[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FILED
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
________________________ ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
NOVEMBER 1, 2006
No. 05-16235 THOMAS K. KAHN
________________________ CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 04-23223-CV-MGC
JOSE GUEVARA,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
REPUBLIC OF PERU,
MINISTERIO DEL INTERIOR,
ANTONIO KETIN VIDAL,
FERNANDO ROSPIGLIOSI,
Defendants-Appellees.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
_________________________
(November 1, 2006)
Before TJOFLAT, CARNES and HILL, Circuit Judges.
CARNES, Circuit Judge:
This appeal presents the issue of whether a foreign state’s offer of a reward
in return for information enabling it to locate and capture a fugitive falls within the
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act’s commercial activity exception to sovereign
immunity. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that it does.
I.
Vladimiro Lenin Montesinos Torres served as an advisor to Peruvian
President Alberto Fujimori and as the head of Peru’s National Intelligence System
during the 1990s. (Compl. ¶ 8). He is currently in the midst of a series of
corruption trials in that country. The allegations are that Montesinos committed a
host of crimes while he was in office, including arms trafficking, drug dealing,
money laundering, extortion, and more than a few murders. Id. According to
declassified documents from the United States Southern Command, the nerve
center responsible for this country’s military operations in Latin America,
Montesinos has “been compared variously to such sinister figures as Rasputin,
Darth Vadar, Torquemada and Cardinal Richelieu.” United States Southern
Command, Information Paper (Jan. 6, 1997). The picture is one of a man who has
never been troubled by anything resembling a moral scruple, and the facts about
how he was brought to justice form the stage on which this lawsuit plays.
2
For decades journalists and politicians had been leveling accusations of
corruption against Montesinos, but for a long time none of them stuck. Things
began to change on the evening of September 14, 2000, when an opposition
lawmaker aired on Peruvian national television a video showing Montesinos
handing a bribe to a congressman-elect. See Clifford Krauss, Fujimori’s Fall, N.Y.
Times, Dec. 3, 2000, § 1, at 1.1 That alone might not have done him in, but as it
turned out Montesinos was like a serial killer who relishes the opportunity to relive
his crimes—he had videotaped many of his dirty deeds. Id. Peruvian authorities
seized from Montesinos more than 700 videotapes incriminating him in a host of
crimes. See Jane Holligan, Bribes, Lies, and Videotape in Peru, Bus. Week
Online, Feb. 2, 2001. On September 16, 2000, President Fujimori, facing public
pressure, announced that he was dissolving the intelligence agency and that he
would step down after holding new elections. See N.Y. Times, supra.
Jail time seemed imminent for Montesinos, but the former spy chief was also
something of a magician. Over the years he had managed to make many of his
enemies, including journalists, disappear, and he had one more magic act up his
1
Because this is an appeal from a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) dismissal, the
operative facts are those alleged in the complaint. Lawrence v. Dunbar, 919 F.2d 1525, 1529
(11th Cir. 1990). In this section of the opinion, where outside sources are cited, we have drawn
some additional details from them to flesh out the story. Those details, which are entirely
consistent with the complaint’s allegations, are not essential to our decision. At least at this
stage, the parties are at loggerheads over the law, not the facts.
3
sleeve. Thomas Catan, The Sins of Montesinos, The Fin. Times Mag., July 26,
2003, at 15. In October 2000, Montesinos slipped out of the country on a yacht
bound for the Galapagos Islands, sailed on to Venezuela, and visited a plastic
surgery clinic. Then he vanished. Id.
An international manhunt ensued. In November of 2000, Peru appointed a
special prosecutor to investigate the intelligence system’s net of corruption and to
see that those involved were convicted and punished. (Compl. ¶ 11). The same
month the prosecutor issued national and international arrest warrants for
Montesinos. Id. Antonio Ketin Vidal, the Minister of the Interior of Peru, worked
with international police agencies to coordinate the search. Id. Despite a media
frenzy, the trail quickly grew cold. Fin. Times Mag., supra.
Peru needed to generate new leads. To do so, Interim President Valentin
Corazao issued Emergency Decree No. 049-2001, which established a five million
dollar reward for accurate information enabling the authorities to locate and
capture Montesinos. (Compl. ¶ 12). Article One of that decree provided that Peru
thereby:
Establish[ed] a financial reward in the amount of US $5,000,000.00
(FIVE MILLION 00/100 UNITED STATES DOLLARS), which shall
be given to the person or persons who provide(s) accurate information
that will directly enable locating and capturing Vladimiro Lenin
Montesinos Torres. In the event several persons provide the said
information, the financial reward shall be divided among them.
4
(Compl. Ex. A). Article Three of the decree defined “accurate information”:
For purposes of this Emergency Decree, accurate information shall be
that [information] provided through any means to the Special High
Level Committee and which enables locating and capturing Vladimiro
Lenin Montesinos Torres, who is wanted.
Id. (bracketed word in original)
Enter the plaintiff. Jose Guevara had met Montesinos in Venezuela in mid-
December 2000. (Compl. ¶ 15). Montesinos needed a safe-house, and Guevara
agreed to provide it. Id. Guevara also provided Montesinos with a security detail,
which gave him complete knowledge of the fugitive’s whereabouts. (Compl. ¶¶
15-16).
