LAKER AIRWAYS LIMITED, A
FOREIGN CORPORATION vs. SABENA,
BELGIAN WORLD AIRLINES, A FOREIGN CORPORATION KLM, ROYAL DUTCH AIRLINES, A
FOREIGN CORPORATION, APPELLANT Nos. 83-1280, 83-1281 United States Court Of Appeals For
The District Of Columbia Circuit 235 U.S. App. D.C. 207, 731
F.2d 909, 1984-1 Trade Cas. (CCH) P65,885, 78 A.L.R. Fed. 751, 1984 U.S. App.
Decision March 6, 1984, Decided COUNSEL:
Appeals from the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Peter J. Nickles,
Eugene D. Gulland, William P. Skinner, for Appellant Sabena in No. 83-1281.
Thomas J. Whalen, Stephen J. Fearon, Lawrence Mentz, for Appellant KLM in No.
83-1280. Carl W. Schwarz, Robert M. Beckman, Wesley K. Caine, for Appellee in
Nos. 83-1280 and 83-1281. Lloyd N. Cutler, James S. Campbell, Gary D. Wilson,
Andrew N. Vollmer, William R. Richardson, Jr., Terrence J. Leahy, Laurance A.
Short, William Karas, David H. Coburn, for Amicus Curiae, Deutche Lufthansa
Aktiengesellschaft, et al., urging that the preliminary injunction be vacated
in Nos. 83-1280 and 83-1281. JUDGES:
Wilkey and Starr,
Circuit Judges, and MacKinnon, Senior Circuit Judge. Opinion for the Court
filed by Circuit Judge Wilkey. Dissenting Opinion filed by Circuit Judge Starr. [*914] OUTLINE
OF OPINION FOR THE COURT Introduction
I.
BACKGROUND A. Lakers Antitrust Claims B. Litigation History C. Current Appeal in this Court II.
ANALYSIS A. Bases of Concurrent Prescriptive Jurisdiction:
Territoriality and Nationality 1. Overview 2. United States Jurisdictional Base a. Territorial Contacts Justifying Application of United States Antitrust Law b. Adequacy of United States Territorial Interests 3. British Jurisdictional Base 4. Concurrent Jurisdiction B. Propriety of the Antisuit Injunction 1. Protection of Jurisdiction 2. Evasion of Important Public Policies 3. Effect of the English Injunctions C. Paramount Nationality D. International Comity E. Judicial Reconciliation of Conflicting Assertions of
Jurisdiction 1. Nature of the Conflict 2. Judicial Interest Balancing a. Defects in the Balancing Process b. Promotion of International Committee 3. Political Compromise III.
CONCLUSION OPINION
BY: WILKEY,
Circuit Judge: We
review today the limits of a federal courts power to conserve its
adjudicatory [*915] authority over
a case properly filed with the court when, instead of actively raising all
defensive claims in the federal court, the named defendants initiate suits in
foreign tribunals for the sole purpose of terminating the federal
courts adjudication of the litigation. Three months after Laker
Airways, Ltd. (Laker) filed an antitrust action in United
States District Court for the District of Columbia against several defendants,
including domestic, British, and other foreign airlines, the foreign airlines
filed suits in the High Court of Justice of the United Kingdom seeking an
injunction forbidding Laker from prosecuting its American antitrust action
against the foreign defendants. After the High Court of Justice entered interim
injunctions against Laker, the Court of Appeal issued a permanent injunction
ordering Laker to take action to dismiss its suit against the British airlines.
In the meantime, Laker responded by requesting injunctive relief in the United
States District Court, arguing that a restraining order was necessary to
prevent the remaining American defendants and the additional foreign defendants
Laker had named in a subsequent antitrust claim from duplicating the foreign
defendants successful request for an English injunction compelling
Laker to dismiss its suit against the defendants. If
these defendants had been permitted to file foreign injunctive actions, the
United States District Court would have been effectively stripped of control
over the claims based on United States law which it was
in the process of adjudicating. Faced with no alternative but acquiescence in
the termination of this jurisdiction by a foreign courts order, United
States District Judge Harold H. Greene granted Lakers motion for a
preliminary injunction restraining the remaining defendants from taking part in
the foreign action designed to prevent the district court from hearing
Lakers antitrust claims.
Two of
the defendants enjoined from taking part in the English proceeding, KLM Royal
Dutch Airlines (KLM) and Societe Anonyme Belge
dExploitation de la Navigation Aerienne (Sabena)
now contend on appeal that the court abused its discretion. Their arguments are
essentially two-fold: first, that the injunction tramples Britains
rights to regulate the access of its nationals to judicial remedies; second,
that the injunction contravenes the principles of international comity which
ordinarily compel deference to foreign judgments and which virtually always
proscribe any interference with foreign judicial proceedings. Our
review of the limited available facts strongly suggests that both the United
States and Great Britain share concurrent prescriptive jurisdiction over the
transactions giving rise to Lakers claim. Ordinarily anti-suit
injunctions are not properly invoked to preempt parallel proceedings on the
same in personam claim in foreign tribunals. However, KLM and Sabena do not
qualify under this general rule because the foreign action they seek to join is
interdictory and not parallel. It was instituted by the foreign defendants for
the sole purpose of terminating the United States claim. The only conceivable
benefit that KLM and Sabena would reap if the district courts
injunction were overturned would be the right to attack the pending United
States action in a foreign court. This would permit the appellants to avoid
potential liability under the United States laws to which their business
operations and treaty obligations have long subjected them. In these
circumstances there is ample precedent justifying the defensive use of an
anti-suit injunction. The
injunction does not transgress either the principles of international comity or
nationality-based prescriptive jurisdiction on which KLM and Sabena rely.
Limitations on the application of comity dating from the origins of the
doctrine recognize that a domestic forum is not compelled to acquiesce in pre-
or post-judgment conduct by litigants which frustrates the significant policies
of the domestic forum. Accession to a demand for comity predicated on the
coercive effects of a foreign judgment usurping legitimately concurrent
prescriptive jurisdiction is unlikely to foster the processes of accommodation
and cooperation [*916] which form
the basis for a genuine system of international comity. Similarly, the mere
fact of Lakers British juridical status simply does not erase all
other legitimate bases of concurrent jurisdiction, as appellants suggest. Thus,
the appellants arguments that the district court abused its
discretion fall well short of their mark. The
claims raised by KLM and Sabena do pose serious issues regarding the
Judiciarys role in accommodating the conflicting implementation of
concurrent prescriptive jurisdiction. We have necessarily inquired into the
source of the conflict facing the courts of the United States and United
Kingdom, and probed the extent to which the judicial processes may effectively
be employed to resolve conflicts like the present one. Given the inherent
limitations on the Judiciarys ability to adjust national priorities
in light of directly contradictory foreign policies, there is little the
Judiciary may do directly to resolve the conflict. Although the flash point of
the controversy has been the anti-suit injunctions, the real powder keg is the
strongly mandated legislative policies which each national court is bound to
implement. Thus, it is unlikely that the underlying controversy would be
defused regardless of the action we take today. Because
the principles of comity and concurrent jurisdiction clearly authorize the use
of a defensive preliminary injunction designed to permit the United States
claim to go forward free of foreign interference, we affirm the decision of the
district court. I.
BACKGROUND This
case raises especially troublesome issues on two different fronts. It
represents a head-on collision between the diametrically opposed antitrust policies
of the United States and United Kingdom, and is perhaps the most pronounced
example in recent years of the problems raised by the concurrent jurisdiction
held by several states over transactions substantially affecting several
states interests. These problems are all the more intractable because
of the vehicles involved in the collision: anti-suit injunctions designed to
preempt the parties access to the courts of foreign jurisdictions.
The intersection of these issues confronts us with the Herculean task of
accommodating conflicting, mutually inconsistent national regulatory policies
while minimizing the amount of interference with the judicial processes of
other nations that our courts will permit. Resolution of this appeal thus requires
a clear grasp of both the underlying factual background of Lakers
antitrust claims and the complex sequence of litigation and counterlitigation
in which those claims have been asserted by Laker and attacked by the foreign
defendants. A.
Lakers Antitrust Claims Accepting
the veracity of Lakers allegations for the purposes of this appeal
only,[1] we learn that Laker Airways, Ltd. was founded as a charter
airline in 1966. It began charter operations between the United States and
United Kingdom in 1970. As early as 1971 it sought to branch out into scheduled
transatlantic air service. Laker hoped to gain a sizeable share of the
transatlantic market by offering only basic air passage with little or no
in-flight amenities and non-essential services. Flying at a reduced cost would
enable Laker to set rates much lower than those then charged by existing
transatlantic air carriers. Lakers
potential competitors allegedly resisted the entry of this new carrier,
delaying the commencement of Lakers novel economy service for several
years. However, by 1977 Laker obtained the necessary authorizations from the
United States and British governments and inaugurated its low cost
transatlantic airline service between London and New York. The
prices for scheduled transatlantic air service are substantially controlled by
the International Air Transport Association [*917]
(IATA), a trade organization of the worlds
largest air carriers. The IATA meets annually to establish fixed fares for air
carriage, which are implemented after authorization by national governments of
the individual carriers. Lakers fares were approximately one-third of
the competing fares offered by other transatlantic carriers which were predominately
set under the auspices of the IATA. The airline members of IATA allegedly
perceived Lakers operations as a threat to their system of cartelized
prices. The new competition not only jeopardized the established markets of
those carriers operating between the United Kingdom and the United States
such as British Airways and British Caledonian Airways
but also affected the demand for services provided by airlines flying direct
routes between points in Continental Europe and the United States
such as Swiss Air Transport (Swissair), Lufthansa German
Airlines (Lufthansa), KLM, and Sabena since some
passengers allegedly found it cheaper to fly through London on Laker Airways,
rather than direct on the other European transatlantic carriers. During
meetings of the IATA in July and August 1977 the IATA airlines allegedly agreed
to set rates at a predatory level to drive Laker out of business. Notwithstanding
this asserted predatory scheme, up until 1981 Laker managed to operate at a
profit. At its zenith, Laker was carrying one out of every seven scheduled air
passengers between the United States and England. However,
during 1981 Lakers financial condition rapidly deteriorated. In mid
1981 the pound sterling declined precipitously. A large segment of
Lakers revenues was in pounds, but most of its debts, such as those
on its United States financed fleet of DC-10 aircraft, and expenses were in
dollars. Already weakened by the asserted predatory pricing scheme, Laker ran
into repayment difficulties. Fearing financial collapse, it sought to have its
repayment obligations refinanced. At
this point several airlines allegedly conspired to set even lower predatory
prices. In October 1981 Pan American Airlines, Trans World Airlines, and
British Airways dropped their fares for their full service flights to equal
those charged by Laker for its no-frills service. They also allegedly paid high
secret commissions to travel agents to divert potential customers from Laker.
These activities further restricted Lakers income, exacerbating its
perilous economic condition. At IATA meetings in December 1981 at Geneva,
Switzerland, and in January 1982 at Hollywood, Florida, the IATA airlines
allegedly laid plans to fix higher fares in the spring and summer of 1982 after
Laker had been driven out of business.
IATA
members also interfered with Lakers attempt to reschedule its
financial obligations. After Laker arranged a refinancing agreement, KLM,
Sabena, and other IATA airlines allegedly pressured Lakers lenders to
withhold the financing which had previously been promised. As a result of these
alleged conspiracies, Laker was forced into liquidation under Jersey law in
early February 1982. B.
Litigation History In the
aftermath of these asserted conspiracies, Laker, through its liquidator,
commenced an action in United States District Court for the District of
Columbia to recover for the injuries sustained by the airline as a result of
the alleged predatory pricing and unlawful interference with its refinancing
arrangements. Lakers complaint filed on 24 November 1982, Civil
Action No. 82-3362, alleged two counts: (1) violation of United States
antitrust laws, and (2) a common law intentional tort. Named as defendants were
four American corporations, Pan American World Airways, Trans World Airlines,
McDonnell Douglas Corp., and McDonnell Douglas Finance Corp., as well as four
foreign airlines, British Airways, British Caledonian Airways, Lufthansa, and
Swissair. Fearing
that Laker would commence a second antitrust action against it, Midland [*918] Bank, a British corporation involved in
Lakers abortive refinancing attempt, filed a preemptive action in the
United Kingdoms High Court of Justice on 29 November 1982 seeking to
enjoin Laker from naming it as a defendant in any United States antitrust
action. An ex parte injunction was issued the same day; this became a more
permanent preliminary injunction on 4 February 1983. Shortly
thereafter the four foreign defendants in No. 82-3362 initiated a similar suit
in the High Court of Justice. Their writs filed on 21 January 1983 sought (1) a
declaration that the four foreign defendants were not engaged in any unlawful
combination or conspiracy, and (2) an injunction prohibiting Laker from taking
any action in United States courts to redress an alleged violation by the
defendants of United States antitrust laws. The writs specifically sought to
compel Laker to dismiss its suit against the foreign defendants in No. 82-3362
and to prohibit Laker from instituting any other proceedings in any non-English
forum to redress any alleged violation of English or other laws prohibiting
intentional or unlawful commercial injury.[2] The
substantive basis for the requested relief was the alleged inapplicability of
United States antitrust laws under the Bermuda II Treaty[3] and the British Protection of Trading Interests Act.[4] Shortly thereafter Justice Parker issued an interlocutory
injunction preventing Laker from taking any action in the United States courts
or elsewhere to interfere with the proceedings the defendants were commencing
in the High Court of Justice. On 24
January 1983, to avoid being enjoined from continuing to sue the four United States
defendants, Laker sought a temporary restraining order from the United States
District Court preventing the American defendants from instituting similar
preemptive proceedings in England. The order was granted the same day, and
later extended pending a hearing on Lakers motion for a preliminary
injunction. Approximately
three weeks later, on 15 February 1983, Laker commenced in the district court a
second antitrust suit, Civil Action No. 83-0416. Appellants KLM and Sabena were
named as defendants. A temporary restraining order was also entered against the
appellants, preventing them from taking any action in a foreign court that
would have impaired the district courts jurisdiction. This order was
extended pending a hearing on Lakers motion for a preliminary
injunction. On 2
March 1983, the British defendants in No. 82-3362 successfully petitioned
Justice Parker of the High Court of Justice to grant a second interim
injunction against Laker preventing Laker from taking any further
steps to prosecute its United States claim against the British
airlines. Although the injunction was only designed to preserve the status quo
pending a ruling by the High Court of Justice on the merits of the British
airlines suit seeking dismissal of No. 82-3362, the injunction
prevented Laker from filing any discovery or other motions against British
Airways and British Caledonian. At a
hearing held five days later, Lakers motion for a preliminary
injunction against the four American defendants, KLM, and Sabena was considered
by the United States District Court. By order[5] of 7 March 1983 and memorandum opinion[6] dated 9 March 1983, the district court granted [*919] a preliminary injunction. The terms of
the injunction were designed only to protect the jurisdiction of [the
district court] over these proceedings to the extent necessary to
preserve the rights of the plaintiff under the laws of the United
States. The injunction prevented the defendants from taking any
action before a foreign court or governmental authority that would interfere
with the district courts jurisdiction over the matters alleged in the
complaint.[7] In its memorandum opinion, the court made it clear that it
would consider further narrowing the terms of the injunction at the request of
any party as long as it would not leave the defendants free to secure
orders which would interfere with the litigation pending before the
district court.[8] The court also consolidated Lakers two antitrust
actions, No. 82-3362 and No. 83-0416. KLM
Royal Dutch Airlines and Sabena Belgian World Airlines, joined by amici curiae
Swissair and Lufthansa, now appeal the 7 March 1983 order and 9 March 1983
memorandum of the district court which enjoined KLM and Sabena from seeking an
injunction against Lakers antitrust suit in the English courts.
However, during the pendency of this appeal, the process of litigation and
counterlitigation has continued in the United States and English courts. On 29
March 1983, Justice Parker vacated his 2 March 1983 injunction against
Lakers prosecution of its antitrust suit against the foreign
defendants in No. 83-3362. This interim injunction was then reinstated pending
appeal. In
April and May 1983 Laker continued its efforts to proceed in its United States
antitrust actions while defending itself against the proceedings in the High
Court of Justice which were designed to terminate its United States claims. On
26 April 1983 Laker issued a summons in the High Court of Justice seeking a
dismissal or stay of the suits initiated by Lufthansa and Swissair. Laker also
moved in the High Court of Justice for a discharge of the injunction granted on
21 January 1983. In a motion for partial summary judgment filed in the United
States District Court, Laker affirmatively challenged the defendants
contentions that the action should be dismissed on forum non conveniens
grounds. By an opinion and order dated 3 May 1983 the district court granted
Lakers motion and held that the principles of forum non conveniens
did not require that jurisdiction be relinquished.[9] In a
judgment read by Justice Parker on 20 May 1983, the High Court of Justice held
that the injunctive relief requested by the British airlines was not justified
and terminated claims for relief filed by British Caledonian and British
Airways.[10] Justice Parker held that the application of American
antitrust laws to companies carrying on business in the United States was not
contrary to British sovereignty or the terms of the Bermuda II Treaty, at least
while the dormant terms of the British Protection of Trading Interests Act had
not been invoked. The judgment did recognize that a determination by the
English Secretary of State that Britains trading interests were
negatively implicated by the United States antitrust action could change the
result.[11] However, at this point, before any intervention by the
British Executive, the British court was willing to hold that Laker could not be
prohibited from proceeding with its antitrust claims against British Airways
and British Caledonian. The original interim injunctions were maintained
pending an appeal to the Court of Appeal by British Airways and British
Caledonian. [*920]
The complexion of the controversy changed dramatically the next month when the
British Government invoked the provisions of the British Protection of Trading
Interests Act (Act).[12] Upon a determination that measures taken to regulate
international trade outside the United Kingdom threaten to damage the
trading interests of the United Kingdom, the Act authorizes the
English Secretary of State to require that any person conducting business in
the United Kingdom disobey all foreign orders and cease all compliance with the
foreign judicial or regulatory provisions designated by the Secretary of State.
The Act authorizes the Secretary of State to prevent United Kingdom courts from
complying with requests for document production issued by foreign tribunals,
and forbids enforcement of treble damage awards or antitrust judgments
specified by the Secretary of State.[13] On 27 June 1983 the Secretary of State for Trade and
Industry cited his powers under the Act and issued an order and general
directions prohibiting persons who carry on business in the United Kingdom,
with the exception of American air carriers designated under the Bermuda II
Treaty, from complying with United States antitrust
measures in the district court arising out of any (1)
agreement or arrangement (whether legally enforceable or not) to
which a UK designated airline is a party, or (2) any act
done by a UK designated airline that relates to the provision of air
carriage under the Bermuda II Treaty.[14] Laker
applied for judicial review of the validity of the order and directions. The
Court of Appeal considered this application with the appeals by British Airways
and British Caledonian of Justice Parkers judgment of 20 May 1983. On 26
July 1983 the Court of Appeal announced its judgment that the order and
directions were well within the power of the Secretary of State to issue, and
hence valid. Because the order and directions of the British Executive
prevented the British airline from complying with any requirements imposed by
the United States District Court and prohibited the airlines from relying on
their own commercial documents located within the United Kingdom to defend
themselves against Lakers charges, the Court of Appeal concluded that
the United States District Court action was wholly
untriable and could only result in a total denial of
justice to the British airlines.[15] As a result, the Court of Appeal held that Laker must be
permanently enjoined from proceeding with its United States antitrust claims
against British Airways and British Caledonian. After
a hearing following judgment, the Court of Appeal granted an injunction (1)
restraining Laker from taking any steps against British Airways and British
Caledonian in the United States action, and (2) directing Laker to use its best
efforts to have British Airways and British Caledonian dismissed from the
United States action. The second aspect of the injunction was stayed pending
appeal to the House of Lords.[16] Subsequently, on 21 October 1983 Lakers summons to
dismiss or stay the Lufthansa and Swissair action issued on 26 April 1983 was
also adjourned pending the outcome of Lakers appeal.[17] C.
Current Appeal in this Court As the
litigation now stands, British Airways and British Caledonian have obtained an
injunction by the English Court of Appeal restraining Laker from prosecuting
its civil antitrust claim against them. Swissair [*921]
and Lufthansa have applied for similar relief, but their applications are still
pending. However, they are apparently protected by the interim injunctions that
prevent Laker from taking any action in United States courts to thwart their 21
January 1983 claim for relief. KLM and Sabena are restrained by the United
States District Court from joining the English proceedings. Supported
by amici curiae Swissair and Lufthansa, KLM and Sabena challenge the United
States District Courts preliminary injunction on appeal to this
court.[18] They claim that the injunction was unnecessary to protect
the district courts jurisdiction and violates their right to take
part in the parallel actions commenced in the English
courts. Denial of this opportunity, they assert, flouts international principles
of comity. Moreover, they charge that the district court ignored
Britains paramount right to apply British law to
Laker, which is a British subject. Appellants and amici request that we
overturn the district courts injunction as a clear abuse of
discretion. II.
