A. v. Doe Run Resources Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 20, 2023
Docket4:11-cv-00044
StatusUnknown

This text of A. v. Doe Run Resources Corporation (A. v. Doe Run Resources Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. v. Doe Run Resources Corporation, (E.D. Mo. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

A.O.A., et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Case No. 4:11 CV 44 CDP ) IRA L. RENNERT, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR APPLICATION OF PERUVIAN LAW AND SUMMARY JUDGMENT UNDER PERUVIAN LAW, OR, ALTERNATIVELY, DISMISSAL UNDER TRANSNATIONAL LAW DOCTRINES

Table of Contents

I. Introduction ............................................................................................................ 3 II. Procedural History ................................................................................................ 4 III. Background ......................................................................................................... 7 IV. The Defendants and Related Entities ................................................................11 V. Choice of Law ....................................................................................................15 A. Legal Standard ................................................................................................17 B. Article 1971 and Negligence ..........................................................................21 1. Actual Conflict .............................................................................................22 2. Peruvian Law Applies to the Immunity Defense .........................................24 3. Summary Judgment Not Warranted ............................................................26 C. Article 1981 and Vicarious Liability of the Upstream Defendants ................28 1. No Actual Conflict .......................................................................................29 2. Missouri Law Applies to Vicarious Liability Claims ..................................31 a. Significant Contacts re Piercing the Corporate Veil ...............................32 i. Undercapitalization .............................................................................32 ii. Control ................................................................................................34 b. Significant Contacts re Agency ..............................................................39 VI. International Comity and Transnational Law Doctrines ..................................41 A. Adjudicatory Comity, or International Comity Abstention .........................44 1. True Conflict ................................................................................................48 2. Place of Wrongful Conduct ..........................................................................52 3. United States-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement ........................................60 4. Consideration Given to Letters from Peruvian Officials .............................62 5. Abstention Not Warranted ...........................................................................66 B. The Presumption Against Extraterritoriality ...............................................68 C. Act of State Doctrine ..................................................................................70 D. Foreign Affairs Doctrine ..............................................................................71 VII. Certification for Interlocutory Appeal .............................................................74 I. Introduction Plaintiffs are numerous Peruvian citizens who allege that they were injured

when they were exposed as children to toxic substances from the La Oroya Complex, a metallurgical smelting and refining complex operating in La Oroya, Peru. They claim that the defendants, several interrelated American companies

and their executives and directors, acting from Missouri and New York, prioritized profit over safety by authorizing and directing the Complex to emit excessive levels of toxic substances into the La Oroya environment without proper safety protocols in place. Plaintiffs allege that defendants’ Missouri conduct is

responsible for their serious medical and developmental injuries from their exposure to lead and other toxic substances emitted from the Complex. This Order addresses defendants’ Motion for Application of Peruvian Law

and Summary Judgment Under Peruvian Law, or, Alternatively, Dismissal under Transnational Law Doctrines. (ECF 1230.) In determining defendants’ earlier motion to dismiss, I ruled that Missouri law would govern this dispute. A.O.A. v. Rennert, 350 F. Supp. 3d 818 (E.D. Mo. 2018). In that same Order, I rejected

defendants’ argument that the case should be dismissed on the basis of international comity. Id. Defendants now argue that the complete factual record developed through discovery shows that those conclusions should change and,

further, that additional transnational doctrines warrant dismissal. I continue to conclude, as I did before, that Missouri law applies to most of this case. But I agree with defendants that it is appropriate to apply Peruvian law

to one issue: defendants’ claim that they are immune from liability because of what they refer to as the “safe harbor” of Article 1971 of the Peruvian Civil Code. Even under Peruvian law, however, numerous genuine issues of material fact

remain in dispute about whether Article 1971 precludes defendants’ liability in this case. I have also fully considered defendants’ alternative motion to dismiss based on various transnational law doctrines. I again decline to abstain based on

international comity, and I conclude that dismissal under the other transnational doctrines proffered by defendants is not warranted. I recognize, however, that reasonable jurists might disagree on those issues. Because decisions on whether to

abstain and/or dismiss under transnational doctrines are governed by factors that present controlling questions of law on which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion, I will certify the issues for interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).

The many other motions filed by the parties remain pending. II. Procedural History The long and complicated history of this litigation began in 2007 when

Sister Kate Reid and Megan Heeney began filing in Missouri state court several actions as next friends on behalf of plaintiffs, alleging state tort claims against the defendant companies, executives, and directors. The first case filed in October

2007 was removed to this Court and then remanded for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. (Case No. 4:07CV1874 CDP, ECF 61.) After amendment in state court, the case was again removed, but plaintiffs dismissed it without prejudice.

(Case No. 4:08CV525 CDP, ECF 51.) Shortly thereafter, two additional cases were filed in state court; they were removed and then remanded, again for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. (Case Nos. 4:08CV1416 CDP, ECF 19; 4:08CV1420 CDP, ECF 19.) After significant activity in the state court, one of the named

defendants, The Renco Group, instituted an arbitration proceeding against Peru in 2010, seeking indemnification for these cases. Defendants again removed in 2011, this time based on the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign

Arbitral Awards, June 10, 1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517, as implemented by 9 U.S.C. §§ 201, et seq. I denied the plaintiffs’ motion to remand (ECF 45), and that denial as well as my denial of the defendants’ motion to stay this consolidated case pending arbitration was affirmed by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. Reid v. Doe Run

Res. Corp., 701 F.3d 840 (8th Cir. 2012). Since that time, more Peruvian plaintiffs have filed Missouri state-court actions through next friends Reid and Heeney, and defendants removed those cases

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