18‐2345
Vera v. Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A.
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Second Circuit
______________
August Term, 2018
(Argued: January 29, 2019 Decided: December 30, 2019)
Docket No. 18‐2345‐cv
______________
ALDO VERA, JR., as Personal Representative of the Estate of ALDO VERA, SR.,
Plaintiff‐Appellee,
WILLIAM O. FULLER, as Successor Personal Representative of the Estate of ROBERT OTIS
FULLER; GUSTAVO E. VILLOLDO, individually and as Administrator, Executor, and
Personal Representative of the Estate of GUSTAVO VILLOLDO; ALFREDO VILLOLDO,
Petitioners‐Appellees,
–v.–
BANCO BILBAO VIZCAYA ARGENTARIA, S.A.,
Respondent‐Appellant.
______________
B e f o r e:
CABRANES, LYNCH, and CARNEY, Circuit Judges.
______________
Respondent‐Appellant Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A. (“BBVA”) appeals
from an August 2, 2018 final judgment of the U.S. District Court for the Southern
District of New York (Hellerstein, J.) entered following issuance of our mandate in Vera
v. Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A., 729 Fed. App’x 106 (2d Cir. 2018). As relevant
here, the District Court’s judgment rendered final several of its previous orders
requiring BBVA to turn over funds to Petitioners‐Appellees Jeannette Fuller Hausler,
Gustavo E. Villoldo, and Alfredo Villoldo from a blocked electronic fund transfer
originated by the Cuban Import‐Export Corporation, an instrumentality of the Republic
of Cuba. These turnover orders, in turn, rested on the District Court’s grant of full faith
and credit to default judgments that Petitioners‐Appellees secured against Cuba in
Florida state courts, whose jurisdiction against the sovereign was asserted under the
state‐sponsored terrorism exception of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, 28 U.S.C.
§ 1605A (“FSIA”). The District Court made no independent findings regarding its own
jurisdiction to enforce these judgments under the FSIA, and in particular under section
201(a) of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1610 note. Because our review of
the record convinces us that jurisdiction did not lie, we reverse the judgment of the
District Court, vacate the District Court’s turnover orders, and remand the cause with
instructions to dismiss the action for lack of subject‐matter jurisdiction. Applying
common‐law equitable principles of restitution, we further direct the District Court to
order Petitioners‐Appellees, as well as Plaintiff‐Appellee Aldo Vera, Jr., also a party in
these proceedings and a beneficiary of the same turnover orders, to return to BBVA the
funds that BBVA paid them under the void turnover orders.
REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions.
JUDGE CABRANES joins the judgment of the Court.
______________
ROARKE O. MAXWELL, (Andrew C. Hall, on the
brief), Hall, Lamb, Hall & Leto, P.A., Coral
Gables, FL, for Petitioners‐Appellees Gustavo E.
Villoldo and Alfredo Villoldo.
JAMES W. PERKINS, (Ashley A. LeBlanc, on the
brief), Greenberg Traurig, LLP, New York, NY;
Roberto Martinez, Colson Hicks Edison, P.A.,
2
Coral Gables, FL, for Petitioner‐Appellee Jeannette
Fuller Hausler.
Robert A. Swift, Kohn, Swift & Graf, P.C.,
Philadelphia, PA; Jeffrey E. Glen, Anderson
Kill P.C., New York, NY, for Plaintiff‐Appellee
Aldo Vera, Jr.
KENNETH A. CARUSO, (Christopher D. Volpe,
Michelle Letourneau‐Belock, on the brief),
White & Case LLP, New York, NY, for
Respondent‐Appellant Banco Bilbao Vizcaya
Argentaria, S.A.
______________
CARNEY, Circuit Judge:
This is the fifth appeal that we have seen in these proceedings. The current
controversy arises from the efforts of Petitioners‐Appellees Gustavo E. Villoldo and
Alfredo Villoldo (“the Villoldos”) and Jeannette Fuller Hausler (collectively, “the
Villoldos and Hausler” or “Petitioners”) to enforce several default judgments obtained
by them against the Cuban government in Florida state courts. These judgments rest,
factually, on allegations of torture and extrajudicial killing suffered by members of
Petitioners’ families in 1959 and 1960 at the hands of the revolutionary Cuban state.
They rest, legally, with respect to those courts’ jurisdiction over Cuba, on the state‐
sponsored terrorism exception of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (“FSIA”), now
codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605A, and earlier found in substantially the same form at 28
U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7). Section 201(a) of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (“TRIA”),
codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1610 note, would provide the District Court here a jurisdictional
3
basis for enforcing those state judgments, if valid, by attaching and executing on Cuban
assets blocked by banking institutions under the Cuban Assets Control Regulations, 31
C.F.R. Part 515.
Section 1605A revokes a state’s sovereign immunity from legal proceedings and
liability for certain terrorism‐related claims for personal injury and death if, in addition
to meeting ordinary tort liability standards, “the foreign state was designated as a state
sponsor of terrorism at the time [the tortious act] occurred, or was so designated as a
result of such act.” 28 U.S.C. § 1605A(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) (emphasis supplied). The Republic of
Cuba (“Cuba”) was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism only in March 1982—over
two decades after the abhorrent conduct that Petitioners allege. Accordingly, courts
may exercise jurisdiction over Petitioners’ claims against Cuba only if they can establish
that either (1) Cuba was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism in 1982 at least in
part because of the actions it took against their family members in 1959 and 1960, or (2)
Cuba committed certain acts of terrorism (within the statute’s meaning) against
Petitioners or their family members after 1982.
Beginning in about 2007, Plaintiff‐Appellee Aldo Vera, Jr. (“Vera”), the Villoldos,
and Hausler (collectively, “Appellees”) independently pursued litigation on their tort
claims in Florida state courts, each obtaining a significant default judgment against
Cuba. (Hausler’s judgment was for over $400 million, Vera’s, for $95 million, and the
Villoldos’, for $2.79 billion.) In 2013, seeking enforcement of those judgments in New
York, they jointly filed an Omnibus Turnover Petition in the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York against nineteen banks. Those banks, Appellees alleged,
held blocked Cuban assets in New York. One of the banks, Respondent‐Appellant
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A. (“BBVA”), sought dismissal of the turnover
4
petition, contending first that the District Court lacked subject‐matter jurisdiction over
the enforcement proceeding, and, then, in the alternative, that the Florida state court
judgments were void and not entitled to the federal court’s full faith and credit.
The District Court denied BBVA’s motion to dismiss but did not make a
threshold jurisdictional determination in doing so, relying instead on the jurisdictional
findings and legal conclusions of the three Florida state courts to proceed under TRIA
section 201(a). As we held in reviewing (and vacating) a prior contempt order against
BBVA issued by the District Court with respect to Vera, reliance on a state court’s legal
conclusions does not adequately support a federal court’s own exercise of subject‐
matter jurisdiction against a foreign sovereign or its assets when a proceeding is
predicated on a default judgment. In Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 867 F.3d 310, 318 (2d Cir.
2017) (“Vera III”), we explained that the District Court was required to “analyze the
record independently to determine if Cuba was immune” from its jurisdiction and that
the Florida courts’ jurisdictional findings do not “bind or aid” it in making this
determination. See Verlinden B.V. v. Cent. Bank of Nigeria, 461 U.S. 480, 493–94 (1983) (“At
the threshold of every action in a District Court against a foreign state . . . it must apply
the detailed federal law standards set forth in the Act.”). Accordingly, the District
Court’s judgment against BBVA and the turnover orders that preceded it are subject to
serious challenge.
After carefully examining the record on appeal, we conclude that, had it
independently determined the issue, the District Court would necessarily have found
that Hausler and the Villoldos failed to establish that the exception to sovereign
immunity provided for in section 1605A applied. As we ruled with respect to Vera in
Vera III, Petitioners here have failed to show under section 1605A either that (1) Cuba
5
was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism “as a result” of the pre‐1982 acts
underlying their judgments or that (2) the acts underlying their judgments occurred
after 1982. Without either showing, the state‐sponsored terrorism exception did not
permit the court to exercise jurisdiction over Cuba’s assets under TRIA section 201(a).
Accordingly, and as spelled out in greater detail below, we decide that the
District Court did not have subject‐matter jurisdiction over this enforcement
proceeding. We therefore REVERSE the District Court’s judgment; VACATE the District
Court’s turnover orders; and REMAND the cause to the District Court with instructions
(1) to dismiss the amended Omnibus Turnover Petition and (2) to enter an order
directing restitution by Appellees of the funds that BBVA paid them.
BACKGROUND1
I. The start of the Vera proceedings
The proceedings that culminated in this appeal began in March 2012, when Vera,
who held a similar default judgment against Cuba issued by a Florida state court, filed
suit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York seeking to enforce
that judgment. Vera v. Republic of Cuba, No. 12‐CV‐1596 (S.D.N.Y.). In August 2012, after
Cuba’s default in the federal proceeding, the District Court (Hellerstein, J.) determined
1 This statement of facts is drawn from the findings of fact made in the Florida state court
judgments secured by Hausler and the Villoldos. It also relies on documents supporting those
judgments that were presented to the District Court and to this Court by the parties in their
Joint Appendix. Although BBVA challenges the Florida state courts’ jurisdictional
determinations, in this setting it has not disputed the reliability of their findings of fact.
