2012 Predictions for Consumer Class Actions and Mass Torts

As a kid, I was a huge fan of Carnac the Magnificent on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show.  In this first post of the new year, I thought I would channel my inner Carnac to make some predictions about what we can expect in the field of consumer class actions and mass torts in 2012.

1.  Wal-Mart v. Dukes will have tremendous impact on consumer class actions and mass torts.  Despite plaintiffs' attempts to limit the opinion solely to employment discrimination cases, the actual holdings in Dukes go to the fundamental core of class actions.  A unanimous Court said you can't deprive a defendant of its substantive right to challenge the elements of individual class members' claims just to make it easier to have a class.  Similarly, a unanimous Court strongly suggested -- even if the 8th Circuit didn't get it -- that Daubert rules matter at the class cert stage.  And a unanimous Court rejected the use of "trial by formula" rather than proof of actual damages.  These holdings are just as important -- if not moreso -- as the Court's articulation of the commonality standard, and you will begin to see the impact of these Dukes holdings in consumer class action cases this year.

2.  So many courts -- primarily in California -- have struggled to get around the clear preemption analysis in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion that the U.S. Supreme Court is going to have to take up the issue of class arbitration waivers again.  It may not happen by the end of 2012, but too many courts have shot the bird to the Supremes since Concepcion.  Some argue that the decision does not apply to a particular cause of action under a state statute.  Others just find the whole arbitration provision containing a class action waiver void as against public policy.  But the simple fact is that it is nearly impossible to square these opinions with the very clear preemption analysis in Concepcion, and in the right case, the Court is going to have to issue certiorari to say that it really meant what it said.

3.  Courts may struggle for the right standard by which to judge personal jurisdiction, but plain ole stream-of-commerce theory is dead.  A majority of justices made that much plain in J. McIntyre Machinery, Ltd. v. Nicastro, 131 S. Ct. 2780 (2011).  They just couldn't agree on a new standard.  But we know there must be some purposeful availment in addition to mere awareness that the product might reach the forum.  I believe most courts that find jurisdiction will rely on web presence in the forum as the "plus" factor that shows purposeful availment of the forum's laws.

4.  Prescription medicine plaintiffs will continue to cast their plain old failure to warn claims as "design defect" claims to try to get around the clear bar of the learned intermediary doctrine.  Hopefully, most courts will continue to recognize that medicines are unavoidably unsafe products for which you cannot have a design defect claim.  Indeed, you can't even propose a feasible alternative design, because to do so is to change the product into something else!

5.  Global warming lawsuits seeking to foist on certain industries humanity's collective responsibility for climate change will continue, but the defenses of standing, remoteness, proximate cause and the political question doctrine will continue to be strong defenses.  Because the Supremes dealt only with federal law issues in American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut, 131 S. Ct. 2527 (2011), courts will still have to work these issues out as matters of state law.  We can expect plaintiffs to win at least one of these cases at a trial court level.  But the sheer magnitude of how far they are attempting to stretch state law should cause appellate courts to be more circumspect.

6.  Product sellers from tobacco to telephones will continue to vigorously defend their commercial speech rights under the First Amendment.  Appellate courts will grapple with these sellers' rights to not be forced to convey government messages about their products where there are other, less intrusive means of achieving the government's purpose.

7.  Plaintiffs will attempt to circumvent the federal preemption for generic medicines recognized in Pliva, Inc. v. Mensing, 131 S. Ct. 2567 (2011), by trying to describe various claims -- such as express warranty claims -- as enforcing voluntarily adopted standards, rather than imposing state law requirements that conflict with federal law.  Plaintiffs will be hard-pressed to succeed on such dubious claims for at least two reasons.  First, the statements they point to will be consistent with what FDA has approved for the label, making plaintiffs' claims conflict with federal law.  And second, it will be very difficult to find statements that were actually material and became part of the basis of the bargain.

8.  The food and beverage industries are going to continue to be a primary target for consumer fraud claims.  Often these suits are fueled by health claims in advertising or on the label.  But increasingly such suits are being brought based on an ingredient in the product.  Although FDA has balked at issuing regulations that fully define when products may be labeled "natural," it has begun enforcement actions against products that use the term and contain synthetic preservatives or other synthetic ingredients.  Expect more of such consumer fraud class actions in 2012.

9.  Although class action suits over head injuries in professional football players may capture the imagination of sports writers and the public, the fact remains that class actions for personal injuries are almost never certified because the individualized issues regarding each class member's alleged injury, causation, and damages predominate over any common issues.  Don't expect 2012 to bring a big class action payday for professional footballers who allege concussion-related harm.

10.  The U.S. Supreme Court's majority and dissenting opinions in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, No. 10-1491, are going to be fascinating reading.  Kiobel, of course, raises the issue of whether legally fictitious entities -- corporations, rather than individuals or Nation-States -- can be sued under the Alien Tort Statute, which dates back to 1789.  The Second Circuit -- looking around the globe to foreign legal precedents -- held that corporations were not subject to ATS suits.  One may imagine that certain Justices who might concur in that result might bristle at relying on foreign legal precedents to get there.  While I'm willing to bet that the result in Kiobel is affirmed, I'll honestly admit that I can't predict what the opinion(s) will look like in reaching that result.

 

 

The U.S. Supreme Court Grants Certiorari in Kiobel

The United States Supreme Court just granted certiorari in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, No. 10-1491, which squarely presents the Court with the issue whether a corporation (as opposed to a natural person or a State) can be sued in U.S. federal court under the Alien Tort Statute.  As readers of this blog already know, the Second Circuit held that it could not.  Courts within the Second Circuit -- including the Second Circuit itself -- have been following the Kiobel opinion.  Many courts outside of the Second Circuit have disagreed, however, allowing ATS suits to proceed against corporations despite the overwhelming historical precedents internationally that suits for violations of international human rights laws lie against natural persons and nations, rather than juridical entities like corporations.  Last month I told Law 360 that Kiobel was a petition that the Supreme Court should agree to hear this term.

Kiobel is to be argued with Mohammad v. Rajoub, No. 11-88.  The D.C. Circuit had held in Rajoub that only natural persons -- and not corporations -- could be sued under the Torture Victim Prevention Act.  Earlier this year I had labeled the D.C. Circuit's decision Kiobel's "kissing cousin." 

 

Ninth Circuit Expands Personal Jurisdiction in ATS Opinion

The Ninth Circuit issued a dreadful decision this week that uses an agency theory to impose general jurisdiction over a foreign corporation because of its control of its US subsidiary, thus subjecting it to an Alien Tort Statute and Torture Victim Prevention Act suit arising out of the actions of the company's Argentina subsidiary.  See Bauman v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., No. 07-15386, Slip op. (9th Cir. May 18, 2011).

The plaintiffs in Bauman were 22 Argentine nationals who either were allegedly kidnapped, detained, or tortured by Argentine security forces or were related to those who were.  They alleged that during Argentina's Dirty War in the mid-1970s, Mercedes Benz Argentina -- a wholly-owned subsidiary of DaimlerChrysler AG -- labeled workers who favored unions as "subversives" and "agitators," with the knowledge and intention that the state security forces would capture them (often, allegedly, at MBA's plant) and subsequently commit human rights abuses.  The plaintiffs sought recovery from the corporate parent -- DaimlerChrysler AG ("DCAG"), a German company headquartered in Stuttgart.

