MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiffs Mani Kumari Sabbithi, Joaquina Quadros, and Gila Sixtina Fernandes, domestic workers from India, bring this action against their former employers Major Waleed KH N.S. Al Saleh, his wife, Maysaa KH A.O.A. Al Omar, (together “defendants”), and the State of Kuwait. 1 Plaintiffs bring suit under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (“TVPA”), 18 U.S.C. § 1581, et seq., the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201, et seq., and assert various contract and tort claims. 2 Before this Court is the defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint and quash service of process based on diplomatic immunity. Upon consideration of the motion, the responses and replies thereto, the amici curiae brief and response thereto, the Statement of the United States and responses thereto, and the applicable law, the Court GRANTS defendants Al Saleh and Al Omar’s motion to dismiss and quashes service of process as to those defendants.
1. BACKGROUND
Defendant Major Waleed KH N.S. Al Saleh is a Kuwaiti diplomat. Al Saleh and his wife, defendant Maysaa KH A.O.A. Al Omar, lived in the United States from 2005
Plaintiffs claim that once in the United States, the defendants did not comply with the terms of the employment contracts. Allegedly, plaintiffs worked sixteen to nineteen hours per day, seven days a week, and were not paid directly, but instead defendants sent wages of 70 KD (approximately $242 U.S. dollars) to 100 KD (approximately $346 U.S. dollars) per month to plaintiffs’ families overseas. See id. ¶¶ 47-93. Plaintiffs allege that the defendants deprived them of their passports, threatened plaintiffs with physical harm, and physically abused Sabbithi. Id.
Plaintiffs eventually escaped the defendants’ home, and, on January 18, 2007, plaintiffs filed this complaint against defendants and the State of Kuwait. In addition to this civil action, plaintiffs pursued criminal charges against the defendants through the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”). Pursuant to the DOJ’s request, the U.S. Department of State (“State Department”) asked the State of Kuwait to waive the defendants’ diplomatic immunity. Pis.’ Sur-rep. Ex. A. According to the State Department, Kuwait declined to waive the defendants’ immunity. Id. As a result, the DOJ closed its investigation into defendants’ alleged illegal conduct. Id.
On July 18, 2007, the Court granted Break the Chain Campaign, Casa of Maryland, Inc., Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Global Rights, and Boat People SOS, Inc. leave to file as amici curiae a memorandum of law in support of plaintiffs’ opposition to the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss and Quash Service of Process. On March 20, 2008, this Court invited the State Department to submit its views regarding this case. The State Department responded on July 22, 2008.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Diplomatic Immunity
This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1351, which states that district courts “have original jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the States, of all civil actions and proceedings against ... members of a mission or members of their families (as such terms are defined in section 2 of the Diplomatic Relations Act).” 28 U.S.C. § 1351(2);
see also Gonzalez Paredes v. Vila,
Defendants argue that they have diplomatic immunity, and that their immunity deprives this Court of jurisdiction in this case, pursuant to the Vienna Conven
In accordance with the Vienna Convention, Congress enacted 22 U.S.C. § 254d, which provides that “[a]ny action or proceeding brought against an individual who is entitled to immunity with respect to such action or proceeding under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations ... shall be dismissed.” 22 U.S.C. § 254d. Therefore, if the Court concludes that defendants are immune, it must dismiss the action pursuant to 22 U.S.C. § 254d.
Gonzalez Paredes,
A defendant’s diplomatic immunity “may be established upon motion or suggestion by or on behalf of the individual....” 22 U.S.C. § 254d. Defendants filed as an exhibit to their motion to dismiss a letter from the State Department dated March 15, 2007. In that letter, the State Department confirmed that in August 2004, the Embassy of Kuwait had notified the State Department that A1 Saleh was a diplomatic agent at the Embassy of Kuwait and, as of March 2007, A1 Saleh continued to serve in that capacity. Mot. to Dismiss Ex. 2. The State Department also certified that the Embassy of Kuwait had confirmed that A1 Omar was a national of Kuwait and A1 Saleh’s spouse residing in his household. Id. In addition, defendants filed the State Department’s Diplomatic List from the summer of 2006, in which the defendants’ names appear as diplomats of Kuwait. Mot. to Dismiss Ex. 3.
In view of the State Department’s determination that the defendants are diplomats and its certification that as diplomats they are immune from suit pursuant to the Vienna Convention, the Court concludes that these defendants are entitled to diplomatic immunity.
See Gonzalez Paredes,
B. Proposed Liability Despite Diplomatic Immunity
Despite defendants’ status as diplomats, plaintiffs contend that diplomatic immunity should not shield the defendants from liability in this case. In support of this position, plaintiffs argue that: (1) defendants’ alleged trafficking of plaintiffs falls within the commercial activities exception to immunity under the Vienna Convention; (2) diplomatic immunity cannot bar plaintiffs’ claims challenging defendants’ conduct in violation of the Thirteenth Amendment; (3) diplomatic immunity cannot bar plaintiffs’ claims because defendants’ actions were so egregious they violate
jus cogens
norms prohibiting slavery and slavery-like practices; and (4) plaintiffs’ claims
1. The “Commercial Activity” Exception to Diplomatic Immunity
The purpose of diplomatic immunity is “to ‘contribute to the development of friendly relations among nations’ and to ‘ensure the efficient performance of the functions of diplomatic missions’ ”.
