14‐4721‐cv(L)
Fed. Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. Spirits Int’l B.V.
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2015
(Argued: August 24, 2015 Decided: January 5, 2016)
Docket Nos. 14‐4721‐cv(L), 15‐152‐cv (XAP)
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FEDERAL TREASURY ENTERPRISE
SOJUZPLODOIMPORT, OAO “MOSCOW
DISTILLERY CRISTALL”
Plaintiffs‐Counter
Defendants‐Appellants‐
Cross‐Appellees,
‐ v.‐
SPIRITS INTERNATIONAL B.V. F/K/A SPIRITS
INTERNATIONAL N.V., SPI SPIRITS LIMITED,
SPI GROUP SA, YURI SHEFLER, ALEXEY
OLIYNIK, STOLI GROUP (USA) LLP,
Defendants‐Counter
Claimants‐Appellees‐
Cross‐Appellants,
WILLIAM GRANT & SONS USA, WILLIAM
GRANT & SONS, INC.
Defendants‐Appellees‐
Cross‐Appellants,
ALLIED DOMECQ INTERNATIONAL
HOLDINGS B.V., ALLIED DOMECQ SPIRITS &
WINES USA, INC. D/B/A ALLIED DOMECQ
SPIRITS, USA
Defendants.
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Before: NEWMAN, WALKER, and JACOBS, Circuit Judges.
Rival claims to the “Stolichnaya” trademarks have been asserted by
successors in interest to a Soviet enterprise and by an agency of the Russian
Federation. The principal issue is whether the agency of the Russian Federation
has been endowed by that government with rights and powers that support
standing under section 32(1) of the Lanham Act. The question has been here
before. We conclude that the United States District court for the Southern District
of New York (Scheindlin, J.) erred in considering whether the asserted basis for
standing to pursue the section 32(1) claims was valid under Russian law, but that
the district court correctly dismissed all of the other claims as barred by res
judicata and laches.
Affirmed in part and vacated and remanded in part.
2
DANIEL H. BROMBERG (Kathleen M.
Sullivan, Marc L. Greenwald, Robert
Raskopf, and Jessica Rose, Quinn Emanuel
Urquhart & Sullivan LLP, New York, NY,
on the brief) Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &
Sullivan LLP, Redwood Shores, CA for
Plaintiffs‐Counter Defendants‐Appellants‐
Cross‐Appellees.
Eugene D. Gulland, Bingham B. Leverich,
and David M. Zionts, Covington & Burling
LLP, Washington, D.C.; Emily Johnson
Hemm, Covington & Burling LLP,
Redwood Shores, CA, for Defendants‐
Counter Claimants‐Appellees‐Cross‐
Appellants.
EDWARD T. COLBERT (William M.
Merone, on the brief) Kenyon & Kenyon
LLP, Washington, D.C. for Defendants‐
Appellees‐Cross‐Appellants.
DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:
Rival claims to the “Stolichnaya” trademarks have been asserted by an
agency of the Russian Federation and by successors in interest to a Soviet
enterprise. The principal issue is whether Federal Treasury Enterprise
Sojuzplodoimport (“FTE”), an agency of the Russian Federation, has been
endowed by that government with rights and powers that give it standing to
3
pursue claims under section 32(1) of the Lanham Act (the “section 32(1) claims”).
The question has been here before. We conclude that the United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York (Scheindlin, J.) erred in determining
whether FTE’s asserted basis for standing was valid under Russian law. We
further conclude that the district court correctly dismissed all of FTE’s other
claims (the “non‐section 32(1) claims”) as barred by both res judicata and laches.
FTE and co‐plaintiff OAO “Moscow Distillery Cristall” (“Cristall”) allege
that the defendants unlawfully misappropriated and commercially exploited the
Stolichnaya trademarks related to the sale of vodka and other spirits in the
United States (the “Marks”). Currently, control over the Marks in the United
States is exercised by defendants as successors in interest to a Soviet state
enterprise: Spirits International B.V. f/k/a Spirits International N.V., SPI Spirits
Limited, SPI Group SA, Yuri Shefler, and Alexey Oliynik (collectively, “SPI”).