Guevara was easier to track down than Montesinos. In June 2001, F.B.I.
agents located and detained Guevara in Miami. (Compl. ¶¶ 17-18). The agents
told him that the United States intended to pursue criminal charges against him
unless he gave up Montesinos. (Compl. ¶ 18). They also reminded Guevara of
Peru’s reward offer. Id. Faced with a choice of jail time and loyalty to Montesinos
or five million dollars and freedom, it did not take Guevara long to make up his
mind.2 Guevara not only disclosed Montesinos’ hiding place and telephone
2
The apparent ease with which Guevara made the choice to betray Montesinos brings to
mind the epitaph an owner put on the tombstone of his departed canine companion: “[O]ne
might have thought he was human, but he was loyal.” Chiseled Farewells, Harv. Mag., Nov. –
Dec. 2002, at 15 (quoting an epitaph on the tombstone of a dog named Pompey, buried in the
5
number but also arranged to have him delivered into the hands of the Venezuelan
intelligence agency. (Compl. ¶ 22). Montesinos was arrested as a result of the
information Guevara provided and the assistance he rendered, but for reasons that
it has not disclosed in this case Peru has refused to pay him the promised reward.
(Compl. ¶ 1).
II.
Guevara filed this lawsuit in the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida, and it
was removed under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(d) to the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Florida. The lawsuit claims breach of contract, breach of
contract implied in law, fraudulent inducement, and fraudulent misrepresentation.
The named defendants include The Republic of Peru; its Ministry of the Interior;
Antonio Ketin Vidal, who was the Minister of the Interior at the time of these
events; and Fernando Rospigliosi, who succeeded Vidal in that office. The
Republic of Peru and the Ministry of the Interior filed a motion to dismiss,
contending that they are immune under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act
(FSIA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1602–11. Vidal and Rospigliosi filed a motion to dismiss
contending that as agents of the Republic of Peru they are likewise entitled to
animal cemetery in London’s Hyde Park).
6
sovereign immunity. The two individual defendants also asserted that the district
court lacked personal jurisdiction over them.
In an order entered on October 6, 2005, the district court concluded that
Peru’s actions did not fit under any exception to the FSIA and therefore both the
nation and its Ministry of the Interior were entitled to sovereign immunity. On
October 14, 2005, the court entered another order concluding that Peru’s sovereign
immunity protected the two individual defendants, who had been acting in their
official capacity. On those bases, the court dismissed the complaint for lack of
jurisdiction and denied all other pending motions as moot.
Guevara appealed the judgment dismissing his complaint. The individual
defendants, in addition to urging that we affirm the dismissal on the grounds stated
by the district court, have also pressed their position that the district court lacked
personal jurisdiction over them.
III.
A.
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act provides the sole basis for obtaining
subject matter jurisdiction over a foreign sovereign in the United States. Beg v.
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 353 F.3d 1323, 1324 (11th Cir. 2003). The Act
provides a general grant of immunity for foreign governments, 28 U.S.C. § 1604,
7
subject to specific statutory exceptions. The one at issue in this case is the
commercial activity exception. 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2). It provides that:
(a) A foreign state shall not be immune from the jurisdiction of courts
of the United States or of the States in any case– . . . (2) in which the
action is based upon a commercial activity carried on in the United
States by the foreign state; or upon an act performed in the United
States in connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state
elsewhere; or upon an act outside the territory of the United States in
connection with a commercial activity of the foreign state elsewhere
and that act causes a direct effect in the United States.
Id.
Peru contends, and the district court agreed, that offering a reward for
capturing a fugitive involves uniquely sovereign objectives, and for that reason
does not constitute a commercial activity. Guevara responds that the dispositive
issue is whether private actors could similarly offer a reward for information
leading to the capture of a fugitive. They can, he says, and it follows that the
activity is “commercial” as that term is used in the Act.
B.
To decide this issue we need to mark the boundaries of the “commercial
activity” exception as it is used in the FSIA. Examining the text of the Act helps
some. It says that “commercial activity” is:
either a regular course of commercial conduct or a particular commercial
transaction or act. The commercial character of an activity shall be
8
determined by reference to the nature of the course of conduct or particular
transaction or act, rather than by reference to its purpose.
28 U.S.C. § 1603(d). The Supreme Court has noted that this definition “leaves the
critical term ‘commercial’ largely undefined.” Republic of Argentina v. Weltover,
Inc., 504 U.S. 607, 612, 112 S. Ct. 2160, 2165 (1992). The problem is that the first
sentence “simply establishes that the commercial nature of an activity does not
depend upon whether it is a single act or a regular course of conduct; and the
second sentence merely specifies what element of the conduct determines
commerciality.” Id.
The Supreme Court, going beyond the statutory explanation, also determined
in Weltover that the FSIA in general, and its commercial exception in particular,
“largely codifies the so-called ‘restrictive’ theory of foreign sovereign immunity.”
Id. Under the restrictive theory immunity should be granted “only with respect to
causes of action arising out of a foreign state’s public or governmental actions.”
