Chinese state entities argue they have
'sovereign immunity' in U.S. courts
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[May 11, 2016]
By Matthew Miller and Michael Martina
BEIJING (Reuters) - Some Chinese
state-owned entities, backed by the key government agency that oversees
major state industrial companies, have adopted a controversial defense
when they face U.S. lawsuits: You can't touch us because we enjoy
sovereign immunity.
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A woman walks past the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC)
headquarters building in Beijing in this file photo dated October 30,
2012. REUTERS/Jason Lee |
Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), China's biggest
state-owned aerospace and defense company, has used the strategy
twice, while state-owned China National Building Materials Group Co
(CNBM), a state-owned building products company, successfully used
it in a case involving allegations that Chinese-made drywall led to
health problems for U.S. homeowners.
China's Foreign Ministry in October complained to the U.S.
government over attempts by plaintiff lawyers to serve the drywall
lawsuit on the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission (SASAC), which is responsible for 106 government-owned
enterprises with 4.7 trillion yuan ($722 billion) in assets,
including CNBM and AVIC. The ministry argued in a diplomatic note
that U.S. courts have no jurisdiction over suits against a country's
"state-owned properties."
The legal argument concerns whether companies controlled by the
Chinese government can be protected under the U.S. Foreign Sovereign
Immunities Act (FSIA), which was passed by Congress in 1976, even
when their U.S. subsidiaries are involved in commercial disputes.
The use of sovereign immunity by Chinese state-owned conglomerates
is a reflection of how China's state capitalism and legal regime is
increasingly running into conflict with Western regulation and
jurisprudence, particularly as the country's overseas investment
rapidly grows.
Some legal experts say the sovereign immunity defense, intended
under international law to shield governments from legal rulings
made by a foreign power, isn't a new or unexplored area of the law,
but that it typically does not apply to commercial cases.
AVIC did not respond to a request for comment. A CNBM spokesman said
case had been decided according to U.S. law but declined further
comment. SASAC did not respond to a request for comment.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters at a regular
briefing on Wednesday: "We demand that the host country earnestly
respect and safeguard Chinese companies' legal interests abroad."
Lu said he was unclear about specific cases.
BEHIND BIG WALLS
In March, AVIC challenged a more than $70 million arbitration
judgment against it in a U.S. federal district court in Dallas,
arguing that it may enjoy sovereign immunity as a Chinese
state-owned enterprise. That case is still to be resolved.
The Sixth Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in December in
AVIC's favor in a separate case, by ordering a Michigan federal
district court to re-examine its decision not to dismiss a lawsuit
brought by Global Technology Inc (GTI) in a breach of contract case.
The more senior court said that the lower court should have more
thoroughly weighed AVIC's sovereignty immunity arguments. The case
is now back with the lower court, where the parties have agreed to a
court-supervised mediation. Clashes between the U.S. and Chinese
legal systems have emerged in other arenas.
"I think there is a mentality in China that, hey, we are behind
these big walls and nobody can touch us," said Bill Perry a
Seattle-based trade litigator with law firm Harris Moure.
Chinese audit firms also have withheld working papers of Chinese
firms listed on U.S. stock markets during investigations by U.S.
regulators, stating that Chinese state secrecy law prohibited them
from doing so.
A U.S. judge held Bank of China Ltd in contempt in November for
refusing to surrender account records on customers accused of
selling counterfeit luxury goods.
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The bank argued that providing the records would violate Chinese
laws, but complied with the order in January after the judge imposed
a daily fine of $50,000.
'ALARMING AND DISTURBING'
The ongoing AVIC arbitration judgment concerns a case led by Tang
Energy Group, a Dallas-based clean energy company. In December, it
got a multiparty arbitration award against AVIC and its offshore
subsidiaries for breach of contract.
The arbitration panel from the International Centre for Dispute
Resolution in Dallas found that AVIC had failed to fulfill its
commitments to help fund a West Texas wind farm and develop a global
wind energy business as part of a joint venture agreement.
AVIC, in its March filing, asked the U.S District Court in Dallas to
vacate the judgment, arguing that the panel was unfairly constituted
and that it exceeded the scope of its mandate by naming AVIC's
offshore entities in its judgment. It also claimed sovereign
immunity in the dispute.
The claim of sovereign immunity is "alarming and disturbing," said
Greg Levesque, a senior adviser to Tang. "Anyone working with AVIC
or its subsidiaries has to wonder if a dispute arises whether
they're going to claim immunity or act responsibly."
'THAT'S U.S. LAW'
In the drywall case, China's Foreign Ministry called SASAC's
inclusion in the lawsuit "extremely ridiculous".
"The U.S. court's acceptance of the lawsuit and the attempt to serve
on SASAC through various channels has seriously infringed on the
national sovereignty and interests of China," its diplomatic note
said.
In March, the judge in the case dismissed CNBM from the suit,
reasoning that plaintiffs had not proven the company conducted any
commercial activity related to drywall in the United States.
James Stengel, a partner of the New York office of law firm Orrick -
which represented CNBM in the suit, said the sovereignty doctrine
"is highly relevant" for Chinese state-owned companies.
"You can make the argument that a different economic and political
system gives Chinese companies an advantage in some ways. But that's
U.S. law, and the U.S. government has made a clear decision that we
will recognize the sovereign immunity of appropriately structured
enterprises," Stengel said.
(Additional reporting by Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by
Martin Howell in Singapore)
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