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Louis Dreyfus Commodities Suis v. Financial Software Systems Inc, 15-4041 (2017)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Number: 15-4041 Visitors: 36
Filed: Aug. 09, 2017
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: NOT PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _ No. 15-4041 _ LOUIS DREYFUS COMMODITIES SUISSE, SA v. FINANCIAL SOFTWARE SYSTEMS, INC., Appellant _ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 2-14-cv-05995) District Judge: Hon. Gerald J. Pappert _ Submitted under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) September 12, 2016 Before: CHAGARES, GREENAWAY, JR., and RESTREPO, Circuit Judges. (Filed: August 9, 2017) _ OPINION _ This d
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                                                                  NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                        UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                             FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                                  _____________

                                       No. 15-4041
                                      _____________

                    LOUIS DREYFUS COMMODITIES SUISSE, SA

                                             v.

                      FINANCIAL SOFTWARE SYSTEMS, INC.,

                                                 Appellant
                                      _____________

                 On Appeal from the United States District Court for the
                           Eastern District of Pennsylvania
                              (D.C. No. 2-14-cv-05995)
                       District Judge: Hon. Gerald J. Pappert
                                   _____________

                      Submitted under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a)
                                 September 12, 2016

      Before: CHAGARES, GREENAWAY, JR., and RESTREPO, Circuit Judges.

                                  (Filed: August 9, 2017)
                                      _____________

                                        OPINION
                                      _____________




       
        This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7,
does not constitute binding precedent.
CHAGARES, Circuit Judge.

       This is a dispute about the enforceability of a foreign judgment: specifically, a

default judgment entered in the United Kingdom against defendant Financial Software

Systems, Inc. (“FSS”) in favor of plaintiff Louis Dreyfus Commodities Suisse (“LDCS”),

and subsequently enforced on summary judgment by the United States District Court for

the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in the amount of $761,733. FSS argues that the U.K.

judgment should not be recognized under Pennsylvania’s Uniform Foreign Money

Judgment Recognition Act, 42 Pa. Stat. §§ 22001–22009 (“Recognition Act” or

“UFMJRA”), because personal service of process for the U.K. lawsuit was effected in

Pennsylvania by a process server, rather than by a sheriff as required by Pennsylvania

law. FSS also contests the District Court’s attachment of post-judgment interest. We

will affirm.

                                             I.

       FSS is a Pennsylvania corporation that agreed in 1996 to license software to

LDCS, a Swiss corporation. Amending their agreement in July 2012, the parties added a

forum-selection clause providing that “[a]ny dispute arising from or in connection with

this [agreement] shall be submitted to exclusive jurisdiction of the competent court in

England.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 312. Soon thereafter, a dispute over $700,000 arose,

and LDCS filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit against FSS in the High Court of Justice,

Queen’s Bench Division, Manchester District Registry Mercantile Court (“the U.K.

Court”). Pursuant to U.K. procedural rules, LDCS sought and received permission from

the U.K. Court to serve process on FSS at FSS’s headquarters in Horsham, Pennsylvania.

                                             2
LDCS retained a process server who personally served the papers on one of FSS’s

directors in Horsham on December 12, 2012. The papers granted FSS twenty-two days

to acknowledge service. Email exchanges on January 9-11, 2013, show that FSS had

actual knowledge of the lawsuit but believed that it had not been properly served under

Pennsylvania law. After FSS’s response time expired, LDCS filed an application for

default judgment, and the U.K. Court issued a notice for FSS to appear at a hearing on

January 18, 2013. The notice was personally served at FSS headquarters on January 11,

2013, but LSS failed to appear at the January 18 hearing. The U.K. Court then entered a

default judgment in the amount of $717,893 and subsequently awarded costs in the

amount of £28,302.

        LDCS first sought to enforce the judgment in Pennsylvania state court by filing a

“Praecipe to File and Index Foreign Judgment” in the Montgomery County Court of

Common Pleas on February 20, 2013. The clerk initially entered the judgment, but FSS

then petitioned to strike the judgment. The court granted the petition, and the Superior

Court affirmed, holding that judgments from foreign countries must be recognized under

the Recognition Act before being enforced, which LDCS had failed to observe. Louis

Dreyfus Commodities Suisse SA v. Fin. Software Sys., Inc., 
99 A.3d 79
, 86 (Pa. Super.

