NADER TURKI ALDOSSARI, on behalf of as parent and natural guardian of Rakan Nader Aldossari, Appellant v. JOSEPH C. RIPP; MOHAMMED BIN NAYEF AL SAUD, former Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia; THE KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA; SAUDI EST. FOR DEVELOPMENT OF RIYADH; SAUDI ARAMCO; EXPORT REFINERY WESTERN HEMISPHERE, LTD; TRANSCONTINENTAL OIL AND FINANCIAL GROUP OF AMERICA, INC.; MOHAMMED BIN SALMAN BIN ABDULAZIZ AL SAUD, Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia
No. 21-2080
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
September 13, 2022
Honorable Gene E.K. Pratter, District Judge
PRECEDENTIAL. Argued April 13, 2022. Before: AMBRO, JORDAN, and SCIRICA, Circuit Judges.
Elliott & Davis
6425 Living Place – Suite 200
Pittsburgh, PA 15206
Counsel for Appellant
Katherine C. Cooper
Michael K. Kellogg
Gregory G. Rapawy
Andrew C. Shen [ARGUED]
Kellogg Hansen Todd Figel & Frederick
1615 M Street, N.W. – Suite 400
Washington, DC 20036
Counsel for Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Mohammed Bin Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Lawrence F. Stengel
Saxton & Strump
280 Granite Run Drive – Suite 300
Lancaster, PA 17601
Counsel for Mohammed Bin Nayef Al Saud
Carolyn B. Lamm [ARGUED]
Claire Marsden
Hansel T. Pham
White & Case
701 13th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20005
Counsel for Saudi Aramco
OPINION OF THE COURT
JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Constitutional, prudential, and statutory constraints on our authority prevent us from hearing some cases that are brought to us. For example, disputes under state law between citizens of the same state are typically beyond our adjudicatory power.
Nader Turki Aldossari brought suit to recover a debt allegedly owed to his father. In the 1990s, his father‘s company, Trans Gulf, entered into an agreement in Saudi Arabia with three other businesses. The companies agreed to set up and operate an oil refinery in Saint Lucia, an island nation in the Caribbean. Crude oil for the refinery was to be
The defendants filed motions to dismiss, which the District Court granted with prejudice, holding that Aldossari and his son lacked standing to sue and that most of the defendants – Saudi Arabia, Saudi Aramco, and the current and former Crown Princes – were immune from suit. After Aldossari appealed, the only other defendant who appeared in the case died, and no representative or estate has been substituted.
We hold that dismissal of the claims against that deceased defendant was proper because Aldossari failed to allege any basis for exercising subject-matter jurisdiction over those claims. As for the claims against the surviving defendants, the lack of any meaningful ties between those defendants and the United States in Aldossari‘s claims defeats his effort to sue them in the United States. This case concerns
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background1
In December 1994, four companies aiming to establish an oil refinery in Saint Lucia executed an Ownership Agreement in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.2 Those parties were Trans Gulf, a Saudi-based company; Saudi Est. for
The parties to the Ownership Agreement agreed to split ownership of the refinery on a roughly equal basis: 25% for Saudi Est., 24% for “Trans Gulf (and his partners as they agree[d] between them),”5 25.5% for Export, and 25.5% for
Aldossari provides scant detail of the parties’ performance under the Ownership Agreement. He does claim, however, that his father, bin Nader, traveled to Saint Lucia in 1995 “on behalf of the former Crown Prince7 and [the] Saudi Arabian government” to meet with government officials. (J.A. at 86.) According to Aldossari, “as a result of the efforts of [his father,] the parties entered into deals for the supply of oil from Aramco.” (J.A. at 86.) He also says that Export secured an agreement with the Saudi government “and/or” Saudi Aramco for the supply of crude oil, but he does not include a copy of that agreement or explain why it was Export that obtained that contract and not Saudi Est., as the Ownership Agreement provided. (J.A. at 85.)
