In 1960, the Cuban Government established respondent to serve as
an official autonomous credit institution for foreign trade, with
full juridical capacity of its own. Respondent sought to collect on
a letter of credit issued by petitioner bank in respondent's favor
in support of a contract for delivery of Cuban sugar to a buyer in
the United States. Shortly thereafter, all of petitioner's assets
in Cuba were seized and nationalized by the Cuban Government. When
respondent brought suit on the letter of credit in Federal District
Court, petitioner counterclaimed, asserting a right to set off the
value of its seized Cuban assets. After the suit was brought, but
before petitioner filed its counterclaim, respondent was dissolved
and its capital was split between Banco Nacional, Cuba's central
bank, and certain foreign trade enterprises or houses of the Cuban
Ministry of Foreign Trade. Rejecting respondent's contention that
its separate juridical status shielded it from liability for the
acts of the Cuban Government, the District Court held that, since
the value of petitioner's Cuban assets exceeded respondent's claim,
the setoff could be granted in petitioner's favor, and therefore
dismissed the complaint. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding
that respondent was not an alter ego of the Cuban Government for
the purpose of petitioner's counterclaim.
Held: Under principles of equity common to
international law and federal common law, petitioner may apply the
claimed setoff, notwithstanding the fact that respondent was
established as a separate juridical entity. Pp.
462 U. S.
619-633.
(a) The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 does not
control the determination of whether petitioner may apply the
setoff. That Act was not intended to affect the substantive law
determining the liability of a foreign state or instrumentality, or
the attribution of liability among such instrumentalities. Pp.
462 U. S.
619-621.
(b) Duly created instrumentalities of a foreign state are to be
accorded a presumption of independent status. This presumption may
be overcome, however, where giving effect to the corporate form
would permit a foreign state to be the sole beneficiary of a claim
pursued in United States courts while escaping liability to the
opposing party imposed by international law. Pp.
462 U. S.
623-630.
Page 462 U. S. 612
(c) Thus, here, giving effect to respondent's juridical status,
even though it has long been dissolved, would permit the real
beneficiary of such an action, the Cuban Government, to obtain
relief in our courts that it could not obtain in its own right
without waiving its sovereign immunity and answering for the
seizure of petitioner's assets in violation of international law.
The corporate form will not be blindly adhered to where doing so
would cause such an injustice. Having dissolved respondent and
transferred its assets to entities that may be held liable on
petitioner's counterclaim, Cuba cannot escape liability for acts in
violation of international law simply by retransferring assets to
separate juridical entities. To hold otherwise would permit
governments to avoid the requirements of international law simply
by creating juridical entities whenever the need arises. Pp.
462 U. S.
630-633.
658 F.2d 913, reversed and remanded.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, MARSHALL, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ.,
joined, and in Parts I, II, III-A, and III-B of which BRENNAN,
BLACKMUN, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed an opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which BRENNAN, and
BLACKMUN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
462 U. S.
634.
Page 462 U. S. 613
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1960, the Government of the Republic of Cuba established
respondent Banco Para el Comercio Exterior de Cuba (Bancec) to
serve as "[a]n official autonomous credit institution for foreign
trade . . . with full juridical capacity . . . of its own. . . ."
Law No. 793, Art. 1 (1960), App. to Pet. for Cert.2d. In September,
1960, Bancec sought to collect on a letter of credit issued by
petitioner First National City Bank (now Citibank) in its favor in
support of a contract for delivery of Cuban sugar to a buyer in the
United States. Within days after Citibank received the request for
collection, all of its assets in Cuba were seized and nationalized
by the Cuban Government. When Bancec brought suit on the letter of
credit in United States District Court, Citibank counterclaimed,
asserting a right to set off the value of its seized Cuban assets.
The question before us is whether Citibank may obtain such a
setoff, notwithstanding the fact that Bancec was established as a
separate juridical entity. Applying principles of equity common to
international law and federal common law, we conclude that Citibank
may apply a setoff.
I
Resolution of the question presented by this case requires us to
describe in some detail the events giving rise to the current
controversy.
Bancec was established by Law No. 793, of April 25, 1960, as the
legal successor to the Banco Cubano del Comercio Exterior (Cuban
Foreign Trade Bank), a trading bank established by the Cuban
Government in 1954 and jointly owned by the Government and private
banks. Law No. 793 contains detailed "By-laws" specifying Bancec's
purpose, structure, and administration. Bancec's stated purpose
was
"to contribute to, and collaborate with, the international trade
policy of the Government and the application of the measures
concerning foreign trade adopted by the 'Banco Nacional de
Cuba,'"
Cuba's central bank (Banco Nacional). Art. 1,
Page 462 U. S. 614
No. VIII, App. to Pet. for Cert. 4d. Bancec was empowered to act
as the Cuban Government's exclusive agent in foreign trade. The
Government supplied all of its capital and owned all of its stock.
The General Treasury of the Republic received all of Bancec's
profits, after deduction of amounts for capital reserves. A
Governing Board consisting of delegates from Cuban governmental
ministries governed and managed Bancec. Its president was Ernesto
Che Guevara, who also was Minister of State and president of Banco
Nacional. A General Manager appointed by the Governing Board was
charged with directing Bancec's day-to-day operations in a manner
consistent with its enabling statute.
In contracts signed on August 12, 1960, Bancec agreed to
purchase a quantity of sugar from El Institutio Nacional de Reforma
Agraria (INRA), an instrumentality of the Cuban Government which
owned and operated Cuba's nationalized sugar industry, and to sell
it to the Cuban Canadian Sugar Company. The latter sale agreement
was supported by an irrevocable letter of credit in favor of Bancec
issued by Citibank on August 18, 1960, which Bancec assigned to
Banco Nacional for collection.
Meanwhile, in July, 1960, the Cuban Government enacted Law No.
851, which provided for the nationalization of the Cuban properties
of United States citizens. By Resolution No. 2 of September 17,
1960, the Government ordered that all of the Cuban property of
three United States banks, including Citibank, be nationalized
through forced expropriation. The "Bank Nationalization Law," Law
No. 891, of October 13, 1960, declared that the banking function
could be carried on only by instrumentalities created by the State,
and ordered Banco Nacional to effect the nationalization.
