matter quickly was trumped by the district
court’s interests in “structur[ing] a sanction in the most effective manner.”
Cunningham,
The Bank contends that this application of the Cohen test will result in
inefficiencies and a possible measure of unfairness to Arab Bank, but neither of
these concerns alters our analysis. To be sure, if our Court were to decide on appeal
*27
after final judgment that the District Court erred in imposing the sanctions, the
parties will have already expended considerable resources. Moreover, it is
conceivable that, as Arab Bank argues, it will experience substantial and immediate
harm from an adverse jury verdict following the challenged instruction. These
equitable considerations, however, do not bear on the inquiry called for by § 1291
and Cohen. As the Supreme Court has cautioned, “allowing appeals of right from
nonfinal orders that turn on the facts of a particular case thrusts appellate courts
indiscriminately into the trial process and thus defeats one vital purpose of the
final-judgment rule – that of maintaining the appropriate relationship between the
respective courts.” Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
Furthermore, although § 1291 applies categorically, we are not powerless to
account for these equitable considerations. Our system maintains an “escape hatch
from the finality rule.” SEC v. Rajaratnam,
II. Mandamus
The All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), empowers this Court to issue a writ of
mandamus directing a district court to correct an erroneous order. 40 Mandamus,
however, is a “drastic and extraordinary remedy,” whose use is warranted only
under “circumstances amounting to a judicial usurpation of power or a clear abuse
of discretion” by the district court. Cheney,
Three demanding requirements must be met before a court will issue a writ
of mandamus. First, the petitioner must demonstrate that its “right to issuance of
the writ is clear and indisputable.” Cheney,
Second, “the party seeking issuance of the writ must have no other adequate
means to attain the relief [it] desires.” Cheney,
Third, “even if the first two prerequisites have been met, the issuing court, in
the exercise of its discretion, must be satisfied that the writ is appropriate under
the circumstances.” Cheney,
We address each of the relevant factors in turn. Although failure to satisfy any one of these prongs is dispositive of Arab Bank’s petition, we review all three here, and conclude that none of the three supports issuance of the writ.
A. Arab Bank Is Not Clearly Entitled to a Writ of Mandamus. The Bank argues that the sanctions order constitutes an abuse of discretion because it improperly balances the interests of the parties and nations affected by the discovery order; offends international comity; rests on clearly erroneous factual findings; and violates the Bank’s due process rights.
We first address the Bank’s challenges to the legal analysis and factual
determinations undergirding the District Court’s decisions to compel discovery and
impose sanctions. We observe that when weighing the conflicting legal obligations
of U.S. discovery orders and foreign laws, “[m]echanical or overbroad rules of thumb
are of little value; what is required is a careful balancing of the interests involved
and a precise understanding of the facts and circumstances of the particular case.”
United States v. First Nat’l City Bank,
Second, we examine Arab Bank’s contention that the sanctions order here
was so severe that it offended due process. On that count, we conclude that
although the sanctions are substantial, they are not equivalent to a default
judgment. The District Court’s sanctions order cannot fairly be said to constitute a
“judicial usurpation of power or a clear abuse of discretion” such as is necessary to
warrant mandamus. City of New York,
Our conclusion today should not be read, however, to preclude a future court
from holding that the district court erred in imposing the sanctions. Because the
writ of mandamus is such an extraordinary remedy, our analysis of whether the
petitioning party has a “clear and indisputable” right to the writ is necessarily more
deferential to the district court than our review on direct appeal. Cf. In re
Volkswagen of America, Inc.,
1.