At some point, things took a turn for the worse, at least for Aldossari‘s father. Aldossari claims that “Ripp and the former Crown Prince acted in concert to breach … the
To all appearances, that was the end of the matter for the next fifteen years. Although the Ownership Agreement provided that “[a]ny dispute between the parties shall be arbitrated in accordance with the rules and regulations then pertaining by the International Chamber of Commerce in Switzerland” (J.A. at 104), there is no indication that Aldossari or his father, or anyone else, ever availed themselves of that dispute-resolution mechanism.
In 2014, however, Aldossari met with Prince Mohammed bin Nayef in London. At that time, says Aldossari, the Prince “acknowledged the agreement” and bin Nader‘s “right to receive payment” under it. (J.A. at 87.) In Aldossari‘s telling, the Prince promised that he “had [Aldossari‘s] father‘s share” and that he would “arrange for payment … in the coming weeks[.]” (J.A. at 87.) That never occurred. The following year, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef became the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, a role he held until 2017, when Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud became the reigning Crown Prince. Aldossari claims that Crown
But Aldossari had not run out of determination. In February 2020, he brought his son Rakan Nader Aldossari – a minor and a citizen of Pennsylvania – into the picture.8 Aldossari executed an “Assignment of Claim” that transferred to Rakan the right to recover on any claims Aldossari had “arising out of the St. Lucia Refinery Ownership Agreement[.]” (J.A. at 83, 96.) In exchange, Rakan would give Aldossari five percent of any amount he recovered. With that new arrangement in place, this litigation began.
B. Procedural Background
Aldossari filed suit on Rakan‘s behalf in June 2020 against Trans Gulf‘s counterparties to the Ownership Agreement – Export,9 Transcontinental, and Saudi Est. – along with Ripp, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Saudi Aramco, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and former Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef.10 In his amended complaint,
Aldossari claims that all of the defendants save the current Crown Prince are in breach of contract by failing to pay bin Nader for Trans Gulf‘s promised share of the profits from the Saint Lucia refinery deal.11 He also alleges that the former Crown Prince, Saudi Arabia, Saudi Aramco, Saudi Est., and Ripp are liable in quantum meruit for the services that bin Nader provided them in his role as the “local manager in Saudi Arabia and the [M]iddle [E]ast” for Transcontinental and Export and through meeting with Saint Lucia government officials to move the deal along. (J.A. at 89-90.) And he further asserts that Ripp intentionally interfered with bin Nader‘s contractual relationships by working to prevent bin Nader, his estate, and Trans Gulf from receiving their share of the profits. Finally, Aldossari alleges that the current Crown Prince intentionally interfered with contractual relations by “act[ing] to undermine the efforts” of the former Crown Prince, Saudi Arabia, Saudi Aramco, and Saudi Est. to “fulfill their obligations” to bin Nader and his descendants, including by
Export, Transcontinental, and Saudi Est. did not enter appearances in the District Court – in fact, Aldossari did not even attempt to serve them.13 Ripp, Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia, and the current Crown Prince were served (or waived service),14 entered appearances, and moved to dismiss on a number of grounds including the statute of limitations, lack of subject-matter and personal jurisdiction, improper venue, and failure to state a claim. A little more than a week before the District Court ruled on the motions, the former Crown Prince entered an appearance, but he did not file a responsive pleading prior to the Court‘s decision.
The District Court held that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over Aldossari‘s claims and dismissed the entire case. It first concluded that Aldossari lacked standing to
As a separate basis for dismissal, the Court also held that each defendant other than Ripp was immune from suit. It determined that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (the “FSIA“),
The Court ordered dismissal without prejudice, but when Aldossari elected to stand on his complaint, it converted its order to a dismissal with prejudice. Aldossari then timely appealed. Three months later, Aldossari‘s counsel informed us that Ripp had died.
II. DISCUSSION15
A. Sequence of Decision
The District Court dismissed the case because it concluded that Aldossari lacked standing to pursue any of his claims and therefore the Court had no subject-matter jurisdiction over the case. We agree that the claims were properly dismissed, but we take a different route to arrive at that conclusion.