ANALYSIS This
appeal is the direct result of a clash between two governments asserting
jurisdiction to prescribe law over a single series of transactions. The
district courts injunction is defended by Laker as necessary to
protect the courts jurisdiction. If there is no justification for the
courts exercise of jurisdiction, the injunctive relief should
necessarily fail. Similarly, if the United Kingdom courts would lack
jurisdiction over a claim filed by Sabena and KLM, the district court should be
under no obligation to defer to the actions of those foreign tribunals. A true
conflict arises only if the national jurisdictions overlap. We must therefore
begin our analysis with a review of the recognized bases supporting
prescriptive jurisdiction, and then examine whether the alleged facts of this
case satisfy those requirements. A.
Bases of Concurrent Prescriptive Jurisdiction: Territoriality and Nationality 1.
Overview Territoriality
and nationality are the two fundamental jurisdictional bases on which courts of
the United States and United Kingdom rely to assert control over the
controversy between Laker and the antitrust defendants. The
prerogative of a nation to control and regulate activities within its
boundaries is an essential, definitional element of sovereignty. Every country
has a right to dictate laws governing the conduct of its inhabitants.
Consequently, the territoriality base of jurisdiction is universally
recognized. It is the most pervasive and basic principle underlying the
exercise by nations of prescriptive regulatory power.[19] It is the customary basis of the
application of law in virtually every country.[20] In the
context of remedial legislation, prohibition of effects is usually indivisible
from regulation of causes. Consequently, the principles underlying territorial
jurisdiction occasionally permit a state to address conduct causing harmful
effects across national borders. Territoriality-based jurisdiction thus allows
states to regulate the conduct or status of individuals or property physically
situated within the territory, even if the effects of the conduct are felt
outside the territory.[21] Conversely, [*922]
conduct outside the territorial boundary which has or is intended to have a
substantial effect within the territory may also be regulated by the state.[22] Just
as the locus of the regulated conduct or harm provides a basis of jurisdiction,
the identity of the actor may also confer jurisdiction upon a regulating country.
The citizenship of an individual or nationality of a corporation has long been
a recognized basis which will support the exercise of jurisdiction by a state
over persons. Under this head of jurisdiction a state has jurisdiction to
prescribe law governing the conduct of its nationals whether the conduct takes
place inside or outside the territory of the state.[23] Because
two or more states may have legitimate interests in prescribing governing law
over a particular controversy, these jurisdictional bases are not mutually
exclusive. For example, when the national of one state causes substantial
effects in another state, both states may potentially have jurisdiction to
prescribe governing law.[24] Thus, under international law, territoriality and
nationality often give rise to concurrent jurisdiction.[25] A court faced with assertions of conflicting or inconsistent
prescriptive power under facially concurrent jurisdiction must first examine
the sufficiency of jurisdictional contacts under each base of jurisdiction to
determine whether either claim of jurisdiction is unfounded. If both claims to
jurisdiction are legitimately exercised, avenues of conflict resolution must be
considered before jurisdiction to prescribe can go forward. 2.
United States Jurisdictional Base The
prescriptive application of United States antitrust law to the alleged
conspiracies between KLM, Sabena, and the other antitrust defendants is founded
upon the harmful effects occurring within the territory of the United States as
a direct result of the alleged wrongdoing. Before we examine the nature of
those effects and consider whether they support the prescriptive jurisdiction
over the claimed conspiracies, we wish to make it clear that this aspect of
territorial jurisdiction is entirely consistent with nationally and
internationally recognized limits on sovereign authority. It has
long been settled law that a country can regulate conduct occurring outside its
territory which causes harmful results within its territory.[26] The traditional example of this principle is that of the
transnational homicide: when a malefactor in State A shoots a victim across the
border in State B, State B can proscribe the harmful conduct.[27] To take a more likely example, embezzlement or unauthorized
access to computerized financial accounts can certainly be controlled by the
territory where the accounts are located, even though the thief operates by
telephone from a distant [*923]
territory. Other examples are easily multiplied.[28] Even
if invisible, the radiating consequences of anti -competitive activities cause
economic injuries no less tangible than the harmful effects of
assassins bullets or thieves telephonic impulses. Thus,
legislation to protect domestic economic interests can legitimately reach
conduct occurring outside the legislating territory intended to damage the
protected interests within the territory. As long as the territorial effects
are not so inconsequential as to exceed the bounds of reasonableness imposed by
international law,[29] prescriptive jurisdiction is legitimately exercised. The
territorial effects doctrine is not an extraterritorial assertion of
jurisdiction.[30] Jurisdiction exists only when significant effects were
intended within the prescribing territory. Prescriptive jurisdiction is
activated only when there is personal jurisdiction, often referred to as
jurisdiction to adjudicate. A foreign corporation doing
business within the United States reasonably expects that its United States
operations will be regulated by United States law. The only extraterritoriality
about the transactions reached under the territorial effects doctrine is that
not all of the causative factors producing the proscribed result may have
occurred within the territory. Although some of the business decisions
affecting United States operations may be made outside the forum state, the
entire transaction is not ordinarily immunized. Certainly
the doctrine of territorial sovereignty is not such an artificial limit on the
vindication of legitimate sovereign interests that the injured state confronts
the wrong side of a one-way glass, powerless to counteract harmful effects
originating outside its boundaries which easily pierce its
sovereign walls, while its own regulatory efforts are
reflected back in its face.[31] Unless one admits that there are certain vital interests
than can be affected with impunity by careful selection of the decision-making
forum, with the result that a country may be forced to rely entirely on the good
offices of a foreign state for vindication of the forums interests
even when vindication of the forum states interests would
contradict the foreign states own policies then
availability of territorial effects jurisdiction must be recognized. For these
reasons territorial effects jurisdiction has been implemented by several
European forums.[32] Indeed, the British have vigorously legislated on this
principle in the Protection of Trading Interests Act. a.
Territorial Contacts Justifying Application of United States Antitrust Law. The
circumstances of this litigation suggest numerous American interests that would
be vindicated if Laker is permitted to proceed with its antitrust claim.
Although some of the alleged anti-competitive actions occurred within the
United States,[33] most [*924] of
the conspiratorial acts took place in other countries. This distinction,
however, has no overriding significance, since the economic consequences of the
alleged actions gravely impair significant American interests. If the only
interest involved were that of Laker, a British corporation, then it may very
well be that United States jurisdiction to prescribe would not exist. However,
Laker is in liquidation. Therefore its interests are only nominal compared to
those claiming through it. A
primary objective of antitrust laws is to preserve competition, and thus
ultimately protect the interests of American consumers.[34] For decades, a great percentage of
passengers on North Atlantic air routes has been United States citizens.[35] The greatest impact of a predatory
pricing conspiracy would be to raise fares for United States passengers. No
other single nation has nearly the same interest in consumer protection on the
particular combination of routes involved in Lakers antitrust claims.
Application of antitrust laws would thus directly benefit American consumers. Because
Laker is currently being liquidated, the claims of its creditors are even more
directly at stake than consumer interests. Laker is now little more than a
corporate conduit through which its assets, including any damages owed Laker,
will pass to its creditors. Its antitrust action is primarily an effort to
satisfy its creditors, who ultimately bear the brunt of the injury allegedly
inflicted upon Laker. Although
the precipitous actions of the British airline defendants prevented the
district court from conducting a thorough inquiry into the underlying facts
relevant to this aspect of the litigation, the facts indicate that Lakers
principal creditors are Americans. Lakers fleet of American
manufactured DC-10 aircraft was largely financed by banks and other lending
institutions in the United States.[36] Moreover, a substantial portion of its
total debt obligations are likely to have been American, since the bulk of the
debts and expenses were payable in American dollars.[37] The actions of the alleged conspirators
destroyed the ability of Laker to repay these American creditors; any antitrust
recovery will therefore benefit these United States interests. In
addition to the protection of American consumers and
creditors interests, the United States has a substantial interest in
regulating the conduct of business within the United States. The landing rights
granted to appellants are permits to do business in this country. Foreign
airlines fly in the United States on the prerequisite of obeying United States
law.[38] They have [*925] offices and employees within the United States, and
conduct substantial operations here. By engaging in this commercial business
they subject themselves to the in personam jurisdiction of the host
countrys courts. They waive either expressly or implicitly other
objections that might otherwise be raised in defense.[39] A major reason for this subjection to
business regulation is to place foreign corporations generally in the same
position as domestic businesses.[40] Thus, United States creditors are
entitled to, and do, rely on their ability to enforce their claims against
foreign corporations like the appellants.
This
equivalency works in both directions. Foreign corporations are privileged to,
and do, rely on United States law.[41] Consequently, creditors rely on the
ability of foreign corporations, not only to be sued, but to sue in courts.
Creditors expect to recover claims derivatively when foreign corporations
possess a claim. Foreign corporations thus have the same obligation as domestic
corporations to sue for benefit of creditors when they are
financially troubled and need money for satisfaction of creditors
claims.[42] The
United States has an interest in maintaining open forums for resolution of
creditors claims. Just as the appellants are expected to abide by the
United States laws governing those who do business here, so is Laker entitled
to the protection of those laws. Permitting Laker to maintain its antitrust
suit satisfies the legitimate expectations of Laker and its creditors. b.
Adequacy of United States Territorial Interests It is
beyond dispute that these contacts support an exercise of jurisdiction under
the Sherman and Clayton Acts. Jurisdiction exists under United States antitrust
laws whenever conduct is intended to, and results in, substantial effects
within the United States.[43] Under the conspiracy alleged by Laker,
the intent to affect American commerce is obvious. The asserted predatory
pricing of fares and interference with refinancing attempts were designed
specifically to drive Laker out of business and eventually to raise the fares
paid by transatlantic passengers, the bulk of whom are American. Substantial
realization of those intended effects has also been alleged by Laker. Laker was
forced into liquidation shortly after its refinancing attempts collapsed. Its
creditors have not yet been satisfied. The downward pressure on fares induced
by Lakers competition, which previously benefitted transatlantic
passengers, has [*926] been
eliminated. Moreover, providing a forum for Lakers suit would also
respect domestic creditors reliance on the ability of foreign
corporations to sue and be sued under the United States laws which ordinarily
govern the business operations of foreign corporations within the United
States. Thus, significant and long standing American economic interests would
be vindicated through a successful antitrust action by Laker. 3.
British Jurisdictional Base Some
of the British jurisdictional contacts are territorial. The plaintiff did
business on routes between the United States and United Kingdom. A number of
the purported conspiratorial acts took place in Great Britain. The conspiracy
allegedly caused bankruptcy of a corporation operating in Great Britain. However,
the primary base of jurisdiction is the British nationality of the parties involved
in the transactions cited in Lakers complaint.[44] Laker itself is incorporated under
Jersey law, and is thus a British national for purposes of this litigation. Two
of the named defendants, British Airways and British Caledonian, are also incorporated
under British law. In addition, the conspiracy may also tangentially implicate
the activities of other British entities such as the Bank of England and the
Civil Aviation Authority.[45] Regulating
the activities of businesses incorporated within a state is one of the oldest
and most established examples of prescriptive jurisdiction.[46] We cannot say that these
nationality-based jurisdictional contacts would be insufficient to support
British jurisdiction over a claim filed by KLM or Sabena, especially when the
conspiracy charged does have territorial contacts with the United Kingdom.
Thus, existence of British jurisdiction to prescribe is not seriously
challenged by Laker. 4.
Concurrent Jurisdiction The
sufficiency of jurisdictional contacts with both the United States and England
results in concurrent jurisdiction to prescribe. Both forums may legitimately
exercise this power to regulate the events that allegedly transpired as a
result of the asserted conspiracy. Concurrent
jurisdiction does not necessarily entail conflicting jurisdiction. The mere
existence of dual grounds of prescriptive jurisdiction does not oust either one
of the regulating forums. Thus, each forum is ordinarily free to proceed to a
judgment. In the
current situation, appellants charge that the district court abused its
discretion by forbidding them from joining the parallel
proceeding in the English courts. They argue that this result is compelled both
by principles of comity and by respect for a countrys paramount
interest in controlling the remedies available to its nationals. Before we can
fully consider the extent of appellants rights based on comity and
Lakers nationality to participate in the English proceedings, we
examine whether the district courts injunction contravenes the
well-established limits on the use of in personam injunctions against
litigation in foreign jurisdictions.
B.
Propriety of the Antisuit Injunction It is
well settled that English and American courts have power to control the conduct
of persons subject to their jurisdiction to the extent of forbidding them from
suing in foreign jurisdictions.[47] However, the fundamental corollary to
concurrent jurisdiction must ordinarily be respected: parallel proceedings on
the same in personam claim should ordinarily be allowed to proceed
simultaneously, at least until a judgment is reached in one which [*927] can be pled as res judicata in the
other.[48] The mere filing of a suit in one forum
does not cut off the preexisting right of an independent forum to regulate
matters subject to its prescriptive jurisdiction. For this reason, injunctions
restraining litigants from proceeding in courts of independent countries are
rarely issued.[49] A
second reason cautioning against exercise of the power is avoiding the
impedance of the foreign jurisdiction. Injunctions operate only on the parties
within the personal jurisdiction of the courts. However, they effectively
restrict the foreign courts ability to exercise its jurisdiction.[50] If the foreign court reacts with a
similar injunction, no party may be able to obtain any remedy.[51] Thus, only in the most compelling
circumstances does a court have discretion to issue an anti-suit injunction. There
are no precise rules governing the appropriateness of anti-suit injunctions.
The equitable circumstances surrounding each request for an injunction must be
carefully examined to determine whether, in light of the principles outlined
above, the injunction is required to prevent an irreparable miscarriage of
justice. Injunctions are most often necessary to protect the jurisdiction of
the enjoining court, or to prevent the litigants evasion of the
important public policies of the forum. We consider the applicability of each category
in turn. 1.
Protection of Jurisdiction Courts
have a duty to protect their legitimately conferred jurisdiction to the extent
necessary to provide full justice to litigants. Thus, when the action of a
litigant in another forum threatens to paralyze the jurisdiction of the court,
the court may consider the effectiveness and propriety of issuing an injunction
against the litigants participation in the foreign proceedings. These
situations may arise either before or after a judgment has been entered.[52] The policies that guide the exercise
[*928] of discretion vary slightly
in each situation. When the injunction is requested after a previous judgment
on the merits, there is little interference with the rule favoring parallel
proceedings in matters subject to concurrent jurisdiction.[53] Thus, a court may freely protect the
integrity of its judgments by preventing their evasion through vexatious or
oppressive relitigation.[54] However,
when a party requests the issuance of an injunction to protect the
courts jurisdiction before a judgment has been reached, the rules are
less clear. Some courts issue the injunction when the parties and issues are
identical in both actions, justifying the injunction as necessary to prevent
duplicative and, therefore, vexatious litigation.[55] However, this rationale is prima facie
inconsistent with the rule permitting parallel proceedings in concurrent in
personam actions. The policies underlying this rule avoiding
hardship to parties and promoting the economies of consolidated litigation
are more properly considered in a motion for dismissal for forum non
conveniens.[56] They do not outweigh the important
principles of comity that compel deference and mutual respect for concurrent
foreign proceedings. Thus, the better rule is that duplication of parties and
issues alone is not sufficient to justify issuance of an anti-suit injunction.[57] Similarly,
the possibility of an embarrassing race to judgment or
potentially inconsistent adjudications[58] does not [*929]
outweigh the respect and deference owed to independent foreign proceedings.[59] The parallel proceeding rule applies
only until a judgment is reached in one of the actions.[60] After that point, the second forum is
usually obliged to respect the prior adjudication of the matter.[61] If the rules regarding enforcement of
foreign judgments are followed there will seldom be a case where parties reach
inconsistent judgments. There
is little, if any, evidence of courts sacrificing procedural or substantive
justice in an effort to race to a prior judgment. To the
extent this slight risk exists it is outweighed by the more important policies
favoring respect for concurrent proceedings. In any event, most forums need not
fear that their crucial policies would be trampled if a foreign judgment is
reached first, since violation of domestic public policy may justify not
enforcing the foreign judgment.[62] These
and other factors[63] relied upon to support issuance of
prejudgment protective injunctions in aid of jurisdiction do not usually
outweigh the importance of permitting foreign concurrent actions. Thus,
although they suggest possible bases favoring the district courts
decision to enjoin the appellants, we do not find them controlling. The
logical reciprocal of the parallel proceeding rule proves that there must be
circumstances in which an anti-suit injunction is necessary to conserve the
courts ability to reach a judgment. Just as the parallel proceeding
rule counsels against interference with a foreign courts exercise of
concurrent jurisdiction, it authorizes the domestic court to resist the
attempts of a foreign court to interfere with an in personam action before the
domestic court.[64] When the availability of an action in
the domestic courts is necessary to a full and fair adjudication of the
plaintiffs claims, a court should preserve that forum.[65] [*930]
Thus, where the foreign proceeding is not following a parallel track but
attempts to carve out exclusive jurisdiction over concurrent actions, an
injunction may be necessary to avoid the possibility of losing validly invoked
jurisdiction. This would be particularly true if the foreign forum did not
offer the remedy sought in the domestic forum. The
district courts injunction was clearly proper under these principles.
As far as could be determined by the initial pleadings and papers filed,
jurisdiction to prescribe was properly exercised. Consequently, the
courts ability to render a just and final judgment had to be
protected, absent clear evidence that the foreign action could fully consider
the litigants claims. Appellants
characterize the district courts injunction as an improper attempt to
reserve to the district courts exclusive jurisdiction an action that
should be allowed to proceed simultaneously in parallel forums. Actually, the
reverse is true. The English action was initiated for the purpose of reserving
exclusive prescriptive jurisdiction to the English courts, even though the
English courts do not and can not pretend to offer the plaintiffs here the
remedies afforded by the American antitrust laws. Although
concurrently authorized by overlapping principles of prescriptive jurisdiction,
the British and American actions are not parallel proceedings in the sense the
term is normally used. This is not a situation where two courts are proceeding
to separate judgments simultaneously under one cause of action. Rather, the
sole purpose of the English proceedings is to terminate the American action.
The writs filed in the High Court of Justice sought to paralyze or halt the
proceedings before the United States District Court. Although they also sought
a determination that the defendants had not engaged in any unlawful conduct,
the clear thrust of the requested relief was the termination of the United
States antitrust claim.[66] Appellants conceded at oral argument
that they are not interested in concurrent proceedings in the courts of the
United Kingdom they want only the abandonment or dismissal of the
American action against them.[67] Further proof of this is Judge
Greenes offer to draft the injunction more narrowly to permit certain
proceedings that were not inconsistent with the unhindered continuation of the
United States antitrust action.[68] That no suggestions were made by the
appellants to narrow the injunction indicates that they are only interested in
interfering with the antitrust action, and not in adjudicating the existence of
an unlawful conspiracy under British law.
Judge
Greene faced the stark choice of either protecting or relinquishing his
jurisdiction. Midland Bank had previously obtained a preemptive interim
injunction against Lakers naming it as a defendant in a United States
antitrust action. Subsequently all of the foreign defendants in No. 82-3362
appeared in the High Court of Justice without notice to either Laker or the
United States District Court and obtained interim protection. The remaining
defendants, although domestic corporations, had to be restrained from
attempting to follow the same path. It was equally clear that appellants also
intended to seek English injunctive relief. Due to the lack of any prior notice
by the four foreign defendants, the district court was threatened with a
potential fait accompli by the appellants which would have virtually eliminated
[*931] the courts
effective jurisdiction over Lakers facially valid claim. Given the
tensions between the parties, it is likely that the threat worsened every day.
Thus, there was nothing improper in the district courts decision to
enjoin appellants from seeking to participate in the English proceedings solely
designed to rob the court of its jurisdiction. 2.
