MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER
Before the court is defendants’ motion to quash service of process (# 16). For the reasons stated below, defendants’ motion to is denied.
*1102 Background
Plaintiff R. Griggs Group, Ltd. (hereinafter Griggs), a company of the United Kingdom, filed this action against Filanto Spa (hereinafter Filanto), an Italian company, for trademark infringement, seeking damages and declaratory and injunctive relief. From February 21 to 24, 1995, Griggs participated in a footwear trade show in Las Vegas, Nevada. During the trade show, Griggs identified Filanto аs marketing footwear which allegedly bore a trade dress substantially identical to those manufactured and trademarked by Griggs. In March, Griggs participated in another footwear trade show in Bologna, Italy, at which Griggs again identified Filanto as marketing allegedly infringing footwear.
Griggs attempted to serve process on Filanto in two ways. First, it served a Giorgio Lumo 1 at the Las Vegas trade show. Griggs also attempted to serve Filanto by mailing a summons and complaint to Antonio Filograna, Commercial President Commander, at Filanto’s offices in Italy via Federal Express. The package was delivered on August 28, 1995, and signed for by Luigi Serrano. Filanto moved to quash service on Mr. Lumo. Service on Mr. Lumo
Filanto’s motion (# 16) purports to move to quash service on Giorgio Lumo pursuant to F.R.C.P. 12(b)(4). Although federal courts have the authority to quash defective service of process as an alternative to dismissing a complaint, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure technically do not provide for Motions to Quash.
Montalbano v. Easco Hand Tools, Inc.,
The Hague Convention On The Service Abroad Of Judicial And Extrajudicial Documents In Civil Or Commercial Matters (hereinafter the Hague Convention) applies when the internal law of the forum country requires the transmittal of documents abroad as a necessary part of the service.
Volkswagenwerk Aktiengesellschaft v. Schlunk,
Giorgio Lumo’s relationship to Filanto is unclear. However, an unrefuted affidavit from Antonio Filograna establishes that he is not an officer, director, employee, managing agent, or general agent of Filanto nor is he an agent authorized by appointment or by law to receive service of process on behalf of Filanto. (Defendant’s Motion to Quash, Filograna Affidavit, ¶¶ 3, 4). Plaintiff has made no showing that Mr. Lumo was sufficiently integrated with the organization to render service upon him fair, reasonable and just.
Cf. Direct Mail Specialists, Inc. v. Eclat Computerized Technologies, Inc.,
Although defendant’s original motion referred only to the attempted service upon Mr. Lumo, the record reflects that Griggs also attempted to serve Filanto by mailing a summons and complaint to Antonio Filograna, Commercial President Commander, at Filanto’s offices in Italy via Federal Express. 2 Because substantive legal arguments in both plaintiff’s opposition and the subsequent memoranda filed with the court by both parties specifically address this attempt at service, the court now considers the matter of Federal Express service on Mr. Filograna.
Service of Process by Mail Under the Hague Convention
“Service of process” is a formal delivery of documents that is legally sufficient to charge the defendant with notice of a pending action.
Volkswagenwerk Aktiengesellschaft v. Schlunk,
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4 governs service of process. Strict compliance with the rules governing manner of service is required. Under Rule 4(f), service of process upon individuals in foreign countries is governed by the methods set forth by any internationally agreed means reasonably calculated to give notice, such as those mеans authorized by the Hague Convention On The Service Abroad Of Judicial And Extrajudicial Documents (hereinafter the Hague Convention). F.R.C.P. 4(f)(1). Because both Italy and Great Britain are signatories to the Hague Convention, service of process on an Italian defendant in Italy by a British plaintiff is governed by the Hague Convention.
