We consider whether the federal courts have jurisdiction over a class action brought by Latin American banana workers against multinational fruit and chemical companies alleged to have exposed the workers to a toxic pesticide.
I
Dibromoehloropropane (DBCP) is a powerful pesticide. Tough on pests, it’s no friend to humans either. Absorbed by the skin or inhaled, it’s alleged to cause sterility, testicular atrophy, miscarriages, liver damage, cancer and other ailments that you wouldn’t wish on anyone. Originally manufactured by Dow Chemical and Shell Oil, the pesticide was banned from general use in the United States by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1979. But the chemical companies continued to distribute it to fruit companies in developing nations.
In our case, banana workers from Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala and Panama brought a class action against Dole Food Company, other major fruit companies and chemical companies (hereinafter “Dole”) for injuries allegedly sustained from exposure to DBCP in their home countries. This case represents one front in a broad litigation war between these plaintiffs’ lawyers and these defendants. In some of the cases, plaintiffs have reportedly won multimillion dollar settlements. See Larry K. Lowry & Arthur L. Frank, Exporting DBCP and Other Banned Pesticides: Consideration of Ethical Issues, 5 Int’l J. Occup. Envtl. Health 135, 140 (1999). In others, defendants have managed to have the cases dismissed for forum non conveniens. See, e.g., Delgado v. Shell Oil Co.,
The merits are not before us. Instead, we must decide whether the case is properly in federal court. The workers brought suit in Hawaii state court. Dole responded by impleading two Israeli chemical companies, Dead Sea Bromine Company and Bromine Compounds Limited (“Dead Sea Companies”), which are alleged to have manufactured some of the DBCP used in plaintiffs’ home countries. The Companies were, until recently, indirectly owned by the Israeli government, and they immediately removed the ease to federal court pursuant to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (FSIA), 28 U.S.C. § 1330. Dole likewise removed based on federal-question jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1331. The district court denied plaintiffs’ remand motion and then dismissed the case for forum non conveniens.
II
Dole was entitled to remove the case to federal court if plaintiffs could have brought it there to begin with. See 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). We must therefore consider whether plaintiffs could have brought the case in district court under federal-question jurisdiction or the FSIA
We are courts of limited jurisdiction. This means we hear only those cases that Congress directs and the Constitution permits us to hear. Under Article III, federal courts may assert jurisdiction over federal questions, extending to all cases “arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their Authority.” U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2. Although any federal ingredient may be sufficient to satisfy Article III, the statutory grant of jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 requires more. See Verlinden B.V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria,
Even if the case turns entirely on the validity of a federal defense, federal courts may not assert jurisdiction unless a federal right or immunity is “an element, and an essential one, of the plaintiffs cause of action.” Franchise Tax Bd. v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust,
Under conventional principles, the class action here unquestionably arises under state law. Plaintiffs seek relief under the common law of Hawaii for negligence, conspiracy, strict liability, intentional torts and breach of implied warranty. None of the claims has an element premised on a right created by Congress or the Constitution. Dole nonetheless argues that we have federal-question jurisdiction because the case calls for an application of the federal common law of foreign relations.
Although there is no general federal common law, “there are enclaves of federal judge-made law which bind the States.” Banco Nacional de Cuba v. Sabbatino,
Because the Constitution gives the federal government exclusive authority to manage the nation’s foreign affairs, the Court concluded that “rules of international law should not be left to divergent and perhaps parochial state interpretations.” Sabbatino,
Federal-question jurisdiction was not an issue in Sabbatino; the district court already had jurisdiction because of diversity of citizenship. The question presented was what substantive law would apply-state law pursuant to Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
This is as far as Sabbatino goes, and it’s not far enough, because nothing in plaintiffs’ complaint turns on the validity or invalidity of any act of a foreign state. Plaintiffs seek compensation for injuries sustained from the defendants’ manufacture, sale and use of DBCP. Plaintiffs don’t claim that any foreign government participated in such activities or that the defendants acted under the color of foreign law. The case-at least as framed by plaintiffs-does not require us to evaluate any act of state or apply any principle of international law. The common law of foreign relations will become an issue only when- and if-it is raised as a defense.