Alfred Dunhill v. Republic of Cuba, 425 U.S. 682, 698, 96 S. Ct. 1854, 1863
(1976). By contrast, sovereign immunity does not apply to a foreign state’s
“commercial and private activities.” Id. To understand what this means we turn to
an examination of the historical development of sovereign immunity law in this
9
country, mindful of Holmes’ advice that in order to know what the law is we must
know what it has been and is becoming.3
The FSIA is only thirty years old, but the view of sovereign immunity that it
embodies is much older. Originally, the United States recognized only a limited
form of sovereign immunity. David J. Bederman, Admiralty and the Eleventh
Amendment, 72 Notre Dame L. Rev. 935, 939–40 (1997). More than two
centuries ago a federal court applied an exception to foreign sovereign immunity
where the foreign power’s actions have a “commercial character.” Ellison v. The
Bellona, 8 F. Cas. 559, 559 (D.S.C. 1798). Early Supreme Court decisions
similarly noted that “a clear distinction is to be drawn between the rights accorded
to private individuals or private trading vessels, and those accorded to public
armed ships which constitute a part of the military force of the nation.” The
Schooner Exchange v. M’Faddon, 11 U.S. (7 Cranch) 116, 143 (1812); see also
The Santissima Trinidad, 20 U.S. (7 Wheat.) 283, 353 (1822).
This dichotomy between public and sovereign versus private and
commercial fits the original figure Chief Justice Marshall used to explain the
principle underlying the commercial exception to immunity—that of a sovereign
3
See Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law 1 (Boston, Little, Brown & Co.
1881) (“In order to know what it is, we must know what it has been, and what it tends to
become. . . . The history of what the law has been is necessary to the knowledge of what the
law is.”).
10
“descending” to the level of a private individual. See Bank of the United States v.
Planters’ Bank of Ga., 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 904, 907 (1824) (“It is, we think, a
sound principle, that when a government becomes a partner in any trading
company, it devests itself, so far as concerns the transactions of that company, of
its sovereign character, and takes that of a private citizen. Instead of
communicating to the company its privileges and its prerogatives, it descends to a
level with those with whom it associates itself, and takes the character which
belongs to its associates, and to the business which is to be transacted.”). A state
not acting in its unique role as sovereign is akin to a private citizen or merchant.
Although Schooner Exchange anticipated exceptions to immunity for private
commercial activity, by the 1920s the decision had nonetheless “c[o]me to be
regarded as extending virtually absolute immunity to foreign sovereigns.”
Verlinden B.V. v. Cent. Bank of Nig., 461 U.S. 480, 486, 103 S. Ct. 1962, 1967
(1983); see, e. g., Berizzi Bros. Co. v. S.S. Pesaro, 271 U.S. 562, 571, 46 S. Ct.
611, 611 (1926). Over the next two decades, the Court shifted to a policy of
deference toward the executive branch. See, e.g., Republic of Mexico v. Hoffman,
324 U.S. 30, 34, 65 S. Ct. 530, 532 (1945) (“Chief Justice Marshall introduced the
practice, since followed in the federal courts, that their jurisdiction in rem . . . will
be surrendered on recognition . . . of the asserted immunity by the political branch
11
of the government charged with the conduct of foreign affairs . . .”); Ex parte
Republic of Peru, 318 U.S. 578, 588, 63 S. Ct. 793, 799 (1943) (same); Compania
Espanola de Navegacion Maritima, S.A. v. The Navemar, 303 U.S. 68, 74, 58 S.
Ct. 432, 434 (1938) (same). This deferential approach did not change the existing
practice of granting sovereign immunity in virtually all cases where it was claimed,
because the executive regularly requested that the courts grant immunity to all
friendly foreign sovereigns. Verlinden, 461 U.S. at 486, 103 S. Ct. at 1968.
In 1952 the State Department changed the executive’s policy to one
embodying the restrictive theory of sovereign immunity. The department first
signaled this shift in policy in a letter from Jack B. Tate, Acting Legal Adviser,
United States Dept. of State, to Philip B. Perlman, Acting Attorney General. (May
19, 1952), as reprinted in 26 Dept. of State Bull. 984–85 (1952). Tate wrote in
part:
A study of the law of sovereign immunity reveals the existence of two
conflicting concepts of sovereign immunity, each widely held and
firmly established. According to the classical or absolute theory of
sovereign immunity, a sovereign cannot, without his consent, be made
a respondent in the courts of another sovereign. According to the
newer or restrictive theory of sovereign immunity, the immunity of
the sovereign is recognized with regard to sovereign or public acts
(jure imperii) of a state, but not with respect to private acts (jure
gestionis). . . . it will hereafter be the Department’s policy to follow
the restrictive theory of sovereign immunity in the consideration of
requests of foreign governments for a grant of sovereign immunity.
12
Id.; see also Alfred Dunhill, 425 U.S. at 698, 96 S. Ct. at 1863 (explaining that the
position taken in the Tate Letter became the official policy of the United States
government). This new restrictive approach also required the State Department to
make case-specific immunity recommendations for each lawsuit against a foreign
state, and that proved problematic. See Verlinden, 461 U.S. at 487, 103 S. Ct. at
1968. Congress resolved this problem, at least for the executive branch, by
enacting the FSIA, shifting the burden of making immunity determinations to the
judicial branch. 28 U.S.C. § 1602 (stating that the determination of immunity by
the courts would “serve the interests of justice”).