On or about September 15, 1960, before the banks were
nationalized, Bancec's draft was presented to Citibank for payment
by Banco Nacional. The amount sought was $193,280.30 for sugar
delivered at Pascagoula, Miss. On September 20, 1960, after its
branches were nationalized,
Page 462 U. S. 615
Citibank credited the requested amount to Banco Nacional's
account and applied the balance in Banco Nacional's account as a
setoff against the value of its Cuban branches.
On February 1, 1961, Bancec brought this diversity action to
recover on the letter of credit in the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York.
On February 23, 1961, by Law No. 930, Bancec was dissolved and
its capital was split between Banco Nacional and "the foreign trade
enterprises or houses of the Ministry of Foreign Trade," which were
established by Law No. 934 the same day. [
Footnote 1] App. to Pet. for Cert. 16d. All of Bancec's
rights, claims, and assets "peculiar to the banking business" were
vested in Banco Nacional, which also succeeded to its banking
obligations.
Ibid. All of Bancec's "trading functions"
were to be assumed by "the foreign trade enterprises or houses of
the Ministry of Foreign Trade." By Resolution No. 1, dated March 1,
1961, the Ministry of Foreign Trade created Empresa Cubana de
Exportaciones (Cuban Enterprise for Exports) (Empresa), which was
empowered to conduct all commercial export transactions formerly
conducted by Bancec "remaining subrogated in the rights and
obligations of said bank [Bancec] as regards the commercial export
activities." App. to Pet. for Cert. 26d. Three hundred thousand of
the two million pesos distributed to the Ministry of Foreign Trade
when Bancec was dissolved were assigned to Empresa.
Id. at
27d. By Resolution No. 102, dated December 31, 1961, and Resolution
No. 1, dated January 1, 1962, Empresa was dissolved and Bancec's
rights relating to foreign commerce in sugar were assigned to
Empresa Cubana
Page 462 U. S. 616
Exportadora de Azucar y sus Derivados (Cubazucar), a state
trading company, which is apparently still in existence.
On March 8, 1961, after Bancec had been dissolved, Citibank
filed its answer, which sought a setoff for the value of its seized
branches, not an affirmative recovery of damages. [
Footnote 2] On July 7, 1961, Bancec filed a
stipulation signed by the parties stating that Bancec had been
dissolved and that its claim had been transferred to the Ministry
of Foreign Trade, and agreeing that the Republic of Cuba may be
substituted as plaintiff. The District Court approved the
stipulation, but no amended complaint was filed.
Apparently the case lay dormant until May, 1975, when respondent
filed a motion seeking an order substituting Cubazucar as
plaintiff. The motion was supported by an affidavit by counsel
stating that Bancec's claim had passed through the Ministry of
Foreign Trade and Empresa to Cubazucar, all by operation of the
laws and resolutions cited above. Counsel for petitioner opposed
the motion, and the District Court denied it in August, 1975,
stating that "to permit such a substitution . . . would only
multiply complications in this already complicated litigation."
App. 160.
A bench trial was held in 1977, [
Footnote 3] after which the District
Page 462 U. S. 617
Court [
Footnote 4] granted
judgment in favor of Citibank.
505 F.
Supp. 412 (1980). The court rejected Bancec's contention that
its separate juridical status shielded it from liability for the
acts of the Cuban Government.
"Under all of the relevant circumstances shown in this record, .
. . it is clear that Bancec lacked an independent existence, and
was a mere arm of the Cuban Government, performing a purely
governmental function. The control of Bancec was exclusively in the
hands of the Government, and Bancec was established solely to
further Governmental purposes. Moreover, Bancec was totally
dependent on the Government for financing, and required to remit
all of its profits to the Government."
* * * *
"Bancec is not a mere private corporation, the stock of which is
owned by the Cuban Government, but an agency of the Cuban
Government in the conduct of the sort of matters which, even in a
country characterized by private capitalism, tend to be supervised
and managed by Government. Where the equities are so strong in
Page 462 U. S. 618
favor of the counterclaiming defendants, as they are in this
case, the Court should recognize the practicalities of the
transactions. . . . The Court concludes that Bancec is an alter ego
of the Cuban Government."
Id. at 427-428.
Without determining the exact value of Citibank's assets seized
by Cuba, the court held that
"the value of the confiscated branches . . . substantially
exceeds the sums already recovered, and therefore the set-off
pleaded here may be granted in full in favor of Citibank."
Id. at 467. It therefore entered judgment dismissing
the complaint. [
Footnote 5]
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
reversed. 658 F.2d 913 (1981). While expressing agreement with the
District Court's "descriptions of Bancec's functions and its status
as a wholly-owned instrumentality of the Cuban government," the
court concluded that "Bancec was
Page 462 U. S. 619
not an alter ego of the Cuban government for the purpose of
[Citibank's] counterclaims."
Id. at 917. It stated that,
as a general matter, courts would respect the independent identity
of a governmental instrumentality created as "a separate and
distinct juridical entity under the laws of the state that owns it"
-- except "when the subject matter of the counterclaim assertible
against the state is state conduct in which the instrumentality had
a key role."
Id. at 918. As an example of such a
situation, the Court of Appeals cited
Banco Nacional de Cuba v.
First National City Bank, 478 F.2d 191 (CA2 1973), in which it
had ruled that Banco Nacional could be held liable by way of setoff
for the value of Citibank's seized Cuban assets because of the role
it played in the expropriations. But the court declined to hold
that
"a trading corporation wholly owned by a foreign government, but
created and operating as a separate juridical entity, is an alter
ego of that government for the purpose of recovery for wrongs of
the government totally unrelated to the operations, conduct or
authority of the instrumentality."
658 F.2d at 920. [
Footnote
6]
Citibank moved for rehearing, arguing,
inter alia, that
the panel had ignored the fact that Bancec had been dissolved in
February, 1961. The motion, and a suggestion of rehearing en banc,
were denied. This Court granted certiorari. 459 U.S. 942 (1982). We
reverse, and remand the case for further proceedings.
II
A
As an initial matter, Bancec contends that the Foreign Sovereign
Immunities Act of 1976, 28 U.S.C. 1602-1611 (FSIA), immunizes an
instrumentality owned by a foreign government from suit on a
counterclaim based on actions
Page 462 U. S. 620
taken by that government. Bancec correctly concedes that, under
28 U.S.C. 1607(c), [
Footnote 7]
an instrumentality of a foreign state bringing suit in a United
States court is not entitled to immunity
"with respect to any counterclaim . . . to the extent that the
counterclaim does not seek relief exceeding in amount or differing
in kind from that sought by the [instrumentality]."