Hellenic Lines, Ltd. v. Moore,
Plaintiffs allege that defendants’ conduct in bringing plaintiffs from Kuwait to the United States to work as domestic servants constituted human trafficking, and was therefore a “commercial activity exercised by the diplomatic agent ... outside his official functions” within the meaning of the Vienna Convention. Plaintiffs, and
amici,
argue at length that human trafficking is a profitable commercial activity that results in severe human rights violations. “But such a literal manner of interpretation is superficial and incomplete, and, [this Court] believe[s], yields an incorrect rendering of the meaning of ‘commercial activity’ as used in the Vienna Convention.”
Tabion v. Mufti,
Hiring household help is incidental to the daily life of a diplomat and therefore not commercial for purposes of the exception to the Vienna Convention. This Court agrees with the Fourth Circuit in Tabion:
When examined in context, the term “commercial activity” does not have so broad a meaning as to include occasional service contracts as Tabion contends, but rather relates only to trade or business activity engaged in for personal profit. Accepting the broader meaning fails to take into account the treaty’s background and negotiating history, as well as its subsequent interpretation. It also ignores the relevance of the remainder of the phrase-“outside his official functions.”
Id.; see also Gonzalez Paredes,
This Court finds the reasoning in
Gonzalez Paredes,
a case with very similar facts, persuasive. In
Gonzalez Paredes,
the plaintiff, a citizen of Paraguay, was hired by defendants in Argentina to work as a domestic servant for defendants while they served on a diplomatic mission to the United States.
Gonzalez Paredes,
In determining whether the hiring of domestic help was a commercial activity outside a diplomat’s official functions, the Gonzalez Paredes court considered Statements of Interest filed by the State Department. Those statements mirror the statements the United States provided to the Court in this case. See id. at 193. Finding no reason to disagree with the conclusion of the State Department, the Gonzalez Paredes court found that a contract for domestic services was not itself “commercial activity” within the meaning of the Vienna Convention.
Similarly, this Court concludes that hiring domestic employees is an activity incidental to the daily life of a diplomat and his or her family, and does not constitute commercial activity outside a diplomat’s
2.Constitutional Claims and Diplomatic Immunity
Plaintiffs argue that the defendants’ actions in this case violated the Thirteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution prohibiting slavery, and that diplomatic immunity does not apply against a constitutional challenge. Plaintiffs do not cite a single case, however, in which diplomatic immunity was withheld in order to provide redress for a constitutional violation. Instead, case law suggests that diplomatic immunity can shield a diplomat from liability for alleged constitutional violations.
See, e.g., FDIC v. Meyer,
3.Jus cogen norms and Diplomatic Immunity
Jus cogen
norms are peremptory norms of international law which enjoy the highest status in international law and prevail over both customary international law and treaties.
Comm. of U.S. Citizens Living in Nicar. v. Reagan,
The Court is not persuaded that defendants’ conduct constituted human trafficking, and thus no
jus cogen
norm was at issue.
See supra
II.B.l.
See also Gonzalez Paredes,
4.“Subsequent-in-Time” Rule
Finally, plaintiffs’ argument that the TVPA overrides the Vienna Convention pursuant to the subsequent-in-time rule is wholly unavailing. The subsequent-in-time rule applies “[w]here a treaty and a statute ‘relate to the same subject,’ ” and the two cannot be harmonized.
Kappus v. CIR,
C. Residual Immunity
In light of defendants leaving their diplomatic post in 2007 and returning to Kuwait, plaintiffs ask the Court to find that defendants no longer have diplomatic immunity. Although Article 39 of the Vienna .Convention states that an official’s privileges and immunities end when his diplomatic functions cease, Article 39 provides that a residual immunity subsists with respect to “acts performed by such a person in the exercise of his functions as a member of the mission.” Therefore, defendant’s, immunity remains intact for acts performed in the exercise of his duties as a diplomatic officer of the State of Kuwait.
See
Knab
v. Republic of Geor.,
The Court recognizes that foreclosing plaintiffs’ access to the courts may have harsh implications, including even the denial of legal or monetary relief. The application of the doctrine of diplomatic immunity inevitably “deprives others of remedies for harm they have suffered.”
Hellenic Lines,
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, the Court GRANTS defendants’ Motion to Dismiss and Motion to Quash Service. An appropriate order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Kuwait is a foreign state as defined in 28 U.S.C. § 1602, et seq. (the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976). Compl. ¶ 11. Plaintiffs assert that Kuwait is liable for materially and practically assisting the defendants in the alleged offenses. Plaintiffs also seek to hold Kuwait liable under an agency theory for the actions of its employee, Defendant Al Saleh, and his wife, Defendant Al Omar. Id. ¶ 3. Kuwait is not a party to defendants’ motion to dismiss. See Mot. to Dismiss at 1.
. Plaintiffs claim breach of contract; quantum merit; unjust enrichment; fraud and constructive fraud; false imprisonment; intentional infliction of emotional distress; negligent infliction of emotional distress; assault; battery; and civil conspiracy.
. Plaintiffs urge the Court to give "commercial activity” as used in the Vienna Convention similar meaning as is given for consular and foreign sovereign immunities. Under the Foreign Sovereign Immunity Act (FSIA), a foreign state is not immune for actions "based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by a foreign state,” 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2), but there is no similar language in FSIA that the commercial activity be outside the foreign state's official functions. Cases interpreting the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations are equally inapplicable because consular immunity is narrower in scope than diplomatic immunity, in that consular immunity
only
exists for "acts performed in the exercise of consular functions,” Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, Apr. 24, 1963, art. 43(1), 21 U.S.T. 77, 104, as opposed to diplomatic immunity which exists for all acts performed by the diplomat, with limited exceptions. The Vienna Convention is a multilateral treaty, and the Court's analysis must begin with the language of the Treaty itself.
See Rainbow Nav., Inc. v. Dep’t of Navy,
