OPINION
The Heirs of Walter Westfeld, a prominent German art dealer during the 1930s, *412 seek to recover the value of Westfeld’s art collection from the Federal Republic of Germany. Westfeld had attempted to remove his art collection to Tennessee but, before he could do so, Nazi officials seized and sold off the collection. The district court granted Germany’s motion to dismiss, holding that the Heirs’ claims were barred by the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, and do not fall within the exception for acts in connection with commercial activity. On appeal, the Heirs make a compelling argument that while other plaintiffs raising similar claims have not fallen within the commercial activity exception, their claims do fall within a literal reading of the text of the exception and should be allowed to proceed. However, while the Heirs present a very persuasive explanation of why Germany’s actions were in connection with commercial activity, they fail to establish that Germany’s actions had a sufficiently direct effect in the United States to support applying this exception. Therefore, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision granting Germany’s motion to dismiss.
I.
Fred Westfield, 1 in his capacity as the second administrator of the estate of Walter Westfeld, and the individual heirs of Walter Westfeld, brought this action to recover damages from the Federal Republic of Germany for the seizure and conversion of Westfeld’s art and tapestry collection. The Heirs contend that, while under Nazi control, German officials seized and sold the collection, which Westfeld had attempted to protect and bring to the United States.
Westfeld was a renowned art dealer in Germany in the 1930s. Nazi officials began persecuting and torturing Westfeld in 1933 because he was Jewish. Westfeld attempted to flee Germany with his art collection but his passport had expired and he was unable to get a visa from the United States. In 1938, German officials arrested Westfeld for what the Heirs refer to as a “trumped up” currency charge. Westfeld was sentenced to prison for three and a half years and fined Reich-marks 300,000 for the alleged currency violation. Before the sentence and fine were finalized, the District Attorney’s Office in Dusseldorf ordered that Westfeld’s art and tapestry collection be sold to satisfy the fine. The Heirs explain this was a common practice in Nazi Germany that allowed the government to raise funds. Lempertz, the German auction house, auctioned off Westfeld’s collection under orders from the German government on December 12 and 13, 1939. The Heirs eventually obtained a copy of the auction catalogue, which describes more than five hundred tapestries and pieces of artwork from Westfeld’s collection that Lempertz sold.
In prison, officials interrogated Westfeld and discovered that he had more artwork. From 1943 to 1944, after Westfeld had been killed, Nazi officials seized and sold the rest of his collection. After the war, the Regional Court Düsseldorf declared Westfeld’s sentence and fine to be null and void.
In 2004, Fred Westfield discovered that the Boston Museum of Fine Arts was seeking information about his uncle, Waiter Westfeld, in relation to a painting in its collection of Dutch Masters. Through the Museum, Fred learned that Germany had seized his uncle’s art collection and discovered that much of it had been sold at auction by Lempertz.
*413 The Heirs seek to recover the value of this property, arguing that Germany improperly seized it from Westfeld. Important to establishing jurisdiction, the Heirs contend that Westfeld had intended to send these items to Nashville, Tennessee where his brother lived. The complaint alleges that Germany’s actions had a direct effect in the United States because they prevented valuable assets from reaching the United States, deprived Westfeld’s family members in the United States the benefit of the property intended for them, deprived Westfeld’s family members of property that would have passed to them by intestacy, and deprived the United States art market of access to the collection.
Fred Westfield initiated an action in a Tennessee probate court, which appointed him administrator de bonis non administratis, the second administrator, of Walter Westfeld’s estate. The probate court also designated the individual plaintiffs in this suit the sole heirs of Walter Westfeld after litigation with German citizens who also claimed to be heirs. 2
The Heirs then filed this lawsuit in Tennessee state court. Germany removed to federal court and filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction based on the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act. The district court granted Germany’s motion to dismiss and the Heirs appealed.
II.
A. Standard of Review.
This Court reviews decisions regarding subject matter jurisdiction under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act de novo.
O’Bryan v. Holy See,
B. The Commercial Activity Exception to Sovereign Immunity.
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1602
et seq.
(2006), provides the sole basis for a court in this country to obtain jurisdiction over a foreign sovereign.
Republic of Arg. v. Weltover, Inc.,
At issue on this appeal is the “commercial activities” exception, 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2), which provides that foreign *414 sovereigns are not immune from suit in any case:
in which the action is based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United States by the foreign state; [2] or upon an act performed in the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere; [3] or upon an act outside the territory of the United States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere and that act causes a direct effect in the United States.
The Heirs rely on the exception contained in the third clause of this section and assert that Germany’s act of seizing Westfeld’s valuable art collection was “in connection with” the “commercial activity” of selling it on the private market. Although the district court rejected this argument, on appeal the Heirs quite persuasively navigate the morass of reported decisions and make a convincing argument that, based on Germany’s sale of the collection at auction to raise capital, the seizure of Westfeld’s artwork was sufficiently in connection with commercial activity to fall within this exception. However, we need not, and do not, decide whether the actions as alleged are sufficiently in connection with commercial activity to fall within this exception. Even if Germany’s actions were sufficiently in connection with commercial activity, Germany is nonetheless entitled to immunity because the Heirs have not established that those actions caused a direct effect in the United States.