It contends, however, that, as a substantive matter, the FSIA
prohibits holding a foreign instrumentality owned and controlled by
a foreign government responsible for actions taken by that
government.
We disagree. The language and history of the FSIA clearly
establish that the Act was not intended to affect the substantive
law determining the liability of a foreign state or
instrumentality, or the attribution of liability among
instrumentalities of a foreign state. Section 1606 of the FSIA
provides in relevant part that,
"[a]s to any claim for relief with respect to which a foreign
state is not entitled to immunity . . . , the foreign state shall
be liable in the same manner and to the same extent as a private
individual under like circumstances. . . ."
The House Report on the FSIA states:
"The bill is not intended to affect the substantive law of
liability. Nor is it intended to affect . . . the attribution of
responsibility between or among entities of a foreign state; for
example, whether the proper entity of a foreign state has been
sued, or whether an entity sued is
Page 462 U. S. 621
liable in whole or in part for the claimed wrong."
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, p. 12 (1976). [
Footnote 8]
Thus, we conclude that the FSIA does not control the
determination of whether Citibank may set off the value of its
seized Cuban assets against Bancec's claim. Nevertheless, our
resolution of that question is guided by the policies articulated
by Congress in enacting the FSIA.
See infra at
462 U. S.
627-628.
B
We must next decide which body of law determines the effect to
be given to Bancec's separate juridical status. Bancec contends
that internationally recognized conflict-of-law principles require
the application of the law of the state that establishes a
government instrumentality -- here Cuba -- to determine whether the
instrumentality may be held liable for actions taken by the
sovereign.
We cannot agree. As a general matter, the law of the state of
incorporation normally determines issues relating to the
internal affairs of a corporation. Application of that
body of law achieves the need for certainty and predictability of
result while generally protecting the justified expectations of
parties with interests in the corporation.
See Restatement
(Second) of Conflict of Laws § 302, Comments
a and
e (1971).
Cf. Cort v. Ash, 422 U. S.
66,
422 U. S. 84
(1975). Different conflicts principles apply, however, where the
rights of third parties
external to the corporation are at
issue.
See Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws,
supra, 301. [
Footnote
9] To
Page 462 U. S. 622
give conclusive effect to the law of the chartering state in
determining whether the separate juridical status of its
instrumentality should be respected would permit the state to
violate with impunity the rights of third parties under
international law while effectively insulating itself from
liability in foreign courts. [
Footnote 10] We decline to permit such a result.
[
Footnote 11]
Bancec contends in the alternative that international law must
determine the resolution of the question presented. Citibank, on
the other hand, suggests that federal common law governs. The
expropriation claim against which Bancec
Page 462 U. S. 623
seeks to interpose its separate juridical status arises under
international law, which, as we have frequently reiterated, "is
part of our law. . . ."
The Paquete Habana, 175 U.
S. 677,
175 U. S. 700
(1900). As we set forth below,
see infra, at
462 U. S.
624-630, and nn.
19 20 the
principles governing this case are common to both international law
and federal common law, which, in these circumstances, is
necessarily informed both by international law principles and by
articulated congressional policies.
III
A
Before examining the controlling principles, a preliminary
observation is appropriate. The parties and
amici have
repeatedly referred to the phrases that have tended to dominate
discussion about the independent status of separately constituted
juridical entities, debating whether "to pierce the corporate
veil," and whether Bancec is an "alter ego" or a "mere
instrumentality" of the Cuban Government. In
Berkey v. Third
Avenue R. Co., 244 N.Y. 84, 155 N.E. 58 (1926), Justice (then
Judge) Cardozo warned in circumstances similar to those presented
here against permitting worn epithets to substitute for rigorous
analysis.
"The whole problem of the relation between parent and subsidiary
corporations is one that is still enveloped in the mists of
metaphor. Metaphors in law are to be narrowly watched, for,
starting as devices to liberate thought,they end often by enslaving
it."
Id. at 94, 155 N.E. at 61. With this in mind, we
examine briefly the nature of government instrumentalities.
[
Footnote 12]
Page 462 U. S. 624
Increasingly during this century, governments throughout the
world have established separately constituted legal entities to
perform a variety of tasks. [
Footnote 13] The organization and control of these
entities vary considerably, but many possess a number of common
features. A typical government instrumentality, if one can be said
to exist, is created by an enabling statute that prescribes the
powers and duties of the instrumentality, and specifies that it is
to be managed by a board selected by the government in a manner
consistent with the enabling law. The instrumentality is typically
established as a separate juridical entity, with the powers to hold
and sell property and to sue and be sued. Except for appropriations
to provide capital or to cover losses, the instrumentality is
primarily responsible for its own finances. The instrumentality is
run as a distinct economic enterprise; often it is not subject to
the same budgetary and personnel requirements with which government
agencies must comply. [
Footnote
14]
These distinctive features permit government instrumentalities
to manage their operations on an enterprise basis while granting
them a greater degree of flexibility and independence from close
political control than is generally enjoyed
Page 462 U. S. 625
by government agencies. [
Footnote 15] These same features frequently prompt
governments in developing countries to establish separate juridical
entities as the vehicles through which to obtain the financial
resources needed to make large-scale national investments.
"[P]ublic enterprise, largely in the form of development
corporations, has become an essential instrument of economic
development in the economically backward countries which have
insufficient private venture capital to develop the utilities and
industries which are given priority in the national development
plan. Not infrequently, these public development corporations . . .
directly or through subsidiaries, enter into partnerships with
national or foreign private enterprises, or they offer shares to
the public."
Friedmann, Government Enterprise: A Comparative Analysis, in
Government Enterprise: A Comparative Study 303, 333-334 (W.
Friedmann & J. Garner eds.1970).
Separate legal personality has been described as "an almost
indispensable aspect of the public corporation."
Id. at
314. Provisions in the corporate charter stating that the
instrumentality may sue and be sued have been construed to waive
the sovereign immunity accorded to many governmental activities,
thereby enabling third parties to deal with the instrumentality
knowing that they may seek relief in the courts. [
Footnote 16] Similarly, the
instrumentality's assets and liabilities must be treated as
distinct from those of its sovereign in
Page 462 U. S. 626
order to facilitate credit transactions with third parties.