Accordingly, because of Cuba’s default in the Florida state proceedings and because BBVA
raises no argument to the contrary, we accept these findings as true for present purposes.
6
that Vera’s Florida state court judgment was due full faith and credit and, accordingly,
entered a federal judgment in the amount of approximately $49 million in Vera’s favor.
Then, in late 2012 and early 2013, Vera filed numerous turnover motions, seeking to
seize assets from banks in New York that he alleged to be holding Cuban assets.
Vera was not long alone in seeking to enforce a default judgment against Cuba in
New York federal courts. In 2013, both Hausler and the Villoldos—that is, Petitioners in
this case—intervened in the Vera enforcement proceedings, asserting that their rights as
judgment creditors were entitled to priority over Vera’s. Before reviewing what
happened next in those proceedings, it will be helpful to describe the key facts
underlying the Villoldo and Hausler state court judgments and to provide a short
outline of their respective procedural histories.2
II. The Villoldo judgment
Gustavo E. Villoldo (“Gustavo”) and Alfredo Villoldo (“Alfredo”) are the Cuban‐
born sons of the late Gustavo Villoldo Argilagos (“Villoldo Argilagos”). Their father, a
dual citizen of the U.S. and Cuba, founded a successful automotive company and
owned numerous other businesses and landholdings in Cuba before the Cuban
Revolution. After the revolution brought the Castro government to power on January 1,
1959, the Villoldo family became a target of the new regime because of their financial
wealth and ties to the United States. Both sons are U.S. citizens.
2 None of the Florida state court judgments at issue in this appeal is, to our knowledge, reported
in Westlaw, LexisNexis, or other commercially available databases. Accordingly, we cite to the
judgments in the form provided by the parties in their Joint Appendix on appeal.
7
Cuban soldiers arrested Gustavo and Alfredo on January 6, 1959. Gustavo was
detained in unhealthy and inhumane conditions, beaten, and interrogated under torture
in a Cuban facility where executions were being carried out. After their release five days
later, the brothers and their father continued to be subject to severe harassment by the
Cuban government. Cuban soldiers repeatedly took Villoldo Argilagos into custody
and threatened to murder the entire family unless he turned over the family’s
businesses and properties to the new regime. On February 16, 1959, one day after
meeting with prominent Cuban government member Ernesto “Che” Guevara, Villoldo
Argilagos committed suicide. He did so, according to Gustavo’s testimony, because he
was ordered to do so to save the lives of his wife and sons. The two brothers then fled to
the United States, leaving behind their family’s vast properties, which were soon after
confiscated.
After leaving Cuba, Gustavo Villoldo joined the Central Intelligence Agency, and
engaged in important intelligence activities on behalf of the United States. These
included the 1967 operation that led to Che Guevara’s execution in Bolivia. In
deposition testimony, Gustavo Villoldo recounted that, shortly after the operation, two
Cuban agents were sent to New York to kidnap or kill him. He testified further in
general terms that, between 1997 and 2003, when he was living in the United States, the
Cuban government made numerous threats against his life.
In August 2011, in a Florida state court proceeding, the Villoldo brothers secured
a default judgment against Cuba for these wrongs. The court entered judgment in their
favor in the amount of $2.79 billion, denominating $1 billion of that sum as punitive
8
damages.3 The Florida state court characterized Cuba’s actions against the Villoldo
family as “torture” within the meaning of section 1605A of title 28 and ruled that, under
that section, it had subject‐matter jurisdiction to hear their claims. In December 2011,
the Villoldos sued Cuba in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York,
seeking recognition and enforcement of their Florida judgment under the Full Faith and
Credit Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1738. Villoldo v. Castro Ruz, No. 11‐CV‐9394 (S.D.N.Y.) (Swain, J.).
In October 2012, according full faith and credit to the Florida judgment, Judge Swain
entered a default judgment against Cuba and related individuals and entities in that
case in the sum awarded by the Florida state court, making no independent
jurisdictional findings.
In November 2017, after their ongoing enforcement proceedings in the District
Court were nearly complete, the Villoldos (having returned to Florida state court) filed
a “motion to re‐establish the court record” there with respect to the 2011 judgment.
They submitted new affidavits from Gustavo Villoldo, his daughter Elia Lora, and his
attorney Andrew C. Hall, and various attachments to those affidavits. Granting this
motion, the Florida state court then ruled—in November 2017—that “the information
contained within the affidavits and attachments were relied upon by the Court when
rendering its verdict at trial [in 2011] in this case.” J. App’x 1027. Citing this newly‐
submitted evidence, the Florida court issued an opinion and amended final judgment
3Earlier, in 2009, the Villoldos had obtained another Florida state court judgment in their favor
against Cuba in the amount of $1.179 billion, relying on largely similar allegations. J. App’x 383–
89.
9
on June 4, 2018, making significant additional findings of fact and instructing that the
judgment was effective nunc pro tunc as of August 19, 2011.
In their 2017 affidavits, Gustavo Villoldo and Elia Lora represented that they had
earlier testified at trial that their home in Florida was once surrounded by armed men
whom they perceived to be agents of the Cuban state.4 Lora’s affidavit reflects that she
had observed four men with large guns in their hands, that her family members armed
themselves with two AR‐15 rifles and yelled at the intruders to leave, and that local
police responded to their 911 call within minutes but could not find the intruders.
Neither Alfredo nor Gustavo Villoldo was present in the home at the time. More
broadly, Gustavo Villoldo averred that he was subjected to a “concerted and continuing
effort” by Cuba following Che Guevara’s death in 1967 “to locate [him] in order to carry
out [his] assassination.” J. App’x 882.
III. The Hausler judgment
Jeannette Fuller Hausler (now deceased) was a U.S. citizen.5 Her brother, Robert
Otis Fuller, nicknamed “Bobby,” was a dual U.S.‐Cuban national born in Cuba, and heir
to significant Cuban agricultural and business holdings. Mirroring the Villoldos’
4This testimony was not reflected in the factual findings supporting the 2011 judgment and
does not appear to be in the contemporaneous 2011 deposition given by Gustavo Villoldo.
5Jeannette Hausler died during the pendency of this appeal and William Fuller, who succeeded
her as the administrator of Bobby Fuller’s estate, has been substituted as Petitioner‐Appellee. In
this opinion, we continue to refer to Hausler as Petitioner and to the “Hausler Judgment,” to
avoid confusion and ensure continuity with the language used in multiple rounds of
proceedings.
10
experience, the Fuller family’s lives and properties were threatened by the new Cuban
regime after January 1959. In early October 1960, Cuban agents arrested Fuller, who
was returning from a short trip to Miami, and charged him with engaging in
counterrevolutionary activities. He was tortured until he signed a prepared confession.
Fuller was then presented to a military tribunal where, within minutes, he was
tried and sentenced to death. In the proceedings, he was denied access to meaningful
legal counsel and was not permitted to call witnesses in his defense. On October 16,
1960, he was executed by firing squad. His death prompted the U.S. Department of
State to file a formal protest denouncing the proceedings. In the protest, the Department
accused the Cuban authorities of carrying out Fuller’s trial in a “Roman [c]ircus
atmosphere,” failing to “observe basic civilized standards,” and engaging in “inhuman
behavior.” J. App’x 597–98.
In January 2007, in Florida state court, Hausler secured a default judgment
against Cuba for $400 million, of which $300 million was designated as punitive and
$100 million as compensatory damages. In an opinion accompanying the judgment, the
Florida state court ruled that Fuller was a victim of “extra‐judicial killing” and asserted
jurisdiction over Cuba under the FSIA’s state‐sponsored terrorism exception, then
codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7).6 J. App’x 592. The following year, on Hausler’s
6From 1996 through 2008, the state‐sponsored terrorism exception to sovereign immunity was
codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7). In 2008, section 1605(a)(7) was modified and then recodified as
section 1605A. For purposes of the issues presented in this appeal, no relevant differences exist
between current section 1605A and former section 1605(a)(7). See Schermerhorn v. State of Israel,
876 F.3d 351, 357 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (observing that “section 1605A(a) and its predecessor section
1605(a)(7) are nearly identical” in defining the scope of the terrorism exception). Even so, when
11
application, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida granted full faith
and credit to the state court judgment and entered a default judgment against Cuba,
making no independent jurisdictional findings. Hausler v. Republic of Cuba, No. 08‐CV‐
20197 (S.D. Fla.) (Jordan, J.).
Hausler then began proceedings in the Southern District of New York. Hausler v.
Republic of Cuba, No. 09‐CV‐10289 (S.D.N.Y.) (Marrero, J.). In 2009 and 2010, relying on
the Florida state and federal judgments, Hausler served writs of garnishment against
various New York banks holding blocked Cuban assets. She then formally intervened in
the Vera enforcement proceedings, now before us on appeal.
IV. The Vera enforcement proceedings
The proceedings leading to this appeal have been protracted and circuitous, to
say the least. As previewed in Section I, supra, Hausler and the Villoldos sought to use
their Florida state court judgments to seize Cuban assets held by banks operating in the
Southern District of New York. In 2013, both intervened in the Vera proceedings.