III.
The district court did not reach the issue of whether Germany’s actions caused a direct effect in the United States in light of its holding that the seizure of Westfeld’s art collection was insufficiently connected to commercial activity.
3
“An effect is direct if it follows as an immediate consequence of the defendant’s ... activity.”
Weltover,
Courts have struggled to announce objective standards and clear rules for determining what does and does not qualify as a direct effect in the United States. Without objective standards to guide us,
*415
much of our analysis is drawn from comparison to other decisions addressing the scope of the direct effect requirement, many of which involve bonds issued by foreign governments. For example,
Welt-over
involved bonds issued by Argentina that allowed the creditor to elect to receive payment in either the London, Frankfurt, Zurich or New York markets.
Weltover,
Similarly, when considering claims arising out of a scam perpetrated by an individual purporting to be an official in the Nigerian government, we concluded that the direct effect requirement was satisfied when the foreign government failed to comply with its alleged obligation to make payment in the United States.
Keller,
The Heirs also cannot establish that Germany’s actions had direct effects in the United States based on allegations that its expropriation of the artwork prohibited Westfeld from sending his collection to Nashville. Even this Court’s recent decision in
DRFP L.L.C. v. Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela,
In contrast to situations where foreign sovereigns promised to pay funds to accounts in the United States, if the funds are only payable in a foreign country, failure to receive those funds does not cause direct effects in the United States. This is true even where the entity that was not paid alleges that it intended to transfer the funds to the United States on receipt. When funds are due abroad and not paid, the direct effects occur abroad. Although the entity might ultimately feel the financial injury at home in the United States, we have held that those reverberations are too attenuated to qualify as direct effects.
Am. Telecom,
Unlike sovereigns that obligated themselves to make payment in the United States, the only reason effects were felt in the United States is because Westfeld had intended to send his art collection
to
Nashville. In
American Telecom,
we noted that the only immediate consequences, and hence direct effects, of disqualifying an
*417
American corporation from bidding on a contract to perform services in Lebanon were felt in Lebanon.
Consistent with this, we have also noted that the foreign sovereign’s actions, and not the plaintiffs, must have caused the effects in the United States. In
American Telecom,
we held that the foreign sovereign’s actions in disqualifying a United States corporation from submitting a bid on a project did not cause a direct effect in the United States where the performance was to occur entirely in a foreign locale.
We recognize that “direct effect” is amorphous and hard to define. However, in light of the Supreme Court’s pronouncement in Weltover, and our decisions interpreting this requirement, we hold that the Heirs have not alleged that Germany’s actions caused a direct effect in the United States. The seizure undoubtedly prevented Westfeld from disposing of his collection, but any effects felt in the United States did not follow as an immediate consequence of Germany’s actions. Germany acted entirely within its borders and the only connection to the United States is because Westfeld planned to send the artwork to Nashville. The complaint does not state that Germany ever promised to send the artwork to the United States. Additionally, none of the Heirs or Westfeld’s relatives in the United States had any actual ownership interest in the property at the time of the seizure. While Westfeld’s plans to send the artwork to the United States meant that Germany’s actions had effects here, they were not direct. Concluding otherwise would effectively read the “direct” requirement out of the statute and greatly expand the jurisdiction of our courts in contrast to Congress’s goals in enacting the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.
Although we are very sympathetic to the Heirs’ claims, we cannot conclude that Walter Westfeld’s intention to transfer the proceeds to the United States caused a direct effect here. Our longstanding tradition of foreign sovereign immunity, and *418 prior decisions recognizing that an American entity’s failure to receive funds due abroad does not cause direct effects in the United States, compel the conclusion that Germany’s actions did not cause direct effects in this case. Accordingly, we hold that the district court did not err by granting the motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Germany’s actions in seizing Westfeld’s art and tapestry collection, as abhorrent as they were, do not fall within the commercial activity exception to sovereign immunity.
IV.
We find the Heirs’ argument that this case does not involve a sovereign act because a German court declared Westfeld’s sentence and fíne “null and void” unpersuasive. Sovereigns were historically entitled to absolute immunity and the Act was intended to codify the “restrictive theory” of sovereign immunity, waiving immunity only in certain limited situations.
Verlinden B.V.,
V.
We are deeply sympathetic to the loss the Heirs suffered as a result of Germany’s unspeakable acts. However, our jurisdiction is limited by both Article III of the Constitution and the statutes Congress enacts. We must operate within those restrictions, and because the Heirs failed to establish that Germany’s actions caused a direct effect in the United States, their claims do not fall within the commercial activity exception to sovereign immunity. Therefore, the district court’s decision dismissing this action is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The members of the Westfeld family who emigrated to the United States and are parties to this action now use the spelling "West-field.”
. There appears to be some dispute as to whether the parties to this lawsuit are actually Westfeld’s only heirs. However, as it does not affect the outcome in this case, we need not address this issue.
. While the district court did not reach this issue, Germany addressed the direct effect requirement in its brief, and the Heirs responded to Germany’s argument in their reply-
. This opinion refers to decisions from some of the circuits that require a "legally significant act” take place in the United States to find a direct effect. However, we do not adopt this requirement or refer to discussion relating to this requirement in the opinions that are cited.