The other defendants are licensed distributors of SPI: William Grant & Sons USA
and William Grant & Sons, Inc. (collectively, “William Grant”); Allied Domecq
International Holdings B.V. and Allied Domecq Spirits & Wines USA, Inc. d/b/a
Allied Domecq Spirits, USA (collectively, “Allied Domecq”); and Stoli Group
(USA) LLP (“Stoli Group”).
4
In a prior suit, FTE brought claims against SPI under section 32(1) of the
Lanham Act, as well as analogous federal and state law claims. We dismissed
FTE’s section 32(1) claims on the ground that the Russian Federation itself
retained too great an interest in the Marks for FTE to qualify as an “assign” with
standing to sue. Fed. Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. SPI Spirits Ltd., 726
F.3d 62, 66 (2d Cir. 2013). FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims were either dismissed
on the merits, voluntarily dismissed, or dropped during the course of that
litigation.
Subsequently, the Russian Federation issued a decree (the “Decree”),
directing the Federal Agency for State Property Management (“State Property
Management”) to transfer to FTE “the rights of the Russian Federation” to the
Marks. Pursuant to the Decree, an assignment was executed (the “Assignment”),
purporting to transfer the Russian Federation’s “entire right, title, and interest in
and to the [Marks]” to FTE. FTE then filed the present lawsuit, once again
asserting both section 32(1) and non‐section 32(1) claims against SPI. Defendants
moved to dismiss.
In a series of orders, the district court ruled that: (i) FTE lacked statutory
standing to assert the section 32(1) claims because the Assignment was invalid
5
under Russian law; (ii) FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims were barred by res judicata
in light of the prior litigation; and (iii) the non‐section 32(1) claims were also
barred by laches.
We conclude that the doctrines of comity and act of state preclude a United
States court from invalidating an action of a foreign sovereign with respect to a
transfer of rights among its branches or entities on the ground that the transfer is
invalid under the law of that foreign sovereign. Accordingly, because the district
court undertook to determine whether the Assignment from the Russian
Federation to FTE was valid under Russian law, we vacate the district court’s
dismissal of FTE’s section 32(1) claims for lack of standing and remand for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We affirm the dismissal of
FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims as barred by res judicata and laches.
BACKGROUND
Beginning in the 1940s, the Soviet Union manufactured and marketed
premium vodka under the name “Stolichnaya” (“from the capital” in Russian).
In 1969, a Soviet state enterprise called “V/O‐SPI” obtained a federal trademark
in the United States for “Stolichnaya” vodka. V/O‐SPI (later renamed “VVO‐
SPI”) licensed the use of the Marks to various distributors in the United States.
6
Those distributors, which at the time included PepsiCo, sold “Stolichnaya”
branded vodka in the United States throughout the 1970s and 1980s. As the
Soviet Union began to collapse in the early 1990s, many Soviet state enterprises
were privatized. VVO‐SPI was purportedly privatized by its directors and
managers under the new name “VAO‐SPI,” which later became controlled by
SPI.
As the asserted successor in interest to VVO‐SPI, SPI represented itself as
the owner of the Marks. When PepsiCo’s license of the Marks ended in 2000, SPI
entered into a series of licensing agreements with defendants Allied Domecq,
William Grant, and Stoli Group to distribute vodka bearing the Marks in the
United States: (i) Allied Domecq from 2001 to 2008; (ii) William Grant from 2008
to 2014; and (iii) Stoli Group from 2014 to present.
In 2000, a Russian court held that VVO‐SPI was not validly privatized
under Russian law and that ownership of the Marks had remained with the
Soviet Union, and therefore with the Russian Federation. In 2002, the Russian
Federation formed FTE to be the legitimate successor to VVO‐SPI, and FTE
entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with Cristall to distribute vodka
bearing the Marks in the United States.