Volkswagenwerk,
The Hague Conference on Private International Law is an international forum for discussing and proposing methods for unifying rules of private international law. B. Ristau, International Judicial Assistance (Civil And Commercial), 1990 Revision, Vol. 1, § 1-1-2. The tenth session of the Conference culminated in the Hague Convention On The Service Abroad Of Judicial And Extrajudicial Documents In Civil Or Commercial Matters, 3 *1104 which was opened for signature on November 15, 1965. Id. The purpose of the contracting states in adopting the Convention was to ensure timely notice to litigants and multilateral judicial efficiency. The heart of the Convention was a requirement that each signatory state both establish a Central Authority for receiving requests for service from litigants in signatory states and execute such foreign service requests. Id., § 4-3-1. However, use of the Central Authority for service is not mandatory; Articles 8 through 11 provide for alternate methods of service. Id., § 4-3-5. At issue in this case is whether section (a) of Article 10 provides one of those alternate methods of service.
Plaintiff argues that Article 10(a) of the convention provides for service by mail; defendant argues that it does not. Article 10(a) provides, in relevant part:
Provided the State of destination does not object, the present Convention shall not interfere with—
(a) the freedom to send judicial documents, by postal channels, directly to persons abroad.
The issue is whether the word “send” in this context refers to service of proсess.
Neither Supreme Court nor the Ninth Circuit have decided this issue. In the federal courts, two distinct lines of cases interpreting Article 10(a) have emerged. In
Ackermann v. Levine,
In
Bankston v. Toyota Motor Corp.,
As between these two approaches, the court is of the view that the
Ackermann
approach has more to recommend it. While the court recognizes that Articles 2 through 7 of the Hague Convention effected a major innovation in international law by creating the Central Authority as the principal mechanism for service of process in signatory countries,
see Volkswagenwerk,
Articles 8 through 11 within Chapter 1 of the Convention all discuss alternatives to the use of the Central Authority procedures detailed in Articles 2 through 7. For example, *1105 Article 8 provides that a state may use its own diplomatic or consular agents to “effect service directly” upon persons abroad. Article 9 provides for the use of consular or diplomatic channels to forward documents to the appropriate authorities of another contracting state for service. Articlе 10(b) and 10(c) provide for the use of judicial officers, officials or other competent persons of a contracting state to effect service, whether at the behest of a litigant or other judicial officers etc., subject to a contracting state’s right to object. Article 11 provides that two or more contracting states may agree among themselves to use alternate channels of service. In Chapter 3, entitled General Clauses, Article 19 provides that sеrvice of documents from abroad may be made by any method permitted by the internal law of the receiving state. In this context, it is not surprising or incongruous that mail service would be another option available to the transnational litigant.
Because the Convention as a whole does not purport to address aspects of litigation other than service of process, Article 10(a) would be anomalous if it related to a subject other than service. The preamble to the Convention describes the purpose of the contracting states in adopting the Convention as, in substance, ensuring timely notice to litigants and ensuring multilateral judicial efficiency. Article 1 of the Convention provides that it is applicable to every civil or commercial case where there is occasion to transmit a judicial or extrajudicial document abroad, and the whole of Chapters I and II of the Convention, Articles 2 through 17, involves service of such documents. The placement of one lone subprovision dealing with the mailing of nonservice documents in the midst of fifteen articles addressing service of process, would be inconsistent with the structure of the entire Convention.
While not untroubled by the textual distinction between “send” and “serve”, on balance, the court cannot ascribe to it the significanee found by the
Bankston
court. In the interpretation of treaties, courts are obliged to consider not only the text, but the “context in which the written words аre used.”
Volkswagenwerk,
486 at 699,
Although it is true that the word “serve” (or “service”) is used fairly consistently throughout the Convention, it is inaccurate to suggest, as the
Bankston
court did, that 10(a) is unique in the Convention in not referring to service.