DCAG also owned a holding company, DaimlerChrysler North America Holding Corporation, which was the sole owner of Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC ("MBUSA").  MBUSA has a regional office in Costa Mesa, California.  The parties all agreed that MBUSA would be subject to general personal jurisdiction in California.  The question -- for purposes of Bauman -- was whether the German parent company, DCAG, would be subject to such general personal jurisdiction.

The District Court concluded that it was not and granted the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.  But a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit -- Judges Mary Schroeder, Dorothy Nelson, and Stephen Reinhardt -- disagreed, reversing the District Court's opinion.  Notably, the panel did not consider the Kiobel question:  whether a corporation can even be subject to suit under the Alien Tort Statute.

In stretching to find personal jurisdiction over DCAG, the Ninth Circuit did not engage in an analysis of whether the corporate veils between MBUSA and DCAG should be pierced as being effectively fraudulent.  Rather, the court used an agency theory to conclude that DCAG exercised such control over MBUSA as its product distributor that the distributor should be considered DCAG's agent in the US, subjecting it to general personal jurisdiction.  Foreign companies that have clauses in their distribution agreements allowing them to control their brands and intellectual property would do well to pay close attention to the Bauman court's analysis.

In conducting the standard "minimum contacts" analysis for general personal jurisdiction (i.e., jurisdiction over matters that arise outside the forum), the court framed the issue as "whether MBUSA's extensive contacts with California warrant the exercise of general jurisdiction over DCAG."  Slip op at 6575.  The court instructed that it had two tests available to it to determine whether due process would allow the exercise of jurisdiction over a parent by virtue of its relationship to a subsidiary.  The first is the "alter ego" test, which requires the parent to exercise such control over the subsidiary that it is a mere instrumentality of the parent, such that honoring the corporate formalities will result in fraud or injustice.  Slip op. at 6576.  Clearly, the plaintiffs could not meet that standard.

And so the court focused on the second test, the "agency" test, which asks whether the "subsidiary functions as the parent corporation's representative in that it performs services that are sufficiently important to the foreign corporation that if it did not have a representative to perform them, the corporation's own officials would undertake to perform substantially similar services."  Id. (citation omitted).  The court acknowledged that this test also required a showing that the parent controlled the subsidiary, but held that the quantum of control required to meet the agency test was somehow less than the control required to meet the "alter ego" test. 

It is this conclusion -- that plaintiffs need not show control of the day-to-day operations of the subsidiary -- that is fundamentally flawed.  The Ninth Circuit found that MBUSA performs important services for DCAG.  Of course it does -- it sells a HUGE number of DCAG's cars.  And if MBUSA didn't do it, of course DCAG would have to get another company to do it.  But that isn't what satisfies due process.  Control -- extraordinary, daily, detailed, almost sham-like control -- is what due process requires to exercise general jurisdiction over the parent.

Admittedly, DCAG's distributorship agreement with MBUSA gives it the right to control a number of issues -- just as any company concerned about its luxury brand and trademarks would do to protect the value of such intellectual property.  The goal of most of these controls is to ensure that the quality of the customer experience is maintained; they are not attempts to use MBUSA as a sham independent agency to protect the manufacturer.  And they are not evidence of day-to-day control of all aspects of MBUSA's operations.

DCAG sets dealership standards, service standards, warranty terms, prices, customer satisfaction policies, dealership locations, and what customer information MBUSA may collect; approves modification of vehicles and all dealership signage; can review advertising and marketing plans; and establishes sales targets and electronic systems for accounting, order, inventory control, and warranty claim processing.  But these controls do not amount to running MBUSA on a day-to-day basis.

After the Bauman court concluded that the "agency" test was met, it then embarked on a 7-prong analysis of whether the exercise of general jurisdiction over DCAG was "reasonable,"  First, it concluded that DCAG had purposefully interjected itself into California through MBUSA.  It also focused on some lawsuits the company had filed in the state, and the work of a California-based research subsidiary there.  It also noted that DCAG "has retained permanent counsel in California."  Id. at 6585.

Next, it evaluated the burden of defending the suit in California.  The court discounted such burdens on an international corporation, concluding that it weighed "slightly in DCAG's favor." 

Third, the court discounted any conflict with the sovereignty of DCAG's home country of Germany, reasoning that because the company intended to benefit from the US market, it must tolerate the risk of litigation here.  Id. at 6588.

Moreover, the court held that California has "a significant interest in adjudicating the suit" arising out of torts allegedly committed in Argentina, citing the Alien Tort Statute and the Torture Victim Prevention Act.

The court held that there was no "most efficient" forum for adjudicating the dispute.  The US and Germany would be equally efficient, it reasoned, and Argentina was "not a truly available forum" because it imposes a two-year statute of limitations on human rights cases arising out of the Dirty War.  The court also expressed concern about whether Germany would allow equitable tolling of the statute of limitations for human rights claims.

Ultimately, the court:

conclude[d] that it is reasonable to exercise jurisdiction over DCAG in California, a state that has itself become a major hub for world commerce and attracts business not only from all over Europe, but from all over Asia as well.

Id. at 6594.  The court noted that sales in California alone counted for 2.4% of DCAG's worldwide sales, and nearly 50% of DCAG's revenue cam from the United States.  The court continued:  "Our test for personal jurisdiction must take these realities into account in determining whether it is reasonable to subject a parent company to the jurisdiction of the courts of this nation on the basis of the acts of its agent."  Id. at 6596.

Beware, large multinational corporations with considerable US sales.  Bauman suggests that general personal jurisdiction exists to hale you into court here based on your US subsidiaries' contacts, even where the causes of action pled against you arise out of a foreign subsidiary's alleged actions on foreign soil.  Bauman is a dangerous precedent indeed.

A Second Circuit Panel Follows Kiobel, Dismisses ATS Claim

Those looking for confirmation that Kiobel is really the law of the Second Circuit need look no further than Shan v. China Construction Bank Corporation, No. 10-2992-cv, Slip op. (2d Cir. May 5, 2011) (Summary Order).  In Shan, the plaintiff sued his former employer, the China Construction Bank Corp., claiming that it caused his torture by reporting him to the Chinese police, which allegedly tortured and detained him.  Plaintiff alleged violations of the Torture Victimss Act and the Alien Tort Statute. 

The Second Circuit previously had held in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 621 F.3d 111 (2d Cir. 2010), pet. for reh'g en banc denied, 2011 WL 338151 (2d Cir. Feb. 4, 2011), that the Alien Tort Statute (and the generally-recognized law of nations) does not provide a cause of action against corporations, only individuals and governments.  This decision was widely criticized.  I discussed it favorably here and here

In a Summary Order in Shan, a two-judge panel of the Second Circuit (Circuit Judge Reena Raggi and District Judge John Gleeson, sitting by designation) held that they were simply unable to consider arguments that Kiobel was wrongly decided.  (Circuit Judge Guido Calabresi had recused himself, and the other two judges were in agreement, obviating the need for a replacement for Judge Calabresi.)  The court cited as support case law indicating that only an en banc panel could overrule Kiobel

The plaintiff advanced an interesting argument, urging that Kiobel had deliberately limited itself to private corporations, and thus was not applicable to the defendant in Shan, since it was a company that was wholly-owned by the Chinese government.  But the panel refused to consider this argument because the complaint, it held, failed to plead any underlying cause of action with the sufficiency required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8.

The complaint failed to adequately plead direct liability for torture because it did not plead that the Bank directed the Chinese police to torture the plaintiff.  At best, it pled only that the Bank procured his arrest in retaliation for releasing an audit.  But it did not plead that the Bank was directly responsible for the police's alleged human rights violations. 