The standing analysis here would necessitate reaching complex, fact-bound determinations. Those issues include whether bin Nader suffered a cognizable injury-in-fact from the breach of a contract to which he was not formally a party, although the company he allegedly owned was a party and he personally was named in the contract as a participant in the transaction. They also include whether Aldossari can rely on his status as an heir to his father (and on an alleged promise of payment from the former Crown Prince) to seek recovery of funds supposedly owed to bin Nader. Moreover, while the parties agree that Pennsylvania‘s choice-of-law rules apply, see Cassirer v. Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection Found., 142 S. Ct. 1502, 1506-08 (2022) (in a lawsuit asserting non-federal claims against a foreign sovereign, courts must apply “the forum State‘s choice-of-law rule“), they dispute whether,
It is questionable whether the standing questions in this case even implicate the constitutional limits of Article III at all. Instead, those issues may turn on non-jurisdictional doctrines like prudential limits on shareholder and contractual standing and the “real party in interest” requirement embodied in
On this record, however, we need not delve into those questions, because we can dispose of the claims against each defendant on other, more straightforward threshold grounds. As to Saudi Arabia and Saudi Aramco, we agree with the
If we felt free to do so, we might well address the glaring statute-of-limitations defect in Aldossari‘s complaint, which was brought decades after the main events in this case.17
It is not immediately obvious, however, that the statute of limitations counts as a threshold non-merits issue. Compare Elkadrawy v. Vanguard Grp., 584 F.3d 169, 173 (3d Cir. 2009) (holding that “a dismissal on statute-of-limitations grounds [is] a judgment on the merits” for res judicata purposes (quoting Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 514 U.S. 211, 228 (1995))), with United States v. Doe, 810 F.3d 132, 150 (3d Cir. 2015) (bypassing jurisdictional inquiry to resolve claim on statute-of-limitations ground under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act), and In re Briscoe, 448 F.3d 201, 220 (3d Cir. 2006) (“[T]he statute of limitations is a defense … that does not truly go to the merits of the plaintiff‘s claim in any sense.“). Fortunately, this is another line of inquiry we can bypass, since we can more readily resolve the appeal on other bases.
B. Saudi Aramco and Saudi Arabia: Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act18
The District Court held that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the claims against Saudi Arabia and Saudi
A district court has jurisdiction over a civil action against a “foreign state” if the state is not entitled to immunity, which is the case only if “one of the specified exceptions to foreign sovereign immunity” in the FSIA applies.19 Verlinden
It is undisputed that Saudi Arabia is a foreign state and that Saudi Aramco, the Kingdom‘s state-owned oil company, is an agency or instrumentality of the Saudi government. So, under the FSIA, they are both presumptively immune - and there is no jurisdiction over the claims against them - unless Aldossari can show that an exception to immunity applies.
Aldossari invokes two of those exceptions: waiver and commercial activity.20 The District Court held that neither was satisfied, and we agree.
1. Waiver
A foreign state is not immune if it has “waived its immunity either explicitly or by implication[.]”
Aldossari argues that the King of Saudi Arabia waived sovereign immunity in a speech in June 2015, when the King said (according to Aldossari) that “here, any citizen can file lawsuits against the King, Crown Prince or other members of the Royal Family.”21 (J.A. at 187.) According to a report prepared by an expert on Saudi law and submitted by Aldossari, the King also said in his speech that “no one is above the law and that any citizen has the right to file any kind of lawsuit against the King, the Crown Prince or any private or governmental entity.” (J.A. at 184.) Aldossari concedes that the King‘s statement did not “speak directly to suits outside Saudi Arabia” and “permitted ... suits [by Saudi citizens] in Saudi Arabia[,]” but he nonetheless asks us to construe the statement‘s effect as extending beyond that nation‘s borders. (Opening Br. at 13 (emphasis added).)