See Bankston,
*1106 Both the Ackermann and Bankston decisions have been criticized on the grounds that they fail to consider appropriate supplementary sources of interpretation. See, e.g., Patricia N. McCausland, Note and Comment, How May I Serve You? Service Of Process By Mail Under The Hague Convention On The Service Abroad Of Judicial And Extrajudicial Documents In Civil Or Commercial Matters, 12 Pace L.Rev. 177 (1992). According to several commentators, these supplementary sources suggest that Article 10(a) should be read as authorizing service by mail in those сountries who have not objected to such service in a declaration pursuant to Article 21. 8 Id.; see also Franklin B. Mann, Jr., Comment, Foreign Service of Process By Direct Mail Under the Hague Convention And The Article 10(a) Controversy: Send v. Service, 21 Cumb.L.Rev. 647 (1991); B. Ristau 9 International Judicial Assistance (Civil And Commercial), 1990 Revision, Vol. 1, § 4r-3-5.
For example, in 1989, a special commission of experts chosen by their respective signatory governments met to discuss the operation of the convention, resulting in the 1992 publication of a handbook as a guide to law practice under the Convention. See Practical Handbook On The Operation Of The Hague Convention Of 15 November 1965 On The Service Abroad Of Judicial And Extrajudicial Documents In Civil Or Commercial Matters, 2d Ed., v-vi, 1992 (hereinafter Handbook). The Handbook, described in the introductory “Notice to the Reader” as “the product of close cooperation between the Governments of these [member] States, through the intermediary of the Permanent Bureau”, id. at vi, reflects a consensus among the member states that Article 10(a) provides a method of service. Id. at 42-45. The Handbook critiques the line of cases, including the Eighth Circuit Bankston decision, holding that 10(a) does not allow mail service, as contradicting not only the implicit understanding of the delegates to the earlier (1977) Special Commission meeting but substantial legal literature on the Convention and its predecessor treaties. Id. at 44, 45.
The 1989 report of the Special Commission itself reflects the reasoning of the Commission that the contracting states would not have been offered the opportunity to object to the 10(a) provision on the basis that such use of the postal сhannels constituted an infringement of their sovereignty unless such use constituted service; “[t]hus, theoretical doubts about the legal nature of the procedure were unjustified.” Special Commission Report On The Operation Of The Hague Service Convention And The Hague Evidence Convention (hereinafter Special Commission Report), reproduced at 28 I.L.M. 1556, 1561.
Also of import is the position of the U.S. State Department, in the wake of the Bankston decision, that “the [Bankston ] decision ... is incorrect to the extent that it suggests that the Hague Convention does not permit as a method of servicе the sending of a copy of the summons and complaint by registered mail to a defendant in a foreign country.” Letter from Alan J. Kreezko, U.S. Department of State Deputy Legal Advisor, to the Administrative Office of United States Courts and the National Center for State Courts (March 14, 1991), excerpted at 30 I.L.M. 260. Although not dispositive, courts often give great weight to treaty interpretations made by the Executive Branch. See Rest.3d of Foreign Relations Law of the United States § 326(2) (1986).
Although the Supreme Court has yet to addrеss the question of the interpretation of the word “send” in Article 10(a), its approach in
Volkswagenwerk Aktiengesellschaft v. Schlunk
is instructive.
Article I of the Hague Convention provides:
The present Convention shall apply in all cases, in civil or commercial matters, where there is occasion to transmit a judicial or extrajudicial document for service abroad.
The Court, after noting that the Convention itself does not prescribе a standard for determining when such an “occasion” exists, held that the existence of an “occasion” for service abroad necessarily is determined, as a threshold matter, in accordance with the law of the forum state.
In thus construing the scope of the Convention, the Court interpreted Article I as referring to service of process in the technical sense, i.e. a “formal delivery of documents that is legally sufficient to charge the defendant with notice of a рending action.” Id at 700,
More recently, in a case involving interрretation of the Warsaw Convention, the Supreme Court described its practice in interpreting treaties. The Court stated, “[Bjecause a treaty ratified by the United States is not only the law of the land, see Const., Art. II, § 2, but also an agreement among sovereign powers, we have traditionally considered as aids to its interpretation the negotiating and drafting history (traveaux [preparatoires]) and the post-ratification understanding of the contracting parties.”