Evasion of Important Public Policies Antisuit
injunctions are also justified when necessary to prevent litigants
evasion of the forums important public policies.[69] This principle is similar to the rule
that a foreign judgment not entitled to full faith and credit under the
Constitution will not be enforced within the United States when contrary to the
crucial public policies of the forum in which enforcement is requested.[70] Both rules recognize that a state is
not required to give effect to foreign judicial proceedings grounded on
policies which do violence to its own fundamental interests.[71] The
standard for refusing to enforce judgments on public policy grounds is strict;
defendants are rarely able to block judgments on these grounds.[72] Enjoining participation in a foreign
lawsuit in order to preempt a potential judgment is a much greater interference
with an independent countrys judicial processes. It follows that an
anti-suit injunction will issue to preclude participation in the litigation
only when the strongest equitable factors favor its use.[73] Both the importance to the forum [*932] of the law allegedly evaded, and the
identity of the potentially evading party are relevant. In
this situation, the district courts injunction properly prevented
appellants from attempting to escape application of the antitrust laws to their
conduct of business here in the United States. KLM and Sabena seek to evade
culpability under statutes of admitted economic importance to the United States[74] which are specifically applicable to
their activities in the United States, and upon which Laker may have
legitimately relied. Whatever
the merits of the British defendants claims based upon the Bermuda II
Treaty,[75] KLM and Sabena have no claim to
antitrust immunity under their air service treaties. In fact, far from
conferring any immunity, their treaties contain express language subjecting
them to the jurisdiction of the United States over predatory pricing and abuse
of monopoly power. Article Twelve of the United States-Belgium Air Transport
Services Agreement provides, (1) Each Party shall allow prices for air transportation
to be established by each designated airline based upon commercial
considerations in the marketplace.
Intervention by the Parties shall be limited to: (a) protection of predatory or discriminatory prices or
practices ; (b) protection of consumers from prices that are unduly
high or restrictive because of the abuse of a dominant position ; and (c) protection of airlines from prices that are
artificially low because of direct or indirect governmental subsidy or support.[76] There
is similar language in the United States-Netherlands air service agreement[77] and the United States-Germany[78] air service agreement. 77
United States-Netherlands Air Transport Treaty at art. 6, 29 U.S.T. at 3095,
supra note 38. These
provisions were all negotiated recently, at a time when the countries could be
expected to have been familiar with the United States position
regarding enforcement of its antitrust laws over foreign corporations operating
in the United States. Significantly, in the face of these express treaty
provisions appellants have not asserted before the United States courts any
claim to immunity under the air service treaties. In
light of these treaty provisions, we find it offensive that KLM and Sabena
attempt to ride on the coattails of the British airlines under the Bermuda II
Treaty and the British Protection of Trading Interest Act, which were
respectively intended to regulate British air carriage and to protect primarily
the economic interests of British domestic corporations. We do not see how a
suit by a British corporation against Dutch and Belgian corporations involving
anticompetitive activities allegedly taken by the defendants to protect their
United States-Dutch and United States-Belgain [*933]
air markets adversely implicates British trading interests. British interest
would be damaged only if a British corporation will have to pay the judgment.
Conceivably, British trading interests may even be furthered by retaining KLM,
Sabena, and the other non-British parties to the action, since a judgment
against any one of them would contribute towards the full satisfaction of the
creditors claims against a British corporation in liquidation. KLM
and Sabena are not less properly enjoined from pursuing the British litigation
by virtue of their status as foreign corporations. Because of the inherent
interference of an anti-suit injunction, injunctions are occasionally limited
to restrain only residents of the forum state from pursuing foreign litigation,
and do not necessarily run to all those who would be subject to the forum
states in personam jurisdiction. However, on occasion, circumstances
have even permitted restraints on actions by foreign parties in other forums.[79] The
propriety of such a restraint should be clear with respect to KLM and Sabena.
Foreign corporations doing business in the enjoining forum are expected to
abide by the forums laws. We recognize that the British Government
disputes the right of the United States to apply its antitrust laws to British
air carriers operating in the United States. However, KLM and Sabena have not
argued that their status as air carriers under their air service treaties
guarantees them any special status in this regard. Indeed, their treaties
permit signatory government intervention to redress predatory prices or abuse
of dominant market position. In this situation, KLM and Sabena should be
treated as any other resident or corporation operating within this country.
They are not permitted to escape forum policies any more than other
residents. Sabenas
argument that the district courts anti-suit injunction
compels Britain to acquiesce in conduct by its nationals that may
violate its policies disfavoring international application of treble damages
laws[80] is disingenuous. The district
courts order does not compel Britain to do anything, but only
preserves free access to United States courts. The British Government is free
to pursue other sanctions against Laker.[81] 3.
Effect of the English Injunctions The
district courts injunction was within its discretion even though the
United Kingdom courts have issued in personam injunctions stopping Laker from
proceeding against British Airways and British Caledonian. Long experience
derived from this countrys federal system teaches that a forum state
may,[82] but need not,[83] [*934]
stay its own proceedings in response to an anti-suit injunction against a party
before the court. This is consistent with the general rule permitting
concurrent proceedings on transitory causes of action.[84] In extreme cases it may even be
necessary to issue a counterinjunction to thwart another states attempt
to assert exclusive jurisdiction over a matter legitimately subject to
concurrent jurisdiction.[85] In
suits involving states, even the Full Faith and Credit Clause does not compel
recognition of an anti-suit injunction. In Pacific Employers Insurance Co.
v. Industrial Accident Commission[86] the Supreme Court held that when two states each create an
exclusive remedy for a liability which each state has jurisdiction to impose,
neither is bound to defer to the others jurisdiction by enforcing the
other jurisdictions remedy to the exclusion of its own. Although one
state may exercise its prescriptive jurisdiction to create an
exclusive remedy for an injury, absent some other
overriding constitutional stricture, that exclusivity is never so total as to
prevent another sovereign from disregarding a foreign remedy in favor of its
own administrative scheme tailored to serve its unique needs. The
same result is reached here a fortiori, since the mandatory policies of the
Full Faith and Credit Clause do not apply to international assertions of
exclusive jurisdiction. The anti-suit injunction was a necessary and proper
vehicle to protect the United States District Courts jurisdiction and
prevent the evasion by KLM and Sabena of important domestic laws governing
their conduct of business within the United States. C.
Paramount Nationality We
turn now to the appellants argument that Lakers nationality
requires the United States District Court to defer to the injunctions issued by
the courts of the United Kingdom. KLM
and Sabena do not dispute the power of the United States District Court to
issue the injunction. They contend rather that the district court abused its
discretion by issuing an anti-suit injunction instead of relinquishing its
jurisdiction, staying its proceedings, or adopting some other vehicle of
conflict resolution. Appellants are therefore in the contradictory position of
supporting the right of English courts to issue an anti-suit injunction, but
opposing the United States District Courts issuance of the same kind
of injunction. The only way appellants can differentiate between the two
injunctions is to focus on the nationality of Laker. The
similarity of the injunctions is underscored by the way Sabena phrased the
issue posed by this case: which sovereign, the United States or Great
Britain, has the right to determine whether British law permits Laker to
conduct private treble damage actions in the United States.[87]
As counsel for Sabena recognized at oral argument, whether British law permits
or proscribes certain activities is primarily a matter for the British courts
to determine.[88] On parity of reasoning the availability
of treble damage actions in [*935]
United States courts is a question of United States law. Appellants
case thus hinges entirely on the consequences attending the existence in one
court of nationality-based jurisdiction over Laker. Appellants
attempt to prioritize the authority of the courts to proceed in cases of
concurrent jurisdiction by arguing that the nationality of the plaintiff gives
the plaintiffs state an inherent advantage which displaces all other
jurisdictional bases. They label this principle paramount
nationality, and present this as the theory of conflict resolution to
be used when concurrent jurisdiction is present: assuming that two or
more states exercise jurisdiction over Lakers allegations, the state
with jurisdiction over its national must have the paramount right to determine
whether and, if so, where litigation by that national may go forward.[89] We are
asked to recognize an entirely novel rule. Although a court has power to enjoin
its nationals from suing in foreign jurisdictions, it does not follow that the
United States courts must recognize an absolute right of the British government
to regulate the remedies that the United States may wish to create for British
nationals in United States courts. The purported principle of paramount
nationality is entirely unknown in national and international law.
Territoriality, not nationality, is the customary and preferred base of
jurisdiction.[90] Moreover, no rule of international law
or national law precludes an exercise of jurisdiction solely because another
state has jurisdiction.[91] In fact, international law recognizes
that a state with a territorial basis for its prescriptive jurisdiction may
establish laws intended to prevent compliance with legislation established
under authority of nationality-based jurisdiction.[92] All
proposed methods of avoiding conflicts stemming from concurrent jurisdiction
indicate that nationality of the parties is only one factor to consider, not
the paramount or controlling factor.[93] Appellants have not cited any cases
where the principle has been followed as a method of choosing between competing
claims of jurisdiction, despite the numerous occasions when the principle could
have been decisive.[94] As this paucity of case law implies,
significant adverse consequences would attend the adoption of this rule, and we
decline to do so. The
rationale behind the claim of paramount nationality seems to be that
particularly important foreign sovereign prerogatives are infringed when a
foreign national sues in domestic courts against the wishes of a foreign state.
However, this argument ignores the stronger policy interests of the domestic
forum. If a country has a right to regulate the conduct of its nationals, then
a fortiori it has the power to regulate the activities of its very governmental
organizations, such as its courts, which it establishes and maintains for the
purpose of furthering its own public policies. United
States courts must control the access to their forums. No foreign court can
supersede the right and obligation [*936]
of the United States courts to decide whether Congress has created a remedy for
those injured by trade practices adversely affecting United States interests.
Our courts are not required to stand by while Britain attempts to close a
courthouse door that Congress, under its territorial jurisdiction, has opened
to foreign corporations. Under the nationality base of jurisdiction, Britain
can punish its corporations for walking through that courthouse door, but it
cannot close the American door. Thus, although British courts can sanction
their citizens for resorting to United States antitrust remedies, United States
courts are not required to cut off the availability of the remedy. The
position advanced by appellant would require United States courts to defer to
British policy when there is no statement by Congress that it does not wish the
courts to provide the remedy. Appellants argument that there is no
absolute duty to exercise jurisdiction has no merit in this context.[95] It is based on abstention and forum non
conveniens cases, which in turn are premised on the availability of a second
forum that can fully resolve the plaintiffs claims. In this case, the
English Court of Appeal has admitted that there is no other forum for
Lakers claims. Besides
lacking any basis in national or international law, and besides ignoring
important domestic interests, the paramount nationality rule would generate
more interference than it would resolve. Legislation based on nationality tends
to encourage chauvinism and discrimination without enhancing international
comity.[96] The paramount nationality rule would be
no exception. Foreign plaintiffs in our courts could routinely face public
policy challenges in their domestic courts, while our courts would be required
to stay proceedings pending foreign authorization. On the other hand, as the
district court noted, United States courts could use corporate nationality as a
pretext to interject themselves in foreign proceedings involving United States
corporations and subsidiaries.[97] The
paramount nationality rule would also be impractical to administer. It would be
difficult or impossible to determine when the nationality of a corporation is
sufficiently strong that legitimate territorial contacts should be nullified.[98] There are at least five competing
methods of determining nationality of a corporation.[99] Multiple countries could simultaneously
assert controlling jurisdiction over one national
corporation based, for example, on shareholder nationality, state of
incorporation, or other corporate links to a particular forum. There would be
no paramount nation in this situation. The conflicts associated with concurrent
jurisdiction would continue to confront the courts. Finally,
KLM and Sabena are not British nationals. Thus, their claims are fundamentally
different from those advanced by British Airways and British Caledonian.
Nothing gives KLM or Sabena a supreme right to vindicate the British national
interests that may be implicated by Lakers suits. Sabena, at least,
is specifically entitled to the protection of United States antitrust laws
under its air services agreement.[100] KLM no doubt would expect the same
protection.[101] No rule of paramount nationality should
free them from obligation under United States antitrust laws and at the same
time protect them from other corporations violations. Contrary to
appellants arguments, Lakers nationality is [*937] clearly an insufficient basis to reverse
the district court. D. International
Comity Appellants
and amici curiae argue strenuously that the district courts
injunction violates the crucial principles of comity that regulate and moderate
the social and economic intercourse between independent nations. We approach
their claims seriously, recognizing that comity serves our international system
like the mortar which cements together a brick house. No one would willingly
permit the mortar to crumble or be chipped away for fear of compromising the
entire structure. Comity
summarizes in a brief word a complex and elusive concept the degree
of deference that a domestic forum must pay to the act of a foreign government
not otherwise binding on the forum. Since comity varies according to the
factual circumstances surrounding each claim for its recognition, the absolute
boundaries of the duties it imposes are inherently uncertain.[102] However, the central precept of comity
teaches that, when possible, the decisions of foreign tribunals should be given
effect in domestic courts, since recognition fosters international cooperation
and encourages reciprocity, thereby promoting predictability and stability
through satisfaction of mutual expectations. The interests of both forums are
advanced the foreign court because its laws and policies have been
vindicated; the domestic country because international cooperation and ties
have been strengthened. The rule of law is also encouraged, which benefits all
nations.[103] Comity
is a necessary outgrowth of our international system of politically
independent, socio-economically interdependent nation states. As surely as
people, products and problems move freely among adjoining countries, so
national interests cross territorial borders. But no nation can expect its laws
to reach further than its jurisdiction to prescribe, adjudicate, and enforce.
Every nation must often rely on other countries to help it achieve its
regulatory expectations. Thus, comity compels national courts to act at all
times to increase the international legal ties that advance the rule of law
within and among nations. However,
there are limitations to the application of comity. When the foreign act is
inherently inconsistent with the policies underlying comity, domestic
recognition could tend either to legitimize the aberration or to encourage
retaliation, undercutting the realization of the goals served by comity. No
nation is under an unremitting obligation to enforce foreign interests which
are fundamentally prejudicial to those of the domestic forum. Thus, from the
earliest times, authorities have recognized that the obligation of comity
expires when the strong public policies of the forum are vitiated by the
foreign act.[104] [*938] Case law on the subject is extensive and
recognizes the current validity of this exception to comity.[105] Opinions
vary as to the degree of prejudice to public policy which should be tolerated
before comity will not be followed, but by any definition the injunctions of
the United Kingdom courts are not entitled to comity. This is because the
action before the United Kingdom courts is specifically intended to interfere
with and terminate Lakers United States antitrust suit. The
district courts anti-suit injunction was purely defensive
it seeks only to preserve the district courts ability to arrive at a
final judgment adjudicating Lakers claims under United States law.
This judgment would neither make any statement nor imply any views about the
wisdom of British antitrust policy. In contrast, the English injunction is
purely offensive it is not designed to protect English jurisdiction,
or to allow English courts to proceed to a judgment on the defendants
potential liability under English anticompetitive law free of foreign interference.
Rather, the English injunction seeks only to quash the practical power of the
United States courts to adjudicate claims under United States law against
defendants admittedly subject to the courts adjudicatory
jurisdiction. The Court of Appeal itself recognized that there is no other
forum available for resolution of Lakers claims. It is
often argued before United States courts that the application of United States
antitrust laws to foreign nationals violates principles of comity. Those pleas
are legitimately considered.[106] In conducting this inquiry, a court
must necessarily examine whether the antitrust laws were clearly intended to
reach the injury charged in the complaint.[107] If so, allowing the
defendants conduct to go unregulated could amount to an unjustified
evasion of United States law injuring significant domestic interests. This is
one context in which comity would not be extended to a foreign act. On the
other hand, if the anticompetitive aspect of the alleged injury is not
appreciable; the contacts with the United States are attenuated; and the
actions of foreign governments denote the existence of strong foreign
interests, then comity may suggest a lack of Congressional intent to regulate
the alleged conduct.[108] In this context, comity may have a
strong bearing on whether application of United States antitrust laws should go
forward.[109] [*939]
However, the appellants plea to comity is fundamentally different.
KLM and Sabena contend that comity compels us to recognize a decision by a
foreign government that this court shall not apply its own laws to corporations
doing business in this country. Thus, the violation of public policy vitiating
comity is not that the evasion of United States antitrust law might injure
United States interests, but rather that United States judicial functions have
been usurped, destroying the autonomy of the courts. Under the position
advanced by appellants, the United States District Court would no longer be
free to rule that comity prevented the United States from exercising
prescriptive jurisdiction over the defendants, since that determination would
be made as of right by a separate forum.[110] In
this latter context we cannot rule that the district court abused its
discretion to protect its jurisdiction. Between the state courts, the Full
Faith and Credit Clause has not been held to compel recognition of an anti-suit
injunction.[111] A fortiori, the principles of comity do
not prevent proceeding in the face of a foreign injunction. Comity
ordinarily requires that courts of a separate sovereign not interfere with
concurrent proceedings based on the same transitory claim, at least until a
judgment is reached in one action, allowing res judicata to be pled in defense.
The appeal to the recognition of comity by the American court in order to
permit the critical issues to be adjudicated in England, which is the plea made
by appellants here, thus comes based on a very strange predicate. Since the
action seeking to determine Lakers right to recover for
anticompetitive injuries was first instituted in the United States, the initial
opportunity to exercise comity, if this were called for, was put to the United
Kingdom courts. No recognition or acceptance of comity was made in those courts.
The appellants claims of comity now asserted in United States courts
come burdened with the failure of the British to recognize comity. Although
reciprocity may no longer be an absolute prerequisite to comity,[112] certainly our law has not departed so
far from common sense that it is reversible error for a court not to capitulate
to a foreign judgment based on a statute like the British Protection of Trading
Interests Act, designed to prevent the court from resolving legitimate claims
placed before it. We cannot forget that the foreign injunction which creates an
issue of comity or forbearance was generated by the English
Executives deliberate interference with a proceeding which had been
ongoing in the American courts for over six months. Deference to the English
courts is now asked in a situation in which all the English courts are doing is
supporting and acquiescing in the action taken by their executive. There never
would have been any situation in which comity or forbearance would have become
an issue if some of the defendants involved in the American suit [*940] had not gone into the English courts to
generate interference with the American courts. There
is simply no visible reason why the British Executive, followed by the British
courts, should bar Lakers assertion of a legitimate cause of action
in the American courts, except that the British government is intent upon
frustrating the antitrust policies of the elective branches of the American
government. The effort of the British therefore is not to see that justice is
done anywhere, either in the United States or British courts, but to frustrate
the enforcement of American law in American courts against companies doing
business in America. Absent a clear treaty concluded by the United States
Executive Branch, this simply cannot be agreed to by the courts of the United
States. Nothing
in the British Executive order and directions suggests that they are entitled
to comity. The order and directions purport to counteract United States
regulation of international trade outside its territorial jurisdiction.[113] The Protection of Trading Interests Act
and the order govern any person in the United Kingdom who carries on
business there.[114] They forbid any person in the United
Kingdom from furnishing any commercial document in the United
Kingdom, or any commercial information [apparently
regardless of location ] which relates to the said Department of Justice
investigation or the grand jury or the District Court proceedings.[115] Even United States airlines would be
swept within these broad directives, but for the directions specific
exclusion of United States carriers. The
English Executive has thus issued an order to every airline in the world doing
business in England to refuse to submit to the jurisdiction of the American
court and not to submit any documents from England pursuant to an order of the
American court. If the exercise of extraterritorial
jurisdiction under United States antitrust laws can ever be described as
arrogant, the order and directions issued by the British Government certainly
bear the same characteristic. United States antitrust laws are enforced where
there is an impact in the United States, but only after an adjudication in the
United States courts of a violation. Here the English Executive has presumed to
bar foreigners from complying with orders of an American court before there is
an adjudication by a court on the merits of the dispute. Moreover,
since oral argument before this court, the English Secretary of State has
interpreted the order and directions to bar the furnishing of any
commercial information, even that located exclusively
within United States territory.[116] On the basis of this interpretation the
British Government has refused to permit Lakers use of commercial
information contained in documents situated in the United States to respond to
interrogatories propounded by Trans World Airlines. The orders thus interfere
with any attempt by Laker to use any commercial information, whether located in
the United Kingdom or the United [*941]
States, to proceed against any of the defendants, whether British or
American. This
development completely undermines the appellants strongest argument
in favor of the application of comity namely, that all United States
interests protected under the antitrust laws could be adequately enforced
through means other than a treble damage suit, such as a civil or criminal
action brought by the Government,[117] or a creditors class action.[118] Since the British Government is
refusing to permit Laker to proceed with its suit even insofar as it relates to
American defendants, it is clear that it would prevent Lakers
participation in any proceeding designed to vindicate United States interests
allegedly harmed as a result of injuries suffered by Laker and its customers.[119] Thus, Laker would be hampered in
assisting the plaintiffs in any alternative action. Without crucial information
provided by the injured party, Laker, any other suit would be procedurally
doomed to failure, regardless of its merits. Therefore, comity can not be
extended on the grounds that the British directions protect solely British
interests while permitting the United States to vindicate its own policies; the
truth, the reality, is far different. If we
are guided by the ethical imperative that everyone should act as if his actions
were universalized, then the actions of the British Executive in this
particular matter scarcely meet the standard of Kant.[120] For, if the United States and a few
other countries with major airlines enacted and enforced legislation like the
Protection of Trading Interests Act, the result would be unfettered chaos
brought about by unresolvable conflicts of jurisdiction the world over. If we
were to forbid every American airline and every foreign airline doing business
in the United States from producing documents in response to the summons of an
English court, or a French court, or a German court, and the French and the
German governments were to enact and enforce similar legislation, there could
be no complete resolution of any legal dispute involving airlines around the
world. The operations of the airlines would be snarled in a criss-cross of
overlapping and tangled restrictions to the extent that no airline could be
certain of its legal obligations anywhere. Thus, even the practical
consequences that would flow from a grant of comity counsel against deferring
to the British injunctions triggered by the Protection of Trading Interests
Act.[121] [*942]
There is nothing in the nature of the parties which suggests comity should be
exercised. Laker appears before the court as a voluntary plaintiff, under no
compulsion to sue. Laker prosecutes its action here subject to sanctions that
may be issued against it in the United Kingdom. Thus, there is no suggestion
that comity should be exercised to avoid hardship to a party who might
otherwise be caught between the inconsistent imperatives of two forums. No
facts have been presented here suggesting that the antitrust suit adversely
affects the operations of foreign governments. Laker is a privately owned
airline. To the extent KLM and Sabena are governmentally owned, they are
non-British. The ownership of these airlines implicates no significant
interests of Britain as a state. The parties have not seriously asserted
otherwise. Similarly,
the parties have not invoked either the sovereign immunity doctrine or the act
of state doctrine, which insulate from review those foreign governmental
actions which are not compatible with judicial scrutiny in our domestic courts.
