EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
The Republic of Ecuador ("Appellant") seeks discovery from Appellees John Connor and GSI Environmental, his company, for use in a foreign arbitration against Chevron. See 28 U.S.C. § 1782. During the course of extended litigation with Ecuador, Chevron,
Chevron, as successor to Texaco, became embroiled in litigation over the alleged environmental contamination of oil fields in Ecuador. The litigation spans nearly two decades and dozens of courts. A court in Lago Agrio, Ecuador finally issued a multi-billion dollar judgment against Chevron. During the Lago Agrio litigation, Chevron filed for arbitration under the rules of UNCITRAL, as allowed by the US-Ecuador Bilateral Investment Treaty ("BIT"). Chevron charged that miscarriages of justice in the Ecuadorian courts and participation by Ecuador in the plaintiffs' fraud violated its rights. Ecuador applied to the district court for ancillary discovery from Appellees for use in the arbitration and Chevron intervened to protect its interests.
In connection with the BIT arbitration and ongoing Lago Agrio litigation in Ecuador, both parties have repeatedly sought discovery through United States courts pursuant to § 1782. At least twenty such orders have been issued on behalf of Chevron. No previous discovery request has been denied on the grounds raised in the district court here — that the BIT arbitration is not an "international tribunal." The district court, however, felt compelled by prior Fifth Circuit decisions to deny Ecuador's discovery request. Following those cases, the court concluded, the BIT arbitration represents a bilateral investment dispute that is not pending in a "foreign or international tribunal" as the statute requires. See Republic of Kazakhstan v. Biedermann Int'l, 168 F.3d 880 (5th Cir.1999); El Paso Corp. v. La Comision Ejecutiva Hidroelectrica Del Rio Lempa, 341 Fed.Appx. 31 (5th Cir.2009).
On appeal from the denial of its discovery request, Ecuador asserts that the BIT arbitration is indeed a foreign proceeding covered by the statute but, in the alternative, that Chevron, having benefitted repeatedly from agreeing to this assertion, should be judicially estopped to deny it now when discovery would aid its bitter opponent. Because the underlying facts are not in dispute, we review the district court's order de novo. Biedermann, 168 F.3d at 881.
The predicate for the exercise of judicial estoppel against Chevron is easily described. To promote international dispute resolution and comity, § 1782 authorizes federal district courts to issue discovery orders ancillary to proceedings in "foreign or international tribunals."
Chevron challenges the basis for equitable estoppel, however, on numerous grounds. First, it contends, asserting contrary positions on a question of law — whether the BIT arbitration pends in an "international tribunal" — is not amenable to judicial estoppel under Supreme Court and binding Fifth Circuit authority. Second, and relatedly, the Biedermann decision afforded Chevron a basis in this circuit alone for a justifiable contrary legal argument. Third, Chevron did not "profit" unfairly from its contrary position in other courts because § 1782 discovery was sought, and allowed, on the separate basis that it was for use in the Ecuadorian Lago Agrio litigation before a "foreign tribunal." Chevron's final argument asserts that the nature of the tribunal is a "jurisdictional" element of § 1782 that cannot or should not be settled by estoppel.
Because federal courts may only act according to constitutional and statutory delegations of authority, we are constrained to consider Chevron's jurisdictional argument at the outset despite its being
Whether Chevron's premise applies here is questionable, and in any event its proposed conclusion does not follow from the premise. Describing a federal court's authority under § 1782 as "jurisdictional" fits awkwardly with conventional Article III terminology. Normally, federal court jurisdiction reflects the courts' power to decide cases or controversies between contending parties. Significantly, a § 1782 application may or may not be adversarial. The federal court addresses an interlocutory discovery application that is ancillary to a non-domestic proceeding. Its § 1782 order "adjudicates" nothing else. Perhaps in recognition that Congress delegated a quasi-administrative role to the courts in § 1782, the Supreme Court discussed the scope of a court's "authority" — not its "jurisdiction" — under the statute. Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 542 U.S. 241, 246, 124 S.Ct. 2466, 2472, 159 L.Ed.2d 355 (2004). Intel, like this case, required statutory construction to interpret § 1782's terms, the identity of the "interested person" who may apply for discovery and the status of the foreign "proceeding." Further, Chevron cites no case that has identified the criteria for hearing a § 1782 application as "jurisdictional."
Not only does the unusual role of a federal court under § 1782 suggest that "jurisdictional" thinking is misplaced, but even if "jurisdiction" is at issue, the best approach is to treat jurisdiction as conflated with the merits of the application. A helpful analogy may be drawn to Bell v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678, 66 S.Ct. 773, 90 L.Ed. 939 (1946), and its progeny.