Ct. 2014). The Superior Court noted, however, that nothing prevented LDCS from

seeking to satisfy the requirements of the Recognition Act going forward. See 
id. at 86
n.10.




                                             3
       LDCS filed the instant lawsuit in the District Court in October 2014, seeking

recognition of the U.K. judgment under the Recognition Act and an order enforcing it.1

Both parties moved for summary judgment, and the District Court granted summary

judgment in favor of LDCS. Louis Dreyfus Commodities Suisse, SA v. Fin. Software

Sys., Inc., No. 14-05995, 
2015 WL 5916856
(E.D. Pa. Oct. 9, 2015). It held that the

Recognition Act’s personal jurisdiction requirement was satisfied despite any technical

flaw in the personal service of process, and thus the judgment was enforceable, because

FSS had actual notice of the U.K. lawsuit and had waived any objection to the U.K.

Court’s jurisdiction by executing the forum-selection clause. 
Id. at *3-4.
Citing the U.K.

Judgments Act of 1838, which provides for eight-percent annual interest on judgments,

the District Court also awarded post-judgment interest assessed from the date of the U.K.

judgment (January 18, 2013) through the date of the order granting summary judgment

(October 9, 2015). FSS timely appealed.

                                            II.

       The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and we exercise

jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We exercise a plenary standard of review over a

district court order granting summary judgment. Willis v. UPMC Children’s Hosp. of

Pittsburgh, 
808 F.3d 638
, 643 (3d Cir. 2015). “Summary judgment is appropriate when

‘the movant shows that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the

       1
         In an order not being appealed, the District Court rejected FSS’s claim that the
District Court was barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine and the law-of-the-case
doctrine from reviewing the earlier state court ruling. Louis Dreyfus Commodities
Suisse, SA v. Fin. Software Sys., Inc., No. 14-05995, 
2015 WL 687801
, at *4-6 (E.D. Pa.
Feb. 17, 2015).
                                             4
moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.’” 
Id. (quoting Fed.
R. Civ. P.

56(a)).

                                              III.

          FSS contends that the U.K. Court lacked jurisdiction to enter a default judgment

because its jurisdiction was falsely premised on process having been served in

accordance with Pennsylvania law. It claims that because LDCS hired a private process

server, rather than a sheriff, to serve process, the service was improper under

Pennsylvania law, Pa. R. Civ. P. 400(a) (“[O]riginal process shall be served within the

Commonwealth only by the sheriff.”) — and therefore also improper under U.K. law and

the Hague Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in

Civil or Commercial Matters (“the Hague Convention”). FSS also argues that a standard

forum-selection clause does not override a plaintiff’s obligation to serve process properly.

Finally, it challenges the District Court’s award of post-judgment interest because such

interest was never sought by LDCS in a U.K. court proceeding. We reject FSS’s

arguments and will therefore affirm.

                                              A.

                                              1.

          We first address the Recognition Act and the relevance of the forum-selection

clause. Under the Recognition Act, a defendant may not challenge the foreign court’s

personal jurisdiction if “the defendant, prior to the commencement of the proceedings,

had agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of the foreign court with respect to the subject

matter involved.” 42 Pa. Stat. § 22006(3). FSS concedes that it approved a forum-

                                               5
selection clause providing that “[a]ny dispute arising from or in connection with this

[agreement] shall be submitted to exclusive jurisdiction of the competent court in

England.” J.A. 312. Its argument is that a forum-selection clause is different from a

waiver-of-service clause. In other words, it claims that it agreed to the jurisdiction of

English courts, but only if process was properly served.

