{"title":"新泰特信函:外国官员豁免和法定修正的案例","authors":"Luke Ryan","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.2716195","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Plaintiffs sometimes bring civil lawsuits in U.S. federal courts against officials or ex-officials of foreign governments accused of committing atrocities abroad. In these types of cases, the foreign individuals will almost certainly invoke the affirmative defense of foreign official immunity. In the 2010 decision, Samantar v. Yousuf, the Supreme Court unanimously held that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) — a 1976 statute governing the immunity of foreign states — did not control judicial determination of a foreign individual’s request for immunity. Instead, the Court said that foreign officials may be entitled to immunity as a matter of federal common law. Because of the sensitive foreign policy implications of these types of cases, the executive branch — specifically the State Department — has aggressively asserted control over all foreign official immunity requests. In 2012, in the so-called “Rosenberg Statement” and “Koh Letter,” the Justice Department and Legal Adviser to the State Department, Harold Hongju Koh, declared that (1) federal courts must refrain from deciding any foreign official immunity request that was not first presented to the State Department and (2) it was for the Executive, not the courts, to evaluate whether a foreign individual acted in an official capacity.While the Executive is certainly the branch of government with principal responsibility for foreign affairs, the Koh Letter and Rosenberg Statement represent executive branch overreach into judicial supervision of a federal lawsuit. Judicial deference to the Executive on foreign official immunity calls may be proper; blind obedience is not. In fact, such unilateral control ultimately hurts the State Department itself, which must balance complex and countervailing foreign policy interests. So how should the Executive’s power play be answered? Despite the Supreme Court’s reference to judge- made federal common law in Samantar, this Note argues that the tug-of-war between the executive and judicial branches requires congressional action because the courts are in disarray, with some already having acquiesced to executive control. The current disorder is a striking replay of what happened in the doctrine of foreign sovereign immunity in the late 1950s and 1960s in the aftermath of the 1952 Tate Letter — an earlier dispatch from a different State Department Legal Advisor that sparked such confusion in the federal common law of foreign sovereign immunity that Congress was compelled to intervene with the FSIA. This Note concludes with a model statute that Congress should consider enacting.","PeriodicalId":47517,"journal":{"name":"Fordham Law Review","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-02-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The New Tate Letter: Foreign Official Immunity and the Case for a Statutory Fix\",\"authors\":\"Luke Ryan\",\"doi\":\"10.2139/SSRN.2716195\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Plaintiffs sometimes bring civil lawsuits in U.S. federal courts against officials or ex-officials of foreign governments accused of committing atrocities abroad. In these types of cases, the foreign individuals will almost certainly invoke the affirmative defense of foreign official immunity. In the 2010 decision, Samantar v. 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Despite the Supreme Court’s reference to judge- made federal common law in Samantar, this Note argues that the tug-of-war between the executive and judicial branches requires congressional action because the courts are in disarray, with some already having acquiesced to executive control. The current disorder is a striking replay of what happened in the doctrine of foreign sovereign immunity in the late 1950s and 1960s in the aftermath of the 1952 Tate Letter — an earlier dispatch from a different State Department Legal Advisor that sparked such confusion in the federal common law of foreign sovereign immunity that Congress was compelled to intervene with the FSIA. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