Id. at 315. Thus, what the Court stated with respect to
private corporations in
Anderson v. Abbott, 321 U.
S. 349 (1944), is true also for governmental
corporations:
"Limited liability is the rule, not the exception; and on that
assumption large undertakings are rested, vast enterprises are
launched, and huge sums of capital attracted."
Id. at 362.
Freely ignoring the separate status of government
instrumentalities would result in substantial uncertainty over
whether an instrumentality's assets would be diverted to satisfy a
claim against the sovereign, and might thereby cause third parties
to hesitate before extending credit to a government instrumentality
without the government's guarantee. [
Footnote 17] As a result, the efforts of sovereign
nations to structure their governmental activities in a manner
deemed necessary to promote economic development and efficient
administration would surely be frustrated. Due respect for the
actions taken by foreign sovereigns and for principles of comity
between nations,
see Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U.
S. 113,
159 U. S.
163-164 (1895), leads us to conclude -- as the courts of
Great Britain have concluded in other circumstances [
Footnote 18] -- that government
Page 462 U. S. 627
instrumentalities established as juridical entities distinct and
independent from their sovereign should normally be treated as
such.
We find support for this conclusion in the legislative history
of the FSIA. During its deliberations, Congress clearly expressed
its intention that duly created instrumentalities of a foreign
state are to be accorded a presumption of independent status. In
its discussion of FSIA § 1610(b), the provision dealing with the
circumstances under which a judgment creditor may execute upon the
assets of an instrumentality of a foreign government, the House
Report states:
"Section 1610(b) will not permit execution against the property
of one agency or instrumentality to satisfy a
Page 462 U. S. 628
judgment against another, unrelated agency or instrumentality.
There are compelling reasons for this. If U.S. law did not respect
the separate juridical identities of different agencies or
instrumentalities, it might encourage foreign jurisdictions to
disregard the juridical divisions between different U.S.
corporations or between a U.S. corporation and its independent
subsidiary. However, a court might find that property held by one
agency is really the property of another."
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, pp. 29-30 (1976) (citation omitted).
Thus, the presumption that a foreign government's determination
that its instrumentality is to be accorded separate legal status is
buttressed by this congressional determination. We next examine
whether this presumption may be overcome in certain
circumstances.
B
In discussing the legal status of private corporations, courts
in the United States [
Footnote
19] and abroad [
Footnote
20] have recognized
See 1 W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations
41 (rev. perm. ed.1983):
"[A] corporation will be looked upon as a legal entity as a
general rule, and until sufficient reason to the contrary appears;
but, when the notion of legal entity is used to defeat public
convenience, justify wrong, protect fraud, or defend crime, the law
will regard the corporation as an association of persons."
Id. at 389 (footnote omitted).
See generally H. Henn, Handbook of the Law of Corporations 146
(2d ed.1970); I. Wormser, Disregard of the Corporate Fiction and
Allied Corporation Problems 42-85 (1927).
Page 462 U. S. 629
that an incorporated entity described by Chief Justice Marshall
as "an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only
in contemplation of law" [
Footnote 21] -- is not to be regarded as legally separate
from its owners in all circumstances. Thus, where a corporate
entity is so extensively controlled by its owner that a
relationship of principal and agent is created, we have held that
one may be held liable for the actions of the other.
See NLRB
v. Deena Artware, Inc., 361 U. S. 398,
361 U. S.
402-404 (1960). In addition, our cases have long
recognized
"the broader equitable principle that the doctrine of corporate
entity, recognized generally and for most purposes, will not be
regarded when to do so would work fraud or injustice."
Taylor v. Standard Gas Co., 306 U.
S. 307,
306 U. S. 322
(1939).
See Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.
S. 295,
308 U. S. 310
(1939). In
Page 462 U. S. 630
particular, the Court has consistently refused to give effect to
the corporate form where it is interposed to defeat legislative
policies.
E.g., Anderson v. Abbott, 321 U.S. at
321 U. S.
362-363. And in
Bangor Punta Operations, Inc. v.
Bangor & Aroostook R. Co., 417 U.
S. 703 (1974), we concluded:
"Although a corporation and its shareholders are deemed separate
entities for most purposes, the corporate form may be disregarded
in the interests of justice where it is used to defeat an
overriding public policy. . . . [W]here equity would preclude the
shareholders from maintaining an action in their own right, the
corporation would also be precluded. . . . [T]he principal
beneficiary of any recovery and itself estopped from complaining of
petitioners' alleged wrongs, cannot avoid the command of equity
through the guise of proceeding in the name of . . . corporations
which it owns and controls."
Id. at
417 U. S. 713
(citations omitted).
C
We conclude today that similar equitable principles must be
applied here. In
National City Bank v. Republic of China,
348 U. S. 356
(1955), the Court ruled that, when a foreign sovereign asserts a
claim in a United States court, "the consideration of fair dealing"
bars the state from asserting a defense of sovereign immunity to
defeat a setoff or counterclaim.
Id. at
348 U. S. 365.
See 28 U.S.C. 1607(c). As a general matter, therefore, the
Cuban Government could not bring suit in a United States court
without also subjecting itself to its adversary's counterclaim.
Here there is apparently no dispute that, as the District Court
found, and the Court of Appeals apparently agreed,
see 658
F.2d at 916, n. 4, "the devolution of [Bancec's] claim, however
viewed, brings it into the hands of the Ministry [of Foreign
Trade], or Banco Nacional," each a party that may be held liable
for the expropriation
Page 462 U. S. 631
of Citibank's assets. 505 F. Supp. at 425. [
Footnote 22]
See Banco Nacional de Cuba v.
First National City Bank, 478 F.2d at 194. Bancec was
dissolved even before Citibank filed its answer in this case,
apparently in order to effect "the consolidation and operation of
the economic and social conquests of the Revolution," particularly
the nationalization of the banks ordered by Law No. 891. [
Footnote 23] Thus, the Cuban
Government and Banco Nacional, not any third parties that may
Page 462 U. S. 632
have relied on Bancec's separate juridical identity, would be
the only beneficiaries of any recovery. [
Footnote 24]
In our view, this situation is similar to that in the
Republic of China case.
