MINISTRY OF DEFENSE AND SUPPORT FOR THE ARMED FORCES OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN v. ELAHI
No. 07-615
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 12, 2009—Decided April 21, 2009
556 U.S. 366
Douglas Hallward-Driemeier argued the cause for the United States as amicus curiae urging reversal. With him on the brief were former Solicitor General Garre, Assistant Attorney General Katsas, then-Acting Solicitor General Kneedler, Douglas N. Letter, Lewis S. Yelin, John B. Bellinger III, and Robert F. Hoyt.
Carter G. Phillips argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Jacqueline G. Cooper, Jonathan R. Mook, and Philip J. Hirschkop.
JUSTICE BREYER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Dariush Elahi, the respondent, sued Iran, claiming that Iran unlawfully participated in the assassination of his brother, and he obtained a default judgment of about $312 million. Seeking to collect some of the money, he has tried to attach an asset belonging to Iran, namely, a $2.8 million judgment that Iran obtained against a California company called Cubic Defense Systems, Inc. (Cubic Judgment). Iran has asserted a defense of sovereign immunity in order to prevent the attachment. See Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976,
Since Iran is a sovereign nation, Elahi cannot attach the Cubic Judgment unless he finds an exception to the principle
Even if the Cubic Judgment is a blocked asset, however, Elahi still cannot attach it if he waived his right to do so. And we next decide whether Elahi waived that right when, in return for partial compensation from the Government, he agreed not to attach “property that is at issue in claims against the United States before an international tribunal.” Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000 (VPA),
We ultimately hold that the Cubic Judgment was not a “blocked asset” at the time the Court of Appeals handed down its decision in this case. We recognize that since that time new Executive Branch action may have “blocked” that asset; but, in light of the posture of the case, we do not decide whether it has done so. Rather, we determine that Elahi cannot attach the Cubic Judgment regardless, for the Judgment is “at issue” in a claim against the United States before the Iran-U. S. Claims Tribunal. The Judgment consequently falls within the terms of Elahi‘s waiver.
I
We initially set forth key background elements, including in this section the events necessary to understand the “blocked asset” question, while leaving for Part III, infra, additional background matters related to Elahi‘s waiver.
A
The Cubic Judgment arose out of a 1977 contract between Cubic Defense Systems, a California company, and Iran‘s Ministry of Defense. (We shall refer to the Ministry, for present purposes an inseparable part of the Iranian state, as “Iran.” See Ministry of Defense and Support for Armed Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran v. Cubic Defense Systems, Inc., 495 F. 3d 1024, 1035–1036 (CA9 2007).) Cubic there promised to supply Iran with certain military goods, namely, an air combat training system, for which Iran promised to pay approximately $18 million dollars. In 1979, after Iran had paid some of the money but before Cubic had sent the training system, the Iranian Revolution broke out, militants in Iran seized American hostages, and President Carter “blocked all property and interests in property of the Government of Iran . . . subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.”
About a year later, on January 19, 1981, Iran and the United States settled the crisis, in part with an agreement called the “Algiers Accords.” 20 I. L. M. 224. Under the Accords, the United States agreed to “restore the financial position of Iran, in so far as possible, to that which existed prior to November 14, 1979,” ibid., and (with some exceptions) to “arrange, subject to the provisions of U. S. law applicable prior to November 14, 1979, for the transfer to Iran of all Iranian properties,” id., at 227. The President then lifted the legal prohibitions against transactions involving Iranian property. See
The Algiers Accords also set up an international arbitration tribunal, the Iran-U. S. Claims Tribunal (or Tribunal), to resolve disputes between the two nations concerning each other‘s performance under the Algiers Accords. The Tribunal would also resolve disputes concerning contracts and agreements between the two nations that were outstanding on January 19, 1981. 20 I. L. M., at 230–231. The Tribunal‘s jurisdiction included claims by nationals of one state against the other state, but it did not include claims by one state against nationals of the other state. Id., at 231–232.
B
In January 1982, Iran filed two Cubic-based claims in the Tribunal. In Case No. B/61, Iran claimed that between 1979 and 1981 the United States had wrongly barred the transfer of certain military equipment, including the Cubic air combat training system, to Iran. Iran asked the Tribunal to order the United States either to issue an export license for the equipment or to pay Iran damages. App. to Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 22a, 24a, 31a.
