Sikhs for Justice v. Parkash Badal

736 F.3d 743, 2013 WL 6172451, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 23785
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 26, 2013
Docket13-2316
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 736 F.3d 743 (Sikhs for Justice v. Parkash Badal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sikhs for Justice v. Parkash Badal, 736 F.3d 743, 2013 WL 6172451, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 23785 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

This appeal presents a single issue, which is whether the defendant was served with process; yet the case could be the basis for a novel of international intrigue.

Sikhism is an Indian religion. Most Sikhs live in the northwestern Indian state of Punjab. The state’s highest official is its Chief Minister. Parkash Singh Badal, the defendant in this case — a Sikh of course (all male Sikhs have “singh,” a derivative of “simha,” the Sanskrit word for lion, as part of their names) — is that offi *745 cial, despite his advanced age (85). He has held the office intermittently since 1970 and continuously since 2007.

Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), a U.S.-based human rights group, see www.sikhsfor justice.org/?q=content/about-us (the websites cited in this opinion were visited oh November 25, 2013), accuse Badal of being responsible for overseeing police and other security personnel implicated in extrajudicial killings and torture in Punjab, in violation of customary international law and the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991, 28 U.S.C. § 1850 note, P.L. 102-256,106 Stat. 73 (1992). Joined by several persons who claim to have been torture victims, SFJ filed this class action suit last year in the federal district court in Milwaukee. , The complaint based federal subject-matter jurisdiction on the Alien Tort Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1350, which confers jurisdiction over “any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.” Whether that jurisdiction extends to a tort committed by a foreign official in a foreign country is doubtful in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., — U.S.-, 133 S.Ct. 1659, 1669, 185 L.Ed.2d 671 (2013), but the issue has not been briefed and need not be decided if the district judge was right to dismiss the suit (as he did after an evidentiary hearing and some post-hearing discovery) on the ground that the defendant had not been served with the complaint and as a result the district court had not acquired personal jurisdiction. See Ruhrgas AG v. Marathon Oil Co., 526 U.S. 574, 583-85, 119 S.Ct. 1563, 143 L.Ed.2d 760 (1999). The plaintiffs contend in their appeal that the defendant was served, or alternatively that the district judge, by arbitrarily refusing to give them more time to gather evidence of service, improperly prevented them from proving that he was served.

Through news reports the plaintiffs had learned that the defendant was coming from India to Milwaukee to attend a wedding. He arrived in the United States on August 7. The suit was filed the next day. Now it happened that six people had been killed in an attack on a Sikh temple in Wisconsin two days earlier, and a commemorative meeting had been hurriedly scheduled to take place at a high school in a Milwaukee suburb for the late afternoon of the ninth. The plaintiffs hoped and expected that the defendant would attend the event, and so they hired a process server, Christopher Kratochvil, to serve the defendant during it. They gave him a photograph of the defendant to help Kra-tochvil identify him, and Kratochvil also watched á video of the defendant. The photograph and the video showed a tall, thin, elderly man with a long white beard and a mustache, wearing a turban (mandatory for Sikh men) and eyeglasses.

Such a man was indeed present at the high school event, standing at the front of the room in which the meeting was about to begin. Kratochvil walked up to him, said, “Excuse me, Mr. Singh Badal,”, handed him the summons and complaint, and hurried from the room without waiting for a response. According to Kratochvil the time was 4:50 p.m.

The defendant argues that he was never served during his visit to the United States; that he had not been at the high school on August 9 (he was there on August 10 for a larger event, related to the attack on the Sikhs, with Attorney General Holder); that the supposed service of him was a case of mistaken identity. He presented evidence in the district court proceeding- that the person who had been served was another tall, thin, elderly Sikh, an American citizen named Surinderpal Singh Kalra. Fluent in both English and *746 Punjabi, Kalra was at the high school event on August 9 as an interpreter. He was sporting eyeglasses, a turban, a long white beard, and a mustache. He testified that he had received the service papers intended for the defendant while standing at the front of the room waiting for the meeting to begin, but that he hadn’t understood their significance. He further testified that he had lost track of the papers and thought he’d simply left them on a table in the high school, and later forgot about them altogether — but, later still, had discovered them in the trunk of his car shortly before the evidentiary hearing in this case. He had been named as a witness, the defendant’s lawyers having discovered that he might have been handed the service papers by the process server, by mistake.

The hearing took place in February 2013, some six months after the event at the high school. Kalra brought the service papers with him to the hearing. That was some evidence in support of the defendant’s argument that the supposed service on him was a case of mistaken identity, and he presented more evidence of that. He had had a security detail, supplied by the State Department, during his visit to the United States. Members of the detail testified that they’d stuck close to him and no process server had approached him. The security detail had kept a running account of his every move on his visit to Milwaukee; and not only was there no mention of a visit to the high school but there was a notation that Badal had arrived at Milwaukee’s Boelter Superstore (a fancy store selling China tableware and restaurant equipment, see “Boelter SuperStore,” http://boeltersuperstore.com) at 4:49 p.m., one minute before Kratochvil allegedly served him, and had left the store at 5:09 p.m. after ordering some $1,000 worth of equipment. The store is 17 miles from the high school.

Other witnesses testified to meeting the defendant on April 9 at times that made it impossible for him to have been at the high school at 4:50 p.m. The plaintiffs do not argue that the man identified at the Boelter Superstore as the defendant was a “body double” meant to fool people into thinking the defendant was there when actually he was at the high school. No one who had been at the high school event (attended by about 60 persons) testified to having seen the defendant there — except Kratochvil, the process server. He testified that the defendant was indeed the person whom he had served, as did his brother, who was with him and is also a process server though he didn’t participate in serving the man who Kratochvil insists was the defendant. A Justice Department handout listing the dignitaries who would participate in the event at the high school did not mention the defendant. The district judge adjudged the defendant’s witnesses “uniformly credible,” and an inference of credibility drawn by a judge from live testimony is entitled to considerable deference by an appellate court.

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736 F.3d 743, 2013 WL 6172451, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 23785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sikhs-for-justice-v-parkash-badal-ca7-2013.