"We have a foreign government invoking our law but resisting a
claim against it which fairly would curtail its recovery. It wants
our law, like any other litigant, but it wants our law free from
the claims of justice."
348 U.S. at
348 U. S.
361-362 (footnote omitted). [
Footnote 25]
Giving effect to Bancec's separate juridical status in these
circumstances, even though it has long been dissolved, would permit
the real beneficiary of such an action, the Government of the
Republic of Cuba, to obtain relief in our courts that it could not
obtain in its own right without waiving its sovereign immunity and
answering for the seizure of Citibank's assets -- a seizure
previously held by the Court of Appeals to have violated
international law. [
Footnote
26] We decline to adhere blindly to the corporate form where
doing so would cause such an injustice.
See Bangor Punta
Operations, Inc. v. Bangor & Aroostook R. Co., supra, at
417 U. S.
713.
Respondent contends, however, that the transfer of Bancec's
assets from the Ministry of Foreign Trade or Banco Nacional to
Empresa and Cubazucar effectively insulates it
Page 462 U. S. 633
from Citibank's counterclaim. We disagree. Having dissolved
Bancec and transferred its assets to entities that may be held
liable on Citibank's counterclaim, Cuba cannot escape liability for
acts in violation of international law simply by retransferring the
assets to separate juridical entities. To hold otherwise would
permit governments to avoid the requirements of international law
simply by creating juridical entities whenever the need arises.
Cf. Federal Republic of Germany v.
Elicofon, 358 F.
Supp. 747, 757 (EDNY 1972),
aff'd, 478 F.2d 231 (CA2
1973),
cert. denied, 415 U.S. 931 (1974).
See
n 25,
supra. We
therefore hold that Citibank may set off the value of its assets
seized by the Cuban Government against the amount sought by
Bancec.
IV
Our decision today announces no mechanical formula for
determining the circumstances under which the normally separate
juridical status of a government instrumentality is to be
disregarded. [
Footnote 27]
Instead, it is the product of the application of internationally
recognized equitable principles to avoid the injustice that would
result from permitting a
Page 462 U. S. 634
foreign state to reap the benefits of our courts while avoiding
the obligations of international law. [
Footnote 28]
The District Court determined that the value of Citibank's Cuban
assets exceeded Bancec's claim. Bancec challenged this
determination on appeal, but the Court of Appeals did not reach the
question. It therefore remains open on remand. The judgment of the
Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Law No. 934 provides that
"[a]ll the functions of a mercantile character heretofore
assigned to [Bancec] are hereby transferred and vested in the
foreign trade enterprises or houses set up hereunder, which are
subrogated to the rights and obligations of said former Bank in
pursuance of the assignment of those functions ordered by the
Minister."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 24d.
[
Footnote 2]
Citibank's answer alleged that the suit was
"brought by and for the benefit of the Republic of Cuba by and
through its agent and wholly-owned instrumentality, . . . which is
in fact and law and in form and function an integral part of and
indistinguishable from the Republic of Cuba."
App. 113.
[
Footnote 3]
The bulk of the evidence at trial was directed to the question
whether the value of Citibank's confiscated branches exceeded the
amount Citibank had already recovered from Cuba, including a setoff
it had successfully asserted in
Banco Nacional de Cuba v. First
National City Bank, 478 F.2d 191 (CA2 1973)
Banco I,
the decision on remand from this Court's decision in
First
National City Bank v. Banco Nacional de Cuba, 406 U.
S. 759 (1972). Only one witness, Raul Lopez, testified
on matters touching upon the question presented. (A second witness,
Juan Sanchez, described the operations of Bancec's predecessor.
App. 185-186.) Lopez, who was called by Bancec, served as a lawyer
for Banco Nacional from 1953 to 1965, when he went to work for the
Foreign Trade Ministry. He testified that "Bancec was an autonomous
organization that was supervised by the Cuban Government but not
controlled by it."
Id. at 197. According to Lopez, under
Cuban law, Bancec had independent legal status, and could sue and
be sued. Lopez stated that Bancec's capital was supplied by the
Cuban Government, and that its net profits, after reserves, were
paid to Cuba's Treasury, but that Bancec did not pay taxes to the
Government.
Id. at 196.
The District Court also took into evidence translations of the
Cuban statutes and resolutions, as well as the July, 1961,
stipulation for leave to file a motion to file an amended complaint
substituting the Republic of Cuba as plaintiff. The court stated
that the stipulation would be taken "for what it is worth," and
acknowledged respondent's representation that it was based on an
"erroneous" interpretation of Cuba's law.
Id. at
207-209.
[
Footnote 4]
Judge van Pelt Bryan, before whom the case was tried, died
before issuing a decision. With the parties' consent, Judge Brieant
decided the case based on the record of the earlier proceedings.
505 F.
Supp. 412. 418 (1980).
[
Footnote 5]
The District Court stated that the events surrounding Bancec's
dissolution "naturally inject a question of
real party in
interest' into the discussion of Bancec's claim," but it attached
"no significance or validity to arguments based on that concept."
Id. at 425. It indicated that, when Bancec was dissolved,
the claim on the letter of credit was "the sort of asset, right and
claim peculiar to the banking business, and accordingly, probably
should be regarded as vested in Banco Nacional. . . ." Id.
at 424. Noting that the Court of Appeals, in Banco I, had
affirmed a ruling that Banco Nacional could be held liable by way
of setoff for the value of Citibank's seized Cuban assets, the
court concluded:
"[T]he devolution of [Bancec's] claim, however viewed, brings it
into the hands of the Ministry, or Banco Nacional, each an
alter ego of the Cuban Government. . . . [W]e accept the
present contention of plaintiff's counsel that the order of this
Court of July 6th [1961] permitting, but apparently not requiring,
the service of an amended complaint in which the Republic of Cuba
itself would appear as a party plaintiff in lieu of Bancec was
based on counsel's erroneous assumption, or an erroneous
interpretation of the laws and resolutions providing for the
devolution of the assets of Bancec. Assuming this to be true, it is
of no moment. The Ministry of Foreign Trade is no different than
the Government of which its minister is a member."
505 F. Supp. at 425 (emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 6]
In a footnote, the Court of Appeals referred to Bancec's
dissolution and listed its successors, but its opinion attached no
significance to that event. 658 F.2d at 916, n. 4.
