Plаintiffs brought suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California against the San Francisco Baseball Associates (“the Giants”), the Giants’ Latin America scout, Luis Rosa, and the Giants’ Minor League Coordinator, Jack Hiatt, for violations of federal and state law including sexual harassment, sexual battery, wrongful termination, fraud and conversion. The district court dismissed plaintiffs’ action on the ground of forum non conveniens, concluding that the Dominican Republic was the better forum for the suit. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we reverse.
I
The thirteen plaintiffs are aspiring professional baseball players who live in the Dominican Republic. When they were be
Playing for the San Francisco Giants or some other United States team was the plaintiffs’ common goal. All thirteen plaintiffs сlaim that Rosa expressly conditioned their continued employment and/or reassignment to United States teams upon their submitting to- his sexual advances, and that Rosa appropriated part of their earnings or signing bonuses for his own use. They also allege that the Giants’ manаgement knew or had reason to know of Rosa’s misconduct. In April 1998, plaintiffs initiated this suit against the Giants, Rosa and Hiatt.
In June 1997, plaintiffs had brought substantially similar allegations to the attention of authorities in the Dominican Republic. As a result of their complaints, a combined criminal and civil suit аgainst the Giants and Rosa is now pending in the Dominican Republic. Noting the pen-dency of this “parallel” proceeding, the defendants moved in June 1998 to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint on the alternative grounds of forum non conveniens and abstention. The district court granted the defendаnts’ motion on the ground of forum non conveniens. Plaintiffs timely appeal.
II
A forum non conveniens determination “is committed to [the] sound discretion of the trial court,” and “may be reversed only when there has been a clear abuse of discretion.” Creative Tech., Ltd. v. Aztech Sys. Pte Ltd.,
Ill
A threshold issue is whether, under Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
We note, however, that the result in this case would likely be the same if we applied California’s law of forum non conveniens. See Cal.Civ.Proc.Code § 410.30. When the Supreme Court reserved the Erie issue in Piper, it observed that California and federal forum non conveniens laws were “virtually identical.” Piper,
IV
There are two types оf cases in which forum non conveniens dismissals have been deemed appropriate in federal court. In the first type, now rarely encountered, a foreign or domestic plaintiff chooses a forum with little or no relation to either the defendant or the action in order to disadvantage the defendant. See, e.g., Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
The first type of case was common in federal courts before the adoption of 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) in 1948. For example, in Gilbert, decided just before the passage of § 1404(a), a Virginia plaintiff sued Pennsylvania-basеd Gulf Oil in the Southern District of New York based on Gulfs allegedly negligent delivery of gasoline and an ensuing explosion at Gilbert’s Virginia warehouse. Gilbert,
Rather than requiring dismissal and refiling of a suit where the alternative forum is another federal court, § 1404(a) now allows transfer of a case from one federal district court to another “for the convenience of parties and witnesses in the interest of justice.” 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). Section 1404(a) thus serves аs a statutory substitute for forum non conveniens in federal court when the alternative forum is
In Piper, the Supreme Court adapted the analytic structure of Gilbert to take into account the special characteristics of a case in which a foreign plaintiff sues an American defendant in its home forum. Piper arose out of the crash of a small plane in the Scottish highlands thаt killed the Scottish pilot and five Scottish passengers. Gaynell Reyno was appointed as administratrix of the estates of several of the passengers for the purpose of filing a wrongful death action in California state court against Piper Aircraft and Hartzell Proрeller, the manufacturers of the plane and its propeller. Defendants removed the case to federal district court in California under 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1404(a) and 1406(a),
Even thоugh the action was now brought in Piper’s home forum, the Pennsylvania district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss under forum non conve-niens, finding that a combination of the public and private interest factors derived from Gilbert overwhelmingly favored the Scottish forum. The decedents were Scottish; all the real plaintiffs in interest and witnesses were Scottish; trial would be aided by local familiarity with Scottish geography; and crucial evidence in Scotland was beyond the reach of the district court’s compulsory process. Further, there was a significant risk of inconsistent verdicts because there was a separate action filed in Scotland, and defendants Piper and Hart-zell could not reduce or eliminate that risk by impleading as third-party defendants the charter company and the estate of the pilot. Finally, the district court stressed that it was unfamiliar with Scottish law, and that since different law applied to different defendants, a trial in the United States would be “hopelessly complex and confusing.” See Reyno v. Piper Aircraft Co.,
In sustaining the district court’s dismissal, the Supreme Court generally endorsed the district court’s reliance on the Gilbert factоrs, but gave special attention to two factors peculiar to a case brought in the United States against American defendants by a foreign plaintiff. First, the possibility of less favorable substantive law in the plaintiffs home forum “should ordinarily not be given conclusive or even substantial weight in the forum non conveniens inquiry.”
V
This case is unlike Piper in a number of respects. First, unlike Piper, plaintiffs’ chosen forum is more than merely the
Second, unlike Piper, there are no possible co-defendants or third-party defendants who could not be made to appear in the American forum. Indeed, quite the opposite problem exits in this case: If this suit were dismissed in favor of a suit in the Dominican Republic, it is not clear that defendant Rosa would appear, or could be compelled to appear, in that forum. Although “the relative ability of the forums to compel the attendance of significant unwilling witnesses at triаl” is an important private interest factor, see 17 James Wm. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice § 111.74[3][c][iii] (3d ed.1997), the district court did not accord this factor any weight because Rosa “agreed” to participate in legal proceedings in the Dominican Republic. The plaintiffs expressed concern that Rosa’s “agreement” was feigned. Indeed, in their Rule 60(b) motion in the district court for reconsideration of the dismissal, plaintiffs produced affidavits from two people who recount that Rosa told them he did not plan to return to the Dominican Republic where he faces possible imprisоnment. Despite this concern, the district court did not make its forum non conve-niens dismissal contingent upon Rosa’s participation in the proceeding in the Dominican Republic, either by so ordering in its original dismissal or by amending its dismissal order in response to plaintiffs’ Rule 60(b) motion.
Third, unlike Piper, therе is no showing that access to proof — even aside from Rosa’s testimony — would be easier in the Dominican Republic. The Giants asserted in their motion to dismiss in the district court that “the costs of bringing witnesses to California would be significantly greater than litigating the matter in the Dominican Reрublic,” and that “United States citizens have much easier access to the Dominican Republic than Dominican Republic citizens have to enter the United States.” But there is no evidence to support these assertions. Indeed, the only evidence before the district сourt was a declaration tending to show the opposite, stating that visas would be readily available to plaintiffs.
In Cheng v. Boeing Co.,
VI
The decision of the district court is therefore REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The suit against Hartzell was transferred under § 1406 rather than § 1404(a) because of a lack of personаl jurisdiction over Hartzell in California.
. Note that the difference in substantive law will not be relevant to transfer under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), the statutory replacement for domestic forum non conveniens in federal courts. A transfer under § 1404(a) results in a change of courtrooms, not a change of law. See Van Dusen v. Barrack,
