This is a parallel case to
Abad v. Bayer Corp.,
Abad was a diversity (technically an “alienage,” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2)(B)) class action on behalf of several hundred Argentines, consolidating a number of suits that had been filed in various U.S. states and transferred by the multidistrict panel to the federal district court in Chicago, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407, for inclusion in In re Factor VIII or IX Concentrate Blood Products Litigation. That is the name that has been given to the pretrial proceedings in a large number of products-liability suits by hemophiliacs who had been infected with HIV (the virus that causes AIDS) that had gotten into the clotting factor that persons afflicted with hemophilia inject into their bloodstreams in order to control bleeding. The plaintiffs charged that the defendants — the manufacturers of the clotting factors — had failed to eliminate HIV from the blood of donors from which the clotting factors had been made, as they could and should have done by applying heat in the manufacturing process.
The class members in Abad had acquired and injected and become infected by the contaminated clotting factors in Argentina, and the district court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss the action on the ground of forum non conveniens — the doctrine that allows a court to dismiss a suit if there are strong reasons for believing that it should be litigated in the courts of another, normally a foreign, jurisdiction, in Abad the courts of Argentina. We affirmed.
The district court had deferred ruling on the defendant’s motion until completion of the plaintiffs’ pretrial discovery. The defendant’s discovery would have to be conducted in Argentina because that was where the members of the class lived. So while depositions and other documents obtained in the plaintiffs’ discovery would have to be translated into Spanish if the suit was litigated in Argentina, documents obtained in the defendant’s discovery in Argentina would have to be translated into English if the case was tried in Chicago.
The plaintiffs argued that under Argentine choice of law rules, the substantive law that would be applied if the case were litigated in an Argentine court would be American rather than Argentine law. If true, this would, we said, have been a powerful argument for leaving the case in Chicago. But as near as we were able to determine, it was false. Argentine law would apply wherever the case was tried; and especially because of the dearth of relevant Argentine precedents or other sources of law, the Argentine court would probably do a better (more authentic, legitimate, authoritative) job of applying (if necessary creating) Argentine law than an American court. And we noted that the presumption in favor of a plaintiffs choice of the court in which to litigate (a presumption based in part on the costs and delay involved in restarting a case in another court) is weakened when the plaintiffs are foreign and could litigate the case in their home court. Thus on balance Argentina was the more convenient, the more suitable, forum for the litigation.
The present case, filed originally in California by residents of Taiwan but transferred by the multidistrict panel to the district court in Chicago with the other clotting-factor suits for pretrial proceedings, is similar to
Abad,
although it adds a breach of contract claim to the tort claims.
The district judge dismissed some of the plaintiffs’ claims as untimely and the others on the ground of
forum non conveniens.
Although a dismissal on the latter ground is without prejudice, it is appeal-able, illustrating that the “rule” that dismissals without prejudice are nonfínal and therefore nonappealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 is a Swiss cheese. See
Schering-Plough Healthcare Products, Inc. v. Schwarz Pharma, Inc.,
The critical issue so far as the dismissals on the merits are concerned is choice of law. When a diversity case is transferred by the multidistrict litigation panel, the law applied is that of the jurisdiction from which the case was transferred, in this case California.
In re Air Disaster at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, on 8/29/90,
California statutes of limitations don’t begin to run until the plaintiff discovers, or should in the exercise of reasonable diligence have discovered, that he has a claim against the defendant.
Norgart v. Upjohn Co.,
The plaintiffs argue that the limitations period should have been tolled by defendants’ “fraudulent concealment” because when entering into the settlement agreement they said they had done nothing wrong and that they were offering financial aid purely as a humanitarian gesture. The plaintiffs are mistaken. Denial of liability when negotiating a settlement agreement is the norm; it is not evidence of fraudulent concealment of anything.
The district court was also correct in ruling in the alternative that a California court would apply (“borrow” is the technical legal term) the Taiwanese 10-year statute of repose, because the plaintiffs’ tort claims arose under Taiwanese law. The hemophiliacs whom the plaintiffs represent were infected in the 1980s, more than a decade before these suits were brought.