Between March and June of that year, the Villoldos opposed Vera’s turnover motions,
contending that Vera’s Florida state court judgment was void for lack of subject‐matter
jurisdiction and asserting, inter alia, that Aldo Vera, Sr., the victim of Cuba’s acts, was
not a U.S. national and was not actually killed by agents of Cuba, but rather by criminal
discussing jurisdictional issues related to Hausler’s judgment, we refer to section 1605(a)(7), the
provision in effect when it was entered.
12
elements operating in Puerto Rico.7 In May 2013, Hausler intervened, contending that
her rights as a judgment creditor preceded and therefore should take priority over those
of both Vera and the Villoldos.
After this initial period of competition, however, the three family groups reached
a détente. They advised the District Court that they would jointly petition for turnover
of the relevant assets. In September 2013, they did so, filing the Omnibus Petition for
Turnover Order (“Omnibus Petition”) that we have mentioned and naming as
respondents BBVA and eighteen other banks which, they alleged, were holding blocked
Cuban assets.8
BBVA moved to dismiss the Omnibus Petition for lack of subject‐matter
jurisdiction. The District Court denied the motion, construing BBVA’s motion as a
collateral attack on the Florida state court judgments, and not as a challenge to its own
jurisdiction. In rejecting BBVA’s arguments, the District Court commented that
“[BBVA] must concede that the Florida [courts] made appropriate jurisdictional
findings, and created a sufficient evidentiary record.” Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 40 F.
Supp. 3d 367, 376 (S.D.N.Y. 2014). The court further interpreted BBVA’s motion as an
improper challenge to the “merits” of the Florida state courts’ determinations in that it
attacked the Florida courts’ findings (in the District Court’s words) “that Cuba was
7In a surprising twist, the Villoldo brothers further alleged that Vera, Sr., who in 1959 was the
Chief of the Department of Investigation of the Cuban police, supervised the officers who
tortured the brothers after they were arrested in Cuba.
8In February 2014, before the court’s ruling, the Omnibus Petition was amended in ways not
relevant here. Our references to it encompass the amended version.
13
designated as a state sponsor of terrorism, at least partially, as a result of the acts
against Villoldo, Hausler, and Vera.” Id. This “merits” argument was impermissible, in
the District Court’s view, because the Florida courts “held a trial in each of the three
cases, found the facts, and applied the law, finding that acts of terrorism took the lives
of plaintiffs’ family members [and] that Cuba was designated as a state sponsor of
terrorism either before these acts or partially as a result of these acts.” Id.9
Determining then that it had jurisdiction to proceed, the District Court entered
two orders important to the resolution of the appeal before us. In September 2014, the
court enforced a subpoena in which Vera sought information about BBVA’s holdings of
Cuban assets outside the United States. Then, in March 2015, the District Court ordered
that BBVA turn over the contents of a certain account to the U.S. Marshal. That account
9 Although they relied on slightly different analyses, all three Florida state courts had concluded
that they could exercise jurisdiction over Cuba under the state‐sponsored terrorism exception to
sovereign immunity. Hausler’s state court judgment set forth the conclusion that “Cuba, which
was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism in 1982 . . . at least in part by reason of the acts of
terrorism described herein including the torture and extra‐judicial killing of Bobby Fuller, is
subject to suit in any State Court of the United States, pursuant to the provisions in 28 U.S.C.
§ 1605.” J. App’x 592. The Villoldos’ 2011 Florida state court judgment does not contain any
language linking Cuba’s 1982 designation as a state sponsor of terrorism to its acts against the
Villoldos, but appeared to conclude that the FSIA generally “grants nationals of the United
States a private right of action against a foreign state or officials or agents of that foreign state
acting within the scope of his or her office, for damages for personal injury or death caused by
acts of torture.” Id. at 402–03. Vera’s state court judgment, which is not directly challenged in
this appeal but which we addressed and found wanting in Vera III, advised that “Cuba, which
was designated to be a state sponsor of terrorism in 1982 . . . is subject to suit in any State Court
of the United States, pursuant to the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1605.” See Joint Appendix filed in
Vera v. Republic of Cuba, No. 16‐1227 (2d Cir.) (“Vera III”), Dkt. No. 34, at 273 (providing copy of
the judgment).
14
contained $553,185.21, the proceeds of an electronic fund transfer (“EFT”) that had been
initiated by the Cuban Import‐Export Corporation, a Cuban instrumentality.10 Vera v.
Republic of Cuba, 91 F. Supp. 3d 561, 573 (S.D.N.Y. 2015).
BBVA timely appealed both of these orders, but we were compelled to dismiss
its appeals for lack of jurisdiction because neither the order enforcing Vera’s subpoena
nor the turnover orders were “final decisions” of the District Court appealable under 28
U.S.C. § 1291. See Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 802 F.3d 242, 246 (2d Cir. 2015) (“Vera I”)
(subpoena enforcement order not appealable); Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 651 Fed. App’x
22, 26 (2d Cir. 2016) (“Vera II”) (turnover orders not appealable).
After our decision in Vera I, BBVA refused to produce any information in
response to the subpoena, and, upon the parties’ stipulation to that effect, the District
Court held BBVA in contempt in April 2016. BBVA appealed the contempt order, this
time secure in its expectation of appellate jurisdiction. See In re Air Crash at Belle Harbor,
490 F.3d 99, 104 (2d Cir. 2007) (contempt orders regarded as final and appealable). In
May 2017, while its appeal from the contempt order was pending, the District Court
denied BBVA’s motion for a further stay and ordered that the funds seized from BBVA
10The District Court’s initial turnover order directed the U.S. Marshal to turn the funds over to
Appellees within 15 business days of receiving the funds. BBVA unsuccessfully sought
reconsideration of this order. In ruling on BBVA’s request, however, the District Court allowed
BBVA to deposit the funds into the Registry of the U.S. Courts, rather than with the U.S.
Marshal, if BBVA chose to seek a stay and file an interlocutory appeal. BBVA did so, and the
deposit was thus made into the Registry. Vera v. Republic of Cuba, No. 12‐CV‐1596 (AKH), 2015
WL 13657629, at *4 (S.D.N.Y. May 8, 2015).
15
be turned over to Appellees collectively.11 Vera v. Republic of Cuba, No. 12‐CV‐1596
(AKH), 2017 WL 4350568, at *3 (S.D.N.Y. May 25, 2017).
In adjudicating BBVA’s appeal from the District Court’s contempt order, we held
that the District Court lacked subject‐matter jurisdiction over Vera’s enforcement action
against Cuba altogether; therefore, both the subpoena served by Vera on BBVA to
enforce his judgment and the subsequent contempt order were void. Vera v. Republic of
Cuba, 867 F.3d 310, 321 (2d Cir. 2017) (“Vera III”). Because Vera III concerned a discovery
dispute pertaining only to Vera, however, the question whether the District Court had
subject‐matter jurisdiction to enforce the judgments held by Hausler and the Villoldos
was not before us. In line with our mandate in Vera III, the District Court vacated the
judgment it issued as to Vera, quashed Vera’s subpoena, and vacated the related
contempt order. It took no action with respect to Hausler and the Villoldos.
BBVA then appealed the District Court’s May 2017 order directing that the funds
be disbursed jointly to the three cooperating sets of plaintiffs, and we once again
dismissed its appeal of the non‐final order for lack of appellate jurisdiction. Vera v.
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A., 729 Fed. App’x 106 (2d Cir. 2018) (“Vera IV”). This
time, however, we directed the District Court “to issue an appealable final judgment
expeditiously” on remand so as to facilitate prompt review. Id. at 108.
In accordance with our mandate in Vera IV, the District Court entered final
judgment on August 2, 2018. BBVA timely appealed. Now, on this matter’s fifth trip to
11At that point, in accordance with the District Court’s May 2015 order, the funds were secured
in the Registry of the U.S. Courts.
16
this Court,12 our appellate jurisdiction over the entirety of the dispute between BBVA,
on one hand, and Hausler, the Villoldos, and Vera, on the other, is undisputed.
DISCUSSION
To resolve this appeal, we must address several intertwined factual and legal
issues. We begin by reviewing the general principles of sovereign immunity as they
apply to terrorism claims brought against a foreign state. Following Vera III, we next
stress that, when a district court is presented with a default judgment against a foreign
sovereign, it must assure itself of its own power to hear the case without relying on the
jurisdictional findings and legal conclusions of the court that issued the judgment. Then
applying this framework to the case at hand, we consider whether Petitioners have
presented sufficient competent evidence that the 1982 designation of Cuba as a foreign
sponsor of terrorism was linked, even in part, to its acts against Hausler and the
12To recapitulate, this Court’s previous rulings in the proceedings concerning BBVA’s resistance
to the enforcement efforts of Vera, Hausler, and the Villoldos, are:
1) Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 802 F.3d 242 (2d Cir. 2015) (“Vera I”) (dismissing for lack of
appellate jurisdiction BBVA’s appeal of subpoena enforcement orders);
2) Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 651 Fed. App’x 22 (2d Cir. 2016) (“Vera II”) (dismissing for lack
of appellate jurisdiction BBVA’s appeal of turnover orders);
3) Vera v. Republic of Cuba, 867 F.3d 310 (2d Cir. 2017) (“Vera III”) (holding, on BBVA’s
appeal of a contempt order, that the District Court lacked subject‐matter jurisdiction to
enforce Vera’s judgment);
4) Vera v. Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A., 729 Fed. App’x 106 (2d Cir. 2018) (“Vera IV”)
(dismissing for lack of appellate jurisdiction BBVA’s appeal of the District Court’s order
directing the Registry to disburse funds to Appellees but ordering the District Court to
enter final judgment expeditiously).