Balancing of Interests
Arab Bank argues that the District Court failed to give adequate weight to
the difficulties presented by the Bank’s conflicting legal obligations, and to the
interests of foreign governments in enforcing their bank secrecy laws. These
arguments do not support issuance of a writ of mandamus. The District Court
balanced the competing interests at issue and did not clearly abuse its discretion so
as to warrant this extraordinary remedy by imposing discovery sanctions in
response to the Bank’s persistent noncompliance with the discovery order. See
Linde V,
The Supreme Court long ago recognized the difficulties faced by parties for
whom compliance with a U.S. discovery order would violate foreign law. See Société
Internationale Pour Participations Industrielles et Commerciales, S.A. v. Rogers,
In both Rogers and Aérospatiale, however, the Court held that the operation
of foreign law “do[es] not deprive an American court of the power to order a party
subject to its jurisdiction to produce evidence even though the act of production may
violate that [law].” Aérospatiale,
Section 442 provides that, in determining whether to issue a production
order for information located abroad, courts should consider “the importance to the
investigation or litigation of the documents or other information requested; the
degree of specificity of the request; whether the information originated in the
United States; the availability of alternative means of securing the information; and
the extent to which noncompliance with the request would undermine important
interests of the United States, or compliance with the request would undermine
important interests of the state where the information is located.” Restatement §
442(1)(c). Cases from our Circuit counsel that, when deciding whether to impose
sanctions, a district court should also examine the hardship of the party facing
conflicting legal obligations and whether that party has demonstrated good faith in
addressing its discovery obligations. See In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 218 F. Supp.
*34
2d 544, 554 (S.D.N.Y. 2002); Minpeco, S.A. v. Conticommodity Servs., Inc., 116
F.R.D. 517, 523 (S.D.N.Y. 1987) (cited with approval by First America Corp. v. Price
Waterhouse LLP,
In arriving at the decision to compel discovery of the documents at issue, the
District Court adopted the Magistrate Judge’s conclusion that all but one of the
§ 442 factors supported disclosure; only the materials’ origin outside the United
States cut the other way. Linde III,
In its opinion ordering sanctions, the District Court also addressed the
hardship and good faith factors. With regard to Arab Bank’s good faith, the District
Court concluded that Arab Bank’s contention “that it has acted in the utmost good
faith” is “not supported by the record.” Linde V,
Having reviewed the decisions of the Magistrate Judge and the District Court, we turn now to defendant’s arguments. Arab Bank takes issue with what it alleges are a number of distinct factual and legal errors in the District Court’s balancing analysis. We review these arguments separately and then evaluate the District Court’s overall weighing of these factors in issuing sanctions, mindful that our review here is focused on determining whether Arab Bank has demonstrated a “clear and indisputable” right to the writ.
a.
International Comity
International comity is a consideration guiding courts, where possible,
towards interpretations of domestic law that avoid conflict with foreign law. In re
Maxwell Commc’n Corp.,
Arab Bank argues that the District Court’s decisions ordering production and imposing sanctions should be vacated because they offend international comity. This argument derives from the notion that the sanctions force foreign authorities either to waive enforcement of their bank secrecy laws or to enforce those laws, and in so doing create an allegedly devastating financial liability for the leading financial institution in their region. The Bank asserts, further, that international comity principles merit special weight here because the District Court’s decisions affect the United States’ interests in combating terrorism and pertain to a region of the world pivotal to United States foreign policy.
The District Court’s explication of the foreign states’ interests in enforcing
the bank secrecy laws were, perhaps, spare. But the District Court’s opinions did
not reflect a disregard for those interests. To the contrary, the court expressly
noted that it had “considered the interests of the United States and the foreign
*37
jurisdictions whose foreign bank secrecy laws are at issue.” Linde V,
Additionally, international comity calls for more than an examination of only
some of the interests of some foreign states. Rather, as the Supreme Court
explained in Aérospatiale, “the concept of international comity” requires a
“particularized analysis of the respective interests of the foreign nation and the
requesting nation.”
Furthermore, the District Court properly recognized that the interests of the
United States weigh heavily in this case, even though it is a private lawsuit brought
by individual victims of terrorism. In Minpeco, the district court ordered the
production of documents relevant to private antitrust, commodities fraud, and
racketeering claims despite the defendant’s assertion that the documents were
protected by foreign bank secrecy laws.
