United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 22-1499
UNIVERSAL TRADING & INVESTMENT CO., INC.,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
FOUNDATION HONESTY INTERNATIONAL, INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
BUREAU FOR REPRESENTING UKRAINIAN INTERESTS IN INTERNATIONAL
AND FOREIGN COURTS; UKRAINIAN PROSECUTOR GENERAL'S OFFICE;
UKRAINE,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Barron, Chief Judge,
Howard and Montecalvo, Circuit Judges.
Stephen F. Reardon, with whom Law Office of Stephen F. Reardon
was on brief, for appellant.
Robert M. Shaw, with whom Ralph T. Lepore, III, and Holland
& Knight LLP were on brief, for appellees.
November 27, 2023
MONTECALVO, Circuit Judge. This case of international
dimensions returns to us for the second time.
In the 1990s, Cube, Ltd. ("Cube"), a Ukrainian company,
which later was reorganized to become United Energy Systems of
Ukraine ("UESU"), hired Universal Trading & Investment Company,
Inc. ("UTICo") to help it recover lost assets. Through the
intervention of Pavlo Lazarenko, the former Prime Minister of
Ukraine, UESU had been awarded a lucrative government contract.
But the proceeds of the contract were going missing; someone was
diverting the assets. In connection with UTICo's work to help
Cube and UESU recover the converted assets, UTICo discovered that
Lazarenko was using Cube and UESU to siphon money into his personal
offshore accounts. UTICo contacted the Ukrainian Prosecutor
General's Office ("UPGO") and other Ukrainian agencies to report
the fraudulent relationship.
Based on UTICo's helpful sharing of information, UPGO
enlisted UTICo to assist it in tracing and recovering assets that
Lazarenko and his accomplice, Petro Kiritchenko, allegedly had
stolen from Ukraine. UPGO agreed to provide UTICo a 12% commission
on certain assets "returned to Ukraine, in connection with" the
agreement. Approximately $15 million of the siphoned assets
finally have been returned to Ukraine.1
1 Unless expressly noted otherwise, the financial figures
in this opinion refer to U.S. dollars.
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In the instant case, UTICo has sued Ukraine, UPGO, and
the Bureau for Representing Ukrainian Interests in International
and Foreign Courts (the "Bureau") (collectively, the "Ukrainian
defendants"), claiming that it has helped block and freeze assets
all over the world and is owed a commission for its work. We
previously affirmed the district court's exercise of jurisdiction
over UTICo's breach-of-contract claim, finding that the Ukrainian
defendants' transactions with UTICo were exempt from immunity
under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (the "FSIA"),
28 U.S.C. § 1604. Universal Trading & Inv. Co. v. Bureau for
Representing Ukrainian Ints. in Int'l & Foreign Cts. ("UTICo II"),
727 F.3d 10, 12 (1st Cir. 2013).
Following our resolution of the appeal, the parties
engaged in discovery and additional motion practice before the
district court. In analyzing UTICo's breach-of-contract claim,
the district court construed each asset recovery and failure to
pay a commission as a separate claim for breach of contract.
Universal Trading & Inv. Co., Inc. v. Bureau for Representing
Ukrainian Ints. in Int'l & Foreign Cts. ("UTICo III"), 605 F. Supp.
3d 273, 291 n.11 (D. Mass. 2022). It ultimately dismissed all the
breach-of-contract claims because some were not ripe, others were
barred by the statute of limitations, and the single remaining
claim failed on the merits. See id. at 290-99. The district court
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also denied UTICo's motions to amend the complaint and several of
UTICo's discovery-related requests. See id. at 286-88.
UTICo now appeals each of those decisions, arguing that
its breach-of-contract claims should survive summary judgment,
that it should be allowed to amend the complaint, and that it
should be permitted to conduct additional discovery. Finding no
error in the district court's opinion, we affirm.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
We assume the parties' familiarity with the factual
context of this case and focus our recitation of the facts on those
relevant to the instant appeal. Because the primary issue on
appeal is the district court's entry of summary judgment in favor
of the Ukrainian defendants on UTICo's breach-of-contract claims,
we take the facts in the light most favorable to UTICo and draw
all reasonable inferences therefrom in UTICo's favor. See
Pleasantdale Condos., LLC v. Wakefield, 37 F.4th 728, 730 (1st
Cir. 2022).
1. The Contractual Arrangement
UTICo is a Massachusetts corporation that offers
international asset recovery services. After UTICo informed UPGO
and other Ukrainian agencies of its discovery that Lazarenko, then
the First Deputy Prime Minister and eventually the Prime Minister
of Ukraine, was stealing money owed to the Ukrainian government,
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UPGO hired UTICo to assist it in recovering assets related to UESU
and its parent company, United Energy International, Ltd.
On May 15, 1998, UTICo and UPGO reached their first
agreement (the "May 1998 Agreement"). That agreement stated:
"Taking into account information and assistance that [UTICo] is
providing[,] . . . [UPGO] has agreed that [UTICo] will be
attributed a commission of 12 (twelve) percent on all and any above
assets to be returned to Ukraine, in connection with the Power of
Attorney" that was executed alongside the May 1998 Agreement. The
May 1998 Agreement further clarified that renumeration could not
be paid from the State budget of Ukraine; instead, it was payable
only "from the assets to be repatriated to Ukraine from outside of
Ukraine."
In the months and years that followed, UPGO executed
additional agreements relating to the May 1998 Agreement and
granted UTICo powers of attorney to pursue various asset
investigations across the globe. The additional powers of attorney
contemplated work in the United States, the British Virgin Islands,
Guernsey, the Bahamas, Panama, and other countries. But none of
the powers of attorney contemplated work in Switzerland.
While UTICo performed work for UPGO, UPGO twice
confirmed the validity of the contractual arrangement.
Specifically, on October 2, 1998, UPGO sent a letter to George
Lambert, UTICo's President, "certify[ing] the previously agreed
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terms in regard to the unlawful assets outside of Ukraine." And
almost a year later, in August 1999, Nikolai Obikhod, then the
Deputy Prosecutor General of Ukraine, wrote to Lambert,
recognizing "the work accomplished by, and the assistance from,
[UTICo]" in tracing assets and affirming that UTICo was entitled
to "12% of all funds returned to Ukraine from outside of its
borders with the assistance of UTICo."
2. Investigation and Blocking of Assets
i. UTICo Investigation
No one disputes that UTICo was instrumental in helping
the Ukrainian defendants investigate and freeze millions of
dollars in assets around the world that had been expatriated from
Ukraine.
Some of that assistance was provided prior to the
execution of the May 1998 Agreement. For example, in October 1997,
UTICo shared several documents with UPGO concerning UESU and
Somolli Enterprises Ltd. ("Somolli"), an offshore entity through
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which UESU diverted funds.2 And during an April 1998 meeting
between Obikhod and UTICo to negotiate the May 1998 Agreement,
UTICo disclosed to UPGO that (1) UESU's assets were controlled by
Bassington Ltd. ("Bassington"), an offshore entity incorporated in
the British Virgin Islands, and (2) UTICo had additional evidence
tracing the diversion of UESU assets. Through its work, UTICo
dissected a four-tier subsidiary scheme and traced ownership of
UESU and its parent company back to Bassington.
