I. THE ALIEN TORT STATUTE AND UNIVERSAL CIVIL JURISDICTION
The Alien Tort Statute (ATS) provides that ‘district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States’. Enacted by the First US Congress as part of the Judiciary Act of 1789, the Act was only invoked on three occasions and remained largely dormant until revisited in Filártiga v Peña-Irala. The facts of this well-known case concerned two Paraguayan nationals invoking the ATS to bring a civil action in the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York against a Paraguayan State official for acts of torture committed in Paraguay. The claimants had arrived in the United States under a visitor's visa and subsequently applied for political asylum. When learning that the defendant had also been residing in the United States they initiated civil proceedings. The US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that where a defendant is found and served with process in US territory so as to establish personal jurisdiction, the ATS conferred federal jurisdiction on district courts over violations of the law of nations.Footnote 3 It further held that acts of torture violated the law of nations.Footnote 4 On remand back to the District Court, it was decided that the law to be applied to an action brought under the ATS was not that of the lex loci delicti (in this case Paraguayan law), but the US common law.Footnote 5
Filártiga involved an assertion of universal civil jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is a term that is used in a variety of legal contexts. In public international law, jurisdiction of the State is concerned with the competence which States enjoy to administer their sovereign authority to regulate conduct and the consequences of eventsFootnote 6 performed by natural and legal persons. The manner in which States exercise sovereign authority over conduct and the consequences of events falls into two separate and distinct stages: jurisdiction to prescribe and jurisdiction to enforce.Footnote 7 In practice, the two different forms of jurisdiction often share a very close relationship with one another, particularly where both manifestations of sovereign authority are performed by a domestic court. Although this article draws a formal distinction between the different stages in which States exercise regulatory competence over conduct and the consequences of events, it is worth recalling that, more properly, jurisdiction ‘ought to be regarded as a unitary phenomenon categorised by different stages of [an] exercise of authoritative power’.Footnote 8
States regulate conduct and the consequences of events by making use of the legal process. Prescriptive jurisdiction refers to the ability of States to characterize conduct and the consequences of events as being contrary to their domestic laws.Footnote 9 Although the prescriptive function is primarily performed by the legislature (legislative jurisdiction), it may also be performed by the judiciary (judicial or adjudicative jurisdiction) as well as the executive (executive jurisdiction). States may either criminalize conduct as being an offence giving rise to criminal liability, or, alternatively, characterize it as a civil wrong giving rise to civil liability. The concern of prescriptive jurisdiction is not with how States characterize conduct, but instead with whether States may characterize conduct performed in the territory of another State as an unlawful act. To put the matter differently, the concern of prescriptive jurisdiction is with whether domestic laws may be applied abroad to regulate conduct and the consequences of events occurring in the territory of a foreign sovereign.
Enforcement jurisdiction, by way of contrast, is concerned with the ability of States to give effect to prescribed legal rules. Although States will in the main enforce their own prescribed rules, instances do arise in which they may enforce the law of another State.Footnote 10 Enforcement jurisdiction may be performed by either judicial bodies or executive agencies.
States assert enforcement jurisdiction over conduct at the moment when they apply prescribed rules which seek to regulate that conduct. Exercises of prescriptive jurisdiction over conduct are however temporally different and take place when the conduct is performed as that is the point in time when the natural or legal person has acted unlawfully.Footnote 11Filártiga demonstrates the temporal difference between the two forms of jurisdiction. The United States’ exercise of prescriptive jurisdiction over the acts of torture occurred when the acts were committed in Paraguay. Given that the acts were performed extraterritorially by a Paraguayan national and the harm had been suffered by another Paraguayan national, universality was the principle of prescriptive jurisdiction upon which the United States exercised regulatory authority over the conduct that had been made unlawful by the common law. In contrast, enforcement jurisdiction was asserted by the United States when the civil action was brought before its domestic courts under the ATS and both parties were present in its territory. The mutually distinct yet intertwined nature of these different forms of jurisdiction is well described by O'Keefe when commenting that ‘[a] State's assertion of the applicability of its … law[s] to given conduct is actualized, as it were, when it is sought to be enforced in a given case’.Footnote 12
The limits which international law places on these different forms of jurisdiction, as well as whether it recognizes the lawfulness of universal civil jurisdiction, are considered in more detail below.