The complaint failed to plead "aiding and abetting" or "conspiracy" liability because it did not sufficiently plead that the Bank acted with the purpose that the plaintiff be tortured.  The cause of action also failed because the plaintiff failed to plead that the Bank's conduct amounted to "substantial assistance."

The bank had advanced an interesting Kiobel-like argument that corporations are not capable of being sued under the TVPA because that act covers violations only by individuals or governments.  The DC Circuit recently had reached this conclusion.  But the Second Circuit in Shan chose not to reach the argument because it could dismiss the case on the failure to meet the pleading standard on the underlying causes of action.  Thus, the question whether the Torture Victims Prevention Act only allows a claim against natural persons and governments -- like the Second Circuit had held with respect to the Alien Tort Statute -- remains an open one in the Second Circuit.

 

 

 

Kiobel Gets a Kissing Cousin: DC Circuit Holds TVPA Does Not Apply To Non-Natural Persons

Much has been made of the Second Circuit's holding in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 621 F.3d 111, 120 (2d Cir. 2010) that corporations cannot be sued for alleged violations of customary international law under the Alien Tort Statute.  Well, last Friday the DC Circuit held that only natural persons -- not corporations or even governing bodies -- can be sued under the Torture Victim Protection Act, 28 U.S.C. sec. 1350.  See Mohamad v. Rajoub, Nos. 09-7109, 09-7158, Slip op. (D.C. Cir. Mar. 18, 2011).

In Rajoub, the family of a man allegedly tortured and killed in the custody of the Palestinian Authority in Palestine sued both the Palestinian Authority and the Palestinian Liberation Organization under the TVPA and federal common law.  The TVPA provides that "[a]n individual who, under actual or apparent authority, or color of law, of any foreign nation" subjects an individual to torture or extrajudicial killing shall be liable for damages to the individual so harmed, his legal representative, or any person who could bring a wrongful death action.  28 U.S.C. sec. 1350, note sec. 2(a).

The defendants moved to dismiss, arguing that the term "individual" in the statute precludes suits against non-natural persons (i.e., juridical entities).  The trial court granted the motion, and the DC Circuit affirmed.  The court noted that the ordinary meaning of the word "typically encompasses only natural persons and not corporations or other organizations."  Slip op. at 3 (citation omitted).  It even referred to the Dictionary Act for support, noting that it defines a "person" "'to include 'corporations, companies, associations, firms, partnerships, societies . . . as well as individuals.'"  Id. (citations omitted; emphasis in original).

Plaintiffs argued that Congress enacted the TVPA to codify a cause of action recognzied under the Alien Tort Statute.  The court noted that the Eleventh Circuit has said that corporate defendants can be subject to ATS liability, and that the Second Circuit, in Kiobel, held that they could not.  The court then observed, in a footnote, that that precise issue is before the DC Circuit in a case argued at the end of January.  Slip op. at 3-4 (citing Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp., No. 09-7125 (D.C. Cir. argued Jan. 25, 2011)).

But the court ultimately ignored this argument because of the structure of the statute, which confirmed the meaning of its plain language.  The TVPA refers to an "individual" five times in the relevant section:  once to refer to the person who is liable, and four times to refer to the decedent.  The court reasoned that it would be inconsistent to allow the "individual" being sued to be a corporation or other non-natural person when clearly the "individual" being tortured or killed in the same sentence could only be a natural person.  Moreover, the statute's provision allowing a "person" (rather than an "individual") who could sue for wrongful death to have standing to bring a claim makes sense when one understands that "person" could include juridical entities like an estate, but "individual" could not.  

Accordingly, the court held that non-natural persons cannot be sued under the TVPA.

The court quickly dispatched plaintiffs' argument that they should be able to assert a claim under federal common law against the defendants, citing the Supreme Court's admonition in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692 (2004) against broadly interpreting new international causes of action into federal common law.

Rajoub is an important opinion because it raises further impediments to suing corporations -- or even governments -- for alleged human rights abuses in U.S. courts.  The TVPA applies to torture or killing by individuals, according to the court.  And this court's reading of the TVPA only makes the position articulated in Kiobel more reasonable.

Ninth Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Alien Tort Statute Claim against Franciscans

The Ninth Circuit gave a St. Patrick's Day present to the Franciscan Order last week, affirming dismissal of a suit against it for allegedly aiding and abetting the Ustasha Regime steal the property of holocaust survivors in Yugoslavia.  See Alperin v. The Franciscan Order, No. 09-17761, Slip op. (9th Cir. Mar. 17, 2011).  In Alperin, the heirs of holocaust survivors had sued various defendants, claiming that they had helped the Nazi-installed Ustasha Regime commit genocide and loot the property of holocaust survivors.  The District Court had dismissed the claims as presenting non-justiciable political questions, and the Ninth Circuit had affirmed -- at least for the claims involving genocide.  It reasoned that the "garden-variety legal and equitable claims for the recovery of property" didn't fall into the political question doctrine, and remanded those claims to the District Court.  Alperin v. Vatican Bank, 410 F.3d 532, 548 (9th Cir. 2005).

On remand, plaintiffs were given a chance to replead.  They pled claims under the Alien Tort Statute as the sole basis for jurisdiction.  The District Court concluded that the property-based ATS claims did not present violations of the law of nations because the Ninth Circuit had directed that the associated human rights claims presented non-justiciable political questions.  Plaintiffs then sought leave to amend to drop some foreign plaintiffs so that they could assert diversity jurisdiction, but the court denied their request.

On appeal, the Ninth Circuit -- in an unpublished opinion -- rejected plaintiffs' argument that they had pled the violation of the law of nations by pleading "brigandage."  The court reasoned:

We agree with the district court that the plaintiffs failed to allege an offense cognizable under the ATS.  Black's Law Dictionary 219 (9th ed. 2009) defines brigandage as "plundering and banditry carried out by bands of robbers."  We have found no authority holding that such conduct violates a "specific, universal and obligatory" norm of international character.  Moreover, even if we define brigandage broadly, as plaintiffs do, to include organized robbery by a governmental entity, plaintiffs' claim presents a non-justiciable political question.

Slip op. at 2.

The court also refused to substitute its judgment for the district court's on the question of whether the judgment below should be reopened so that plaintiffs could drop parties and assert diversity jurisdiction.  It held that the district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that plaintiffs made a tactical decision to rely exclusively on the ATS and now must live with it.

The decision in Alperin II, although it is unpublished, is instructive on how difficult it is to plead a cause of action exclusively for property loss under the Alien Tort Statute where piracy is not involved.

Court Holds Alien Tort Statute Gives Federal Jurisdiction over Child Molestation Suit against Catholic Diocese

Recently, I wrote about the Second Circuit's conclusion that the Alien Tort Statute of 1789 does not confer jurisdiction over corporations or juridical entities, but rather countenances suits against States or individuals for violation of international law.  Today, I write about a decision in which a court concluded that it had federal ATS jurisdiction over an individual, and supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining individual and institutional defendants.  Doe v. Mahoney, No. CV 10-02902-JST (JEMx), slip op. (C.D. Cal. Feb. 25, 2011).

Last Friday, a federal court in Los Angeles denied a motion to dismiss a child molestation suit against a priest, two Cardinals, and two Catholic Diocese, holding that the Alien Tort Statute provided federal question jurisdiction over the priest, and that it thus had pendent party (or "supplemental" jurisdiction ) over the claims against the Cardinals and the Diocese, which allegedly conspired to conceal and not report the priest's acts.