That neither of these doctrines even arguably would apply here is further
evidence that no significant British or other governmental interest would be
violated by Lakers suit.
Although
unlikely, it may subsequently be shown that there was sufficient foreign
governmental involvement that enforcement of United States antitrust laws is
not appropriate.[122] In that event, any of several other
well-established principles could be invoked in favor of the defendant.[123] However, these are hurdles that are
more appropriately cleared at later stages in the proceeding when the facts are
fully developed. Finally,
we note that the district court did grant comity to the English orders and
proceedings to the extent it could do so consistently with its duty to defend
its jurisdiction. The court offered to narrow the scope of its preliminary
injunction if KLM or Sabena would submit language permitting the defendants to
proceed in Great Britain without leaving them free to secure orders which would
interfere with the district courts pending litigation.[124] KLM and Sabena ignored this invitation
precisely because their sole purpose is the interference with this action. KLM
and Sabena cannot now argue that the district court abused its discretion by
entering an overly restrictive injunction in violation of comity. Now a
word about the position of our dissenting colleague. We submit that the dissent
relies on a skewed view of comity, ignoring the significant prejudice to the
[*943] administration of justice in
our courts under United States laws in order to accommodate the strongly
asserted views of the British Executive and Judiciary. However laudatory the
impulse to adjust and compromise, we are unable to plunge ahead as the dissent
advocates. The path to the seemly accommodation of . . . competing
national interests eked out by the dissent[125] turns comity into quicksand, snares the
district court in the very pitfalls which it attempted to avoid, and leads the
parties and the district court to a result so vague and ill-defined that it
cannot possibly solve the problems raised by the actions of the two
governments. This position is neither legally tenable nor pragmatically
dictated by the extraordinary circumstances of this litigation. The
interpretation of international comity propounded by the dissent is a weak reed
indeed under the aggravated facts of this case; it does not rest upon any legal
precedent, and ignores the previously recognized limits on the doctrine. The
central authority quoted, Hilton v. Guyot, recognizes that comity never obligates a national
forum to ignore the rights of its own citizens or of other persons
who are under the protection of its laws.[126] Lakers United States
creditors and consumers are entitled to the protection of United States
antitrust laws. Furthermore, although not a United States citizen, as a
corporation operating within the United States, Laker qualifies as an
other person entitled to the protection of United States
law. Heretofore comity has never been thought to require mandatory deferral to
a foreign action primarily intended to cut off these domestic interests. The
dissent reaches this tenuous legal conclusion by attempting to discern the
implications of Dames & Moore v. Regan, which suggests that a national government may
prohibit its nationals from suing in national or other forums.[127] However,
in Dames & Moore, the action taken by our government preserved the United
States claims and established a remedy for enforcing them against the
previously blocked assets of a foreign country hence against that
foreign country. In contrast, the British government, insofar as British
corporations are concerned, would just cancel the entire claim
without even permitting single damages. Thus, because Dames & Moore allowed
a substitute procedure for enforcing the claims, we cannot equate it with the
British position here, even against its own British corporations. Additionally,
this is not a suit against a government, but a private action against a private
corporation on a claim based on monopolistic practices. The instant facts are
thus so far removed from Dames & Moore that it cannot be said that there is
anything in the spirit of Dames & Moore which is being violated by the
courts injunction. Dames
& Moore is silent about the limits on the enforcement of a prohibition
against suing in a particular forum. Although a United States citizen would
violate United States law by suing in a foreign court in violation of executive
agreements similar to those in Dames & Moore, the United States could
enforce its own interests without interfering with the autonomy of the foreign
judiciary or course of the foreign proceeding. On need look no further than the
Protection of Trading Interests Act for any number of remedies: the foreign
award could be subject to callbacks in United States courts, and criminal
penalties or fines could be levied. Other civil sanctions could be exacted,
such as revocation of business licenses and operating permits. Clearly the
United States could enforce its own treaty obligations or domestic interests
without taking the initiative to interfere with a foreign jurisdiction. Thus,
there is nothing in Dames & Moore which suggests that a district court may
not exercise [*944] its discretion
to enjoin a foreign action when necessary to preserve its jurisdiction. Moreover,
where in Dames & Moore the vigorously asserted position of the Executive
Branch was a crucial factor in favor of upholding restricted access to domestic
forums, here it is the inaction and silence of the Executive Branch which is
said to shut off the availability of the United States forum. Only a very small
percentage of private antitrust actions are graced by the intervention of the
Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice. This has never before been a
prerequisite to maintaining a private antitrust claim. If we were to hold that
the absence of this intervention indicated a weakness in Lakers case,
or prevented it from going forward, we would be making new antitrust law indeed
law which would directly contravene the congressional purposes in
establishing a private right of action. There
are other weighty reasons why the absence of any current expression of
affirmative United States interest should not be fatal to Lakers
antitrust action. The American Executive has been in contact with the British
Executive seeking to iron out differences under the Bermuda II Treaty.[128] It may very well be that since the
State Department is seized with the responsibility for negotiations with the
British it has advised the Antitrust Division that it would be inappropriate
for that division to take an adversary position in the ongoing private civil
suit at this time. The
sensitive status of current negotiations may even preclude the Department of
State from actively participating in this litigation. Significantly, the
British Government is not involved in this litigation either, presumably
confining itself to consultation and to the creation and interpretation of the
executive orders giving rise to the controversy. This counsels against inviting
the Executive to present the views of the United States on remand. Unless and
until the views of the American Executive are made known, the absence of any
Executive expression of United States sovereign or other interests should not
be a bar to proceeding with Lakers suit, or to the protection of
jurisdiction to hear the claim.
Putting
aside the lack of any clear basis in comity, the result reached by the dissent
would reverse the district court for abuse of discretion, although the district
court has attempted to do what the dissent chastizes the court for omitting.
The request for preliminary injunctive relief required immediate action; the
dissent itself recognizes that the injunction was fashioned under the
strain of critical moments.[129] Because it was not precisely clear how
broadly the injunction needed to be drafted, the court erred on the side of
caution, but without prejudice to the rights of the defendants to move to
narrow the injunction subsequently. It thus sought to preserve comity by
protecting its jurisdiction while permitting foreign proceedings consistent
with that jurisdiction. The
parties made no request to narrow that injunction. This omission is relevant,
not as a waiver of their right to make further requests, but as evidence that
there is no narrow relief which can be drafted to protect the admittedly
legitimate United States jurisdiction while permitting participation in a
British proceeding intended to terminate the American action. It is incongruous
to suggest that comity requires a reversal of the district court so that the
court can renew its previous offer.
In
fact, the dissent offers no practical guidance about how the district
courts jurisdiction can be guaranteed under the microscopic range of
discretion apparently contemplated in the further proceedings aimed
at narrowing the injunction.[130] It states only that the injunction
could be narrowed to allow KLM and Sabena to follow
Swissair and Lufthansa in bringing declaratory judgment actions, barring only
countersuit injunctive relief pendente [*945]
lite.[131] This is no protection at all for the
district court. Swissair and Lufthansa do not seek a declaratory judgment that
British law does not permit Laker to sue in American courts. If this were the
only request made by Swissair and Lufthansa, then it might very well be
permitted.[132] Instead,
Lufthansa and Swissair seek a declaration that they did not breach English and
other laws regulating restrictive practices. The writs specifically exclude any
requests for a declaratory judgment concerning whether United States antitrust
laws are violated. However, the accompanying request for relief, which it must
be assumed they intend to seek if they succeed in obtaining a favorable
declaratory judgment, is not so limited: it seeks an injunction against any
action in United States courts based on United States antitrust laws.[133] The breadth of the relief requested is
all the more unusual since the declaratory aspect of the writs exclude
consideration of the United States antitrust law. By suggesting that KLM and
Sabena should be permitted to seek this sort of a declaratory judgment, and,
implicitly, obtain the requested relief, the dissent cannot seriously intimate
that the district court would effectively protect its jurisdiction. To the
extent the dissent would permit the district court to preserve its jurisdiction
under the terms of a more limited injunction along the lines contemplated by
the district courts proposal, the net result on the desired remand
would not be much different from that reached by the majority. There is nothing
in our opinion which prevents KLM and Sabena from reconsidering their position
or proposing a modification of the district courts order if anything
less than complete frustration of the district courts jurisdiction
would satisfy the appellants objective. F.
Judicial Reconciliation of Conflicting Assertions of Jurisdiction We
recognize that the district courts injunction, precipitated as it was
by preemptive interim injunctions in the High Court of Justice, unfortunately
will not resolve the deadlock currently facing the parties to this litigation.
We have searched for some satisfactory avenue, open to an American court, which
would permit the frictionless vindication of the interests of both Britain and
the United States. However, there is none, for the British legislation defines
the British interest solely in terms of preventing realization of United States
interests. The laws are therefore contradictory and mutually inconsistent. 1.
Nature of the Conflict The
conflict faced here is not caused by the courts of the two countries. Rather,
its sources are the fundamentally opposed national policies toward prohibition
of anticompetitive business activity. These policies originate in the
legislative and executive decisions of the respective counties. Congress
has specifically authorized treble damage actions by foreign corporations to
redress injuries to United States foreign commerce.[134]
Equally significant, Congress has
designed the private action as a major component in the enforcement mechanism.
The treble damage aspect of private recoveries is the centerpiece of that
enforcement mechanism.[135] We
find no indication in either the statutory scheme or prior judicial precedent
that jurisdiction should not be exercised. Legitimate United States interests
in protecting consumers, providing for vindicating creditors rights,
and regulating economic consequences of those doing substantial [*946] business in our country are all advanced
under the congressionally prescribed scheme. These are more than sufficient
jurisdictional contracts under United States v. Aluminum Co. of America[136] and subsequent case law to support the exercise of prescriptive
jurisdiction in this case. Congress has been aware of the decades-long
controversy accompanying the recurrent assertion of jurisdiction over foreign
anticompetitive acts and effects in the United States dating back nearly forty
years but has, with limited exceptions,[137] not yet chosen to limit the
laws application or disapprove of the consistent statutory
interpretation reached by the courts. Thus, aside from the unprecedented
foreign challenge to the application of the antitrust laws, there is noting in
either the facts alleged in the complaint or the circumstances of the
litigation which suggests jurisdiction should not be exercised in
Lakers suit. The
English courts have indicated that they, too, have acted out of the need to
implement their mandatory legislative policy, and not out of any ill will
towards our courts or the substantive law we are bound to follow. Although the
injunctive relief sought by British Airways and British Caledonian set the
stage for a direct conflict of jurisdiction, until action by the political
branches of the English Government the English courts remained largely
acquiescent to Lakers invocation of United States jurisdiction.
Justice Parkers well reasoned judgment initially denied the injunctive
relief sought by British Airways and British Caledonian. That judgment was
rendered even after the district court issued the injunction under appeal
here. However,
the government of the United Kingdom is now and has historically been opposed
to most aspects of United States antitrust policy insofar as it affects
business enterprises based in the United Kingdom. The British Government
objects to the scope of the prescriptive jurisdiction invoked to apply the
antitrust laws; the substantive content of those laws, which is much more
aggressive than British regulation of restrictive practices; and the procedural
vehicles used in the litigation of the antitrust laws, including private treble
damage actions, and the widespread use of pretrial discovery. These policies
have been most recently and forcefully expressed in the Protection of Trading
Interests Act.[138] The
nature of the direct conflict between the political-economic policies of the
two countries is put into focus by considering whether the British Government
would have been likely to attempt to stop Laker from suing in United States
courts if Laker brought a suit other than an antitrust action. If Laker had
sued the American defendants for fraud, or on a contract claim for failure of
performance, the British would not have been at all interested in intervening,
irrespective of the financial [*947]
condition of Laker at the time it brought the suit. The indifference would not
lessen whether British Airways and British Caledonian were included in the
group sued by Laker in the United States court. It is the hated application of
United States antitrust laws to conduct involving British corporations that has
triggered the involvement of the British Government, and ultimately, the
British courts. Under
the provisions of the Protection of Trading Interests Act, after Justice Parker
refused relief, the English Secretary of State issued an order and directions
prohibiting all those carrying on business in the United Kingdom, with the
exception of United States designated air carriers, from complying with United
States antitrust measures arising out of the provision of air carriage by
United Kingdom designated airlines under the terms of the Bermuda II Treaty.
Because these directions reflected the firm conclusion of the British Executive
Branch that British trading interests were being threatened by Lakers
antitrust claim, they presented an entirely different situation to the Court of
Appeal than that which Justice Parker had faced.[139] The restrictions placed on the British
airlines by these orders fundamentally altered the
perceived ability of the Court of Appeal to permit concurrent actions.[140] Because the directions of the British
Executive blocked British Caledonian and British Airways from complying with
Lakers discovery requests, the court concluded that the British
airlines could not thereafter adequately defend themselves. According to the
Court of Appeal, this rendered Lakers claim wholly
untriable and was therefore decisive.[141] [*948]
Thus, to a large extent the conflict of jurisdiction is one generated by the
political branches of the governments. There is simply no room for
accommodation here if the courts of each country faithfully carry out the laws
which they are entrusted to enforce. The Master of the Rolls expressed hope
that the courts of the two countries will . . . never be in conflict.
The conflict, if there be conflict, will be purely one between the laws of the
two countries, for which neither court is responsible.[142] We echo that hope. 2.
Judicial Interest Balancing Even
as the political branches of the respective countries have set in motion the
legislative policies which have collided in this litigation, they have deprived
courts of the ability meaningfully to resolve the problem. The American and
English courts are obligated to attempt to reconcile two contradictory laws,
each supported by recognized prescriptive jurisdiction, one of which is
specifically designed to cancel out the other. The
suggestion has been made that this court should engage in some form of interest
balancing, permitting only a reasonable assertion of
prescriptive jurisdiction to be implemented.[143] However, this approach is unsuitable
when courts are forced to choose between a domestic law which is designed to
protect domestic interests, and a foreign law which is calculated to thwart the
implementation of the domestic law in order to protect foreign interests
allegedly threatened by the objectives of the domestic law.[144] Interest balancing in this context is
hobbled by two primary problems: (1) there are substantial limitations on the
courts ability to conduct a neutral balancing of the competing
interests, and (2) the adoption of interest balancing is unlikely to achieve
its goal of promoting international comity. a.
Defects in the Balancing Process Most
proposals for interest balancing consist of a long list of national contacts to
be evaluated and weighed against those of the foreign country. These interests
may be relevant to the desirability of allocating jurisdiction to a particular
national forum. However, their usefulness breaks down when a court is faced
with the task of selecting one forums prescriptive jurisdiction over
that of another. Many
of the contacts to be balanced are already evaluated when assessing the
existence of a sufficient basis for exercising prescriptive jurisdiction.[145] Other factors, [*949] such as the extent to which
another state may have an interest in regulating the activity, and
the likelihood of conflict with regulation by other states[146] are essentially neutral in deciding
between competing assertions of jurisdiction. Pursuing these inquiries only
leads to the obvious conclusion that jurisdiction could be exercised or that
there is a conflict, but does not suggest the best avenue of conflict
resolution. These types of factors are not useful in resolving the
controversy. Those
contacts which do purport to provide a basis for distinguishing between
competing bases of jurisdiction, and which are thus crucial to the balancing
process, generally incorporate purely political factors which the court is
neither qualified to evaluate comparatively nor capable of properly balancing.
One such proposed consideration is the degree to which the
desirability of such regulation [of restrictive practices] is generally
accepted.[147] We doubt whether the legitimacy of an
exercise of jurisdiction should be measured by the substantive content of the
prescribed law. Moreover, although more and more states are following the
United States in regulating restrictive practices, and even exercising
jurisdiction based on effects within territory,[148] the differing English and American
assessment of the desirability of antitrust law is at the core of the conflict.
An English or American court cannot refuse to enforce a law its political
branches have already determined is desirable and necessary. The
court is also handicapped in any evaluation of the existence of
justified expectations that might be protected or hurt by the regulation in
question.[149] In this litigation, whether the
reliance of Laker and its creditors on United States antitrust laws is
justified depends upon whether one accepts the desirability of United States
anti-trust law. Whether the defendants could justifiably have relied on the
inapplicability of United States law to their conduct alleged to have caused
substantial effects in the United States is based on the same impermissible
inquiry. The desirability of applying ambiguous legislation to a particular
transaction may imply the presence or absence of legislative intent. However,
once a decision is made that the political branches intended to rely on a
legitimate base of prescriptive jurisdiction to regulate activities affecting
foreign commerce within the domestic forum, the desirability of the law is no
longer an issue for the courts. The
importance of regulation to the regulating state[150] is another factor on which the court
cannot rely to choose between two competing, mutually inconsistent legislative
policies. We are in no position to adjudicate the relative importance of
antitrust regulation or nonregulation to the United States and the United
Kingdom. It is the crucial importance of these policies which has created the
conflict. A proclamation by judicial fiat that one interest is less
important than the other will not erase a real conflict. Given
the inherent limitations of the Judiciary, which must weigh these issues in the
limited context of adversarial [*950]
litigation, we seriously doubt whether we could adequately chart the competing
problems and priorities that inevitably define the scope of any
nations interest in a legislated remedy. This court is ill-equipped
to balance the vital national interests of the United States and the
[United Kingdom] to determine which interests predominate.[151] When one state exercises its
jurisdiction and another, in protection of its own interests, attempts to quash
the first exercise of jurisdiction it is simply impossible to
judicially balance these totally contradictory and mutually
negating actions.[152] Besides
the difficulty of properly weighing the crucial elements of any interest
balancing formula, one other defect in the balancing process prompts our
reluctance to adopt this analysis in the context of preservation of
jurisdiction. Procedurally, this kind of balancing would be difficult, since it
would ordinarily involve drawn-out discovery and requests for submissions by
political branches. There was no time for this process in the present case.
Either jurisdiction was protected or it was lost. It is unlikely that the
employment of a hasty and poorly informed balancing process would have
materially aided the district courts evaluation of the exigencies and
equities of Lakers request for relief. b.