II. KIOBEL v ROYAL DUTCH PETROLEUM
A. The Decision of the Supreme Court
The successful decision in Filártiga led to numerous claims for human rights violations committed abroad being brought before US District Courts. These claims have either been brought against the individuals responsible for the alleged abuses, or corporations who aided and abetted foreign governments in committing the violations of international law.
The case of Kiobel arose out of 12 Nigerian nationals bringing a civil action under the ATS in the District Court for the Southern District of New York against Royal Dutch Petroleum Company, and Shell Transport and Trading Company Plc. Royal Dutch Petroleum and Shell are holding companies who, at the time of the action, were respectively incorporated in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. It was alleged that a joint subsidiary of the defendants that was incorporated in Nigeria, Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria, had both enlisted as well as aided and abetted the Nigerian Government in committing violations of the law of nations in Nigeria. These alleged violations included crimes against humanity, arbitrary arrest and detention, and acts of torture. As identified by the Supreme Court, ‘[o]n these facts, all the relevant conduct took place outside the United States’.Footnote 13
The claimants were granted political asylum in the United States where they resided as legal residents after these alleged violations had been committed. When their claims were brought before the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, both Royal Dutch Petroleum and Shell had an office in the United States and were trading shares on the New York Stock Exchange. Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria, however, had no such corporate presence in the United States, and the action brought against it was dismissed by the District Court for lack of personal jurisdiction.Footnote 14 The claims brought against Royal Dutch Petroleum and Shell for aiding and abetting crimes against humanity, arbitrary arrest and detention, and torture were allowed to proceed by the District Court.
The US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit subsequently dismissed the entire action on the basis that customary international law does not recognize corporate liability for violations of international law.Footnote 15 On appeal to the US Supreme Court, certiorari was granted to consider ‘[w]hether corporations are excluded from tort liability for violations of the law of nations’.Footnote 16 Despite hearing argument on this issue, the Supreme Court ordered a re-argument on a separate and more fundamental question.
The new question that the Supreme Court granted certiorari to consider was ‘[w]hether and under what circumstances the [ATS] allows courts to recognize a cause of action for violations of the law of nations occurring within the territory of a sovereign other than the United States’. Its eventual decision was based solely on the extraterritorial reach of causes of action brought under the ATS and did not consider whether corporations could be liable for violations of international law.Footnote 17 The Supreme Court unanimously held that the action could not be brought against the defendant holding companies under the ATS. Despite all members of the Court agreeing with this finding, the Justices were divided by five members to four on reaching this conclusion.
The Opinion of the Supreme Court was delivered by Chief Justice Roberts and was joined by Justices Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas and Alito. It began by finding that the presumption against extraterritorial application of US law ‘constrain[s] courts considering causes of action that may be brought under the ATS’.Footnote 18 As had been recognized by the Supreme Court in its earlier decision in Morrison v National Australia Bank, the presumption provides that ‘[w]hen a statute gives no clear indication of an extraterritorial application, it has none’.Footnote 19 The presumption against extraterritoriality is a domestic canon of statutory interpretation developed by the courts to determine whether an Act of Congress applies abroad. It recognizes that an exterritorial application of US law interferes with the ability of foreign sovereigns to regulate their internal affairs,Footnote 20 and thereby serves to protect against unintended clashes of jurisdiction which could result in international discord.Footnote 21
Having determined that the presumption against extraterritoriality applied to causes of action brought under the ATS, the Supreme Court then considered whether the presumption had been rebutted by the text, history or purpose of the Act. Referring once again to its earlier decision in Morrison, it identified that only a ‘clear indication of extraterritoriality’Footnote 22 would rebut the weighty concerns underlying the presumption. The Supreme Court held that neither the text, history, nor purpose of the Act provided a clear indication that the First Congress had intended for causes of action brought under the ATS to have an extraterritorial reach and regulate conduct occurring in the territory of a foreign State.Footnote 23
Although disposing of the case on the basis that the presumption against extraterritoriality had not been rebutted by the text, history or purpose of the ATS, the Supreme Court continued and found, separately, that the facts giving rise to the claim did not rebut the presumption either. In this regard, Chief Justice Roberts held that ‘[c]orporations are often present in many countries, and it would reach too far to say that mere corporate presence suffices’.Footnote 24 It must be said that considering a further criterion after it had been concluded that the ‘petitioners’ case … is barred’Footnote 25 lacks some degree of logical coherence. As such, the better reading of the decision must be that in reaching its conclusion that the presumption against extraterritoriality had not been rebutted, the Supreme Court gave consideration to all of these factors rather than just the first three.