       With regard to whether, as a general matter, a standard forum-selection clause

suffices to waive objections to technical service requirements, neither party has cited

compelling authority, although FSS’s position has some appeal.2 Absent a waiver,

service of process is a necessary precondition to personal jurisdiction, but usually not the

only precondition. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(k)(1)(A) (“Serving a summons or filing a

waiver of service establishes personal jurisdiction over a defendant . . . who is subject to

the jurisdiction of a court of general jurisdiction in the state where the district court is

located . . . .”); Maltas v. Maltas, 
2 A.3d 902
, 912 (Conn. 2010) (“Although adequate

service of process is necessary for a state to obtain jurisdiction over an out-of-state party,

it is not sufficient.”). Depending on the wording, a forum-selection clause could

conceivably waive one precondition (such as sufficient minimum contacts with the

forum) without waiving another (such as compliance with the technical requirements for

service of process). At the very least, as a matter of fairness and due process, the mere




       2
        FSS is correct that decisions relied upon by LDCS and the District Court
involved parties that agreed both to submit to the jurisdiction of a particular forum and to
waive some or all of the formal requirements of service of process. By contrast, the
forum-selection clause here says nothing about service of process.
                                               6
existence of a forum-selection clause cannot relieve the plaintiff of its duty to provide the

defendant with some notice of the specific lawsuit being initiated.

       But this case concerns a narrower question arising specifically under the

Recognition Act: whether a defendant who executed a forum-selection clause can avoid

enforcement of a foreign judgment entered in that forum on the ground that personal

jurisdiction was lacking due to failure to meet technical requirements for service of

process. We believe that the answer is no.

       In permitting defendants to avoid foreign judgments if “the foreign court did not

have personal jurisdiction over the defendant,” 42 Pa. Stat. § 22005(2), the Recognition

Act refers to only the substantive dimensions of personal jurisdiction, such as sufficient

minimum contacts, and not the technical requirements for service of process. This is

apparent only after examining § 22006, which prohibits defendants from challenging

“personal jurisdiction” if they were domiciled in the foreign state or had operations in the

foreign state out of which the dispute arises. 
Id. § 22006(4),
(5), (6). If “personal

jurisdiction” referred to all preconditions, including proper service, those sufficient-

minimum-contacts conditions would not be sufficient on their own to bar a “personal

jurisdiction” challenge. But under the Recognition Act, they are. In addition, the

Recognition Act contains separate provisions that already address the need for defendants

to have fair notice but do not incorporate strict service requirements. 
Id. §§ 22004(1)
(“A

foreign judgment need not be recognized if . . . the defendant in the proceedings in the

foreign court did not receive notice of the proceedings in sufficient time to enable him to

defend . . . .”), 22005(1) (“A foreign judgment is not conclusive if . . . the judgment was

                                              7
rendered under a system which does not provide impartial tribunals or procedures

compatible with the requirements of due process of law . . . .”).

       We conclude that the Recognition Act does not permit a defendant to avoid a

foreign judgment merely because technical requirements for service of process were not

met. Where, as here, the defendant “had agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of the

foreign court” by executing a forum-selection clause, 
id. § 22006(3),
the requirement of

personal jurisdiction is satisfied unless the defendant did not receive “notice of the

proceedings in sufficient time to enable him to defend” the lawsuit in the foreign court,

id. § 22004(1),
“under a system . . . compatible with the requirements of due process of

law,” 
id. § 22005(1).3
Unlike if the original lawsuit had been filed in Pennsylvania, the

technical requirements for service of process under Pennsylvania law are not at issue

because the original lawsuit was filed abroad and only the judgment is being enforced in

Pennsylvania.

       To the extent that FSS is claiming a violation of due process, its argument fails.

FSS consented to the jurisdiction of the U.K. Court, and there is no genuine dispute that it

received actual notice of the lawsuit in a fair and reasonable manner. Rio Props., Inc. v.

Rio Int’l Interlink, 
284 F.3d 1007
, 1017 (9th Cir. 2002) (“[T]he Constitution does not

require any particular means of service of process, only that the method selected be

reasonably calculated to provide notice and an opportunity to respond.” (citing Mullane

v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Tr. Co., 
339 U.S. 306
, 314 (1950))).

       3
         The New York courts have taken a similar approach in applying that state’s
parallel UFMJRA. Landauer Ltd. v. Joe Monani Fish Co., 
8 N.E.3d 839
, 840-41 (N.Y.
2014); John Galliano, S.A. v. Stallion, Inc., 
930 N.E.2d 756
, 757-59 (N.Y. 2010).
                                              8
                                              2.