7
In 2004, FTE and Cristall filed suit in the United States District Court for
the Southern District of New York against SPI and its then‐licensee Allied
Domecq, alleging violations of section 32(1) of the Lanham Act, which provides a
cause of action for owners of registered trademarks, and alleging violations of
other provisions of the Lanham Act and state law that do not require trademark
registration. The district court dismissed the Lanham Act claims (on the ground
that the Marks had been “incontestable”) as well as the state law claims of fraud
and unjust enrichment. Fed. Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. Spirits Int’l
N.V., 425 F. Supp. 2d 458, 465‐67 (S.D.N.Y. 2006) (“FTE I”). FTE’s remaining state
law claims (unfair competition and false designation of origin) were voluntarily
dismissed.
On appeal, we vacated as to the incontestability issue, Fed. Treasury Enter.
Sojuzplodoimport v. Spirits Int’l N.V., 623 F.3d 61, 71 (2d Cir. 2010) (“FTE II”),
but affirmed the dismissal of the claims for fraud and unjust enrichment, Fed.
Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. Spirits Int’l N.V., 400 F. App’x 611, 614 (2d
Cir. 2010) (“FTE II Summary Order”). On remand, the defendants consented to
the filing of an amended complaint, which added as a defendant William Grant
(which had since received a license from SPI to distribute Stolichnaya‐branded
8
vodka) and dropped all but the section 32(1) claims, a declaratory judgment
claim, and a state law claim for misappropriation.
The defendants successfully moved to dismiss the section 32(1) claims on
the ground that FTE lacked statutory standing to sue as a “registrant” under the
Lanham Act. Fed. Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. Spirits Int’l N.V., No. 04‐
cv‐8510 (GBD), 2011 WL 4005321, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 1, 2011) (“FTE III”). The
state law misappropriation claim was dismissed without prejudice. FTE
appealed, arguing that it was an “assign” of the Russian Federation, to which the
Marks were properly registered, and thus had standing to assert section 32(1)
claims. We rejected that argument on the ground that the Russian Federation
retained too great an interest in the Marks for FTE to qualify as an “assign.” Fed.
Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. SPI Spirits Ltd., 726 F.3d 62, 66 (2d Cir.
2013) (“FTE IV”).
Following FTE IV, and evidently in response to it, the Russian Federation
issued the Decree, which ordered that:
[State Property Management] is to conclude with [FTE] an
agreement on transferring to the said enterprise the rights of the
Russian Federation to trademarks containing verbal designations
“Stolichnaya” and/or “Stoli” used on the territory of the United
States (on all territories subject to the jurisdiction of the United States
9
of America).
Pursuant to the Decree, the Assignment was executed that transferred to FTE the
Russian Federation’s “entire right, title, and interest in and to the [Marks].”
FTE and Cristall (as FTE’s licensee) then brought the present lawsuit, again
asserting both section 32(1) and non‐section 32(1) claims. The defendants moved
to dismiss, arguing that FTE did not acquire statutory standing to bring the
section 32(1) claims because the Russian Federation’s Assignment was invalid
under Russian law, and that in any event all of FTE’s claims were barred by res
judicata and laches. In a series of decisions, the district court held that FTE still
lacked statutory standing to bring its section 32(1) claims because the Assignment
was invalid under Russian law, and that the non‐section 32(1) claims were barred
by res judicata as well as laches. The parties cross‐appealed.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo the grant of a motion to dismiss, Carpenters Pension
Trust Fund of St. Louis v. Barclays PLC, 750 F.3d 227, 232 (2d Cir. 2014), and a
district court’s rulings on questions of foreign law, Curley v. AMR Corp., 153
F.3d 5, 11 (2d Cir. 1998).
In FTE IV, we observed that, “[h]ad the Russian Federation effected a valid
10
assignment here, FTE could sue under Section 32(1) as an ‘assign.’” FTE IV, 726
F.3d at 79. The Assignment undertook to do just that: the Russian Federation
“sells, conveys, transfers, assigns and sets over its entire right, title and interest in
and to the [Marks] to [FTE]” and “expressly relinquishes any and all right, title
and interest in and to the [Marks].” The district court conceded that it was
“somewhat uncomfortable telling a foreign government that a validly enacted
decree cannot achieve the result that was clearly intended by its passage.” Fed.
Treasury Enter. Sojuzplodoimport v. Spirits Int’l B.V., 61 F. Supp. 3d 372, 386
(S.D.N.Y. 2014). We conclude that the district court had good reason for
discomfort.