[
Footnote 7]
In relevant part, 28 U.S.C. § 1607 provides:
"In any action brought by a foreign state . . . in a court of
the United States or of a State, the foreign state shall not be
accorded immunity with respect to any counterclaim --"
* * * *
"(c) to the extent that the counterclaim does not seek relief
exceeding in amount or differing in kind from that sought by the
foreign state."
As used in 28 U.S.C. § 1607, a "foreign state" includes an
"agency or instrumentality of a foreign state. . . ." 28 U.S.C. §
1603(a).
Section 1607(c) codifies our decision in
National City Bank
v. Republic of China, 348 U. S. 356
(1955).
See H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, p. 23 (1976).
[
Footnote 8]
See also id. at 28 (in deciding whether property in the
United States of a foreign state is immune from attachment and
execution under 28 U.S.C. 1610(a)(2), "[t]he courts will have to
determine whether property
in the custody of' an agency or
instrumentality is property `of' the agency or instrumentality,
whether property held by one agency should be deemed to be property
of another, [and] whether property held by an agency is property of
the foreign state").
[
Footnote 9]
See also Hadari, The Choice of National Law Applicable
to the Multinational Enterprise and the Nationality of Such
Enterprises, 1974 Duke L.J. 1, 15-19.
[
Footnote 10]
Cf. Anderson v. Abbott, 321 U.
S. 349,
321 U. S. 365
(1944) (declining to apply the law of the State of incorporation to
determine whether a banking corporation complied with the
requirements of federal banking laws because "no State may endow
its corporate creatures with the power to place themselves above
the Congress of the United States and defeat the federal policy
concerning national banks which Congress has announced").
[
Footnote 11]
Pointing out that 28 U.S.C. § 1606,
see supra at
462 U. S. 620,
contains language identical to the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA),
28 U.S.C. § 2674, Bancec also contends alternatively that the FSIA,
like the FTCA, requires application of the law of the forum State
-- here New York -- including its conflicts principles. We
disagree. Section 1606 provides that,
"[a]s to any claim for relief with respect to which a foreign
state is not entitled to immunity . . . , the foreign state shall
be liable in the same manner and to the same extent as a private
individual under like circumstances."
Thus, where state law provides a rule of liability governing
private individuals, the FSIA requires the application of that rule
to foreign states in like circumstances. The statute is silent,
however, concerning the rule governing the attribution of liability
as entities of a foreign state. In
Banco Nacional de Cuba v.
Sabbatino, 376 U. S. 398,
376 U. S. 425
(1964), this Court declined to apply the State of New York's act of
state doctrine in a diversity action between a United States
national and an instrumentality of a foreign state, concluding that
matters bearing on the Nation's foreign relations "should not be
left to divergent and perhaps parochial state interpretations."
When it enacted the FSIA, Congress expressly acknowledged "the
importance of developing a uniform body of law" concerning the
amenability of a foreign sovereign to suit in United States courts.
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1487, p. 32 (1976).
See Verlinden B.V. v.
Central Bank of Nigeria, 461 U. S. 480,
461 U. S. 489
(1983). In our view, these same considerations preclude the
application of New York law here.
[
Footnote 12]
Although this Court has never been required to consider the
separate status of a foreign instrumentality, it has considered the
legal status under federal law of United States Government
instrumentalities in a number of contexts, none of which are
relevant here.
See, e.g., Keifer & Keifer v. Reconstruction
Finance Corp., 306 U. S. 381
(1939) (determining that Congress did not intend to endow
corporations chartered by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation
with immunity from suit).
[
Footnote 13]
Friedmann, Government Enterprise: A Comparative Analysis, in
Government Enterprise: A Comparative Study 303, 306-307 (W.
Friedmann & J. Garner eds.1970).
See D. Coombes, State
Enterprise: Business or Politics? (1971) (United Kingdom);
Dallmayr, Public and Semi-Public Corporations in France, 26 Law
& Contemp.Prob. 755 (1961); J. Quigley, The Soviet Foreign
Trade Monopoly 48-49, 119-120 (1974); Seidman, Government-sponsored
Enterprise in the United States, in The New Political Economy 83,
85 (B. Smith ed.1975); Supranowitz, The Law of State-Owned
Enterprises in a Socialist State, 26 Law & Contemp.Prob. 794
(1961); United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
Organization, Management and Supervision of Public Enterprises in
Developing Countries 63-69 (1974) (hereinafter United Nations
Study); A. Walsh, The Public's Business: The Politics and Practices
of Government Corporations 313-321 (1978) (Europe).
[
Footnote 14]
Friedmann,
supra, at 334; United Nations Study
63-65.
[
Footnote 15]
President Franklin D. Roosevelt described the Tennessee Valley
Authority, perhaps the best known of the American public
corporations, as "a corporation clothed with the power of
Government but possessed of the flexibility and initiative of a
private enterprise." 77 Cong.Rec. 1423 (1933).
See also J.
Thurston, Government Proprietary Corporations in the
English-Speaking Countries 7 (1937).
[
Footnote 16]
Id. at 43-44. This principle has long been recognized
in courts in common law nations.
See
Bank of United States
v. Planters' Bank of Georgia, 9 Wheat. 904 (1824);
Tamlin v. Hannaford, [1950] K.B. 18, 24 (C.A.).
[
Footnote 17]
See Posner, The Rights of Creditors of Affiliated
Corporations, 43 U.Chi.L.Rev. 499, 516-517 (1976) (discussing
private corporations).
[
Footnote 18]
The British courts, applying principles we have not embraced as
universally acceptable, have shown marked reluctance to attribute
the acts of a foreign government to an instrumentality owned by
that government. In
I Congreso del Partido, [1983] A.C.
244, a decision discussing the so-called "restrictive" doctrine of
sovereign immunity and its application to three Cuban state-owned
enterprises, including Cubazucar, Lord Wilberforce described the
legal status of government instrumentalities:
"State-controlled enterprises, with legal personality, ability
to trade and to enter into contracts of private law, though wholly
subject to the control of their state, are a well-known feature of
the modern commercial scene. The distinction between them, and
their governing state, may appear artificial: but it is an accepted
distinction in the law of England and other states. Quite different
considerations apply to a state-controlled enterprise acting on
government directions on the one hand, and a state, exercising
sovereign functions, on the other."
Id. at 258 (citation omitted).
