Court Opinion

ID: 3150412
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-29 02:01:05.27565+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:38:25.798621
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                               FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

 JAMES OWENS, et al.,
         Plaintiffs,
             v.                                                Civil Action No. 01-2244 (JDB)
 REPUBLIC OF SUDAN, et al.,
         Defendants.

 RIZWAN KHALIQ, et al.,
         Plaintiffs,
             v.                                                Civil Action No. 10-356 (JDB)
 REPUBLIC OF SUDAN, et al.,
         Defendants.

                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

       Plaintiffs in these two cases are victims and family members of victims of the 1998 terrorist

bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa. Having obtained default judgments against Sudan and

Iran for their roles in those bombings, they now wish to begin enforcing those judgments. In doing

so, they must comply with rules for attaching and executing on the property of a foreign state

contained in the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1610. Attachment and

execution under the FSIA cannot occur until, among other requirements, a court has “determined

that a reasonable period of time has elapsed following the entry of judgment and the giving of any

notice required under section 1608(e) of this chapter.” Id. § 1610(c). Plaintiffs seek orders

acknowledging that they have properly given the required notice and that a reasonable period of

time has now elapsed. For the following reasons, the Court will grant plaintiffs’ request.

                                                1
                                                 BACKGROUND

         Plaintiffs in these two cases won final judgments that total more than half a billion dollars

against Iran and Sudan in March and April 2014. 1 See Apr. 11, 2014 Order, Owens [ECF No.

305]; Mar. 28, 2014 Order, Khaliq [ECF No. 40]. Plaintiffs then began the arduous process of

serving notice of the default judgments on the defendants according to the rules of 28 U.S.C.

§ 1608. The Court detailed plaintiffs’ initial—but inadequate—efforts in an earlier order. See

Apr. 1, 2015 Order, Owens [ECF No. 359]. It determined that while the Owens plaintiffs had

properly served Sudan, they did not appear to have served Iran—and that the Khaliq plaintiffs had

the same problem with the defendants reversed. See id. at 4. The Court held that until plaintiffs

could establish that “both Sudan and Iran have been served,” it could not issue the requested orders.

Id. at 6 (citing Murphy v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 778 F. Supp. 2d 70, 72 (D.D.C. 2011)).

         Plaintiffs have now renewed their motions and supplied additional evidence of their efforts

to serve notice. See Pls.’ Mot. for Order, Owens [ECF No. 382]; Pls.’ Mot. for Order, Khaliq

[ECF No. 80]. 2 Those filings indicate that the Owens plaintiffs transmitted a copy of their

judgment to Iran through diplomatic channels on June 9, 2015, see Letter from Daniel Klimow,

Owens [ECF No. 382-2], and that the Khaliq plaintiffs did the same with respect to Sudan on June

15, 2015, see Letter from Daniel Klimow, Khaliq, [ECF No. 79-2]. Plaintiffs thus contend that

they have now given the notice required by § 1608(e) and that a “reasonable period of time” has

passed, such that attachment and execution efforts should be allowed. See 28 U.S.C. § 1610(c).

          1
            This opinion and the accompanying order do not apply to the so-called “Aliganga plaintiffs,” who
intervened in Owens in 2012. See Owens v. Republic of Sudan, 71 F. Supp. 3d 252, 255 (D.D.C. 2014). The Aliganga
plaintiffs obtained a separate final judgment, see id., and have not yet sought an order pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1610(c).
          2
            Many of the parties’ filings in these two cases are identical, or nearly so. For simplicity’s sake, the Court
will cite only the filings in Owens, except where the comparable filings in Khaliq are meaningfully different.

                                                            2
       Never having appeared in either of these cases, Iran has filed no response. Sudan, on the

other hand, has recently begun participating in these (and related) cases and opposes plaintiffs’

requests. See Sudan’s Opp’n, Owens [ECF No. 383]. Sudan does not quarrel with plaintiffs’

provision of notice, but contends that a reasonable period of time has not elapsed. At a minimum,

Sudan argues, the Court should wait until it resolves Sudan’s pending motions to vacate the default

judgments, see, e.g., Mot. to Vacate, Owens [ECF No. 362], and ideally should interpret § 1610(c)

to require waiting until the judgments can no longer be appealed.