The Concurring Opinion of Justice Breyer (joined by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan) agreed with the conclusion drawn by the Supreme Court that the action brought under the ATS did not apply to the facts of the case, but not with the reasoning employed by the majority in reaching this decision. Rather than invoke the presumption against extraterritoriality, Justice Breyer decided to identify the jurisdictional scope of the ATS and consider whether the facts giving rise to the claim fell within its ambit.Footnote 26 Justice Breyer was of the view that the ATS should be interpreted as ‘providing jurisdiction only where distinct American interests are at issue’.Footnote 27 He then identified three instances in which the ATS would provide jurisdiction to causes of action brought under the Act:
(1) the alleged tort occurs on American soil, (2) the defendant is an American national, or (3) the defendant's conduct substantially and adversely affects an important American national interest, and that includes a distinct interest in preventing the United States from becoming a safe harbor (free of civil as well as criminal liability) for a torturer or other common enemy of mankind.Footnote 28
Applying this finding to the facts of the case, Justice Breyer held that both the conduct and the parties lacked sufficient nexus with the United States in order for the ATS to provide jurisdiction over the claim.Footnote 29
B. What Future for Transnational Human Rights Litigation under the ATS after Kiobel?
Great ambiguity surrounds which cases may invoke the ATS in order to seek civil redress for violations of the law of nations following the Supreme Court's decision in Kiobel. Despite granting certiorari to consider the broad question of whether, and the circumstances in which, causes of action may be brought under the ATS for violations of international law committed abroad, the Supreme Court provided no guidance on this matter beyond applying its conclusion to the facts of the case. At best, all that can therefore be taken from the judgment with some degree of certainty is the ratio decidendi of the case itself: US District Courts will not recognize causes of action brought under the ATS for violations of the law of nations where all of the relevant conduct has taken place in the territory of a foreign State, both the claimant and the defendant are foreign nationals, and the defendant is a corporation who is trading shares on a US stock exchange with an office in the United States at the time when the action is brought.
In addition to not offering any general guidance on the instances when causes of action brought under the ATS may regulate conduct with an extraterritorial dimension, the Supreme Court's judgment raises a question relating to this matter that it left unanswered. Having found that the ‘mere corporate presence’ of the defendants did not rebut the presumption against extraterritoriality, Chief Justice Roberts continued and stated that:
[E]ven where the claims touch and concern the territory of the United States, they must do so with sufficient force to displace the presumption against extraterritorial application.Footnote 30
This statement is significant for two reasons. First, by recognizing that the facts of the claim may rebut the presumption against extraterritoriality, the Supreme Court has confirmed, albeit implicitly, that transnational human rights cases may continue to be brought under the ATS. Had the claim been disposed of solely on the basis that the text, history and purpose of the ATS failed to rebut the presumption, future actions for violations committed abroad could only be brought if the Supreme Court were to overturn this finding. Whilst not impossible, the likelihood of this happening is somewhat slim. More important for present purposes, this statement, secondly, creates much uncertainty over which transnational human rights claims will ‘touch and concern’ the territory of the United States with sufficient force to displace the presumption against extraterritoriality. Commenting on this matter, Justice Alito recognized that ‘[t]his formulation obviously leaves much unanswered’.Footnote 31 It was further noted by Justice Breyer that the decision ‘leaves for another day the determination of just when the presumption against extraterritoriality might be “overcome”’.Footnote 32
Kiobel has not ruled out the possibility for actions to be brought under the ATS which assert universal civil jurisdiction.Footnote 33 While civil claims cannot be brought against foreign corporations (with a mere corporate presence in the United States) for violations committed against foreign nationals abroad, there remains a possibility that the presumption against extraterritoriality will be displaced if such actions were brought against foreign individuals present in the United States at the time when proceedings are initiated.Footnote 34 In the words of Justice Kennedy, ‘[t]he opinion for the Court … leave[s] open a number of significant questions regarding the reach and interpretation of the Alien Tort Statute’.Footnote 35