Promotion of International Comity We
might be more willing to tackle the problems associated with the balancing of
competing, mutually inconsistent national interests if we could be assured that
our efforts would strengthen the bonds of international comity. However, the
usefulness and wisdom of interest balancing to assess the most
reasonable exercise of prescriptive jurisdiction has not
been affirmatively demonstrated. This approach has not gained more than a
temporary foothold in domestic law. Courts are increasingly refusing to adopt
the approach.[153] Scholarly criticism has intensified.[154] Additionally, there is no evidence that
interest balancing represents a rule of international law. Thus, there is no
mandatory rule requiring its adoption here, since Congress cannot be said to
have implicitly legislated subject to these international constraints.[155] If
promotion of international comity is measured by the number of times United
States jurisdiction has been declined under the
reasonableness interest balancing approach, then it has
been a failure. Implementation of this analysis has not resulted in a
significant number of conflict resolutions favoring a foreign jurisdiction. A
pragmatic assessment of those decisions adopting an interest balancing approach
indicates none where United States jurisdiction [*951]
was declined when there was more than a de minimis United States interest.[156] Most cases in which use of the process
was advocated arose before a direct conflict occurred when the balancing could
be employed without impairing the courts jurisdiction to determine
jurisdiction.[157] When push comes to shove, the domestic
forum is rarely unseated.[158]
Despite
the real obligation of courts to apply international law and foster comity,
domestic courts do not sit as internationally constituted tribunals. Domestic
courts are created by national constitutions and statutes to enforce primarily
national laws.[159] The courts of most developed countries
follow international law only to the extent it is not overridden by national
law.[160] Thus, courts inherently find it
difficult neutrally to balance competing foreign interests.[161] When there is any doubt, national
interests will tend to be favored over foreign interests.[162] This partially explains why there have
been few times when courts have found foreign interests to prevail.[163] The
inherent noncorrelation between the interest balancing formula and the economic
realities of modern commerce is an additional reason which may underlie the
reluctance of most courts to strike a balance in favor of nonapplication of domestic
law. An assertion of prescriptive jurisdiction should ultimately be based on
shared assessments that jurisdiction is reasonable.[164] Thus, international law prohibits the
assertion of prescriptive jurisdiction [*952]
unsupported by reasonable links between the forum and the controversy.[165] However,
it does not necessarily follow, as the use of interest balancing as a method of
choosing between competing jurisdictions assumes, that there is a line of
reasonableness which separates jurisdiction to prescribe into neatly adjoining
compartments of national jurisdiction. There is no principle of international
law which abolishes concurrent jurisdiction.[166] Since prescriptive jurisdiction is
based on well recognized state contacts with controversies, the reality of our
interlocked international economic network guarantees that overlapping,
concurrent jurisdiction will often be present.[167] There is, therefore, no rule of
international law holding that a more reasonable assertion
of jurisdiction mandatorily[168] displaces a less
reasonable assertion of jurisdiction as long as both are, in fact,
consistent with the limitations on jurisdiction imposed by international law.[169] That is the situation faced in this
case: the territoriality and nationality bases of jurisdiction of the United
Kingdom and the United States are both unimpeached. In our
federal system of parallel sovereign courts, several lines of cases recognize
that prescriptive jurisdiction is often shared among several forums.[170] Those forums may participate in
interforum compacts that provide a basis for allocating jurisdiction to one
forum over another.[171] [*953]
Similarly, the problems associated with overlapping bases of national taxation
in international law are directly addressed by numerous bilateral and
multilateral treaties rather than a judicially developed rule of exclusive
jurisdiction grounded in a prioritization of the relative reasonableness of
links between the state and the taxed entity.[172] Because we see no neutral principles on
which to distinguish judicially the reasonableness of the concurrent, mutually
inconsistent exercises of jurisdiction in this case, we decline to adopt such a
rule here.[173] 3.
Political Compromise The
district court could capitulate to the British attacking law, at the cost of
losing its jurisdiction to implement the substantive policies established by
Congress. Alternatively it can act to preserve its jurisdiction, running the
risk that counterinjunctions or other sanctions will eventually preclude Laker
from achieving any remedy, if it is ultimately entitled to one under United
States law. In either case the policies of both countries are likely to be
frustrated at the cost of substantial prejudice to the litigants
rights. We
unhesitatingly conclude that United States jurisdiction to prescribe its
antitrust laws must go forward and was therefore properly protected by the
district court. Despite the contrary assertions of the British government,
there is no indication in this case that the limits of international law are
exceeded by either countrys exercise of prescriptive jurisdiction.
But even so, application of national law may go forward despite a conflict with
international law. Both Britain and the United States recognize this rule.[174] It follows a fortiori that national
laws do not evaporate when counteracted by the legislation of another
sovereign. Although,
in the interest of amicable relations, we might be tempted to defuse
unilaterally the confrontation by jettisoning our jurisdiction, we could not,
for this is not our proper judicial role. The problem in this case is
essentially a political one, arising from the vast difference in the
political-economic theories of the two governments which has existed for many
years. Both nations have jurisdiction to prescribe and adjudicate. Both have
asserted that jurisdiction. However, this conflict alone does not place the
court in a position to initiate a political compromise based on its decision
that United States laws should not be enforced when a foreign jurisdiction,
contrary to the domestic courts statutory duty, attempts to eradicate
the domestic jurisdiction. Judges are not politicians. The courts are not
organs of political compromise. It is impossible in this case, with all the
good will manifested by the English Justices and ourselves, to negotiate an
extraordinarily long arms-length agreement on the respective impact of our
countries policies regulating anti-competitive business practices. It is
permissible for courts to disengage when judicial scrutiny would implicate
inherently [*954] unreviewable
actions, such as conduct falling within the act of state or sovereign immunity
doctrines. But both institutional limitations on the judicial process and Constitutional
restrictions on the exercise of judicial power make it unacceptable for the
Judiciary to seize the political initiative and determine that legitimate
application of American laws must evaporate when challenged by a foreign
jurisdiction.[175] Unilateral
abandonment by the Judiciary of legitimately prescribed national law in
response to foreign counter-legislation would not materially advance the
principles of comity and international accommodation which must form the
foundation of any international system comprised of coequal nation states. The
British Governments invocation of the Protection of Trading Interest
Act to foreclose any proceeding in a non-English forum brought to recover
damages for trade injuries caused by unlawful conspiracies is a naked attempt
exclusively to reserve by confrontation an area of prescriptive jurisdiction
shared concurrently by other nations. This assertion of interdictory
jurisdiction propels into the courts a controversy whose eventual termination
is restricted to two unsatisfactory alternatives: (1) either one state or the
other will eventually capitulate, sacrificing its legitimate interests, or (2)
a deadlock will occur to the eventual frustration of both the states
and the litigants interests. The underlying goal of the legislation
is apparently to compel the United States to cede its claims to regulate those
aspects of its domestic economy deemed objectionable by the United Kingdom.
However, the possibility of a cooperative, mutually profitable compromise by
all affected countries is [*955]
greatly restricted. Granting recognition to this form of coercion will only
retard the growth of international mechanisms necessary to resolve
satisfactorily the problems generated when radically divergent national
policies intersect in an area of concurrent jurisdiction. Rather
than legitimizing the interference and stultifying effects that would follow
widespread acceptance of interdictory jurisdiction, we prefer to permit
Lakers suit, based as it is on well recognized prescriptive
jurisdiction, to go forward as free as possible from the interference caused by
foreign antisuit injunctions. III.
CONCLUSION The
conflict in jurisdiction we confront today has been precipitated by the
attempts of another country to insulate its own business entities from the
necessity of complying with legislation of our country designed to protect this
countrys domestic policies. At the root of the conflict are the
fundamentally opposed policies of the United States and Great Britain regarding
the desirability, scope, and implementation of legislation controlling
anticompetitive and restrictive business practices. No
conceivable judicial disposition of this appeal would remove that underlying
conflict. Because of the potential deadlock that appears to be developing, the
ultimate question is not whether conflicting assertions of national interest
must be reconciled, but the proper forum of reconciliation. The resources of
the Judiciary are inherently limited when faced with an affirmative decision by
the political branches of the government to prescribe specific policies. Absent
an explicit directive from Congress, this court has neither the authority nor
the institutional resources to weigh the policy and political factors that must
be evaluated when resolving competing claims of jurisdiction. In contrast,
diplomatic and executive channels are, by definition, designed to exchange,
negotiate, and reconcile the problems which accompany the realization of
national interests within the sphere of international association.[176] These forums should and, we hope, will
be utilized to avoid or resolve conflicts caused by contradictory assertions of
concurrent prescriptive jurisdiction.[177] However,
in the absence of some emanation from the Executive Branch,[178] Lakers suit may go forward
against appellants. Laker seeks to recover for injuries it allegedly sustained
as a result of the defendants conduct in violation of United States
antitrust laws. The complaint alleges a conspiracy to drive out of business a
corporation permitted by United States treaty to operate within the United
States and conducting substantial business here. If Lakers
allegations are proved, the intended and actual effect in the United States are
[*956] clear since Laker, which was
carrying up to one out of every seven transatlantic passengers, was
subsequently forced into liquidation. Resolution of Lakers lawsuit
would further the interests protected under United States law, since American
creditors interests in open forums, and consumers interests
in free competition may be vindicated. Under
these circumstances, judicial precedent construing the prescriptive
jurisdiction of the United States antitrust laws unequivocally holds that the
antitrust laws unequivocally holds that the antitrust laws should be applied.
That jurisdiction is well within the bounds of reason imposed by international
law. Because the factual circumstances of this case made a preliminary injunction
imperative to preserve the courts jurisdiction, and because that
injunction is not proscribed by the principles of international comity, the
district court acted within its discretion. The
decision of the district court is therefore Affirmed.
STARR,
Circuit Judge, dissenting: It is
with reluctance that I am constrained to dissent, for there is much in the
majoritys thorough opinion with which I fully agree. The
majoritys opinion demonstrates persuasively that the jurisdictional
basis for Lakers action in the United States District Court is firmly
established under settled principles of United States and international law.
Judge Wilkeys scholarly analysis further demonstrates that it is not
at all unusual for a court vested with jurisdiction to issue appropriate orders
to vindicate that jurisdiction, even when such orders arrest the prosecution of
actions in the courts of another sovereign. But it
is my judgment that principles of comity among the courts of the international
community counsel strongly against the injunction in the form issued here. The
concept of comity of nations, a blend of courtesy and
expedience,[1] was defined by the Supreme Court in Hilton
v. Guyot as the recognition which one nation allows within its
territory to the legislative, executive or judicial acts of another nation,
having due regard both to international duty and convenience, and to the rights
of its own citizens or of other persons who are under the protection of its laws.
159 U.S. 113, 164, 16 S.
Ct. 139, 40 L. Ed. 95 (1895). The
difficulty in applying this open-ended idea stems from the fact that
comity, in the legal sense, is neither a matter
of absolute obligation, on the one hand, nor of mere courtesy and good will,
upon the other. Id. at 163-64. Few hard-and-fast rules or talismanic tests
are to be found. Nonetheless, it is clear that under appropriate circumstances,
United States courts will invoke the principle of comity in recognition of the
interests of another sovereign. In
light of these principles, it is important to note that this is, at bottom, a
private antitrust action filed in a United States court by a foreign litigant
against, among others, four United States corporate defendants. This is plainly
not an action informed with a public interest beyond that implicated by any
private litigant enforcing admittedly important congressionally granted rights.
Not only is the instant action not brought by the United States to vindicate
sovereign United States interests, but no evidence has been manifested of any
sovereign United States interest in the present suit. For whatever reason, and
I do not pretend to powers of divination as to why, the Executive has been
silent as to what, if any, public interests are touched by Lakers
antitrust suit. In
stark contrast, it is clear beyond cavil that the British Executive is
emphatically interested in this suit brought by a British subject in United
States courts. This sovereign interest articulated by representatives of Her
Majestys government, premised upon British disaffection for the
operation and reach of United States antitrust laws, is one that I cannot in
conscience [*957] reasonably
discount. After all, Laker is a British subject which carried on its operations
as a heavily regulated air carrier under United Kingdom law. Its routes to and
from the United States were established under the umbrella of the Bermuda II Treaty
between the United Kingdom and the United States. The United Kingdom thus
possesses a clear governmental interest in the activities of a now defunct but
once heavily regulated British concern. To be
sure, Lakers status as a British subject, without more, does not mean
that United States courts must unalterably bow to the rulings of British courts
in actions filed after the instant suit was in progress. The majority has
indeed persuasively demonstrated that no principle of paramount nationality
is recognized in international law. But I am persuaded that it is not at all
incompatible with our oath of office for United States judges to recognize the
practical reality that the United Kingdom may in fact ultimately have power to
prevent Lakers maintaining any United States antitrust action. And
the exercise of such a power should not automatically, without benefit of the
views of either the British or United States Executive, be deemed violative of
United States public policy. For it seems to me that, while the facts of the
case are indeed distinguishable, the spirit of the Supreme Courts
ruling in Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453
U.S. 654, 69 L. Ed. 2d 918, 101 S. Ct. 2972 (1981), suggests strongly that
a sovereign government can prohibit one of its nationals from proceeding in a
particular forum, and indeed can require actions to be brought in a specific
forum which may not at all be to the citizens liking. It would
appear, albeit from a vantage point from which I confess the players and
movements can be perceived only dimly, that the British Executive is moving
toward the exercise of precisely the power recognized unanimously as to the
Presidency by the United States Supreme Court in Dames & Moore. Admittedly,
Dames & Moore was grounded upon the Presidents foreign relations
power, and evidenced the United States judiciarys appropriate and
understandable reluctance to take actions that would disrupt or unwind the
foreign policy actions of the Executive, particularly in connection with a
matter of such moment as the implementation of accords effecting the
extrication of American hostages from Tehran. Here, in contrast, the British
Executive appears to be proceeding not from the compelling circumstances of a
hostage crisis but from its antipathy toward United States antitrust laws. But
it is, in my judgment, not for me to say whether the British
Executives attitude in this respect is reasonable or unreasonable.
With all respect to the majority, I am not endowed with sufficient knowledge or
information on the limited record before us to pass judgment on the British
views that my brethren find so distasteful. It may be that the application of
United States antitrust laws under the circumstances of Lakers
transatlantic traffic is eminently sound and reasonable under principles
governing the regulation of trade that is both within and beyond national
borders. But todays decision will not settle the raging debate across
the Atlantic, and indeed throughout much of the industrialized world, about the
application of domestic United States law. The
injunction sustained today is, I am thus constrained to conclude, unduly
sweeping in light of considerations of comity. To be sure, as the majority
quite properly notes, KLM and Sabena failed to avail themselves of the District
Courts invitation for suggestions to narrow the injuctions
sweep. But failure to seek a narrowing of the order, while reducing the foreign
airlines equities in this court, does not end the issue for me. We
take the injunction as we find it, and it cannot reasonably be maintained that
the foreign airlines have waived any objection to the order. Indeed, Laker does
not so argue, and the majority quite rightly does not ground its result on any
such principle. And so
we face the injunction itself. By its terms, the District Courts
order quite literally forbids the foreign airlines from entering any court in
the world, including [*958] courts
of their own respective nations, to contest Lakers right to maintain
the instant action. This approach, fashioned under the strain of critical
moments when it reasonably appeared to the learned trial judge that jurisdiction
over important defendants might irrevocably be lost, is simply too broad to
sustain, in light of the countervailing considerations of comity among nations.[2] Thus,
I would favor vacating the present injunction and remanding the case to the
District Court for consideration of narrowing its order. The District Court
might well decide to enjoin KLM and Sabena only from seeking countersuit
injunctive relief pendente lite in the English courts, thus allowing them to
follow the example of Lufthansa and Swissair in bringing declaratory judgment
actions. This would allow two or more related actions
Lakers antitrust suit and the foreign defendants
declaratory judgment action in foreign court to proceed simultaneously,
without any direct interference from the other sovereigns courts.
This type of injunction seems clearly preferable on comity grounds.[3] A
foreign court would thus be allowed to adjudicate the status of the parties
before it under that nations laws and regulatory provisions,
including any applicable aviation treaties. If both the United States and
foreign actions proceeded to judgment, choice of law questions would likely be
presented in the execution of the judgments and would be considered at that
stage of the litigation. However, several developments in this matter could
moot this potential conflict, including a negotiated settlement of the
inter-governmental dispute over the scope and applicability of United States
antitrust laws; a decision against Laker on the merits in the United States
District Court; or a judicial decision against the foreign defendants in the
foreign court. A narrow injunction would thus preserve the possibility that the
ultimate conflict-of-laws questions would be mooted, either through diplomatic
channels or a defeat either for Laker or the foreign airlines in their
respective actions. The narrower injunction would result in substantially less
interference with foreign courts, with no surrender of the
jurisdiction of the United States over Lakers antitrust claims. I
would further suggest that in the exercise of its sound discretion the District
Court invite the Executive to present the views of the United States. Those
views might well have an important bearing upon the extent of the sovereign
interests of the United States, if any, in this action.[4]
A
tempest has been brewing for some time among the nations as to the reach of
this countries antitrust laws, and todays decision strikes a strong
blow in favor of what will be viewed by many of our friends and allies as a
rather parochial American outlook. But whether that blow is well conceived, it
is, with all respect, at tension with the orderly operation of our two
nations respective judicial systems. As both the majority and the
District Court recognize, [*959] it
is serious business to issue an injunction against proceedings in a sister
nation. This is most keenly true with respect to a nation from which we
inherited so much of our legal system. Inasmuch as only extraordinary reasons
justify the issuance of such an injunction, I would remand the case to the
District Court for further proceedings aimed at narrowing the injunction,
consistent with the principles of comity that inform the seemly accommodation
of sharply divergent and competing national interests. [1] The appeal of the preliminary
injunction at this early stage of the proceedings has not permitted either
findings of fact by the district court or a thorough development of the factual
underpinnings of Lakers antitrust action. [2] Appendix of Record Excerpts
Submitted on Behalf of Appellants Sabena and KLM at Tab 5 [hereinafter cited as
RE]; Brief of Appellant KLM Royal Dutch Airlines at 5, 6. [3] Agreement Between the Government
of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland Concerning Air Services, 23 July 1977, 28
U.S.T. 5367, T.I.A.S. No. 8641. [hereinafter cited as Bermuda II Treaty]. [4] Protection of
Trading Interests Act, 1980, ch. 11, reproduced at RE Tab 9, supra note
2. [5] RE Tab 1, supra note 2. [6] Laker Airways Ltd. v. Pan American
World Airways, 559 F. Supp. 1124 (D.D.C. 1983) [hereinafter cited as District
Court Op.]. [7] RE Tab 1, supra note 2. [8] District Court Op., 559 F. Supp.
at 1139 n. 63. [9] Laker Airways Ltd. v. Pan American
World Airways, 568 F. Supp. 811 (D.D.C. 1983). [10] British Airways Board v. Laker
Airways Ltd., [1983] 3
W.L.R. 545, 549 [hereinafter cited as High Court Judgment], reproduced at
Appendix to Memorandum as to Status of English Proceedings at Tab 5
[hereinafter cited as App.]. [11] Id. at 568. [12] See supra note 4. [13] Id. §§ 1, 2, 4, 5, 6. [14] App. Tab 6, supra note 10. [15] British Airways Board v. Laker
Airways Ltd., [1983] 3 W.L.R. 545, 573, 591, reproduced at App. Tab 5, supra note 10
[hereinafter cited as Court of Appeal Judgment]. [16] App. Tab 7, supra note 10. [17] On 10 November 1983 the House of
Lords granted Lakers petitions for leave to appeal the judgment of
the Court of Appeal. This appeal is currently pending. [18] The four American defendants, who
were also enjoined by the district court, have not appealed the decision. [19] M. MCDOUGAL & W. REISMAN,
INTERNATIONAL LAW IN CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVE 1295 (1981). [20] See, e.g., United States v.
Mitchell, 553 F.2d 996, 1001 (5th Cir. 1977); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF THE
FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW OF THE UNITED STATES § 38 (1965) [hereinafter cited as RESTATEMENT (SECOND)]. [21] See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF THE
FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW OF THE UNITED STATES § 17 (1965); RESTATEMENT OF THE FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW OF THE
UNITED STATES (REVISED) §
402(1)(a), (b) (Tentative Draft No. 2) (1981) [hereinafter cited as
RESTATEMENT (REVISED)]. [22] Federal Trade Commn v.
Compagnie de Saint-Gobain-Pont-A-Mousson, 205 U.S. App. D.C. 172, 636 F.2d
1300, 1316 (D.C. Cir. 1980); United States v. Fernandez, 496 F.2d 1294 (5th
Cir. 1974); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 18(b), supra note 20; RESTATEMENT (REVISED) § 402(1)(c) (Tentative Draft No. 2),
supra note 21. [23] See Steele v. Bulova Watch Co., 344 U.S. 280, 97 L. Ed. 319, 73 S. Ct. 252
(1952); Blackmer v. United States, 284
U.S. 421,
76 L. Ed. 375, 52 S. Ct. 252 (1932); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 30(1)(a), supra note 20; RESTATEMENT
(REVISED) § 402(2)
(Tentative Draft No. 2), supra note 20. [24] The exercise of prescriptive
jurisdiction is, however, subject to the limits of a states
jurisdiction to adjudicate and to enforce its regulations. See, e.g., Federal
Trade Commn v. Compagnie de Saint-Gobain-Pont-A-Mousson, 205 U.S.