Dole nonetheless argues that we must assert federal-question jurisdiction because the case concerns a vital sector of the economies of foreign countries and so has implications for our nation’s relations with those countries. Plaintiffs represent a class of perhaps thousands of foreign nationals who allege that large multinational corporations harmed them in their home countries.
Dole’s position is not without support. In Torres v. Southern Peru Copper Corp.,
Torres and Pacheco de Perez relied principally on Republic of Philippines v. Marcos,
State courts apply federal law in a wide variety of cases and, by doing so, they necessarily develop it. This does not undermine the nationwide uniformity of federal law much more than having somewhat different applications of federal law in the various federal circuits. Ultimately, the Supreme Court has the final say on any question of federal law, whether it arises in federal or state court, and this is thought sufficient to ensure nationwide uniformity in areas as diverse as criminal procedure, patent law and labor law.
We therefore decline to follow Marcos, Toms and Pacheco de Perez insofar as they stand for the proposition that the federal courts may assert jurisdiction over a case simply because a foreign government has expressed a special interest in its outcome. Accord In re Tobacco/Governmental Health Care Costs Litig.,
Nor do we understand how a court can go about evaluating the foreign policy im
As Justice Frankfurter noted in Romero v. International Terminal Operating Co.,
B. Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act
As an alternative source of jurisdiction, the Dead Sea Companies argue that they are instrumentalities of a foreign state under the FSIA. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1330,1603. The FSIA grants the federal courts jurisdiction over an action brought against “an agency or instrumentality of a foreign state,” id. § 1603(a), which is defined to include any entity that is “an organ of a foreign state or political subdivision thereof, or a majority of whose shares or other ownership interest is owned by a foreign state or political subdivision thereof.” Id. § 1603(b)(2).
Until the 1990s, the government of Israel indirectly owned a majority of shares in both companies by owning all the shares of their parent, Israel Chemicals Limited. An Israeli statute, the Government Companies Law, granted the Israeli government a veto over certain decisions of the Dead Sea Companies, including the appointment of the directors and officers, changes in their capital structures, and the use of corporate profits. The Companies also emphasize that the government of Israel exerted control over them through the state’s ownership of the Dead Sea’s mineral resources on which the Companies relied for their enterprise.
1. The Israeli government privatized most of its holdings in Israel Chemicals Limited during the 1990s and so, by the time this suit was filed in 1997, the government no longer owned, indirectly or otherwise, a majority of the shares in the Dead Sea Companies. Because the FSIA grants jurisdiction to the federal courts where an entity “is an organ of a foreign state or political subdivision thereof,” id. § 1603(b)(2) (emphasis added), we must first consider what the meaning of “is,” is.
In Straub v. A P Green, Inc.,
We do not find this question as easy as the unanimity of other circuits would suggest. By its terms, the FSIA applies only to an entity that “is” a foreign state at the time of the suit. 28 U.S.C. § 1603(b)(2). The statute does not say that it applies to an entity that used to be a state, although Congress could easily have said so. Moreover, the statute contains special rules for service of process on the foreign state, see id. § 1608, and for enforcing a judgment against the foreign state. See id. §§ 1609-10. We have no doubt that, in enacting
It is unclear that the policies of the FSIA would be served by extending that immunity to entities that are now private but were state actors at the time of the alleged wrong. The FSIA seeks to avoid affronting other governments by making it hard for private litigants to haul them into court. See First Nat’l City. Bank v. Banco Nacional de Cuba,
Of course, a case against an entity formerly owned by the state may raise other kinds of concerns. Where the defendant was a foreign state at the time of the alleged wrong, the complaint perforce alleges that the foreign state did something wrong. By adjudicating that claim, the court may have to pass judgment on the acts or decisions of a foreign sovereign. But the merits of such acts may well be insulated from judicial scrutiny by the act of state doctrine and, in any event, the affront to the foreign sovereign will be remote and indirect if it is not held answerable for the harm it may have caused. If concern over adjudicating whether the foreign sovereign acted wrongfully were the key to FSIA immunity, Straub should have come out the other way because the entity that committed the wrong there was not a government entity at the time of the alleged wrongdoing. There is thus a plausible basis for concluding that the FSIA does not come into play where a suit is brought against a private entity that was a foreign state at the time of the alleged wrongdoing, but is no longer.