UTICo obtained and shared evidence with the Ukrainian
defendants after the May 1998 Agreement went into effect as well.
Pursuant to the numerous powers of attorney executed in connection
with the May 1998 Agreement, UTICo gathered evidence from across
the globe, obtaining additional information about Bassington and
other entities involved in Lazarenko's money-laundering scheme,
such as Bainfield Co. ("Bainfield"); Orphin S.A. ("Orphin");
Wilnorth, Inc. ("Wilnorth"); and GHP, Corp. ("GHP").
2 UTICo's involvement in Ukrainian recovery projects began
in July 1993 when Cube hired UTICo to trace lost assets. At the
time, Cube had a contract with Ukraine that required Cube to
deliver ferrous metals to China. But Cube lost roughly half the
value of the first delivery of the metals. The converted funds
had passed through Indian intermediaries. UTICo traced the assets
and was able to recover $660,000 for Cube. Cube asked UTICo to
direct the recovered $660,000 to an account held in the name of
Somolli. As UTICo continued to perform work for Cube and then
UESU and learned about Lazarenko's involvement in the
organizations, UTICo developed suspicions that Cube did not report
the $660,000 recovery to Ukraine. Based on its suspicions, UTICo
promptly transferred evidence about the transaction and Somolli to
UPGO and other Ukrainian agencies.
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UTICo performed much of its work abroad in places like
the British Virgin Islands and Panama. But it also performed, or
at least attempted to perform, extensive work for the Ukrainian
defendants in the United States. Specifically, in 1999, UTICo
learned that Lazarenko and Kiritchenko had used expatriated assets
to purchase real estate in California and instigated proceedings
in the United States District Court for the Northern District of
California to recover the real estate. On April 13, 1999, acting
as amicus curiae for UTICo, UPGO sent a letter to the Northern
District of California, which purportedly assigned UPGO's claims
to the real estate to UTICo (the "1999 California Assignment").
In the letter, UPGO explained to the court that (1) Kiritchenko
was facing prosecution in Ukraine, (2) Kiritchenko purchased the
California properties with expatriated assets, and (3) UPGO
supported UTICo's lawsuit to attach all Kiritchenko's realty in
the United States, which was acquired with the laundered funds.
UPGO also gave UTICo power of attorney to pursue the assets of
Lazarenko, Kiritchenko, and their co-conspirators in the United
States.
Despite UPGO's letter, a dispute over UTICo's standing
to sue on UPGO's behalf ensued. The district court ultimately
concluded that UTICo did not have standing because the purported
assignment of Ukraine's claims to UTICo was invalid and the various
powers of attorney were not equivalent to an assignment of
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ownership. Universal Trading & Inv. Co. v. Kiritchenko, No.
C-99-3073 MMC, 2007 WL 2669841, at *20-21 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 7,
2007). The Ninth Circuit affirmed. Universal Trading & Inv. Co.
v. Kiritchenko, 346 F. App'x 232 (9th Cir. 2009). Accordingly,
UTICo was unable to recover the U.S. properties.
In addition to the evidence regarding activities in the
United States, UTICo also recovered evidence of Kiritchenko's and
Lazarenko's activities in Switzerland. None of the powers of
attorney between UPGO and UTICo specifically contemplated UTICo
performing work in Switzerland. But through the course of UTICo's
investigations, it developed evidence that Kiritchenko and
Lazarenko held assets at various Swiss banks, including Credit
Suisse, SCS Alliance, and Banque Populaire Suisse.
ii. Swiss Investigation
UTICo was not the only group to investigate Lazarenko
and Kiritchenko's international money-laundering scheme. Prior to
the execution of the May 1998 Agreement, the Swiss and Ukrainian
governments also had been in communication, and the Swiss
government launched its own investigation.
Starting in January 1998, UPGO sent letters rogatory to
the Swiss authorities, seeking assistance in investigating
Kiritchenko and his co-conspirators. In a supplementary request
dated February 14, 1998, UPGO indicated that Kiritchenko was
suspected of money laundering and that Kiritchenko was the
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beneficiary of GHP -- an entity implicated in the laundering
scheme. In response, on March 6, 1998, Switzerland opened a
criminal investigation to determine whether money laundering or
other financial crimes had been committed in Geneva.
In connection with the Swiss investigation, a Swiss
investigating judge ordered the seizure of documents concerning
bank accounts opened in Kiritchenko's name and started freezing
those accounts' assets. A June 25, 1999 opinion by the Swiss
Federal Tribunal (the "June 1999 decision") details the Swiss
investigating judge's inquiry and the contents of UPGO's January
and February 1998 letters rogatory.
According to the June 1999 decision, in mid-March 1998,
the Swiss investigating judge ordered SCS Alliance to supply all
documents concerning GHP's bank account and other accounts opened
in Kiritchenko's name, as well as the names of the other suspected
individuals. On March 27 and April 1, 1998, SCS Alliance responded
with information about bank accounts opened in Kiritchenko's name
as well as a bank account opened in the name of a family member.
The bank also supplied information about accounts held in the
following entities' names: Bainfield; Wilnorth; GHP; Brancross
Ltd. of Antigua ("Brancross"); European Federal Credit Bank Ltd.
("European Federal"); and Zeneta Foundation of Vaduz ("Zeneta").
Thus, the Swiss authorities got tipped off to Lazarenko's and
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Kiritchenko's involvement in these entities before UPGO and UTICo
executed their May 1998 Agreement.
Around the same time, the Swiss investigating judge met
with an investigating judge from Kiev, Ukraine. At a March 27,
1998 meeting between the judges, the Swiss investigating judge
provided the Ukrainian investigating judge with references to the
offshore companies that had accounts at SCS Alliance. The Swiss
investigating judge specifically highlighted accounts for which
Kiritchenko appeared to be a beneficiary that Ukraine had not
mentioned in its prior letters rogatory -- that is, Brancross,
Wilnorth, European Federal, Zeneta, and Bainfield.
In April 1998, UPGO continued to supplement its earlier
letters rogatory. Those letters provided a range of additional
information, including (1) details on a contract whose proceeds
allegedly were paid into Bainfield's Swiss account, (2) an
explanation of Lazarenko's suspected involvement in the
money-laundering scheme, and (3) identification of other bank
accounts at SCS Alliance and Credit Suisse allegedly implicated in
the scheme. And so, the Swiss investigating judge continued to
request information and seize accounts held in Kiritchenko's and
Lazarenko's names, as well as accounts opened by the companies
implicated in the laundering scheme, at Credit Suisse and SCS
Alliance.
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All told, before May 15, 1998 -- the date on which UTICo
and UPGO entered their first agreement -- the Swiss investigating
judge had received information on and ordered the seizure of the
following accounts at SCS Alliance:
• 5317, held by Kiritchenko;
• 5383, held by Bainfield;
• 5451, held by Wilnorth;
• 5452, held by GHP;
• 5482, held by Brancross;
• 5484, held by Izabella Kiritchenko;
• 5491, held by European Federal; and
• 5522, held by Zeneta.
And at Credit Suisse, the Swiss investigating judge had received
information on and ordered the seizure of the following accounts:
• 875.709.72, held by Paddox Industries Ltd.
