Solicitor general files invitation briefs

U.S. Solicitor General Noel Francisco recently filed a bevy of briefs in response to the Supreme Court’s “invitations” to provide the justices with the federal government’s views on cases in which a petition for certiorari has been filed. If – as they overwhelmingly do – the justices follow the government’s recommendations, these petitions may not lead to many new cases for the court’s merits docket next term, because the government has recommended that review on the merits be granted in only two cases.

The government recommended a grant in Thole v. U.S. Bank, a case in which the justices have been asked to decide whether a participant in a pension fund can sue the fund managers when he has not actually suffered any financial injury. The plan participants in this case have thus far received all of their pension payments, but in 2014 they filed a lawsuit in which they alleged that the managers of the pension plan had pursued a too-risky investment strategy that led to $748 million in losses; the sponsors of the fund then made a large contribution to the plan, leaving it overfunded.

The district court dismissed the case. It ruled that there was no longer a live controversy because the plan was now overfunded. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit upheld the lower court’s dismissal of the case. It ruled that the federal laws governing pension plans don’t allow participants to bring a lawsuit alleging that managers have violated their duties when the plan is in fact overfunded. It reasoned that plan participants are not, in such a scenario, the kind of plaintiffs whom Congress intended to allow to sue.

The plan participants went to the Supreme Court, which last fall asked the federal government to weigh in. The government’s brief urged the justices to grant review, describing the question presented by the case as an “important” one “that arises with some frequency.” And if review is granted, the government continued, the justices should also ask the plan participants and the defendants (a bank and its officials) to address whether the court of appeals should have decided whether the participants have a legal right to sue under Article III of the Constitution, which requires a “concrete” injury. The petition has been distributed for consideration at the justices’ June 20 conference.

The solicitor general recommended that review be granted – at least in part – in Opati v. Sudan, a case that stems from the 1998 attacks by al Qaeda on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed over 200 people and injured over 1,000 more.

The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act generally bars lawsuits against foreign countries in U.S. courts unless one of a few narrow exceptions applies. One of those exceptions, known as the “terrorism exception,” was originally enacted in 1996 and allows lawsuits against countries designated as state sponsors of terrorism. After the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled in 2004 that the exception only waived a foreign country’s immunity from suit, and did not provide the basis for a lawsuit, Congress in 2008 enacted a new terrorism exception, which specifically created a cause of action. Although the FSIA normally prohibits punitive damages, the 2008 amendments specifically allowed them; the 2008 amendments also indicated that any cases brought under the earlier version of the exception that were still pending should be treated as if they had been filed under the new version.

The case before the Supreme Court was filed by victims of the 1998 attacks and their family members against Sudan, which was designated a state sponsor of terrorism in 1993. A federal court awarded them over $10 billion in damages, including approximately $4 billion in punitive damages. On appeal, the D.C. Circuit vacated the punitive damages award, explaining that the current version of the terrorism exception does not allow punitive damages for conduct that occurred before this version was enacted.

Last year the plaintiffs asked the Supreme Court to review the D.C. Circuit’s decision vacating the punitive damages award; the justices then asked the federal government to weigh in. In a brief filed late last month, the federal government recommended that the justices grant review to decide whether the current version of the terrorism exception allows punitive damages for pre-enactment conduct. The government explained that the D.C. Circuit’s decision to the contrary was wrong and that the issue is an important one that “affects, in these cases alone, billions of dollars in punitive damages awarded to approximately 150 U.S. government employees and contractors murdered or injured in the line of duty who were targeted because of their service to the United States.”

However, the government recommended that the court decline to review another issue presented by the plaintiffs’ petition, involving whether the D.C. Circuit should have taken up the question at all when it was not an issue on which the court’s jurisdiction hinged.

The government also recommended a denial in Sudan v. Opati, a cross-petition in which the Sudanese government had asked the justices to take up a variety of questions decided against it in the lower court, including whether – for purposes of the terrorism exception – the term “extrajudicial killing” is limited to summary executions by state actors and whether the terrorism exception withdraws immunity for emotional-distress claims brought by victims’ family members.

The solicitor general made the same recommendation in Sudan v. Owens. In this petition, the Sudanese government had asked the justices to review the D.C. Circuit’s rulings on whether the plaintiffs had shown that federal courts had the power to hear the case under the terrorism exception, as well as the lower court’s holding on when injuries are caused by a defendant’s actions for purposes of the terrorism exception. The federal government urged the Supreme Court to deny review, telling the justices that there is no conflict between the D.C. Circuit’s decision and the rulings of either the Supreme Court or other courts of appeals; moreover, the government added, the D.C. Circuit’s analysis “does not warrant review based on foreign-relations concerns.”

The government’s recommendation in Poarch Band of Creek Indians v. Wilkes, involving tribal immunity, was more nuanced. The case arises from a 2015 car accident: Barbie Spraggins, an employee of an Alabama casino owned by the Poarch Band, was driving a casino pick-up truck when she hit a car driven by Casey Wilkes. Both Wilkes and Alexander Russell, a passenger in the car, were seriously injured; Wilkes suffered a traumatic brain injury. When Wilkes and Russell sued the tribe and the casino in state court, the Alabama Supreme Court allowed the lawsuit to go forward, holding that nonmembers can sue tribes for their injuries.

The tribe asked the Supreme Court to review the state court’s decision, and last fall the justices asked the U.S. solicitor general to weigh in. In a brief filed at the end of May, the government acknowledged that what it described as the Alabama Supreme Court’s “novel holding” was “flatly inconsistent” with the U.S. Supreme Court’s tribal-immunity cases.

However, the government added, the justices should not grant review at this time. First, it suggested, the tribe’s case is not the right one in which to consider whether the Supreme Court should continue to adhere to its prior rulings on tribal sovereign immunity. But more importantly, the government continued, the tribe is considering a change to its tribal code that would waive the tribe’s immunity for lawsuits like Wilkes and Russell’s. If that change is adopted, the government explained, “which could occur as early as June 6, 2019, the Court should grant the petition,” vacate the Alabama Supreme Court’s judgment, and send the case back to the state courts for further proceedings in light of the change to the law. But if the change is not made, the government argued, the justices should simply deny review, because even if the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision is wrong, it is an “outlier.”

The solicitor general also recommended that review be denied in several more cases:

This post was originally published at Howe on the Court.

Posted in: Cases in the Pipeline

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