That may be the case, but it is no reason to reach the conclusion Aldossari wants. Courts have “uniformly concluded” that “a waiver of sovereign immunity in domestic courts does not by itself evidence an intent on the part of the sovereign entity to waive immunity from suit in the United States.” Corzo v. Banco Central de Reserva del Peru, 243 F.3d 519, 523 (9th Cir. 2001) (collecting cases). Indeed, one of the fundamental “privilege[s] of sovereignty” is the ability to
And there is good reason to conclude that Saudi Arabia has exercised that privilege. Customary international law, like the FSIA, operates under a presumption that a state is immune from suit in foreign courts, subject only to a handful of exceptions. See David P. Stewart, The UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property, 99 Am. J. Int‘l L. 194, 195 (2005) (noting the historical “virtual unanimity in international law and practice that sovereigns ... were absolutely immune from the jurisdiction of foreign courts[,]” which eventually softened to permit suits “when claims ar[o]se from [states‘] commercial transactions or ‘private law’ activities“). To that end, the United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property, to which Saudi Arabia is a party, recognizes that “[a] State enjoys immunity ... from the jurisdiction of the courts of another State[,]” subject to a handful of specified limitations not at issue here. U.N. Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property, art. 5, opened for signature Jan. 17, 2005, https://treaties.un.org/doc/Treaties/2004/12/20041202%2003-50%20PM/CH_III_13p.pdf; see also id. arts. 10-17 (enumerating exceptions to immunity). The treaty has not yet gone into effect, but Saudi Arabia‘s accession to it is nevertheless evidence that the Kingdom intends to avail itself of its immunity in U.S. courts whenever it may lawfully do so. In light of those background principles, and construing the King‘s statement narrowly, we detect on this record no
2. Commercial Activity
A foreign state is also not immune from any action “based upon” (1) “a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state[,]” (2) “an act performed in the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere[,]” or (3) “an act outside ... the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere” that “causes a direct effect in the United States[.]”
We have laid out a two-step framework for analyzing a claimed exception to immunity based on commercial activity. First, we ask whether there is a “sufficient jurisdictional connection or nexus between the commercial activity and the United States” - in other words, whether the foreign state has engaged in conduct that satisfies one of the three clauses of
Aldossari argues that three facts show he has satisfied the exception. They are that Saudi Arabia, through Saudi Aramco, “has engaged in routine, regular, and substantial commercial activities in the United States concerning the oil market for decades” (Opening Br. at 18); that those two defendants entered into business with Ripp, a U.S.-based individual; and that Aldossari‘s son Rakan is a Pennsylvania resident. None of those things, however, can bear the weight Aldossari puts on them.
The first assertion - that Saudi Aramco engages in regular oil-related business in and affecting the United States - may be enough to establish a “commercial activity carried on in the United States” under the first clause of
To establish such a nexus, Aldossari must show that his suit against the sovereign defendants is “based upon” a relevant commercial activity or act.
Next, Aldossari tries to fit his second and third jurisdictional “facts” - the U.S. citizenship and domicile of Ripp, and Rakan‘s U.S. citizenship - into
Importantly, the particular contractual duty that Aldossari claims went unfulfilled - payment to Trans Gulf and United World Trade, Inc. v. Mangyshlakneft Oil Prod. Ass‘n, 33 F.3d 1232, 1237 (10th Cir. 1994) (no direct effect when “no part of the contract in this case was to be performed in the United States” and “the defendants’ performance of their contractual obligations had no connection at all with the United States“).