("Paddox");
• 823.896.2, held by GHP; and
• 562.927.6, held by European Federal.
iii. Swiss Judgments
The proceedings in Switzerland ultimately led to two
judgments -- one against Lazarenko and the other against
Kiritchenko.
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On June 28, 2000, the Court of Police in Geneva found
Lazarenko guilty of money laundering and ordered him to pay nearly
10.7 million Swiss francs to Geneva (the "June 2000 Swiss court
judgment"). Although the judgment required Lazarenko to pay
Geneva, Switzerland ultimately transferred most of the funds to
Ukraine.
About two months later, on August 30, 2000, the Attorney
General of Geneva issued a condemnation ruling against
Kiritchenko, finding him guilty of money laundering (the "August
2000 Swiss court judgment"). As a part of Kiritchenko's penalty,
the Attorney General required Kiritchenko to pay a fine of 1
million Swiss francs and ordered the transfer of certain assets
held at Credit Suisse and SCS Alliance to Ukraine.3 Specifically,
the August 2000 Swiss court judgment ordered the transfer of assets
deposited in the following accounts at SCS Alliance:
• 5317, held by Kiritchenko4;
3 The condemnation ruling also transferred some assets to
Geneva, specifically those held in account 5491 at SCS Alliance
and those held in account 562.927 at Credit Suisse.
4 Somewhat confusingly, the August 2000 Swiss court
judgment states that account 5317 was "apparently not used to
receive or channel the benefits of any illicit activity by . . .
Lazarenko or any other third party," see Appellant's App. at 2115,
but then orders a portion of the deposits held at account 5317 to
be transferred to Ukraine, see id. at 2118 (permitting the release
of the seizure on account 5317 after the transfer to Ukraine of
roughly $3.1 million held in the account). Apparently, just a
portion of the funds in account 5317 were connected to the scheme.
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• 5383, held by Bainfield;
• 5451, held by Wilnorth;
• 5452, held by GHP;
• 5482, held by Brancross; and
• 5522, held by Zeneta.
And it further ordered the transfer of assets deposited in the
following accounts at Credit Suisse:
• 875.709.72, held by Paddox;
• 823.896.22, held by GHP; and
• 21383, held by Kiritchenko.
The fine of 1 million Swiss francs was to be paid from account
5484, held by an entity named May at SCS Alliance.
Nearly all the accounts listed in the August 2000 Swiss
court judgment overlap with those identified and investigated by
Switzerland as a part of its investigation. See supra Part
I.A.2.ii. Only account 21383, held in the name of Kiritchenko at
Credit Suisse, was not explicitly named in the June 1999 decision.
Although the account was not explicitly named in the June 1999
decision, the decision indicates that the Swiss investigating
judge had requested information for all accounts that "had been
opened in the name[] of . . . Kiritchenko" and "ordered the seizure
of [those] accounts."
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iv. Transfer of Swiss Assets to Ukraine
The two Swiss proceedings ultimately resulted in the
transfer of roughly $15 million to Ukraine.5 Those funds made
their way to Ukraine in three tranches:
• Approximately 10.6 million Swiss francs ("tranche
one") seized in connection with the June 2000 Swiss
court judgment were transferred to UPGO's escrow
account in October 2000. In March 2001, the funds
were transferred to the Ukrainian treasury.
• Approximately $4,058,000 ("tranche two") seized in
connection with the August 2000 Swiss court
judgment were transferred to UPGO's escrow account
in October 2000. In March 2009, the funds were
transferred to the Ukrainian treasury.
• Approximately $1,744,980 ("tranche three") were
transferred to the Ukrainian treasury in April
2002. The parties disagree as to whether
Kiritchenko voluntarily returned this money or
5 Technically, the returned funds sum to only about 12.3
million U.S. dollars because the 10.6 million Swiss francs returned
in tranche one equated to roughly 6.5 million U.S. dollars at the
time the June 2000 Swiss court judgment was issued. Throughout
this litigation, however, the parties and the district court have
referred to the returned funds as the $15 million in Swiss assets.
For consistency, we will do the same.
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returned it pursuant to the August 2000 Swiss court
judgment.
v. Blocking of Other Assets
The Swiss assets are not the only assets to have been
blocked. The parties agree that nearly $270 million of assets
connected to the money-laundering scheme have been blocked in
Switzerland and beyond. But the Ukrainian defendants represent
that only the above-mentioned Swiss assets have been returned to
Ukraine.
B. Procedural History
On November 26, 2010, UTICo6 sued the Ukrainian
defendants, alleging that the Ukrainian defendants breached their
contractual duties under the May 1998 Agreement. UTICo also
alleged that the Ukrainian defendants breached the 1999 California
Assignment, were unjustly enriched, breached their fiduciary
duties to UTICo, made misrepresentations to UTICo, and negligently
failed to convey certain information to UTICo. It also asked the
court to declare that: (1) UTICo is not subject to Ukrainian
jurisdiction; (2) Ukrainian court decisions concerning UTICo would
6 Foundation Honesty International, Inc. initially sued
alongside UTICo. But following the Ukrainian defendants' motion
to dismiss, the district court dismissed Foundation Honesty
International, Inc. as a plaintiff. Universal Trading & Inv. Co.
v. Bureau for Representing Ukrainian Ints. in Int'l & Foreign Cts.
("UTICo I"), 898 F. Supp. 2d 301, 326 (D. Mass. 2012).
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not be recognized in Massachusetts; and (3) a power of attorney
executed on April 30, 1999, was in effect until June 5, 2010, when
the Supreme Court of the United States denied certiorari on a
petition related to the California litigation, see Universal
Trading & Inv. Co. v. Kiritchenko, 561 U.S. 1038 (2010) (mem.).
The Ukrainian defendants moved to dismiss the complaint
in its entirety, arguing that (1) they were immune from suit; (2)
Massachusetts was an improper venue for the suit; and (3) UTICo
failed to state a claim for which relief could be granted.
The district court granted in part and denied in part
the Ukrainian defendants' motion to dismiss. UTICo I, 898
F. Supp. 2d at 326. Specifically, the district court concluded
that it could assert jurisdiction over UTICo's breach-of-contract
claim relating to the May 1998 agreement under the commercial
activity exception to the FSIA and that UTICo had adequately pled
this claim. Id. at 316-17, 319-21. The court also determined
that venue was proper in Massachusetts. Id. at 317-18. But the
district court dismissed the majority of UTICo's other claims
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because it found that each claim failed to state a claim for which
relief could be granted.7 See id. at 318-25.
The Ukrainian defendants appealed the district court's
assertion of jurisdiction, and we affirmed. UTICo II, 727 F.3d at
12. Like the district court, we found that the commercial activity
exception to the FSIA permitted the court to exercise jurisdiction
over the May 1998 Agreement breach-of-contract claim, reasoning
that the "asset recovery services . . . described in UTICo's
complaint [were] exactly the sort for which private citizens
contract," id. at 20, and that the May 1998 Agreement did "not
impinge on Ukraine's sovereignty because [it] d[id] not . . .
require [Ukraine] to reappropriate any assets into the Ukrainian
treasury that [the] defendants decide[d] not to reappropriate,"
id. at 22.