17
Villoldos, to support the District Court’s exercise of jurisdiction over Cuba’s assets
under TRIA section 201(a).
After conducting a de novo review of the extensive record, we answer this
question in the negative. We therefore conclude that the District Court lacked
jurisdiction over Hausler and the Villoldos’ actions to enforce their judgments (just as it
lacked jurisdiction over Vera’s action, the key question resolved in Vera III). We finish
by considering whether in our discretion to order that Appellees make restitution of the
funds collected by them as a product of the District Court’s jurisdictionally void orders.
We conclude that such an order of restitution is appropriate in the circumstances
presented here.
I. Subject‐matter jurisdiction over these claims against Cuba
A. Principles of subject‐matter jurisdiction under the Foreign Sovereign
Immunities Act
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976, Pub. L. 94‐583, 90 Stat. 2891,
governs the jurisdiction of courts in the United States over all private civil actions
against foreign sovereigns.13 The FSIA provides the “sole basis for obtaining jurisdiction
over a foreign state in our courts,” Argentine Republic v. Amerada Hess Shipping Corp., 488
U.S. 428, 434 (1989), and “must be applied by the District Courts in every action against
a foreign sovereign,” Verlinden B.V., 461 U.S. at 493. See also Mobil Cerro Negro, Ltd. v.
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, 863 F.3d 96, 113 (2d Cir. 2017) (referring to “[t]he
13The FSIA is codified, as amended, in title 28 of the U.S. Code, in sections 1330, 1332(a), 1391(f),
1441(d), and 1602 through 1611. In the text, for convenience, we refer only to the section number
and presume codification in title 28, unless otherwise noted.
18
Supreme Court’s emphatic and oft‐repeated declaration in Amerada Hess” and collecting
cases concerning the categorical nature of the FSIA). It codifies two types of foreign
sovereign immunity—immunity from jurisdiction and immunity from attachment and
execution of the sovereign’s property. We start by briefly describing the latter, as it is
most directly at issue in this action to enforce Petitioners’ default judgments.
The FSIA provides that “the property in the United States of a foreign state shall
be immune from attachment[,] arrest and execution except as provided in sections 1610
and 1611 of this chapter.” 28 U.S.C. § 1609. In this case, the District Court asserted
jurisdiction over the enforcement actions against Cuban assets under a modification to
the FSIA enacted by TRIA section 201(a).14 That statute grants courts subject‐matter
jurisdiction over post‐judgment execution and attachment proceedings involving
blocked assets “in every case in which a person has obtained a judgment against a
terrorist party on a claim based upon an act of terrorism, or for which a terrorist party is
not immune under section 1605A or 1605(a)(7).”15
TRIA section 201(a) provides for federal court jurisdiction over execution and
attachment proceedings involving the assets of a foreign sovereign, however, only
where “a valid judgment has been entered” against the sovereign. Vera III, 867 F.3d at
14As we noted above, “TRIA” refers to the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002, Pub. L. No.
107‐297, 116 Stat. 2322, 2337, currently codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1610 note.
15“Blocked assets” are defined in TRIA section 201(d)(2)(A) as “any asset seized or frozen by the
United States under section 5(b) of the Trading With the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 5(b)) or
under sections 202 and 203 of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C.
1701; 1702).” The Cuban assets at issue in this appeal were blocked under section 5(b) of the
Trading with the Enemy Act.
19
321 (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in original)). In other words, section
201 “provides jurisdiction for execution and attachment proceedings to satisfy a
judgment for which there was original jurisdiction under the FSIA . . . if certain
statutory elements are satisfied.” Weinstein v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 609 F.3d 43, 52 (2d
Cir. 2010). Whether the District Court here had jurisdiction under TRIA to attach and
execute on Cuba’s assets, therefore, turns on whether Petitioners held judgments that
were based on an exception to immunity from jurisdiction established by the FSIA.16
Accordingly, we now look at the FSIA’s framework for sovereign immunity from
jurisdiction.
The FSIA establishes that “a foreign state [is] immune from the jurisdiction of the
courts of the United States and of the States except as provided in sections 1605 to 1607
of this chapter.” 28 U.S.C. § 1604. If any of the listed exceptions applies, however, then a
court may exercise jurisdiction over the state, see 28 U.S.C. § 1330(a), and the foreign
16Petitioners’ Omnibus Petition and certain of the District Court’s orders also make reference to
28 U.S.C. § 1610(g), a provision enacted in 2008. Section 1610(g)(1) provides generally that “the
property of a foreign state against which a judgment is entered under section 1605A, and the
property of an agency or instrumentality of such a state . . . is subject to attachment in aid of
execution, and execution, upon that judgment.” The Supreme Court has recently clarified,
however, that section 1610(g) “does not provide a freestanding basis for parties holding a
judgment under § 1605A to attach and execute against the property of a foreign state, where the
immunity of the property is not otherwise rescinded under a separate provision within § 1610.”
Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 138 S. Ct. 816, 827 (2018). Accordingly, while section 1610(g)
defines the types of assets that might be subject to attachment and execution in terrorism cases
brought against foreign states, it—unlike TRIA section 201(a)—does not provide the District
Court an independent ground for jurisdiction.
20
state may be held liable, in state or federal court, “in the same manner and to the same
extent as a private individual under like circumstances.” Id. § 1606.
In this case, the only jurisdictional exception relied on by Petitioners is section
1605A, known as the “state‐sponsored terrorism exception” or the “terrorism
exception” from sovereign immunity. First enacted in 1996,17 this section currently
provides in relevant part:
A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of courts of the
United States or of the States in any case not otherwise covered by this
chapter in which money damages are sought against a foreign state for
personal injury or death that was caused by an act of torture, extrajudicial
killing, aircraft sabotage, hostage taking, or the provision of material
support or resources for such an act if such act or provision of material
support or resources is engaged in by an official, employee, or agent of such
foreign state while acting within the scope of his or her office, employment,
or agency.
28 U.S.C. § 1605A(a)(1). By its terms, this provision applies to claims for personal injury
or death only if caused by one of several acts listed by statute: as relevant here,
extrajudicial killing or torture.
The exception is further cabined by two important preconditions set forth in
subsection (a)(2). First, a court may hear such a claim only if “the foreign state was
designated as a state sponsor of terrorism at the time the act described in paragraph (1)
17The terrorism exception was first enacted as part of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), Pub. L. No. 104‐132, 110 Stat. 1214. It was codified at 28 U.S.C.
§ 1605(a)(7) until 2008. As described supra n.6, for purposes of this appeal, current section 1605A
and former section 1605(a)(7) may be treated as interchangeable. See Schermerhorn, 876 F.3d at
357.
21
occurred, or was so designated as a result of such act.” Id. § 1605A(a)(2)(A)(i)(I).18
Second, to maintain such a claim, either the claimant or the victim must be a U.S.
national, member of the U.S. armed forces, or employee or contractor of the U.S.
government at the time of the act giving rise to liability.19 Id. § 1605A(a)(2)(A)(ii).
Our Court has repeatedly held that both of these conditions must be satisfied for
the terrorism exception to apply. See Vera III, 867 F.3d at 317 (“Even if a foreign state has
engaged in one of the terrorist acts described above . . . it is not subject to suit in the
United States unless the foreign state was designated as a state sponsor of terrorism [in
accordance with the statute].” (internal quotation marks omitted)); In re Terrorist Attacks
on Sept. 11, 2001, 714 F.3d 109, 115 n.7 (2d Cir. 2013) (“The FSIA’s terrorism exception . .
. does not apply to [instrumentalities of a non‐designated state] because that exception
is only available against a nation that has been designated by the United States
government as a state sponsor of terrorism at the time of, or due to, a terrorist act.”).
Cuba never appeared in the Florida state court or the District Court here to
present a defense, jurisdictional or otherwise. Nevertheless, “the FSIA, by its terms,
authorizes consideration of sovereign immunity from both jurisdiction and execution
18With respect to the designation requirement, section 1605A defines “state sponsor of
terrorism” as “a country the government of which the Secretary of State has determined, for
purposes of [several enumerated laws] or any other provision of law, is a government that has
repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism.” 28 U.S.C. § 1605A(h)(6).
19Section 1605A sets up a third precondition as well, requiring that, in cases where the listed act
took place on the territory of the defendant foreign state, the claimant afford that state “a
reasonable opportunity to arbitrate” his or her claim. See 28 U.S.C. § 1605A(a)(2)(iii). This
precondition is not at issue here.
