It is widеly thought that “[n]o aspect of the extension of the American legal system beyond the territorial frontier of the United States has given rise to so much friction as the requests for documents in investigation and litigation in the United States.” Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law of the United States § 442, reporters’ note 1 (1987). As the imperatives of transnational business shrink the size of the globe, the task of devising an effective yet respectful paradigm for easing this friction becomes more and more urgent. The instant appeal brings the titration into full focus.
The genesis of the problem in this case lies with an auditing engagemеnt accepted
In response, KPMG-B repaired to a Belgian court requesting that substantial penalties be imposed on those who might “take any step of a procedural or other nature in order to proceed with the discovery-procedure.” The plaintiffs in the pending American litigation (who had obtained the turnover order in the first instance) implored the district court to enjoin KPMG-B from pursuing the Belgian action. The district court obliged.
See In re Lernout & Hauspie Sec. Litig.,
I. BACKGROUND
As said, this appeal arises out of a welter of cases having a common theme: the allegation that KPMG-B and others perpetrated large-scale securities fraud leading to L & H’s collapse. Those cases include several class actions. Some of them were commenced in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts and others were transferred to that district.
See, e.g., Filler v. Lernout,
KPMG-B is a target of an ongoing criminal investigation in Belgium, which arises out of the L & H fiasco. It is also a principal defendant in the aforedescribed securities fraud litigation. KPMG-B has not disputed the district court’s in person-am jurisdiction. It did seek to secure dismissal of the securities fraud litigation on forum non conveniens grounds, but failed in that effort.
See L & H II,
Once past these threshold issues, the securities fraud plaintiffs embarked on pretrial discovery. In September of 2002, they served document requests for KPMG-B’s work papers.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 34. The plaintiffs did not get very far; KPMG-B refused to comply with
Tantalized by their glimpse of the work papers, the securities fraud plaintiffs moved to compel their production. A magistrate judge took briefing and heard argument on the applicability of and exceptions to the Belgian secrecy law. 2 On November 13, 2003, he rejected KPMG-B’s arguments and ordered production of the work papers on or before the close of business on December 1, 2003.
On November 27, 2003 — Thanksgiving day — KPMG-B filed an ex parte petition with a court in Brussels, seeking to enjoin the securities fraud plaintiffs from “taking any step” to proceed with the requested discovery. To ensure compliance, they asked the Belgian court to impose a fine of one million Euros for each violation of the proposed injunction. 3 The Belgian court refused to act ex parte; instead, it directed that notice be provided to the securities fraud plaintiffs and scheduled a hearing for December 16, 2003. On December 1, KPMG-B gave notice of the institution of the Belgian action to the securities fraud plaintiffs. It also filed an objection to the magistrate judge’s decision. That objection is still pending in the district сourt (there is, among other things, a disagreement as to its timeliness). Finally, KPMG-B moved to stay the turnover order.
Faced with the threat of extravagant fines, the securities fraud plaintiffs sought the district court’s protection. On December 9, the magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation urging the entry of an order enjoining KPMG-B from proceeding with its Belgian action. The district judge held a hearing two days later and issued an antisuit injunction, the full text of which is reproduced below:
The Court preliminarily enjoins KPMG-Belgium from proceeding with its writ, orders- KPMG-Belgium to withdraw forthwith its writ in the Court of First Instance of Brussels and orders it not to proceеd with the hearing scheduled on December 16, 2003. KPMG-Belgium shall file proof of compliance with this order.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A grant of a preliminary injunction typically receives deferential review.
McGuire v. Reilly,
III. ANALYSIS
Determining the appropriateness of an international antisuit injunction is a highly nuanced exercise. An inquiring court must find a way to accommodate conflicting, mutually inconsistent national policies without unduly interfering with the judicial processes of a foreign sovereign.
See Laker Airways Ltd. v. Sabena, Belgian World Airlines,
A. Articulating the Standards.
It is common ground that federal courts have the power to enjoin those subject to their personal jurisdiction from pursuing litigation before foreign tribunals.
See, e.g., Kaepa, Inc. v. Achilles Corp.,
Federal courts have been consentient in endorsing these principles. Beyond that point, however, the waters grow murky. The courts of appeals have differed as to the legal standards to be employed in determining whether the power to enjoin an international proceeding should be exercised. Two basic views have emerged. For ease in reference, we shall call the more permissive of these views the liberal approach and the more restrictive of them the conservative approach. See Note, An-tisuit Injunctions and International Comity, 71 Va. L.Rev. 1039, 1049-51 (1985) (using this nomenclature).