Back in the district court, the parties engaged in
limited discovery relating to the timeliness of UTICo's
breach-of-contract claim. Both parties filed motions for summary
judgment on the statute-of-limitations question. Following a
7 In addition to the breach-of-contract claim relating to
the May 1998 Agreement, the district court permitted UTICo's
request for a declaration of the duration of the April 30, 1999
power of attorney to proceed. UTICo I, 898 F. Supp. 2d at 326.
But the district court's allowance of UTICo's request for
declaratory relief was limited: the district court allowed it to
proceed only insofar as the duration of the April 30, 1999 power
of attorney might be implicated in resolution of the
breach-of-contract claim. Id.
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February 18, 2015 hearing on the cross-motions for summary
judgment, the district court denied UTICo's motion.
On May 16, 2018, the district court held a second hearing
on the Ukrainian defendants' motion for summary judgment. The
district court ultimately denied the Ukrainian defendants' motion.
But during the hearing, it also narrowed the scope of the claims
before it. It determined that UTICo's claims for breach of
contract became ripe only when the relevant assets were actually
repatriated to Ukraine. And because only the roughly $15 million
in assets connected to the June 2000 Swiss court judgment and the
August 2000 Swiss court judgment (the "Swiss assets") had been
repatriated to Ukraine, the district court limited UTICo's
breach-of-contract claim in the case to the Swiss assets.
In the time between the two hearings, UTICo had moved to
amend its complaint. The district court also addressed this motion
at the May 16, 2018 hearing. It denied the motion, reasoning that
to the extent UTICo was attempting to add allegations that the
Ukrainian defendants breached the duty of good faith and fair
dealing, UTICo had failed to meaningfully explain these theories
of recovery. It also emphasized UTICo's delay in seeking to amend
the complaint and how UTICo did not even attach a proposed amended
complaint to its motion. See UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 285.
After additional discovery, on February 8, 2019, the
Ukrainian defendants moved for summary judgment a second time,
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arguing that the remaining breach-of-contract claims were barred
by the statute of limitations and that, in any event, the claims
failed on the merits. In response, UTICo moved under Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure 56(d) to conduct additional discovery, arguing
that it lacked sufficient discovery to defend against the Ukrainian
defendants' motion. While the Ukrainian defendants' motion for
summary judgment and UTICo's Rule 56(d) motion remained pending,
the parties also prepared for trial, filing proposed findings of
fact, proposed conclusions of law, and trial memoranda. UTICo
then belatedly moved to amend the complaint and cross-moved for
partial summary judgment.
In a detailed decision issued on June 1, 2022, the
district court granted the Ukrainian defendants' second motion for
summary judgment, finding that UTICo's breach-of-contract claims
connected to the two tranches of Swiss assets repatriated to
Ukraine in 2001 and 2002 -- that is, tranches 1 and 3 -- were
barred by the statute of limitations and that the remaining claim
failed on the merits. UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 280, 293,
299. The court also denied UTICo's other motions, reasoning that
the Rule 56(d) motion simply sought to relitigate discovery
disputes to no avail and that the motion to amend was both late
and futile. Id. at 286-88.
On June 1, 2022, the district court entered judgment in
favor of the Ukrainian defendants. This timely appeal followed.
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II. Discussion
On appeal, UTICo challenges each of the district court's
rulings in the June 1, 2022 decision. UTICo also seeks review of
the district court's determination that UTICo's breach-of-contract
claim was ripe only as it related to the $15 million of Swiss
assets that have been transferred to the Ukrainian treasury.
Finally, UTICo argues that the district court abused its discretion
by denying UTICo's three motions to amend. We address each
argument in turn, beginning with UTICo's contention that the
district court erred in limiting its breach-of-contract claim to
those relating to the $15 million of Swiss assets.
A. Non-Repatriated Assets
UTICo first takes issue with the district court's
discarding of the portion of UTICo's breach-of-contract claim
premised upon the $260 million of blocked assets that are
unconnected to the two Swiss court judgments. But its grievances
can be disposed of quickly because they stem primarily from a
misunderstanding of what exactly occurred at the May 16, 2018
hearing.
UTICo misinterprets the nature of the district court's
May 16, 2018 order and June 1, 2022 decision. UTICo asserts that,
during the May 16, 2018 hearing, the district court did not dismiss
the claims premised upon the $260 million of blocked assets not
encompassed in the Swiss assets, but rather it bifurcated the trial
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under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 42(b). Under the bifurcated
trial, says UTICo, the parties would first try the case as it
related to the $15 million in Swiss assets and then separately
address the breach-of-contract claim relating to the remaining
$260 million in blocked assets. UTICo further contends that the
district court then forgot about the bifurcation, thereby denying
UTICo an opportunity to conduct discovery on the $260 million worth
of assets and improperly expanding the scope of the Ukrainian
defendants' second summary judgment motion to include all assets.
But the district court did no such thing. At the May
16, 2018 hearing, the district court made no mention of Rule 42(b).
Rather, it noted that UTICo's breach-of-contract claim was not
ripe insofar as it was based on non-repatriated assets and
therefore dismissed the claims relating to the blocked -- but not
yet repatriated -- $260 million. See Appellant Addendum at 45
("At this point only the Swiss assets are litigable."). In doing
so, the district court made clear that it was not deciding the
merits of UTICo's breach-of-contract claims as to those assets.8
8 The Ukrainian defendants also appeared to understand
that UTICo was not foreclosed from bringing an action in the future
based on the blocked, but not yet repatriated, assets should those
assets someday be repatriated. See Transcript of Motion Hearing
at 29-30, Dist. Ct. Docket Item 168 (counsel for the Ukrainian
defendants acknowledging the court's "point" concerning future
repatriation and recognizing that "[d]own the line[,] who knows
what happens [regarding an action] if assets are repatriated in
the future?").
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See Transcript of Motion Hearing at 39-40, Dist. Ct. Docket Item
168 (noting that the court was not granting "judgment on the
merits" on the non-Swiss assets). In other words, it left open
the possibility for UTICo to bring a new lawsuit if those assets
are someday repatriated.
On appeal, UTICo does not otherwise dispute the district
court's ruling that its breach-of-contract claims relating to the
non-repatriated assets are not ripe. In fact, its
statute-of-limitations arguments are premised on repatriation
being defined as the point at which a breach-of-contract claim
ripens.
Instead, UTICo attempts to circumvent the ripeness issue
by asserting a different theory as to the non-repatriated assets:
breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
But that theory is notably absent from UTICo's initial complaint,
and, for reasons explained infra, the district court did not abuse
its discretion in denying UTICo's subsequent requests to amend the
complaint to add a claim of breach of the implied covenant of good
faith and fair dealing based on the Ukrainian defendants' alleged
failure to repatriate assets.
UTICo's arguments that the district court improperly
dismissed and denied UTICo discovery on its breach-of-contract
claim relating to the $260 million non-repatriated assets thus are
without merit. Indeed, its underlying assumption that the district
- 24 -
court granted summary judgment on the merits of this claim is
incorrect. We therefore affirm the district court's dismissal of
the portion of UTICo's breach-of-contract claim relating to the
non-repatriated assets as unripe.
B. Swiss Assets
UTICo next challenges the district court's determination
that the Ukrainian defendants were entitled to summary judgment on
the portion of UTICo's breach-of-contract claim related to the
Swiss assets that have been transferred to the Ukrainian treasury.