22
even in the absence of an appearance by the sovereign.” Walters v. Indus. & Commercial
Bank of China, Ltd., 651 F.3d 280, 293 (2d Cir. 2011). The statute allows for courts to
“consider the [jurisdictional] issue once it is suggested by any party—or for that matter,
non‐party.” Id. (emphasis in original). Indeed, even if no party raises the issue, courts
have an obligation to consider subject matter jurisdiction sua sponte. Henderson ex rel.
Henderson v. Shinseki, 562 U.S. 428, 434 (2011). Accordingly, BBVA was entitled to raise
Cuba’s sovereign immunity from execution on its assets before the District Court as a
defense to Petitioners’ enforcement action; and it may, on appeal, challenge the District
Court’s ruling that Cuba was not immune.20
B. Review and enforcement of default judgments in the FSIA context
In reviewing a default judgment, we generally “deem[] all the well‐pleaded
allegations [as to liability] in the pleadings to be admitted.” Transatlantic Marine Claims
Agency, Inc. v. Ace Shipping Corp., 109 F.3d 105, 108 (2d Cir. 1997). This principle does
not preclude us, however, from undertaking “an inquiry into whether the default
judgment itself is void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.” Id. Pursuing such an
inquiry, we review jurisdictional conclusions de novo, and in assessing “whether there is
a factual basis to support the [District Court’s] exercise of subject matter jurisdiction . . .
20For this reason, we reject the Villoldos’ argument that that BBVA lacks standing to
“collaterally attack” their Florida state court judgment. Villoldo Br. 23–26. First, we rejected this
contention in Vera III, explaining that “[w]e need not consider a collateral attack on the Florida
judgment [because] BBVA’s principal argument . . . is that the District Court lacked subject‐
matter jurisdiction.” 867 F.3d at 320 n.9 (emphasis in original). Moreover, as described above, a
district court may consider its jurisdiction when suggested by any party, “even if there is no
reason to confer a special right of ‘third‐party standing’ on that party.” Walters, 651 F.3d at 293.
23
we are not limited in our right to refer to any material in the record.” Velez v. Sanchez,
693 F.3d 308, 314 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted).
In these proceedings, Petitioners asked the District Court to enforce judgments
issued by several Florida state courts, each of which concluded that its jurisdiction over
Cuba was authorized by the state‐sponsored terrorism exception. These judgments did
not, however, bar the District Court from considering the jurisdictional question anew,
nor did they relieve it of its obligation to assure itself of its own jurisdiction, whether
upon BBVA’s motion or sua sponte.
It is generally true, of course, that “principles of res judicata apply to
jurisdictional determinations—both subject matter and personal.” Ins. Corp. of Ireland,
Ltd. v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee, 456 U.S. 694, 702 n.9 (1982). At the same time, a
finding of jurisdiction is preclusive only when the jurisdictional issues “have been fully
and fairly litigated . . . in the court which rendered the original judgment.” Durfee v.
Duke, 375 U.S. 106, 111 (1963). Here, as we decided in Vera III, Cuba’s failure to appear
meant that, although the Florida courts heard relevant evidence, “the jurisdictional facts
necessary to eliminate Cuba’s sovereign immunity under the FSIA were not fully and
fairly litigated” in the Florida actions. 867 F.3d at 318. The Florida state courts’
jurisdictional conclusions could therefore “neither bind the District Court . . . nor . . . be
relied on by the parties.” Id; see also Jerez v. Republic of Cuba, 775 F.3d 419, 422–23 (D.C.
Cir. 2014) (refusing to accord res judicata effect to similar Florida state default judgment
entered against Cuba).
Thus, to determine whether it had jurisdiction under TRIA section 201(a) to
attach or execute on Cuba’s assets, the District Court should have first determined for
24
itself whether the state‐sponsored terrorism exception to jurisdictional immunity
applied to the Florida state court default judgments. 21 See Vera III, 867 F.3d at 321 (in
absence of valid underlying judgment, “TRIA did not provide a proper basis for subject
matter jurisdiction over subsequent proceedings”). In this case, however, the District
Court simply granted full faith and credit to the Florida courts’ jurisdictional
conclusions rather than analyzing whether their determinations could support its
application of the terrorism exception. See Vera, 40 F. Supp. 3d at 376–77. This deficiency
21Vera’s situation is different from that of Hausler and the Villoldos in one notable respect.
Upon Cuba’s default in the federal proceeding in Vera in 2012, the District Court granted full
faith and credit to Vera’s Florida state court judgment and entered a federal default judgment
against Cuba. J. App’x 304–05. The Villoldos and Hausler, in contrast, never requested that the
District Court here enter a federal default judgment against Cuba on their judgments, likely
because other federal courts had already done so. See J. App’x 408–09 (Villoldo federal default
judgment entered by Judge Swain of the Southern District of New York); id. at 611–12 (Hausler
federal default judgment entered by Judge Jordan of the Southern District of Florida). Instead,
Hausler and the Villoldos requested only that the District Court here enforce their judgments
against Cuba under TRIA section 201(a). Therefore, while in Vera III we reviewed both the
District Court’s entry of a default judgment and its later reliance on that judgment to support
enforcement jurisdiction under TRIA section 201(a), here we review the District Court’s
jurisdiction over the enforcement proceedings only.
Under the circumstances presented now, though, the distinction has little practical
effect. As observed in the text, because Cuba defaulted, “the jurisdictional facts necessary to
eliminate Cuba’s sovereign immunity were not fully and fairly litigated” in these prior federal
court proceedings. See Vera III, 867 F.3d at 318. Accordingly, when confronted with BBVA’s
challenge, the District Court should have considered whether it was enforcing “judgment[s] for
which there was original jurisdiction under the FSIA,” Weinstein, 609 F.3d at 52, to assure itself
of its own jurisdiction under TRIA. This inquiry, in turn, would have required it to answer the
same question as was posed in Vera III: whether the factual findings of the underlying
judgments and any other evidence properly before it could support application of the state‐
sponsored terrorism exception to Cuba.
25
calls into question the District Court’s exercise of jurisdiction over the enforcement of
the judgments.
Ordinarily, we would address a District Court’s failure to make appropriate
findings to support its jurisdiction by remanding for further proceedings. In Vera III,
however, we declined to do so because “the case present[ed] no relevant unanswered
factual issues regarding the existence of subject matter jurisdiction.” 867 F.3d at 319 n.8.
We follow the same approach here and proceed to decide de novo whether the District
Court had subject‐matter jurisdiction under the FSIA and TRIA section 201(a) over the
enforcement actions brought by Hausler and the Villoldos.22
22Seeking to avoid the de novo review established by Vera III, Petitioners contend that precedent
bars us from revisiting the question of subject‐matter jurisdiction. We do not find their
arguments persuasive, for the following reasons.
First, the Villoldos argue that in Vera II and Vera IV, where we dismissed BBVA’s appeals
of the District Court’s turnover orders for lack of appellate jurisdiction, we also decided the
issue of subject‐matter jurisdiction sub silentio, insofar as BBVA had briefed the issue in both
appeals. Villoldo Br. 22–23. This contention is without merit: once we determined that we, the
Court of Appeals, lacked jurisdiction over the appeal, we had no occasion (or, indeed, arguably,
authority) to rule on a challenge to the District Court’s jurisdiction over the case as a whole.
Second, Hausler contends that we decided that we had subject‐matter jurisdiction to
enforce her judgment in an appeal from a collateral proceeding in Hausler v. JP Morgan Chase
Bank, N.A., 770 F.3d 208 (2d Cir. 2014). She submits that this 2014 decision binds us now.
Hausler Br. 31–36. Although BBVA had addressed the jurisdictional question in its appellate
brief in that appeal, there, we ruled against Hausler on the merits, holding that she could not
attach certain blocked EFTs because “neither Cuba nor its agents or instrumentalities ha[d] any
property interest in the EFTs that are blocked in the garnishee banks.” Id. at 212. That case,
however, was argued in tandem with Calderon‐Cardona v. Bank of N.Y. Mellon, 770 F.3d 993 (2d
Cir. 2014), which definitively resolved the merits question at issue in Hausler: the nature of the
ownership interest necessary for a blocked EFT to be deemed the “property” of a foreign state.
26
C. The Villoldos’ and Hausler’s claims and Cuba’s designation as a state
sponsor of terrorism
The Villoldos’ and Hausler’s claims arise largely from acts that predated Cuba’s
1982 designation as a state sponsor of terrorism by over two decades. Accordingly, to
justify invoking those pre‐1982 acts and the state‐sponsored terrorism exception to
sovereign immunity as the basis for this enforcement action, they must establish that
Cuba was so designated “as a result of” its acts against their families. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1605A(a)(2)(A)(i)(I); see also id. § 1605(a)(7)(A) (2007); City of New York v. Permanent
Mission of India to the United Nations, 446 F.3d 365, 369 (2d Cir. 2006) (“The party seeking
In Calderon‐Cardona, we dealt with attachment of property under section 1610(g), while in
Hausler we addressed the analogous provision in TRIA section 201(a). But we resolved Hausler
by applying Calderon‐Cardona, which had issued only several days prior. 770 F.3d at 211–12. As
we have commented elsewhere in similar circumstances, “[i]t would be ironic if, in our desire to
avoid rendering an advisory opinion, we were to address a novel [jurisdictional] question in a
case where the result is foreordained by another decision of this Court.” Ctr. for Reprod. Law &
Policy v. Bush, 304 F.3d 183, 195 (2d Cir. 2002).
