Uab Skyroad Leasing v. Ojsc Tajik Air

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 26, 2021
DocketCivil Action No. 2020-0763
StatusPublished

This text of Uab Skyroad Leasing v. Ojsc Tajik Air (Uab Skyroad Leasing v. Ojsc Tajik Air) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Uab Skyroad Leasing v. Ojsc Tajik Air, (D.D.C. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

_________________________________________ ) UAB SKYROAD LEASING, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) Case No. 20-cv-00763 (APM) ) OJSC TAJIK AIR, ) ) Respondent. ) _________________________________________ ) MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

Petitioner UAB Skyroad Leasing (“Skyroad”) brings this action to enforce a 2018 arbitral

award against Respondent OJSC Tajik Air (“Tajik Air”) issued by the Vilnius Court of

Commercial Arbitration (“VCCA”) in Vilnius, Lithuania. The VCCA tribunal awarded Skyroad

$20,216,425.54 in damages, and €78,700.58 and $6,773.60 in legal costs, plus interest. Tajik Air

has yet to pay any amount of the award, and appears in this matter to contest the court’s jurisdiction

over it. Tajik Air contends that personal jurisdiction is lacking because (1) Skyroad failed to

execute service of process consistent with the requirements of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities

Act (“FSIA”), and (2) jurisdiction over Tajik Air cannot be exercised consistent with the

requirements of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Tajik Air demands dismissal of

Skyroad’s petition.

Under the FSIA, Tajik Air is considered an instrumentality of a foreign state—the Republic

of Tajikistan is the company’s sole shareholder. As an instrumentality, Tajik Air is presumed to

be separate from its foreign-state owner and, under Circuit precedent, enjoys the protections of the

Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. That presumption is rebuttable, however, and can be overcome by a showing that Tajikistan completely dominates Tajik Air or that Tajik Air is an

agent of the sovereign, or that recognizing Tajik Air as a separate entity would work fraud or

injustice. Skyroad attempts to make these showings, but its evidence falls short. It demonstrates

neither an unusual degree of control by Tajikistan over Tajik Air nor that recognizing separateness

work fraud or injustice. Accordingly, for the court to exercise personal jurisdiction over Tajik Air

consistent with the Due Process Clause, the company must have sufficient minimum contacts with

the United States. The record reveals none. Therefore, the court grants Tajik Air’s motion to

dismiss. The court does not reach Tajik Air’s claim of improper service.

II. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

1. The Aircraft Leases

Respondent Tajik Air is an airline company wholly owned by the Republic of Tajikistan

(“Tajikistan”). See Compl./Pet. to Confirm, Recognize, & Enforce Foreign Arb. Award,

ECF No. 1 [hereinafter Pet.], ¶ 8. Formerly a state-owned enterprise known as “State Unitary

Aviation Enterprise Tajik Air,” id., the company was restructured as an open joint stock company

by government resolution on December 30, 2009, see Resp’t’s Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 12

[hereinafter Resp’t’s Mot.], Decl. of Dilshod Ismatullozoda, ECF No. 12-2 [hereinafter

Ismatullozoda Decl.], Ex. A, ECF No. 12-3 [hereinafter Articles of Ass’n], ¶ 1. The government

of Tajikistan retained 100 percent ownership of Tajik Air’s voting shares. See id. ¶ 8.

Shortly before the State Unitary Aviation Enterprise Tajik Air was privatized, in September

2009, it entered into two identical lease agreements with a Lithuanian company called AB Avia

Asset Management for the lease of two Boeing aircraft. See Pet. ¶¶ 15, 17. The agreements

required Tajik Air to pay monthly rent of $149,000 for each aircraft and to return the two aircraft

2 at the end of the 60-month lease period. Id. ¶ 17. On November 2, 2010, AB Avia Asset

Management transferred all rights and obligations under the lease agreements to UAB AviaAM

B03, which later became UAB Skyroad Leasing. Id. ¶ 16.

As relevant here, the lease agreements contained an arbitration clause providing that “[a]ny

dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to th[e] Finance Lease shall be settled by

Arbitration in the Vilnius Court of Commercial Arbitration in accordance with its Rules.” Id. ¶ 19;

see Mem. of P. & A. in Supp. of Pet. to Confirm Award, ECF No. 4, Decl. of Michael S. Cryan,

ECF No. 4-1 [hereinafter Cryan Decl.], Ex. B, Aircraft Finance Lease Agreement, ECF No. 4-3

[hereinafter Lease Agreement], at 101. The arbitration clause further identified Vilnius, Lithuania,

as the seat of arbitration and called for all proceedings to be conducted in English, using the

substantive law of the Republic of Lithuania. Pet. ¶ 19; Lease Agreement at 101.

2. The Arbitration Award

In 2013, after Tajik Air started falling behind on the monthly lease payments, Skyroad

initiated arbitration proceedings pursuant to the agreements, resulting in an award of $2,824,000

plus interest. See Cryan Decl., Ex. A., Final Arb. Award, ECF No. 4-2 [hereinafter Award], ¶ 7.

When Tajik Air remained delinquent on payments and failed to return the aircraft at the end of the

leases, Skyroad initiated a second arbitration proceeding with the VCCA tribunal on September 5,

2017, whose ultimate award is the subject of this action. See id. ¶ 8; Pet. ¶ 21.

Tajik Air, at first, appeared before the arbitral tribunal. On October 31, 2017, represented

by the Head of the Legal Department of Tajikistan’s Ministry of Transport, Zafar Khafizov, see

Pet. ¶ 22, Tajik Air filed a statement of counterclaim challenging the tribunal’s jurisdiction over

the dispute, see Award ¶ 39. Specifically, Tajik Air argued that the tribunal should declare the

arbitration agreement invalid under Article 12(3) of the Law on Commercial Arbitration of the

3 Republic of Lithuania. See id. ¶¶ 64–65. Article 12(3) provides that disputes involving “a state

or municipal enterprise or an institution or organisation” may not be referred to arbitration without

the consent of the founder of such an entity. Id. ¶ 71. Tajik Air argued that the arbitration

agreements in the Skyroad leases were unenforceable because the company was a state enterprise

at the time it entered the agreement, and it never obtained the consent of its founder, the

government of Tajikistan, to enter the arbitration agreement. See id. ¶ 65.

But Tajik Air’s appearance before the tribunal was short lived. Mr. Khafizov failed to pay

the required fees associated with the counterclaim on behalf of Tajik Air. See id. ¶¶ 46, 52, 65–66.

Indeed, he appears to have absconded with those funds and has since fled the country. See Reply

Mem. in Supp. of Resp’t’s Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 14 [hereinafter Resp’t’s Reply], Second

Decl. of Dilshod Ismatullozoda, ECF No. 14-1 [hereinafter 2d Ismatullozoda Decl.], ¶ 10–11. As

a consequence, the arbitral tribunal did not consider Tajik Air’s counterclaim. See Award ¶ 66.

Nor did Tajik Air otherwise contest Skyroad’s claims—it did not appear at the merits hearing held

before the VCCA tribunal on March 12, 2018. Only Petitioner was in attendance. See Award

¶¶ 31, 59.

Although Tajik Air’s counterclaim was not formally before it, in the Final Award the

tribunal nevertheless sua sponte considered Tajik Air’s jurisdictional argument but rejected it on

two primary grounds. See id. ¶¶ 64–66, 68–82. First, the tribunal found that the restrictions of

Article 12(3) of the Law on Commercial Arbitration were “designed to apply to [] Lithuanian State

entities and institutions, [ ] not [] foreign ones” like Tajik Air, which was “an entity established

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