It argues that the district court erred in finding that the statute
of limitations barred UTICo's claims connected to tranches one and
three and that equitable tolling was not warranted. UTICo also
argues that it has raised a genuine issue as to whether it assisted
the Ukrainian defendants in recovering the three tranches.9
9 UTICo additionally contends that the district court
erred in dividing the assets at issue in this litigation for
purposes of determining accrual into the "Swiss assets" and other
non-repatriated assets. In pressing this contention, UTICo argues
that the contract does not contemplate divisibility but instead
contemplates that the "worldwide assets," with respect to which
UTICo's services were contracted, are to be treated as a "whole."
The upshot of this contention, it seems, is that any claim to a
commission owed on the Swiss assets, so defined, is also unripe
insofar as the whole package of assets contemplated by the parties'
contract has not been repatriated. And accordingly, there is no
basis for the district court to have passed on the statute of
limitations and merits questions with respect to any claims based
on the Swiss assets. However, aside from asserting that there is
no basis on the face of the contract for concluding that the
contract is divisible, UTICo fails to develop any argument that
the district court erred in its application of Massachusetts law
when it concluded that the contract was divisible for
- 25 -
We review a district court's grant of summary judgment
de novo. Potvin v. Speedway LLC, 891 F.3d 410, 413-14 (1st Cir.
2018); see Barraford v. T & N Ltd., 778 F.3d 258, 263 (1st Cir.
2015) (review of grant of summary judgment on
statute-of-limitations grounds is de novo). "We will affirm the
entry of summary judgment if -- and only if -- the facts," as
viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, "show beyond
any legitimate question the movant's entitlement to judgment as a
matter of law." Cabán Hernández v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 486
F.3d 1, 8 (1st Cir. 2007); see Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Although we
must draw all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to
the nonmovant, we are not obligated "to draw unreasonable
inferences or credit bald assertions, empty conclusions, [or] rank
conjecture." Cabán Hernández, 486 F.3d at 8 (emphasis omitted).
1. Statute of Limitations
The parties agree that the relevant statute of
limitations is six years and that UTICo's cause of action began to
accrue when the assets were returned to Ukraine. On appeal, the
parties also agree that assets are not "returned" until they are
statute-of-limitations purposes. We therefore fail to see any
error in the district court's ruling.
- 26 -
transferred into the Ukrainian treasury; mere transfer to UPGO's
escrow account is not enough.10
UTICo commenced this action on November 26, 2010. Thus,
unless tolling is warranted, any cause of action that accrued
before November 26, 2004, is barred by the statute of limitations.
Tranches one and three were transferred to the Ukrainian treasury
in March 2001 and April 2002, respectively, and therefore, unless
tolling is appropriate, any claims relating to these tranches are
time-barred. The district court concluded tolling was not
warranted because the return of funds to Ukraine was not inherently
unknowable, the Ukrainian defendants did not have an affirmative
duty to disclose to UTICo the return of funds to the Ukrainian
treasury, and the Ukrainian defendants did not intentionally
10 Before the district court, the Ukrainian defendants
argued that the assets were "returned" once transferred to UPGO's
escrow account. See UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 291. The
district court concluded that no reasonable factfinder could agree
with the Ukrainian defendants' interpretation of the contract and
that assets were not "returned" until they were transferred to the
Ukrainian treasury. Id. at 292-93. On appeal, the Ukrainian
defendants have not argued that the district court erred in
concluding that the assets needed to be transferred to the
Ukrainian treasury for them to qualify as "returned."
Nevertheless, on appeal, UTICo rehashes its argument
that assets are not "returned" until they reach the Ukrainian
treasury, and, at various points, chastises the district court for
finding that a cause of action accrues when assets are merely
blocked. These arguments are puzzling, to say the least, as the
district court found that a cause of action does not accrue until
the funds reach the Ukrainian treasury, see id., and the Ukrainian
defendants do not dispute this point on appeal.
- 27 -
deceive or conceal the fact that tranches one and three had been
returned. See UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 293-95.
On appeal, UTICo makes much of the fact that it presented
evidence showing that it typically takes five to seven years to
recover expatriated assets once they are blocked. It accuses the
district court of overlooking UTICo's expert affidavits to that
effect in determining that the statute of limitations had run on
tranches one and three.
UTICo's arguments about the precise impact these
affidavits should have on the statute of limitations are not the
model of clarity. To the extent that UTICo is arguing that the
statute of limitations should automatically be tolled by five to
seven years, its argument misses the mark. As the district court
aptly noted, that the typical asset recovery period is
five-to-seven years "does not change the fact that tranche [one]
and tranche [three] were actually adjudicated and returned to the
Ukrainian [t]reasury by 2003," and thus, the actions premised on
tranches one and three accrued more than six years before the
commencement of this litigation. UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at
293.
UTICo next argues that it should be permitted to seek
recourse under the discovery rule. The discovery rule permits
tolling of the statute of limitations "until a prospective
plaintiff learns or should have learned that [it] has been injured
- 28 -
. . . in three circumstances: where a misrepresentation concerns
a fact that was 'inherently unknowable' to the injured party, where
a wrongdoer breached some duty of disclosure, or where a wrongdoer
concealed the existence of a cause of action through some
affirmative act done with the intent to deceive." Patsos v. First
Albany Corp., 741 N.E.2d 841, 846 (Mass. 2001).
UTICo claims that the statute of limitations should have
been tolled for two separate reasons: (1) the fact of repatriation
was "inherently unknowable" and (2) the Ukrainian defendants
fraudulently concealed the transfer of tranches one and three to
the Ukrainian treasury. To the extent that UTICo again falls back
on its expert affidavits to argue that a reasonable person would
not have asked about the recovery of funds until five to seven
years after assets were blocked, we are unconvinced. A reasonable
juror could not sign onto that line of logic in light of the
evidence that several news organizations had reported on
interactions between Swiss authorities and UPGO. Moreover, as the
district court noted, UTICo was in regular communication with UPGO
and could have asked UPGO whether Ukraine had fully repatriated
the assets from the accounts implicated in the June 2000 Swiss
court judgment and August 2000 Swiss court judgment. See UTICo
III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 294. Although UTICo contests the accuracy
of the news articles and suggests they referred to the transfer of
funds to UPGO's escrow account rather than the Ukrainian treasury,
- 29 -
those stories, at a minimum, put UTICo on notice that it should
have been asking the Ukrainian defendants about the repatriation
of the specific Swiss accounts implicated in tranches one and three
if it truly thought it had a claim to a commission on those returned
funds.
UTICo asserts it did just that, but that UPGO denied any
recovery of Swiss assets. Therefore, UTICo argues, a reasonable
juror could find that UPGO concealed the repatriation of tranches
one and three. To demonstrate a genuine issue of fact as to
whether the Ukrainian defendants concealed the transfer of
tranches one and three to the Ukrainian treasury, UTICo relies on
Lambert's affidavit and his 2019 deposition.
The Lambert affidavit and 2019 deposition suggest that
UTICo asked representatives of UPGO whether any assets had been
returned to the Ukrainian treasury. For example, Lambert attests
that at meetings in 2003 with representatives of UPGO, he inquired
about the recovery of frozen assets, including those from
Switzerland, and that UPGO representatives denied that any assets
had been repatriated. During his 2019 Rule 30(b)(6) deposition on
behalf of UTICo, Lambert similarly stated that at the 2003 and
2004 meetings, UTICo "raised the question about the recovery of
the various accounts. [UTICo] went through various jurisdictions.