       After the Court received the parties’ initial filings, it requested a round of supplemental

briefing. See Order for Supp. Briefing, Owens [ECF No. 385]. The Court noted that in a pair of

recent decisions, the Seventh Circuit had said that the requirements of § 1610(c) are inapplicable

to plaintiffs seeking to enforce judgments obtained under the FSIA’s immunity exception for state-

sponsored terrorism. See Wyatt v. Syrian Arab Republic, 800 F.3d 331, 342–43 (7th Cir. 2015);

Gates v. Syrian Arab Republic, 755 F.3d 568, 575–77 (7th Cir. 2014). The Court therefore asked

the parties to address whether plaintiffs’ requested orders were necessary under the circumstances

of these cases. No surprise: Sudan says such orders are indeed necessary. See Sudan’s Supp. Br.,

Owens [ECF No. 387]. But less expected: plaintiffs agree. See Pls.’ Supp. Br., Owens [ECF No.

386]. The Court must decide, then, whether the parties are correct that § 1610(c) is applicable

here, and if so, whether its requirements are satisfied.

                                           DISCUSSION

       “The text of the [FSIA] confers on foreign states two kinds of immunity.” Republic of

Argentina v. NML Capital, Ltd., 134 S. Ct. 2250, 2256 (2014). The first is jurisdictional immunity:

a foreign state is immune from suit in U.S. courts except as provided in §§ 1605 to 1607 of the

Act.   28 U.S.C. § 1604.       This Court determined years ago that these defendants lacked

jurisdictional immunity in light of § 1605A, the immunity exception applicable to certain acts of

                                                  3
state-sponsored terrorism. See Owens v. Republic of Sudan, 826 F. Supp. 2d 128 (D.D.C. 2011).

(As noted, though, Sudan has recently filed vacatur motions that challenge that determination.)

The second kind of immunity is execution immunity: even if judgment has been entered against a

foreign state lacking jurisdictional immunity, the state’s property within the United States is

“immune from attachment[,] arrest[,] and execution except as provided in sections 1610 and

1611.” 28 U.S.C. § 1609; see also NML Capital, 134 S. Ct. at 2256. Plaintiffs’ goal now is thus

to enforce their judgments consistent with § 1610. (No party has suggested that § 1611 is relevant

here.)

         Four subsections of § 1610 are important to the Court’s analysis. Subsections (a) and (b)

together delineate the general circumstances in which a foreign state’s property in the United States

is subject to execution. Subsection (a) identifies seven circumstances in which “[t]he property in

the United States of a foreign state . . . , used for a commercial activity in the United States, shall

not be immune from attachment in aid of execution, or from execution.” Because the term “foreign

state” is defined to include “an agency or instrumentality of a foreign state,” see 28 U.S.C.

§ 1603(a), subsection (a) is applicable both to a state itself and to its agencies and instrumentalities.

Subsection (b), in turn, identifies three circumstances in which “any property in the United States

of an agency or instrumentality of a foreign state engaged in commercial activity in the United

States shall not be immune from attachment in aid of execution, or from execution.” Subsection

(b) is applicable only to agencies and instrumentalities—not to a foreign state itself—and does not

require that the particular property in question have been used for a commercial activity. See EM

Ltd. v. Republic of Argentina, 473 F.3d 463, 472–73 (2d Cir. 2007) (“[T]he protections applicable

to assets of instrumentalities vary from those applicable to the assets of the foreign states

themselves”); see also H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 27–30 (1976).

                                                   4
       Subsection (c) contains the procedural prerequisites to execution that are foremost at issue

here. Subsection (c) provides: “No attachment or execution referred to in subsections (a) and (b)

of this section shall be permitted until the court has ordered such attachment and execution after

having determined that a reasonable period of time has elapsed following the entry of judgment

and the giving of any notice required under section 1608(e) of this chapter.”