Zicherman v. Korean Air Lines Co.,
— U.S. -,
For the foregoing reasons, including the purpose, logic and structure of the Convention itself, the interpretive approach taken by the Supreme Court in Volkswagenwerk and Zicherman, the position taken by the U.S. Department of State, and the understanding of international law experts as evidenced by the Practical Handbook, the Special Commission Report, and the Ristau treatise, the court finds that Article 10(a) provides for mail service and hereby declines to dismiss *1108 this action for insufficiency of service of process.
IT IS ORDERED that defendants’ motion to quash service on Giorgio Lumo is hereby GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the motion to quash Federal Express service on Filanto through its representative Antonio Filograna is hereby DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The proof of service of the summons and complaint describes personal service on a Giorgio Dumi; Antonio Filograna's affidavit refers to a Giorgio Lumi. Per Elizabeth Deen's declaration, the correct spelling of the individual’s name is Giorgio Lumo. (Plaintiff's Opposition, Deen Declaration). There is every indication that all references describe the same person. In the interest of clarity, the court will use the spelling endorsed by Ms. Deen.
. The record also contains an August 23, 1995, letter to Mr. Filograna from plaintiff's counsel, which apparently accompanied the Federal Expressed summons and complaint, indicating that a сopy of the summons and complaint had previously been delivered to Mr. Filograna by plaintiff's Italian counsel. Pier Luigi Roncaglia. Because the parties do not address this delivery as an attempt at service, the court expresses no opinion on the validity of that method of service.
. Hague Convention On the Service Abroad of Judicial And Extrajudicial Documents In Civil Or Commercial Matters, opened for signature November 15, 1965; entered into force for the United States February 10, 1969; for Italy January 24, 1982; for the United Kingdom February 10, 1969; 20 U.S.T. 361; 658 U.N.T.S. 163.
. Ackermann involved mad service on an American defendant in the United States with regard to a suit filed agаinst it in Germany. The court held that because the United States had not objected to the use of "postal channels” as provided for in Article 10(a), service by mail was an appropriate method of service in that country under the Convention.
.
Shoei Kako Co., Ltd.
v.
Superior Court,
. In addition to Article 10, which uses the qualifying phrase "[p]rovided the State of destination does not object”, Article 21 provides that "[ejach contracting State shall ... inform the Ministry, where appropriate, of — (a) opposition to the use of methods of transmission pursuant to articles 8 and 10.”
. The United States is not a signatory to the Vienna Convention; however, it has been the policy of the United States that Articles 31 and 32 are declaratory of customary international law, and will be so applied by the United States. See 75 Am.J.Int’l L. 147 (1981), republishing a September 12, 1980 letter to Senator Adlai E. Stevenson from the Legal Advisor of the Department of State; see also Rest.3d Of The Foreign Relations Law Of The United States, Part III, introductory note (1986).
. Article 21 provides, in relevant part,
Each contracting Statе shall [at the time of the deposit of its instrument of ratification or accession, or at a later date] ... inform ... [the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands] where appropriate, of—
(a) opposition to the use of methods of transmission pursuant to articles 8 and 10.
. Bruno Ristau, former Director of the Office of Foreign Litigation, U.S. Department of Justice, served as the United States representative to two Special Commissions convened by the Hague Conference on Private International Law to study and improve the implementation by member states of the Hague Service and Evidence Conventions.
. Ristau concludes, on the basis of the negotiating history of Article 10, that sending of judicial documents by mail was intended to include service of process. Ristau, International Judicial Assistance § 4-3-5, citing to the Rapporteur’s report on the final text of the Convention, at Service Convention Neg.Doc. at 373.
. The reasoning of Ackermann, however, i.e. that 10(a) would superfluous unless it referred to sending documents for service, rings truer after Volkswagenwerk than it did previously.