The complaint alleged that the priest, Father Aguiar, had molested boys in Mexico with the knowledge of the Diocese of Tehuacan and its bishop, who later became a Cardinal.  In 1987, that Cardinal, Cardinal Rivera, allegedly recommended Father Aguiar to Cardinal Mahoney in the Diocese of Los Angeles for work in LA.  Father Aguiar was transferred, and within the roughly 10 months that he was in Los Angeles, he was accused of molesting at least 26 minors.  Employees of the Diocese of Los Angeles are alleged to have aided Father Aguiar's escape to Mexico without informing the police.  Nearly 10 years later, Father Aguiar was placed back at the Diocese of Tehuacan, where he allegedly raped and sexually abused the plaintiff, who was 12 at the time.

Plaintiff sued Father Aguiar, as well as Cardinals Rivera and Mahoney and the Diocese of Tehuacan and Los Angeles, alleging, inter alia, rape and sexual abuse, crimes against humanity, torture, cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment, civil conspiracy, and negligent supervision.  The Los Angeles defendants -- Cardinal Mahoney and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles -- moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1). 

The court held that the motion was not properly made under Rule 12(b)(1) because it attacked the sufficiency of the pleadings. Slip op. at 7-8.  To the extent it attacked the statute of limitations (ten years), the court held that the law of equitable tolling until the youth reaches capacity and Caifornia's statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse would have made the claims timely. 

The court also held that the Alien Tort Statute claims were not frivolous, and thus provided adequate federal question jurisdiction.  Slip op. at 12-13.  Specifically, the court found that the allegations of crimes against humanity, torture, and cruel and inhuman punishment on the part of Father Aguiar -- coupled with the remaining defendants' "conspiracy to conceal and not report such acts"  -- was "sufficient to establish subject matter jurisdiction under the ATS because Plaintiff, an alien, alleges torts committed in violation of customary international law."  Slip op. at 13.  The court noted that the claims against the defendants other than Father Aguiar derived from the same nucleus of operative fact "and, thus, form part of the same case or controversy."  Slip op. at 14.  Thus, the court exercised supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining parties.

The court made it plain that it was not testing the adequacy or sufficiency of the pleadings pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).  Rather, it was employing the "frivolous" pleading standard of Rule 12(b)(1).  Nevertheless, this case presents the possibility that -- outside the Second Circuit -- liability may rest with at least some forms of juridical entities where aiding and abetting liability or conspiracy are pled.

Dismissal of Claims Against Old GM Shows How Kiobel Should Be Applied to Alien Tort Statute Claims Against Corporations

 

You don’t often catch me reading bankruptcy court opinions. I find the Bankruptcy Code impenetrable, and I’m ecstatic that there are smart people at my firm who want to practice in this area so that I don’t have to.

But occasionally a bankruptcy court has something important to say about mass tort litigation.  And so, last week I uncharacteristically sat reading a bankruptcy court decision, In re Motors Liquidation Co., 2011 WL 284933 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Jan. 28, 2011).  I even wrote up a post that – to my utter annoyance [insert curse words here] – disappeared into the ether before I could upload it.  That turns out to have been a good thing, though, as there have been subsequent developments that I am now able to share with you in this post.

In Motors Liquidation, Judge Robert Gerber was faced with two basic questions.  First, could the claims against the Old General Motors brought under the Alien Tort Statute be certified as class claims in the proof of claim process?  Second, could ATS claims even be asserted against Old GM at all, given the Second Circuit’s holding in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 621 F.3d 111, 149 (2d Cir. 2010) that corporate liability cannot form the basis of a suit under the ATS?

Judge Gerber’s opinion gives these two questions straightforward and frank consideration, ultimately answering both in the negative.  Despite the fact that it is a bankruptcy court opinion, Judge Gerber’s opinion is instructive for how questions regarding corporate ATS liability should be answered in the Second Circuit post-Kiobel.

Despite the fact that there is some question about the applicability of Rule 23 to some stages of the bankruptcy process, Judge Gerber’s opinion makes it plain that under classic Rule 23 jurisprudence, there simply is no way that the sweeping class pled in the Apartheid litigation could possibly meet the predominance and superiority requirements of Rule 23(b)(3). The proposed classes spanned over twenty years’ worth of alleged misconduct that purportedly gave rise to at least four causes of action under international law:  “crimes against humanity,” “extrajudicial killing,” “torture,” and “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.”  Moreover, the legal issues were complicated by the fact that the Old GM was alleged to have aided and abetted these crimes, not committed them itself directly.  This added layers of questions about action and intent for each incident.

Judge Gerber explained this eloquently:

For both the more general claim of “crime against humanity,” on the one hand, and the more specific ways by which people were injured, on the other, I just see too many individual issues.

The complication (and in my view it’s a major one) is the difficulty in establishing, for so many people’s unique injuries, causation and the requisite purpose on the part of Old GM personnel with respect to whatever was being done to cause or facilitate the particular injury alleged by the claimant (or class member) involved – which in my view is not just a matter of damages but a matter necessary to fix liability in the first place. . . .

. . .

. . . [Claimants’] rights to recover against the Old GM for such injuries would depend not just on their individual damages (which, if that were all, would likely not defeat class certification), but also on the numerous combinations of injury involved, action causing it, assistance of that action, and purpose on the aprt of Old GM personnel to facilitate the commission of the primary violations of international law and resulting injury on which the aiding and abetting claims would be based.

. . .

. . . As relevant here, apartheid was implemented in many different ways, injuring people in many different ways, and Old GM’s alleged wrongful acts and purpose, if any, would have a nexus to the affected people in too many different ways. . . .

. . . [C]laims of secondary liability for aiding and abetting . . . at least normally requires showings not just of the primary violation, but of additional matters applicable to the aider-and-abettor, such as substantial assistance, and a purpose or intent to advance the primary violation.

2011 WL 284933 at *5-*8 (citations omitted).

Judge Gerber also recognized that because any classwide trial would be unmanageable, the superiority requirement of Rule 23(b)(3) also could not be met:

But to proceed on a class action basis, I’d have to choose between holding one or more trials of extraordinary complexity, on the one hand, or taking inappropriate shortcuts as to individual issues of wrongful conduct, causation and requisite purpose and assistance, on the other. . . . I think any shortcuts that would have to be taken to make class action treatment superior as an administrative matter would have to come at the expense of due process concerns.

Id. at *9.

Judge Gerber’s opinion states the obvious, but it is still remarkable for doing so clearly in the face of the inevitable criticism that would come from any opinion finding against classwide recovery in the face of an evil such as Apartheid, no matter how far removed the defendant may have been from it.  The simple truth is that it is beyond cavil that a class action over aiding and abetting millions of individual acts in furtherance of Apartheid over a more than twenty-year period presents too many individual issues to be adjudicated in a single classwide trial consistent with a defendant’s due process rights.  Judge Gerber’s opinion gives the roadmap to this conclusion.

As for the second question, Judge Gerber recognized that the Second Circuit in Kiobel already instructed that there cannot be corporate liability under the Alien Tort Statute:

No corporation has ever been subject to any form of liability whether civil, criminal or otherwise) under the customary international law of human rights. Rather, sources of customary international law have, on several occasions, explicitly rejected the idea of corporate liability. Thus, corporate liability has not attained a discernable, much less universal, acceptance among nations of the world in their relations inter se, and it cannot, as a result, form the basis of a suit under the Alien Tort Statute.