I
“Under the principles of international comity, United States courts
ordinarily refuse to review acts of foreign governments and defer to proceedings
taking place in foreign countries, allowing those acts and proceedings to have
extraterritorial effect in the United States.” Pravin Banker Assoc., Ltd. v. Banco
Popular Del Peru, 109 F.3d 850, 854 (2d Cir. 1997); see also Hilton v. Guyot, 159
U.S. 113, 164 (1895). Nevertheless, “courts will not extend comity to foreign
proceedings when doing so would be contrary to the policies or prejudicial to the
11
interests of the United States.” Pravin, 109 F.3d at 854; see also Allied Bank Int’l
v. Banco Creditor Agricola de Cartago, 757 F.2d 516, 522 (2d Cir. 1985); Banco
Nacional de Cuba v. Chem. Bank New York Trust Co., 658 F.2d 903, 908 (2d Cir.
1981); Republic of Iraq v. First Nat. City Bank, 353 F.2d 47, 51 (2d Cir. 1965).
The Decree and Assignment were indisputably acts of a foreign
government. The declaration of a United States court that the executive branch of
the Russian government violated its own law by transferring its own rights to its
own quasi‐governmental entity (FTE) would be an affront to the government of a
foreign sovereign. Even an inquiry into whether Russian law permitted the
Assignment is a breach of comity. “So long as the act is the act of the foreign
sovereign, it matters not how grossly the sovereign has transgressed its own
laws.” Banco de Espana v. Fed. Reserve Bank of N.Y., 114 F.2d 438, 444 (2d Cir.
1940).
Extending comity to the Russian Federation’s issuance of the Decree and
execution of the Assignment would undermine no policy or interest of the United
States, which has no stake in which instrumentality of the Russian Federation
asserts trademark claims over the Marks.
We concluded in FTE IV that the United States has an interest in enforcing
12
“its own trademark laws within its borders” and “the Lanham Act’s express
[standing] requirements.” FTE IV, 726 F.3d at 82. But in this case, the question of
standing depends on whether an agency of a foreign sovereign has been
endowed by that government with all the rights and powers it claims over the
Marks. Whether those rights, if validly assigned, prevail against alleged
infringers is very much an issue confided to the United States courts; the distinct
question whether the government of a foreign sovereign has effectively and
legally allocated its rights and powers among its agencies and instrumentalities
under that foreign sovereign’s law, is not. Considerations of international comity
precluded the district court from adjudicating the validity of the Assignment.
II
The district court’s determination of the validity of the Assignment was
likewise barred by the act of state doctrine. The doctrine “precludes any review
whatever of the acts of the government of one sovereign State done within its
own territory by the courts of another sovereign State.” First Nat. City Bank v.
Banco Nacional de Cuba, 406 U.S. 759, 763 (1972). The doctrine “arises out of the
basic relationships between branches of government in a system of separation of
powers” and “expresses the strong sense of the Judicial Branch that its
13
engagement in the task of passing on the validity of foreign acts of state may
hinder rather than further this country’s pursuit of goals.” Banco Nacional de
Cuba v. Sabbatino, 376 U.S. 398, 423 (1964). In this sense, the act of state doctrine
“is not some vague doctrine of abstention but a principle of decision binding on
federal and state courts alike”; “the act within its own boundaries of one
sovereign State . . . becomes . . . a rule of decision for the courts of this country.”
W.S. Kirkpatrick & Co. v. Envtl. Tectonics Corp., Int’l, 493 U.S. 400, 406 (1990)
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, “the acts of the foreign
sovereign within its dominions are deemed valid when entered into.” Banco de
Espana, 114 F.2d at 444.
As we established in FTE IV, the Russian Federation’s Decree was the act
of a foreign sovereign; it was also “done” within the boundaries of Russia. The
Decree and subsequent Assignment do not purport to decide the merits issue of
whether SPI and its licensees have violated the Lanham Act by misappropriating
the Marks. Rather, the validity of the Assignment determines only FTE’s
statutory standing to assert such claims as the Russian Federation may have.