The Concurring Opinion of Justice Breyer did not leave such a question unanswered. As mentioned above, Justice Breyer held that the ATS would provide jurisdiction to a cause of action where ‘the defendant's conduct substantially and adversely affects an important American national interest, and that includes a distinct interest in preventing the United States from becoming a safe harbor (free of civil as well as criminal liability) for a torturer or other common enemy of mankind’.Footnote 36 Justice Breyer later clarified in his judgment that the jurisdictional basis envisaged by this scenario was the principle of universality.Footnote 37 Endorsing the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Filártiga, he stated that:
Jurisdiction was deemed proper [in this case] because the defendant's alleged conduct violated a well-established international law norm, and the suit vindicated our Nation's interest in not providing a safe harbor, free of damages claims, for those defendants who commit such conduct.Footnote 38
In addition, he cited with approval the assertion of universal civil jurisdiction made by the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in its decision of In re Estate of Ferdinand Marcos, Human Rights Litigation. Footnote 39
The ambiguity created by Kiobel will no doubt lead to cases finding their way before the Supreme Court seeking further guidance on the reach of the ATS. It seems likely that, if presented with this question in the future, the Supreme Court will find that actions may be brought under the ATS which assert universal civil jurisdiction over the harm caused by individuals who are present in the United States at the time when proceedings are initiated. Two points support this suggestion. First, although the five Justices who formed the majority were silent on this issue, the remaining four were of the opinion that the ATS would provide jurisdiction for such an action. In this regard it is worth recalling that what divided the Supreme Court was not the conclusion reached on the extraterritorial scope of the ATS, but the reasoning that should be employed in arriving at the conclusion. Secondly, a body of jurisprudence making such an assertion of jurisdiction is well established under the ATS. As identified by Justice Breyer, the Supreme Court previously referred to Filártiga and Marcos with approval in its earlier decision in Sosa v Alvarez-Machain.Footnote 40
III. THE LAWFULNESS OF UNIVERSAL CIVIL JURISDICTION
With the narrow reasoning in Kiobel leaving open the possibility for actions to continue being brought under the ATS that assert universal civil jurisdiction, the final part of the discussion turns to consider whether such assertions of jurisdiction are lawful under international law and makes particular reference to State practice relating to this decision.
A. The Legal Framework of Jurisdiction in International Law
It is well known that the international legal order is formed of independent and equal sovereigns co-existing with one another. International law recognizes the horizontal nature of the legal order by allocating States a prima facie exclusive prescriptive jurisdiction over conduct and the consequences of events occurring within their sovereign territory. The non-intervention in internal matters that take place in another State is considered to be essential in maintaining peaceful relations and international stability.
The decision of the Permanent Court of International Justice in the Lotus case identified that international law does not prevent States from extending the application of their domestic laws to regulate conduct and the consequences of events occurring in the territory of another State.Footnote 41 For such assertions of extraterritorial prescriptive jurisdiction to be lawful, international law requires that they are supported by a permissive international norm recognized by either custom or treaty.Footnote 42 The established principles of extraterritorial prescriptive jurisdiction broadly recognize that States are entitled to regulate conduct and the consequences of events occurring abroad when they enjoy a sufficiently close connection to them.Footnote 43 Detailed rules which resolve how competing assertions of prescriptive jurisdiction that assert regulatory authority over the same conduct are yet to be established in international law. In any event, practice exists which recognizes that a State may only assert extraterritorial prescriptive jurisdiction over conduct once local domestic remedies have been exhausted (where available) in the States bearing a link of territoriality or nationality to the conduct.Footnote 44
With respect to enforcement jurisdiction, international law allocates a generally exclusive competence on States to give effect to prescribed legal rules within their territories.Footnote 45 This is, however, subject to the narrow exception that States may consent for others to exercise enforcement jurisdiction within their territory. A State that exercises enforcement jurisdiction in another State's territory without its consent violates the sovereignty of that State.Footnote 46
B. Customary International Law
One of the recognized principles of extraterritorial prescriptive jurisdiction in which States are considered by international law as having a sufficiently close connection with the impugned conduct is the principle of universality. Customary international law deems all States as having an entitlement to exercise universal jurisdiction owing to the particularly heinous and destructive nature of the conduct. The universal principle permits States to criminalize specific offences in their domestic legal systems perpetrated by non-nationals against other non-nationals that are performed entirely in the territory of a foreign State.Footnote 47 This principle is widely accepted by States in a criminal context.Footnote 48 A survey of State practice reveals, however, that customary international law does not recognize the principle as applying in a civil context.Footnote 49