Later in his opinion, Lord Wilberforce rejected the contention
that commercial transactions entered into by state-owned
organizations could be attributed to the Cuban Government.
"The status of these organisations is familiar in our courts,
and it has never been held that the relevant state is in law
answerable for their actions."
Id. at 271.
See also Trendtex Trading Corp. v.
Central Bank of Nigeria, [1977] Q.B. 529, in which the Court
of Appeal ruled that the Central Bank of Nigeria was not an "alter
ego or organ" of the Nigerian Government for the purpose of
determining whether it could assert sovereign immunity.
Id. at 559.
In
C. Czarnikow Ltd. v. Rolimpex, [1979] A.C. 351, the
House of Lords affirmed a decision holding that Rolimpex, a Polish
state trading enterprise that sold Polish sugar overseas, could
successfully assert a defense of
force majeure in an
action for breach of a contract to sell sugar. Rolimpex had
defended on the ground that the Polish Government had instituted a
ban on the foreign sale of Polish sugar. Lord Wilberforce agreed
with the conclusion of the court below that, in the absence of
"clear evidence and definite findings" that the foreign government
took the action "purely in order to extricate a state enterprise
from contractual liability," the enterprise cannot be regarded as
an organ of the state. Rolimpex, he concluded,
"is not so closely connected with the government of Poland that
it is precluded from relying on the ban [on foreign sales] as
government intervention. . . ."
Id. at 364.
[
Footnote 19]
See 1 W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private
Corporations § 41 (rev.perm.ed.1983):
"[A] corporation will be looked upon as a legal entity as a
general rule, and until sufficient reason to the contrary appears;
but, when the notion of legal entity is used to defeat public
convenience, justify wrong, protect fraud, or defend crime, the law
will regard the corporation as an association of persons."
Id. at 389 (footnote omitted).
See generally
H. Henn, Handbook of the Law of Corporations § 146 (2d ed.1970); I.
Wormser, Disregard of the Corporate Fiction and Allied Corporation
Problems 42-85 (1927).
[
Footnote 20]
In
Case Concerning The Barcelona Traction, Light & Power
Co., 1970 I.C.J. 3, the International Court of Justice
acknowledged that, as a matter of international law, the separate
status of an incorporated entity may be disregarded in certain
exceptional circumstances:
"Forms of incorporation and their legal personality have
sometimes not been employed for the sole purposes they were
originally intended to serve; sometimes the corporate entity has
been unable to protect the rights of those who entrusted their
financial resources to it; thus, inevitably, there have arisen
dangers of abuse, as in the case of many other institutions of law.
Here, then, as elsewhere, the law, confronted with economic
realities, has had to provide protective measures and remedies in
the interests of those within the corporate entity as well as of
those outside who have dealings with it: the law has recognized
that the independent existence of the legal entity cannot be
treated as an absolute. It is in this context that the process of
'lifting the corporate veil' or 'disregarding the legal entity' has
been found justified and equitable in certain circumstances or for
certain purposes. The wealth of practice already accumulated on the
subject in municipal law indicates that the veil is lifted, for
instance, to prevent the misuse of the privileges of legal
personality, as in certain cases of fraud or malfeasance, to
protect third persons such as a creditor or purchaser, or to
prevent the evasion of legal requirements or of obligations."
* * * *
"In accordance with the principle expounded above, the process
of lifting the veil, being an exceptional one admitted by municipal
law in respect of an institution of its own making, is equally
admissible to play a similar role in international law. . . ."
Id. at 38-39. On the application of these principles by
European courts,
see Cohn & Simitis, "Lifting the
Veil" in the Company Laws of the European Continent, 12 Int'l &
Comp.L.Q. 189 (1963); Hadari, The Structure of the Private
Multinational Enterprise, 71 Mich.L.Rev. 729, 771, n. 260
(1973).
[
Footnote 21]
Trustees of Dartmouth College
v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518,
17 U. S. 636
(1819).
[
Footnote 22]
Pointing to the parties' failure to seek findings of fact in the
District Court concerning Bancec's dissolution and its aftermath,
Bancec contends that the District Court's order denying its motion
to substitute Cubazucar as plaintiff precludes further
consideration of the effect of the dissolution. While it is true
that the District Court did not hear evidence concerning which
agency or instrumentality of the Cuban Government, under Cuban law,
succeeded to Bancec's claim against Citibank on the letter of
credit, resolution of that question has no bearing on our inquiry.
We rely only on the fact that Bancec was dissolved by the Cuban
Government and its assets transferred to entities that may be held
liable on Citibank's counterclaim -- undisputed facts readily
ascertainable from the statutes and orders offered in the District
Court by Bancec in support of its motion to substitute
Cubazucar.
[
Footnote 23]
Law No. 930, the law dissolving Bancec, contains the following
recitations:
"WHEREAS, the measures adopted by the Revolutionary Government
in pursuance of the Program of the Revolution have resulted, within
a short time, in profound social changes and considerable
institutional transformations of the national economy."
"WHEREAS, among these institutional transformations there is one
which is specially significant due to its transcendence in the
economic and financial fields, which is the nationalization of the
banks ordered by Law No. 891, of October 13, 1960, by virtue of
which the banking functions will hereafter be the exclusive
province of the Cuban Government."
"WHEREAS, the consolidation and the operation of the economic
and social conquests of the Revolution require the restructuration
into a sole and centralized banking system, operated by the State,
constituted by the [Banco Nacional], which will foster the
development and stimulation of all productive activities of the
Nation through the accumulation of the financial resources thereof,
and their most economic and reasonable utilization."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 14d-15d.
[
Footnote 24]
The parties agree that, under the Cuban Assets Control
Regulations, 31 CFR pt. 515 (1982), any judgment entered in favor
of an instrumentality of the Cuban Government would be frozen
pending settlement of claims between the United States and
Cuba.
[
Footnote 25]
See also First National City Bank v. Banco Nacional de
Cuba, 406 U.S. at
406 U. S.
770-773 (Douglas, J., concurring in result);
Federal
Republic of Germany v. Elicofon, 358 F.
Supp. 747 (EDNY 1972),
aff'd, 478 F.2d 231 (CA2 1973),
cert. denied, 415 U.S. 931 (1974). In
Elicofon,
the District Court held that a separate juridical entity of a
foreign state not recognized by the United States may not appear in
a United States court. A contrary holding, the court reasoned,
"would permit nonrecognized governments to use our courts at will
by creating
juridical entities' whenever the need arises." 358
F. Supp. at 757.
[
Footnote 26]
See Banco I, 478 F.2d at 194.
