Aurelius Capital Partners, LP v. THE REPUBLIC OF ARGENTINA

584 F.3d 120, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 22746
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 15, 2009
DocketDocket 08-5621-cv(L), 08-5619-cv(con), 08-5620-cv(con), 08-5622-cv(con), 08-5623-cv (con), 08-5624-cv(xap), 08-5626-cv(con), 08-5630-cv-(con), 08-5691-cv(con), 08-5692-cv(con), 08-5693-cv(con), 08-5694-cv(con), 08-5695-cv-(con), 08-5696-cv(con), 08-5697-cv(con), 08-5698-cv-(con), 08-5699-cv(con), 08-5700-cv(con), 08-5701-cv(con), 08-5702-cv(con), 08-5703-cv(con), 08-5705-cv(con), 08-5708-cv(con), 08-5709-cv(con), 08-5710-cv(con), 08-5711-cv(con), 08-5712-cv(con), 08-5713-cv(con), 08-5714-cv(con), 08-5723-cv(con), 08-5726-cv(con), 08-5727-cv(con), 08-5729-cv(con), 08-5730-cv(con), 08-5731-cv(con), 08-5734-cv(con), 08-5735-cv(con), 08-5737-cv(con), 08-5738-cv(con), 08-5740-cv(con), 08-5741-cv(con), 08-5744-cv(con), 08-5746-cv(con), 08-5747-cv(con), 08-5748-cv(con), 08-5749-cv(con), 08-5750-cv(con), 08-5751-cv(con), 08-5753-cv(con), 08-5754-cv(con), 08-5755-cv(con), 08-5756-cv(con), 08-5757-cv(con), 08-5758-cv(con), 08-5759-cv(con), 08-5760-cv(con), 08-5761-cv(con), 08-5762-cv(con), 08-5769-cv(con), 08-5771-cv(con), 08-5774-cv(con), 08-5775-cv(con), 08-5776-cv(con), 08-5778-cv(con), 08-5779-cv(con), 08-5780-cv(con), 08-5782-cv(xap), 08-5783-cv(con), 08-5790-cv(con), 08-5792-cv(con), 08-5793-cv(con), 08-5794-cv(con), 08-5796-cv(con), 08-5799-cv(con), 08-5800-cv(con), 08-5802-cv(con), 08-5803-cv(con), 08-5803-cv(con), 08-5807-cv(con), 08-5808-cv(con), 08-5811-cv(con), 08-5817-cv(con), 08-5821-cv(con), 08-5825-cv(con), 08-5829-cv(con) 08-5869-cv(con), 08-5870-cv(con), 08-5872-cv(con), 08-5885-cv(con), 08-5910-cv(con), 08-5813-cv(con), 08-5981-cv(con), 08-6133-cv(con), 08-6135-cv(con), 08-6136-cv(xap), 08-6137-cv(con), 08-6138-cv(con), 08-6242-cv(con), 08-6243-cv(con), 08-6249-cv(con), 08-6250-cv(con), 08-6251-cv(con), 08-6252-cv(con), 08-6253-cv(con), 08-6254-cv(con), 08-6255-cv(con), 08-6256-cv(con), 08-6257-cv(con), 08-6260-cv(con), 08-6261-cv(con), 08-6269-cv(con), 08-6270-cv(con), 09-0151-cv(con), 09-0155-cv(con), 09-0158-cv(con), 09-0160-cv(con), 09-0161-cv(con), 09-0163-cv(con), 09-0163-cv(con), 09-0164-cv(con), 09-0165-cv(con), 09-0525-cv(con), 09-0803-cv(con), 09-0812-cv(con)
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 584 F.3d 120 (Aurelius Capital Partners, LP v. THE REPUBLIC OF ARGENTINA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aurelius Capital Partners, LP v. THE REPUBLIC OF ARGENTINA, 584 F.3d 120, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 22746 (2d Cir. 2009).

Opinion

J. CLIFFORD WALLACE, Senior Circuit Judge:

The Republic of Argentina (Republic) appeals from the district court’s orders of attachment and execution (Thomas P. Griesa, Judge) entered in late 2008 over Argentine social security funds, which under proposed Argentine legislation were to be transferred to the Administración Na-cional de Seguridad Social (the Administration). The orders were confirmed in the district court’s opinion and order dated December 11, 2008, immediately after the legislation transferring the funds to the Administration became effective. The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1330. We have jurisdiction over the appeal from the district court’s December 11, 2008 order and opinion pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we have jurisdiction over the restraining orders, orders of attachment and writs of execution pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) and the collateral *124 order doctrine described in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 546-47, 69 S.Ct. 1221, 93 L.Ed. 1528 (1949). Because we conclude that the funds were immune from attachment under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (Act), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1602-1611, we reverse the decision of the district court and vacate its orders.