The very limited State practice on universal civil jurisdiction is mostly offered by the United States. Of course, in order to create a customary rule the practice must be accompanied by the necessary belief that assertions of universal civil jurisdiction are lawful. Having disposed of the claim by invoking a domestic canon of statutory interpretation, the Supreme Court in Kiobel gave no consideration to this matter. However, the Concurring Opinion of Justice Breyer, which identified the jurisdictional reach of the ATS, claimed that applying the statute in the manner he suggested was ‘analogous to … the approaches of a number of other nations’,Footnote 50 and ‘consistent with international law’.Footnote 51 The correctness of this view faces both doctrinal and evidential difficulties, and is, therefore, somewhat doubtful.
In support of these suggestions, Justice Breyer made reference to civil law States that have enacted legislation establishing universal criminal jurisdiction and allow for civil actions to be attached to criminal proceedings (a process commonly referred to as actions civiles).Footnote 52 While this argument does envisage a way in which civil compensation might be obtained from an assertion of universal criminal jurisdiction, it cannot be said that this has led to the formation of a customary rule on universal civil jurisdiction. The first difficulty with this argument is that States enact legislation establishing universal criminal jurisdiction either pursuant to a treaty obligation or under the belief that they are entitled to do so as a matter of customary law. A corresponding assertion of universal civil jurisdiction made by attaching a civil claim to the prosecution of a crime under this legislation simply lacks the necessary opinio juris to create a rule of custom. Actions civiles are more properly regarded as a separately established legal procedure which have unintentionally, on the part of the State, created the possibility for civil actions to be attached to crimes being prosecuted under the universal principle. In addition, in the States where actions civiles may be brought, there is a notable lack of any widespread and consistent practice of civil actions being attached to the (few) criminal prosecutions which assert universal criminal jurisdiction so as to create a rule of custom.
Justice Breyer also made reference to the Restatement (Third) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States,Footnote 53 and suggested that his findings on the jurisdictional application of the ATS were ‘consistent with the approaches set forth in the Restatement’.Footnote 54 Once again, problems arise with the material cited by Justice Breyer that seek to support his conclusions drawn. The Restatement recognizes that under the universal principle a State ‘has jurisdiction to define and prescribe punishment for certain offenses recognized by the community of nations as of universal concern’.Footnote 55 It then goes on to observe that universal jurisdiction is not limited to criminal law:
In general, jurisdiction on the basis of universal interests has been exercised in the form of criminal law, but international law does not preclude the application of non-criminal law on this basis, for example, by providing a remedy in tort or restitution for victims of piracy.Footnote 56
The Restatement is correct in recognizing that international law does not ‘preclude’ universal civil jurisdiction. This comment, however, cannot be taken too far. As already mentioned, assertions of extraterritorial prescriptive jurisdiction will only be lawful when supported by a permissive international norm. Importantly, what the Restatement does not do is recognize international law as permitting exercises of universal civil jurisdiction. Justice Breyer's suggestion that his jurisdictional application of the ATS is ‘consistent with the approaches set forth in the Restatement’Footnote 57 therefore appears to be incorrect.Footnote 58
Further reference was given to the ‘international jurisdictional norms to help determine the statute's jurisdictional scope’ by Justice Breyer.Footnote 59 It will be recalled that although Justice Breyer dismissed the claim in Kiobel on the basis that the conduct and defendant corporations lacked sufficient nexus with the United States, he held that actions which assert universal civil jurisdiction could be brought under the ATS against individuals.Footnote 60 The different findings on the extraterritorial application of the ATS reached by drawing a distinction between the legal personalities of the defendants is not supported by the jurisdictional rules on universality. The universal principle regulates the conduct and consequences of events performed by non-nationals of the prescribing State, irrespective of whether they are natural or legal persons. Issues of legal personality are, of course, relevant when determining which defendants may be held liable for violations of international law in claims brought under the ATS.