That is a question of Russian law decided within Russia’s borders, rather than a
matter of U.S. law with a situs in the United States, see, e.g., Films by Jove, Inc. v.
14
Berov, 341 F. Supp. 2d 199, 207 (E.D.N.Y. 2004).
The district court, concluding otherwise, reasoned that the act of state
doctrine does not apply when the act of the foreign sovereign concerns a United
States trademark because the trademark is a property interest located within the
United States. The district court relied on cases in which we declined to apply
the act of state doctrine to attempts by foreign sovereigns to confiscate property
located in the United States. F. Palicio y Compania, S.A. v. Brush, 256 F. Supp.
481, 488 (S.D.N.Y. 1966), aff’d, 375 F.2d 1011 (2d Cir. 1967); Zwack v. Kraus Bros.
& Co., 237 F.2d 255, 259 (2d Cir. 1956); see also Films by Jove, Inc., 341 F. Supp. 2d
at 207 (noting that “it is well‐settled law that the act of state doctrine does not
extend to takings of property located outside the territory of the acting state”
(emphasis added)). To give extraterritorial effect to such acts would “emasculate
the public policy of the forum against confiscation.” Zwack, 237 F.2d at 259. But
such public policy concerns are not present here because neither the Decree nor
the resulting Assignment impairs anyone’s property rights or affects the
jurisdiction of the United States courts to decide the competing claims to
ownership of the Marks. In any event, the line of “confiscation” cases does not
undermine application of the act of state doctrine here: the Decree works no
15
confiscation, in form or effect; rather, it transfers whatever rights the Russian
Federation may already have in the Marks to FTE.
SPI argues that the act of state doctrine is inapplicable because the
Assignment is a commercial act. As an initial matter, neither the Supreme Court
nor this Circuit has ever concluded that there is a commercial exception to the
doctrine of act of state. W.S. Kirkpatrick & Co., 493 U.S. at 404 (noting that a
majority of the Supreme Court has never adopted a commercial exception to the
doctrine of act of state); Braka v. Bancomer, S.N.C., 762 F.2d 222, 225 (2d Cir.
1985) (declining to opine on the existence of a commercial exception).
Even if the act of state doctrine is subject to a commercial exception, the
exception would not apply. To be sure, a plurality of the Supreme Court
advocated for such a commercial exception in Alfred Dunhill of London, Inc. v.
Republic of Cuba, 425 U.S. 682, 695 (1976), which concerned Cuba’s repudiation
of purely commercial debts. Invoking Supreme Court precedent that treated a
sovereign differently when it acts as a merchant in the private marketplace, the
plurality concluded that the act of state doctrine does not require that United
States courts respect a foreign government’s repudiation of debts arising from its
operation of a purely commercial business. Id. at 698.
16
Here, the sovereign act was a wholly intragovernmental transfer of rights,
executed by the sovereign acting as a government. The Assignment effectuates a
transfer of rights to pursue claims from the foreign sovereign, the Russian
Federation, to one of its instrumentalities, FTE, pursuant to a governmental act,
the Decree. The allocation by governmental decree of such rights as the Russian
Federation may have, and the designation of the government entity that has
power to assert or defend them, is an internal act that augments no commercial
interest of the Russian Federation and impairs no commercial interest of anyone
else. The subject matter of the transferred rights is the ability to exploit
trademarks for commercial gain — but that does not render the transfer itself a
commercial transaction. The Russian Federation did not act as a trader or
merchant; it acted as a government by allocating its rights to assert legal claims to
FTE (which is itself a branch of the sovereign). Therefore, we have little trouble
concluding that any commercial activity exception to the act of state doctrine
would not encompass the Decree and Assignment and, in the circumstances
presented here, does not permit us to determine the efficacy of the Decree and
Assignment in vesting FTE with the authority to bring suit previously held by the
Russian Federation.