In Case No. B-66, Iran claimed that Cubic had breached its contract to deliver the training system partly because the United States had taken actions contrary to the Algiers Accords. Again Iran asked the Tribunal to order either the issuance of an export license for the equipment or the payment of damages. Id., at 1a, 2a, 9a–10a. In April 1987 the Tribunal dismissed this second case (No. B-66) on the grounds that the Iran-Cubic contract imposed no obligations on the United States and that the Tribunal lacked jurisdic-
Iran, believing that Cubic had breached its contract, then went to arbitration before the arbitration tribunal specified in the Cubic contract, namely, the International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. Iran asked that arbitration tribunal to award it restitution and damages.
In May 1997 the arbitrators issued their decision. The arbitrators found that prior to the Iranian Revolution, prior to the hostage crisis, and prior to the blocking of any Iranian assets, (1) Iran and Cubic had themselves agreed that they would temporarily discontinue (but not terminate) the contract; and (2) Cubic had agreed to try to sell the training system to another buyer and to settle accounts with Iran later. The arbitrators further found that after the crisis (in September 1981) (3) Cubic successfully sold a modified version of the system to Canada. Ministry of Defense and Support for Armed Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran v. Cubic Int‘l Sales Corp., No. 7365/FMS (Int‘l Ct. of Arbitration of Int‘l Chamber of Commerce), pp. 32–33, 36–40, 50–51, reprinted in 13 Mealey‘s Int‘l Arbitration Report pp. G–4, G–15 to G–18, G–21 (Oct. 1998) (Arbitration Award). The arbitrators concluded that Cubic had not lived up to this modified agreement. And, after taking account of the advance payments that Iran had made to Cubic, the funds that Cubic had spent, the amount that Canada had paid Cubic, and various other items, they awarded Iran $2.8 million plus interest. Id., ¶ C.18.3(a), at G–31.
Cubic refused to pay Iran this money. Iran then sued in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of California to enforce the arbitration award. The District Court confirmed the award and entered a final judgment ordering Cubic to pay $2.8 million plus interest to Iran. That judg-
C
In February 2000 Elahi brought a tort action against Iran in the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia. Elahi claimed that Iranian agents had murdered his brother. See
In 2001 Elahi filed a notice of lien against Iran‘s Cubic Judgment. He thereby sought to satisfy from the Cubic Judgment a portion of what Iran owed him under his own default judgment against Iran. Iran opposed the lien. It argued that the Cubic Judgment, as property of the sovereign state of Iran, was immune from attachment or execution. The District Court denied immunity. Ministry of Defense and Support for Armed Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran v. Cubic Defense Systems, Inc., 236 F. Supp. 2d 1140, 1152 (SD Cal. 2002).
The Court of Appeals affirmed the denial. Ministry of Defense and Support for Armed Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran v. Cubic Defense Systems, Inc., 385 F. 3d 1206 (CA9 2004). The Court of Appeals thought that the Ministry of Defense of Iran had lost its immunity from attachment be-
We remanded the case, and on remand, the Ninth Circuit held that the Ministry of Defense fell into the latter category (an inseparable part of the state of Iran), not the former (an “agency or instrumentality” of Iran). 495 F. 3d 1024, 1035–1036 (2007). Hence Elahi could not take advantage of the “engaged in commercial activity” exception. The Court of Appeals also found inapplicable a slightly different exception applicable to “property . . . of a foreign state . . . used for a commercial activity in the United States,”
Nonetheless the Court of Appeals found yet another exception that it believed denied Iran its sovereign immunity defense. The court pointed out that in 2002 Congress had enacted the TRIA. That Act permitted a person with a terrorism-related judgment to attach an asset of the responsible “terrorist” state to satisfy the judgment, “[n]otwithstanding any other provision of law,” provided that the asset was a “blocked asse[t].”
The Court of Appeals also rejected Iran‘s argument that Elahi had waived his right to attach the Cubic Judgment regardless (a matter to which we shall turn in Part III). And the court concluded that Elahi was free to attach the Judgment. Id., at 1037.
Iran, with the support of the Department of State, asked us to grant certiorari. We did so, and we shall consider both aspects of the Court of Appeals’ determination.