The liberal approach has been championed by two courts of appeals: the Fifth Circuit,
Kaepa,
Four courts of appeals have espoused the conservative approach for gauging the propriety of international antisuit injunctions.
See Stonington Partners, Inc. v. Lernout & Hauspie Speech Prods.,
We reject the liberal approach. We deem international comity an important integer in the decisional calculus — and the liberal approach assigns too low a priority to that interest. In the bargain, it undermines the age-old presumption in favor оf concurrent parallel proceedings — a value judgment that leaves us uneasy — and presumes that public policy always favors allowing a suit pending in an American court to go forward without any substantial impediment. To cinch matters, this approach gives far too easy passage to international antisuit injunctions. We understand that the judicial process is a cornerstone of the American way of life — but in an area that raises significant separation of powers concerns and implicates international relations, we believe that the law calls for a more cautious and measured approach.
We stop short, however, of an uncritical acceptance of the conservative approach. The recent expositions of that approach have come to regard the two main rationales upon which international antisuit injunctions may be grounded — preservation of jurisdiction and protection of important national policies — as exclusive.
See, e.g., Gen. Elec. Co. v. Deutz Ag,
We therefore reject this reworking of the conservative approach and instead endorse its traditional version. That version is not only more flexible but also more consistent with
Laker Airways
— which we regard as the seminal opinion in this field of law. The
Laker Airways
court did not suggest that its two stated rationales were the only ones that could justify issuing an international antisuit injunction.
In order to provide guidance for the district courts, we spell out the manner in which our preferred approach operates. The gatekeeping inquiry is, of course, whether parallel suits involve the same parties and issues. Unless that condition is met, a court ordinarily should go no further and refuse the issuance of an international antisuit injunction.
See, e.g., China Trade,
We acknowledge that the task of determining when a litigant has overcome this presumption is a difficult one. That is partly because comity is an elusive concept. The Supreme Court has defined it as “the recognition which one nation allows within its territory to the legislative, executive or judicial acts of another nation,
We hasten to add that although the definition of comity may be tenebrous, its importance could not be more clear. In an increasingly global economy, commercial transactions involving participants from many lands have become common fare. This world economic interdependence has highlighted the importance of comity, as international commerce depends to a large extent on “the ability of merchants to predict the likely consequences of their conduct in overseas markets.”
Gau Shan,
In the final analysis, rebutting this presumption involves a continual give and take. In the course of that give and take, the presumption may be counterbalanced by other facts and factors particular to a specific case. These include (but are by no means limited to) such things as: the nature of the two actions (i.e., whether they are merely parallel or whether the foreign action is more properly classified as in-terdictory); the posture of the proceedings in the two countries; the conduct of the parties (including their good faith or lack thereof); the importance of the policies at stake in the litigation; and, finally, the extent to which the foreign action has the potential to undermine the forum court’s ability to reach a just and speedy result.
Seen in this light, we agree that either the preservation of jurisdiction or the safeguarding of important national policies may afford a sufficient basis for the issuance of an international antisuit injunction. We do not, however, attach talis-manic significance to concepts such as jurisdiction-stripping and insults to public policy. Instead, we hold that in every case a district court should examine the totality of the circumstances in deciding whether a particular case warrants the issuance of an international antisuit injunction.
See Laker Airways,
B. Applying the Standards.
Against this backdrop, we ponder whether the district court acted within the realm of its discretion when it enjoined KPMG-B from pursuing the Belgian litigation. We conclude that it did.
The lower court applied the traditional four-pаrt test for preliminary injunctions.
See, e.g., Ross-Simons of Warwick, Inc. v. Baccarat, Inc.,
We need not belabor the obvious. The parties and issues are substantially similar, thus satisfying the gatekeeping inquiry. The district judge acknowledged the importance of comity concerns in her published opinion.
See L & H IV,
The essential character of the Belgian action is easily discerned. In it, KPMG-B seeks to impose huge financial penalties on the securities fraud plaintiffs should they take any steps to enforce the district court’s turnover order. This attempt to chill legitimate discovery by in terrorem tactics can scarcely be viewed as anything but an effort to “quash the practical power of the United States courts.”
Laker Airways,
Where, as here, a party institutes a foreign action in a blatant attempt to evade the rightful authority of the forum court, the need for an antisuit injunction crests.
See Laker Airways,
The equities also counsel in favor of affirming the district court’s order. This is not a case in which a trial court is enabling a fishing expedition. The securities fraud plaintiffs have survived the PSLRA’s heightened pleading requirements and, moreover, they have actually seen the documents that they seek. Consequently, they know that they are not fishing in an empty stream.