Accordingly, because the outcome in Hausler was indisputably “foreordained” by our
decision in Calderon‐Cardona, the Hausler court sensibly avoided delving into the voluminous
record on appeal to ascertain the precise basis for the district court’s assertion of jurisdiction in
that case. See Ivanishvili v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 433 F.3d 332, 338 n.2 (2d Cir. 2006) (explaining
that “where the jurisdictional constraints are imposed by statute, not the Constitution, and
where the jurisdictional issues are complex and the substance of the claim is . . . plainly without
merit,” we may consider the merits of the case without first addressing statutory jurisdiction).
The 2014 Hausler decision thus cannot reasonably be understood to have decided the
jurisdictional issue. See Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523 U.S. 83, 98 (1998) (approving of
ruling where court “declined to decide [the] jurisdictional question, because the merits question
was decided in a companion case, with the consequence that the jurisdictional question could
have no effect on the outcome”) (internal citations omitted).
27
to establish jurisdiction [over a foreign state] bears the burden of producing evidence
establishing that a specific exception to immunity applies.”).
We have not yet had occasion to articulate how taut the causal link must be
between a specific enumerated act—such as an extrajudicial killing or act of torture—
and a country’s later designation to support application of the terrorism exception. Here
too, we need not address whether Petitioners must meet the more demanding standard
of “but‐for causation” (i.e., that Cuba was designated a state sponsor of terrorism as a
direct result of the specific acts taken against their family members, and that it would
not otherwise have been so designated). Rather, as we did in Vera III, we examine the
record to ascertain if the Villoldos or Hausler adduced evidence that “specifically links”
Cuba’s acts against their families to the Secretary of State’s determination in 1982 to
designate Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism. 867 F.3d at 319. And again, as in Vera III,
we find the record patently insufficient, even under this lesser causation standard, to
support the Villoldos’ and Hausler’s position.
During one of several collateral federal district court proceedings spawned by
this sprawling litigation, the State Department in 2012 filed a Statement of Interest
presenting its formal position as to the “reason or reasons Cuba was designated a state
sponsor of terrorism under Section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of 1979.”23 J.
App’x 323. The submission, which BBVA points to on appeal, consisted of an affidavit
23After BBVA moved in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida to vacate the
Hausler judgment for lack of subject‐matter jurisdiction, the State Department made this filing
at the invitation of then‐District Judge Adalberto Jordan. Hausler v. Republic of Cuba, No. 08‐CV‐
20197 (S.D. Fla. Feb. 7, 2012), ECF No. 79.
28
by Peter M. Brennan, an experienced diplomat who was then in charge of the
Department’s Office of the Coordinator for Cuban Affairs. Brennan averred that, in
1982, when it was so designated, “Cuba belonged in the category of states that have
repeatedly provided support for . . . organizations and groups abroad that used
terrorism and revolutionary violence as a policy instrument to undermine existing
governments.” Id. at 324. This support was the reason for its designation, he implied. In
support of this understanding, Brennan’s affidavit cited contemporaneous
Congressional testimony given by two State Department officials: (1) the March 12, 1982
testimony of Thomas Enders, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter‐American Affairs,
before the Subcommittee on Security and Terrorism of the Senate Judiciary Committee;
and (2) the March 18, 1982 testimony of Ernest Johnson, Jr., Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Economic Affairs, before a subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.24 We also referred to these documents in Vera III.
Enders, in his testimony before the Senate Subcommittee on Security and
Terrorism, provided an extensive catalogue of Cuban support given to insurgent
groups in other Latin American countries, including Nicaragua, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Colombia, and Chile. Enders specifically referenced
Cuba’s implementation in 1978 of a “new strategy . . . of uniting the left in the countries
of the hemisphere for the purpose of using it . . . [to establish] more Marxist‐Leninist
24See The Role of Cuba in Int’l Terrorism & Subversion: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Sec. &
Terrorism of the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 97th Cong. 142–48 (1982) (testimony of Thomas
Enders); Regulation Changes on Exports: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Near E. & S. Asian Affairs
of the S. Comm. on Foreign Relations, 97th Cong. 9–10 (1982) (testimony of Ernest Johnson, Jr.).
29
regimes in this hemisphere” as standing in contrast to the country’s previous attempts
to “portray itself as a member of the international community not unlike others,
carrying out state‐to‐state relations through embassies and emphasizing trade and
cultural contacts.” J. App’x 332. Enders portrayed the members of the Cuban leadership
group as subject to a “deep‐seated drive to re‐create their own guerrilla experience
elsewhere,” observing that “the Castro regime has made a business of violent
revolution.” Id. at 336.
Johnson’s brief testimony echoed Enders’s remarks. He again tied Cuba’s 1982
designation to its support of armed groups outside its borders. He expressed the “hope
[that] . . . the addition of Cuba [to the list] will demonstrate to other countries . . . that
our export controls are truly directed towards terrorism. . . . In the case of Cuba, we
evaluated carefully the evidence of Cuban support for revolutionary violence and
groups that use terrorism as a policy instrument.” Id. at 362.
Notably absent from Enders’s and Johnson’s testimony is any reference to
political repression or human rights abuses within Cuba itself, either during the 1959–60
period, when Cuba tortured the Villoldos and their father and executed Bobby Fuller;
during the period immediately preceding Cuba’s 1982 designation as a state sponsor of
terrorism; or in any other time period. Instead, the underlying record supports
Brennan’s assertion that Cuba was designated as a result of its “support for
organizations and groups abroad that used terrorism and revolutionary violence as a
policy instrument.” J. App’x at 324; see also Vera III, 867 F.3d at 318 (reaching same
conclusion). In the face of these official statements describing the Secretary of State’s
reasons in 1982 for designating Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism, neither the
30
Villoldos nor Hausler present any persuasive evidence that Cuba was in fact so
designated “as a result of” its violent actions against their families decades prior.
The Villoldos
The Villoldos cite extensively the jurisdictional conclusions of the Florida state
court. Such conclusions, however, cannot be relied on by the parties to establish
jurisdiction in the District Court here. Vera III, 867 F.3d at 318. They also recount their
allegations of horrible mistreatment that they and their father suffered at the hands of
the Cuban revolutionary government in 1959, but provide no evidence that might
“specifically link” these acts to the Secretary of State’s 1982 designation of Cuba as a
state sponsor of terrorism.
Looking to other acts to establish such a link, the Villoldos refer further to the
Florida state court’s factual finding that “Cuba stole [their family’s] enormous wealth
and used it to fund the exportation of terrorism throughout Latin America, establishing
jurisdiction as to all three Villoldo plaintiffs.” Villoldo Br. 49. But, even assuming that
Cuba’s seizure of the Villoldos’ assets helped to support its later promotion of terrorism
overseas, the available record strongly suggests that Cuba was not designated a state
sponsor of terrorism as a result of any seizure of assets within its borders, regardless of
the use to which it later may have put some portion of those assets. Accordingly, the
Villoldos have failed to meet their burden to establish that the District Court had
jurisdiction over their action to enforce their Florida state judgment based on Cuba’s
acts of torture or property seizures committed in 1959.
31
Turning to more recent events, the Villoldos contend in the alternative that the
District Court here had jurisdiction to enforce their state court judgment because of
Cuba’s alleged repeated attempts to assassinate Gustavo Villoldo after its 1982
designation as a state sponsor of terrorism. These, they insist, constituted some of the
acts of “torture” on which the Florida state judgment was based.25 Villoldo Br. 49–52.
Their allegations, however, are legally insufficient.
The terrorism exception incorporates the definition of “torture” established in the
Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991 (“TVPA”), Pub. L. No. 102‐256, 106 Stat. 73. See 28
U.S.C. § 1605A(h)(7). The TVPA defines torture as “any act, directed against an
individual in the offender’s custody or physical control, by which severe pain or suffering
. . . whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on that individual for [certain
enumerated purposes].” 28 U.S.C. § 1350 note (emphasis added). See Chowdhury v.
Worldtel Bangladesh Holding, Ltd., 746 F.3d 42, 52 (2d Cir. 2014) (torture is a “deliberate
and calculated act of an extremely cruel and inhuman nature specifically intended to
inflict excruciating and agonizing physical or mental pain or suffering”) (citation
omitted). The Villoldos urge, and the Florida state court reached the legal conclusion,
that “threats of assassination and assassination attempts” carried out against Gustavo
Villoldo after 1982 “are properly classified as torture.” J. App’x 865. After reviewing the
record, we conclude that neither the Florida court’s findings of fact nor any evidence
25We need not consider whether these alleged post‐1982 acts could support valid claims for
“hostage taking” or “the provision of material support or resources” within the meaning of 28
U.S.C. § 1605A. The Florida state court issued a judgment explicitly based on a finding of
“torture,” and as we have explained, the District Court’s jurisdiction here is entirely dependent
on its recognition of a valid state court judgment. Vera III, 867 F.3d at 321.