The U.S. domicile of one of the defendants - Ripp - does not change the analysis.29 The mere presence in a lawsuit of a U.S. defendant cannot justify hailing into court foreign sovereign parties that have engaged in a purely overseas business relationship with the plaintiff. See Maizus v. Weldor Tr. Reg., 820 F. Supp. 101, 104 (S.D.N.Y. 1993) (“[T]his Court is aware of no case in which” “the fact that one of the ... defendants ... is an American corporation[,]” without more, “has been found to be a sufficient basis for jurisdiction under the FSIA.“). From all appearances, Ripp was domiciled in the United States whether or not the oil refinery deal took place; there is no coherent argument for saying that their domiciles in this country were somehow an “effect” of the events underlying this case. See Effect, Black‘s Law Dictionary (6th ed. 1990) (“result; outcome; consequence“); Effect, Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary (1971) (“something that is produced by an agent or cause [or] something that follows immediately from an antecedent“). Unless a defendant‘s location in the United States somehow stemmed from the events underlying the lawsuit, it cannot be said that the defendant‘s domicile is an “effect,” much less a direct effect,
And the same holds true if, as here, a plaintiff is based in the United States. Absent an indication that the plaintiff‘s U.S. residence or citizenship came about as a result of the subject matter of the litigation, his location is not an “effect” of any pertinent act. See Odhiambo, 764 F.3d at 40 (a plaintiff‘s “U.S. presence or U.S. citizenship alone [cannot] ... suffice[] to create a direct effect in the United States“); Adler v. Federal Republic of Nigeria, 107 F.3d 720, 726-27 (9th Cir. 1997) (“[M]ere financial loss by a person ... in the U.S. is not, in itself, sufficient to constitute a ‘direct effect.‘“). The plaintiff‘s location or citizenship tells us nothing of any effects caused by the defendants’ acts. A contrary rule would permit jurisdiction in practically every case in which a U.S. domiciliary claimed harm from the acts of a foreign sovereign, an outcome that would undermine the FSIA‘s background presumption of affording immunity to foreign states.30 See Westfield v. Fed. Republic of Germany, 633 F.3d 409, 414 (6th Cir. 2011) (“[W]e are ... wary of
In sum, the very few and thin strands of this case that pass through the United States are insufficient to justify exercising jurisdiction under the FSIA over the claims against Saudi Arabia and Saudi Aramco. The District Court‘s dismissal of those claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction was thus fully justified.
C. The Crown Princes: Personal Jurisdiction31
The District Court held that both the current and the former Crown Prince were entitled to dismissal under the common law of immunity for officials of foreign governments. See Samantar v. Yousuf, 560 U.S. 305, 319, 325 (2010) (holding that the common law, rather than the FSIA, governs the immunity of foreign officials). We need not decide whether that analysis was correct, because we can instead hold that their dismissal from the suit was proper because the District Court lacked personal jurisdiction over either of them.
A court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant in a civil case only if it has the authority to do so from a source of positive law (such as a statute or a rule of civil procedure) and if exercising jurisdiction would not violate “the outer limits” set by the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. Fischer v. Fed. Express Corp., 42 F.4th 366, 380-83 (3d Cir. 2022).
A defendant may be subject to suit consistent with the constitutional guarantee of due process only if he has “certain minimum contacts with the State such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v. Brown, 564 U.S. 915, 923 (2011) (cleaned up) (quoting Int‘l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 316 (1945)). Personal jurisdiction can either be general or specific, O‘Connor v. Sandy Lane Hotel Co., 496 F.3d 312, 317 (3d Cir. 2007), but Aldossari fails to establish that the exercise of either type of jurisdiction is appropriate here.
General (or “all-purpose“) jurisdiction permits a court to hear any and all claims against a defendant brought within a certain forum, even if those claims have nothing to do with any actions the defendant took in the forum. Goodyear, 564 U.S. at 919. The paradigmatic forum for the exercise of general jurisdiction “is the individual‘s domicile[,]” id. at 924, which, for both Crown Princes, is Saudi Arabia.
Nor do Aldossari‘s specific jurisdiction arguments avail him. That form of personal jurisdiction is “case-specific[,]” Goodyear, 564 U.S. at 927, and may be exercised if a plaintiff‘s claims “arise out of or relate to the defendant‘s contacts with the forum[,]” Fischer, 42 F.4th at 372 (quoting Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Ct., 137 S. Ct. 1773, 1780 (2017)). Put otherwise, “the defendant‘s suit-related conduct must create a substantial connection with the forum State[,]” giving rise to a “relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation.” Walden v. Fiore, 571 U.S. 277, 283-84 (2014).