       Finally, there is subsection (g), which was added to § 1610 in 2008 by the same legislation

that enacted § 1605A, the exception to jurisdictional immunity for certain acts of state-sponsored

terrorism that underlies the judgments in these cases. See National Defense Authorization Act for

Fiscal Year 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 1083, 122 Stat. 3, 338–342 (2008). The relevant portion

of subsection (g) provides that, subject to certain exceptions,

       the property of a foreign state against which a judgment is entered under section
       1605A, and the property of an agency or instrumentality of such a state, including
       property that is a separate juridical entity or is an interest held directly or indirectly
       in a separate juridical entity, is subject to attachment in aid of execution, and
       execution, upon that judgment as provided in this section, regardless of—

           (A) the level of economic control over the property by the government of the
           foreign state;

           (B) whether the profits of the property go to that government;

           (C) the degree to which officials of that government manage the property or
           otherwise control its daily affairs;

           (D) whether that government is the sole beneficiary in interest of the property;
           or

           (E) whether establishing the property as a separate entity would entitle the
           foreign state to benefits in United States courts while avoiding its obligations.

28 U.S.C. § 1610(g)(1).

       Having initially surveyed these key features of § 1610’s landscape, the Court can now turn

to the first question posed by plaintiffs’ requests: whether § 1610(c)’s procedural requirements

even apply to these cases.

                                                   5
   I. SECTION 1610(c) APPLIES TO THESE CASES

       In their initial filings, none of the parties denied the applicability of § 1610(c). The Court,

however, raised the issue in light of Gates v. Syrian Arab Republic, in which the Seventh Circuit

concluded that plaintiffs seeking to execute a judgment obtained under § 1605A were not

constrained by § 1610(c), because “§ 1610(c) simply does not apply to the attachment of assets to

execute judgments under § 1610(g) for state-sponsored terrorism.” 755 F.3d 568, 575 (7th Cir.

2014); see also Wyatt v. Syrian Arab Republic, 800 F.3d 331, 343 (7th Cir. 2015) (“The Gates

plaintiffs, as terrorism victims who obtained a judgment under § 1605A, could proceed to

attachment and execution under § 1610(g) without complying with § 1610(c).”). With respect,

this Court disagrees with the Seventh Circuit’s reasoning in Gates and concludes that § 1610(c)

remains applicable to plaintiffs seeking to execute a judgment obtained under § 1605A.

       The central—and flawed—premise in Gates is that § 1610(g) is a freestanding immunity

exception that authorizes execution and attachment to satisfy judgments under § 1605A. See

Gates, 755 F.3d at 575 (“[Plaintiffs] seek attachment under § 1610(g), which authorizes attachment

of property of foreign state sponsors of terrorism and their agencies or instrumentalities to execute

judgments under § 1605A for state-sponsored terrorism.”). In light of that premise, Gates found

it critical that § 1610(c) places its conditions on any “attachment or execution referred to in

subsections (a) and (b)” but not subsection (g). See id. Section 1610(c)’s failure to cross-reference

§ 1610(g) could not have been a mere oversight, the Gates court felt, because Congress had made

several conforming amendments to § 1610 when it added subsection (g); leaving subsection (c)

untouched thus appeared deliberate. See id. at 575–76. And interpreting the lack of cross-

reference to mean that execution under § 1610(g) can proceed without the notice and timing

requirements of § 1610(c) “is consistent with the broader legislative purpose of the 2008 FSIA

                                                 6
Amendments to make it easier for terrorism victims to obtain judgments and attach assets.” Id. at

576.

       Several features of the statute indicate, however, that § 1610(g) is not the freestanding

immunity exception that Gates envisioned. First and foremost: while § 1610(g) identifies a

category of property subject to attachment and execution to satisfy a § 1605A judgment, it says

that such property “is subject to attachment in aid of execution, and execution, upon that judgment

as provided in this section.” 28 U.S.C. § 1610(g)(1) (emphasis added). Neither Gates nor the

briefs filed in Gates mentioned the phrase “as provided in this section,” but it is critical. If

§ 1610(g) were a freestanding immunity exception, the phrase would make no sense. But if,

instead, § 1610(g) merely provides a special rule that governs the operation of § 1610(a) and (b)

in the context of a § 1605A judgment, then “as provided in this section” makes perfect sense. See

Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 33 F. Supp. 3d 1003, 1013 (N.D. Ill. 2014) (agreeing that this

phrase “indicates that Section 1610(g) is not a separate basis of attachment, but rather qualifies the

previous subsections”), appeal docketed, No. 14-1935 (7th Cir. Apr. 25, 2014).