32
submitted by the Villoldos—nor, indeed, the Villoldos’ general allegations—support
this conclusion.26 Accordingly, the Villoldos failed to establish that Cuba committed
torture or any other act enumerated in section 1605A(a)(1) against either of them after
1982. The District Court therefore lacked jurisdiction over the Villoldos’ enforcement
action and should have dismissed their petition.27
26The specific post‐1982 acts that Gustavo alleges include: (1) that on six occasions armed
individuals “approached [him] in an aggressive manner”; (2) that on one of these occasions, a
Cuban man approached him outside a restaurant in Miami, Florida, displayed a weapon, and
stated he would kill him; and (3) that “armed assassins surrounded [his] family’s home in
Miami” while he was driving to and from a nearby convenience store.” J. App’x 883. While
disturbing, none of these incidents amount to “torture” within the meaning of the TVPA.
27 Because the District Court made its jurisdictional determination in 2014, it did not then have
before it the amended 2018 judgment that the Florida state court directed to be effective nunc
pro tunc as of the 2011 judgment or the additional materials submitted by the Villoldos in
support of their 2017 state court motion to “re‐establish the record.” The Villoldos did, however,
file both the 2018 judgment and the materials supporting their motion with the District Court in
New York, and in July 2018, requested that the court consider these materials “should [it]
engage in further review of the Florida state court’s subject matter jurisdiction.” J. App’x 1044.
Although the District Court did not take up the Villoldos’ invitation and instead entered final
judgment in response to our mandate in Vera IV, 729 Fed. App’x at 108, the newly‐filed
materials are now part of the record on appeal.
In reaching our conclusion on this argument, we have reviewed the entirety of the
record, including the materials submitted by the Villoldos in 2017 and 2018. Because, after
having considered these materials, we conclude that the Villoldos have failed to establish that
the terrorism exception applies, a remand for the District Court to consider them in the first
instance is unnecessary.
33
Hausler
For her part, Hausler seeks to satisfy the preconditions to reliance on the
terrorism exception by pointing to testimony given by Peter Deutsch, a former
Congressman, and Jaime Suchlicki, a professor at the University of Miami and expert on
Cuban affairs.28 Deutsch testified in a 2003 deposition in unrelated proceedings that, as
a member of Congress, he was a cosponsor of the 1996 AEDPA amendment that
generated the terrorism exception. In that deposition, he stated his view that “in 1961
President Kennedy effectively and in fact . . . designated [Cuba] as a state sponsor of
terrorism.” J. App’x 685. In a 2012 affidavit filed in related proceedings in the U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of Florida, Deutsch further declared that he
“agreed to be directly involved in the drafting and enactment as a co‐sponsor of the
[FSIA terrorism exception] based upon assurances that my constituents who had
suffered from the Government of Cuba’s acts of extra‐judicial killing and torture during
the period of 1960–61 would, under this legislation, be able to obtain legal redress.” Id.
at 661. He emphasized that he “would not have agreed to be a co‐sponsor of that
legislation [had he] not received those assurances,” and that he “was assured that the
language as drafted, and as later enacted, met this test.” Id. In 2012, Deutsch reiterated
his view that “[i]n 1961 President John F. Kennedy effectively and in fact designated the
28In the course of the proceedings before Judge Jordan in the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of Florida, the attorney who initially litigated Hausler’s claim before the
Florida state court filed an affidavit in which he both acknowledged that no transcript was
made of the default judgment proceeding and represented that the deposition testimony of
Congressman Deutsch and proffered testimony by Professor Suchlicki were admitted into the
state court record. Hausler v. Republic of Cuba, No. 08‐CV‐20197 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 20, 2012), ECF No.
77. No further record appears to be available.
34
Government of Cuba a state sponsor of terrorism, in part by reason of the extra‐judicial
killing of U.S. citizens during the 1960–61 time period.” Id. at 662.
Professor Suchlicki supported Deutsch’s assertions. He averred in a 2012
affidavit that the “historical evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that the
Government of Cuba was condemned by the Kennedy administration starting no later
than early 1961, based at least in part upon the extrajudicial killing and torture of U.S.
citizens,” and that, as a professional in the field, he was “not aware of any statement
which would support the view that support for Latin American revolutionaries was the
only reason for such designation of the Government of Cuba as a state sponsor of
terrorism.” Id. at 673.
The assessments offered in the statements of Deutsch and Suchlicki reflect a
misunderstanding of the statutory regime that governs sovereign immunity and its
“terrorism exception.” The version of FSIA in effect when Hausler obtained her
judgment abrogated the sovereign immunity of a foreign state designated under
“section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. App. 2405(j)) or section
620A of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2371).” 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7)(A)
(2007). Congress did not, however, add section 620A to the Foreign Assistance Act until
June of 1976. Pub. L. No. 94–329, § 303, 90 Stat. 729 (1976). Cuba could not therefore
have been so designated in 1961 as Deutsch and Suchlicki appear to claim.
Deutsch and Suchlicki, however, are not entirely incorrect. Section 620(a) of the
original Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 expressly prohibited the provision of foreign aid
to Cuba and authorized the President “to establish and maintain a total embargo upon
all trade between the United States and Cuba.” Pub. L. No. 87‐195, § 620, 75 Stat. 424,
35
444‐45 (1961). Moreover, President Kennedy in fact implemented such an embargo in
February 1962. Proclamation No. 3447, Embargo on All Trade with Cuba, 27 Fed. Reg.
1085 (Feb. 7, 1962). Thus, while Deutsch and Suchlicki are correct that President
Kennedy sanctioned Cuba during this period (and he did so under a provision of the
Foreign Assistance Act adjacent to that identified in the FSIA), these sanctions did not
lift Cuba’s immunity under the FSIA.
Accordingly, as demonstrated by the previously cited Congressional testimony
of high‐ranking State Department officials, Cuba was not designated as a state sponsor
of terror under the relevant provisions until 1982. Because the decision to designate a
state as a sponsor of terrorism is committed by statute to the discretion of the Secretary
of State, we often regard such official pronouncements as authoritative.29 See Vera III,
867 F.3d at 319 (relying on “legislative materials and statements by government officials
submitted in this case [that] make no mention of extrajudicial killings or of the death of
Vera’s father”); Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 195 F. Supp. 2d 140, 160–61 (D.D.C.
29As we observed supra note 19, section 1605A expressly commits designation of a country as a
“state sponsor of terrorism” to the discretion of the Secretary of State. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1605A(h)(6). Section 1605(a)(7), the predecessor provision in effect when Hausler secured her
Florida state court judgment, operated to the same effect. It abrogated the sovereign immunity
of state sponsors of terrorism designated under “section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of
1979 (50 U.S.C. App. 2405(j)) or section 620A of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C.
2371).” 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(7)(A) (2007). Both provisions committed designation to the discretion
of the Secretary of State. See 50 U.S.C. App. 2405(j)(1)(A) (2007) (requiring license for the export
of goods to a country “if the Secretary of State has made the following determinations . . . [t]he
government of such country has repeatedly provided support for acts of international
terrorism”); 22 U.S.C. § 2371(a) (2007) (“The United States shall not provide any assistance
under this chapter . . . to any country if the Secretary of State determines that the government of
that country has repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism.”).
36
2002) (relying on State Department reports and letters to conclude that Iran was not
designated as a state sponsor of terrorism as a result of the 1979–81 hostage crisis and
rejecting contrary testimony given by an independent expert), aff’d, 333 F.3d 228 (D.C.
Cir. 2003).
In sum, although Hausler’s witnesses establish that a succession of presidential
administrations has vigorously condemned human rights abuses in Cuba, Hausler
cannot seriously dispute that it was not until 1982 that Cuba was designated a state
sponsor of terrorism, and that the record shows that the basis for the formal designation
was Cuba’s active support for violent groups acting outside of its borders. See Vera III,
867 F.3d at 318. Thus, Hausler, too, failed to adduce evidence demonstrating a specific
link between the death of her brother in 1960 and Cuba’s designation as a state sponsor
of terrorism over two decades later. Accordingly, she has failed to meet her burden to
establish that the District Court had jurisdiction over her action under TRIA section
201(a) to enforce her Florida state court judgment.
We conclude, therefore, that the terrorism exception—the sole potential basis for
subject‐matter jurisdiction in this case—applied neither to Hausler nor the Villoldos’
actions before the District Court. Hausler and the Villoldos thus did not hold valid
judgments against Cuba enforceable under TRIA section 201(a); the District Court
lacked jurisdiction over the enforcement proceeding; and the District Court’s orders
requiring BBVA and other banks to turn over blocked Cuban assets to all three groups
of Appellees (Hausler, the Villoldos, and Vera) were void for want of jurisdiction.
37
II. Restitution of funds turned over to Appellees
Having determined that the District Court lacked subject‐matter jurisdiction over
the Villoldo and Hausler enforcement actions—and having earlier decided the same
with respect to Vera in Vera III—we now confront the consequences of these rulings.