No such relationship connects the Crown Princes or their alleged conduct underlying this case to Pennsylvania. The complaint accuses the current Crown Prince of only a few acts: ordering the arrest of the former Crown Prince and the seizure of his assets and preventing him from performing under the Ownership Agreement. That conduct, if it took place, occurred in Saudi Arabia and bore no connection to Pennsylvania. Nothing in the record reveals any “contacts with the forum” by the current Crown Prince, much less any contacts related to the allegations in this case.36 Bristol-Myers
And as for the former Crown Prince, all of the conduct in which he was allegedly involved - the execution and performance of the Ownership Agreement, and the much later meeting with Aldossari - took place in Saudi Arabia, Saint Lucia, or London. Even if we were to assume, as Aldossari claims, that the former Crown Prince was personally a party to the oil refinery deal,37 the contract was signed in Saudi Arabia relationship to the transactions at the core of this case, see supra Section II.B.2, and so they cannot serve as grounds for specific jurisdiction. And Saudi Aramco‘s business dealings in the United States, at least as conclusorily alleged here, are not sufficient to make it so “essentially at home” here as to justify the exercise of general jurisdiction. Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v. Brown, 564 U.S. 915, 919 (2011). So even if the company‘s contacts could be attributed to the Crown Prince - which we doubt - they would not suffice to establish jurisdiction over him.
Aldossari argues that the former Crown Prince can still be subject to personal jurisdiction in Pennsylvania because the Ownership Agreement had as counterparties Ripp, a Pennsylvania citizen, and Transcontinental, a Delaware corporation. That position, however, is squarely foreclosed by precedent. Merely entering into a contract with a resident of a state, absent any indication that the contract was executed or performed there, is insufficient to justify the exercise of personal jurisdiction in that state. See Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 471 U.S. 462, 478 (1985) (“If the question is whether an individual‘s contract with an out-of-state party alone can automatically establish sufficient minimum contacts in the other party‘s home forum, we believe the answer clearly is that it cannot.“); United States v. Swiss Am. Bank, Ltd., 274 F.3d 610, 621-22 (1st Cir. 2001) (no personal jurisdiction when “the business relationship between” foreign defendant and domestic counterparty “involve[d] no in-forum activities[,]” since defendant‘s “business relationship and/or contract with [domestic counterparty] ... is not itself a contact with the United States as a forum“). Because none of the former Crown Prince‘s conduct related to this litigation had a “substantial connection with the forum State[,]” Walden, 571 U.S. at 284, the District Court lacked personal jurisdiction over him.
Aldossari claims was the former Crown Prince - is only mentioned in passing as entitled to a seat on the refinery‘s board.
Here, Aldossari‘s bare allegations do not give us any reason to think that, with more evidence, he could identify some conduct by the Crown Princes that connects them to Pennsylvania, much less link that conduct to the allegations that underlie his claims. Moreover, Aldossari has not pointed to any specific facts he might be able to discover that would support the exercise of personal jurisdiction. That being so, letting him take discovery would be the launch of a “fishing expedition[,]” which we decline to facilitate. Id. Because no personal jurisdiction exists over the current and former Crown Princes, the District Court‘s dismissal of the claims against them was warranted.
D. Ripp: Subject-Matter Jurisdiction and Appellate Rule 43
Ripp participated pro se in the District Court proceedings and moved to dismiss on standing, venue, and merits grounds, prevailing on the first of those bases. Three months after Aldossari filed his notice of appeal, however, Ripp died. Aldossari‘s briefing did not specifically address the District Court‘s dismissal of his claims against Ripp or take a clear position on whether he intended to continue pursuing those claims. That alone could be a forfeiture. At argument, however, his counsel took the position that Aldossari still wishes to pursue those claims. Counsel also asserted that no estate has been opened for Ripp.