Despite these shortcomings, Justice Breyer's Concurring Opinion still constitutes practice which provides evidence of a customary rule. Evidence of further practice of the United States which supports universal civil jurisdiction is provided by statements made by the US Government in its amicus curiae brief submitted to the Supreme Court in Kiobel.Footnote 61 The amicus curiae brief noted that, according to the US Department of State, ‘recognizing a cause of action in the circumstances of Filartiga is consistent with the foreign relations interests of the United States’.Footnote 62 Moreover, it was claimed that the ‘United States does not suggest that an extraterritorial private cause of action would violate international law in [Kiobel]’.Footnote 63 In addition, the United States enacted the Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA) in 1991 to create a cause of action against an individual for acts of torture and extrajudicial killing committed under authority or colour of law of any foreign nation.Footnote 64 The TVPA was passed by Congress to provide a modern cause of action for claims that had been brought under the ATS, and was considered to be in accordance with international law when enacted.Footnote 65
The amicus curiae brief submitted by Argentina to the Supreme Court in Kiobel similarly claimed that international law ‘allow[s] countries to offer a civil forum to aliens suing their oppressors for human rights violations committed in foreign States’.Footnote 66 Actions brought under the ATS were said to be consistent with international law as they formed part of its renewed focus after the Second World War to end impunity and provide compensation to individuals for human rights violations.Footnote 67 In addition, it was suggested that such actions did not involve the United States projecting its laws abroad as ‘[t]he basic legal principles … are not prescribed by the United States but by International Law’.Footnote 68 Once again, although the amicus curiae brief provides evidence of State practice contributing towards the formation of a customary rule, difficulties arise as to whether the beliefs actually held are in accordance with international law. It may certainly be noted that a trend towards States providing reparation for violations of human rights has become discernible in international law over recent years.Footnote 69 However, it is not the case that this movement has conferred on individuals a right to be provided with redress through civil proceedings in a State's domestic courts,Footnote 70 particularly where the violations have been committed abroad.Footnote 71 Moreover, the action brought under the ATS is not prescribed by international law as was suggested by Argentina, but rather the US common law. In Filártiga, the District Court for the Eastern District of New York held on remand that the common law provided a civil remedy for violations of the law of nations, and reference would only be made to international law when determining the substantive principles applicable to this action fashioned by the common law.Footnote 72 This finding was subsequently endorsed by the US Supreme Court in Sosa,Footnote 73 and in Kiobel it was stated that:
The question under Sosa is not whether a federal court has jurisdiction to entertain a cause of action provided by foreign or even international law. The question is instead whether the court has authority to recognize a cause of action under U.S. law to enforce a norm of international law.Footnote 74
The European Commission (EC) submitted an amicus curiae brief on behalf of the European Union (EU) arguing that an ‘assertion of universal civil jurisdiction is consistent with international law if confined by the limits in place for universal criminal jurisdiction’.Footnote 75 This statement did not represent the views of EU Member States. Rather than suggest that the Member States had ceded their competence for collective views to be presented on their behalf,Footnote 76 the amicus curiae brief identified that it was submitted in order to satisfy the EU's treaty obligation to engage in external actions seeking cooperation in international relations in order to support human rights and the principles of international law.Footnote 77 The EC's amicus curiae brief therefore does not constitute State practice which may create a customary rule. At best, it may only be taken as evidence of the existence of customary international law with respect to this matter.Footnote 78 Doubts, however, arise with respect to the accuracy of the views submitted in the EC's amicus curiae brief.