Although the FSIA transferred the job of making initial immunity
determinations from the State Department to the United States courts, it retained
the restrictive theory of immunity. The House Report accompanying the bill that
was ultimately enacted explained that:
the bill would codify the so-called “restrictive” principle of sovereign
immunity, as presently recognized in international law. Under this principle,
the immunity of a foreign state is “restricted” to suits involving a foreign
state’s public acts (jure imperii) and does not extend to suits based on its
commercial or private acts (jure gestionis).
H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 6 (1976), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6605.
The case law governing foreign sovereign immunity and the legislative
history of the FSIA both treat commercial and private activity as outside the
13
bounds of sovereign immunity. See, e.g., Alfred Dunhill, 425 U.S. at 698, 96 S.
Ct. at 1863 (“commercial and private activities . . . do not give rise to sovereign
immunity”); The Schooner Exchange, 11 U.S. (7 Cranch) at 143 (“[A] clear
distinction is to be drawn between . . . private individuals or private trading
vessels, and . . . public armed ships.”); H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 6 (1976),
reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6605 (“[T]he immunity of a foreign state is
‘restricted’ to suits involving a foreign state’s public acts (jure imperii) and does
not extend to suits based on its commercial or private acts (jure gestionis).”).
Commercial activities and private activities are often spoken of together and in a
way that distinguishes them from sovereign or public acts. See, e.g., Weltover,
504 U.S. at 613, 112 S. Ct. at 2166 (noting “the distinction between state sovereign
acts, on the one hand, and state commercial and private acts, on the other”); Letter
from Jack B. Tate, Acting Legal Adviser, Dept. of State, to Philip B. Perlman,
Acting Attorney General (May 19, 1952), as reprinted in 26 Dept. of State Bull.
984–85 (1952) (“[t]he immunity of the sovereign is recognized with regard to
sovereign or public acts (jure imperii) of a state, but not with respect to private acts
(jure gestionis).”); H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 6 (1976), reprinted in 1976
U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6605.
14
It is against this historical and legislative backdrop that the Weltover court
announced the rule for determining whether an activity is commercial: “[W]hen a
foreign government acts, not as regulator of a market, but in the manner of a
private player within it, the foreign sovereign’s actions are ‘commercial’ within the
meaning of the FSIA.” 504 U.S. at 614, 112 S. Ct. at 2166. The Court explained:
[B]ecause the Act provides that the commercial character of an act is to be
determined by reference to its “nature” rather than its “purpose,” 28 U.S.C. §
1603(d), the question is not whether the foreign government is acting with a
profit motive or instead with the aim of fulfilling uniquely sovereign
objectives. Rather, the issue is whether the particular actions that the foreign
state performs (whatever the motive behind them) are the type of actions by
which a private party engages in “trade and traffic or commerce,” Black’s
Law Dictionary 270 (6th ed. 1990)
Id.
Our first extended discussion of the Weltover decision came in Honduras
Aircraft Registry, Ltd. v. Gov’t of Honduras, 129 F.3d 543 (11th Cir. 1997), where
we stated that a “foreign state loses its immunity if it engages in commercial
activity . . . because then it is exercising the same powers that a private citizen
might be exercising.” Id. at 548. We read Weltover to mean that “[a] foreign state
is commercially engaged when it acts like an ordinary private person, not like a
sovereign, in the market.” Id.
The Honduras case involved a contract entered into by that country and the
plaintiff, a corporation founded by two businessmen with airline experience, for
15
the provision of goods and services Honduras needed to upgrade and modernize its
civil aeronautics program. Id. at 545. The plaintiffs’ responsibilities included
establishing a database containing information that Honduras needed to admit
airplanes to its registry. Id. When its leadership changed, Honduras abrogated the
contract. After being haled into a United States court by the plaintiff, Honduras
invoked sovereign immunity, arguing that the registration of aircraft is a sovereign
act. Id. at 546.
While we agreed with Honduras that “registering aircraft under the
Honduras flag is an act peculiar to its sovereignty,” we nonetheless concluded that
its contracting for services was a commercial act. Id. at 548. As we explained,
“[a]pparently Honduras did not have the resources or the technical expertise to
conduct its own aircraft inspections or to set up a registry,” so it “ventured into the
marketplace to find the expertise and resources needed to accomplish those tasks.”
Id. at 547. The plaintiffs did not contend that the contract gave them the right to
register aircraft or force Honduras to do so, but instead took the position that they
had contracted to provide services in connection with registration and were
bringing suit to enforce that contract. Id. at 548. We agreed, because “[a]ll of
those underlying activities were commercial in nature and of the type negotiable
among private parties.” Id. at 547.
16
C.
The location and capture of a fugitive by law enforcement officials of a
country may be a sovereign act, but that is not what this case is about. Peru’s
contractual offer of a reward did not promise that in return for the information it
was seeking Peru would locate and capture Montesinos, and Guevara is not
seeking to compel it to do so. All that Guevara is seeking is what Peru promised
in the reward offer, which is that it would pay five million dollars to anyone who
furnished information of the nature and quality that enabled Peru to capture
Montesinos. The information that Guevara provided fit the requirements of the
offer: it enabled Peru to capture Montesinos. The question in this appeal is
whether Guevara can use the courts of this country to compel Peru to keep its
contractual promise to pay him the money it offered.