App. D.C. 172, 636 F.2d 1300, 1316-17 (D.C. Cir. 1980). [25] See RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 37, § 30 Comment c, supra note 20. [26] See, e.g., United States v.
Aluminum Co. of Am., 148 F.2d 416 (2d Cir. 1945); Strassheim v. Daily, 221 U.S. 280, 285, 55 L. Ed. 735, 31 S. Ct. 558
(1911); Deutsche Lufthansa Aktiengesellschaft v. Civil Aeronautics Board, 156
U.S. App. D.C. 191, 479 F.2d 912, 917 n.9 (D.C. Cir. 1973); Pacific Seafarers Inc.
v. Pacific Far East Line, Inc., 131 U.S. App. D.C. 226, 404 F.2d 804, 814-15
(D.C. Cir. 1968), cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1093, 21 L. Ed. 2d 784, 89 S. Ct. 872
(1969); Case of the S.S. Lotus, [1927] P.C.I.J., Ser. A.,
No. 10 at 18, 2 M. Hudson, World Court Reports 20. [27] See RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 18 Illustration 2,
supra note 20. [28] See, e.g., United States v.
Fernandez, 496 F.2d 1294 (5th Cir. 1974) (conviction for possessing, uttering,
and forging, in a foreign territory, United States Treasury checks which had
been stolen in the United States). [29] See RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 403(1) (Tentative Draft
No. 2), supra note 21. [30] See, e.g.,
Extraterritoriality and Conflicts of Jurisdiction, U.S.
Department of State Current Policy Bulletin No. 481 (15 April 1983). [31] See Rahl, International
Application of American Antitrust Laws: Issues and Proposals, 2 N.W. J.
INTL L. & BUS. 336, 341 (1980); Picciotto, Jurisdictional
Conflicts, International Law and the International State System, 11
INTL J. SOC. L. 11, 14-15 (1983). [32] These forums include, at least,
the Federal Republic of German, Austria, and the European Economic Community.
See Gerber, The Extraterritorial Application of the German Antitrust Laws, 77
AM. J. INTL L. 756 (1983); Rahl, International Application of
American Antitrust Laws: Issues and Proposals, 2 N.W. J. INTL L. 336,
340-41 (1980). [33] Laker alleges that acts in
furtherance of the unlawful conspiracy occurred at the IATA meeting at
Hollywood, Florida in 1981. Complaint para. 22, Civil Action No. 83-0416
(D.D.C. 1983), reproduced at RE Tab 3, supra note 2. Additionally, secret
commissions may have been paid to travel agents within the United States to
divert business away from Laker. Complaint para. 28, Civil Action No. 82-3362
(D.D.C. 1982), reproduced at App. Tab 5 p. 592, supra note 10. [34] See Pfizer Inc. v. India, 434 U.S. 308, 314, 54 L. Ed. 2d 563, 98 S. Ct.
584 (1978). [35] Oral Argument Tr. at 32. See also
UNITED STATES DEPT OF TRANSPORTATION, RESEARCH & SPECIAL PROGRAMS
ADMIN., U.S. INTL AIR TRAVEL STATISTICS, Table IIa at 2, 3; Table IId
at 2, 3; Table IIIa at 55-57; Table IIId at 46-48; Table IV at 1, 10, 14
(1982). [36] Laker Br. at 4. [37] See id. at 5. [38] See Protocol Relating to United
States-Netherlands Air Transport Agreement of 1957, 31 March 1978, art. 8(c),
29 U.S.T. 3088, 3098, T.I.A.S. No. 8998 [hereinafter cited as United
States-Netherlands Air Transport Treaty]; Protocol Relating to the United
States of America-Federal Republic of Germany Air Transport Agreement of 1955,
1 November 1978, arts. 8(c), 9(a), 30 U.S.T. 7323, 7340, T.I.A.S. No. 9591
[hereinafter cited as United States-Germany Air Transport Treaty]. The British
Government apparently recognizes this as a general rule, although it argues
that immunity from United States antitrust laws follows under the Bermuda II
Treaty and that application of those laws is inherently limited by territorial
sovereignty. Partially in response to representations by counsel for the
British Attorney-General that Her Majestys Government has
consistently taken the position that British Enterprises engaged in
transnational business operations should comply with the laws and governmental
policies of the countries in which they transact business, Justice
Parker stated: I would regard it as being inherent in the grant of
permission to operate in the United States that the designated airlines comply
with United States [antitrust] law. See High Court Judgment at 564,
568, supra note 10. This position was qualified by the Court of Appeal. See
Court of Appeal Judgment at 583-84, supra note 15. [39] See Foreign Sovereign Immunities
Act, 28 U.S.C. §§
1602-1611 (1976); Agreement Providing for Nonassertion of Sovereign
Immunity from Suit of Air Transport Enterprises, United States-Netherlands, 19
June 1953, 4 U.S.T. 1610, T.I.A.S. No. 2828. [40] Cf. William Becker Travel Bureau,
Inc. v. Sabena Belgian World Airways, 13 Av. Cas. (CCH) 17,1770 (S.D.N.Y. 1975)
(Sabena subject to nondiscrimination provisions of Federal Aviation Act, 49
U.S.C. § 1374(b) (1976)). [41] See, e.g., Pfizer Inc. v. India, 434 U.S. 308, 54 L. Ed. 2d 563, 98 S. Ct. 584
(1978). Cf. British Overseas Airways Corp. v. Civil Aeronautics Board, 113 U.S.
App. D.C. 76, 304 F.2d 952 (D.C. Cir. 1962) (action brought by, inter alia, KLM
and Sabena seeking review of proposed regulations). [42] See Teasdale v. Robinson, 290 F.2d
108, 114 (8th Cir. 1961) (fiduciary obligations of corporate officers to
creditors are enforceable by the trustee in bankruptcy); 4 COLLIER ON
BANKRUPTCY para. 704.02 (L. King 15th ed. 1983). Cf. Landy v. Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp., 486 F.2d 139, 148 (3d Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 416 U.S. 960,
40 L. Ed. 2d 312, 94 S. Ct. 1979 (1974) (stockholder free to initiate
derivative action when receiver refuses to initiate suit necessary for
protection of creditors). [43] United States v. Aluminum Co. of
Am., 148 F.2d 416 (2d Cir. 1945). See also RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 415 (2), supra note 21:
Any agreement in restraint of
United States trade made outside of the United States, and any conduct or
agreement in restraint of such trade carried out predominantly outside of the
United States, is subject to the jurisdiction to prescribe of the United
States, if a principal purpose of the conduct or agreement is to interfere with
the commerce of the United States, and the agreement or conduct has some effect
on that commerce. (Tentative Draft No. 2). [44] See infra p. 934. [45] See Br. of Appellant Sabena at 9. [46] See RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 27, & id. Comment
a, supra note 20. [47] See, e.g., Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U.S. 107, 33 L. Ed. 538, 10 S. Ct. 269
(1890). Cf. Dames & Moore v. Regan, 453
U.S. 654,
69 L. Ed. 2d 918, 101 S. Ct. 2972 (1981). [48] Colorado River Water Conservancy
Dist. v. United States, 424
U.S. 800,
817, 96 S. Ct. 1236, 47 L. Ed. 2d 483 (1976); Princess Lida of Thurn &
Taxis v. Thompson, 305
U.S. 456,
466, 83 L. Ed. 285, 59 S. Ct. 275 (1939); Kline v. Burke Const. Co., 260 U.S. 226, 230, 67 L. Ed. 226, 43 S. Ct. 79
(1922); Insurance Co. v. Brunes Assignee, 96 U.S. 588, 24 L. Ed. 737 (1877). However,
proceedings in rem are usually restricted to one forum. See Princess Lida of
Thurn & Taxis v. Thompson, 305
U.S. 456,
83 L. Ed. 285, 59 S. Ct. 275 (1939). [49] See, e.g., Bryant v. Atlantic
Coast Line R.R., 92 F.2d 569 (2d Cir. 1937); Blanchard v. Commonwealth Oil Co.,
294 F.2d 834, 839 (5th Cir. 1961). The rules against anti-suit
injunctions are more relaxed when the injunction runs against concurrent
litigation within a single forum. In this situation respect for a co-equal
sovereigns jurisdiction is not implicated and is more easily out
-weighed by the economies achieved through avoidance of duplicative actions. See
Colorado River Water Conservancy Dist. v. United States, 424 U.S. 800, 817, 96 S.
Ct. 1236, 47 L. Ed. 2d 483 (1976); Roth v. Bank of the Commonwealth, 583 F.2d
527, 538 (6th Cir. 1978). When both actions involve the same parties, issues,
and underlying transactions the court whose jurisdiction was first invoked may
be justified in restraining litigants from prosecuting subsequently filed suits
within the same court system. Failure to distinguish between the different
policies informing the discretion to issue intercourt and intracourt
injunctions may suggest an inappropriate rule. See, e.g., Western Electric Co.
v. Milgo Electronic Corp., 450 F. Supp. 835, 837 (S.D. Fla. 1978) (relying on
federal intracourt cases in denying injunctive relief against foreign action).
In the intercourt context, similarity of the actions alone should not justify
an injunction. See supra note 48. [50] See, e.g., Compagnie des Bauxites
de Guinea v. Insurance Co. of N. Am., 651 F.2d 877, 887 (3d Cir. 1981),
affd on other grounds, 456 U.S. 694, 72 L. Ed. 2d
492, 102 S. Ct. 2099 (1982); Canadian Filters (Harwich) Ltd. v. Lear-Siegler,
Inc., 412 F.2d 577, 578 (1st Cir. 1969). [51] Peck v. Jenness, 48 U.S. 612, 624-25 (1849). [52] See, e.g., 28 U.S.C.
§ 2283: A court
of the United States may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State
court except as expressly authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary in
aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments.
(emphasis added). This limitation on the authority of the federal courts to
enjoin state courts effectuates the strong policies of comity and mutual
respect that limit the discretion of courts to interfere with concurrent
proceedings. These policies, which find such compelling expression in ordering
the intranational affairs of our dual court system, apply a fortiori to injunctions
affecting the exercise of jurisdiction in foreign countries. Canadian Filters
(Harwich) Ltd. v. Lear-Siegler, Inc., 412 F.2d 577, 578 (1st Cir. 1969). [53] There is less justification for
permitting a second action after a prior court has reached a judgment on the
same issues. The parallel proceeding rule applies only until one court reaches
a judgment that may be pled as res judicata in the other. Princess Lida of
Thurn & Taxis v. Thompson, 305 U.S. 456, 466, 83 L.
Ed. 285, 59 S. Ct. 275 (1939). [54] See Bethell v. Peace, 441 F.2d 495
(5th Cir. 1971); Scott v. Hunt Oil Co., 398 F.2d 810 (5th Cir. 1968). Since res
judicata and collateral estoppel may be pled in subsequent actions, a showing
of harassment, bad faith, or other strong equitable circumstances should
ordinarily be required. Cf. Donovan v. Dallas, 377 U.S. 408, 411-12, 12
L. Ed. 2d 409, 84 S. Ct. 1579 (1964) (state court improperly enjoined
litigants suit in federal court after adverse state court judgment
since plea of res judicata was for second forum, not first forum, to
determine); C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER & E. COOPER, 17 FEDERAL PRACTICE &
PROCEDURE § 4226 at 346-50
(1978). [55] See, e.g., Seattle Totems Hockey
Club, Inc. v. National Hockey League, 652 F.2d 852, 856 (9th Cir. 1981), cert.
denied, 457 U.S. 1105, 102 S. Ct. 2902, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1313 (1982); Cargill, Inc.
v. Hartford Accid. & Indem. Co., 531 F. Supp. 710, 715 (D. Minn. 1982);
Medtronic, Inc. v. Catalyst Research Corp., 518 F. Supp. 946 (D. Minn.),
affd, 664 F.2d 660 (8th Cir. 1981). [56] Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno, 454 U.S. 235, 258-61, 70
L. Ed. 2d 419, 102 S. Ct. 252 (1981); Pain v. United Technologies Corp., 205
U.S. App. D.C. 229, 637 F.2d 775, 786-94 (D.C. Cir. 1980). [57] Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinea
v. Insurance Co. of N. Am., 651 F.2d 877, 887 (3d Cir. 1981), affd on
other grounds, 456 U.S. 694,
72 L. Ed. 2d 492, 102 S. Ct. 2099 (1982). See also Kline v. Burke Const. Co., 260 U.S. 226, 233, 67 L.
Ed. 226, 43 S. Ct. 79 (1922); Atlantic Coast Line R.R. Co. v. Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers, 398
U.S. 281, 295, 26 L. Ed. 2d 234, 90 S. Ct. 1739 (1970) (where two courts
have concurrent jurisdiction neither is ordinarily free to prevent either party
from simultaneously pursuing claims in both courts). However, where so many actions have
been commenced that there is no advantage to be gained from the multiple
actions other than harassment and attrition, circumstances may justify an
injunction. See Sperry Rand Corp. v. Sunbeam Corp., 285 F.2d 542 (7th Cir.
1960) (dissolving an anti-suit injunction when the domestic action would not
resolve the issues raised in the foreign proceeding and there was no evidence
of harassment); Commercial Acetylene Co. v. Avery Portable Lighting Co., 152 F.
642, 647 (E.D. Wis. 1906), affd, 159 F. 935 (7th Cir. 1908) (the
court may prevent oppression through multiple suits brought for
commercial advantage rather than honest adjudication). Even
in this situation, deference to the foreign proceedings is still an important
factor to be considered. Id. at 647-48 (enjoining commencement of further
patent infringement suits against purchasers when one action against manufacturer
would resolve the issue of validity of the patent, but requiring the movant to
apply for a stay in ten previously filed federal infringement actions instead
of enjoining those actions). [58] See supra note 55. [59] Colorado River Water Conservancy
Dist. v. United States, 424
U.S. 800, 817, 96 S. Ct. 1236, 47 L. Ed. 2d 483 (1976); Compagnie des
Bauxites de Guinea v. Insurance Co. of N. Am., 651 F.2d 877, 887 (3d Cir.
1981), affd on other grounds, 456 U.S. 694, 72 L. Ed. 2d
492, 102 S. Ct. 2099 (1982). Cf. C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER & E. COOPER, 17
FEDERAL PRACTICE & PROCEDURE § 4225 at 336 (1978) (The necessary in aid of its
jurisdiction exception of 28 U.S.C. § 2283 does not allow a federal
court to enjoin state proceedings merely because they to enjoin state
proceedings to protect a judgment that involve issues presented in a federal in
personam action.). Similarly, permitting the protection or
effectuation of judgments under 28 U.S.C. § 2283 does not allow a federal court to enjoin state
proceedings to protect a judgment that the federal court may make in
the future but has not yet made. C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER & E.
COOPER, 17 FEDERAL PRACTICE & PROCEDURE § 4226 at 345 (1978). [60] See supra note 53. [61] Tahan v. Hodgson, 213 U.S. App.
D.C. 306, 662 F.2d 862, 864 (D.C. Cir. 1981). [62] Id. [63] For example, the chronological
order in which concurrent in personam suits are filed is often cited as a
controlling factor. E.g., Gage v. Riverside Trust Co., 86 F. 984 (S.D. Cal.
1898). Taken literally, a general rule permitting the earlier filed action to
enjoin all subsequent actions would destroy the principle of concurrent
jurisdiction. Cf. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinea v. Insurance Corp. of N.
Am., 651 F.2d 877, 887 (3d Cir. 1981), affd on other grounds, 456 U.S. 694, 72 L. Ed. 2d
492, 102 S. Ct. 2099 (1982) (injunction refused despite delay of four years in
commencing foreign action). However, when substantial time has elapsed between
the commencement of the two actions, laches or similar equitable principles
make it more appropriate to enjoin the second action. See Seattle Totems Hockey
Club, Inc. v. National Hockey League, 652 F.2d 852, 855 (9th Cir. 1981), cert.
denied, 457 U.S. 1105, 102 S. Ct. 2902, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1313 (1982); United
Cigarette Mach. Co. v. Wright, 156 F. 244 (E.D. N.C. 1907), affd, 193
F. 1023 (4th Cir. 1912). Cf. Saeman v. Everest & Jennings, Inc., 343 F.
Supp. 457, 461-62 (N.D. Ill. 1972) (action stayed pending foreign proceeding
filed three years earlier). [64] See James v. Grand Trunk Western
R.R. Co., 14 Ill. 2d 356, 152 N.E.2d 858, cert. denied, 358 U.S. 915, 3 L. Ed.
2d 239, 79 S. Ct. 288 (1958). Compliance with interlocutory orders may be
protected from foreign interference as well. Omnium Lyonnais
DEtancheite et Revetement Asphalte v. Dow Chemical Co., 441 F. Supp.
1385 (C.D. Cal. 1977) (enjoining use of discovery materials in foreign
proceedings in violation of terms of domestic discovery order). [65] See, e.g., Hyafill v. Buffalo
Marine Const. Co., 266 F. 553 (W.D. N.Y. 1919). Cf. State ex rel., General
Dynamics Corp. v. Luten, 566 S.W.2d 452 (Mo. 1978) (injunction reversed on
grounds, inter alia, that party had not demonstrated that the foreign court
could not do full justice). [66] See, e.g., High Court Judgment at
568, supra note 10, where Justice Parker stated it is common ground
that if Lakers are allowed to pursue the American action B.A.s and
B.C.s actions should be stayed or dismissed. They would serve no
useful purpose and would merely involve both sides in unnecessary
expense. [67] Oral Argument Tr. at 17, 19. [68] See District Court Op., 559 F.
Supp. at 1139 n. 63. [69] Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U.S. 107, 122-23, 33
L. Ed. 538, 10 S. Ct. 269 (1890); Seattle Totems Hockey Club, Inc. v. National
Hockey League, 652 F.2d 852, 855 (9th Cir. 1981); Canadian Filters (Harwich)
Ltd. v. Lear-Siegler, Inc., 412 F.2d 577, 578-79 (1st Cir. 1969). See also 1A
(Part 2) J. MOORE, W. TAGGART, A. VESTAL & J. WICKER, MOOREs
FEDERAL PRACTICE para..204 (1982) (a court may enjoin a party from
pursuing litigation in another court which circumscribes the policy of the
forum issuing the injunction). [70] See Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U.S. 113, 164-65, 40
L. Ed. 95, 16 S. Ct. 139 (1895); Tahan v. Hodgson, 213 U.S. App. D.C. 306, 662
F.2d 862, 864 (D.C. Cir. 1981); Sangiovanni Hernandez v. Dominicana de Aviacion
C. Por A., 556 F.2d 611, 614 (1st Cir. 1977); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONFLICT
OF LAWS § 117 Comment c
(1971). [71] The specific reason for refusing
recognition on public policy grounds may vary. In foreign judgment cases,
enforcement is denied because the judgment is predicated on laws repugnant to
the domestic forums conception of decency and justice. In the context
of anti-suit injunctions, deference to the foreign proceeding may be denied
because of the litigants unconscionable evasion of the domestic laws,
and not necessarily because of the inherent obnoxiousness of the forum laws to
which the litigant has resorted. [72] Only in clear-cut cases
ought it to avail defendant. Tahan v. Hodgson, 213 U.S. App. D.C.
306, 662 F.2d 862, 866 n. 17 (D.C. Cir. 1981). See also RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
CONFLICT OF LAWS § 117
Comment c (1971). [73] Courts split when identifying
those circumstances in which instituting a foreign proceeding constitutes an
enjoinable evasion of forum law and policy. The experience of the state courts,
where the principle has been more often applied, gives no clear-cut rule. When
the primary purpose of the foreign action is to avoid the regulatory effect of
the domestic forums statutes, then an injunction is more readily
issued. See, e.g., Hoover Realty Co. v. American Inst. of Mktg. Syss., Inc., 24
Mich. App. 12, 179 N.W.2d 683 (1970); Sandage v. Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co., 142
Ind. 148, 41 N.E. 380 (1895). On the other hand, merely seeking a remedy not
available in the domestic forum may be proper. Tabor & Co. v. McNall, 30
Ill. App. 3d 593, 333 N.E.2d 562 (1975); Lederle v. United Services Auto.
