U.S. Supreme Court Finds President's Waiver of Terrorism Exception to Iraq's Sovereign Immunity Bars Pending Cases

2009 ◽  
Vol 103 (3) ◽  
pp. 582-584
Author(s):  
John R. Crook
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Preis

Time and again, the U.S. Supreme Court has declared that the federal cause of action is "analytically distinct" from rights, remedies, and jurisdiction. Yet, just pages away in the U.S. Reports are other cases in which rights, remedies, and jurisdiction all hinge on the existence of a cause of action. What, then, is the proper relationship between these concepts?The goal of this Article is to articulate that relationship. This Article traces the history of the cause of action from eighteenth-century England to its modem usage in the federal courts. This history demonstrates that the federal cause of action is largely distinct from rights, closely related to (and sometimes synonymous with) remedies, and distinct from jurisdiction except where Congress instructs otherwise or the case implicates sovereign immunity. Sorting out these relationships provides several benefits, including refining the doctrine of prudential standing, clarifying the grounds for federal jurisdiction, and dispelling claims that Congress lacks power over certain causes of action.


2020 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. 486-493
Author(s):  
Cristina M. Mariottini

With Judgment No. 21995/2019 (the Judgment), the Italian Court of Cassation (Court of Cassation) once again tackled the limits of sovereign immunity with regard to crimes against humanity (para. 7). The Judgment is part of litigation originating in Greece with the Leivadia Tribunal's 1997 Distomo decision, confirmed in 2000 by the Areopago (Hellenic Supreme Court), which ordered Germany to pay compensation and legal costs of approximately 50 million euros to the relatives of 218 victims of the Distomo massacre committed by the German military in 1944. In this Judgment, the Court of Cassation addressed whether sovereign immunity blocked the seizure of German assets located in Italy as part of that compensation order. The Court of Cassation's decision is noteworthy because it takes the discussion on sovereign immunity from jurisdiction and crimes against humanity one step further by addressing, in particular, the question of compensation and attachment of claims and rights held by the debtor against third parties.


2006 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 908-910
Author(s):  
Daniel Bodansky ◽  
Colin P. A. Jones

Case No. 1231 [2003]. 1416 Saibansho JIHŌ 6. At <http://www.courts.go.jp>.Saikō Saibansho (Supreme Court of Japan), July 21, 2006.In a decision issued on July 21, 2006, a five-justice panel of the Supreme Court of Japan effectively overturned seventy-eight years of Japanese jurisprudence on foreign sovereign immunity. The holding in Case No. 1231 [2003] serves to limit the ability of foreign governmenrs to claim immunity from the civil jurisdiction of Japanese courts in cases involving commercial and other activities not of a sovereign character.The case came before the Supreme Court as an appeal from a decision of the Tokyo High Court. The two companies bringing the appeal had sued Pakistan for the nonpayment of amounts owing under a contract entered into between appellants and another company for the purchase of computer equipment.3 Appellants argued that the company purchasing the computers was connected to the Pakistani defense ministry and was therefore an agent of the Pakstani government. Pakistan claimed that it was immune from suit under the doctrine of foreign sovereign immunity. It also denied that the contracting company was its agent.


1931 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-96
Author(s):  
A. H. Feller

To the ever-increasing confusion of doctrine which makes up the law of sovereign immunity, the courts of the United States have added procedural complications which, though not as weighty, are nevertheless as puzzling as any of the substantive rules. Of recent years the United States Supreme Court and the lower Federal courts have often had occasion to consider the method whereby the question of immunity was raised. The result has been the evolution of a set of rules so vaguely defined in the decisions as to offer little guidance to the bench and bar, and withal of interest to the scholar who finds that these rules exist in no other judicial system.


1997 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 803-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rotem M. Giladi

The case of the Canadian ambassador's residence has been the subject of several court decisions at various instances in Israel. These decisions (as well as others relating to the doctrine of sovereign immunity) have been reviewed in former issues of this section. On June 3, 1997, the Supreme Court, in its appellate jurisdiction, gave its judgment in this case and delineated the application of the international law doctrine of sovereign immunity in Israeli law. In a different case decided on the last day of 1996, the Tel-Aviv District Court was required to rule on the applicability of this doctrine to a civil suit brought against the government of the United States of America. This District Court decision now needs to be examined in light of the recent ruling of the Supreme Court in theEdelsoncase.


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