Like the antitrust, commodities fraud, and racketeering laws at issue in Minpeco, the ATA’s legislative history reflects that Congress conceived of the ATA, at least in part, as a mechanism for protecting the public’s interests through private enforcement. One of the Act’s sponsors noted that the Act would ensure that *39 “justice [is] sought” against terrorists “even if not by [foreign governments or] the United States.” 137 Cong. Rec. S. 1771 (daily ed. Feb. 7, 1991) (Senator Grassley commenting after enactment). Furthermore, he declared that the Act would “empower[ ] victims with all the weapons available in civil litigation, including: [s]ubpoenas for financial records, [and] banking information [of alleged terrorists].” Id. The District Court here appropriately recognized the important U.S. interests at stake in arming private litigants with the “weapons available in civil litigation” to deter and punish the support of terrorism. Id.
In light of the particularly deferential standard of review applicable here, we find no clear abuse of discretion in the District Court’s conclusion that the interests of other sovereigns in enforcing bank secrecy laws are outweighed by the need to impede terrorism financing as embodied in the tort remedies provided by U.S. civil law and the stated commitments of the foreign nations.
b. Arab Bank’s Good or Bad Faith
Arab Bank also takes issue with several of the factual findings upon which the District Court based its determination that Arab Bank had not acted “with the utmost good faith.”
First, Arab Bank contests the District Court’s characterizations of Arab
Bank’s disclosures of evidence related to the Saudi Committee transfers. In
particular, Arab Bank argues that the District Court erroneously stated that Arab
Bank had not disclosed all “internal Bank communications relating to the Saudi
Committee” and that the bank had not disclosed “all Saudi Committee documents.”
*40
Linde V,
Second, Arab Bank argues that the District Court mischaracterized its efforts to obtain waivers from the foreign states. The District Court stated that “[d]efendant’s letters requesting permission from foreign banking authorities to disclose information protected by bank secrecy laws are not reflective of an ‘extensive effort’ to obtain waivers. . . . Instead, the letters were calculated to fail.” Id. In arriving at this conclusion, the District Court cited to one of the letters that Arab Bank had sent to foreign authorities seeking permission to produce information covered by bank secrecy laws – a 2006 letter to the Lebanese Special Investigation Commission (“LSIC”). See id. That letter stated, among other things, that plaintiffs’ claims had “no basis in reality or law,” even though the District Court had denied defendants’ motion to dismiss. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). As Arab Bank asserts, however, this letter was not the only communication Arab Bank made to foreign authorities. As discussed above, in 2005, the Bank requested that the LSIC grant the Bank permission to disclose information related to a single bank account in Lebanon, and the LSIC granted the Bank this permission. Further, in 2006, the Bank submitted requests to foreign authorities for permission to produce a broader swath of documents covered by the bank secrecy laws. Among those communications that are included in the record, only the 2006 letter to the LSIC contained the language cited by the District Court.
Third, Arab Bank objects to the District Court’s emphasis on Arab Bank’s disclosure of allegedly protected information to the DOJ and the OCC, which the District Court considered evidence of Arab Bank’s “selective compliance with foreign bank secrecy laws.” Id. at 200. Arab Bank contends that disclosures made pursuant to investigations by DOJ and Treasury agencies implicate different concerns than disclosures to private litigants. The Bank points to Jordan’s assertion in a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton following the District Court’s issuance of sanctions that Jordan considers disclosures to government agencies less serious because of Jordan’s “continued commitment to providing such assistance to other nations for law enforcement or national security purposes.” Appellant’s Br. at 60.
Even were we to assume that in these three ways the District Court
overstated the record support for its finding that Arab Bank had not acted with the
“utmost good faith,” we would still not issue a writ of mandamus here. The District
Court’s finding that the Bank had not acted with the “utmost good faith” was based
in large part on the uncontested observation that the discovery dispute had resulted
in “years of delay.” Linde V,
c. Hardship Arab Bank also argues that the District Court erred in determining that Arab Bank did not face a substantial hardship if it produced the information at issue when the court found “there is nothing in the record indicating that defendant faces a real risk of prosecution.” Id. at 197.