In support of its suggestion that universal civil jurisdiction is lawful, the EC referred to ‘the national legislation of several [European] States … [which] expressly allows for universal civil jurisdiction in exceptional circumstances’.Footnote 79 This claim was unsubstantiated and no evidence was provided by the EC of States that have actually enacted such legislation.Footnote 80 The amicus curiae brief also identified the recent Dutch decision of El-Hojouj v Derbal,Footnote 81 in which a foreign national (who resided in the Netherlands) was allowed to successfully bring a civil claim against Libyan State officials for acts of torture committed in Libya. Judgment in this decision was rendered on the basis of procedural rules of private international law allowing Dutch courts to exercise, in exceptional cases, a ‘forum of necessity’ jurisdictionFootnote 82 when it would be unacceptable for cases to be submitted to a foreign court, and existed a sufficient connection with the Dutch legal system.Footnote 83 This decision was mistakenly believed by the EC to be an assertion of universal civil jurisdiction. Although the Dutch court heard a dispute that concerned harm being suffered by a non-national from conduct performed extraterritorially by another non-national, it cannot be said that this conduct was regulated under the principle of universality. This is because the merits of the claim were decided in accordance with Libyan law rather than Dutch law.Footnote 84 As such, the Netherlands did not exercise prescriptive jurisdiction over the conduct.Footnote 85
In addition, the EC suggested that the harmonized rules established by the Brussels I RegulationFootnote 86 and the Lugano ConventionFootnote 87 have created a practice on universal civil jurisdiction. Under the harmonized rules, all Member States of the European Union, as well as Switzerland, Norway and Iceland, are required to recognize and enforce judgments for civil damages entered in any other State bound by the regime.Footnote 88 Referring to the decision in El-Hojouj as well as the possibility of bringing actions civiles, the amicus curiae brief suggested:
As a result, even those States that do not recognize universal civil jurisdiction on a national basis can be required to enforce a judgment on such [a] basis by courts of other States bound by the regime.Footnote 89
The suggestion that the enforcement of a civil judgment which regulates conduct under the universal principle results in the forum State making such an assertion of jurisdiction is also mistaken. Universality is a principle of prescriptive jurisdiction.Footnote 90 In the envisaged situation, the forum State is not applying its laws to regulate the conduct giving rise to the judgment that it seeks to enforce.Footnote 91 As well explained by Mann, ‘[e]nforcement jurisdiction … concerns not the law prescribed by a State to regulate, inter alia, acts outside its own territory, but the lawfulness of the State's own acts to give effect to such regulation’.Footnote 92 The forum State is thus only exercising enforcement jurisdiction over the conduct, and is consenting, under the harmonized rules, for judgment entered in the prescribing State to be recognized and enforced in its territory.Footnote 93
Akehurst has claimed that ‘[t]he acid test of the limits of jurisdiction in international law is the presence or absence of diplomatic protests’.Footnote 94 With respect to claims brought under the ATS, it has been suggested by Cassese that States have acquiesced to assertions of universal civil jurisdiction and implicitly accepted its lawfulness through non-contestation.Footnote 95 This is not the case. The Nigerian Government lodged a formal objection with the US Attorney General when proceedings were first initiated in Kiobel, identifying that the US had unlawfully asserted jurisdiction over conduct that had taken place in Nigeria and thereby gravely undermined its sovereignty.Footnote 96 In addition, the Governments of the Netherlands and the United Kingdom submitted a joint amicus curiae brief to the Supreme Court making clear that ‘[t]he basic principles of international law have never included civil jurisdiction for claims by foreign nationals against other foreign nationals for conduct abroad’.Footnote 97 Both States had an interest in the decision given that the defendants, Royal Dutch Petroleum and Shell, were respectively incorporated in their territories. Their amicus curiae brief further said that for the ATS to allow such claims to be brought ‘would clearly interfere with other nations’ sovereignty and be plainly inconsistent with international law’.Footnote 98 Moreover, whilst the practice of States has come to recognize universal criminal jurisdiction, it does not follow that the international rules which apply in one field of law automatically apply in another:
[I]t is widely recognized that criminal and civil jurisdiction are two distinct regimes. Extrapolating universal civil jurisdiction from the existence of universal criminal jurisdiction is not a proper application of international law: in particular, it is not consistent with the way in which international law develops. Such a principle must first be well-established and practiced by States to emerge as a new basis of civil jurisdiction under international law.Footnote 99