The District Court declined to stay execution of its turnover orders pending
BBVA’s appeal from the court’s final judgment. For the reasons set forth above, we
conclude that these turnover orders were void ab initio. BBVA has requested that, if
such a result is reached, this Court order all three Appellees to make restitution to
BBVA of the funds that they received under the invalid turnover orders. Appellees
counter that restitution to BBVA is inappropriate because BBVA lacks its own
possessory interest in the funds. After all, Appellees argue, the funds at issue are the
property of the Cuban Import‐Export Corporation, a Cuban instrumentality that never
appeared in this case; BBVA was merely an intermediary bank that blocked the assets
under the Cuban Assets Control Regulations, 31 C.F.R. Part 515. Accordingly, Appellees
urge, once BBVA delivered the funds to the Registry of the U.S. Courts, it was
dispossessed of any interest of its own, and only the Cuban Import‐Export Corporation
or the Cuban government itself would have standing to seek their return. To this, BBVA
replies that it retains a possessory interest in the funds because (1) it is subject to
potential liability for the funds to the Cuban corporation; and (2) it is entitled to an
38
equitable lien on the monies for its expenses in diligently protecting the Cuban
corporation’s property from execution.
In considering what equity demands in this situation, we first summarize the
traditional standards applicable to requests for restitution and then consider their
application here.
The Supreme Court has long ago observed that “[t]he right to recover what one
has lost by the enforcement of a judgment subsequently reversed is well established.”
Baltimore & O.R. Co. v. United States, 279 U.S. 781, 786 (1929). This well‐established right
may be tempered, however, by application of equitable principles. Thus, the most
recent Restatement of the law of restitution offers this qualified statement: “A transfer
or taking of property, in compliance with or otherwise in consequence of a judgment
that is subsequently reversed or avoided, gives the disadvantaged party a claim in
restitution as necessary to avoid unjust enrichment.” Restatement (Third) of Restitution
and Unjust Enrichment § 18 (Am. Law Inst. 2011) (emphasis added). Because an order
of restitution is generally seen as discretionary, we consider whether “the money was
received in such circumstances that the possessor will give offense to equity and good
conscience if permitted to retain it.” Atl. Coast Line R. Co. v. Florida, 295 U.S. 301, 309
(1935).
In conducting this inquiry, we are mindful of the Restatement’s comment that a
judgment debtor’s “entitlement to restitution may not be resisted merely on the ground
that an invalid judgment gave effect to what was, in any event, a moral obligation owed
to the judgment creditor.” Restatement (Third) of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment
§ 18 cmt. e (Am. Law Inst. 2011) (emphasis added). Instead, the Restatement ties an
39
entitlement to restitution to the legal validity of the underlying debt or liability,
explaining that, while “[a]n invalid or erroneous judgment that gives effect to a valid
liability does not create unjust enrichment,” a “restitution claim based on legal
compulsion stands on a different footing” when it is based on “money . . . paid to satisfy
a claim that is valid in equity and good conscience yet legally unenforceable.” Id.
(emphases added). Thus, when a debtor has been “compelled by law to pay a claim that
is not legally enforceable . . . [t]he need to remedy this misapplication of legal process . .
. constitutes an important reason for restitution that is independent of the
individualized equities of the parties.” Id.
Appellees’ immense default judgments against Cuba reflect the horror of those
acts that Cuba is alleged to have committed against their family members between 1959
and 1976. In determining whether Appellees were “unjustly enriched” for equitable
purposes by receiving the funds they have collected, however, we must weigh the legal
validity of their underlying claims, not the relative moral standing of the parties. Here,
as set forth in Section I.C, supra, Appellees articulate no sound or even plausible
jurisdictional basis under section 1605A for their claims or for the judgments entered.
This void suggests that the consequent turnover orders are not expressions of an
underlying “valid liability” that some merely ancillary technical ground has made
unrecoverable.30 Rather, Appellees have collected substantial funds pursuant to void
30 Vera argues that his receipt of an amended state court judgment in 2018, specifically finding
that the terrorism exception to sovereign immunity is established in his case, creates a valid
liability such that he has not been unjustly enriched. However, it does not appear that Vera has
taken any steps to register that judgment in federal district court as would be necessary to
create an enforceable debt. Relatedly, the Florida state court judgments entered for Hausler and
40
turnover orders in a case where the District Court had no basis in law for exercising
jurisdiction. We are compelled in these circumstances to rule that restitution is
warranted.
The unavoidability of this conclusion is underscored by our prior rulings. In Vera
II, in which we dismissed BBVA’s attempt to directly appeal the District Court’s
turnover orders, we held that we lacked appellate jurisdiction because the orders did
not effect injunctive relief of the type that is immediately appealable, and because BBVA
could not show that the orders “‘(1) might have a serious, perhaps irreparable
consequence; and (2) can be effectually challenged only by immediate appeal.’” Vera II,
651 Fed. App’x at 26 (quoting Bridgeport Guardians, Inc. v. Delmonte, 537 F.3d 214, 220
(2d Cir. 2008)). The turnover orders did not work an irreparable harm on BBVA’s
interests, we reasoned, because “the mere loss of funds pending final judgment can be
remedied on appeal through recovery of the funds with interest.” Id. And, in May 2017,
when the District Court denied BBVA a further stay and ordered that the funds
deposited in the Court Registry be disbursed to Appellees, it expressly relied on this
statement. See Vera v. Republic of Cuba, No. 12‐CV‐1596 (AKH), 2017 WL 4350568, at *2
(S.D.N.Y. May 25, 2017) (“As the Second Circuit held when denying BBVA’s appeal for
lack of jurisdiction, BBVA has failed to show that the Turnover Order would ‘have a
serious, irreparable consequence’ because ‘the mere loss of funds pending final
judgment can be remedied on appeal through recovery of the funds with interest.’”).
Indeed, with subject‐matter jurisdiction at the very least an open question throughout
the Villoldos do not create a liability independent of the FSIA claims registered in federal
district court, which we void with this opinion.
41
this proceeding, the Villoldos, Hausler, and Vera all can fairly be said to have assumed
the risk of sustaining an adverse ruling on appeal when they opposed BBVA’s stay
motion and sought execution of the turnover orders before appellate review was
complete. See PSM Holding Corp. v. Nat’l Farm Fin. Corp., 884 F.3d 812, 823 (9th Cir. 2018)
(judgment creditor “assumed some amount of risk when it opted to execute on the
judgment while an appeal was pending”); Strong v. Laubach, 443 F.3d 1297, 1300 (10th
Cir. 2006) (same).
In reaching our decision, we acknowledge the complexities surrounding BBVA’s
possessory interest in the funds. On the one hand, we agree with Appellees that BBVA’s
concern about confronting double liability is speculative at best. And, even if BBVA
might be entitled to an equitable lien on the funds to the extent it has sustained costs
related to its vigorous defense of the Cuban corporation’s assets, it has not yet
presented any documentation of the attorney’s fees that it has incurred in this action,
and its entitlement to recover them may, in any event, be subject to legitimate dispute.
On the other hand, we note that, even if BBVA does not have a possessory interest in
the funds, it may well have an interest in completing the transfer of the funds to the
Cuban Import Export Corporation, now that the funds transfer is no longer blocked by
the United States.31
We ultimately conclude, however, that the strength (or weakness) of BBVA’s
interest in the funds does not provide an adequate basis for denying restitution to
BBVA. When a party seeks restitution of funds collected from it pursuant to an invalid
31 The U.S. government unblocked the funds in 2015. See 31 C.F.R. § 515.584(e).
42
judgment, it is not ordinarily required to establish the nature of its possessory interest
in the lost funds. Rather, the baseline rule in this Circuit is that “a party against whom
an erroneous judgment or decree has been carried into effect is entitled, in the event of a
reversal, to be restored by his adversary to that which he has lost thereby.” LiButti v.
United States, 178 F.3d 114, 120 (2d Cir. 1999); see also In re Craig’s Stores of Texas, Inc., 402
F.3d 522, 525 (5th Cir. 2005) (“[W]hen the underlying litigation was dismissed for lack
of jurisdiction, the disputed registry funds should have been disbursed back to the
party that deposited them in the registry.”). Of course, we may decline to apply this
rule if equitable considerations counsel otherwise. See LiButti, 178 F.3d at 120 (“[T]his
rule is not without exceptions.”). But as discussed above, the equitable considerations at
play in such a restitution analysis principally concern whether restitution is necessary to
avoid unjustly enriching the party that benefited from the enforcement of an invalid
judgment. For the reasons already stated, we conclude here that Appellees were
unjustly enriched by enforcement of the void turnover orders, and that equity and good
conscience require restoration of the status quo ante, particularly given (1) the absence of
an underlying valid liability, and (2) Appellees’ decision to seek execution of the
turnover orders, notwithstanding the substantial and apparent risks that the orders
were vulnerable to reversal on appeal. Accordingly, we direct the District Court on
remand to enter an order requiring restitution by Appellees of the funds that BBVA
paid them under the void turnover orders. We have reviewed the parties’ additional
arguments and conclude that they are unavailing.
43
CONCLUSION
The District Court lacked subject‐matter jurisdiction over this enforcement
proceeding under TRIA. The turnover orders that it issued in the enforcement
proceeding were void ab initio. Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the District
Court, VACATE the turnover orders, and REMAND the cause to the District Court with
instructions to (1) dismiss the amended Omnibus Petition and (2) issue an order
directing Appellees to return to BBVA the funds that BBVA paid them under the void
turnover orders.
JOSÉ A. CABRANES, Circuit Judge:
I join the judgment of the Court.
44