The facts here are similar enough to those in the Honduras case to compel
the same result. Just as Honduras could have attempted to develop its aircraft
database in-house without offering money for the assistance of anyone outside the
government, Peru could have attempted to use its police and investigatory powers
to search for Montesinos without offering money for information from anyone
outside the government. However, Peru “did not have the resources or the . . .
expertise,” Honduras, 129 F.3d at 547, it needed to get the job done. After the trail
17
ran cold, Peru “ventured into the marketplace,” id., to buy the information needed
to get its man. Id. Guevara provided that information for a price, the price being
the five million dollars that Peru had offered to pay for it. The underlying activity
at issue—the exchange of money for information—is “commercial in nature and of
the type negotiable among private parties.” Id.
Peru attempts to distinguish Honduras by arguing that here “[t]he sovereign
act of capturing Montesinos [was] a condition precedent to the earning of the
reward.” (Br. Of Appellee at 8) On that basis it would have us conclude that the
“sovereign act of capture was the ‘nature’ of the transaction.” Id. at 7. Both the
premise and the conclusion of Peru’s argument are false.
The premise of the argument is false because the contract did not contain a
condition precedent requiring Montesinos’ capture. Article One of the emergency
degree specifies that the reward “shall be given to the person or persons who
provide(s) accurate information that will directly enable locating and capturing
Vladimiro Lenin Montesinos Torres.” (Compl. Ex. A) (emphasis added). Article
Three specifies that accurate information shall be that “which enables locating and
capturing Vladimiro Lenin Montesinos Torres.” Id. (emphasis added) This
condition describes the extent and quality of the information that an informant
must provide to qualify for the reward. It does not require an actual capture.
18
“Enable” means “to make able; give power, means, competence, or ability to;
authorize” or “to make possible or easy.” Random House Unabridged Dictionary
639 (2d ed. 1983). Guevara satisfied the condition when he provided information
sufficient to “make able” or “make possible” the capture of Montesinos. The
information he provided enabled the capture when he provided it; it did not
become enabling only after Peru took Montesinos into custody.
Although Peru issued the Emergency Decree in Spanish, we think that little
has been lost in translation. Article One uses a conjugated form of the verb
“permitir,” which means “to permit” or “to allow.” Harrap’s Concise Spanish 383
(1991). Article Three uses “posibilitar,” which means “to make possible” or “to
facilitate.” Id. at 397. Peru was not offering a reward in return for Montesinos’
capture; it was offering a reward in return for information of sufficiently high
quality to enable his capture. It is true that Article Seven provides that Peru “shall
pay the Financial Reward 24 hours after the actual location and capture of . . .
Montesinos.” (Compl. Ex. A). While this clause could be read as a condition
precedent requiring capture, it appears primarily intended to induce acceptance of
the reward offer by promising timely payment.
Put another way, if Guevara had offered up every single bit of information
Peru could possibly desire about how to locate and capture Montesinos, but Peru
19
had a sudden change of heart and decided to let Montesinos remain free, we think
that Guevara still would have satisfied his end of the bargain. Peru’s own website
describing the Emergency Decree best explains the document’s terms: “The basic
condition is to give true information to make possible the location and capture of
Vladimiro Montesinos Torres.” Id. Guevara did that, and Peru used the
information to capture Montesinos.
Even if the capture of Montesinos were a condition precedent, Peru’s
assertion that conditions necessarily (or even typically) alter the “nature” of a
contract is mistaken. The core of a contract is the parties’ performance obligations,
what they bargained for. Conditions fix the timing of the parties’ performance
obligations or make them contingent. The occurrence of a condition may be
beyond the parties’ control, but that does not alter the nature of the contract. For
example, an oil company might enter into a contract with a freight company to ship
oil from Turkey to the United States conditioned on the oil company receiving an
export license from the government of Turkey. Although the condition – the
granting an export license – is a sovereign act, see MOL, Inc. v. Peoples Republic
of Bangladesh, 736 F.2d 1326, 1328–29 (9th Cir. 1984), the contract is still one for
the shipment of oil, which is quintessentially commercial.
20
The same principle applies if one of the parties is a sovereign state. Suppose
that a country contracts to buy bullets from a private manufacturer. We know that
transaction would be a commercial activity because the Supreme Court has said so.
Weltover, 504 U.S. at 614, 112 S. Ct. at 2166 (“[A] contract to buy army boots or
even bullets is a ‘commercial’ activity.”). If the country conditioned the contract
on it declaring war on a neighbor before the scheduled date of delivery, we would
still have a commercial contract under which, if war is declared, the private party is
obligated to supply bullets and the country would be obligated to pay for them.
The condition precedent of a declaration of war speaks to the purpose or
motivation for buying the bullets, but it does not change the commercial nature of
the acts of purchasing and paying for them. Enforcing the contract would not
impinge on sovereignty, because it would not force the country to declare war or to
refrain from doing so.
We think that information about a fugitive’s whereabouts is to a war on
crime as military supplies are to a more traditional war. Both commodities are
useful to a state’s performance of a sovereign function, but a contract for the
purchase of either does not require the state to perform a sovereign function. In
both situations performance of the contract by the private party enables the state to
engage in a sovereign function if it wishes, but does not mandate that it do so.
21
What it mandates is that the state pay the promised amount for the other party’s
performance. Paying an amount owed under a contract is not itself a sovereign act.
