Mortimer Off Shore Services, Ltd. v. Federal Republic of Germany

615 F.3d 97, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15235, 2010 WL 2891069
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 2010
DocketDocket 08-1783-cv (L), 08-2358-cv (XAP)
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 615 F.3d 97 (Mortimer Off Shore Services, Ltd. v. Federal Republic of Germany) 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
Mortimer Off Shore Services, Ltd. v. Federal Republic of Germany, 615 F.3d 97, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15235, 2010 WL 2891069 (2d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee Mortimer Off Shore Services, Ltd. (“Mortimer”) appeals from the dismissal by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Gerard E. Lynch, Judge) of Mortimer’s action to enforce 351 bearer bonds (“Bonds”) valued at over $400,000,000 (as of the filing of the complaint) against the Federal Republic of Germany (“FRG”) 1 for failure to state a *99 claim. See Mortimer v. The Fed. Republic of Germany, No. 05 Civ. 10669(GEL), 2007 WL 2822214 (S.D.N.Y. Sept.27, 2007). The complaint alleged that the FRG assumed liability for the Bonds, which were issued after the First World War by banks located in the state of Prussia in territory later comprising West Germany and East Germany.

We hold that Mortimer’s claim seeking to enforce the Bonds issued in territory that became East Germany (“East German Bonds”) must be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, because Mortimer failed to allege an “action [by East Germany or the FRG] ... based upon a commercial activity,” 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2), that, if proven, would give rise to jurisdiction over a foreign sovereign. We further hold that Mortimer cannot seek to enforce the Bonds issued in territory that became West Germany (‘West German Bonds”) without first complying with the statutory validation procedures aimed to ensure that the Bonds represent valid, legal obligations.

Next, Mortimer appeals from the denial of its subsequent motions to amend the judgment and for leave to file an amended complaint. We determine that leave to amend would be futile because the proposed amended complaint did not cure the original complaint’s deficiencies, either by providing a basis for subject matter jurisdiction to enforce the East German Bonds, or by showing that the validation procedures do not apply to the West German Bonds.

Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Mortimer’s action in regard to both the West German Bonds and the East German Bonds, and we affirm its denial of Mortimer’s motions to amend the judgment and for leave to file an amended complaint in regard to both the West German Bonds and the East German Bonds.

BACKGROUND

Mortimer possesses 351 bearer bonds entitled “German Provincial & Communal Bank Consolidated Agricultural Loan Secured Sinking Fund Gold Bonds Series A” (“Agricultural Bonds”) that have a face amount of $25,000,000 and that, as of the commencement of this action in December 2005, were estimated to exceed $400,000,000 in value. Mortimer, 2007 WL 2822214, at *2. Mortimer brought this action to recover the outstanding principal and interest under the Bonds from the FRG.

On June 1, 1928, a consortium of fourteen provincial banks (“obligor banks”) within the state of Prussia, a political subdivision of the German Reich, issued the Bonds and then loaned the proceeds to farmers as part of a Prussian program for improving agricultural conditions. Id. at *1. The state of Prussia allegedly guaranteed the obligor banks’ obligations under the Bonds. The obligor banks were located within territory later constituting West Germany and East Germany, which have since been reunified to make up the present-day FRG. 2 The Bonds contained cou *100 pons from December 1944 and matured on June 1, 1958. The thirty-year Bonds were “listed on the New York Stock Exchange,” were marketed in the Southern District of New York, were made “payable ... in the Borough of Manhattan,” New York City, and “entitle[d] the holder to payment upon demand.” (Compl. ¶¶ 6, 8, & 13) According to Mortimer, each obligor bank is severally liable for a value of the Bonds proportionate to its share of the underlying loans, and obligor banks located in West Germany and East Germany are liable for 35.5 and 64.5% of the Bonds’ debt, respectively. Mortimer, 2007 WL 2822214, at *1.

I. Historical and Legal Background

A. German History

The FRG, as it “exists today[,] is the product of a long, contentious, and disparate history.” Martin A. Rogoff, The European Union, Germany, and the Lander: New Patterns of Political Relations in Europe, 5 Colum. J. Eur. L. 415, 417 (1999). For many centuries, German territory, then part of the Heiliges romisches Reich (Holy Roman Empire or “First Reich”), consisted of “several hundred discrete political units.” Id.

The modern German nation-state was formed in 1871, when most of these units were “united into one [centralized] state under the leadership of [the Kingdom of] Prussia,” id., a monarchy, and officially called the Deutsches Reich (“German Reich” or “Second Reich”). In 1919, after World War I ended, the King of Prussia abdicated his throne and the Deutsches Reich was declared the Weimar Republic. 3 The German Reich was made up of several states or Lander, the largest of which was the “Free state of Prussia,” Michael Stolleis, A History of Public Law in Germany, 1914-1945, 108-09 (Thomas Dunlap trans., Oxford Univ. Press 2004), that encompassed territory later comprising both West Germany and East Germany.

In 1933, as a result of growing discontentment with the Weimar government, the Nazi Party rose to power and Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. Over the next few years, the Drittes Reich (“Third Reich”), formally abolished the Lander parliaments, Rogoff, 5 Colum. J. Eur. L. at 418, and became a centralized totalitarian state. Under Hitler’s dictatorship, in 1939, the Third Reich invaded Poland, beginning World War II in Europe, and in 1941, attacked the Soviet Union and declared war on the United States. See generally William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany (1960).

In 1949, four years after World War II ended, the western eleven Lander that were controlled by France, the United Kingdom, and the United States merged to form West Germany, a market economy, and the five Lander in the eastern sector occupied by the Soviet Union became East *101 Germany, a communist Eastern block state that remained under the Soviet Union’s political and military control.

On October 3,1990, West and East Germany were reunified, thereby creating the present-day FRG.

B. Foreign Currency Bonds

After the First World War, German enterprises sold a large number of bearer bonds which were underwritten, marketed, and payable in the United States. See Abrey v. Reusch, 153 F.Supp. 337, 339-42 (S.D.N.Y.1957) (detailing the history of the validation laws and treaties relating to the bearer bonds); Dix v. Comm’r, 34 T.C.

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