And it was never disclosed to [UTICo] that any assets had been
actually repatriated, in terms that the Ukrainian treasury
- 30 -
obtained those funds." Relying on this evidence, UTICo contends
that the district court erred in concluding that "there is no
cognizable fraudulent concealment to be found in the record" and
thereby granting summary judgment for the Ukrainian defendants on
statute-of-limitations grounds.
Under Massachusetts law, the rule governing equitable
tolling of a statute of limitations because of fraudulent
concealment is codified at Massachusetts General Laws ch. 260 § 12.
The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has held that, in the
absence of a fiduciary relationship, the statute of limitations
may be tolled because of fraudulent concealment only "if the
wrongdoer . . . concealed the existence of a cause of action
through some affirmative act done with intent to deceive." Epstein
v. C.R. Bard, Inc., 460 F.3d 183, 189 (1st Cir. 2006) (quoting
Puritan Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Cashman, 596 N.E.2d 1004, 1010 (Mass.
1992) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); see
Abdallah v. Bain Capital LLC, 752 F.3d 114, 119-20 (1st Cir. 2014).
In challenging the district court's ruling that there was no
factual basis in the record from which a reasonable factfinder
could "conclude that Ukraine intentionally concealed any cause of
action," UTICo has failed to develop any argument or cite any case
law in support of the proposition that Lambert's statements in his
affidavit and 2019 deposition in and of themselves suffice to
permit a reasonable juror to find that the Ukrainian
- 31 -
defendants -- through the representations of the UPGO's
representatives -- acted with an intent to deceive UTICo. See
United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[I]ssues
adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort
at developed argumentation, are deemed waived.").
Whether Lambert's attestations create a genuine issue of
material fact as to whether the repatriation of tranche three was
unknowable or concealed by the Ukrainian defendants is a closer
question. But we need not wade any further and decide whether
UTICo has created a genuine issue of fact as to the timeliness of
this claim because, as we next explain, the breach-of-contract
claim relating to tranche three fails on the merits.
2. Recovery of Tranches Two and Three
We turn now to the district court's ruling that the
Ukrainian defendants were entitled to summary judgment on the
merits of UTICo's breach-of-contract claim relating to tranche
two. The district court concluded that UTICo has not demonstrated
a genuine issue of fact as to whether it was helpful in the recovery
of the accounts listed in the August 2000 Swiss court judgment
which comprise tranche two. UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 298-99.
Tranche three, like tranche two, implicates the August 2000 Swiss
court judgment. Thus, we find that the district court's analysis
on the merits of the breach-of-contract claim relating to tranche
two applies equally to the claim relating to tranche three.
- 32 -
As the district court explained, a reasonable juror
certainly could find that UTICo assisted the Ukrainian defendants
in locating and blocking assets. See id. at 296-98. But the
question before us is not merely whether UTICo assisted the
Ukrainian defendants in a broad sense. To defeat the Ukrainian
defendants' motion for summary judgment, UTICo had to show that a
reasonable juror could infer that the $4.058 million returned to
Ukraine in tranche two and the $1.744 million in tranche three
were returned to Ukraine "in connection with" the powers of
attorney executed by UPGO. Like the district court, for purposes
of considering the Ukrainian defendants' motion for summary
judgment, we will adopt UTICo's definition of "in connection with"
and ask whether UTICo was "helpful" in recovering the assets. See
UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 295-96. The precise question before
us therefore is whether a reasonable juror could infer that UTICo's
work under the powers of attorney was helpful in recovering the
assets returned pursuant to the August 2000 Swiss court judgment.
We agree with the district court that a reasonable juror could
not.
UTICo argues that summary judgment should not have been
granted to the Ukrainian defendants on the merits because it has
raised a genuine issue of fact as to whether it was helpful in
recovering tranches two and three. The Ukrainian defendants
respond that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to
- 33 -
UTICo's helpfulness in the recovery of tranches two and three
because the record establishes that the Swiss authorities
recovered these assets without meaningful help from UTICo.
Before diving deeper into UTICo's arguments on appeal,
we find it useful to pause and lay out the summary judgment
standard in more detail. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
56(a), a "court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows
that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." The party
seeking summary judgment "bears the initial burden of showing that
no genuine issue of material fact exists." Feliciano-Muñoz v.
Rebarber-Ocasio, 970 F.3d 53, 62 (1st Cir. 2020). If the moving
party meets this burden, the nonmovant must then put forth specific
facts to establish the existence of a genuine dispute of material
fact. See Pleasantdale Condos., LLC, 37 F.4th at 733. And "[o]n
issues where the nonmovant bears the ultimate burden of proof,"
id. (citation omitted), "conclusory allegations, improbable
inferences, and unsupported speculation" will not suffice, Balser
v. Int'l Union of Elec., Elec., Salaried, Mach. & Furniture Workers
(IUE) Loc. 201, 661 F.3d 109, 118 (1st Cir. 2011) (citation
omitted). Instead, the nonmovant must come forth with "definite,
competent evidence to rebut the motion for summary judgment."
Pleasantdale Condos., LLC, 37 F.4th at 733 (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted).
- 34 -
As an initial matter, UTICo's argument on appeal largely
boils down to: (1) we recovered hundreds of documents; (2) we sent
these to UPGO at some point; (3) UPGO shared the documents with
the Swiss authorities; and (4) therefore, we must have been helpful
to Ukraine in its efforts to recover the Swiss assets mentioned in
the August 2000 Swiss court judgment. But UTICo does little to
connect the dots and explain how it knows that the documents made
their way to Switzerland and why the documents would have been
critical to the Swiss authorities succeeding in their prosecution
of Kiritchenko.
UTICo's effusiveness and lack of developed argumentation
before us and the district court may well mean its argument that
it assisted in the recovery of tranches two and three is waived.
See Zannino, 895 F.2d at 17 ("It is not enough merely to mention
a possible argument in the most skeletal way, leaving the court to
do counsel's work, create the ossature for the argument, and put
flesh on its bones."); Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro, 843 F.2d 631,
635 (1st Cir. 1988) ("Judges are not expected to be mindreaders.
Consequently, a litigant has an obligation to spell out its
arguments squarely and distinctly, or else forever hold its peace."
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). The district
court should not be expected "to ferret out . . . evanescent
needle[s] from . . . outsized paper haystack[s]." Rivera-Gomez,
843 F.2d at 635. Nonetheless, the district court patiently waded
- 35 -
through UTICo's submissions, paying particular attention to the
Lambert affidavit and the exhibits referenced in it. After its
careful review, it concluded the Ukrainian defendants were
entitled to summary judgment.
This court also has reviewed UTICo's submissions and has
reached the same conclusion: UTICo has failed to show that a
reasonable juror could conclude that UTICo's work in connection
with the May 1998 Agreement and related powers of attorney helped
Ukraine recover the Swiss assets in tranches two and three.