Conditions precedent stem from the motivation for a contract, rather than
from its nature. Parties insert conditions precedent as insurance against frustration
of purpose. If a general contractor only needs the services of a subcontractor if it
wins the bid on a construction contract, it conditions the use of the subcontractor’s
services on the outcome of the bidding. Because Peru only wanted to pay for
information about Montesinos sufficient to enable his capture, Peru framed its
offer in those terms. Although capturing Montesinos may have been critically
important to Peru and to its obligation under the contract, it is not critically
important to our sovereign immunity analysis. The FSIA tells us that “[t]he
commercial character of an activity shall be determined by reference to the nature
of the . . . act, rather than by reference to its purpose.” 28 U.S.C. § 1603(d); see
also Weltover, 504 U.S. at 614, 112 S. Ct. at 2166. If there is a condition
precedent present here, it speaks to Peru’s purpose, instead of to the nature of the
contract.
Peru next contends that its offer of a reward cannot be “commercial” as that
term is used in FSIA because there “is no marketplace in which private persons
apprehend or capture individuals.” (Br. Of Appellee at 9) In fact, there is. Not
22
only that but the oldest American decision recognizing a commercial activities
exception to sovereign immunity involved a reward for capture. In 1798 the
District Court of South Carolina held that a ship flying under the flag of a foreign
state could not claim sovereign immunity in a wage dispute where the wages it
owed the seamen were paid as a reward for each ship captured, a fact that was
“decisive of the commercial character” of the vessel. The Bellona, 8 F. Cas. at
559.
While the days of prize ships have passed, private individuals still can and
do offer rewards for information leading to the capture of fugitives. For example,
popular talk show host Oprah Winfrey recently offered up to $100,000 for
information leading to the capture of fugitive child predators. See Oprah Winfrey
Helps The FBI Get Its Man, Wash. Post, Oct. 8, 2005 at C7. Winfrey has already
paid at least three such rewards. See Stella Foster, Stella’s Column, Chi. Sun-
Times, Jan. 17, 2006, at 56. O.J. Simpson notoriously offered a reward for
information leading to the arrest of his ex-wife’s “real killers.” See Paul
Lieberman, Simpson Won’t Get Police Help in Search for Killer, L.A. Times, Oct.
5, 1995, at A1. And, of course, private bail-bonding companies frequently offer
rewards for information leading to the capture of bail jumpers. The question is
whether Peru’s offer of a reward for information is the kind of thing that private
23
parties do. The answer is that Oprah did it, O.J. did it, and bail bondsmen do it
regularly.
Concerned about the effect of the bail bondsmen analogy on its position,
Peru argues that “[w]hen a bailbondsman physically apprehends an individual, the
bondsman does so as subrogee of the sovereign’s authority.” (Br. of Appellee at
11). Peru’s point, apparently, is that when a bondsman arrests a fugitive he is
acting as an agent of the sovereign. That argument does not help Peru much, if at
all. If a bail bondsman offered a reward for information enabling the location and
capture of a fugitive who had skipped out on a bond, he could not successfully
defend a lawsuit seeking to collect on the reward by asserting sovereign immunity.
If an agent acting for the sovereign could not successfully claim sovereign
immunity, the sovereign could not either.
That Peru’s offer of a reward for information enabling the capture of a
fugitive is the kind of thing that private parties do becomes even more obvious
when we properly characterize the market at a higher level of generality. In
Weltover, the Supreme Court broadly characterized a contract for the purchase of
bullets as a “sales contract[].” 504 U.S. at 614, 112 S. Ct. at 2166. In Honduras,
we characterized the contract as one designed “to provide goods and services.”
129 F.3d at 548. What we have here is a contract to purchase information, and in
24
our information age such contracts are a common staple of the private sector.
Peru’s attempt to lower the level of generality from a contract for the sale of
information down to one of reward for information leading to the capture of a
fugitive focuses on the purpose instead of the nature of the transaction.
Contracts for the purchase of information are ubiquitous in the marketplace.
Marketing companies offer college students a few dollars, or a product worth that
much, for completing surveys. Nonprofit groups pay market research firms for
each name added to a targeted mailing list. Apartment complexes and fitness clubs
offer referral bonuses for those who provide the names of friends and associates
who may be looking for a place to live. A plethora of internet sites offer for sale
information about the arrest record, litigation history, and location of everyone
with a name and some kind of number to go with it. (Think LexisNexis.) Credit
reporting agencies sell tens of millions of dollars of information about consumers
and businesses to other businesses each year. There is nothing sovereign about
buying and selling information.
Finally, Peru contends that even if a private individual can engage in an
activity, it does not mean that the activity is commercial. It accuses Guevera of
“equat[ing] private activity with commercial activity,” (Br. of Appellee at 11), but
this equation is hardly novel. Several centuries of case law, the Tate Letter, and
25
the legislative history of the FSIA also use those terms interchangeably. Still, the
term codified in the act is “commercial activity,” and we agree with Peru that there
is a realm of private activity that cannot fairly fall within any meaning of the word
“commercial.” But we do not agree with Peru’s proposal about how we should
stake off that realm.
Peru proposes that “commercial activity” includes only that which is “done
for a profit motive.” Id. at 12. We decline to adopt that test because the Supreme
Court has instructed us that the FSIA “unmistakably commands” that we consider
the nature, rather than the purpose, of a transaction, Weltover, 504 U.S. at 617, 112
S. Ct. at 2167, and a “motive” test treads too closely to an examination of
“purpose.”
