Master Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of the FSIA and confirms that suits against foreign states in U.S. courts arise under federal law for Article III purposes. with this comprehensive case brief.
Verlinden B.V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria is a foundational decision on the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (FSIA). The case resolved a core constitutional question: whether Congress could vest federal district courts with subject-matter jurisdiction over civil actions against foreign states even when the plaintiff is a foreign citizen and the underlying claim sounds in state or foreign law. The Court's answer—yes, because such suits necessarily require application of federal law governing sovereign immunity—cements the FSIA as the central, comprehensive framework for litigating claims against foreign sovereigns in the United States.
Beyond the FSIA, Verlinden is a staple of the Federal Courts canon for its articulation of Article III's "arising under" power. The Court reaffirmed the Osborn "federal ingredient" principle: a case arises under federal law when federal law must be applied and resolved as a necessary element of the claim, even if the plaintiff's cause of action is nonfederal. By ensuring a uniform federal forum for immunity determinations, Verlinden also underscores separation-of-powers and foreign-relations considerations that counsel centralized federal control over suits implicating the sovereign prerogatives of other nations.
461 U.S. 480 (1983), United States Supreme Court
Verlinden B.V., a Dutch company, contracted to sell cement to purchasers in Nigeria during a period when Nigeria arranged extensive cement imports. To facilitate payment, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), an entity of the Nigerian government, issued or arranged letters of credit denominated in U.S. dollars and payable through New York banking channels. After Nigeria experienced severe logistical and port-capacity problems, CBN allegedly instructed banks not to honor certain letters of credit and refused payment to Verlinden upon presentation of documents. Verlinden sued CBN in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging wrongful dishonor and related contract claims. It invoked the FSIA, specifically the "commercial activity" exception, 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2), and § 1330(a)'s grant of subject-matter jurisdiction over actions against foreign states. CBN moved to dismiss, arguing in part that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because both parties were foreign and there was no ordinary federal question on the face of the complaint. The constitutionality of Congress's jurisdictional grant in § 1330(a) was squarely presented, and the Supreme Court granted review to decide whether such suits constitutionally "arise under" federal law for purposes of Article III.
Does the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act validly confer federal subject-matter jurisdiction over civil actions against foreign states—including suits brought by foreign plaintiffs—consistent with Article III's requirement that cases in federal court arise under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States?
Under the FSIA, federal district courts have original subject-matter jurisdiction over any nonjury civil action against a foreign state as to any claim for which the foreign state is not entitled to immunity under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1604–1607. 28 U.S.C. § 1330(a). For constitutional purposes, an action against a foreign state necessarily arises under federal law because the plaintiff's ability to proceed depends on the application of federal sovereign-immunity standards established by the FSIA. Thus, Congress may constitutionally confer jurisdiction over suits against foreign states in federal courts, even when the plaintiff is a foreign citizen and the underlying cause of action is nonfederal.
Yes. The FSIA's grant of federal subject-matter jurisdiction in § 1330(a) is constitutional. Any action brought against a foreign state in a U.S. court necessarily presents a federal question—the availability or nonavailability of sovereign immunity under the FSIA—and therefore arises under federal law for purposes of Article III. A foreign plaintiff may sue a foreign state in U.S. federal court, provided an FSIA immunity exception applies.
