MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Magnus Electronics, Inc. (“Magnus”) originally sued Aerolineas Argentinas (“Aerolíneas”) and Royal Bank of Canada (“Bank”) because of the nondelivery of Magnus’ goods sold to Argentine purchaser Alfredo DiLullo (“DiLullo”). When Mag-nus struck out against Aerolineas (see this Court’s three opinions reported beginning at
Facts 1
In October 1981 Magnus entered into a written contract to sell goods to DiLullo (Complaint U 3). Under the contract Mag-nus was to cause the goods to be delivered to DiLullo in Buenos Aires through Bank, which was to assure that the goods were delivered only against payment of the purchase price (Complaint If 4). Magnus’ freight forwarder caused the goods to be shipped to Miami, where Aerolineas took possession under an airway bill designating Bank as sole consignee (id.).
On November 11, 1981 (shortly after the goods had arrived in Buenos Aires) “agents of the Argentine Air Force, acting in their capacity on behalf of the Argentina [sic] military, unlawfully seized and took possession of [Magnus’] goods in Argentine customs” (Complaint It 7). That conversion *389 was implemented by use of at least one forged document (id.), information of the seizure and conversion was suppressed and the goods were classified as “War Secret” material (Complaint II 8). Magnus believes DiLullo “also participated in the aforesaid fraud and withheld information of the unauthorized release” (id.).
“In so acting to cause [Magnus’] goods to be fraudulently converted for Argentine military purposes, the Country of Argentina has acted in violation of international law” (Complaint II9). Those acts of fraud and conversion are alleged to be “without the scope of sovereign judicial immunity” (Complaint ¶ 10).
Lack of Personal Jurisdiction
Argentina is a sovereign state. As with any sovereign, it is amenable to suit only by strict and literal compliance with the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (the “Act”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1330 and 1602-1611,
2
for “the comprehensive scheme established by the [Act] is the exclusive means by which foreign countries may be sued in American courts.”
Frolova v. Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,
Section 1608(a)(3) mandates service on Argentina’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs “by any form of mail requiring a signed receipt.” In this case it appears Magnus arranged for delivery to the Argentine Ministry by an Argentine notary, instead of service by mail.
That noncompliance with the Act’s literal requirements (though it certainly did provide notice) deprives this Court of personal jurisdiction. 3 But because such a procedural defect is obviously curable, this opinion goes on to deal with the noncurable subject matter deficiency in Magnus’ claim.
Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Again the sovereign status of Argentina forces Magnus to invoke the Act, without whose provisions Argentina is invulnerable to suit here. Magnus seeks to call into play Section 1605(a)(2):
(a) A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of courts of the United States or of the States in any case—
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(2) in which the action is based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state; or upon an act performed in the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere; or upon an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States.
First it is clear the action, predicated on an alleged fraudulent seizure and conversion of Magnus’ goods in Argentina, is not within the statute’s first clause, referring to “commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state.” Though Magnus, playing fast and loose with the rules, goes outside the record to ascribe Aerolíneas’ United States activities to Argentina, even it does not say that provision applies. And of course the second clause of the statute is plainly inapplicable. Magnus claims instead under the last clause of Section 1605(a)(2).
But on that score Magnus has double difficulty: It fails to satisfy both the “commercial activity” requirement and the “direct effect” test. This opinion will deal with each in turn.
As for the “commercial activity” ingredient, Magnus attempts to gloss over the *390 consequence of the fact that, by its own description of the transaction, it “was of a commercial nature, [Magnus] sending goods to an Argentine buyer [DiLullo] in a regular, for-profit commercial transaction” (Magnus Mem. 7). Argentina was not in that conceded “commercial activity” — indeed Magnus’ grievance is that Argentina wrongfully sidetracked that commercial transaction by intercepting the goods before they reached their rightful destination. Magnus simply cannot force its lawsuit based on that allegedly tortious conduct (an act of international piracy, as Magnus would have it) into the mold of “commercial activity of a foreign state.”
That common sense meaning of “commercial activity” comports with the gravamen of the Section 1605(a)(2) exception. As
Harris v. VAO Intourist, Moscow,
As it is used in section 1605(a)(2), “commercial activity” is meant to distinguish activity which results from what in our society would be termed governmental, public or sovereign enterprises — e.g., running police departments or parks— from those resulting from the acts of foreign state agencies or instrumentalities acting in what we would deem a commercial capacity — e.g., operating hotels or cruise ships. See Yessenin-Volpin v. Novosti Press Agency, Tass,443 F.Supp. 849 (S.D.N.Y.1978).
For better or worse, governmental expropriation of private property is the paradigmatic instance of activity coming under the first rubric and not the second. Whatever else Argentina's alleged conduct may be termed, it is not “commercial activity.”
As for “direct effect,” Magnus seeks to read that requirement as though mere economic impact on a United States party, caused by a foreign government’s actions on its own soil, were enough to subject the foreign sovereign to suit here. That construction of course would prove too much: It would eliminate sovereign immunity altogether, for all the United States plaintiff would have to show would be
damages
caused by the alleged wrongful conduct of the foreign government in its own territory. Due process constraints preclude such a broad sweep against
private
litigants (see e.g.,
State Security Insurance Co. v. Frank B. Hall & Co.,
Not surprisingly, that has been the courts’ approach to tort litigation sought to be carried on in the United States against foreign governments.
Harris,
Accordingly Magnus has not established the predicate for suing Argentina under the Act. This action is dismissed. 5
Notes
. This account is drawn from the Complaint. Magnus’ responsive Memorandum has imper-missibly amplified its own allegations with assertions contained in a letter its lawyer wrote this Court April 30, 1985. That letter was written after this Court had dismissed Magnus’ claim against Aerolíneas, when Magnus sought to show Aerolineas has fraudulently concealed the existence of Magnus' cause of action. This Court simply assumed those assertions were true arguendo in its First Supplemental Opinion,
. All citations to the Act will simply take the form “Section —," with numerical references to Title 28 and not to the Act’s internal numbering.
. Argentina also claims (Mem. 6 n. 4) the "Notice of Suit,” also required by Section 1608(a)(3), "did not comply with the form prescribed by the Secretary of State in the implementing regulations, 22 C.F.R., Part 93.” It also appears the transmittal may not have included a copy of the summons (another statutory requirement). This opinion however need not deal with those questions, because one flaw under the Act is as fatal as two or three.
. In an instance typical of Magnus’ misuse of precedent, it cites
Honeywell, Inc. v. Metz Apparatewerke,
. Magnus included Aerolíneas in the Complaint even though this Court had previously entered final judgment on its action against the airline. Accordingly the joinder of Aerolíneas is barred *391 by claim preclusion (res judicata). As for Bank, it has been dismissed out with prejudice pursuant to a June 25, 1985 stipulation with Magnus.