A quick recap of the Swiss authorities' knowledge at the
time UTICo and Ukraine entered the May 1998 agreement demonstrates
why UTICo's arguments on appeal lack merit. As previously
mentioned, by the time May 15, 1998, rolled around, the Swiss
authorities already knew the names of several companies associated
with Kiritchenko, had identified accounts related to the companies
at Credit Suisse and SCS Alliance, and had some awareness of the
connection between those accounts and Kiritchenko's
money-laundering scheme. The names of those companies and accounts
later would reappear in the August 2000 Swiss court judgment. In
addition, in the months leading up to the May 1998 Agreement, the
Swiss investigating judge exchanged information with Ukraine and
requested information regarding Kiritchenko and his companies'
- 36 -
accounts from banks within its jurisdiction.11 What is more, the
information obtained by Switzerland was apparently not
insubstantial as it was enough to result in the seizure and
compulsory administration of the bulk of the accounts that later
were named in the August 2000 Swiss court judgment.
UTICo is correct that it would be an additional two years
before Kiritchenko would plead guilty to the Swiss charges. But
its suggestion that UTICo was the one to tip the scales and secure
Kiritchenko's plea with the evidence it gathered and the threat of
its California litigation amounts to little more than conjecture
that cannot defeat summary judgment. See Pleasantdale Condos.,
LLC, 37 F.4th at 733 ("Evidence that is conjectural or problematic
will not suffice to forestall summary judgment." (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted)); Cabán Hernández, 486 F.3d at
8 (emphasizing that on summary judgment we do not have "to draw
unreasonable inferences or credit bald assertions, empty
conclusions, [or] rank conjecture").
There are a few problems with UTICo's suggestion that it
provided evidence that helped Ukraine recover the assets and caused
11 We note that this information exchange was not a one-way
street. The Swiss investigating judge also shared information
with the Ukrainian authorities. For example, at a March 27, 1998
meeting, the Swiss investigating judge alerted a Ukrainian
investigating judge to the names of several accounts and entities
for which Kiritchenko was the beneficiary but that Ukraine had
failed to mention in its requests to Switzerland.
- 37 -
Kiritchenko to plead to the Swiss charges. First, although UTICo
establishes that it sent hundreds of pages of documents to UPGO,
it is unclear exactly what they sent to UPGO and when. Although
the powers of attorney are dated, the hundreds of pages of
documents lack dates, and Lambert's affidavit does not fill that
gap.
Similarly, UTICo has not put forth evidence establishing
that these documents were crucial to the Swiss authorities in
securing the August 2000 Swiss court judgment or Kiritchenko's
plea. Although it asserts that its expert declarations explain
the importance of certain documents -- in particular, the recovery
of Kiritchenko's passport -- to proving up a money-laundering
charge, we have reviewed its expert declaration and found nothing
to that effect. Indeed, UTICo's experts say little about the
specific types of evidence needed to secure the return of
expatriated assets after a money-laundering conviction. Instead,
UTICo's experts opine about the length of the typical asset
recovery cycle, the documents related to asset recovery that UTICo
believes the Ukrainian government possesses, the veracity of
documents relating to the California litigation, and the
interpretation and translation of UTICo's agreements with UPGO.
None of these things bear on the importance of the documents UTICo
sent to UPGO to send to the Swiss.
- 38 -
This once again forces UTICo to rely on Lambert's
statements to fill the gap. But neither his affidavit nor his
2019 deposition testimony rises to the occasion. As the district
court noted, UTICo's argument that it assisted in the recovery of
the Swiss assets suffers from issues of "vagueness" and is often
"conclusory." UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 296, 298. Lambert's
affidavit and 2019 deposition suffer from these same defects.
Although Lambert's affidavit and deposition testimony recount the
entities about which UTICo gathered evidence and the evidence
recovered, they fail to include specific details from which one
might infer how that evidence landed in Switzerland's hands, how
it was crucial to obtaining the August 2000 Swiss court judgment,
and why Switzerland could not obtain this information during its
own investigation.12
Finally, UTICo's suggestion that its evidence and
parallel litigation in California caused Kiritchenko to plea and
provide the information to get Swiss recovery over the finish line
overlooks the additional evidence obtained by Switzerland during
12 At times, UTICo's reply brief suggests that without
UTICo, the Swiss authorities would not have known of the companies
and accounts implicated in the money-laundering scheme. But this
assertion is at odds with the non-speculative evidence
establishing that the Swiss authorities knew of the relevant
accounts and companies before the May 1998 Agreement's execution.
What is more, such a contention cannot be taken seriously where
Lambert, in his 2019 deposition testimony, acknowledged that the
Swiss authorities knew of the existence of these companies.
- 39 -
its investigation. In particular, the Swiss investigating judge
deposed Kiritchenko and Lazarenko. In his deposition, Lazarenko
offered the Swiss authorities details on the money-laundering
scheme and the entities implicated in it. And, in June 2000, two
months before the August 2000 Swiss court judgment against
Kiritchenko, Lazarenko pled guilty to the offenses against him,
including the factual details underlying his offenses.
UTICo's strongest support for its assertion that UPGO
forwarded helpful documents from UTICo to Switzerland are two
December 12, 1998 letters from UPGO to the Swiss investigating
judge. The two letters indicate that UPGO sent several volumes of
documents to Switzerland that included, among other things, the
following: (1) "[d]ocumentation on transfers of funds from the
accounts of [United Energy International Ltd.] . . . to the
accounts of various firms in Swiss banks"; (2) "[c]opies of the
documents on the owners and principals of [Bainfield, Paddox, and
Bassington]"; and (3) information concerning Somolli. Even so, it
remains unclear what information UTICo transmitted to Ukraine,
whether those mailings both pre-date the December 12, 1998 letters
and post-date the May 1998 agreement, and why the transmitted
information was crucial to the success of the Swiss investigation.
Without those details, we are left only to speculate on the
usefulness of the information and whether it was forwarded to
Switzerland. And speculation and surmise cannot carry the day at
- 40 -
the summary-judgment stage. See Gomez v. Stop & Shop Supermarket
Co., 670 F.3d 395, 398 (1st Cir. 2012) ("Assumptions are not a
substitute for evidence," we will not "pile[] inference upon
inference" at the summary-judgment stage in a manner that "elevates
assumption over proof."); Cadle Co. v. Hayes, 116 F.3d 957, 960
(1st Cir. 1997) ("[E]stablishing a genuine issue of material fact
requires more than effusive rhetoric and optimistic surmise.").
Nor can "'[t]he mere existence of a scintilla of evidence' in favor
of the nonmoving party . . . defeat summary judgment."
Barreto-Rosa v. Varona-Mendez, 470 F.3d 42, 45 (1st Cir. 2006)
(quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 252
(1986)).
Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the
Ukrainian defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the
portion of UTICo's breach-of-contract claim related to the Swiss
assets that have been transferred to the Ukrainian treasury.
C. Motions to Amend
Finally, UTICo takes issue with the district court's
denial of UTICo's three motions to amend.
"We review a district court's denial of a motion to amend
for abuse of discretion." Mulder v. Kohl's Dep't Stores, Inc.,
865 F.3d 17, 20 (1st Cir. 2017). Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
15(a) instructs that leave to amend be "freely give[n] when justice
so requires." Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). "But this does not mean
- 41 -
. . . that a trial court must mindlessly grant every request for
leave to amend." Nikitine v. Wilmington Tr. Co., 715 F.3d 388,
390 (1st Cir. 2013) (omission in original) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). Indeed, "a district court may deny leave
to amend when the request is characterized by undue delay, bad
faith, futility, [or] the absence of due diligence on the movant's
part." Id. (alteration in original) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). And where "the record evinces an
arguably adequate basis for the [district] court's decision," we
will affirm the denial of a motion to amend. Hatch v. Dep't for
Child., Youth & Their Fams., 274 F.3d 12, 19 (1st Cir. 2001).