[
Footnote 27]
The District Court adopted, and both Citibank and the Solicitor
General urge upon the Court, a standard in which the determination
whether or not to give effect to the separate juridical status of a
government instrumentality turns in part on whether the
instrumentality in question performed a "governmental function." We
decline to adopt such a standard in this case, as our decision is
based on other grounds. We do observe that the concept of a "usual"
or a "proper" governmental function changes over time and varies
from nation to nation.
Cf. New York v. United States,
326 U. S. 572,
326 U. S. 580
(1946) (opinion of Frankfurter, J.) ("To rest the federal taxing
power on what is
normally' conducted by private enterprise in
contradiction to the `usual' governmental functions is too shifting
a basis for determining constitutional power and too entangled in
expediency to serve as a dependable legal criterion"); id.
at 326 U. S. 586
(Stone, C.J., concurring); id. at 326 U. S. 591
(Douglas, J., dissenting). See also Friedmann, The Legal
Status and Organization of the Public Corporation, 16 Law &
Contemp.Prob. 576, 589-591 (1951).
[
Footnote 28]
Bancec does not suggest, and we do not believe, that the act of
state doctrine,
see, e.g., Banco Nacional de Cuba v.
Sabbatino, 376 U. S. 398
(1964), precludes this Court from determining whether Citibank may
set off the value of its seized Cuban assets against Bancec's
claim. Bancec does contend that the doctrine prohibits this Court
from inquiring into the motives of the Cuban Government for
incorporating Bancec. Brief for Respondent 16-18. We need not reach
this contention, however, because our conclusion does not rest on
any such assessment.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE BLACKMUN
join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Today the Court correctly rejects the contention that American
courts should readily "pierce the corporate veils" of separate
juridical entities established by foreign governments to perform
governmental functions. Accordingly, I join Parts I, II, III-A, and
III-B of the Court's opinion. But I respectfully dissent from
462 U. S. in
which the Court endeavors to apply the general principles it has
enunciated. Instead, I would vacate the judgment and remand the
case to the Court of Appeals for further proceedings.
As the Court acknowledges, the evidence presented to the
District Court did not focus on the factual issue that the Court
now determines to be dispositive. Only a single witness testified
on matters relating to Bancec's legal status and operational
autonomy. The record before the District Court also included
English translations of various Cuban statutes and resolutions, but
there was no expert testimony on the
Page 462 U. S. 635
significance of those foreign legal documents. Finally, as the
Court notes, the record includes a July, 1961, stipulation of the
parties and a May, 1975, affidavit by counsel for respondent.
Ante at
462 U. S.
616-617, n. 3. It is clear to me that the materials of
record that have been made available to this Court are not
sufficient to enable us to determine the rights of the parties.
The Court relies heavily on the District Court's statement that
"the devolution of [Bancec's] claim, however viewed, brings it into
the hands of the Ministry [of Foreign Trade], or Banco Nacional."
But that statement should not be given dispositive significance,
for the District Court made no inquiry into the capacity in which
either entity might have taken Bancec's claim. If the Ministry of
Foreign Trade held the claim on its own account, arguably the Cuban
Government could be subject to Citibank's setoff. But it is clear
that the Ministry held the claim for six days at most, during the
interval between the promulgation of Laws No. 930 and No. 934 on
February 23, 1961, and the issuance of Resolution No. 1 on March 1.
It is thus possible that these legal documents reflected a single,
integrated plan of corporate reorganization carried out over a
6-day period, which resulted in the vesting of specified assets of
Bancec in a new, juridically autonomous corporation, Empresa.
[
Footnote 2/1] Respondent
argues
Page 462 U. S. 636
that the Ministry played the role of a trustee,
"entrusted and legally bound to transfer Bancec's assets to the
new empresa [foreign trade enterprise]. . . . The Republic having
acted as a trustee, there could be no counterclaim based upon its
acts in an individual capacity."
Brief for Respondent 57.
Of course, the Court may have reached a correct assessment of
the transactions at issue. But I continue to believe that the Court
should not decide factual issues that can be resolved more
accurately and effectively by other federal judges, particularly
when the record presented to this Court is so sparse and
uninformative. [
Footnote 2/2]
[
Footnote 2/1]
Law No. 930 provided, in part, that Bancec's "trade functions
will be assumed by the foreign trade enterprises or houses of the
Ministry of Foreign Trade," App. to Pet. for Cert. 16d; App. 104.
Law No. 934, correspondingly, stated:
"All the functions of a mercantile character heretofore assigned
to said Foreign Trade Bank of Cuba are hereby transferred and
vested in the foreign trade enterprises or houses set up hereunder,
which are subrogated to the rights and obligations of said former
Bank in pursuance of the assignment of those functions ordered by
the Minister."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 24d. The preamble of Resolution No. 1 of
1961, issued on March 1, 1961, explained that Law No. 934 had
provided
"that all functions of a commercial nature that were assigned to
the former Cuban Bank for Foreign Trade are attributed to the
enterprises or foreign trade houses which are subrogated in the
rights and obligations of said Bank."
Nothing in the affidavit filed by respondent in May, 1975,
elucidates the precise nature of these transactions, or explains
how Bancec's former trading sanctions were exercised during the
6-day interval. App. 132-137.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Nor do I agree that a contrary result "would cause such an
injustice."
Ante at
462 U. S. 632.
Petitioner is only one of many American citizens whose property was
nationalized by the Cuban Government. It seeks to minimize its
losses by retaining $193,280.30 that a purchaser of Cuban sugar had
deposited with it for the purpose of paying for the merchandise,
which was delivered in due course. Having won this lawsuit,
petitioner will simply retain that money. If petitioner's
contentions in this case had been rejected, the money would be
placed in a fund comprised of frozen Cuban assets, to be
distributed equitably among all the American victims of Cuban
nationalizations.
Ante at
462 U. S. 632,
n. 24. Even though petitioner has suffered a serious injustice at
the hands of the Cuban Government, no special equities militate in
favor of giving this petitioner a preference over all other victims
simply because of its participation in a discrete, completed,
commercial transaction involving the sale of a load of Cuban
sugar.