A statute of repose, which is designed specifically for products-liability suits, cuts off liability after a fixed number of years, whether or not the plaintiff should have discovered within that period that he had a claim. A statute of repose thus overrides the discovery rule. It does this because of the long latency of many product defects, which can under a discovery rule impose vast and unpredictable products liability on manufacturers. See
Eaton v. Jarvis Products Corp.,
If the plaintiffs’ tort claims arose in Taiwan, California law makes the Taiwanese statute of repose applicable to those claims. The reason is California’s “borrowing” statute, which — sensibly designed to discourage forum shopping — provides that “when a cause of action has arisen in another State, or in a foreign country, and by the laws thereof an action thereon cannot there be maintained against a person by reason of the lapse of time, an action thereon shall not be maintained against him in this State, except in favor of one who has been a citizen of this State, and who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued.” Cal. Civ. P.Code § 361; see
McCann v. Foster Wheeler LLC,
The case on which the plaintiffs principally rely,
McKee v. Dodd,
The plaintiffs concede that the suit “accrued” in Taiwan but deny that it “arose” there. They misunderstand those terms. A claim “accrues” when the statute of limitations begins to run; a claim that could not have been discovered by the date on which it arose will not (in a jurisdiction with a discovery rule) accrue then. E.g.,
Norgart v. Upjohn Co., supra,
California courts would apply the Taiwanese statute of repose in this case even if there were no borrowing statute. Applying the “balancing of interests approach” that California courts use to resolve conflict of laws issues, a California court would reason that if Taiwan will not provide a remedy to its own citizens, there is no reason for California to do so. See
McCann v. Foster Wheeler LLC, supra,
We turn to the claims that the district court dismissed not as untimely but on the basis, rather, of
forum non conveniens.
One set of claims arises from the settlement agreement that provided the plaintiffs with $60,000 apiece as compensation for the injuries caused by the contaminated clotting factors. The agree
Taiwanese law makes it difficult to gather evidence for use in a trial in a foreign country because Taiwan is not a party to the Convention on the Taking of Evidence Abroad in Civil or Commercial Matters, http://hceh.net/index_en.php?aet= conventions.text & cid=82 (visited Mar. 17, 2010); see 10B
Federal Procedure
§ 26:906 (Lawyers ed.2010). The alternative method of obtaining evidence in a foreign country — sending a letter rogatory to the foreign court, United States Department of State, “Taiwan Judicial Assistance,” http://travel.state.gov/law/ info/judicial/judicial — 669.html (visited Mar. 13, 2010) — seems not to be a very satisfactory means of obtaining evidence from Taiwan. See Kenneth C. Miller & Nancy Pionk, “The Practical Aspects of Litigating against Foreign Corporations,” 54
J. Air L. & Commerce
123, 146-49 (1988);
Hayes Bicycle Group, Inc. v. Muchachos Int’l Co.,
The only circumstance that would favor holding the trial in California rather than in Taiwan would be the greater convenience for the defendants, since they are American companies. But as they don’t want the case to be tried in California, or indeed anywhere else in the United States, really there is nothing in favor of the American forum. And as we pointed out in
Abad,
“when application of the doctrine [of
forum non conveniens]
would send the plaintiffs to their home court, the presumption in favor of giving plaintiffs their choice of court is little more than a tie breaker.”
The remaining claim that the district court dismissed on grounds of forum non conveniens is the products-liability claim of Chen-Chen Huang that may or may not be time-barred. It is an unusual claim because Huang is not a hemophiliac or a hemophiliac’s representative. Rather, she claims to have been infected by sexual relations with her boyfriend who was a hemophiliac (now dead) and is believed to have become infected with HIV from clotting factors manufactured by one of the defendants. The critical issue at trial is likely to be the likelihood that sex with her boyfriend was responsible for Huang’s contracting HIV. The pertinent evidence is in Taiwan and for the reason noted earlier would be difficult to obtain for use in a trial in the United States.
A complication is that whether Huang’s claim would be time-barred if litigated in a Taiwanese court is uncertain. The defen
The Supreme Court has said that “if the remedy provided by the alternative forum is so clearly inadequate or unsatisfactory that it is no remedy at all,” such dismissal is indeed improper,
Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno,
But the cases suggest that if the plaintiffs suit would be time-barred in the alternative forum, his remedy there is inadequate — is no remedy at all, in a practical sense — and in such a case dismissal on grounds of
forum non conveniens
should be denied unless the defendant agrees to waive the statute of limitations in that forum and the waiver would be enforced there.
Norex Petroleum Ltd. v. Access Industries, Inc.,
We can imagine a case in which the court chosen by the plaintiff has a longer statute of limitations than the court preferred by the defendant and would not apply the other jurisdiction’s shorter statute. Then dismissal on grounds of forum non conveniens would be tantamount to dismissal on the merits, and if so it would matter what the thinking behind the shorter statute of limitations was. Suppose it was purely procedural or institutional — the jurisdiction with the shorter limitations period lacked confidence that its courts could handle stale evidence but this misgiving was not shared by the court in which the plaintiff had sued. Then no jurisdiction’s policy would be served by sending the plaintiff to a court in which his case would be doomed. This case is different because the shorter statute (shorter because the statute of repose caps the conventional statute of limitations that begins to run upon discovery) expresses a substantive policy that the plaintiff is trying to avoid. Refusing to invoke forum non conveniens would give the plaintiff a gratuitous substantive advantage. Convenience favors Taiwan and the statute of limitations applicable to this suit will be the same whether the case is tried there or in California.
Affirmed.