We quickly dispose of UTICo's appeal of the denials of
the first and second motions to amend. In its first motion to
amend, UTICo sought leave to add an unfair and deceptive trade
practices claim under Massachusetts General Laws ch. 93A. The
district court denied this motion without prejudice to UTICo
refiling the motion after this court resolved the Ukrainian
defendants' interlocutory appeal. Certainly, we see no abuse in
the district court's decision to defer consideration of the motion
to amend until our resolution of an appeal that may have dispensed
of the case in full. UTICo remained free to refile its motion to
amend after we affirmed the district court's exercise of
jurisdiction over the breach-of-contract claims and mandate issued
on September 4, 2013.
- 42 -
For some reason, UTICo never refiled its first motion to
amend. Instead, UTICo waited over a year to file its second motion
to amend. That motion made no mention of an unfair and deceptive
trade practices claim. The precise amendments that UTICo sought
to make were less than clear. At a minimum, it appears UTICo
sought to add additional factual allegations it believed related
to the tolling of the statute of limitations. During the May 16,
2018 hearing, UTICo also suggested that it sought to amend the
complaint to add a claim that the Ukrainian defendants breached
the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, but the motion
itself makes no mention of a good faith and fair dealing claim.
At the conclusion of that hearing, the district court denied
UTICo's second motion to amend because it was not "well-founded"
and because the amendments that UTICo sought to make did not relate
to the remaining breach-of-contract claims.13
13 The district court also emphasized that UTICo had failed
to include a proposed amended complaint with its motion to amend.
See UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 285. On appeal, UTICo makes
much of the fact that the Local Rules for the District of
Massachusetts do not require a party to attach a copy of its
proposed pleading to a motion to amend. UTICo is correct that
neither Local Rule 15.1 nor Rule 15 require a proposed pleading,
but the point still stands that a party must set forth some basis
on which the district court can distill how and why a party seeks
to amend a complaint -- whether that be done in the motion to amend
or in a proposed complaint attached to the motion. UTICo failed
to do so, particularly with respect to its claim that the Ukrainian
defendants breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing.
- 43 -
Again, we see no abuse of discretion in the district
court's denial of the second motion to amend. The proposed
amendments included in UTICo's motion did not relate to the Swiss
assets -- the only claim remaining after the May 16, 2018 hearing.
Nor did the proposed amendments relate to the reasoning on which
the district court predicated its decision to limit the
breach-of-contract claim to the repatriated Swiss assets.
Instead, the proposed amendments merely identified funds which had
yet to be repatriated and attempted to buttress UTICo's already
dismissed claims that related to the California litigation.
Finally, we turn to the denial of UTICo's third motion
to amend. UTICo moved to amend the complaint a third time late in
this litigation. It sought to add several claims to the complaint,
including claims for fraudulent concealment, breach of the implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and misrepresentation.
The district court denied the motion to amend both because of undue
delay and because UTICo's proposed amendments would have been
futile. See UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at 286-87.
The district court acted within its discretion in
denying the third motion to amend based on undue delay. By the
time UTICo filed its third motion to amend, discovery had closed,
the deadline for summary judgment motions had passed, and the
Ukrainian defendants' second motion for summary judgment was
pending before the court. In addition, over a year had passed
- 44 -
since the district court denied UTICo's second motion to amend
for, among other reasons, its failure to meaningfully articulate
a claim based on a theory of breach of the implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing. We have upheld the denial of motions
to amend for undue delay based on even shorter time frames at
earlier stages of the litigation. See, e.g., Calderón-Serra v.
Wilmington Tr. Co., 715 F.3d 14, 20 (1st Cir. 2013) (affirming
denial of motion to amend "filed . . . nearly a year after the
commencement of the action and many months after the . . . motions
to dismiss had been taken under advisement"); Villanueva v. United
States, 662 F.3d 124, 127 (1st Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (affirming
denial based on undue delay when plaintiff was aware of facts
underlying proposed claim before filing suit yet waited four months
to request to amend); Kay v. N.H. Dem. Party, 821 F.2d 31, 34 (1st
Cir. 1987) (per curiam) (affirming a finding of undue delay when
plaintiff moved to amend three months after granting of motion to
dismiss relevant claims).
UTICo contends that its delay in filing the third motion
to amend should not be held against it where the district court
took nearly three years to rule on the motion and previously took
over three years to rule on the second motion to amend. But
UTICo's frustration about the pace of this litigation misses the
point. For various reasons, the pace of this case's proceedings
may have been slow. Nevertheless, UTICo still had ample time to
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seek leave to amend for a third time to try and remedy the flaws
in its second motion to amend.
It also is unclear why UTICo could not have requested
leave to make the amendments set forth in its third motion to amend
at an earlier stage of the litigation. Although UTICo asserts in
a conclusory manner that its proposed amendments were "based on
new evidence and facts showing UTICo's assistance in the recovery
by [the d]efendants of the assets in Switzerland and elsewhere,"
it does not explain why it had to wait until four months after the
close of discovery to add these allegations and why it could not
discover those facts earlier. Nor does it make any effort to
explain what the "new evidence and facts" are and why they are
critical. What is more, it does not appear that the proposed
amendments actually further elucidate UTICo's assistance in
recovery of the $15 million of Swiss assets. Indeed, at oral
argument, UTICo conceded that its proposed amendments to the
complaint did not affect the claims remaining at that point, that
is, the breach-of-contract claims relating to the $15 million in
Swiss assets, but rather focused on pleading additional claims.
Given the delay in moving to amend for the third time and the lack
of explanation for why UTICo failed to propose these amendments
earlier, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its
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discretion in denying the third motion to amend.14 See
Calderón-Serra, 715 F.3d at 20 ("Appreciable delay alone, in the
absence of good reason for it, is enough to justify denying a
motion for leave to amend.").
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the district
court's dismissal of UTICo's breach-of-contract claim insofar as
it relates to blocked but not yet repatriated assets, its grant of
summary judgment to the Ukrainian defendants on UTICo's
breach-of-contract claim related to the Swiss assets, and its
denial of UTICo's three motions to amend.
14 Because the district court did not abuse its discretion
in denying the third motion to amend for undue delay, we need not
pass judgment on whether the proposed amendments would have been
futile. It does appear that many of UTICo's proposed amendments,
such as its claims related to the California assignment and
fraudulent concealment claim, are futile. But we pause to make
clear that we decline to address the futility of UTICo's claim for
breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
today. The district court concluded that although our decision in
UTICo II approved of the exercise of jurisdiction over UTICo's
breach-of-contract claims, its reasoning foreclosed the exercise
of jurisdiction over a claim for breach of the implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing that rested on the theory that Ukraine
has failed to repatriate assets. UTICo III, 605 F. Supp. 3d at
286-87. That may well be the case, but we find it best to leave
this question of foreign sovereign immunity for another day.
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