       Subsections (a) and (b) of § 1610 corroborate this second reading. The last of subsection

(a)’s seven immunity exceptions is where “the judgment relates to a claim for which the foreign

state is not immune under section 1605A [or a repealed predecessor], regardless of whether the

property is or was involved with the act upon which the claim is based.” 28 U.S.C. § 1610(a)(7).

And similarly, the last of subsection (b)’s three exceptions is where “the judgment relates to a

claim for which the agency or instrumentality is not immune by virtue of section 1605A [or the

repealed predecessor], regardless of whether the property is or was involved in the act upon which

the claim is based.” Id. § 1610(b)(3). If § 1610(g) were a freestanding immunity exception

available to § 1605A judgment-holders, these provisions referring to § 1605A within subsections

                                                  7
(a) and (b) would be pointless superfluities. See Rubin, 33 F. Supp. 3d at 1013. What plaintiff

seeking to enforce a § 1605A judgment would invoke § 1610(a)(7), and thereby force himself to

jump the procedural hurdles of § 1610(c), if he could instead invoke § 1610(g) and effortlessly

stroll around them? And what legislature would draft such a statutory scheme? Cf. Hinck v.

United States, 550 U.S. 501, 507 (2007) (declining “to isolate one feature” of tax statute “and use

it to permit taxpayers to circumvent the other limiting features Congress placed in the same

statute”). This is yet another anomaly unexamined by the Gates opinion and briefs. 3 The better

reading, again, is that § 1610(a)(7) and (b)(3) remain the actual immunity exceptions for § 1605A

judgments, and that § 1610(g) only provides a supplemental rule that governs their application.

        What does that supplemental rule do? It overrides the general rule that “government

instrumentalities established as juridical entities distinct and independent from their sovereign

should normally be treated as such.” First Nat. City Bank v. Banco Para El Comercio Exterior de

Cuba, 462 U.S. 611, 626–27 (1983). Sometimes called the “Bancec” rule (after the Cuban

instrumentality involved in First National), this means that “[i]f an instrumentality of a state

operates independently of the state, liability for the obligations of the instrumentality cannot

automatically be imputed to the state,” nor vice versa. Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations

Law § 452 reporter’s note 2 (1987) (citation omitted). Importantly, the Bancec rule “extends also

to the enforcement of judgments, so that property of one agency or instrumentality of a state may

not be used to satisfy a judgment against other agencies or instrumentalities of that state, or against

        3
            Appellants in the pending Rubin appeal attempt to reconcile § 1610(a)(7) and (b)(3) with Gates’s
interpretation of § 1610(g). See Reply Br. of Appellants at 28, Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 14-1935 (7th
Cir. Dec. 4, 2014), 2014 WL 7040111. They argue that the Gates reading does not render § 1610(a)(7) and (b)(3)
superfluous because those provisions are still necessary for plaintiffs who hold judgments under § 1605A’s repealed
predecessor, § 1605(a)(7), which is not covered by § 1610(g). See id. But this would only give meaning to the
references to § 1605(a)(7), while the references to § 1605A would remain pointless. And given that those references
were added at the same time as § 1610(g), that is problem enough for the Gates reading.

                                                        8
the state itself, in the absence of some liability-creating relationship between the two

instrumentalities.” Id. (citation omitted). Section 1610(g) overrides the Bancec rule with respect

to § 1605A judgments, so that the property of an instrumentality can be used to satisfy a judgment

against the foreign state itself. That is so “regardless of” the five factors listed in § 1610(g)(1),

which some courts had previously used to test whether an instrumentality was so extensively

controlled by a state as to share its liability. See, e.g., Flatow v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 308 F.3d
1065, 1071 n.9 (9th Cir. 2002). 4

         Finally, the Court is unpersuaded by Gates’s closing argument that “[e]xempting

attachments under § 1610(g) . . . from § 1610(c)’s solicitous notice requirements is entirely

consistent with the liberalizing purpose of the 2008 [FSIA] Amendments.” 755 F.3d at 576–77.