       Nothing in the Hague Convention, to which the United States and the United

Kingdom are signatories, compels a different result. Article 15 of the Convention

permits default judgments against a foreign defendant as long as “(a) the document was

served by a method prescribed by the internal law of the State addressed for the service of

documents in domestic actions upon persons who are within its territory, or (b) the

document was actually delivered to the defendant or to his residence by another method

provided for by this Convention,” and “the service or the delivery was effected in

sufficient time to enable the defendant to defend.” Convention Done at the Hague Nov.

15, 1965, T.I.A.S. No. 6638, 20 U.S.T. 361 (Feb. 10, 1969), art. 15. “[L]aw of the State”

in this context means the law of the signatory nation, and it is clear that the Convention is

satisfied with regard to service in the United States as long as federal requirements for

service have been satisfied and the defendant has been given sufficient time to defend.

See Ackermann v. Levine, 
788 F.2d 830
, 840 (2d Cir. 1986) (“The district court erred in

holding that service under the Convention must satisfy both federal and state law.”).

Federal rules do not require service by a sheriff, and thus neither does the Hague

Convention. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 4. Further, Article 10 of the Convention provides that

“the present Convention shall not interfere with . . . the freedom of any person interested

in a judicial proceeding to effect service of judicial documents directly through the

judicial officers, officials or other competent persons of the State of destination,” as long

as the “State of destination” (“State” meaning nation) does not object to such service.

T.I.A.S. No. 6638, 20 U.S.T. 361, art. 10 (emphasis added).

                                              9
                                      *      *       *

       In order for LDCS to enforce its foreign judgment under the Recognition Act, it

need not have met strict technical requirements for service of process in connection with

the foreign lawsuit. Nor did the Hague Convention require LDCS to comply with

Pennsylvania’s service rules when initiating a lawsuit in the United Kingdom and serving

process on a defendant in Pennsylvania. We therefore reject FSS’s arguments regarding

the enforceability of the U.K. judgment.

                                             B.

       FSS also objects to the District Court’s award of eight-percent post-judgment

interest. It argues that LDCS was required to request such interest in a U.K. court

proceeding. We disagree.

       FSS cites no authority for the proposition that a judgment creditor seeking to

enforce a foreign judgment in Pennsylvania and attach post-judgment interest must have

sought post-judgment interest in the foreign forum. It cites U.K. regulations governing

the enforcement of judgments in U.K. courts but does not explain why those regulations

would prohibit LDCS from seeking post-judgment interest when enforcing the judgment

abroad. We agree with LDCS that an American court enforcing a foreign judgment

generally has the power to attach post-judgment interest. See, e.g., Cont’l Transfert

Technique Ltd. v. Fed. Gov’t of Nigeria, 
850 F. Supp. 2d 277
, 286-88 (D.D.C. 2012);

Soc’y of Lloyd’s v. Anderson, No. 3-03-MC-112-D, 
2004 WL 1243220
, at *1 (N.D. Tex.

June 4, 2004). Typically, post-judgment interest is not intertwined with the judgment

itself. Rather, when a statute provides for post-judgment interest, the interest

                                             10
automatically accrues by operation of law and can be added to the judgment by courts as

a ministerial act, Dunn v. HOVIC, 
13 F.3d 58
, 62 (3d Cir. 1993); InterDigital Commc’ns

Corp. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
607 F. Supp. 2d 718
, 722-25 (E.D. Pa. 2009), and nothing in the

U.K. Judgments Act of 1838 appears to command otherwise, see J.A. 1021.4

Accordingly, we see nothing erroneous in the District Court’s award of post-judgment

interest.

                                           IV.

       For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court will be affirmed.




       4
        In awarding post-judgment interest, the court in Continental Transfert applied an
American post-judgment interest statute, whereas the court in Society of Lloyd’s applied
the U.K. Judgments Act of 1838. We need not address this choice-of-law question.
Although FSS objects to the District Court’s chosen eight-percent interest rate,
contending that a U.K. court would have had discretion to use a lower rate, it has not
objected to the Judgments Act of 1838 as the source of the post-judgment interest.
                                            11

Source:  CourtListener

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