Peru points out that while the text of the Act prohibits an inquiry into the
government’s actual motive for a particular act, it does not forbid us from
imagining why a private person might engage in similar conduct. We could, Peru
says, imagine that a hypothetical private party was performing an identical activity
as the government and then inquire into whether that hypothetical party had a
profit motive. We see no reason to do so, because this type of inquiry is not
supported by the text of FSIA or by precedent. It would be inconsistent with the
language of the Act and the Supreme Court’s instruction that motive not be
26
considered. It is also unnecessary, because the Weltover test already screens out
non-commercial acts.
While the FSIA does not state that all commercial activities must have a
profit motive, the legislative history of the Act does establish that all activities
carried on for a profit are commercial. H.R. Rep. No. 94-1487, at 16 (1976),
reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6604, 6615. But saying that for-profit activities
are commercial is not the same thing as saying that all commercial activities are for
profit. The premise that all A is B does not logically compel the conclusion that all
B is A, unless A and B are the same thing. There is no reason in the FSIA to
believe that commercial activity means the same thing, and no more than, for-profit
activity. Some activities that are not carried on for a profit may nonetheless
constitute commercial acts. As the House Report explains:
Certainly, if an activity is customarily carried on for profit, its
commercial nature could readily be assumed. At the other end of the
spectrum, a single contract, if of the same character as a contract
which might be made by a private person, could constitute a
“particular transaction or act.”
Id. Reducing the meaning of commercial activity to that motivated for profit
excludes what the House Report referred to as “the other end of the spectrum,”
contracts “of the same character as a contract which might be made by a private
person,” even if not made for profit. Id.
27
Adopting Peru’s position that an activity is not commercial unless it is for
profit would also conflict with the Weltover decision. That decision establishes
that a government contract to buy bullets is commercial, even though most private
individuals do not buy bullets for profit. See 504 U.S. at 617. In fact, when private
individuals purchase goods and services, they rarely do so with the intent to profit
from their purchase. (Think of consumers at grocery stores and gas stations.)
Peru’s test would exclude most cases in which the government acts as a purchaser,
rather than a vendor, of goods and services because most purchases made by
private persons are not made with the intent to resell for profit. Nothing in the
restrictive theory of sovereign immunity turns on whether the government is a
buyer or a seller. Instead, the critical distinction is whether the government is
acting in its capacity as sovereign or if it is acting as any private individual might
act.
We think that the Weltover test already provides an effective mechanism for
filtering out private yet non-commercial activities. The test applies to suits “based
upon a foreign state’s participation in the marketplace in the manner of a private
citizen.” Weltover, 504 U.S. at 614, 112 S. Ct. at 2166 (emphasis added). It
distinguishes between cases where a foreign government acts “as regulator of a
market,” which are not within the exception to sovereign immunity, and those
28
where it acts “in the manner of a private player within” that market, which are. Id.
When it issued the offer contained in the Emergency Decree, Peru entered the
marketplace of information. It did so not as a regulator but as a purchaser in the
manner available to any private individual, and that makes its actions commercial.
Although our decision is not based on policy grounds, we think it worth
noting that this is an instance in which the result the law requires coincides with
good policy. Accepting Peru’s position, dressed though it is in the clothing of
sovereignty, would frustrate rather than further the ability of countries to carry out
their sovereign functions. Anything that makes it easier for countries to welch on
their promises to pay for information decreases the real value of any reward they
offer and makes it less likely that an offer will be accepted. As Guevara has
learned up to this point in the litigation, the promise of a multimillion dollar reward
means little or nothing to an informant if the country offering the reward cannot be
made to pay it. The holding Peru asks us to reach would jeopardize not only its
vital interests but those of every country that offers rewards for information,
including this country.
The United States has a number of statutes that authorize the executive
branch to offer rewards for information useful in combating terrorism, espionage,
international narcotics trafficking, violations of international humanitarian law, and
29
other criminal acts. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. §§ 3071–77 (authorizing the Attorney
General to offer rewards for information leading to the arrest of individuals
engaged in terrorism or espionage); 22 U.S.C. § 2708 (granting the Secretary of
State discretion to pay rewards for information leading to the arrest of individuals
engaged in international terrorism or narcotics-related offenses); Pub. L. No. 105-
323, 112 Stat. 3029, 3032 (amending 22 U.S.C. § 2708 to extend it to cover serious
violations of international humanitarian law relating to the former Yugoslavia);
Pub. L. No. 106-277, 114 Stat. 813 (extending Pub. L. No. 105-323 to cover
serious international humanitarian crimes in Rwanda); Pub. L. No. 108-106, 117
Stat. 1209, 1223 (authorizing rewards for information concerning an indictee of the
Special Court for Sierra Leone). These reward programs have been successful.
Under them the government has paid out at least $47 million since September 11,
2001. Kevin Whitelaw, Just a Phone Call Away, U.S. News & World Rep., Jan.
31, 2005, at 23. Success stories include the location and capture (killing) of
Saddam Hussein’s sons, Uday and Quasay Hussein, and the capture of Ramzi
Yousef, one of the 1993 World Trade Center bombers. Id.