II
A
We turn first to the question whether the Cubic Judgment was a “blocked asset.” The Ninth Circuit held that the asset in question consisted of Iran‘s interest in military goods, namely, an air combat training system, which it believed the Executive Branch had failed to unblock after the Iranian hostage crisis ended. None of the parties here, however, support the Ninth Circuit‘s determination. And neither do we.
The basic reason we cannot accept the Ninth Circuit‘s rationale is that we do not believe Cubic‘s air combat training system is the asset here in question. Elahi does not seek to attach that system. Cubic sent the system itself to Canada,
In 1981, the Treasury Department issued an order that authorized “[t]ransactions involving property in which Iran has an interest” where “[t]he interest in the property . . . arises after January 19, 1981.”
Iran‘s interest in the property that underlies the Cubic Judgment also arose after January 19, 1981. As the International Court of Arbitration held, Cubic and Iran entered into their initial contract before 1981. But they later agreed to discontinue (but not to terminate) the contract. Arbitration Award G–15, G–21. They agreed that Cubic would try to sell the system elsewhere. Id., ¶ C.9.15, at G–14. And they further agreed that they would take “final decisions” about who owed what to whom “only . . . once the result of Cubic‘s attempt to resell the System” was “known.” Id., ¶ B.10.7, at G–17.
Cubic completed its sale of the system (to Canada) in October 1982. Id., ¶ B.12.14, at G–22. And the arbitrators referred to October 1982 as “the date the Parties had in mind when they agreed to await the outcome of Cubic‘s resale attempts.” Ibid. Only then was Cubic “in a position to reasonably, comprehensively and precisely account for the reuse of components originally manufactured for Iran and for any
The upshot is that, whether we consider Iran‘s “interes[t] in property” as its interest in the Cubic Judgment itself or its underlying interest in the proceeds of the Canadian sale, the interest falls within the terms of the Treasury Department‘s general license authorizing “[t]ransactions involving property in which Iran . . . has an interest” where “[t]he interest in the property . . . arises after January 19, 1981.”
Finally, even if we were to assume (as the Ninth Circuit held) that the relevant asset were Iran‘s pre-1981 interest in the air combat training system itself, we should still conclude that that asset was not “blocked” at the time of the decision below. As the Government points out, such an interest falls directly within the scope of
B
Although the Cubic Judgment was not a blocked asset at the time the Court of Appeals reached its decision, the Government believes that it is a blocked asset now. In 2005 the President issued a new Executive Order that blocks assets held by proliferators of weapons of mass destruction.
III
As we have just said, the second question concerns Elahi‘s waiver of his right to attach the Cubic Judgment. In 2000, Congress enacted a statute that offers some compensation to certain individuals, including Elahi, who hold terrorism-related judgments against Iran. VPA § 2002, as amended by TRIA § 201(c). The Act requires those who receive that compensation to relinquish “all rights to execute against or attach property that is at issue in claims against the United States before an international tribunal, [or] that is the subject of awards rendered by such tribunal.”
The question is whether the Cubic Judgment “is at issue in claims” against the United States before an “international
A review of the record in Iran-U. S. Claims Tribunal Case No. B/61 leads us to conclude that the Cubic Judgment is “at issue” before that Tribunal. In Case No. B/61 Iran argued that, between 1979 and 1981, the United States had wrongly prevented the transfer of Cubic‘s air combat training system to Iran. Iran asked the Tribunal, among other things, to order the United States to pay damages. Statement of Claim, Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States (filed Jan. 19, 1982), App. to Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 22a, 24a, 31a. In its briefing before the Tribunal, Iran acknowledged that any amount it recovered from Cubic would “be recuperated from the remedy sought” against the United States. App. 76, n. 2. And Iran sent a letter to the United States in which it said that any amounts it actually received from Cubic would be “recouped from the remedy sought against the United States in Case B61.” App. to Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 84a. But Iran added that the Cubic Judgment could not be used as a setoff insofar as it had been attached by creditors. Id., at 85a.
Meanwhile, in a rebuttal brief before the Tribunal, the United States, while arguing that in fact it owed Iran nothing, added that at the very least Iran must set off the amount “already . . . awarded” by the International Court of Arbitration (namely, the $2.8 million awarded to Iran from Cubic) against any money awarded by the Tribunal. Id., at 52a, 80a–81a, and n. 32. And the United States’ demand for a setoff applies even if third parties have attached the Cubic Judgment. See Tr. of Tribunal Hearing, in No. B/61 (Iran-U. S. Cl. Trib., Dec. 7 and 12, 2006), App. to Brief for Respondent 37, 38–39, 41, 42.