The 2008 amendments did indeed have a liberalizing thrust, but a court cannot “assume that

whatever furthers the statute’s primary objective must be the law.” Rodriguez v. United States,

480 U.S. 522, 526 (1987). A close reading of § 1610 convinces this Court that, notwithstanding

the plaintiff-friendly aims of the 2008 amendments, § 1610(c) still applies to plaintiffs, like those

here, seeking to enforce a judgment under § 1605A.

         4
           The Court’s reading of § 1610(g) is also the reading that the United States has adopted in several recent
cases addressing whether § 1605A judgment-holders can attach foreign-state assets in the United States that lack the
connections to commercial activity required by § 1610(a) and (b). See, e.g., Br. for United States as Amicus Curiae
at 22–26, Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 14-1935 (7th Cir. Nov. 3, 2014), 2014 WL 6671022; Br. for United
States as Amicus Curiae at 27–32, Ministry of Defense v. Frym, No. 13-57182 (9th Cir. July 3, 2014), 2014 WL
3421361. That question is not presently before the Court. The Court recognizes that its interpretation of § 1610 might
strongly suggest that the commercial nexus requirement remains applicable to efforts to enforce a § 1605A judgment,
but reserves judgment on that issue. Cf. Kapar v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 2015 WL 2452754, at *5 (D.D.C. May
22, 2015) (suggesting in dicta that § 1610(g) eliminates the commercial nexus requirement, but not grappling with
arguments discussed here); Estate of Heiser v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 807 F. Supp. 2d 9, 19 n.8 (D.D.C. 2011)
(same).

                                                          9
   II. SECTION 1610(c) IS SATISFIED HERE

       Having determined that § 1610(c) is indeed applicable to these plaintiffs, the question now

is whether its requirements are satisfied. The first of those requirements is that plaintiffs have

provided notice of their default judgments to the foreign states. See 28 U.S.C. § 1610(c)

(incorporating the notice requirement of § 1608(e)). As noted, the Court previously determined

that as of April 2015 neither set of plaintiffs had fully complied with this requirement: the Owens

plaintiffs had served Sudan but not Iran; the Khaliq plaintiffs, the reverse. But plaintiffs have

submitted updated materials indicating that service is now complete. Iran received notice of the

Owens judgment through diplomatic channels on June 9, 2015 (and of the Khaliq judgment back

in August 2014). See Letter from Daniel Klimow, Owens [ECF No. 382-2]; Letter from William

P. Fritzlen, Khaliq [ECF No. 79-1]. And Sudan received notice of the Khaliq judgment through

diplomatic channels on June 15, 2015 (and of the Owens judgment back in September 2014). See

Letter from Daniel Klimow, Khaliq [ECF No. 79-2]; Letter from William P. Fritzlen, Owens [ECF

No. 382-1]. Sudan does not argue that plaintiffs’ notice was procedurally inadequate, and the

Court concludes that plaintiffs have properly notified defendants under § 1608.

       The thornier question is whether “a reasonable period of time has elapsed following the

entry of judgment and the giving of [the] notice” just discussed. 28 U.S.C. § 1610(c). The statute

provides no express guidance on how to assess whether a period is “reasonable.” Courts have

considered “the procedures necessary for the foreign state to pay the judgment (such as the passage

of legislation), evidence that the foreign state is actively taking steps to pay the judgment, and

evidence that the foreign state is attempting to evade payment of the judgment.” Ned Chartering

& Trading, Inc. v. Republic of Pakistan, 130 F. Supp. 2d 64, 67 (D.D.C. 2001) (citing H.R. Rep.