However, the question is a close one, and the answer is ultimately not disposi-tive here. We will therefore assume for the purposes of this case that the FSIA would grant federal jurisdiction over an entity that at the time of the tortious conduct was-but no longer is-a government instrumentality.
2. Proceeding on that assumption, we turn to whether the Dead Sea Companies were in fact instrumentalities of the Israeli government. In Gates v. Victor Fine Foods,
Because the Dead Sea Companies were never owned directly by the Israeli government, Gates would seem to foreclose them claim to be instrumentalities through stock ownership. Because they must, the Companies do their best to distinguish Gates. First, they argue that Gates did not consider whether the indirect ownership of stock qualified as an “other ownership interest” under section 1603(b)(2). An instrumentality under the FSIA includes entities in which the foreign government owns a majority of the shares or some “other ownership interest.” We decline to read “other ownership interest” in such a way as to make the majority-shareholder requirement superfluous. Instead, we read it simply to describe some other form of ownership not called shares of stock. That provision does not include the indirect ownership of shares specifically foreclosed by Gates.
Second, the Dead Sea Companies suggest that Gates held only that the subsidiary of an organ of a foreign state is not an instrumentality, while a subsidiary of a state-owned corporation may be one. We see no rationale supporting such a distinction. If anything, we would more readily view an organ of a foreign state as an extension of the government than we would so view a state-owned business. Moreover, we already have read Gates for the broader holding that “an entity wholly owned by ‘an agency or instrumentality of a foreign state’ is not owned by a ‘foreign state or a political subdivision thereof.’ ” Corporacion Mexicana de Servicios Maritimos, S.A. de C.V. v. M/T Respect,
The Companies point out that several other circuits have disagreed with Gates and held that subsidiaries of a corporation owned by a foreign state are in fact instru-mentalities under the FSIA. See, e.g., Delgado v. Shell Oil Co.,
3. In the alternative, the Dead Sea Companies argue that they were “organs” of the Israeli government under section 1603(b)(2). In defining whether an entity is an organ, courts consider whether the entity engages in a public activity on behalf of the foreign government. In making this determination, courts examine "the circumstances surrounding the ■ entity’s creation, the purpose of its activities, its independence from the government, the level of government financial support, its employment policies, and its obligations and privileges under state law. See Corporacion Mexicana,
The Dead Sea Companies argue that, like the oil company in Co'iyoracion Mexi-cana, Üje Companies were government ori gans created by Israel for the purpose of exploiting the Dead Sea resources owned by the government. The Dead Sea Companies were classified as “government companies” under Israeli law, which gave the government certain privileges reflecting its ownership stake. The government had the right to approve the appointment of directors and officers, as well as any changes in the capital structure of the Companies, and the Companies were obliged to present an annual budget and financial statement to various government ministries. The government could constrain the use of the Companies’ profits as well as the salaries of the directors and officers.
Although Israeli law granted such authority directly to the Israeli government, it is not considerably different from the control a majority shareholder would enjoy under American corporate law. In contrast to the oil refinery in Corporación Mexicana, the Dead Sea Companies were not run by government appointees; their employees were not treated as civil servants; nor were the Companies wholly owned by the government of Israel. The Companies could sue and be sued, and could in fact sue the government of Israel (although official Israeli documents describe such disputes as between “a government company and another government body”). Nor did the Companies exercise any regulatory authority, as did the entity in Gates. These factors support the district court’s view of the Companies as independent commercial enterprises, heavily regulated, but acting to maximize profits rather than pursue public objectives.