To put the matter in terms of the language of Elahi‘s waiver, one can say for certain that the Cubic Judgment is “property.” And Case No. B/61 itself is a “clai[m] against the United States before an international tribunal.” We can also be reasonably certain that how the Tribunal should use that property is also under dispute or in question in that claim. Moreover, since several parties other than Elahi have already attached the Cubic Judgment, see Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 20, the question whether an attached claim can be used as a setoff is potentially significant, irrespective of Elahi‘s own efforts to attach the judgment.
Are these circumstances sufficient to place the Cubic Judgment “at issue” in Case No. B/61? Elahi argues not. He points out that the Cubic Judgment does not appear on a list of property contained in Iran‘s statement of claim in Case No. B/61; nor is it the subject of any other claim before the Tribunal. Indeed, Iran and the United States do not dispute the Cubic Judgment‘s validity; they do not dispute the Cubic Judgment‘s ownership; and they do not dispute the fact that the United States’ asset freeze had no adverse effect on the Cubic Judgment or on Iran‘s entitlement to the Cubic Judgment. As the dissent correctly points out, the Judgment is not “at issue” in any of these senses. The Judgment will neither be suspended nor modified by the Tribunal in Case No. B/61, nor is the Judgment property claimed by Iran from the United States in that case, see post, at 388–391 (KENNEDY, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
For one thing, we do not doubt that the setoff matter is “under dispute” or “in question” in Case No. B/61, and those words typically define the term “at issue.” Black‘s Law Dictionary 136 (8th ed. 2004). In the event that the Tribunal finds the United States liable in Case No. B/61, the total sum awarded to Iran by the Tribunal will depend on whether the Judgment is used as a setoff. And whether the Judgment can be so used depends, in turn, on whether the United States is right that an attached judgment should be set off or whether Iran is right that it should not be—a matter in question before the Tribunal. In that sense, the Judgment is “under dispute.” We recognize that the dispute is over the use of the Judgment, not the validity of the Judgment. But we do not see how that fact matters.
For another thing, ordinary legal disputes can easily encompass questions of setoff. Suppose Smith sues a carrier for wrongfully harming a shipment of goods. The question of liability, the question of damages, and the question of reducing damages through setoff may all be at issue in the case. Which is the more important issue in a particular case depends not upon the category (liability, damages, or setoff) but upon the circumstances of that particular case.
Further, the language of the statute suggests that Congress meant the words “at issue” to carry the ordinary meaning just described. Elahi essentially distinguishes between property that is the subject of a claim (a claim, for example, that the United States took or harmed particular property
“relinquis[h] all rights to execute against or attach property [1] that is at issue in claims against the United States before an international tribunal [or] [2] that is the subject of awards rendered by such tribunal.”
VPA § 2002(a)(2)(D), 114 Stat. 1542 (emphasis added); see also§ 2002(d)(5)(B) , as added by TRIA§ 201(c)(4), 116 Stat. 2337 (cross-referencing§ 2002(a)(2)(D) ).
Had Congress wanted to limit the property to which it first refers (namely, property that is “at issue” in a claim) to property that is the subject of a claim, it seems likely that Congress straightforwardly would have used the words “subject of”—words that appear later (in respect to awards rendered) in the very same sentence.
Finally, the statute‘s purpose leans in the direction of a broader interpretation of the words “at issue” than that proposed by Elahi. Pointing to the statute‘s legislative history, Elahi says that the statute seeks to enable victims of terrorism to collect on judgments they have won against terrorist parties. See Brief for Respondent 6–7, 31 (citing H. R. Conf. Rep. No. 107–779 (2002); 148 Cong. Rec. 23119, 23121–23123 (2002) (statement of Sen. Harkin)). He is such a victim, and, he says, Congress would have intended an interpretation that favors his cause. But Congress had a more complicated set of purposes in mind. The statute authorizes the attachment of blocked assets, and it provides partial compensation to victims to be paid (in part) from general Treasury funds. But it does so in exchange for a right of subrogation, VPA § 2002(c), and for the victim‘s promise not to pursue the bal-
The Cubic Judgment falls into this category. It is property that the United States could use to satisfy its potential liability to Iran, but which may be unavailable for that purpose if successfully attached. With respect to the statute‘s revenue-saving purpose, it is difficult to distinguish between property that is the subject of a claim before a tribunal and property that is in dispute before the tribunal in respect to its use as an offset.