In weighing the equities, we also think it noteworthy that KPMG-B, not the securities fraud plaintiffs or the district court, set the stage for a crisis of comity. If KPMG-B had not filed a foreign petition calculated to generate interference with an ongoing American case, the district court would have had no need to issue a defensive injunction that sought only to preserve the court’s ability to adjudicate the claims before it according to the law of the
KPMG-B’s remaining arguments need not occupy us for long. First, it posits that the district court erred when it entered the antisuit injunction prior to reviewing the magistrate judge’s turnover order (including his assessment of the Belgian law issue). This argument is hopeless.
District courts have broad discretion in determining the sequence of their rulings.
Cf. Dynamic Image Techs., Inc. v. United States,
KPMG-B next contends that the lower court erred as a matter of law by failing to give due regard to the possible use of letters rogatory as a means of securing the requested documents. This contention lacks force.
While letters rogatory are among the discovery devices available in a federal court, parties are not required to resort to them come what may.
See Société Nationale Industrielle Aérospatiale v. United States Dist. Court,
Nor can we accept KPMG-B’s related contention that, as a matter of law, no international antisuit injunction can issue if the forum court’s goal can be achieved in some other way. While we encourage trial courts to search out alternatives that might avoid the need to issue antisuit injunctions, we will not force them to exhaust remote possibilities. Here, there is no compelling justification for overriding the district court’s considered judgment that letters rogatory are not a reasonably equivalent alternative to the turnover order.
KPMG-B’s thesis is, in substance, that the work papers will be made available by the Belgian prosecutor at the conclusion of the criminal investigation. But there is a rub: we have no reliable way of knowing when that investigation will end and, in all events, the record is unclear as to whether the outcome of the investigation will (or will not) affect the availability of the work papers. We do not think that a district court must bring the resolution of a case within its jurisdiction to a dead halt in the hope that the resolution of a foreign criminal proceeding at an uncertain future date may alleviate the need for a discovery order.
IV. CONCLUSION
We do not mean to minimize the potential difficulty of the situation that KPMG-B faces. To some extent, however, that situation is the natural consequence of its decision to ply its wares in the lucrative American marketplace. Having elected to establish a major presence in the United States, KPMG-B must have anticipated that it would be subject to suit in this country (and, thus, subject to pretrial discovery rules that are pandemic to the American justice system).
See
Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relatiоns Law § 442, reporters’ note 1 (1987) (noting “that persons who do business in the United States ... are subject to the burdens as well as the benefits of United States law, including the laws on discovery”). While courts should “take care to demonstrate due respect for any special problem confronted by [a] foreign litigant on account of its nationality,”
Société Nationale,
We need go no further. For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court acted within the еncincture of its discretion in enjoining KPMG-B from pursuing its Belgian litigation. In the last analysis, an international antisuit injunction, like any other injunction, is an equitable remedy designed “to bring the scales into balance.”
Rosario-Torres v. Hernandez-Colon,
We affirm the district court’s injunction order and vacate the partial stay of that order previously issued by this court. Costs shall be taxed against the appellant.
Notes
. The district court accepted, adopted, and elaborated upon the report and recommendation of the magistrate judge. For simplicity's sake, we do not distinguish between the two judicial officers, but, rather, take an institutional view and refer to the determinations below as those of the district court.
. The parties agree that, as a general matter, Article 458 of the Belgian Criminal Code prohibits auditors from disclosing confidential client information. There are, however, numerous exceptions to that general proscription. The parties have differing views as to whether KPMG-B's disclosure of its work papers pursuant to the distriсt court's turnover order would (or would not) fall within any one of these exceptions.
. In pertinent part, KPMG-B's petition asked the Belgian court for the following:
To prohibit defendants, upon forfeitment of a penalty of 1.000.000 EUR per infraction by each defendant, to take any step of a procedural or other nature in order to proceed with the discovery-procedure, initiated by them in the framework of the aforementioned American procedures, including but not limited to:
1. taking any step of a procedural or other nature in order to execute or rely on the decisiоn of the District Court of Massachusetts dated 13 November 2003 to produce the audit working papers;
2. taking any step of a procedural or other nature in the framework of the order of the American judge in its decision of 13 November 2003 to meet and confer with Petitioner concerning the production of the requested documents....
. The Hague Convention provides a set of minimum standards for securing evidence across national borders.
See Société Nationale,