Ill
The federal courts do not have jurisdiction over this case under either 28 U.S.C. § 1331 or 28 U.S.C. § 1330. Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND with instruc
Notes
. Because Dole Food Company is a citizen of the forum state, defendants could not remove
. Although the act of state doctrine generally serves as a defense, it can also be used affirmatively as the basis of a claim. See Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law § 443 cmt. i (1986) (noting that an act of state may be "necessary to a litigant's claim or defense”); see also Republic of Philippines v. Marcos,
. As the district court recognized, such claims may raise serious questions of forum non conveniens under federal and state law. Of course, the federal courts may decide that issue only if we have jurisdiction over the case.
. Torres relied on only one other case, Texas Indus, v. Radcliff Materials, Inc.,
Torres also distinguished Aquafaith Shipping, Ltd. v. Jarillas,963 F.2d 806 , 808 (5th Cir.1992), which had held that the well-pleaded complaint rule applies with full force to cases arising under the federal common law of foreign relations. In Aquafaith, the defendants alleged that a maritime suit arose under federal law because the Philippine government had involved itself with the plaintiff's claims. Aquafaith rejected the claim on the ground that the foreign government's involvement didn't appear anywhere in the plaintiff's complaint. Id. at 809. Torres concluded that the plaintiff's claims in Aquafaith had not “necessarily implicate[d] vital economic and sovereign interests” of a foreign power, as they did in Torres.113 F.3d at 542 n. 8.
. In reaching this conclusion, the Second Circuit relied on several authorities, none particularly helpful, among them Judge Friendly’s opinion in Republic of Iraq,
Marcos also seemed to draw support from Franchise Tax Board,463 U.S. at 23 ,103 S.Ct. 2841 , where the Supreme Court noted that federal-question jurisdiction may exist "even though the plaintiff pleads a state cause of action if federal law 'is so powerful as to displace entirely any state cause of action.’ ” Marcos,806 F.2d at 354 (quoting Franchise Tax Bd.,463 U.S. at 23 ,103 S.Ct. 2841 ). We find this reference to Franchise Tax Board curious. While the Supreme Court acknowledged that a state action may arise under federal law when Congress has established a federal cause of action preempting state law, see Franchise Tax Bd.,463 U.S. at 23-24 (citing Avco Corp. v. Aero Lodge No. 735,390 U.S. 557 , 560,88 S.Ct. 1235 ,20 L.Ed.2d 126 (1968)), we fail to see what analogous federal action Marcos had in mind when it suggested that a state dispute over real property might have been preempted by federal law.
. See, e.g., Boy Scouts of Am. v. Dale,
. As Judge Paul Friedman noted in In re Tobacco Litigation:
[T]o the extent that the United States government is concerned about potential adverse foreign relations consequences from the resolution of these lawsuits, the Executive Branch possesses the competence, capacity and incentive to make its view known either to this Court or the state courts in which the suits were brought. The Executive Branch is responsible for the conduct of foreign affairs and may address any potential foreign relations issues that may arise in these cases.
. We note, for example, that the Fifth Circuit in Tones had before it an amicus brief from the government of Peru, but none from our own government. Based on Peru's representations, the court concluded that Peru had a vital interest in the case and the litigation might adversely affect Peru’s relations with the United States. See Torres,
. We are particularly troubled by the suggestion in Pacheco de Perez (echoed by Dole in our case) that federal jurisdiction will hinge on whether a foreign government has taken a position in support or in opposition to the litigation. See
. We are not the first federal employees to tackle this question. See Robert Blecker, How Does Congress Define Perjuiy"?, Wall St J., Dec. 9, 1998, atA22.
. We recognize that state officials formerly involved with the then-state entity might be drawn into the litigation, for instance as key witnesses, a circumstance that might affect the immunity analysis. Cf. Clinton v. Jones,
. These factors also distinguish the Dead Sea Companies from the Syrian oil company in Kelly,