The dissent adds that the “better reading” of the words “at issue” is one that limits them to the “foster[ing] [of] compliance with the Government‘s international obligations.” Post, at 392. We agree with this statement, but we do not see how it adds anything but new phraseology to the dissent‘s basic claim, namely, that arguments before the Tribunal about “setoffs” do not count as “issues.” To repeat our own view of the matter, a dispute about whether one country must pay the other country more money because it cannot use particular property (because of an attachment) to satisfy an obligation raises an issue that the Tribunal must resolve, no less and no more than other issues that might be before the Tribunal in that case or other cases.
Contrary to the dissent‘s suggestion, post, at 394, there is no unfairness in our holding. Elahi could have chosen to forgo the Government‘s compensation scheme, and he then could have attached the Cubic Judgment, as have other terrorist victims with judgments against Iran. See Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 20. But that course carried risks: Iran had challenged Elahi‘s notice of lien and it was uncertain whether Elahi would prevail. In 2003, while litigation over his notice of lien was pending, Elahi chose to participate in the Government‘s scheme. He thereby re-
Elahi makes several other arguments. He points to language in the TRIA (the statute authorizing attachment of blocked assets) which says: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law” the “blocked assets” of a state “shall be subject to . . . attachment in aid of execution” of a terrorism-related judgment.
But VPA § 2002(d)(5) requires Elahi, in exchange for having received partial compensation, to relinquish “all rights” to attach property “at issue” in an international tribunal.
Moreover, the relinquishment provision that applies to Elahi was added to the VPA by the very same statute, the TRIA, that permitted the attachment of blocked assets, and which contains the “notwithstanding” clause upon which Elahi relies. § 201(a) (blocked assets); § 201(c) (amending VPA). Congress could not have intended the words to which Elahi refers to narrow so dramatically an important provision that it inserted in the same statute. And for those who, like Elahi, argue that the legislative history supports his reading of the statute, we point out that the history suggests that Congress placed the “notwithstanding” clause in § 201(a) for totally different reasons, namely, to eliminate the effect of any Presidential waiver issued under
Elahi makes three final arguments, first that setoff is not “at issue” because the United States has argued in Case No. B/61 that it has no liability at all, second that setoff is not “at issue” because the United States has not formally asserted a setoff before the Tribunal, and third that the Government violated his due process rights by inadequately informing that his waiver would deprive him of his right to attach the Cubic Judgment. We find none of these arguments convincing and shall briefly indicate our reasons in summary form.
As to the first, the United States argued setoff in the alternative, thereby placing it, in the alternative, “at issue” before the Tribunal. As to the second, Elahi at most points to a ground for disputing the propriety, under Tribunal rules, for granting a setoff; he does not deny that the Tribunal sometimes can do so, see, e. g., Futura Trading Inc. v. National Iranian Oil Co., 13 Iran-U. S. Cl. Trib. Rep. 99, 115–116, ¶ 62 (1986) (preventing collection on a claim because the claimant had already collected the sum at issue from a different
IV
We conclude: The Cubic Judgment was not blocked at the time the Court of Appeals reached its decision. We do not decide whether more recent Executive Branch actions would block the Judgment at present. Regardless, Elahi has waived his right to attach the Judgment. We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE KENNEDY, with whom JUSTICE SOUTER and JUSTICE GINSBURG join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I join Parts I and II of the Court‘s opinion but, with all respect, dissent from Parts III and IV. As to Parts I and II, the Court is correct, in my view, to hold that the Cubic Judgment was not a “blocked asset” when the Court of Appeals reached its decision. As to Parts III and IV, however, respondent Dariush Elahi has not relinquished his right to attach the Cubic Judgment. By holding otherwise, the Court departs from the plain meaning and the purpose of the statutes Congress enacted to compensate Elahi and other victims of terrorism.