Invoking a footnote in a Fifth Circuit case, and a century-old Supreme Court case, Chevron next contends that judicial estoppel may never be applied to issues of law. In Sturm v. Boker, 150 U.S. 312, 14 S.Ct. 99, 37 L.Ed. 1093 (1893), the Supreme Court held that a party's testimony concerning the extent of his legal ownership of goods, in a case controlled by contract language, was no more than a "statement of opinion upon a question of law" that may not act as an estoppel against the declarant. Id. at 336, 14 S.Ct. at 107. Sturm was cited by this court in a footnote, which states in full: "As Royal properly argues, a statement of opinion on the law does not create a judicial estoppel." Royal Ins. Co. of Am. v. Quinn-L Capital Corp., 3 F.3d 877, 885 n. 6 (5th Cir.1993) (citing Sturm). These decisions are inapposite.
Notwithstanding our subordination to Supreme Court authority, we are convinced that Sturm is not controlling. The application of estoppel in Sturm was both fact-specific and case-specific. Sturm's discussion of estoppel is sufficiently ambiguous that it does not clearly reach judicial estoppel — perhaps this is why New Hampshire v. Maine does not cite Sturm. To hold that Sturm prevents judicial estoppel from being applied to any question of law goes too far, just as the Court itself said, "it would be pressing [the complainant's] language too far to hold that he made any positive statement to the effect that he was the absolute owner of the goods...." Sturm, 150 U.S. at 334, 14 S.Ct. at 106. Indeed, the Court's holding may be better explained on the principle that estoppel may only apply where an offending party's positions were "clearly" contradictory. New Hampshire, 532 U.S. at 750, 121 S.Ct. at 1815. Even more pertinent here, the Supreme Court did not limit judicial estoppel in New Hampshire, which refers to contrary "positions," not to contrary "factual positions," as the foundation of the doctrine. Id., 121 S.Ct. at 1814.
As for Royal, the footnote may be understood to note that, by themselves, a party's contrary statements of opinion on the law are insufficient for judicial estoppel. There is no indication that the party persuaded a court to adopt its contrary position or that, in so doing, it gained an inequitable advantage.
More narrowly, Chevron contends that "there is nothing inconsistent about following the law of the circuit — even if the law may be different in another circuit." None of the cases it cites stand for this proposition, and our research has found no support. It is true that parties may, without fear of judicial estoppel, adopt different technical positions based on the existence of different applicable bodies of law (e.g., state versus federal tax law). See Folio v. City of Clarksburg, 134 F.3d 1211, 1217-18 (4th Cir.1998) (recognizing the appropriateness of classifying a fee as a "tax" for purposes of the Tax Injunction Act and a "fee" for state-law purposes). What Chevron did was pursue a strategy of obtaining § 1782 discovery in multiple jurisdictions on the basis, in part, that the BIT arbitration is an "international tribunal" and this circuit's Biedermann decision is distinguishable, only to disavow that position entirely when Ecuador sought discovery in this circuit. The facts have not changed and, as Chevron itself admits, the legal standard under § 1782, a federal statute construed in a federal court system, must ultimately be uniform. Chevron's brief acknowledges the existence, in the prior applications for discovery, of "the same underlying legal question: whether or not § 1782 should be construed to authorize discovery for use in arbitration." Notwithstanding the potential for circuit conflicts, the interpretive issue here is not governed by two distinct bodies of law. Following the "law of the circuit" is not, in this case, an antidote to judicial estoppel where the doctrinal criteria otherwise apply.
The only remaining doubt about the availability of judicial estoppel is that Chevron's inconsistent argument may have been "irrelevant" to the discovery orders in prior cases. Because the parties' disputes have involved both Ecuadorian court litigation (unquestionably, a "foreign tribunal") and the BIT arbitration (arguably, an "international tribunal"), Chevron's § 1782 discovery requests were often premised on twin grounds. We have found no authority suggesting that "harmless error," or some variety thereof, is not among the equitable considerations underlying judicial estoppel, but we do not reach the question here. A review of many of the courts' orders shows that they rested on the twin § 1782 grounds for authorizing discovery, in part because Ecuador never challenged that the BIT arbitration is an "international tribunal." A recent Third Circuit decision, in particular, notes repeatedly that although certain of Ecuador's objections to discovery might be meritorious if related to the Lago Agrio litigation alone, "Chevron seeks the § 1782 discovery for use in both the Lago Agrio litigation and the BIT arbitration." In re Application of Chevron Corp., 633 F.3d 153, 161, 163 (3d Cir.2011). Chevron profited from being able to assert mutually reinforcing grounds under § 1782 to support its discovery requests; the courts were persuaded that whether "for use" in the Ecuadorian court proceedings or the
The result of rejecting these objections is clear. Chevron has deliberately taken inconsistent positions on the availability of § 1782 discovery for use in "international tribunals." Chevron successfully obtained such discovery by persuading courts to reject Ecuadorian (and related parties') objections and by contending, opposite to its current position, that the BIT arbitration is an "international tribunal." Finally, if Chevron is permitted to shield itself under Biedermann against Ecuador's current discovery request, it will have gained an unfair advantage over its adversary. Chevron should be judicially estopped from asserting its legally contrary position here. Consequently, we need not and do not opine on whether the BIT arbitration is in an "international tribunal." On remand, the district court should proceed in its discretion to evaluate Ecuador's request for discovery pursuant to § 1782.
The order of the district court is