EIG Energy Fund XIV, L.P. v. Petroleo Brasileiro, S.A.
Opinion
Karen LeCraft Henderson, Circuit Judge:
In 2012 and 2013, an American investment fund sank $221 million into what seemed like a sure bet: buying equipment to extract a massive, newly discovered reserve of undersea crude oil off the coast of Brazil. Brazilian politicians and corporate executives also saw an opportunity and set up a scheme to make illegal use-including payment of bribes and kickbacks-of investors' money. The eventual revelation of the corruption produced the largest political scandal in modern Brazilian history. In light of the scandal, banks were no longer willing to make loans for the oil-extraction project, which collapsed, taking the American fund's money with it.
Behind the project-and at least some of the corruption-was Petroleo Brasileiro, S.A. (Petrobras), Brazil's state-owned oil company. The jurisdiction of U.S. courts
over claims against foreign states and their "instrumentalities," like Petrobras, is limited by the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA),
I. Background
In 2006 Petrobras discovered an estimated 50 billion barrels of undersea oil off the coast of Brazil. 1 Although costly to extract, the sheer size of the deposit was tantalizing not only to the Brazilian state-which had a direct economic interest in the find through Petrobras, the state-owned oil company-but to investors around the world. Petrobras soon formed a foreign-investment venture to build 28 specialized "drill ships" at a cost of more than $700 million apiece. The business plan for the venture, named Sete Brasil Participações, S.A. (Sete), called for equity investment of around 7.9 billion Brazilian Reais ($2.19 billion at today's exchange rates), with approximately 4.6 per cent of that coming from Petrobras itself. The remainder of the ships' cost was to be debt-financed through third-party lenders.
To attract foreign investment, Brazilian law provides tax incentives through special partnerships known as Fundos de Investimento em Participações, or FIPs. Petrobras created FIP Sondas to facilitate foreign investment in the Sete project. Petrobras specifically targeted U.S. investors for Sete, Joint Appendix (JA) 25, including EIG Management Company, LLC (EIG), a Washington, D.C.-based private equity fund. Petrobras disseminated in the United States, including to EIG, a presentation called "The Drilling Rigs Project: Petrobras'[s] Strategy for its Successful Implementation." JA26. The presentation contained a "Cautionary Statement for US Investors," referencing U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules governing oil and gas investment. JA26-27. Another document disseminated by Petrobras in the United States, titled "Pre-Salt Oil Rigs Project," "discussed the Sete investment premise and touted that Sete would have 'management with extensive experience in the market.' " JA27-28. A third document "promoting investment in Sete" was sent to EIG by a putative Petrobras agent nearly a year after the first two documents circulated. JA28.
Petrobras and Sete executives also met with EIG executives in the United States at least twice. At one meeting, in Houston, Texas, Sete CEO João Carlos de Medeiro Ferraz (Ferraz) "offered rosy descriptions of Sete and its business prospects." JA29. At another, in Washington, D.C., Ferraz addressed a conference of EIG employees and investors and "informed [them] that Sete expected drillship charter revenue 'of almost $90 billion [in] the next 20 years.' " JA30 (second alteration in original). EIG employees twice traveled to Brazil to meet with Petrobras representatives, and Petrobras or Sete corresponded extensively with EIG leading up to EIG's investment, through written memoranda, presentations, telephone calls and emails.
EIG ultimately invested $221 million in FIP Sondas between August 2012 and May 2013, on behalf of eight funds under its management. Six of the eight EIG funds were based in Delaware but the other two were based in the Cayman Islands, which Brazil has designated as a tax haven. Because investors from designated tax havens are ineligible for the tax incentives provided FIP investments, EIG formed EIG Sete Parent SARL (EIG Sete Parent), a Luxembourg corporation, which in turn formed EIG Sete Holdings SARL (EIG Sete Holdings), also a Luxembourg corporation. EIG's investment in Sete therefore flowed from the eight funds to EIG Sete Parent, to EIG Sete Holdings, to FIP Sondas and, ultimately, to Sete itself.