I
A
The statutory phrase to be interpreted is “property that is at issue in claims against the United States before an in-
To determine whether the Cubic Judgment is “at issue” in Case No. B/61, the primary consideration must be whether the Claims Tribunal, in the exercise of its own authority and jurisdiction, can affect the ownership, disposition, or control of the property the judgment comprises. Here the property in question is a judgment rendered by the United States District Court for the Southern District of California. As all acknowledge, that court had jurisdiction over the subject and the persons then before it. And, as is further conceded, that court‘s judgment is valid and has binding force on Cubic Defense Systems, Inc., the nongovernmental party before that court. See Ministry of Defense and Support for Armed Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran v. Cubic Defense Systems, Inc., 29 F. Supp. 2d 1168, 1170 (1998). Neither party to Case No. B/61 questions the judgment or requests the Claims Tribunal to interpret it—much less to alter, enforce, or invalidate it.
B
Even if the Court‘s broad reading of the phrase “at issue” were correct, the Court‘s conclusion would still be wrong because the relinquishment provision is limited to property that is at issue “in claims against the United States.” And the Cubic Judgment is not part of the claims Iran makes in Case No. B/61, as both Iran and the United States have made clear in their submissions to the Claims Tribunal. To put the countries’ filings in context, a brief review of both the Cubic Judgment and Case No. B/61 is necessary.
The Cubic Judgment is the result of a contract dispute between Iran and Cubic. In the late 1970‘s, Iran hired Cubic to build an air combat training system, and advanced some $12 million for the project. But Iran failed to make all the payments due. App. 43–44. Thus rebuffed, Cubic sold the system to Canada and refused to refund any of Iran‘s advance payments. Iran brought an arbitration against Cubic. The panel of arbitrators, after ascertaining Cubic‘s costs of building the system, and after allowing the company a rea-
Case No. B/61 is in essence a contract dispute between Iran and the United States. Iran accuses the United States of breaking its promise, made in the Algiers Accords, to “arrange . . . for the transfer to Iran of all Iranian properties” located in the United States on January 19, 1981. 20 I. L. M. 224, 227, ¶ 9 (1981). One of the properties Iran claims is Cubic‘s air combat training system. See Statement of Claim in No. B/61, (Iran-U. S. Cl. Trib.), App. to Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 22a, 24a, 31a. Both parties have confirmed, in their joint report describing all the “property claimed by Iran,” that Cubic‘s system is “at issue” in Iran‘s claims. Cover Letter to Final Joint Report Re: Case No. B/61 (July 14, 1989), App. to Brief for Respondent 14.
But the Cubic Judgment, in contrast to Cubic‘s training system, is not part of Iran‘s claims in Case No. B/61. Both countries made this clear in their submissions to the Tribunal. Their joint report does not list the Cubic Judgment among the properties “at issue.” Final Joint Report (July 14, 1989), id., at 15–23. And, in a statement altogether consistent with that omission, Iran told the Tribunal that “[t]he subject-matter of [Case No. B/61], at variance with the [arbitration] action [against Cubic], is the losses suffered by Iran as a result of the United States’ non-export of Iranian properties.” Iran‘s Statement No. 16, App. 73, 76. The United States agreed, stating that the “only ‘property that’ . . . is properly at issue” in Case No. B/61 is property that “‘has already been made the subject of a claim’” by Iran against the United States. U. S. Rebuttal (Sept. 1, 2003), 1 Lodging p. L419 (emphasis deleted) (Sealed). The United States reaffirmed this position in oral argument before the Tribunal:
Because the Claims Tribunal lacks jurisdiction over the Cubic Judgment, and because that judgment is not part of Iran‘s claims against the United States in Case No. B/61, the judgment is not “property that is at issue in claims against the United States” under the plain meaning of the TRIA‘s relinquishment provision. TRIA § 201(c)(4), 116 Stat. 2339 (amending VTVPA § 2002(d)).
II
Even if the text of the relinquishment provision were somehow ambiguous—and it is not—then the purpose of the VTVPA and TRIA would tip the scales in Elahi‘s favor. The text and the evident purpose of those statutes demonstrate that Congress’ primary purpose was to compensate the victims of terrorism, not to secure from those victims a relinquishment of their claims to property owned by entities found to have sponsored terrorism.
The text of the VTVPA, and of the amendments made to it by the TRIA, shows that Congress’ primary purpose was to enable the victims of terrorism to execute on the assets of a state found to have sponsored or assisted in a terrorist act. In the first subsection of the TRIA concerning the attachment of state assets by victims of terrorism, Congress provided that “[n]otwithstanding any other provision of law . . . in every case in which a person has obtained a judgment against a terrorist party on a claim based upon an act of terrorism . . . the blocked assets of that terrorist party . . . shall be subject to execution or attachment in aid of execution in order to satisfy such judgment . . . .”
