DOCUMENTS OF LEGAL CASES |
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Action on behalf of three members of the Sison
family and Jaime Piopongco for violations of international law
and common law torts committed by former Philippine President
Marcos. These violations include torture, political killing and
disappearance, and arbitrary arrest and detention during the
Marcos regime. We served Marcos in Hawaii where he was living
after he was exiled to the United States in February 1986. On
July 18, 1986, Judge Fong granted the motion to dismiss based on
the "act of state" doctrine which he claimed prevented
U.S. courts from inquiring into the actions of sovereign nations
within their own territory, even if the acts are alleged to
violate international law. We appealed. The argument took place
on June 10, 1987, in San Francisco. In July, 1987, the court
requested that the Justice Department file an amicus brief
concerning certain questions posed by the court. The Justice
Department filed this brief in October 1987. The brief supported
(grudgingly) our position on the act of state doctrine but
argues that there is no subject matter jurisdiction under 28 USC
§ 1350 over claims against human rights violations present in
this country who committed these violations outside the United
States. Such a ruling would undermine the ruling in Filartiga v.
Pena-Irala, 630 F.2d 876 (2d. Cir. 1980), upon which our suit is
based. The "submission" of the case for decision was
deferred pending the en banc decision in Republic of the
Philippines v. Marcos. In early December, 1988, the en banc
panel issued a unanimous decision overturning the panel's
"act of state" decision. On July 10, 1989, the Ninth
Circuit reversed Judge Fong's dismissal on "act of
state" grounds and remanded all of the other issues to him
for decision. A request was made to transfer the case pursuant
to rules governing multi-district litigation. In early September
1990 all of the human rights cases against Marcos were
transferred to Judge Real. The defendant's motion for summary
judgment was denied in October 1991. On March 2, 1992, Judge
Real granted our motions in limine and substantially narrowed
the defense case. We were permitted to assert claims based on
the recently passed (in March 1992) Torture Victim Protection
Act. Trial started on September 9, 1992, and lasted (despite
Hurricane Iniki in the middle) two weeks. On September 25, 1992,
the jury, after deliberating three days, returned a liability
verdict for the class and for all of our plaintiffs. On June 8,
1992, a related appeal in Trajano v. Marcos, raising many of the
key issues in our case, was argued in the Ninth Circuit. The
decision came down in October, 1992, and affirmed the default
judgment, rejecting all of the Estate's arguments. The Estate's
Petition for Cert. was denied. The trial on the exemplary
damages phase of the case on February 22, 1994, resulted in an
award of 1.2 billion dollars. A trial on the compensatory
damages took place in January and Judge Manuel Real dismissed
plaintiff Sison's claims, stating that just because a plaintiff
was tortured does not mean that he had been damaged. Our
plaintiffs were awarded damages. Judge Real reduced most all of
the jury awards to direct action plaintiffs for no apparent
reason. Judgment was granted in the Sison case in August, 1995.
We appealed on certain issues, including the dismissal of
Sison's claims. Public Policy Department
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