Tachiona v. Mugabe

169 F. Supp. 2d 259, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18712, 2001 WL 1335003
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 30, 2001
Docket00 CIV. 6666(VM)
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 169 F. Supp. 2d 259 (Tachiona v. Mugabe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tachiona v. Mugabe, 169 F. Supp. 2d 259, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18712, 2001 WL 1335003 (S.D.N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

*263 DECISION AND ORDER

MARRERO, District Judge.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

BACKGROUND.264

FACTS .265

DISCUSSION.268

I. HEAD-OF-STATE IMMUNITY.268

A. ABSOLUTE SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY DOCTRINE: THE SCHOONER

EXCHANGE.268

B. RESTRICTIVE IMMUNITY.270

1. The Tate Letter.270
2. The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.272

*264 3. Post-FSIA Effects and Development.278

4. FSIA Case Law.281

a. Chuidian.281

b. Aristide.284

c. Beyond Chuidian and Aristide.288

d. Plaintiffs’ Authorities Distinguished.293

II. DIPLOMATIC IMMUNITY.297

III. PERSONAL INVIOLABILITY.302

IV. JURISDICTION..309

A. PERSONAL JURISDICTION.309

B. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION.309

1. The Alien Tort Claims Act. CO r — i CO

2. The Torture Victim Protection Act hO r — l CO

V. CONCLUSION. .316

ORDER . .318

Plaintiffs (hereinafter referred to collectively as “Plaintiffs”) are citizens of Zimbabwe. They brought this suit as a class action in their own names and on behalf of other similarly situated Zimbabweans who Plaintiffs claim have suffered from wrongful actions they attribute to defendants. Plaintiffs’ claims are lodged against Robert Gabriel Mugabe (hereinafter “Mugabe”), who is the President of Zimbabwe; Stan Mudenge (hereinafter “Mudenge”), Zimbabwe’s Foreign Minister; and Jonathan Moyo, Minister for Information and Publicity of Zimbabwe; as well as against the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (“ZANU-PF”), the Zimbabwe government’s ruling political party of which Mugabe is First Secretary and President, and Mudenge and Moyo are senior officers. As jurisdictional and substantive grounds for their action Plaintiffs invoke the Alien Tort Claims Act (“ATCA”), 1 the Torture Victim Protection Act (“TVPA”), 2 the general federal question jurisdictional statute, 3 and fundamental norms of international human rights law. 4

BACKGROUND

The principles at issue in this case hold ancient roots. They trace to a time when the concept of the sovereign embodied a dual meaning. It stood for both the abstract nation and the corporeal person of its ruler: the State was the monarch and the monarch was the State. The echoes of that notion resound most prominently in words that issue from the anden regime, when perhaps not at all in haughty jest, but in a pointed reflection of then perceived reality, France’s King Louis XIV, in his enduring remark “L’état, c’est moi”, proclaimed the state and himself synonymous.

*265 Old ideas die hard. And so, the core of the controversy now before the Court tests the residual vigor of a political and legal legacy of sovereign antiquity. At issue is whether and to what degree the duality that was once assumed as a truism of sovereignty, as though emanating from divine right, may still survive as a binding equation in a doctrine of sovereign immunity for a foreign head-of-state that would preclude this Court, as the United States Government here urges, from extending jurisdiction over the foreign government leaders here, no matter how grievous or unofficial the wrongs they are called upon to answer.

Conversely, Plaintiffs advance a more expansive theory. In essence, they posit that the concept of sovereignty has evolved, and that with it the traditional principles governing sovereign immunity changed, the world of these ideas over time scooped by the arcs of new realities above them, yielding ground to a modern age that, both in symbol and in fact, has witnessed “Diadems drop, and Doges surrender.” 5 According to this view, in the ensuing progress of events and enlightened principles, the Court may find enough support to ground its exercise of judicial power over the foreign officials here.

In the final analysis, as this Court concludes, the instant case is one in which hopes outpace remedy, personal demands for justice run higher than the availability of full and immediate legal recourse in this forum. The progression of the legal precepts and theories Plaintiffs here invoke, despite critical strides marked in recent years, still trails behind human aspirations and has some time and way to go to close the gap. Consequently, on the circumstances now before the Court, the measure of justice necessarily is gauged on a scale some may feel does not fully reckon all that is seen and unseen, and whose standards may account, perhaps disproportionately, for things not altogether discernible. Nonetheless, for the reasons described below the Court accepts the State Department’s Suggestion of Immunity on behalf of Mugabe and Mudenge and dismisses the action as to them. Plaintiffs’ motion for entry of a default judgment against ZANU-PF, however, is granted.

FACTS 6

The complaint asserts that the ZANU-PF led by President Mugabe and the other individual defendants acting in their personal capacities and as senior officers of ZANU-PF, planned and executed a campaign of violence designed to intimidate and suppress its burgeoning but peaceful political opposition, the Movement for Democratic Change (“MDC”). Specifically, Plaintiffs charge that defendants’ lawless conduct included “murder, torture, terrorism, rape, beatings, and destruction of property ....” 7 For reasons discussed below and critical to the legal dispute at *266 hand, Plaintiffs stress that the violent deeds associated with this campaign were all perpetrated by defendants and other agents of ZANU-PF acting individually, not by the government of Zimbabwe nor by Mugabe and Mudenge carrying out any public mandate or official duties. The complaint and supporting materials graphically depict acts of brutality this campaign inflicted upon its intended victims.

For present purposes, the Court accepts the uncontested assertions that the violence and wrongs Plaintiffs allege fall squarely within the conduct encompassed by the ATCA and TVPA and proscribed by universally recognized human rights norms. 8

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169 F. Supp. 2d 259, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18712, 2001 WL 1335003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tachiona-v-mugabe-nysd-2001.