17
III
To establish that a claim is barred by res judicata, “a party must show that
(1) the previous action involved an adjudication on the merits; (2) the previous
action involved the [parties] or those in privity with them; [and] (3) the claims
asserted in the subsequent action were, or could have been, raised in the prior
action.” Pike v. Freeman, 266 F.3d 78, 91 (2d Cir. 2001) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
In the prior litigation, FTE’s section 32(1) claims were dismissed for lack of
statutory standing. FTE IV, 726 F.3d at 66. Dismissal for lack of statutory
standing is not “on the merits” and therefore lacks res judicata effect. The lack of
statutory standing is a “curable” defect, as demonstrated by our observation in
FTE IV that FTE might acquire Lanham Act standing by a valid assignment from
the Russian Federation. Criales v. American Airlines, Inc., 105 F.3d 93, 98 (2d Cir.
1997). FTE’s prior litigation was thus premature for failure to satisfy a
precondition to suit: obtaining sufficient rights in the Marks to assert the section
32(1) claims on its own behalf. Id. at 97. Since such dismissals are not “on the
merits,” FTE’s present section 32(1) claims are not barred by res judicata.
18
Res judicata does, however, bar FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims. All of
FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims were, or could have been, asserted in the prior
litigation. FTE’s unfair competition claims and federal trademark claims were
previously brought but abandoned, while FTE’s state law trademark
infringement and dilution claims could have been brought but were not. Because
our opinion in FTE II Summary Order, affirming the district court’s dismissal of
FTE’s prior litigation, constituted an adjudication “on the merits,” Pike, 266 F.3d
at 91, all of FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims are barred. Accordingly, res judicata
requires the dismissal of FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims, only.
IV
The district court ruled that FTE’s non‐section 32(1) claims were also
barred by laches, but that the section 32(1) claims were not. Laches is an
equitable defense. Because the Lanham Act does not prescribe a statute of
limitations, federal courts often “look to ‘the most appropriate’ or ‘most
analogous’ state statute of limitation” to determine when the presumption of
laches applies to Lanham Act claims. Conopco, Inc. v. Campbell Soup Co., 95
F.3d 187, 191 (2d Cir. 1996). If the most closely analogous state statute of
limitations has not run, the presumption of laches does not attach and the
19
defendant bears the burden of proving the defense. Id. But once the analogous
state statute of limitations has run, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to show why
laches should not apply. Id. The ultimate determination of whether laches bars a
plaintiff’s claim is within the trial court’s discretion. Tri‐Star Pictures, Inc. v.
Leisure Time Prods., B.V., 17 F.3d 38, 44 (2d Cir. 1994).
The district court concluded that the presumption of laches never arose as
to the section 32(1) claims because they were tolled during the pendency of the
prior litigation. Under N.Y. C.P.L.R. 205(a), a dismissed claim can be brought
again (provided it is not substantively barred) within six months of the
termination of the prior litigation. That is what happened here. The section 32(1)
claims arose in 2001 when SPI instructed PepsiCo to transfer the Marks to Allied
Domecq. The prior litigation was brought in 2004 and lasted until 2013, when the
section 32(1) claims were dismissed in FTE IV; FTE then commenced the present
suit within six months. Because the most analogous New York statute of
limitations for FTE’s section 32(1) claims is the six‐year statute of limitations for
fraud, Conopco, 95 F.3d at 191, and only three years had lapsed before the prior
suit was brought, FTE’s section 32(1) claims were timely under New York’s
statute of limitations. Therefore, the presumption of laches never arose. Nor has
20
SPI proven the laches defense independently of the presumption. Accordingly,
the district court correctly concluded that FTE’s section 32(1) claims were not
barred by laches.
The district court did, however, conclude that the presumption of laches
applied to the non‐section 32(1) claims. These claims were not tolled during the
pendency of the prior litigation because, under N.Y. C.P.L.R. 205(a), claims that
are voluntarily dismissed do not get the benefit of tolling. Therefore, FTE in
effect brought the claims thirteen years after their accrual (2001 to 2014) and after
New York’s six‐year statute of limitations for fraud had run. The district court
further held that FTE unreasonably delayed in bringing the non‐section 32(1)
claims and that defendants would be prejudiced by FTE’s litigation of such
claims after this delay. The district court did not abuse its discretion in
concluding that the presumption of laches arose or that the defendants would be
prejudiced were FTE able to litigate its non‐section 32(1) claims.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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