Although government officials from Jordan, Lebanon, and the Palestinian Monetary Authority submitted letters to the District Court declaring that Arab Bank would face legal action if it violated national bank secrecy laws, the record (as highlighted by the District Court) does not show “that defendant or its employees have been prosecuted for the Bank’s voluntary productions in other cases.” Id. (emphasis removed). Indeed, there is no evidence that Arab Bank ever sought – or even had to seek – waivers for the disclosures to the OCC or the DOJ or that Arab Bank was ever prosecuted for these disclosures. As discussed above, foreign states may face different considerations when deciding whether to prosecute banks for disclosing sensitive materials to foreign governments than when deciding to prosecute banks for the disclosure of such materials to private civil litigants. In other words, it does not necessarily follow from the foreign states’ decisions not to prosecute the disclosures to the OCC and DOJ that Arab Bank will not be prosecuted for disclosing the materials at issue here. But the converse is also not *43 necessarily true: The foreign states would not necessarily prosecute the Bank or any of its employees for the disclosure of sensitive banking information to private civil litigants in the context of the current proceedings. In any event, as the Supreme Court made clear in Rogers and Aérospatiale, the mere threat of criminal prosecution abroad does not strip our courts of the authority to order production of relevant materials in private civil litigation. Any error in this regard does not amount to a clear abuse of discretion establishing entitlement to the writ.
* * *
In sum, the District Court’s account of the history of this litigation and Arab Bank’s efforts to disclose materials may, in some respects, be subject to legitimate debate. But none of the District Court’s alleged errors so fatally undermines its conclusions as to any of the factors of the multi-faceted balancing analysis so as to support issuance of a writ of mandamus.
The District Court’s decisions here to compel production and then to issue
sanctions for the Bank’s failure to comply find sufficient support in cases from this
Court and other courts of appeals compelling discovery, notwithstanding competing
foreign legal obligations. See, e.g., United States v. Davis,
These cases illustrate the multitude of considerations facing courts deciding whether to compel discovery and impose sanctions in the face of competing legal dictates of foreign nations. The District Court concluded, in line with this precedent, that the importance of the documents, the lack of available alternative means to obtain them, the specificity of the discovery requests, and, finally, the important U.S. and international interests in preventing the financial support of terrorist organizations weigh in favor of producing the material at issue. Records concerning accounts held at the Bank and documents related to the Saudi Committee are directly relevant to whether Arab Bank knowingly provided banking services in support of terrorist operations and are thus essential to plaintiffs’ case. Arab Bank has unique access to the records and only Arab Bank can make a *45 complete production. The Bank does not have a “clear and indisputable” right to the writ to correct the District Court’s balancing.
2. Due Process Arab Bank also argues that it is entitled to a writ of mandamus because the sanctions imposed violate its right to due process by, it maintains, effectively eviscerating its chance to present a meaningful defense in the District Court proceedings. Raising the specter of a “show trial” and positing the inevitable determination of liability, Arab Bank suggests that imposing these sanctions is tantamount to entering a default judgment against the Bank. Arab Bank protests that it attempted in good faith to comply with its discovery obligations and that, in light of its good faith, the sanctions imposed were unduly harsh. To allow the jury to infer its culpable intent, Arab Bank maintains, would offend due process because (in its view) the record does not support the conclusion that the undisclosed records would show that it knowingly facilitated terrorism. None of these arguments, however, demonstrates a “clear and indisputable” entitlement to a writ of mandamus.
Due process allows courts to impose, pursuant to Rule 37(b), such sanctions
“as are just” on parties that defy discovery orders. See Ins. Corp. of Ireland v.
Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinée,
As an initial matter, Rule 37(b) permits sanctions even harsher than those imposed by the District Court here, including, for example, an order directing that “designated facts be taken as established” or “rendering a default judgment against the disobedient party.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A)(i),(iv). Contrary to Arab Bank’s calls of alarm, the sanctions order (as we have observed) does not amount to default judgment or otherwise require that the jury find certain facts. To be sure, the inferences the jury will be entitled to draw – along with the District Court’s *47 preclusion sanction here – will adversely affect Arab Bank’s ability to mount a defense at trial. But, as we have observed, Arab Bank will still be entitled to emphasize its substantial Saudi Committee disclosures, including the Bank’s own internal documentation, to persuade a jury that it was not aware that the beneficiaries of its financial services were terrorists. Arab Bank could rely on these disclosures, and related testimony, to rebut plaintiffs’ assertion that Arab Bank intended to support the Saudi Committee’s alleged efforts to finance terrorists, and urge the jury to extrapolate from this evidence that Arab Bank had lacked a culpable state of mind with regard to the other transfers at issue.