Brazilian prosecutors' "Operation Car Wash" became public in 2014. The multi-year investigation uncovered extensive corruption in the Brazilian government, including Petrobras, and in the private-sector oil industry, including Sete. To date, prosecutors have obtained 93 convictions against officials engaged in a bribery and kickback scheme going back to at least 1997. Among the guilty were senior executives at Sete, including Ferraz, EIG's primary contact at Petrobras and Sete. A 30-year employee of Petrobras, Ferraz became the chief executive of Sete sometime before the spring of 2013, when he met with EIG in Houston. Ferraz was EIG's primary contact regarding its Sete investment, first, while he was at Petrobras and, later, when he was Sete CEO. In testimony given to an investigative panel of the Brazilian Congress in 2015, Ferraz explained that "[t]he capital market in the United States, in particular, loves [Sete's] type of business. They very much like the prospects of financing drilling rigs, despite the risks involved." JA233. And so, Ferraz testified, "[t]here was great market interest [in Sete], particularly among US private equity groups" such as EIG. JA218. Another Sete executive, chief operating officer Pedro José Barusco, testified to the Brazilian Congress that he and Ferraz had taken "the initiative to create Sete Brasil" and that "the establishment of bribe amounts ... was a continuity [ sic ] of what happened in Petrobras." JA23, JA31 (compl.).
As the scandal of Operation Car Wash enveloped Sete and Petrobras, skittish lenders withdrew their support from the drill ships project. Because the project was highly leveraged by design, the loss of debt financing made it impossible to proceed with construction. Facing insolvency, Sete declared bankruptcy. Investors, including EIG, were left with nothing but worthless shares.
EIG sued Petrobras and the other defendants in district court, alleging counts of fraud, aiding and abetting fraud and civil conspiracy to commit fraud. 2 Petrobras moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1). 3 Petrobras asserted that, as an instrumentality of the Brazilian state, it is immune from suit on EIG's claims under the FSIA.
The district court denied Petrobras's motion to dismiss, concluding that EIG's claims fall within the FSIA's commercial activity exception to foreign-state immunity.
EIG Energy Fund XIV, L.P. v. Petróleo Brasileiro S.A.
,
The district court reasoned that EIG's injury "occurred at the time Petrobras successfully induced [it] to invest in the Petrobras-Sete project," which injury "occurred, at least in part, in the United States."
Moreover, the district court found that "Petrobras did not merely establish Sete" but " 'installed its own former employees'-including the architects of Sete and the bribe scheme, Ferraz and Barusco-for the purpose of continuing the corrupt enterprise."
Petrobras timely appealed the denial of its motion under Rule 12(b)(1), invoking our interlocutory appellate jurisdiction under
II. Analysis
A. Standard of review and burden of proof
"The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act 'provides the sole basis for obtaining jurisdiction over a foreign state in the courts of this country.' "
Saudi Arabia v. Nelson
,
"Once the defendant has asserted the jurisdictional defense of immunity under the FSIA, the court's focus shifts to the exceptions to immunity" provided in the Act.
Phx. Consulting Inc. v. Republic of Angola
,
If an FSIA defendant contests only the legal sufficiency of the plaintiff's jurisdictional claims, our standard of review is akin to that applied under Rule 12(b)(6), under which dismissal is warranted if no plausible inferences can be drawn from the facts alleged that, if proven, would provide grounds for relief.
Price
, 294 F.3d at 93 (citing
Browning v. Clinton
,
B. Petrobras's alleged fraud caused a direct effect in the United States
Petrobras is subject to the jurisdiction of U.S. courts if it "caused a direct effect in the United States."
A "direct" effect is one that "follows 'as an immediate consequence of the defendant's ... activity.' "
We believe EIG has made out a
prima facie
case for jurisdiction by alleging that Petrobras specifically targeted U.S. investors for Sete, JA25; that Petrobras intentionally concealed the ongoing fraud at Petrobras and at Sete, JA26-27; and that money invested in Sete was used to pay bribes and kickbacks, JA32-34.
See
Atlantica Holdings, Inc. v. Sovereign Wealth Fund Samruk-Kazyna JSC
,
Petrobras raises two defenses to jurisdiction: that it did not cause EIG's injuries because intervening acts-third-party lenders' decisions not to lend to Sete-"broke the chain of causation," Appellant's Br. 31-35; and that Petrobras's alleged fraud did not cause a direct effect in the United States because EIG's injury occurred, again, not in the United States, its investment having been funneled through corporate subsidiaries in Luxembourg, id. at 20-31. Both arguments fail.
