Second Circuit Gives Successor States a Blank Slate on Credit Obligations

Second Circuit Gives Successor States a Blank Slate on Credit Obligations

Last month the Second Circuit issued a remarkable ruling that threatens to upend the longstanding rule of successor state liability for the credit obligations of predecessor states. It did so by ruling that the automatic assumption of liability of sovereign debt of the predecessor state under international law is not a “commercial activity” within the meaning of the FSIA. In so holding, the Second Circuit ruled that without some affirmative action by the successor state, it is immune from liability for the commercial obligations of the predecessor state. In other words, each new state starts with a blank financial slate.

The case of Mortimer v. Germany, is complex, involving 1928 local public debt owed by the state of Prussia, a Länder within the German Republic. Following the Second World War, the German Republic was divided into West Germany and East Germany, and then united again in 1990. Thus, since the time the public debt was guaranteed, the government went through two state successions, one in 1949 and a second in 1990. Approximately one-third of the bonds were issued by obligor banks in West Germany, and the remaining two-thirds by obligor banks in East Germany. The current market value of the bonds alleged exceeded $400 million.

The bondholder sought to enforce the bonds against Germany, but to no avail. The Second Circuit ruled that with respect to the West Germany bonds the express assumption of liability for those bonds through enactment of “validation laws” constituted a “commercial activity” within the meaning of § 1605(a)(2), as affirmed in Republic of Argentina v. Weltover. But because the bondholders never validated the bonds the plaintiff, under the Iqbal pleading standard, “failed to plausibly allege that it either met the statutory validation requirements … or was not required to do so.”

The more significant holding is with respect to the East German bonds. East Germany never expressly assumed liability for the Prussian bonds. The question therefore, was whether the plaintiff could identify any “commercial activity” that would satisfy the FSIA standard. The Second Circuit concluded that the plaintiff could not.

“We hold that automatic assumption of liability by a successor state, even if established, would not meet the requirements of the FSIA’s commercial activity exception…. Accession to liability by the rules of customary international law entails no action by the successor state with respect to the commercial activity at issue—the assumption of liability. The state performs no action when it automatically assumes liability. This stands in sharp contrast to a country’s assumption of liability through an explicit act, such as West Germany did here. Because no “action” within the meaning of § 1605(a)(2) occurs when a successor state accedes to liability, the requirements of FSIA’s commercial activity exception are not met in that context and jurisdiction under the FSIA based on such an accession will not lie.”

The problem with this reading, of course, is that it completely ignores the original commercial activity of the predecessor state of Prussia in 1928. When Prussia guaranteed the obligations of the banks, that was a commercial activity under then-existing international law. The Second Circuit makes no mention whatsoever of this activity, nor does it recognize the retroactive application of the FSIA as affirmed by the Supreme Court in Austria v. Altmann.

The result of the Second Circuit’s holding is to render claims against the commercial debt of a predecessor state unenforceable, absent express assumption of liability by the successor state. It effectively transforms the customary international law rule of automatic successor liability for public debt into one of conditional successor liability. The effect of this ruling is to preclude creditors from enforcing all predecessor public debt against state successors, at least in the financial headquarters of the United States.

(Disclaimer: Tai-Heng Cheng and I wrote an amicus brief on the issue of successor liability in support of the plaintiff).

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Topics
Europe, North America, Trade & Economic Law
Notify of
Perry Bechky
Perry Bechky

Roger, 

Thanks for an interesting post.  You say that the Second Circuit has given “a blank slate” to successor states on debts in a “a remarkable ruling that threatens to upend the longstanding rule of successor state liability,” but then describe the case as being entirely about the FSIA commercial activity exception.  Aren’t you conflating immunity and substance?  The court (as you describe it) doesn’t say anything about whether or not successor states are liable for predecessors’ debts, but simply that the United States is not the proper forum to adjudicate this claim against Germany.  Isn’t that the normal outcome of a finding of FSIA immunity?  You seem to acknowledge as much in your final caveat (“at least in the financial headquarters of the United States”), but to what extent do your substantive conclusions survive that caveat?

Respectfully,
Perry.

Vlad Perju

Perry,

Good question and sorry about the confusion.  Yes, you are correct, the Second Circuit did not suggest that the customary international law standard was the blank slate doctrine for public debt.  But in granting immunity to a successor state that does not expressly affirm the debts of the predecessor state, it has effectively done the same thing–it has given the successor state a blank slate.  That’s a pretty significant limitation to the commercial activity exception, especially in light of Weltover and Altmann.  That was what I was trying convey in the post. 

Roger Alford

Perry Bechky
Perry Bechky

Roger, Thanks for that clarification. And thanks again for your post calling attention to this case. I’ve now had a chance to take a quick look at the opinion. It seems that your critique still skips a step to get from the court’s holding that Germany is immune from this suit in the US to your conclusion that this “effectively … give[s] the successor state a blank slate.” To get there, don’t you have to establish that there is no adequate alternative forum and, in particular, that the German courts are unable or unwilling to adjudicate fairly the question whether East Germany succeeded to the Weimar debts at issue? The closest I spotted in the opinion to a “missing link” along these lines is in Footnote 11, which says in part: “the FRG’s Federal Court of Justice, its highest court for civil and criminal matters, recently denied the claim of a United States holder of German dollar bonds issued in 1925 in a city located in what later became East Germany, concluding that neither East Germany nor the FRG succeeded to such debt automatically, under international law, or by way of an affirmative legislative act and treaty.” The combination of… Read more »