To contravene the statute‘s clear design, the Court surmises that Congress also had a “more complicated” purpose, namely, to “protec[t] property that the United States might use to satisfy its potential liability to Iran.” Ante, at 383, 384. This imagined purpose, the Court says, requires us to read the relinquishment provision as broadly as possible so as to prevent victims of terrorism from attaching property. But the Court does not point to evidence of this putative purpose, aside from the text of the relinquishment provision itself—a text which, as submitted above, the Court reads the wrong way.
The better reading of the relinquishment provision—and one much more consistent with Congress’ protective purpose—is not as a “revenue-saving” device, ante, at 384, but as a way to foster compliance with the Government‘s international obligations. If Iran has asked the Claims Tribunal to resolve the status of certain property, then Iran and the Tribunal may well take the position that the United States has a responsibility under the Algiers Accords to prevent U. S. nationals from executing against that property. That concern is not present in this case. The ownership of the Cubic Judgment is not disputed, and allowing Elahi to attach it will not affect Iran‘s right to obtain full recovery from the United States in Case No. B/61. At most, the attachment
The Court purports to agree with this reading of the statute‘s purpose. Ibid. But that agreement is hard to square with the Court‘s insistence upon fulfilling what it sees as the statute‘s “revenue-saving purpose.” Ibid. If the Court did in fact believe that the “better reading” of the statute‘s purpose, ibid., is to foster compliance with the United States’ international obligations, then the Court would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals. Elahi‘s attachment of the Cubic Judgment does not hinder the U. S. Government‘s efforts to comply with its obligations under the Algiers Accords. At Algiers, the United States agreed to “arrange . . . for the transfer to Iran of all Iranian properties” located in the United States. 20 I. L. M., at 227, ¶ 9. That is not an obligation to pay Iran money, as the Court seems to believe. See ante, at 384. It is instead an obligation to take specific action in regard to specific properties. These specific properties do not include the Cubic Judgment—as the Court concedes. See ante, at 376 (holding that the Cubic Judgment was not blocked). Therefore, Elahi‘s attachment of the Cubic Judgment does not impede the United States’ efforts to make good on its obligations under the Algiers Accords.
To be sure, a judicial lien on one of the specific properties referenced by the Algiers Accords might make it difficult for the U. S. Government to comply with its obligations, under those Accords, to arrange for that property‘s transfer to Iran. By encouraging creditors such as Elahi to give up their liens on these specific properties that are subject to the Algiers Accords, the TRIA makes it easier for the Government to comply with its obligation to “arrange . . . for the transfer” of these properties to Iran. This purpose (fostering compliance with the United States’ obligation under the Algiers Accords) is more in keeping with the statute‘s text than is the Court‘s “revenue-saving” purpose. And this purpose—that is, the purpose of enabling the United States to meet its
III
The facts of this case show the injustice of the Court‘s interpretation. The Court today puts an end to Elahi‘s decade-long quest to hold Iran to account for murdering his brother Cyrus. In 2000, Elahi won a wrongful-death lawsuit against Iran and was awarded some $6 million in compensatory damages. See Elahi v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 124 F. Supp. 2d 97 (DC). In April 2003, Elahi took what he must have considered a further step toward his goal when he accepted $2.3 million from the U. S. Government under the VTVPA.
After today‘s ruling, what once appeared Elahi‘s gain of $2.3 million now seems to be a loss of $500,000. By taking the VTVPA‘s $2.3 million, the Court holds, Elahi relinquished his right to the $2.8 million Cubic Judgment he had already attached. The practical effect of the Court‘s ruling is to turn the purpose of the VTVPA on its head. Rather than further Elahi‘s effort to obtain compensation for the murder of his brother, the Act has instead set him back half a million dollars. For the reasons given above, this result was not what Congress intended when it passed the VTVPA.
IV
Congress passed the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act and the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act to compensate victims of terrorism. Congress expressed this purpose both in the text of the principal provision interpreted here and in accompanying sections of the statute. By stripping Elahi of his right to attach the valid judgment against Cubic rendered by the District Court—a judgment not be-