No. 94-1487, at 30); accord Karaha Bodas Co. v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas

                                                10
Bumi Negara, 2002 WL 32107929, at *1 (S.D. Tex. Jan. 25, 2002). Although the necessary interim

“will of course vary according to the nuances of each case,” courts have found periods of three

months and less reasonable. Ned Chartering, 130 F. Supp. 2d at 67 (six weeks reasonable); see

also, e.g., Karaha Bodas, 2002 WL 32107929, at *2 (fifty days reasonable); Ferrostaal Metals

Corp. v. S.S. Lash Pacifico, 652 F. Supp. 420, 423 (S.D.N.Y. 1987) (three months reasonable).

Here, more than three months have passed since the last-delivered notices (and much more than

that for some judgment-defendant combinations). In the absence of any evidence that defendants

are making efforts to pay these judgments voluntarily—and there is none here—the Court is

inclined to find three months a sufficient pause.

       Sudan offers two broad arguments to the contrary, neither of which appears to have been

previously addressed by any court. The first and more ambitious is that the term “judgment” in

§ 1610(c) means “a final, non-appealable judgment,” and thus a “reasonable period” has not

elapsed until either the judgment has been affirmed on appeal or the time for taking an appeal has

passed. Sudan’s Opp’n at 3–7. The Court is unconvinced. Sudan is correct that the phrase “final

judgment” can be ambiguous, sometimes meaning merely “an appealable judgment issued by the

District Court,” and other times meaning “a judgment which is final in the sense that it either has

already been appealed to the extent possible or is no longer subject to appeal.” Mass. Union of

Pub. Hous. Tenants, Inc. v. Pierce, 755 F.2d 177, 179–80 (D.C. Cir. 1985) (per curiam) (addressing

28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(B), which requires a party seeking attorney’s fees to submit an application

“within thirty days of final judgment in the action”). But § 1610 does not forbid execution within

some proximity of “final judgment”—it doesn’t say “final” at all. It says execution cannot proceed

until “a reasonable period of time has elapsed following the entry of judgment.” 28 U.S.C.

§ 1610(c) (emphasis added). It is clear in context that the “judgment” in question is the district

                                                11
court’s judgment—Sudan does not argue otherwise—and a district court’s “entry of judgment”

necessarily precedes the point at which the judgment becomes final in Sudan’s preferred sense of

being no longer appealable. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 58(c) (specifically addressing timing of entry of

judgment). The entry of judgment, then, is a necessary step preceding appeal. Indeed, a judgment

becomes final in this sense without any action by the district court—just the passage of time or the

loser’s exhaustion of available appeals. With the passage of a reasonable time specifically tethered

to the event of the entry of judgment, there is no plausible hook in § 1610(c)’s text for Sudan’s

theory.

          Sudan nonetheless urges that such a requirement (of what the Court will call

“nonappealable finality”) should be read into § 1610(c) in light of international comity concerns.

Sudan points first to 28 U.S.C. § 2414, under which the United States will authorize payment of

foreign-court judgments that are “final,” which requires the Attorney General’s certification “that

no appeal shall be taken from a judgment or that no further review will be sought from a decision

affirming the same.” Sudan argues that U.S. courts should not treat foreign sovereigns less

favorably. But while such a lack of reciprocity may be unwise, this Court will not misread statutes

to eliminate it—and § 2414 does not support Sudan’s reading. On the contrary, by illustrating how

easy it is for statutory text to communicate a requirement of nonappealable finality, § 2414—which

was on the books when Congress enacted § 1610(c)—makes the absence of such text in § 1610 all

the more purposeful. This is not to say § 2414’s text is the only way to communicate such a

requirement, just that it reinforces rather than undermines the conclusion that no such requirement

lurks secretly in § 1610(c).

          Sudan’s other comity-based argument fares no better.          Sudan highlights a 1976

congressional hearing at which the State Department’s Legal Adviser testified that the FSIA (then

                                                12
just a bill) was generally consistent with the European Convention on State Immunity—a treaty,

Sudan points out, that does not allow attachment or execution until a judgment has become

nonappealably final. Sudan’s Opp’n at 5–6 (citing Jurisdiction of U.S. Courts in Suits against

Foreign States: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Administrative Law and Governmental

Relations of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary on H.R. 11315, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 37 (1976)

(statement of Monroe Leigh)). But this is not enough to infer such a requirement in § 1610(c).