I

In 2001, the Republic defaulted on payments on debt instruments issued to bondholders. In connection with the issuance of the Argentine bonds, the Republic had agreed to a waiver of sovereign immunity. As a result of the default, many bondholders, including the majority of the plaintiffs in this case, obtained judgments against the Republic. Since the judgments against the Republic were entered, the bondholders have attempted to recover on the judgments. Most of these attempts have been unsuccessful “because they concerned property that was immune from execution under the [Act] or property that did not belong to the Republic.” See Br. of Def.-Appellant Republic of Argentina at 4-5, citing, inter alia, Capital Ventures Int’l v. Republic of Argentina, 280 Fed.Appx. 14, 15 (2d Cir.2008) and EM Ltd. v. Republic of Argentina, 473 F.3d 463, 475-76 (2d Cir.2007).

On October 21, 2008, the President of the Republic announced that private pension funds, held and managed on behalf of Argentine workers and pensioners, would be transferred to the Administration. This appeal stems from certain judgment holders’ attempts to execute upon some of those funds in order to satisfy their judgments. Before describing the proceedings in the district court whereby the plaintiffs attempted to execute against the pension funds, background on the Administration and the private pension funds is necessary.

The Argentine constitution requires that the government provide social security benefits to its citizens. Const, of the Argentine Nation, First Part, Ch. 1, § 14bis, available at http://www.argentina.gov.ar/ argentina/portal/documentos/ constitución_ingles.pdf (requiring that “[t]he State shall grant the benefits of social security, which shall be of an integral nature and may not be waived”). In 1991, the Republic adopted a decree creating a unified social security system, known as the “Distribution System.” Later that year, the Administration was established for the purpose of administering the Distribution System. The Administration also administered other programs, including welfare and unemployment benefits. In 1993, the Argentine government reformed the pension system to create a hybrid regime that allowed Argentine workers and pensioners to choose between the Distribution System and a new private plan, the “Capitalization System.” Under the Capitalization System, workers made contributions to individual accounts managed by private corporations, which administered the retirement and pension funds and provided payments and benefits due to the pensioners in exchange for management fees. By law, the assets in the funds were only to be used to provide social security benefits, and the private corporations did not have property rights in the funds’ assets. Some of the funds were held in New York, where the private corporations invested the funds to grow for the benefit of the pensioners.

Dissatisfied with the Capitalization System, in 2007, the Argentine Congress passed a law that allowed Capitalization System participants to switch back to the Distribution System. In order to facilitate this transition, the Argentine Congress passed a decree establishing the Sustainability Guarantee Fund (Guarantee Fund), *125 which received the social security funds transferred from the Capitalization System and was managed by the Administration. The law establishing the Guarantee Fund provided that its assets could be used only to provide social security benefits to qualifying participants.

Then, on October 21, 2008, proposed legislation was introduced in the Argentine legislature requiring the reunification of the bifurcated social security system. The proposed legislation required all of the assets in the Capitalization System to be transferred to the Guarantee Fund. The proposed legislation also reaffirmed that assets in the Guarantee Fund may only be used to provide social security benefits for Argentine pensioners.

On October 29, 2008, the district court signed an Order to Show Cause in three of the cases brought by Aurelius Capital Partners and Blue Angel Capital against the Republic based on defaulted bonds. The Order to Show Cause set for hearing a motion to authorize the United States Marshals Service to serve a writ of execution covering the retirement and pension funds, and related property located in New York and belonging to the Republic, the Administration, and the private corporations holding the funds under the Capitalization System. Although the plaintiffs in the three initial cases moved for relief only against the Republic and did not name either the Administration or the private corporations as parties, the district court nevertheless authorized the plaintiffs to make immediate service of restraining notices to the Republic, the Administration and the private corporations, which prevented removal of the retirement and pension funds or any of their assets from the United States. The restraining notices did not prohibit the parties from engaging in daily trading activities, provided that no property left the United States. The theory behind the orders was that once the proposed legislation had been enacted and the property had been transferred to the Administration, it would essentially become property of the Republic; if the property belongs to the Republic, then, because the Republic had waived sovereign immunity with respect to the bondholders’ judgments, judgment could be executed against it.

Two days after the October 29 order, EM Ltd. and NML Capital, Ltd. obtained “me too” ex parte

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Bluebook (online)
584 F.3d 120, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 22746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aurelius-capital-partners-lp-v-the-republic-of-argentina-ca2-2009.