Id. at *13.

The plaintiffs offered Judge Gerber a number of reasons to ignore Kiobel.  It was subject to a motion for rehearing.  The opinion had raised the issue sua sponte and not had the benefit of briefing by the parties.  Another panel of the Second Circuit had not reflexively followed Kiobel yet in an appeal.

But Judge Gerber rejected all of these arguments, sticking to the limited scope of his authority:

[T]hose are points for the Circuit to consider, not me; I’m bound as a lower court in the Second Circuit to abide by any Second Circuit holding. As “corporate liability . . . cannot . . . form the basis of a suit under the ATS,” and each of the claims submitted by the Aparthied Claimants is alleged against a corporation, I must disallow the remaining claims.

Id. at *14 (citation omitted).

Judge Gerber was right.  One week later, the Second Circuit issued two orders:  one from the panel that heard the case denying rehearing by the panel, and another order denying the petition for rehearing Kiobel in banc, reflecting a tied 5-5 vote.  The former order really merits reading, as it places the debate about corporate liability under the ATS in context.  This much is abundantly clear:   Kiobel is Second Circuit law and can no longer be avoided.

Interestingly, some of the news services have been reporting that the Eleventh Circuit recently decided an ATS case that creates a split with KiobelSee Baloco v. Drummond Co., No. 09-16216 (11th Cir. Feb. 3, 2011).  But although Baloco results in the continuation of ATS claims against a corporate defendant, nowhere does it undertake an analysis of whether customary international law actually allows claims against juridical entities.  Rather, in Baloco, the court held that family members of union leaders killed in Columbia adequately pled causes of action under the ATS, the Torture Victims Protection Act, and Columbian wrongful death law. The court in Baloca also considered whether the plaintiffs were bound by the res judicata effect of a prior action, holding that the minor children – who, according to the pleadings, had not been represented by guardians in the prior proceeding – could not be bound by the res judicata effect of the prior proceeding.

Notably, Judge Gerard E. Lynch, in dissenting from the denial of in banc rehearing in Kiobel, argued that that Kiobel had caused a circuit split with the 11th Circuit due to its decision in Romero v. Drummond Co., 552 F.3d 1303, 1315 (11th Cir. 2008).  We no doubt will see this argument advanced forcefully in certiorari petitions in the U.S. Supreme Court.

 

St. Ann's Episcopal Church, Bridgehampton

A Few Thoughts on Kiobel

A lot has been written in the last couple of weeks about the Second Circuit's decision in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 2010 WL 3611392 (2d Cir. Sept. 17, 2010).  At 74 dual-column pages, if offers a lot of fodder for commentary.  It reaches what many, including dissenting Judge Pierre Leval, would consider an unpopular result:  large multinational corporations are free to conduct their business internationally without the threat of liability under the Alien Tort Statute for human rights violations.

And yet, the majority opinion by Judge Jose Cabranes is virtually unassailable in the simplicity of its analysis.  The question whether the Alien Tort Statute allows suits against "juridical persons" like corporations is itself governed by the norms of customary international law.  The US Supreme Court articulated in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692 (2004) the sources of international law that a court must look to in determining customary international law.  And, as Judge Cabranes observed, each of those sources squarely indicate that liability for violations of international human rights laws rests with nation States and individuals -- not corporations.  Indeed, proposals to bring fictional persons like corporations under the jurisdiction of international tribunals have been repeatedly rejected because the moral authority underlying international human rights law rests on the responsibility of nation States and individuals for their own actions.  As such, corporate liability is not a norm that is "specific, universal, and obligatory" enough to be a norm in the relations of States with each other.  Sosa, 542 U.S. at 732.

That hardly means that companies are without serious disincentives to flout international human rights laws.  As Judge Cabranes rightly observed, they remain subject to the internal laws of various states, and the individuals who might attempt human rights violations on behalf of a corporation remain fully responsible for their actions under norms of customary international law as "'hostis humani generis, an enemy of all mankind.'"  Id.

Particularly given the unique history of the Alien Tort Act -- from its 18th Century origins as a limited jurisdictional grant for anti-piracy suits, to its transformation in 1980 as a narrow jurisdictional hook for suits involving universally-recognized legal norms, to Sosa -- it seems that Judge Cabranes's careful analysis gets it just right. 

 

Judge Kimba Wood Dismisses Defendant from Alien Tort Statute Class Action for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction

Today's featured opinion has a somewhat tortured procedural history, but its ultimate holding -- that U.S. courts lacked personal jurisdiction over a foreign Alien Tort Statute defendant -- provides some encouragement for defendants who become mired in ATS litigation in the U.S.  See Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., 02 Civ. 7618 (KMW) (HBP), Slip op. (S.D.N.Y. June 21, 2010) (Law360 subscription required).

The dispute in Kiobel and some related litigation centered around allegations that certain oil companies cooperated with agents of the Nigerian government to use violence to suppress protests of oil exploration and development.  The district court previously had granted a motion to dismiss brought by a Nigeria company, finding that America lacked personal jurisdiction over the company.  Plaintiffs in a related suit appealed an identical decision, and the Second Circuit reversed, ordering the district court to allow discovery into the facts surrounding the jurisdictional issues.  After having done so in this case, the court once again considered the defendant's motion to dismiss.  Judge Wood held that plaintiffs failed to assert jurisdictional facts sufficient to establish "continuous and systematic general business contacts" with the United States, which is required for the assertion of general jurisdiction.  See Slip op. at 2.

The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria ("SPDC") is a Nigerian corporation with its headquarters in Nigeria.  It has no office, place of business, address or phone in the U.S., and it is not licensed to business here.  Plaintiffs offered three reasons why SPDC should be subject to U.S. jurisdiction.

First, they claimed that SPDC's oil was shipped to the United States.  Judge Wood, applying Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(k) and the requirements of due process, held that this factor did not weigh in favor of jurisdiction.  To establish sufficient minimum contacts, plaintiffs must plead "continuous and systematic general business contacts" with the U.S.  Plaintiffs did not.  SPDC sold its oil FOB Nigeria to another company.  The ownership and risk of loss thus passed in Nigeria.  SPDC did not control who receives the oil, although the parties assumed for pricing purposes that roughly 60% went to U.S. companies.  Still, without more, "[s]ales of a foreign manufacturer's product in the United States by third parties are generally insufficient to establish jurisdiction over the foreign manufacturer."  Slip op. at 17 (citing cases).  The court concluded:

It is clear that customers located in the United States buy a substantial amount of the oil produced by SPDC and that SPDC made business decisions with respect to their contractual arrangements and operations in Nigeria based, in part, on its expectations concerning market conditions in the United States.  However, these facts do not suffice to confer general jurisdiction over SPDC, and plaintiffs cite no law to suggest otherwise.

Slip op. at 19.

Second, plaintiffs claimed that jurisdiction over SPDC was proper because the company would "cross-post" employees with other Shell companies in the United States to receive training.  Judge Wood distinguished this sort of educational travel -- which was designed to improve the employees' performance in Nigeria -- with travel designed to generate business in the United States.  SPDC's employees ceased to be SPDC employees during their posting, and they were not in the U.S. to generate business for SPDC.  Thus, the court concluded that these contacts were not the sort of continuous and systematic business contacts that give rise to general jurisdiction.  Slip op. at 21.