Assn, 394 S.W.2d 31 (Tex. Civ. App. 1965), vacated on other grounds,
400 S.W.2d 749 (Texas 1966) (injunction not ordinarily granted merely to
prevent the invocation of more favorable law unless an actual evasion of the
substantive law of the domicile will result). The standard of unfair
or unconscionable advantage is employed by other courts. Keisker v.
Bush, 210 Ky. 718, 276 S.W. 815 (1925). The only guideline which emerges is
the necessity of evaluating the merits of each claim in light of the particular
equitable circumstances surrounding the dual litigation. It should be clear
that the availability of slight advantages in the substantive or procedural law
to be applied in the foreign court does not signify an actionable evasion of
domestic public policy. See Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno, 454 U.S. 235, 70 L. Ed. 2d
419, 102 S. Ct. 252 (1981). An impermissible evasion is much more likely to be
found when the party attempts to elude compliance with a statute of specific
applicability upon which the party seeking an injunction may have relied, and
which is designed to effectuate important state policies. [74] United States v. Topco Associates,
Inc., 405 U.S. 596,
610, 31 L. Ed. 2d 515, 92 S. Ct. 1126 (1972). [75] The specific terms of this treaty,
upon which British Caledonian and British Airways rely to establish their
purported immunity from United States antitrust laws, remains unclear. Although
the British Government interprets the treaty as conferring immunity, there are
no express provisions to this effect. The United States Government has not
acceded to this interpretation. Moreover, as the United Kingdom courts
recognize, the alleged attempts to interfere with Lakers refinancing
arrangements fall outside of the range of tariff setting activities that would
be immunized by the Bermuda II Treaty. See Court of Appeal Judgment at 589,
supra note 15 (holding that the refinancing allegations could not proceed
independently of the other claims on the ground that the refinancing
allegations did not state an independent claim, but not that they were immune
under the Bermuda II Treaty); High Court Judgment at 566, supra note 10. [76] Air Transport Agreement Between
the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Belgium,
23 Oct. 1980, art. 12, T.I.A.S. No. 9903 [hereinafter cited as United
States-Belgium Air Transport Treaty]. [77] United States-Netherlands Air
Transport Treaty at art. 6, 29 U.S.T. at 3095, supra note 38. [78] United States-Germany Air
Transport Treaty at art. 6, 30 U.S.T. at 7334, supra note 38. [79] E.g., Seattle Totems Hockey Club,
Inc. v. National Hockey League, 652 F.2d 852, 855 (9th Cir. 1981), cert.
denied, 457 U.S. 1105, 102 S. Ct. 2902, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1313 (1982); PPG
Industries, Inc. v. Continental Oil Co., 492 S.W.2d 297 (Tex. Civ. App. 1973). [80] Br. for Appellant Sabena at 15. [81] Comity teaches that the sweep of
the injunction should be no broader than necessary to avoid the harm on which
the injunction is predicated. No injunction should be entered at all when less
intrusive measures would redress the injury caused by evasion of the public
policies. Thus, although our counterparts on the United Kingdom courts may
disagree, the English injunctions against Laker cannot be justified as
necessary to prevent Lakers evasion of Britains important
public policy of avoiding foreign remedies that could damage British trading
interests. The British injunction is not an anti-suit injunction designed to
protect their jurisdiction to proceed with the case. Rather, its only purpose
is to destroy the United States District Courts jurisdiction. This harsh result is entirely
unwarranted. Even though we do not approve of them, the terms of the British
Protection of Trading Interest Act authorize post judgment sanctions, repayment
of litigation costs and damages, and even repayment of judgments. In addition,
Laker is subject to criminal sanctions and fines if it violates the
Acts prohibitions. These powerful mechanisms appear to be more than
adequate to protect whatever British economic interests the Secretary of State
determines are adversely affected. [82] Blanchard v. Commonwealth Oil Co.,
294 F.2d 834 (5th Cir. 1961). [83] Doyle v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co.,
55 F.2d 708 (D. Minn. 1932). See also British Transport Commn v.
United States, 354 U.S. 129,
142, 1 L. Ed. 2d 1234, 77 S. Ct. 1103 (1957) (an injunction against
suits being filed in foreign jurisdictions would be ineffective unless comity
required its recognition). Cf. State ex rel. Bossung v. District
Court, 140 Minn. 494, 168 N.W. 589 (1918) (lower courts stay of
proceeding due to foreign anti-suit injunction reversed for abuse of
discretion). [84] Comity is the usual basis for
staying the domestic action due to a foreign anti-suit injunction. However,
comity does not apply to the appeal of KLM and Sabena. See infra part II. D. [85] James v. Grand Trunk Western R.R.
Co., 14 Ill. 2d 356, 152 N.E.2d 858, cert. denied, 358 U.S. 915, 3 L. Ed. 2d
239, 79 S. Ct. 288 (1958) (counterinjunction granted). But see Bryant v.
Atlantic Coast Line R.R., 92 F.2d 569 (2d Cir. 1937) (counterinjunction
denied). [86] See Pacific Employers Ins. Co. v.
Industrial Accid. Commn, 306 U.S. 493, 83 L. Ed.
940, 59 S. Ct. 629 (1939). [87] Sabena Br. at 12 (emphasis added). [88] Oral Argument Tr. at 14-15. [89] Br. of Amici Curiae at 12
(footnote omitted). [90] See RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 402 Comment b
(Tentative Draft No. 2), supra note 21; RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 30 Comment b, supra note 20. [91] RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 37, supra note 20; id.
§ 39 Comment b, at 112.
In most situations international law does not provide for choosing among competing
bases of jurisdiction to prescribe conduct. Id. It follows that no single base
is inherently superior to any other, as appellants assert. [92] RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 30 Comment c, supra
note 20. [93] See, e.g., RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 40, supra note 20;
RESTATEMENT (REVISED) §
403 (Tentative Draft No. 2), supra note 21. [94] E.g., Pacific Employers Ins. Co.
v. Industrial Accid. Commn, 306 U.S. 493, 83 L. Ed.
940, 59 S. Ct. 629 (1939) (Massachusetts not entitled to exclusive jurisdiction
over workers compensation claim of Massachusetts resident-employee); Case of
the S.S. Lotus, (1927) P.C.I.J., Ser. A., No. 10 at 18, 2
M. Hudson, World Court Reports 20 (France not entitled to exclusive
jurisdiction over prosecution of allegedly negligent French vessel operator). [95] See Br. of Appellant Sabena at 16
n.1. [96] See Davidow, Extraterritorial
Antitrust and the Concept of Comity, 15 J. WORLD TRADE L. 500, 508 (1981). [97] District Court Op., 559 F. Supp.
at 1132. [98] Davidow, Extraterritorial
Antitrust and the Concept of Comity, 15 J. WORLD TRADE L. 500, 508 (1981). [99] P. BLUMBERG, THE LAW OF CORPORATE
GROUPS § 20.02 (1983). [100] United States-Belgium Air
Transport Treaty at art. 11(2), supra note 76. [101] See United States-Netherlands Air
Transport Treaty at arts. 5, 6, 29 U.S.T. at 3094-95, supra note 38. [102] See Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U.S. 113, 164-65, 40
L. Ed. 95, 16 S. Ct. 139 (1895). [103] See Maier, Extraterritorial
Jurisdiction at a Crossroads: An Intersection Between Public and Private
International Law, 76 AM. J. INTL L. 280, 283 (1982). [104] See Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U.S. 113, 164, 40 L.
Ed. 95, 16 S. Ct. 139 (1895); Maier, Extraterritorial Jurisdiction at a
Crossroads: An Intersection Between Public and Private International Law, 76
AM. J. INTL 280, 282 (1982) (quoting U. HUBER, DE CONFLICTU LEGUM).
In his classic COMMENTARIES ON THE CONFLICT OF LAWS 30, 32-33 (1834) (Arno
Press ed. 1972), Joseph Story also recognized that foreign laws ought to be
given force in domestic forums only so far as they do not prejudice
the power or right of other governments, or of their citizens. This
principle, he stated, seems
irresistibly to flow from the right and duty of every nation to protect its own
subjects against injuries resulting from the unjust and prejudicial influence
of foreign laws; and to refuse its aid to carry into effect any foreign laws,
which are repugnant to its own interests and polity. It is difficult to conceive, upon
what ground a claim can be rested, to give any municipal laws an
extraterritorial effect, when those laws are prejudicial to the rights of other
nations, or their subjects. It would at once annihilate the sovereignty and
equality of the nations, which should be called upon to recognize and enforce
them; or compel them to desert their own proper interest and duty in favor of
strangers, who were regardless of both. A claim, so naked of principle and
authority to support it, is wholly inadmissible. See also id. at 37. [105] E.g., Tahan v. Hodgson, 213 U.S.
App. D.C. 306, 662 F.2d 862, 864, 866 (D.C. Cir. 1981); Clarkson Co., Ltd. v.
Shaheen, 544 F.2d 624, 629 (2d Cir. 1976); Somportex Ltd. v. Philadelphia
Chewing Gum Corp., 453
F.2d 435, 440 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 405 U.S. 1017, 31 L. Ed. 2d 479, 92
S. Ct. 1294 (1971); Kenner Prods. Co. v. Societe Fonciere et Financiere
Agache-Willot, 532 F. Supp. 478, 479; Sumitomo Corp. v. Parakopi Compania
Maratima, S.A., 477 F. Supp. 737, 742 (S.D. N.Y. 1979), affd, 620
F.2d 286 (2d Cir. 1980); Duplan Corp. v. Deering Milliken, Inc., 397 F. Supp.
1146 (D.S.C. 1975). [106] Pacific Seafarers, Inc. v. Pacific
Far East Line, Inc., 131 U.S. App. D.C. 226, 404 F.2d 804, 814 n.31 (D.C. Cir.
1968), cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1093, 21 L. Ed. 2d 784, 89 S. Ct. 872 (1969)
(principles of comity are appropriately considered when construing antitrust
laws). [107] See National Bank of Canada v.
Interbank Card Assn, 666 F.2d 6, 8 (2d Cir. 1981). [108] See, e.g., Lauritzen v. Larsen, 345 U.S. 571, 582-83,
592-93, 97 L. Ed. 1254, 73 S. Ct. 921 (1953); United States v. Aluminum Co. of
Am., 148 F.2d 416, 443 (2d Cir. 1945). [109] In this case, the injuries alleged
in Lakers complaints are clearly within the scope of the antitrust
laws; the interests at stake in Lakers action here are primarily
those of United States consumers and lenders; and Congress has expressly
allowed foreign corporations to sue for violations of the Sherman and Clayton
Acts. See Pfizer Inc. v. India, 434 U.S. 308, 312, 98 S.
Ct. 584, 54 L. Ed. 2d 563 n.9 (1978). Regulation of the appellants
conduct is entirely consistent with their treaty obligations to conduct
business here without participating in predatory or discriminatory pricing
practices. Thus, it is the Sherman Acts applicability,
rather than its inapplicability, that is supported by consideration of the
comity factors. Pacific Seafarers, Inc. v.
Pacific Far East Line, Inc., 131 U.S. App. D.C. 226, 404 F.2d 804, 814 n.31
(D.C. Cir. 1968), cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1093, 21 L. Ed. 2d 784, 89 S. Ct. 872
(1969). [110] A defendants claims that
foreign law forbids a foreign national from prosecuting a United States
antitrust action should be made initially in the United States District Court
free from the coercive threat of a possible anti-suit injunction. If justified
by principles of comity or the lack of sufficient implication of United States
interests, that claim could be granted. In making such a ruling the district
court would not necessarily be required to resolve unsettled questions of
foreign law, such as whether the foreign plaintiff would violate foreign law by
suing under United States antitrust claims, since the district court would have
discretion to stay the action pending a special proceeding in the foreign court
brought for the limited purpose of resolving that issue, if the status of the
foreign law were unclear. See Lehman Bros. v. Schein, 416 U.S. 386, 389-91, 40
L. Ed. 2d 215, 94 S. Ct. 1741 (1974). Cf. Louisiana Power & Light Co. v.
City of Thibodaux, 360 U.S.
25, 3 L. Ed. 2d 1058, 79 S. Ct. 1070 (1959) (federal district court
properly stayed federal proceedings pending the initiation and resolution of a
state court action to construe an uninterpreted state statute). [111] See, e.g., Pacific Employers Ins.
Co. v. Industrial Accid. Commn, 306 U.S. 493, 83 L. Ed.
940, 59 S. Ct. 629 (1939); James v. Grand Trunk Western R.R. Co., 14 Ill. 2d
356, 152 N.E.2d 858, cert. denied, 358 U.S. 915, 3 L. Ed. 2d 239, 79 S. Ct. 288
(1958). [112] Tahan v. Hodgson, 213 U.S. App.
D.C. 306, 662 F.2d 862, 864, 867-68 (D.C. Cir. 1981). [113] See App. Tab 6, supra note 10. [114] Id. ; Protection of Trading
Interests Act § 1, supra
note 4. [115] App. Tab 6, supra note 10
(emphasis added). [116] Letter from Peter J. Nickels to
Clerk George A. Fisher, with attachment (5 Jan. 1984); letter from Carl W.
Schwartz to Clerk George A. Fisher, with attachments (12 Jan. 1984) (see
letters from Durrant Piesse to R. J. Ayling, Esq., of The Solicitors
Office, Dept. of Trade and Industry (20 Sept. 1983, 3 Oct. 1983, 16 Nov. 1983,
12 Dec. 1983) [requesting permission to use commercial information in
responding to interrogatories served by TWA]; letters from R. J. Ayling to
Durrant Piesse (21 Oct. 1983, 9 Dec. 1983, 15 Dec. 1983) [denying permission
based on interpretation by the Secretary of State of the order and directions]).
Apparently Laker argued to the Secretary of State that the order and directions
do not bar Laker from producing documents located in the United States and
should therefore not be interpreted to prevent Laker from answering
interrogatories based on information contained in those documents. The
Secretary of State interpreted the order and directions literally, concluding
that Lakers answers to interrogatories may not disclose commercial
information regardless of whether the information was derived from documents
that could be produced. Id. [117] A grand jury investigation may be
pending. We are uninformed as to its current status. [118] Oral Argument Tr. at 26-37. As a
general rule, the stockholders and creditors of corporations injured by
antitrust violations do not have standing to vindicate the injury. However,
this rule is based on the fact that the direct victim of the injury
the corporation is ordinarily capable of protecting the
creditors private interest and the publics general interest
in effective antitrust enforcement. P. AREEDA & D. TURNER, II Antitrust Law
§ 336(c) (1982). As in
any derivative action, the case for creditor or stockholder standing would be
stronger when the corporation could not enforce its own rights. See, e.g., Loeb
v. Eastman Kodak Co., 183 F. 704, 709 (3d Cir. 1910) (denying standing to a
creditor of a bankrupt corporation, but stating a creditor should be permitted
to sue in the name of the bankruptcy trustee if the latter were barred). In
view of our disposition of this case, we need not decide whether
Lakers American creditors would have standing to redress
Lakers alleged antitrust injuries. [119] For example, the directions issued
pursuant to the order state in the broadest possible terms that Laker shall not
comply, or cause or permit compliance, whether by themselves, their
officers, servants or agents, with any requirement to produce or furnish to the
United States Department of Justice, the grand jury or the District
Court any document in the United Kingdom or any commercial information which
relates to the said Department of Justice investigation or the grand jury or
District Court proceedings. See App. Tab 6, supra note 10. [120] See J. WATSON, THE PHILOSOPHY OF
KANT 230-31 (1901). [121] Of course, the British government
does not intend to invoke the Protection of Trading Interests Act to bar all
jurisdiction exercised by United States courts over foreign airlines
just that necessary to provide a forum for the enforcement of American
antitrust laws. This illustrates that the conflict here is between deeply felt
and long held economic and political policies of both the United States and the
British governments, and that the courts of the respective jurisdictions are in
no position to resolve that dispute by conceding comity to the decrees of the
other. The comity we are asked to invoke is thus comity for the British
Executive and that is something better left to the American
Executive to negotiate. Conceding comity to the actions of the British courts,
which were brought about and directed rather specifically by the actions of the
British Executive, and whose sole purpose is the unilateral subjugation of
United States interests to those of Great Britain, would require the American
judges to abdicate their oath of office to uphold the laws of the United
States. This we cannot conscientiously do, however much we understand and
respect the position that our English judicial peers are in. See infra parts
II. F. 1 and II. F. 3. [122] Sabena has suggested that the
alleged conspiracies may implicate the involvement of several British
governmental authorities, including the Department of Trade, Civil Aviation
Authority, and Bank of England. Br. of Appellant Sabena at 9. [123] See generally, J. ATWOOD & K.
BREWSTER, 1 ANTITRUST AND AMERICAN BUSINESS ABROAD §§ 8.02, 8.12-8.14 (1981) (discussing
applicability of Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341, 87 L. Ed.
315, 63 S. Ct. 307 (1943); NoerrPennington doctrine; and defense of foreign
governmental compulsion). [124] District Court Op., 559 F. Supp.
at 1139 n. 63. See also Cargill v. Hartford Accd & Indem. Co.,
531 F. Supp. 710, 715 (D. Minn. 1982) (refusing to enjoin commencement of suits
not directly related to the domestic proceedings); Medtronic, Inc. v. Catalyst
Research Corp., 518 F. Supp. 946, 954, 957 (D. Minn.), affd, 664 F.2d
660 (8th Cir. 1981) (limiting injunction to bar only foreign injunctive relief,
but permitting continuation of foreign damage actions based on same claim). [125] Dissent Op. at 6. [126] 159 U.S. 113, 164, 16 S.
Ct. 139, 40 L. Ed. 95 (1895) (emphasis added). [127] 453 U.S. 654, 101 S. Ct.
2972, 69 L. Ed. 2d 918 (1981). [128] See infra note 177. [129] Dissent Op. at 958. [130] Id. at 958. [131] Id. at 958. [132] See supra note 110. [133] See App. Tab 2, supra note 10. [134] Pfizer Inc. v. India, 434 U.S. 308, 314, 54 L.
Ed. 2d 563, 98 S. Ct. 584 (1978). [135] See Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v.
International Parts Corp., 392
U.S. 134, 139, 20 L. Ed. 2d 982, 88 S. Ct. 1981 (1968); Westinghouse
Electric Corp. v. City of Burlington, 122 U.S. App. D.C. 65, 351 F.2d 762, 770
(D.C. Cir. 1965); P. AREEDA & D. TURNER, II ANTITRUST LAW § 331 at 149-150 (1982). [136] 148 F.2d 416 (2d Cir. 1945). [137] See The Foreign Trade Antitrust
Improvements Act of 1982, 96 Stat. 1246, 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 6a, 45(a)(3) (1982). In passing this
Act, which clarifies the applicability of United States antitrust laws to
export trade, Congress did not change either (1) the ability of the courts to
exercise comity or otherwise recognize the peculiar problems associated with
antitrust actions involving international transactions, or (2) the application
of antitrust laws to conduct producing the requisite effect in United States
territory. See Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act of 1982, 97th Cong., 2d
Sess., H. REP. 686 at 13 (1982). [138] Although we take issue with the
combative, intrusive method of frustrating United States jurisdiction through
which the British Executive has exported these policies, contrary to the
implications of the dissent we do not find the British views to be inherently
distasteful or unreasonable. Dissent Op. at 957. We reject any suggestion that the
standard of justice under British antitrust laws, which provide only for single
damages, is inferior to the treble damage provisions of United States laws.