The Legal Adviser merely said that the FSIA was not inconsistent with the Convention “[i]n

general terms.” Jurisdiction of U.S. Courts, supra, at 37. That hardly indicates—if legislative

history even could—that the FSIA and the Convention must be identical in this respect. Indeed,

the Legal Adviser’s very next comment was that “we go somewhat further on the question of

execution,” a reference to the fact that the Convention permitted signatories to choose not to adopt

its exceptions to execution immunity, whereas no such opt-out existed in the FSIA. Id. Moreover,

much like § 2414, the Convention is so clear in communicating the requirement of nonappealable

finality that the absence of such a requirement in § 1610 is further highlighted. See European

Convention on State Immunity, Art. 26(c), opened for signature May 16, 1972, C.E.T.S. No. 074

(incorporating the requirement of Article 20(1)(b) that “the judgment cannot or can no longer be

set aside if obtained by default, or . . . is not or is no longer subject to appeal or any other form of

ordinary review or to annulment”); see also Altmann, 541 U.S. at 708 (Breyer, J., concurring)

(relying in part on the clarity of non-retroactivity provisions in foreign statutes and treaties,

including the Convention, to conclude that the FSIA lacks a comparable limitation). Finally,

Sudan’s tenuous inference from one bit of legislative history can, as is so often the case, be

countered by a different tenuous inference from another: namely, one might think it significant

that the discussion of § 1610(c)’s “reasonable period” requirement in the House Report

                                                  13
accompanying the FSIA says nothing about having to wait until a judgment is nonappealably final.

See H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 30. In the end, Sudan’s reliance on legislative history that does not

address this specific issue or mention § 1610(c) is unpersuasive.

       Sudan’s fallback argument is that, even if § 1610(c) does not require nonappealable

finality, the Court should not deem a reasonable period to have elapsed, given that the Court might

grant its pending motions to vacate the judgments. The Court is unconvinced, however, that this

argument is consistent with § 1610(c)’s role in the scheme of the FSIA. Section 1610 speaks in

terms of “time,” not procedural milestones—neither (as discussed above) the point at which a

judgment becomes nonappealably final, nor (as relevant here) the point at which postjudgment

motions are denied.    And the case law and legislative history suggest that the purpose of

§ 1610(c)’s reasonable-period requirement is to allow foreign states the opportunity to make

arrangements for voluntary payment, while still allowing for more immediate enforcement efforts

when necessary, see Ned Chartering, 130 F. Supp. 2d at 67; H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 30—but

not to give foreign states an automatic stay of execution pending the resolution of postjudgment

motions.

       This is not to say that Sudan’s basic concern—that its assets will be imperiled on the basis

of a judgment that this Court might soon vacate—is illogical. But if Sudan would like a stay of

execution pending the resolution of its motions, it can move for such relief under Federal Rule of

Civil Procedure 62(b). If Sudan suggests “appropriate terms for the opposing part[ies’] security,”

the Court could grant such a motion. Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(b)(4); see also Peacock v. Thomas, 516
U.S. 349, 359 n.8 (1996) (“The district court may only stay execution of the judgment pending the

disposition of certain post-trial motions or appeal if the court provides for the security of the

judgment creditor.”). As for § 1610(c), however, the Court concludes that a “reasonable period of

                                                14
time” has elapsed, and that plaintiffs are entitled to begin enforcing their presumptively valid

judgments. The Court will therefore issue plaintiffs’ requested orders with respect to both Sudan

and Iran. To be clear, these orders will not authorize the attachment or execution upon any

particular property: plaintiffs must still convince a court with jurisdiction over specific assets that

those assets are subject to attachment or execution under § 1610. See Agudas Chasidei Chabad v.

Russian Federation, 798 F. Supp. 2d 260, 270-71 (D.D.C. 2011).

                                            CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that: § 1610(c) applies to plaintiffs’

enforcement efforts; plaintiffs’ have properly provided notice to defendants under § 1608; and a

reasonable period of time has elapsed since the entry of judgment and defendants received notice.

A separate order will issue in each case.

                                                                               /s/
                                                                       JOHN D. BATES
                                                                  United States District Judge
Dated: October 28, 2015

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