原告有时会在美国联邦法院对被控在国外犯下暴行的外国政府官员或前官员提起民事诉讼。在这类案件中,外国个人几乎肯定会援引外国官员豁免的肯定性辩护。在2010年的Samantar诉Yousuf案判决中,最高法院一致认为,1976年制定的《外国主权豁免法》(Foreign Sovereign immunity Act,简称FSIA)对外国个人豁免请求的司法裁定不具有约束力。相反,法院表示,根据联邦普通法,外国官员可能有权享有豁免。由于这类案件对外交政策的敏感影响,行政部门——特别是国务院——积极主张控制所有外国官员的豁免请求。2012年,在所谓的《罗森博格声明》(Rosenberg Statement)和《高信》(Koh Letter)中,司法部和国务院法律顾问高洪洙(Harold Hongju Koh)宣布,(1)联邦法院必须避免对未首先提交给国务院的任何外国官员豁免请求作出裁决;(2)应由行政部门而不是法院来评估一名外国人是否以官方身份行事。虽然行政部门当然是政府的一个部门,主要负责外交事务,但Koh信函和罗森伯格声明代表了行政部门对联邦诉讼的司法监督越权。司法尊重行政部门对外国官员豁免的要求可能是适当的;盲目的服从不是。事实上,这种单边控制最终会伤害国务院本身,因为国务院必须平衡复杂的、相互抵消的外交政策利益。那么,如何回答行政部门的权力游戏呢?尽管最高法院在萨曼塔尔案中引用了法官制定的联邦普通法,但本报告认为,行政部门和司法部门之间的拉锯战需要国会采取行动,因为法院处于混乱状态,有些法院已经默许了行政控制。当前的混乱是20世纪50年代末和60年代外国主权豁免理论中发生的事情的惊人重演,1952年泰特信(Tate Letter)的后果是另一位国务院法律顾问早些时候发出的一份信函,该信函在外国主权豁免的联邦普通法中引发了如此混乱,以至于国会被迫干预FSIA。本说明最后提出了国会应考虑颁布的示范法规。
The New Tate Letter: Foreign Official Immunity and the Case for a Statutory Fix
Plaintiffs sometimes bring civil lawsuits in U.S. federal courts against officials or ex-officials of foreign governments accused of committing atrocities abroad. In these types of cases, the foreign individuals will almost certainly invoke the affirmative defense of foreign official immunity. In the 2010 decision, Samantar v. Yousuf, the Supreme Court unanimously held that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) — a 1976 statute governing the immunity of foreign states — did not control judicial determination of a foreign individual’s request for immunity. Instead, the Court said that foreign officials may be entitled to immunity as a matter of federal common law. Because of the sensitive foreign policy implications of these types of cases, the executive branch — specifically the State Department — has aggressively asserted control over all foreign official immunity requests. In 2012, in the so-called “Rosenberg Statement” and “Koh Letter,” the Justice Department and Legal Adviser to the State Department, Harold Hongju Koh, declared that (1) federal courts must refrain from deciding any foreign official immunity request that was not first presented to the State Department and (2) it was for the Executive, not the courts, to evaluate whether a foreign individual acted in an official capacity.While the Executive is certainly the branch of government with principal responsibility for foreign affairs, the Koh Letter and Rosenberg Statement represent executive branch overreach into judicial supervision of a federal lawsuit. Judicial deference to the Executive on foreign official immunity calls may be proper; blind obedience is not. In fact, such unilateral control ultimately hurts the State Department itself, which must balance complex and countervailing foreign policy interests. So how should the Executive’s power play be answered? Despite the Supreme Court’s reference to judge- made federal common law in Samantar, this Note argues that the tug-of-war between the executive and judicial branches requires congressional action because the courts are in disarray, with some already having acquiesced to executive control. The current disorder is a striking replay of what happened in the doctrine of foreign sovereign immunity in the late 1950s and 1960s in the aftermath of the 1952 Tate Letter — an earlier dispatch from a different State Department Legal Advisor that sparked such confusion in the federal common law of foreign sovereign immunity that Congress was compelled to intervene with the FSIA. This Note concludes with a model statute that Congress should consider enacting.
期刊介绍:
The Fordham Law Review is a scholarly journal serving the legal profession and the public by discussing current legal issues. Approximately 75 articles, written by students or submitted by outside authors, are published each year. Each volume comprises six books, three each semester, totaling over 3,000 pages. Managed by a board of up to eighteen student editors, the Law Review is a working journal, not merely an honor society. Nevertheless, Law Review membership is considered among the highest scholarly achievements at the Law School.