Third, plaintiffs claimed that because SPDC used a Shell employee recruiting and placement subsidiary to recruit new employees from the United States for SPDC in Nigeria, jurisdiction should lie.  The court rejected this argument, noting that the U.S. sub was not SPDC's agent:  it could not bind SPDC, it performed work for all Shell companies worldwide, and there was at least a three-year stretch where SPDC recruited no employees from the United States whatsoever.  These were not the type of continuous and systematic contacts that could support personal jurisdiction. 

Accordingly, the court held that the exercise of general jurisdiction over SPDC would not be consistent with due process, and thus it granted SPDC's motion to dismiss.  Although the court's ultimate conclusion is encouraging, it is troubling that it came in a case that has been going on for 8 years, with multiple rounds of discovery.  Sometimes justice can be very expensive indeed.

Judge Lee Rosenthal Dismisses Alien Tort Claims Act Case for Lack of Causation

U.S. District Judge Lee Rosenthal in Houston -- the Chair of the Judicial Conference Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure -- recently Issued a very thoughtful opinion analyzing the Alien Tort Claims Act and other statutes in a case brought by victims of 21 terrorist attacks in Israel during the Second Intifada and their families against oil companies that bought and sold Iraqi oil.  See Abecassis v. Wyatt, 2010 WL 1286871 (S.D. Tex. Mar. 31, 2010).  The 193 plaintiffs' theory was that payments from the oil sales were diverted by Saddam Hussein to secret accounts in Jordan that Hussein subsequently used to pay rewards to the families of the suicide bombers in each of the 21 terrorist attacks.  Defendants thus allegedly "violated international law by financing terrorism and by aiding and abetting and conspiring to commit acts of genocide and crimes against humanity."  The complaint did not name as defendants Saddam Hussein, Iraq, the terrorist organizations, or the individual terrorists who carried out these attacks.

Most of the plaintiffs were aliens and asserted claims under the Alien Tort Claims Act.  The U.S. nationals asserted a claim under the Antiterrorism Act ("ATA").

Judge Rosenthal's opinion describes in careful detail the United Nations economic sanctions that were imposed on Iraq in the 1990s and the UN's "Oil for Food Program," in which Iraq was allowed to make limited oil sales in exchange for funds that would be deposited in an account that could only be used to buy food and medicines for the Iraqi people.  The complaint alleged that many of the companies and individuals that Iraq chose to receive allocations to buy Iraqi oil were not really oil companies and made huge profits by selling their oil allocations to brokers and others able to transport the oil to a refinery.  These companies -- defendants in the action -- allegedly secured their allocations by making side payments to Hussein's secret accounts.

As I have explained before in prior posts, the Alien Tort Claims Act gives federal courts jurisdiction over certain violations of "customary international law," but that jurisdiction is severely limited.  When the ATCA was first adopted in 1789, the recognized violations of "customary international law" that it covered were:  (1) piracy, (2) interfering with a nation's "safe conduct" request for one of its citizens, and (3) assaulting or impeding a nation's ambassador.  Since the 1980s, however, litigants have sought to broaden the scope of "customary international law" covered by the ATCA, as well as the type of "people" who may be sued under the Act.  It is this fundamental tension that presents judges like Judge Rosenthal with difficult questions indeed.

In Abecassis, the defendants moved to dismiss the case for lack of Article III standing.  Citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555 (1992), Judge Rosenthal observed that constitutional standing to bring a claim requires an "injury in fact" that is both "concrete and particularized" and "actual or imminent," a causal connection between the injury and the challenged conduct; and the likelihood that a favorable decision would redress the alleged injury.  The defendants' motions to dismissed challenged the second element -- causation -- arguing that plaintiffs failed to show that their injury was "fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant, and not the result of the independent action of some third party not before the court."  Id. (quoting Lujan).

The defendants argued that plaintiffs' injuries resulted from the independent acts of the terrorists and, perhaps, of Saddam Hussein, but certainly not as the result of their purchases of oil.  The plaintiffs responded that because they pled the defendant oil companies were accessories and aidors and abettors to genocide and crimes against humanity, rather than direct tortfeasors, they did not have to plead "but for" causation, i.e., that their injuries would not have happened but for the oil purchases.  Rather, they allege, they need only plead that the oil companies gave substantial assistance to the direct tortfeasors.

There have been ATCA cases that have gone both ways on the question of aiding and abetting liability, and Judge Rosenthal carefully analyzed them.  Ultimately, she concluded that the injuries pled were not fairly traceable to the defendants, and plaintiffs thus failed to allege constitutional standing to bring their ATCA claim:

The plaintiffs here allege that the Hussein government caused their injuries by making payments to suicide bombers' families, which encouraged future suicide bombings.  It is speculative whether the bombings that injured the plaintiffs and their family members are fairly traceable to Hussein's prior payments to families of other suicide bombers.  It was the suicide bombers and the terrorist organizations that decided to carry out the specific attacks, not the Hussein government, not the third party that bought Iraqi oil, and not [the defendant that held the allocation for the oil].  The suicide bombers were independent of [the defendant].  The injuries caused by those bombers are not fairly traceable to [the defendant].

. . .

. . . The plaintiffs here have not alleged a direct relationship between [the defendants] and the principal tortfeasors, the suicide bombers.  There were independent third parties between Iraq and the plaintiffs. . . .  Even if [the defendants were] not independent of Hussein because of the aiding and abetting allegations, it was the third party oil sellers' decision to mark up the oil price to pay kickbacks and it was the terrorists' decisions to carry out the attacks.  What these actors would have done without [the defendants'] involvement is speculative.  The causation prong of the standing test is not met.

Id. at *16. 

Judge Rosenthal also analyzed whether the ATCA claims stated a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), concluding that they did not.  She looked to international law to determine whether there was a sufficient international norm for recognizing "secondary liability" (or "aiding and abetting" liability) for the torts pled.  She held that there was not, and that the complaint failed to plead that the defendants even knew that their kickbacks paid through the Oil for Food Program were being used to fund attacks in Israel -- let alone any intention that they do so.  She held that "[t]he allegation would have to be that the defendant acted with the purpose of assisting terrorists to murder or maim innocent civilians."

In analyzing the claims of the U.S. nationals under the Antiterrorism Act ("ATA"), Judge Rosenthal assumed -- without deciding -- that plaintiffs had pled standing under the liberally drafted statute, but dismissed the claim (with leave to replead) for failure to plead a cognizable claim under Rule 12(b)(6).

The ATA makes it a federal crime to "provide[] material support or resources . . . knowing or intending that they are to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out" a violation of the section that makes it a crime to kill, conspire to kill, or inflict bodily injury on a U.S. citizen abroad.  18 U.S.C. sec. 2339A.  Judge Rosenthal relied upon the Seventh Circuit's recent en banc decision in Boim v. Holy Land Foundation (Boim III), 549 F.3d 685 (7th Cir. 2008), which "held that anyone who provides material support -- not necessarily substantial support -- to a terrorist organization, directly or indirectly, with knowledge that the organization carries out attacks in Israel (or with recklessness as to the truth of this fact), is liable under the ATA to an American (or his estate) injured in Israel by that organization."