Arab Bank also argues, however, that the state-of-mind sanction was not
reasonably related to the Bank’s failure to comply with the discovery order and
therefore was not proper. This argument, too, fails to support issuance of a writ of
mandamus. The Supreme Court’s decision in Insurance Corp. of Ireland makes
clear that a court may instruct a jury to presume the truth of a factual allegation
from a party’s failure to produce material relevant to that allegation.
In addition, as described in detail in the District Court’s opinion, the record
includes documents reflecting transfers “approved” by Arab Bank to Hamas or
individuals associated with Hamas, as well as evidence that the Bank processed
payments the Saudi Committee made to family members of individuals linked to
terrorism. See Linde V,
Finally, although the District Court here need not have found the same degree of fault as would be required to support a default judgment, we can hardly conclude that Arab Bank was faultless. The District Court did not clearly err in determining that Arab Bank’s production efforts did not evince the “utmost good faith.” The combination of the Bank’s long delay in the District Court, partial production in the U.S. government investigations (in contrast), and apparent unwillingness to pursue permission to produce materials covered by the narrowly- tailored discovery orders further support the District Court’s sanctions order, which, unlike the default judgment at issue in Rogers, allows the Bank to mount a defense at trial.
The sanctions at issue here are substantial, but, at least for the purpose of our deferential inquiry here, they find adequate support in Arab Bank’s failure to produce and the resulting evidentiary imbalance, and they do not preclude the Bank from defending itself at trial. For these reasons, too, Arab Bank has fallen short of demonstrating that it is “clearly entitled” to the writ.
B. Review After Final Judgment Will Provide Adequate Relief Arab Bank presents a number of arguments in support of its contention that issuance of the writ is the only adequate means for it to attain the relief that it is due. These arguments fall into two distinct categories. First, as reviewed in our discussion of interlocutory review, Arab Bank argues that the sanctions order causes it irreparable harm by rendering it essentially inevitable that the jury will find the Bank liable on plaintiffs’ claims, which will cause it to be labeled a terrorist sympathizer and to experience substantial reputational harm. According to Arab Bank, such a verdict would make it difficult for the Bank to “survive long enough to take an appeal.” Appellant’s Br. at 19. Second, Arab Bank argues that if the sanctions order stands, foreign states will be irreparably harmed because bank customers will form the impression that U.S. courts can force banks in the region to disclose private information notwithstanding the protections promised by those states’ bank secrecy laws.
Arab Bank’s first argument is based on speculation and reflects a
misapprehension of what constitutes “irreparable harm” for purposes of mandamus
review. It is true that if the jury were to in fact infer knowledge and purpose based
on the District Court’s permissive instructions, Arab Bank might have difficulty
avoiding liability on plaintiffs’ claims. See, e.g., Licci ex rel. Licci v. Lebanese
Canadian Bank, SAL,
Furthermore, the type of harm that is deemed irreparable for mandamus
purposes typically involves an interest that is both important to and distinct from
the resolution of the merits of the case. For example, we have issued writs of
mandamus in cases where district courts have incorrectly determined that highly
sensitive privileged materials are discoverable. See, e.g., City of New York, 607
F.3d at 934 (issuing writ of mandamus to prevent disclosure of confidential reports
prepared by undercover New York City Police Department officers that were
covered by law-enforcement privilege). By contrast, in this case, the harm that
Arab Bank would experience from an adverse judgment is in essence
indistinguishable from the harm experienced by other litigants who lose a battle in
a lower court and seek appellate review. Issuing a writ of mandamus to correct an
error on the basis of the harm to the Bank alleged here would suggest that the writ
is available to any party concerned about the delay between an adverse trial
judgment and vindication on appeal. But as the Supreme Court has cautioned, the
writ “is not to be used as a substitute for appeal, even though hardship may result
from delay . . . .” Schlagenhauf v. Holder,
Second, with the support of its amici, Arab Bank argues that allowing the sanctions to remain in place will harm foreign states by signaling that the privacy offered by their bank secrecy laws could be eroded by U.S. courts that order disclosure of protected material. Such a development, Arab Bank and amici predict, will result in customers fleeing these countries’ banking systems and ensuing “financial and political destabilization, which can only undermine the fight against terrorism.” Appellant’s Br. at 20. This reasoning, also, is overly speculative and the harm alleged too indirectly related to the sanctions at issue here to support a petition for a writ of mandamus. If anything, Arab Bank’s decision not to disclose the relevant materials may signal to bank customers that banks will not disclose private information despite discovery orders issued by U.S. courts.