The Court emphasized that the FSIA establishes a comprehensive federal regime governing when foreign states are immune from suit and when they are not. Before the FSIA, immunity decisions were often influenced by the Executive Branch; the Act codified the restrictive theory of sovereign immunity and placed determinations of immunity squarely in the judiciary, fostering uniformity and reducing diplomatic friction. Turning to Article III, the Court relied on the Osborn "federal ingredient" principle: a case arises under federal law when the right to relief necessarily depends on resolution of a substantial question of federal law. In every case against a foreign state, the court must first determine whether the FSIA affords immunity, which is a pure question of federal law. If immunity applies, the case must be dismissed; if an exception applies, the court may proceed to the merits. Either way, the federal-law question is essential and controlling, satisfying Article III's arising-under requirement even when the plaintiff's substantive claim sounds in state or foreign law. The Court rejected the contention that the lack of any U.S. party defeats federal jurisdiction. Article III does not require a U.S. party in cases arising under federal law; it simply requires a federal ingredient. Congress permissibly channeled suits against foreign sovereigns into federal court to ensure nationally uniform standards in an area with profound foreign-relations implications. The FSIA's jurisdictional grant thus fits comfortably within Congress's authority, supported by the Necessary and Proper Clause and by Congress's role in regulating foreign relations and foreign commerce. Because the suit's threshold inquiry is governed by federal statute, § 1330(a) is constitutional regardless of the parties' citizenships. Finally, the Court noted that the FSIA's framework integrates subject-matter jurisdiction (§ 1330(a)), service of process (§ 1608), and personal jurisdiction (§ 1330(b)), with immunity standards and exceptions (§§ 1604–1607). The Court did not decide the ultimate merits of Verlinden's underlying contract claims or definitively resolve which immunity exception applied; its ruling was confined to upholding Congress's constitutional authority to confer jurisdiction on the federal courts for suits against foreign states.
Verlinden anchors the FSIA at the center of U.S. litigation against foreign states and clarifies that such suits belong in federal court because they necessarily present a dispositive federal question: sovereign immunity under federal statute. For Federal Courts students, the case is a leading exposition of Article III's arising-under power and the Osborn federal-ingredient approach, illustrating that jurisdiction can be proper even when the substantive cause of action is nonfederal and the parties are foreign. For international and transnational litigators, Verlinden ensures uniform national treatment of foreign sovereign immunity issues and lays the groundwork for later FSIA jurisprudence on commercial activity, execution of judgments, and the exclusivity of the FSIA as the framework governing suits against foreign sovereigns.
Yes. If an FSIA immunity exception applies (for example, the commercial activity exception in 28 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(2)), a foreign plaintiff may sue a foreign state in federal court. Verlinden holds that such suits arise under federal law because the court must apply the FSIA's federal immunity standards.
Generally, no. The FSIA is primarily jurisdictional and immunity-conferring (and -withholding); it prescribes when foreign states can be sued and under what conditions. Plaintiffs typically must identify a substantive cause of action under state, federal, or foreign law. Some later-enacted provisions (e.g., the terrorism exception now in § 1605A) include a federal cause of action in limited circumstances, but FSIA as addressed in Verlinden did not supply a general cause of action.
28 U.S.C. § 1330(a), which grants federal district courts original jurisdiction over any nonjury civil action against a foreign state concerning claims for which the foreign state is not immune under the FSIA. The Court held that actions under § 1330(a) constitutionally arise under federal law for Article III purposes.
No. The Supreme Court's decision addressed the constitutional question of federal subject-matter jurisdiction under the FSIA. It did not finally resolve whether a particular immunity exception applied to Verlinden's claim or adjudicate the merits, leaving those issues for further proceedings.
Verlinden reaffirms that a case arises under federal law if a federal issue is an essential, threshold ingredient—here, the determination of sovereign immunity under the FSIA—regardless of the citizenship of the parties or whether the underlying cause of action is based on nonfederal law. It thus serves as a modern application of the Osborn 'federal ingredient' doctrine.
Verlinden characterizes the FSIA as a comprehensive federal framework governing immunity in any civil action against a foreign state. Subsequent Supreme Court decisions have expressly confirmed that the FSIA provides the exclusive basis for jurisdiction over foreign states in U.S. courts.
Verlinden B.V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria secures the FSIA's central role in U.S. courts by upholding Congress's decision to channel suits against foreign sovereigns into the federal judiciary. By holding that such actions necessarily arise under federal law due to the immunity determination, the Court safeguarded uniformity and predictability in an area sensitive to foreign relations and separation-of-powers concerns.
For law students, Verlinden is indispensable on two fronts: it is a capstone in FSIA doctrine and a touchstone in the study of Article III jurisdiction. It demonstrates how jurisdiction can be grounded in a federal statutory framework that functions as a necessary predicate to any adjudication on the merits, even where the substantive claim is nonfederal and the litigants are not U.S. citizens.
Need to cite this case?
Generate a perfectly formatted Bluebook citation in seconds.
Use our Bluebook Citation Generator →