This argument is certainly correct.Footnote 100 By way of analogy, when determining the customary rules on immunity from civil jurisdiction, consideration is not given to the practice which has developed in the criminal context.Footnote 101 Additional practice of the United Kingdom which supports the view that international law does not recognize universal civil jurisdiction may be found in statements made in Parliament,Footnote 102 as well as the House of Lords’ decision in Jones. Footnote 103
Similar opposition to overly broad assertions of extraterritorial civil jurisdiction arising out of an alien's civil claim against foreign defendants for alleged activities that caused injury on foreign soil was made by Germany in its amicus curiae brief submitted to the Supreme Court in Kiobel. Such exercises of jurisdiction made under the ATS were ‘likely to interfere with foreign sovereign interests in governing their own territories and subjects’,Footnote 104 and said to be ‘contrary to international law’.Footnote 105
A number of other States have also made protests to other claims that have been brought under the ATS.Footnote 106 As noted by the Joint Separate Opinion of Judges Higgins, Kooijmans and Buergenthal in the Arrest Warrant case, the ATS is a ‘very broad form of extraterritorial jurisdiction … [that] has not attracted the approbation of States generally’.Footnote 107 States which have specifically protested to assertions of universal civil jurisdiction made under the ATS include Australia,Footnote 108 Canada,Footnote 109 El Salvador,Footnote 110 Indonesia,Footnote 111 South AfricaFootnote 112 and Switzerland.Footnote 113
The foregoing thus demonstrates that there is insufficient evidence of a widespread and consistent State practice accepted as law to create a rule of customary international law on universal civil jurisdiction.Footnote 114
C. Conventional International Law
Several treaties have been enacted by States which establish a jurisdictional framework permitting the domestic courts of contracting parties to criminally prosecute certain offences under the principle of universality. States have not as of yet, however, implemented an international convention providing the necessary legal basis to support such an assertion of jurisdiction in the civil context.
Uncertainty has surrounded whether Article 14 of the Convention against Torture 1984Footnote 115 (CAT) establishes a framework of universal civil jurisdiction, and requires contracting parties to provide an enforceable right to compensation in their domestic legal systems for acts of torture that have been committed abroad and have no nexus with the forum State. Article 14(1) provides that:
Each State Party shall ensure in its legal system that the victim of an act of torture obtains redress and has an enforceable right to fair and adequate compensation, including the means for as full rehabilitation as possible.
As can be seen, the provision is simply silent with regard to its territorial application. The Committee against Torture recently issued a General Comment which stated that ‘the application of article 14 is not limited to victims who were harmed in the territory of the State party’.Footnote 116 It further identified that contracting parties are under a duty to enact legislation providing victims of torture with the right to seek an effective judicial remedy,Footnote 117 and that ‘article 14 requires … that all victims of torture … are able to access [this] remedy’.Footnote 118 This General Comment, like all others, is non-binding on contracting parties.Footnote 119 It therefore does not constitute an authoritative interpretation of Article 14 which States are obliged to follow. The Committee itself has recognized that it is just a ‘monitoring body created by the States parties themselves with declaratory powers only’.Footnote 120 In this regard, Lord Hoffmann in Jones rightly noted that ‘[t]he committee has no legislative powers’.Footnote 121 Despite the existence of academic opinion suggesting that Article 14(1) establishes universal civil jurisdiction,Footnote 122 the better view still remains that, in accordance with international practice, States are only obliged to provide a judicially enforceable civil remedy to torture victims who have suffered harm within their territorial jurisdiction.Footnote 123 This point was expressly made by the United States in an understanding when ratifying the CAT.Footnote 124
IV. CONCLUSION
The Supreme Court in Kiobel has left open the possibility for transnational human rights claims that assert universal civil jurisdiction over the harm caused by individuals to continue being brought under the ATS. Although uncertainty surrounds the exact limits which international law places on exercises of prescriptive civil jurisdiction, this paper has shown that Justice Breyer's endorsement of universal civil jurisdiction is unconvincing and that such extensions of sovereign regulatory authority fail to find the necessary legal basis in either customary or conventional international law. Despite the existence of strong arguments in favour of recognizing universal civil jurisdiction so as to allow remedies to be provided to individuals who have suffered gross violations of human rights, the fact remains that value-orientated policy consideration cannot provide a substitute for the consent of States in the development of international law.Footnote 125 The current position under international law is that assertions of universal civil jurisdiction unlawfully interfere with the territorial integrity of the State in which the conduct occurred.