Both sets of laws are designed to provide full justice to litigants, although
the particular form and availability of remedies differs somewhat due to the
divergent legislative intent behind the laws. We are not asked and do not
purport to pass judgment on the British attitude, but only resolve the extent
of the United States District Courts discretion to execute its duty
of upholding United States laws in the instant circumstances. [139] Court of Appeal Judgment at 574,
supra note 15. Thus, the Court of Appeal found it unnecessary to consider the
correctness of the judgment of the High Court of Justice. Id. [140] Id. at 584. [141] Id. at 591. It is not at all clear
to us that the English courts were bound to uphold the Secretarys
orders under the reasoning relied upon. We are not informed as to the exact
scope of the English courts authority to review actions of the
executive for conformity to treaties or other governing law. Consequently we
would never criticize or second guess the decision of the Court of Appeals to
affirm the Secretarys order. However, it does not necessarily follow
from the obligation of the English court to sustain its Executive that the
English court must consider that the two British defendants would be unjustly
treated in the American courts because they were unable to make a proper
defense, since their production of documents has been by the British Executive
order, not by any American act. If, because of their handicap in proof, these
two defendants ultimately were to be unjustly treated in the American courts,
then the complaint of injustice should be frankly made by the British court to
its own Executive, which is solely responsible for creating the British
defendants disability. Although it sustained the validity of the
order and directions issued by the British Executive, the court was free to
point out that the problem of the two British defendants arose because of the act
of the British Executive in denying them access to their defensive proof, not
because of any violation of due process or injustice created by this particular
American court or the American court system. Nor should it be presumed that the
American court would be oblivious to the handicap imposed on the British
defendants, if such exists, or powerless to take procedural steps to equalize
matters. Neither is it immediately apparent
why the English injunction is necessary to protect the British defendants from
suffering injustice in the United States courts. The orders apparently apply
equally to Laker, preventing it from furnishing documents in the United Kingdom
or any commercial information relating to the district court proceedings. As
the Secretary of States refusal to permit Laker to use commercial
information in response to interrogatories served by the American defendants
demonstrates, Laker is severely hampered in the advancement of its claims. The
British parties appear to be on an equal footing. If there is any injustice created
in the proceedings, it is between Laker and the American defendants. The order
and directions have been interpreted to bar only Lakers production of
documents and commercial information the United States airlines are
untouched. These defendants are free to assert defenses, make discovery
requests against Laker, and seek penalties for non-compliance. Laker responds
only at the risk of incurring British sanctions under the order and directions.
The order and directions thus leave one group of parties the
American defendants free to conduct their litigation
while hampering the other party the plaintiff. See also Reply of
Amici Curiae to Appellees Memorandum as to Status of English
Proceedings at 4: Lufthansa and Swissair are advised, however, that
the Directions do prevent U.K. nationals [e.g. Laker ] . . . from complying
with discovery demands by parties to the U.S. action (including Lufthansa and
Swissair). (emphasis added). This is an impairment to justice as
objectionable as that complained of by the Court of Appeal. We also note that the Court of
Appeal may have temporarily lapsed from its resolve not to speculate about the
merits of Lakers antitrust claims under United States law when, to
justify its conclusion that Lakers entire claim arose out of conduct
related to the Bermuda II Treaty, the court concluded that the alleged
impedance of the financial rescue operation was such an insignificant aspect of
the alleged conspiracy that this assertion alone could not state a cognizable
antitrust claim. Court of Appeal Judgment at 589, supra note 15. We raise these
points not to suggest that the Court of Appeals decision was wrongly
decided under English law, but only to demonstrate the extreme degree of
deference which that court felt obliged to grant to the legislative policies
implemented in the Secretary of States order and directions. [142] British Airways Board v. Laker
Airways Ltd. & Others (Judgment of 30 March 1983) at 7, reproduced at App.
Tab 4, supra note 10. [143] See, e.g., RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 403 (Tentative Draft
No. 2), supra note 21. [144] See Natural Resources Defense
Council v. Nuclear Regulatory Commn, 208 U.S. App. D.C. 216, 647 F.2d
1345, 1357 (D.C. Cir. 1981): Some balancing, or recognition of latent
conflict of laws, would seem judicious to reconcile the separate but not
inconsistent national interests. . . . (emphasis respectively added
and original). [145] Id. § 403(2) (a), (b). See also Timberlane
Lumber Co. v. Bank of America, 549 F.2d 597, 614 (9th Cir. 1976)
(relative significance of effects in the United States;
the extent to which there is explicit purpose to harm or affect
American commerce; the foreseeability of such
effect; the relative importance to the violations charged
of conduct within the United States as compared with conduct abroad;
nationality or principal business locations of the parties); Mannington Mills,
Inc. v. Congoleum Corp., 595 F.2d 1287, 1297 (3d Cir. 1979)
(Nationality of the parties, Existence of intent
to harm or affect American commerce and its foreseeability). [146] RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 403(a) (g), (h)
(Tentative Draft No. 2), supra note 21. See also Timberlane Lumber Co. v. Bank
of America, 549 F.2d 597, 614 (9th Cir. 1976) (degree of conflict
with foreign law or policy); Mannington Mills, Inc. v. Congoleum
Corp., 595 F.2d 1287, 1297 (3d Cir. 1979) (same). [147] RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 403(2) (c) (Tentative
Draft No. 2), supra note 21. [148] See Picciotto, Jurisdictional
Conflicts, International Law and the International State System, 11
INTL J. SOC. L. 11, 23-26 (1983); Davidow, Extraterritorial Antitrust
and the Concept of Comity, 15 J. WORLD TRADE L. 500, 500-02 (1981); Rahl,
International Application of American Antitrust Laws: Issues and Proposals, 2
N.Y. J. INTL & BUS. 336, 340-41 (1980). [149] RESTATEMENT (REVISED) at
§ 403(2)(d) (Tentative
Draft No. 2), supra note 21 (emphasis added). [150] Id. § 403(2) (c). [151] In Re Uranium Antitrust
Litigation, 480 F. Supp. 1138, 1148 (N.D. Ill. 1978). [152] Id. We note that under the
Tentative Drafts of the RESTATEMENT (REVISED) the reasonableness balancing
could easily be circumvented. Section 415(2) permits the assertion of
jurisdiction without a specific examination into reasonableness under
§ 403(2) and (3) when
there was a principal purpose to affect United States commerce.
Compare § 415(2) with
§ 415(3). Since a
principal purpose is often found whenever there are effects on United States
commerce, the reasonableness text of § 403(2) will often be superfluous. [153] National Bank of Canada v.
Interbank Card Assn, 666 F.2d 6 (2d Cir. 1981); In re Uranium
Antitrust Litigation, 617 F.2d 1248 (7th Cir. 1980). [154] See, e.g., Maier, Interest
Balancing and Extraterritoria l Jurisdiction, 31 AM. J. COMP. L. 579 (1983);
Grippando, Declining to Exercise Extraterritorial Antitrust Jurisdiction on
Grounds of International Comity: An Illegitimate Extension of the Judicial
Abstention Doctrine, 23 VA. J. INTL L. 394 (1983); Kadish, Comity and
the International Application of the Sherman Act: Encouraging Courts to Enter
the Political Arena, 4 N.W. J. INTL L. & BUS. 130 (1982); Rahl,
International Application of American Antitrust Laws: Issues and Proposals, 2
N.W. J. INTL & BUS. 336, 362-64 (1980). Cf. Juenger, Conflict of
Laws: A Critique of Interest Analysis, 32 AM. J. COMP. L. 1 (1984). [155] Congress is presumed to legislate
within the constraints of international law, unless it expressly manifests a
contrary intent. Natural Resources Defense Council v. Nuclear Regulatory
Commn, 208 U.S. App. D.C. 216, 647 F.2d 1345, 1357 (D.C. Cir. 1981);
Federal Trade Commn v. Compagnie de Saint-Gobain-Pont-a-Mousson, 205
U.S. App. D.C. 172, 636 F.2d 1300, 1315 (D.C. Cir. 1980); RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 134 (Tentative Draft
No. 1) (1980), supra note 21; RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 3(3), supra note 20. [156] See, e.g., Montreal Trading Ltd.
v. Amax, Inc., 661 F.2d 864, 870 (10th Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 1001,
71 L. Ed. 2d 868, 102 S. Ct. 1634 (1982) (effects were so speculative
and insubstantial that neither the Constitution nor the
Sherman Act was intended to reach the challenged conduct); Vespa of
Am. Corp. v. Bajaj Auto Ltd., 550 F. Supp. 224, 229 (N.D. Cal. 1982) (no
effects); Conservation Council of W. Australia v. Aluminum Co. of Am., 518 F.
Supp. 270 (W.D. Pa. 1981) (no effects). Where there are only insubstantial or
nonexistent effects on United States commerce, no interest balancing is
necessary to conclude that jurisdiction does not exist. Indeed, application of
interest balancing may obscure an accurate evaluation of the alleged effects
resulting in an unwarranted extension of jurisdiction. See National Bank of
Canada v. Interbank Card Assn, 507 F. Supp. 1113 (S.D. N.Y. 1980)
(applying interest balancing and concluding that jurisdiction should be
exercised), reversed, 666 F.2d 6 (2d Cir. 1981) (alleged effects were not
sufficiently anticompetitive to come within purview of antitrust laws; no need
to balance interests). [157] See, e.g., Wells Fargo & Co.
v. Wells Fargo Express Co., 556 F.2d 406 (9th Cir. 1977); Timberlane Lumber Co.
v. Bank of America, 549 F.2d 597 (9th Cir. 1976); Mannington Mills, Inc. v.
Congoleum Corp., 595 F.2d 1287 (3d Cir. 1979). [158] See Industrial Development Corp.
v. Mitsui & Co., 671 F.2d 876, 884-85 (5th Cir. 1982), vacated on other
grounds, 460 U.S. 1007,
103 S. Ct. 1244, 75 L. Ed. 2d 475 (1983) (applying interest balancing to
conclude that lower court erred in dismissing on jurisdictional grounds);
United States v. Vetco, Inc., 691 F.2d 1281 (9th
Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1098, 70 L. Ed. 2d 639, 102 S. Ct. 671 (1981);
Daishowa Intl v. North Coast Export Co., 1982-2 Trade Cas. para.
64,774 (N.D. Cal. 1982). This result has been predicted. See Davidow,
Extra-territorial Antitrust and the Concept of Comity, 15 J. WORLD TRADE L.
500, 513 (1981). [159] Of course, international law forms
a part of United States laws, and is enforced in United States courts. See,
e.g., The Paquete Habana, 175
U.S. 677, 700, 44 L. Ed. 320, 20 S. Ct. 290 (1900); RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 131, supra note 18. [160] See J. SWEENEY, C. OLIVER & N.
LEECH, THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM 14-23 (1981). [161] See Maier, Interest Balancing and
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, 31 AM. J. COMP. L. 579, 593-95 (1983). [162] In the conflict of laws
it must often be a matter of doubt which should prevail; . . . whenever a doubt
does exist, the court, which decides, will prefer the laws of its own country
to that of the stranger. Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U.S. 113, 165, 40 L.
Ed. 95, 16 S. Ct. 139 (1895). [163] Recognition of this fact in no way
derogates from the status of international law, since in questions of conflict
between the substantive goals of nations asserting concurrent jurisdiction to
prescribe international law is generally neutral. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
§ 39 Comment b, supra
note 20. [164] Maier, Interest Balancing and
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, 31 AM. J. COMP. L. 579, 584-85 (1983). [165] See RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§ 403(1) (Tentative Draft
No. 2), supra note 21. Compare RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF THE CONFLICT OF LAWS
§ 9 (1971): A
court may not apply the local law of its own state to determine a particular
issue unless such application of this law would be reasonable in the light of
the relationship of the state and of other states to the person, thing or
occurrence involved. [166] See M. WHITEMAN, 5 DIGEST OF
INTERNATIONAL LAW 218-19 (1965). [167] Picciotto, Jurisdictional
Conflicts, International Law and the International State System, 11
INTL J. SOC. L. 11, 14, 25 (1983). [168] Of course, there is no requirement
that the forum with jurisdiction exercise it to the fullest extent possible.
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) §
40, supra note 20. [169] An interest evaluation conducted
through the balancing of competing interests can only function as an effective
method of choosing between potential forums to the extent the less reasonable
assertion is characterized as unreasonable. Thus, Section
403(2) of the RESTATEMENT (REVISED) (Tentative Draft No. 2) appears to deny the
existence or even the theoretical necessity of concurrent prescriptive
jurisdiction. However, read narrowly, Section 403
does not require this result. The terms of Section 403(1) suggest that an
evaluation of interests is essential in determining whether there are
sufficient (reasonable) national contacts with the
underlying transaction to allocate prescriptive jurisdiction to a forum. This
examination of the reasonableness of the domestic forums contacts,
without explicitly balancing the weight of other foreign contracts, satisfies
the prohibition of international law against unreasonable assertions of
prescriptive jurisdiction. See also RESTATEMENT (REVISED) § 441 (Tentative Draft No. 2), supra note
21 (defining jurisdiction to adjudicate on the basis of reasonableness without
referring to or balancing the reasonableness of a second forums
adjudicatory contacts). Because Congress and the Executive
can neither anticipate nor resolve all conflicts with foreign prescriptive
jurisdiction, they legitimately expect the full participation of the Judiciary
in minimizing conflicts of jurisdiction. See Extraterritoriality and
Conflicts of Jurisdiction, U.S. Department of State Current Policy
Bulletin No. 481 at 4 (15 April 1983). Evaluating the strength of the United
States interests in a particular transaction to determine the reasonableness of
an assertion of jurisdiction is consistent with those expectations and assures
that concurrent jurisdiction will never be lightly assumed. [170] See Cory v. White, 457 U.S. 85, 89, 72 L. Ed.
2d 694, 102 S. Ct. 2325 (1982); Pacific Employers Ins. Co. v. Industrial
Accident Commn, 306
U.S. 493, 83 L. Ed. 940, 59 S. Ct. 629 (1939); Texas v. Florida, 306 U.S. 398, 410, 83 L.
Ed. 817, 59 S. Ct. 563 (1938); Kline v. Burke Construction Co., 260 U.S. 226, 43 S. Ct.
79, 67 L. Ed. 226 (1922). [171] In some contexts, the Due Process
Clause serves this function in the state and federal courts of the United
States. E.g., Texas v. New Jersey, 379 U.S. 674, 678, 13 L.
Ed. 2d 596, 85 S. Ct. 626 (1965); Hartford Accid. & Indem. Co. v. Delta
Pine & Land Co., 292
U.S. 143, 149, 78 L. Ed. 1178, 54 S. Ct. 634 (1934). The actions of the British
Government in this case indicate that Britain regards the Bermuda II Treaty as
just such an interforum agreement, dislocating the application of the antitrust
laws from the conduct challenged in Lakers complaint. However, since
a dispute exists between the two governments, we can only assume that the
United States Executive Branch does not interpret the agreement to confer an
antitrust exemption on United Kingdom air carriers. [172] See, e.g., RESTATEMENT (REVISED)
§§ 412, 413
(Tentative Draft No. 2) supra note 21; RESTATEMENT (SECOND) § 37 Reporters Note 1, supra
note 20. [173] It may be that a rule of law
should be developed allocating exclusive prescriptive jurisdiction to the forum
with the most significant nexus to the underlying conduct. Given the inherent
difficulty of administering an interest balancing formula, it is doubtful that
a rule of exclusive jurisdiction based on a common conception of reasonableness
will be developed by national courts. The current litigation underscores this
point: in the decades since the United States began applying its antitrust laws
to overseas conduct substantially affecting its territorial interests, neither
the United States nor United Kingdoms courts have accepted
the other courts definition of the legitimate scope of prescriptive
jurisdiction in the antitrust area. It is to be hoped that the political
branches of government will eventually negotiate practical solutions, such as
those undergirding the area of international taxation, which, through their
reciprocal ordering of national regulation, render academic the issue of
whether a country would otherwise have the sovereign right to exert its
authority in a particular manner. [174] See RESTATMENT (REVISED)
§ 135(2) (Tentative Draft
No. 1) (1980), supra note 20; J. SWEENEY, C. OLIVER, N. LEECH, THE
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM 22 (1981). [175] We disagree with the dissenting
opinion precisely because it comes to rest at this untenable position. The
dissent actually agrees with much of this opinion: it
recognizes the legitimacy of the jurisdictional base to Lakers suit;
it confirms the authority of the district court to issue a protective
injunction; and it would not preclude the district court from issuing a more
limited injunction on remand. It is only the form of the
injunction drafted by the district court which the dissent finds so
objectionable that reversal is advocated. The dissent reaches this conclusion
under the guise of comity. However, the legal basis for
this interpretation of comity is nonexistent. See supra pp. 942-944. Comity
would be a more significant factor if the two appealing parties were British
corporations, but they are not. KLM and Sabena are Dutch and Belgian entities.
They are attempting to use the law and courts of a third country, Britain, to
frustrate a previously commenced action in the United States. KLM and Sabena
have made no request to resort to their own courts in reliance on their own air
service agreements or relevant domestic legislation (e.g., Law of 27 March
1969, as Amended on 21 June 1976, and Royal Decree of 6 February 1979
Concerning the Regulation of Marine and Air Transport, at Bulletin Usuel des
Lois et Arretes, 1969, No. 723; id., 10 September 1976, No. 1490, id., 1979,
No. 464). We can only assume that they do not intend to do so. The real motivation for the
dissents position is the desire to avoid further conflict with the
laws of our close friends and allies about the application of domestic United
States law. This is apparent from the dissents concern that an
affirmance of the injunction would be regarded as
parochial, and from its charge that the injunction obstructs
the functioning of our two countries judicial system. We share the same concerns.
However, a reversal would not restore the orderly operation
of our two nations courts. Instead, it could permit one court
entirely to shut down its autonomous sister courts. This certainly does not
seem likely to foster parallel respect. Moreover, the existence of conflict
alone does not establish the judicial perogative to relinquish prescriptive
jurisdiction. Any legitimate assertion of prescriptive jurisdiction seeks to
advance the national interests undergirding the jurisdiction; an assertion of
that prescriptive power in an area of concurrent jurisdiction may give rise to
allegations of parochialism. Protecting the prescriptive jurisdiction of the
United States, which the dissent admits is legitimate, can hardly be more
parochial than the British attempts to destroy that
jurisdiction by knowingly issuing interdictory prohibitions and orders,
worldwide in scope, after the United States District Court was fully seized of
jurisdiction and well on its way in the treatment of Lakers antitrust
suit. Finally, we must remember that it
is American statutory law which is challenged, not law made by the courts.
These antitrust laws date back nearly one hundred years, when Congress began
legislating to advance competition and consumer well-being in the United
States. Up to now, the courts and the Executive have had no choice but to
follow the mandate of Congress. Critics concerned with parochialism should
direct those attacks to that Branch, not to the Judiciary. [176] See, Maier, Interest Balancing and
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, 31 AM. J. COMP. L. 579, 584-85 (1983). Although
this process may always be necessary on an ad hoc basis in response to specific
suits, anticipatory arrangements could go far in avoiding the problems we are
confronted with today. E.g., Agreement Relating to Cooperation on Antitrust
Matters, U.S.-Australia, 29 June 1982, T.I.A.S. No. 10365, reprinted at 43
Antitrust & Trade Reg. Rep. (BNA), No. 1071, at 36 (1 July 1982). [177] In this case the Bermuda II Treaty
calls for negotiation and arbitration of disputes regarding its terms. Bermuda
II Treaty, art. 17, 28 U.S.T. 5382-83, supra note 3. Although some
consultations may have occurred regarding the problems associated with the
litigation and counterlitigation now pressed in the United States and United
Kingdom, apparently neither government has yet invoked its right to call for an
arbitrated resolution of the scope of the Bermuda II Treatys
immunization from United States antitrust laws. It may be that further efforts
by the governments of both countries could help resolve the deadlock which
appears to be developing to the detriment of the litigants interests
and the ultimate frustration of the national policies of the United States and
Great Britain. [178] If the United States Executive
interpreted the Bermuda II Treaty to waive both the obligation of United
Kingdom air carriers to comply with antitrust laws, and the right of those
carriers to rely on the protection of those laws, then Lakers claim
against the foreign airlines would probably fail. Of course, if only the
British airlines duty of compliance were ceded by the treaty, then
nothing would prevent Laker from continuing its suit against KLM and Sabena. [1] Canadian Filters (Harwich) Ltd. v.
Lear-Siegler, Inc., 412 F.2d 577, 578 (1st Cir. 1969). [2] It is far from clear to me that a
refusal by the District Court to grant the injunctive relief requested by Laker
as to the foreign defendants would have sounded the death knell of
Lakers antitrust action, inasmuch as the American defendants would
remain before the court in any event. [3] Evidencing comparable concern for
principles of comity, the court in Medtronic, Inc. v. Catalyst Research Corp.,
518 F. Supp. 946 (D. Minn. 1981), affd 664 F.2d 660 (8th Cir. 1981),
granted a narrow injunction preventing defendant from seeking an injunction
against plaintiffs continued manufacture of a product which was the
subject of a patent suit. The court specifically noted that the relief would
in no way interfere with defendants foreign
patent infringement and validity actions in foreign courts. [4] The possible usefulness of
Executive guidance in this matter has appropriately been recognized by the
district court. On November 17, 1983, Judge Greene appointed amicus curiae in
this case to assist the Court in determining what action by the Court
is required or appropriate in light of the decisions of the English
authorities. . . . Judge Greene suggested, among other things, that
amicus consider what relationship, if any, should be established with
the Department of Justice or the Department of State to enlist their cooperation
or assistance. |