Arab Bank’s reliance on cases like In re Philippine National Bank, 397 F.3d
768 (9th Cir. 2005), and Credit Suisse v. U.S. District Court,
Finally, we observe that this Court has recently issued writs of mandamus to
resolve discovery disputes involving the production of sensitive materials. See, e.g.,
Rajaratnam,
For all these reasons, Arab Bank has failed to establish that a writ of mandamus is the only means available for it to obtain effective review of the sanctions order. Appellate review provided in the ordinary course will amply serve the interests of the Bank and the foreign states whose bank secrecy laws may protect the undisclosed materials.
C. Mandamus is Not Appropriate Under the Circumstances
This Court has “expressed reluctance to issue writs of mandamus to overturn
discovery rulings.” City of New York,
Cases from the Supreme Court and our Court involving petitions for writs of
mandamus to review discovery-related orders help to illustrate when the issues
raised in such a petition are sufficiently novel, discrete, and important to justify
issuance of the writ. In Schlagenhauf v. Holder,
Similarly, as explained above, we have issued writs of mandamus to review
novel, discrete, and important legal issues involving the disclosure of sensitive
information. In City of New York, the City sought a writ of mandamus to correct a
district court’s order that the New York City Police Department turn over “field
reports” produced by undercover police officers, which were potentially covered by
the law-enforcement privilege.
In Rajaratanam, we addressed whether a defendant in a civil enforcement
action could be required to produce inculpatory wiretap evidence obtained by the
United States government in a criminal investigation against him. See
By contrast, we have refused to issue the writ to correct a district court’s order that a party produce “reports made by a Special Investigative Unit” for the *55 party’s internal counsel and therefore assertedly covered by attorney work-product privilege. See American Express Warehousing, Ltd. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 380 F.2d 277, 278-79 (2d Cir. 1967) (“Transamerica”). There, the bases for the district court’s order “involve[d] application of well-known law to commonplace fact and rested on the district judge’s appraisal of facts and exercise of discretion.” Id. at 283. Under these circumstances, we saw “no good reason to allow the extraordinary writ.” Id. at 284.
The questions Arab Bank asks us to resolve are more similar, we think, to
those at issue in Transamerica than those at issue in Rajaratnam and City of New
York. As discussed above, the underlying merits of Arab Bank’s assertions involve
the application of a well-elaborated legal scheme and a fact-intensive inquiry in the
midst of ongoing, lengthy litigation. See Strauss,
As we have reviewed here in detail, the District Court applied the existing
legal framework, including Restatement § 442, in weighing plaintiffs’ need for the
required discovery and the lack of alternative means to obtain it against the
interests of foreign states in enforcing their bank secrecy laws and the hardship
faced by Arab Bank because of its conflicting legal obligations. The court applied
many of the same factors, along with others developed by courts in various
jurisdictions, in deciding whether to impose sanctions. The application of § 442’s
*56
balancing test in such a fact-intensive setting does not present a novel legal issue
with respect to which we can “aid in the administration of justice” by further
clarifying the applicable standards. City of New York,
CONCLUSION
In sum, the District Court’s order imposing discovery sanctions against Arab Bank under Rule 37 is an interlocutory order over which we do not have jurisdiction. Accordingly, we DISMISS the appeal in No. 10-4519. Further, Arab Bank is not entitled to a writ of mandamus vacating the sanctions order. The Bank’s petition for a writ of mandamus in No. 10-4524 is DENIED.
Notes
[*] Consistent with the parties’ stipulation so ordered by this Court on March 25, 2011, ECF No. 86, we use the short-form caption for the purpose of publishing this opinion.