1. No intervening act "broke the chain of causation"
Petrobras's "chain of causation" argument fails for two reasons. First, EIG
was injured by Petrobras's alleged fraud even before the lenders withdrew; additionally, Petrobras's argument would protect it from liability even for the portion of EIG's damages incurred before the lenders withdrew. Petrobras effectively proposes a highly restrictive causation requirement under which contributing factors readily and predictably caused by the defendant's same act would preclude jurisdiction.
We rejected a similar argument in
Kilburn
,
Libya argued that it was not the "but-for" cause of Kilburn's kidnapping, torture and killing.
Kilburn
,
Second-and crucially-the lenders withdrew for the same reason that EIG's investment became worthless: Petrobras's alleged fraud plainly made Sete unsuitable for investment. The lenders' withdrawal and EIG's tanking investment are, in other words, two "effects" with the same cause. The lenders' withdrawal was not an intervening cause in any legally significant way because that action itself was caused by the same alleged fraud that caused EIG's injury.
EIG's allegation that Petrobras committed fraud distinguishes this case from a Second Circuit case Petrobras relies on. In
Virtual Countries, Inc. v. Republic of South Africa
,
Here, by contrast, EIG's alleged injury-being fraudulently induced to invest in Sete-occurred well before Operation Car Wash came to light, and certainly before the lenders reacted to the revelation of Petrobras's alleged fraud. At this preliminary stage of the litigation, EIG need not precisely measure the amount of its damages. It is enough that Petrobras's alleged fraud necessarily made EIG's investment less valuable, even if only to the extent that EIG's money was used to pay bribes and kickbacks rather than to pay shipbuilders. 5 The lenders' withdrawal did not cause EIG's alleged damages, it simply confirmed them.
2. The path of EIG's losses through Luxembourg is irrelevant
Petrobras's remaining argument is that any effect its actions had in the United States was mediated through Luxembourg-where EIG created corporate subsidiaries through which it funneled its Sete investment-and therefore was not "direct." Petrobras, EIG and the district court have all cast this as a debate over the locus of Petrobras's alleged tort, which we have previously identified as one factor in determining whether a tort causes a direct effect in the United States.
See
Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc. v. Islamic Republic of Iran
,
To our knowledge no court has held otherwise. In
Atlantica
,
Odhiambo v. Republic of Kenya
,
For the same reason, we are untroubled by the Second Circuit's assertion in
Antares Aircraft
that "some financial loss from a foreign tort cannot, standing alone, suffice to trigger the exception,"
Neither the Second Circuit precedent nor-more on point-our own Bell Helicopter and Odhiambo nor any other case on which Petrobras relies holds that a tort's foreign locus, without more, means that it causes no direct effect in the United States. Assuming arguendo that Luxembourg was the locus of Petrobras's alleged fraud, we must nevertheless determine whether the alleged fraud "cause[d] a direct effect in the United States." The key to Petrobras's theory that EIG was injured (if at all) in Luxembourg is that EIG "booked the loss" from its Sete investment in Luxembourg and only somewhere down the line was that loss felt, indirectly, in the United States. Three flaws doom Petrobras's argument.
First, the legal significance of corporate form in an FSIA action is not as settled as Petrobras suggests. On this point Petrobras's reliance on
Dole Food Co. v. Patrickson
,
The second flaw in Petrobras's focus on the Luxembourg subsidiaries is that it requires an unrecognized identity between corporate citizenship and the locus of an investment loss. In
Weltover
, the Supreme Court expressly rejected the argument that a plaintiff's foreign citizenship necessarily determines FSIA jurisdiction.
The third defect in Petrobras's "locus" argument is that, although EIG may have "booked the loss" in Luxembourg-a questionable proposition as there is no record support that EIG Luxembourg maintains any Luxembourg accounts as it has no employees there and receives its mail at a U.S. address - presumably EIG would have booked a loss in the same amount in the United States.