The FBI and CIA used a reward offer to nab one of the most nefarious spies
in this country’s history. For as long as three decades, a mole high in the American
intelligence community, code-named “Graysuit,” passed on to the KGB some of
30
this country’s most closely held secrets. Louis J. Freeh, My FBI 237 (2005). A
“huge team of CIA and FBI officers and agents” worked to uncover the traitor’s
identity but without success. Id. Finally, Louis Freeh, the Director of the FBI and
George Tenet, the Director of Central Intelligence, came up with a plan to offer a
“seven-figure payment” for his identity. Id. at 238. The reward offer was aimed at
retired senior KGB intelligence officials. Id. One of them accepted the offer. Id.
at 239. In return for “several million dollars plus other considerations” he turned
over to the CIA and FBI a box full of files and information on Graysuit, which he
somehow managed to smuggle out of Lubyanka, the infamous KGB headquarters.
Id. With that critical information Graysuit was identified as a highly placed FBI
agent named Bob Hanssen. Id. at 240. He was arrested, convicted, and sentenced
to life imprisonment. Michael Killian, FBI Spy Hanssen Gets Life, Apologizes,
Chi. Trib., May 12, 2002, at 1.
Had the KGB agent who accepted the reward offer in the Hanssen case had
reason to doubt whether the United States would pay as promised, he would not
have risked his life to provide the information that he did, information that was
vital to this country’s national security interests. The same is true of those who
provided the information that enabled United States to corner Uday and Quasay
Hussein and to capture Ramzi Yousef. None of the statutes that authorize the
31
United States government to offer and pay rewards contains a waiver of sovereign
immunity, but reward offers are only as effective as they are enforceable.
Enforceable commitments are important to reward programs, which are in turn
important to the sovereign interests of this and other countries. Absent a clear
requirement in the FSIA, we will not create impediments to the enforcement of
reward contracts entered into by this or any other country.
IV.
Guevara contends that the district court erred in finding that Vidal and
Rospigliosi, the individual defendants, acted within the scope of their authority as
officials of Peru in offering the reward. The FSIA does not expressly provide
immunity to individuals acting on behalf of a foreign state. Nonetheless, several
circuits have found that such immunity extends to state officials acting in their
official capacity. See, e.g., Velasco v. Gov’t of Indonesia, 370 F.3d 392, 398 (4th
Cir. 2004); Keller v. Cent. Bank of Nig., 277 F.3d 811, 815 (6th Cir. 2002); El-
Fadl v. Cent. Bank of Jordan, 75 F.3d 668, 671 (D.C. Cir. 1996); Chuidian v. Phil.
Nat’l Bank, 912 F.2d 1095, 1103 (9th Cir. 1990). However this right is derivative;
courts provide individual immunity because “[t]he rule that foreign states can be
sued only pursuant to the specific provisions of sections 1605–07 would be vitiated
32
if litigants could avoid immunity simply by recasting the form of their pleadings.”
Chuidian, 912 F.2d at 1102. That logic does not apply where the sovereign itself is
not entitled to immunity. There is no present need to review the district court’s
conclusion that the individual defendants were acting within the scope of their
authority. Even if they were, they are not entitled to sovereign immunity because
the sovereign itself is not.
The individual defendants contend that we ought to affirm the judgment
dismissing them from the lawsuit anyway, on the ground that the district court
lacked personal jurisdiction over them. The district court, having found that they
were entitled to sovereign immunity, dismissed their challenge to personal
jurisdiction as moot. That result followed from the district court’s conclusion that
the defendants were immune under the FSIA, which limits the subject matter
jurisdiction of the federal courts. 28 U.S.C. § 1604 (stating that if the Act applies,
“a foreign state shall be immune from the jurisdiction of the courts of the United
States”). “[A] court should inquire into whether it has subject matter jurisdiction at
the earliest possible stage in the proceedings.” Univ. of S. Ala. v. Am. Tobacco
Co., 168 F.3d 405, 410 (11th Cir. 1999). If the court finds that it does not have
subject matter jurisdiction, “the court’s sole remaining act is to dismiss the case for
33
lack of jurisdiction.” Morrison v. Allstate Indem. Co., 228 F.3d 1255, 1261 (11th
Cir. 2000).
Because we disagree with the district court that the FSIA bars Guevara’s
suit, the individual defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction
is again relevant. However, the district court should have the first opportunity to
resolve it. Defendants cite SEC v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80, 88, 63 S. Ct. 454,
459 (1943), for the proposition that we must affirm the decision of a district court
if it reached the correct result but for the wrong reason. The Chenery case notes
that this rule does not apply “where the correctness of the lower court’s decision
depends upon a determination of fact.” Id. Our own decisions are to the same
effect. See Pacheco de Perez v. AT&T Co., 139 F.3d 1368, 1372 n.5 (11th Cir.
1998) (“We are mindful of the general rule that a court of appeals will not consider
issues not reached by the district court, especially where the issues involve
questions of fact.”); Stewart v. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., 26 F.3d 115,
115–16 (11th Cir. 1994) (same). The “minimum contacts” prong of the personal
jurisdiction inquiry is necessarily case and fact specific. We decline to take up that
issue without the benefit of factfindings from the district court. Vidal and
Rospigliosi may reassert on remand the issue of the district court’s jurisdiction
over their persons.
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REVERSED and REMANDED.
35