[**] The Honorable Stefan R. Underhill, United States District Judge for the District of Connecticut, sitting by designation.
[1] Ten similar suits brought against Arab Bank were consolidated by the District Court for
discovery and other pretrial proceedings. Linde v. Arab Bank, PLC,
[2] Linde V,
[3] Linde IV,
[4] Linde I,
[5] Id.
[6] Id. “Hamas” is an acronym for the Arabic phrase “Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiya,”
sometimes translated as the “Islamic Resistance Movement.” Country Reports on Terrorism 2010,
U.S. Dep’t of State, Aug. 18, 2011, available at http://www.state.gov/j/ct/rls/crt/2010/170264.htm.
Accordingly, the movement’s title is sometimes printed in capital letters as “HAMAS.” See Linde II,
[7] See 8 U.S.C. § 1189 (defining process pursuant to which the Secretary of State may designate an entity as a “foreign terrorist organization”). We sometimes refer to such organizations here as “FTOs.”
[8] Supplemental Appendix (“Supp. App.”) 15.
[9] Linde III,
[10] Linde III,
[11] Supp. App. 18-19.
[12] See Linde III,
[13] For convenience, throughout this opinion we sometimes refer to Lebanon, Jordan, and the Palestinian Monetary Authority as “the foreign states,” “the foreign nations,” or “the foreign sovereigns.”
[14] See Linde III,
[15] See Linde V,
[16] The corporate relationship of the branch to the headquarters is unclear from the record.
[17] Linde V,
[18] Linde V,
[19] Holy Land Found. for Relief & Dev. v. Ashcroft,
[20] Linde V,
[21] Appellant’s App. 1045.
[22] Linde IV,
[23] Appellant’s App. 1043.
[24] Linde IV,
[25] See Linde V,
[26] Appellant’s App. 1071.
[27] Linde IV,
[28] Order Modifying Rep. and Recommendation at 3, Linde v. Arab Bank, PLC, No. 04-cv-5449 (S.D.N.Y. June 18, 2009), ECF No. 546.
[29] Id. at 4.
[30] Linde IV,
[31] The District Court’s complete statement describing the sanctions imposed is as follows:
At trial, the jury will be instructed that, based on defendant’s failure
to produce documents, it may, but is not required to, infer: (1) that
defendant provided financial services to organizations designated by
the United States as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, and to
individuals associated with the FTOs; (2) that defendant processed
and distributed payments on behalf of the Saudi Committee to
terrorists, including those affiliated with named terrorist
organizations and those who are unaffiliated, their relatives, or
representatives; and (3) that defendant did these acts knowingly and
purposefully. In addition, (4) defendant is precluded from making any
argument or offering any evidence regarding its state of mind or any
other issue that would find proof or refutation in withheld documents;
(5) all requests for admissions in plaintiffs’ First Set of Requests for
Admissions which defendant refused to answer on foreign bank
secrecy grounds are deemed admitted, and any documents referred to
in those requests, which plaintiffs obtained from sources other than
defendant, are deemed authentic and are admissible as such at trial;
and (6) defendant is prohibited from introducing in pre-trial motions
or at trial any evidence withheld on foreign bank secrecy grounds.
Linde V,
[32] The parties dispute the potential scope of the Bank’s liability under the ATA and the ATS,
statutes whose meaning has been, and continues to be, subject to judicial interpretation and public
debate. See Linde II,
[33] Linde V,
[34] Id. at 203.
[35] Id.
[36] Id. at 204.
[37] Id.
[38] We note that 28 U.S.C. § 1292, “Interlocutory decisions,” expressly provides for appellate review of several additional categories of orders before entry of a final judgment, and enables the Supreme Court to add other limited categories, in the exercise of its sound discretion. Id. § 1292(e). These alternative paths to interlocutory review do not bear on our analysis here, however.
[39] The Court’s opinion refers to Rule 37(a)(4), which was recodified as Rule 37(a)(5) in 2007.
See Robbins & Myers, Inc. v. J.M. Huber Corp., No. 01-cv-201,
[40] The All Writs Act provides, “The Supreme Court and all courts established by Act of Congress may issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a).