See
Fin. Accounting Standards Board,
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157: Fair Value Measurements
(Sept. 2006) (requiring "mark-to-market" accounting reflecting fair market value of investment assets). Petrobras cannot avoid U.S. jurisdiction because the effects of its fraud ricocheted halfway around the globe before coming to rest in EIG's Washington, D.C. office. In
Weltover
, the Supreme Court upheld FSIA jurisdiction even though the only connection between the defendant's actions and the United States was that "[m]oney that was supposed to have been delivered to a New York bank for deposit was not forthcoming."
Weltover
,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Petrobras's commercial activity in Brazil caused a direct effect in the United States, including a direct effect on EIG. Accordingly, Petrobras is not immune from EIG's suit and the district court's order denying dismissal is affirmed.
So ordered.
Sentelle, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting:
While I respect my colleagues' careful and well-constructed opinion, I nonetheless remain unconvinced that the courts of the United States have jurisdiction over this matter under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities
Act.
As the majority correctly reasons, Petrobras, an instrumentality of the government of Brazil, " 'is presumptively immune from the jurisdiction of United States courts; unless a specified exception applies, a federal court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over a claim against a foreign state.' " Maj. Op. at 344 (quoting
Saudi Arabia v. Nelson
,
As the majority notes, the EIG Funds formed EIG Sete Parent SARL as a Luxembourg corporation. The Luxembourg corporation formed EIG Sete Holdings SARL, also a Luxembourg corporation. EIG Sete Holdings invested $221 million in FIP Sondas, a Brazilian partnership, which ultimately invested the funds in Petrobras. Thus, the investments, the loss of which constituted the harmful effects of the failure of Sete, flowed from the EIG Funds to EIG Sete Parent, to EIG Sete Holdings, to FIP Sondas, and only ultimately to Sete itself. The effects in the United States of the alleged tortious conduct in Brazil, therefore, were at least three steps removed. This does not seem to comport with normal understandings of "direct," which is defined as "stemming immediately from a source." Direct , MERRIAM-WEBSTERDICTIONARY , http://www.MerriamWebster.com/dictionary/direct (last visited June 19, 2018).
None of the cases cited by appellee or relied upon by the majority provide a basis for concluding that those effects were "direct" in the United States.
Odhiambo v. Republic of Kenya
,
Similarly, as the majority again notes, the Second Circuit's assertion that "some financial loss from a foreign tort cannot, standing alone, suffice to trigger the exception,"
Antares Aircraft, L.P. v. Fed. Rep. of Nigeria
,
Neither the cases discussed above, nor any of the other cases relied upon by the majority, mandate a conclusion that a loss suffered by a Luxembourg entity, owned by another Luxembourg entity, in turn owned by United States entities, constitutes a direct effect in the United States. Implications of a holding to that effect seem to me to be inconsistent with Congress's express language in the relevant exception. Where do we cut off the chain between an effect and a direct effect to give meaning to the congressional expression? If the plaintiff in this case were not EIG but a shareholder of EIG, would that shareholder's loss be direct? I think not. It seems unlikely that Congress would have included as plain a word as "direct" in the creation of an exception to foreign sovereign immunity unless it had more apparent content than the majority's interpretation would allow.
In the end, for the reasons set forth above, I respectfully dissent.
The factual background is derived from the allegations of the plaintiffs' first amended complaint, which we accept as true in reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss.
See
Price v. Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
,
Because Sete is not an "instrumentality" of the Brazilian government, it would not be immune from suit under the FSIA.
See
Dole Food Co. v. Patrickson
,
Petrobras also moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted but the district court's denial of Petrobras's motion on that ground is not before us in this interlocutory appeal.
Since
Kilburn
was decided, the terrorism exception has been relocated from
Federal securities law, by analogy, allows a plaintiff to recover damages for securities that are devalued as a result of the defendant's fraudulent statements or omissions, but only as measured by "the depreciation in value of such security resulting from such [statement or omission] as to which [the defendant's] liability is asserted." 15 U.S.C. § 77k(e). This "loss-causation rule" ensures that securities law does not become an insurance policy to protect against bad investments. But the law also provides that the market's reaction to corporate fraud is a sound measure of loss causation.
See
Reference
- Full Case Name
- EIG ENERGY FUND XIV, L.P., Et Al., Appellees v. PETROLEO BRASILEIRO, S.A., Appellant
- Cited By
- 25 cases
- Status
- Published