After a lengthy exposition of the cases analyzing the ATA and the type of causation that it requires, Judge Rosenthal ultimately concluded that whatever the standard is, the plaintiffs had failed to meet it here because they had not alleged that each defendant knew that the oil it was buying was tied to a kickback to Saddam Hussein and that Hussein was using that money to fund terrorism targeted at U.S. nationals.  Indeed, the complaint cited a news story from the time indicating Hussein was using the money to fund his army and his luxurious lifestyle, mentioning nothing about paying suicide bombers.  Moreover, there were no allegations of an agreement among the "co-conspirators" to fund or otherwise support terrorism targeting Americans.

Judge Rosenthal's opinion is an excellent example of the cautious approach judges should take to claims brought under the Alien Tort Claims Act and other statutes that, if abused, could drag American corporations into costly "secondary liability" lawsuits over tortious violence committed by direct actors who have not been held to account for their actions.

Federal Court Tosses Wrongful Death Claims Under Torture Victims Protection Act and Alien Tort Claims Act

An Alabama federal court recently held that the Torture Victims Protection Act does  not authorize wrongful death claimants to bring suit for their own damages, but instead merely authorizes them to sue for the torture victim’s own injury.  In Baloco v. Drummond Co., Case No. 7:09-CV-00557-RDP, Slip op. (N.D. Ala. Nov. 9, 2009) (subscription to AmLaw Daily may be required to see opinion), the children of alleged torture victims sued Drummond Company for wrongful death damages that they had suffered as a result of their fathers’ murders in Columbia, which allegedly were committed by Colombian paramilitary organizations at the behest of the defendant to prevent union organizing.

Previously, wives and family members had brought suit against Drummond under the Alien Tort Claims Act, the TVPA, and Columbian common law for the injuries suffered by their murdered family members, which suit had resulted in summary judgment for Drummond on the wrongful death claims and a jury verdict for Drummond on the ATCA claim for allegedly aiding and abetting the murders.  Slip op. at 3.

In analyzing the motion to dismiss, Judge David Proctor first had to decide whether the claims of these plaintiffs were barred by the res judicata effect of the earlier judgment.  In addition to a final judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, res judicata requires that the parties in the two actions be identical, or at least in privity.  It also requires that the same cause of action be involved in both cases.  Analyzing the pleadings in the first action, Judge Proctor determined that many of the plaintiffs before him had also been plaintiffs in the first action and asserted the same claim.  Judge Proctor considered their argument that res judicata should not apply to them because they had learned new facts since the first action that supported their claim.  But the court distinguished between new factual developments that occur that may justify not applying res judicata, and the mere discovery of new evidence that existed at the time of the first action, which does not.

Nevertheless, there were three plaintiffs who could not be eliminated on res judicata grounds at the pleading stage, and so the court moved on to consider the question of their standing to bring their claims.  The TVPA provides a federal cause of action for torture and extrajudicial killing.  The claim may be brought by the victim or on his behalf by his legal representative or one who would be a claimant in an action for wrongful death.  Plaintiffs argued that this allowed them to sue for their own wrongful death damages.  The court concluded, however, that the TVPA does not allow recovery for injuries except those suffered by the torture victim himself; the mention of wrongful death in the statute defines who may bring the claim, but does not alter the fact that the claim is for the victim’s damages, not those of his family.  Slip op. at 13-16.  Accordingly, the court held that plaintiffs lacked standing to sue under the TVPA.

Plaintiffs also asserted claims under the Alien Tort Claims Act.  But the ATCA provides no guidance on the issue of standing.  Judge Proctor reasoned that “[i]n the case of the [ATCA], several courts, including the Eleventh Circuit, have referenced the TVPA as the most analogous statute.”  Id. at 16.  The court thus held that because the plaintiffs lack standing under the TVPA, they lack standing under the ATCA as well.

Finally, in declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Columbian common law claims, the court noted that the issues of Columbian law were so complex that it would be impossible for the court to navigate them.

 

Alien Tort Claims Act Cases Keep Coming

Oil companies, fruit growers, beverage producers, automotive companies, tire producers, pharmaceutical companies -- name an industry, and its members likely have been subject to suits brought in the U.S. in the last decade or so under the Alien Tort Claims Act.  Despite direct Supreme Court precedent cautioning against liberal expansion of the ATCA beyond its narrow 18th Century applications (piracy, crimes against ambassadors, and violating "safe conduct" requests), certain courts have continued to entertain ever-broadening interpretations of international law to broaden its scope.  As a result, companies have defended suits in the U.S. alleging that they were responsible for a host of activities that occurred abroad, including environmental harm, civil war violence, and even apartheid.

This blog will continue to follow such cases.  An article of mine summarizing recent cases appeared yesterday in the National Law Journal

Second Circuit's Decision Allowing Alien Tort Statute Claim Against Non-State Actor for Clinical Trials Is Out of Line with Historical Precedent

The Second Circuit's recent opinion allowing a pharmaceutical company to be sued in federal court under the Alien Tort Statute for allegedly conducting clinical trials abroad without the minor patients' informed consent is a dangerous -- and standardless -- expansion of tort law that should cause every product manufacturer grave concern.  See Abdullahi v. Pfizer, Inc., Docket Nos. 05-4863-cv (L), 05-6768-cv (CON), slip op. (2d Cir. Jan. 30, 2009).  The majority's opinion scours the globe for multinational accords and documents from "world" organizations for statements that scientific experimentation without informed consent is bad, and from these statements concludes that a non-governmental corporate actor may be held liable in federal court under international common law for violating this so-called "standard."  If this decision is not corrected either by rehearing en banc or on appeal, can similar suits about pollution, climate change, or even products liability be far behind?

Let's be clear at the outset:  no one is advocating studying the effectiveness of new medicines without obtaining informed consent from the patients being treated.  The question raised by Abdullahi is what is the source of the legal obligation that an entity or individual may be sued for violating?  Is it international law?  Or is it -- as is the case with nearly all civil liability -- a question of national law embodied in statute and/or common law with recognizable elements and types of allowable damages?

Judge Richard Wesley, in his Abdullahi dissent, properly recognized that any claim brought under the Alien Tort Statute must be analyzed within that statute's historical context.  The ATS originally was passed in 1789, and now provides that the "district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States."  28 U.S.C. sec. 1350.  As Justice Souter explained in his opinion in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692, 714-15 (2004), the "law of nations" at that time encompassed three basic spheres:  (1) general norms governing the behavior of nation states with each other, (2) judge-made law regulating the conduct of individuals outside domestic boundaries (such as admiralty law), and (3) rules binding individuals for the benefit of nation states.  Blackstone had defined three specific offenses for this third sphere:  violation of safe conduct requests, infringement of the rights of ambassadors, and piracy.  

According to Justice Souter, "[i]t was this [third] narrow set of violations of the law of nations, admitting of a judicial remedy and at the same time threatening serious consequences in international affairs, that was probably on the minds of the men who drafted the ATS with its reference to tort."  Id. at 715; see also id. at 720.

Sosa counsels that courts exercise great caution when asked to apply the ATS beyond the issues of safe conduct, ambassadorial infringement, and piracy:

Still, there are good reasons for a restrained conception of the discretion a federal court should exercise in considering a new cause of action of this kind.  Accordingly, we think courts should require any claim based on the present-day law of nations to rest on a norm of international character accepted by the civilized world and defined with a specificity comparable to the features of the 18th-century paradigms we have recognized.

Id. at 725 (emphasis added). 