Even if there were an estate, though, Aldossari‘s effort to pursue a claim would run into an early roadblock: the absence of legal authority to exercise subject-matter jurisdiction over his claims against Ripp. This is an issue we have “an independent obligation” to consider of our own accord. Arbaugh v. Y&H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 501 (2006). The sole basis for jurisdiction identified in the complaint is the FSIA, which - in addition to failing to permit the exercise of jurisdiction over the claims against any of the other defendants in this case, see supra Section II.B - is obviously inapplicable to the claims against Ripp, who was a natural person domiciled in the United States. See
Assuming we had subject-matter jurisdiction over the claims against Ripp, however, we would still dismiss the appeal against him on another threshold basis: Ripp has not been replaced in this appeal by any person or entity that can represent his interests. When a party dies during the pendency of an appeal, “the decedent‘s personal representative may be substituted as a party on motion filed with the circuit clerk by the representative or by any party.”
Appellate Rule 43 offers no guidance on what those “appropriate proceedings” may be, in contrast to the analogous civil rule for district-court proceedings, which provides that “the action by or against the decedent must be dismissed” if no one moves to substitute a party within ninety days of the death being stated on the record.
Several of our fellow courts have taken a different approach in applying Appellate Rule 43, going ahead and ruling on the issues presented in the appeal as if no death had occurred. See, e.g., Ciccone v. Sec‘y of Dep‘t of Health & Hum. Servs., 861 F.2d 14, 15 n.1 (2d Cir. 1988) (“[A]lthough no motion for substitution has been filed in this Court, we may proceed to decide [decedent]‘s appeal.” (citation omitted)); Hardie v. Cotter & Co., 849 F.2d 1097, 1098 n.2 (8th Cir. 1988) (“While a personal representative has yet to be substituted as a party in this action, we find it appropriate to dispose of [decedent]‘s claims in this opinion.“); Wright v. Com. Union Ins. Co., 818 F.2d 832, 834 n.1 (11th Cir. 1987) (same). But in all those cases the decedent was the plaintiff-appellant, and the defendant-appellee had no incentive to proactively go out and find a representative to take over the task of advancing a case against itself. Nor was it under any
The calculus looks different when it is a plaintiff-appellant who wishes to proceed with an appeal upon the death of a defendant-appellee. After all, it is the plaintiff who bears the burden of diligently prosecuting his case. Cf.
That is the situation here. Aldossari‘s counsel asserted at argument that no estate had been opened for Ripp, and he was unable to say that one would ever be opened. The mere possibility that there may someday be a substitute party that
E. Disposition
As we have explained, we agree with the District Court that dismissal of all of Aldossari‘s claims was warranted. We are unable to affirm its order of dismissal, however, because the Court erred in dismissing the complaint with prejudice. “A dismissal with prejudice “operates as an adjudication on the merits“” and typically prevents the plaintiff from subsequently litigating his claims in either the original court or any other forum. Papera v. Pa. Quarried Bluestone Co., 948 F.3d 607, 610-11 (3d Cir. 2020). “Dismissal for lack of standing[,]” by contrast, “reflects a lack of jurisdiction” rather than a view on the merits, “so dismissal of [Aldossari‘s] complaint should have been without prejudice.” Thorne v. Pep Boys Manny Moe & Jack Inc., 980 F.3d 879, 896 (3d Cir. 2020). Similarly, the grounds for our holding that the complaint was correctly dismissed are all “threshold, nonmerits issue[s]” that do not require us to “assum[e] ... substantive “law-declaring power.“” Sinochem Int‘l Co., 549 U.S. at 433. Neither our opinion nor
It appears that the District Court‘s intent was to make its order final and therefore appealable, once Aldossari had elected to stand on his complaint rather than seek to amend it. See Weber v. McGrogan, 939 F.3d 232, 238 (3d Cir. 2019) (“[W]hen a plaintiff prefers not to amend, he “may file an appropriate notice with the district court asserting his intent to stand on the complaint,“” at which point the court can issue an order making its dismissal final and allow the plaintiff to take an appeal.). But making an order dismissing a case final - ending the litigation in the district court and enabling the plaintiff to trigger our appellate jurisdiction,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the District Court‘s dismissal with prejudice and remand with directions to dismiss the complaint without prejudice.
