http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/us-court-ruling-curbs-aceh-exxon-human-rights-suit/586576

US Court Ruling Curbs Aceh Exxon Human Rights Suit
April 18, 2013



Washington. In a major victory for multinational companies, the US Supreme 
Court on Wednesday limited the ability of human rights plaintiffs to invoke a 
224-year-old federal law when suing companies over alleged collusion with 
violent foreign governments.

The nine justices ruled unanimously that a federal court in New York could not 
hear claims made by 12 Nigerians who accused Anglo-Dutch oil company Royal 
Dutch Shell of complicity in a violent crackdown on protesters in Nigeria from 
1992 to 1995.

The ruling immediately sparked another debate, not least in concurring opinions 
written by justices in response to Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority 
opinion, about exactly what claims can still be made under the Alien Tort 
Statute. The 1789 law had been dormant for nearly two centuries before lawyers 
began using it in the 1980s to bring international human rights cases in US 
courts.

What is clear is that the ruling is a major win for multi-nationals such as 
Royal Dutch that do business in the developing world and become embroiled in 
local political controversies.

Those companies, which are still subject to lawsuits in foreign courts, fear US 
courts because of the possibility of large damage awards.

The ruling is “good news for businesses all around the globe that were being 
punished in US courts with costly, reputation-damaging litigation,” said Lily 
Fu Claffee, chief legal officer at the US Chamber of Commerce.

The decision does not just benefit foreign-based corporations. US corporations 
could also find it easier to defend themselves against similar claims, although 
it could depend on the extent plaintiffs can show actions overseas were 
directed from the United States, legal experts said. The court also appeared to 
leave open the possibility of certain claims against individuals over conduct 
overseas.

The ruling is likely to affect other cases, including those involving similar 
claims against Anglo-Australian mining company Rio Tinto over its conduct in 
Papua New Guinea; Exxon Mobil over its activity in Indonesia; and Daimler AG 
concerning alleged abuses in Argentina. The companies have all vigorously 
contested the claims.

Fifteen Acehnese villagers accused former Indonesian soldiers working for Exxon 
Mobil of murder, torture and other atrocities.

In their 2011 lawsuit, the villagers contended that family members were killed 
and that others were “beaten, burned, shocked with cattle prods, kicked and 
subjected to other forms of brutality and cruelty” amounting to torture in Aceh 
between 1999 and 2001, a period of civil unrest.

Esther Kiobel, the named plaintiff in the Royal Dutch case and now a US 
citizen, brought her lawsuit in 2002 on behalf of victims of the crackdown in 
Nigeria, including her husband, Barinem, who was executed in 1995.

Chief Justice Roberts wrote in the majority opinion that a presumption against 
extraterritorial application of federal laws applies to the Alien Tort Statute.

The court did not decide the question originally before it in the case: Whether 
corporations can ever be liable under the statute.

Differences of opinion

Although all nine justices concurred with the outcome, only four agreed with 
the chief justice’s reasoning. Justice Stephen Breyer wrote a separate opinion 
in which he was joined by three other justices.

Roberts indicated in his opinion that the court was leaving the door slightly 
open for some overseas-related claims under the Alien Tort Statute, including 
against corporations, as long as there is a sufficient connection with the 
United States. The claims must have “sufficient force to displace the 
presumption” against extraterritorial application, he added.

But he made it clear it would be a high bar, saying it would “reach too far to 
say that mere corporate presence suffices.”

Justice Anthony Kennedy and Justice Samuel Alito wrote separately in agreement 
with Roberts, with both making clear that the court had not resolved for good 
the question of under what circumstances individuals and corporations can be 
liable.

In his concurring opinion, Justice Breyer said he would not have applied the 
presumption against extraterritoriality. Regardless, he said, in the Shell 
case, “The parties and relevant conduct lack sufficient ties to the United 
States.”

Sandy Weisburst, one of Royal Dutch’s lawyers at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & 
Sullivan, said the ruling was a “vindication of Shell’s primary position in 
this case.” Future cases against other defendants would, he said, determine 
“when is there sufficient US conduct” to give US courts jurisdiction.

Plaintiffs’ attorneys sought to play down the impact, pointing out that claims 
can still be made in state court, even when federal courts do not have 
jurisdiction.

Paul Hoffman, the lawyer representing the Shell plaintiffs, said it “seems 
pretty clear” that corporations are covered by the statute and “there will be 
corporate cases in the future” in some circumstances.

Marco Simons, a lawyer with Earthrights International who represents plaintiffs 
in human rights cases, pointed at one of his own cases, against Chiquita Brand 
International as a possible example of a claim that could go forward because 
there was a sufficient US nexus. In that case, plaintiffs claim the company 
made decisions in the United States about funding paramilitaries in Colombia.

That case is currently before the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of 
Appeals. John Hall, a lawyer with the Covington & Burling firm that represents 
Chiquita, said Wednesday’s ruling served to emphasize that “claims like those 
against Chiquita — which concern violent acts committed by Colombians in 
Colombia, allegedly with the complicity of the Colombian government — should 
not be heard in an American court.”

In a recognition of the creativity of plaintiffs’ lawyers, attorneys 
representing corporate interests said they expected litigation to continue on a 
wide array of issues, including the extent of US-based conduct in existing 
cases.

“In the coming months, plaintiffs can be expected to try to re-plead their 
cases and say that their cases involve conduct taking place in the United 
States, not abroad, and thus are not governed by today’s decision,” said Neal 
Katyal, a partner at Hogan Lovells.

Reuters, with additional reporting from Anita Rachman

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