Justice Souter identified five reasons for exercising such caution.  First, unlike in 1789, when the "common law" was viewed to exist outside of any state and was to be "discovered," today we understand that the "common law" is created and chosen by human beings.  Second, and as a result, the federal courts have gotten out of the business of making common law, looking "for legislative guidance before exercising innovative authority over substantive law.  It would be remarkable to take a more aggressive role in exercising a jurisdiction that remained largely in shadow for much of the prior two centuries."  Id. at 726.  Third, the Supreme Court has repeatedly eschewed creating private rights of action -- and thereby deferring to Congress -- because of the practical policy considerations about how the proscriptions should be enforced.  Fourth, creating common law under the ATS would necessarily result in placing limitations on the power of foreign governments and their citizens, which is not the typical role of the judiciary.  And fifth, "[w]e have no congressional mandate to seek out and define new and debatable violations of the law of nations, and modern indications of Congressional understanding of the judicial role in the field have not affirmatively encouraged greater judicial creativity."  Id. at 728.

Thus, the Supreme Court concluded that:

[W]e are persuaded that federal courts should not recognize private claims under federal common law for violations of any international law norm with less definite content and acceptance among civilized nations than the historical paradigms familiar when section 1350 was enacted. . . .  And the determination whether a norm is sufficiently definite to support a cause of action should (and, indeed, inevitably must) involve an element of judgment about the practical consequences of making that cause available to litigants in the federal courts.

Id. at 732-33.

In Sosa, the plaintiff had alleged that Mexican citizens had arbitrarily detained him and transported him across the border to the United States, where he was arrested by the DEA.  Plaintiff pointed to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, as well as other sources, to support his claim that this violated clear and accepted standards under the law of nations.  The Supreme Court concluded that these documents -- while expressing aspirations of avoiding such detention -- did not create legal obligations on individuals as a matter of international law.  Id. at 734-38.

It would be ironic, to say the least, if a person who forcibly abducts another person cannot be sued under the ATS for lack of clear and accepted standards, but a company responding to a meningitis outbreak by providing medicines as part of a clinical trial actually could be sued under the ATS.  What, exactly, are the clear and accepted standards under international law for addressing language and cultural barriers in obtaining informed consent?  And in the case of minors, must consents be obtained from both parents?  Where the parents are unavailable and the State is the guardian, what obligation does international law impose then?  Other than repeating the mantra that "informed consent" is necessary, the majority opinion in Abdullahi does not say.  It does acknowledge in footnote 15 that "disagreements" exist over how to secure consent in illiterate populations and whether informed consent is even possible in double-blind experiments, but it dismisses these as "fringe" concerns.  The problem, of course, is that the trial court is being asked to create the elements of a common law cause of action based on universally recognized international standards, but none actually exist.

Judge Wesley, in his dissent, agreed with the majority that three criteria must be satisfied before a violation of international law can be actionable under the ATS:  "the norm is (1) specific and definable, (2) universally adhered to out of a sense of legal obligation, and (3) a matter of mutual concern, namely a matter 'involving States' actions performed towards or with regard to the other.'"  Abdullahi, slip op. at 52 (citing Flores v. Southern Peru Copper Corp., 414 F.3d 233 (2d Cir. 2003)).  But his analysis reached very different conclusions.

To begin with, Judge Wesley scrutinized the plaintiffs' sources of customary international law.  One had been described by the U.S. Supreme Court as having little utility in defining international obligations, despite its "moral authority."  The second had been promulgated after the conduct at issue in the litigation and was a European regional convention that had not been ratified by France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, Russia or the Netherlands, and thus could hardly be deemed "universal."  Using it as evidence also would amount to an international ex post facto definition of legal obligations.  Two more statements from international organizations post-dated the relevant timeframe by several years.  Two more guidelines were from private entities, and one merely purported to express the "asserted aspirations and demands of some countries," but not "statements of universally-recognized legal obligations."  Plaintiffs also cited states' domestic laws, but Judge Wesley -- relying on Flores -- reasoned that these are irrelevant for the purpose of defining international law.  Finally, plaintiff's citation to the Nuremberg Code -- which is a statement of principles accompanying a criminal verdict -- possessed "at best 'subsidiary' value as a judicial decision."  Abdullahi, slip op. at 52-53.  Thus, Judge Wesley concluded, "this evidence falls short of charting the existence of a universal and obligatory international norm actionable against non-governmental actors under the ATS."  Id.

One of the fundamental flaws in the majority's analysis was that it analyzed so-called obligations without regard for who was bound by them:  state actors, or private actors.  As Judge Wesley pointed out, the majority provided no evidence for the imposition of liability on private actors as a matter of customary international law.

Judge Wesley also looked to the Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law, section 404, for an analogy.  Although section 404 does not purport to state what is actionable under the ATS, it does identify certain offenses for which there is universal criminal jurisdiction over non-state entities:  "piracy, slave trade, attacks on or hijacking of aircraft, genocide, war crimes, and perhaps certain acts of terrorism.'"  Slip op. at 71.  The crimes are listed there not because they are "particularly reprehensible," but rather because they "occur in locations where, or during times when, sovereignty, and a fortiori criminal jurisdiction, are incapable of being exercised."  Id.  That, of course, is not the case for the conduct of medical studies.

Judge Wesley also took issue with the majority's conclusion that the matter was one of mutual concern among nations.  In reaching its conclusion, the majority cited no international accords.  Rather, it posited that conducting studies without informed consent would make people less likely to seek medical treatment in the future.  Judge Wesley conceded that the majority might be quite right, but that this did not establish a problem among nations:

In fact, the majority's theory would be no different when evaluating the medical malpractice of [the defendant's] research physicians or the strict products liability for its allegedly defective drug, but malpractice and products liability are among the quintessential subjects of domestic law.

Id. at 80; see also Flores, 414 F.3d at 249 (murder is not a violation of the ATS because "'nations of the world' have not demonstrated that this wrong is 'of mutual, and not merely several, concern'").  Indeed, as Judge Wesley noted, the three original offenses covered by the ATS (infringing rights of ambassadors, violating safe conducts, and piracy) all "threatened serious consequences in international affairs because the norms were, and still are, the foundation for states' formal relationships with one another."  Abdullahi, slip op. at 81.  

Ultimately, it is Judge Wesley's dissent -- rather than the majority's opinion -- that reflects the caution mandated by the Supreme Court in Sosa, recognizing the institutional reluctance of the federal courts to make new substantive common law rather than deferring to the legislative and executive branches for making such policy choices, particularly in the international arena.

One final matter merits mention.  The complaint pled causes of action under Connecticut's Unfair Trade Practices Act and its Products Liability Act.  The District Court concluded that under Connecticut's choice of law principles, Nigerian law would apply, since Nigeria is the place of the injury, plaintiffs' residence, and where the conduct giving rise to the action occurred.  The Second Circuit vacated that determination, urging the District Court to apply all of the factors in Section 6(2) of the Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law.  Specifically, it criticized the District Court for not analyzing the relevant policies of the forum and other interested states, as well as the parties' expectations.  The dissent fails to address this part of the opinion.

The majority's opinion implies that the District Court got it wrong, and that Connecticut's UTPA and PLA should apply to transactions occurring in Nigeria, where injury occurred in Nigeria to Nigerian citizens.  As a practical matter, there is no way Connecticut law would prevail over Nigerian law in such a governmental interest or most significant relationship analysis.  To the extent the majority is advocating the use of the law of the manufacturer's residence, courts that have conducted such analyses in putative US class actions generally have rejected the conclusion that the law of the manufacturer's residence controls.  See, e.g., Barbara's Sales, Inc. v. Intel Corp., 879 N.E.2d 910 (Ill. 2007). 

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