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Ninth Circuit Strikes Down Law On Armenian Insurance Claims

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  • Ninth Circuit Strikes Down Law On Armenian Insurance Claims

    NINTH CIRCUIT STRIKES DOWN LAW ON ARMENIAN INSURANCE CLAIMS
    By Kenneth Ofgang

    Metropolitan News-Enterprise
    Friday, August 21, 2009

    A California law designed to aid the beneficiaries of Armenian
    Genocide victims in collecting on life insurance policies issued during
    that period interferes with the federal government's authority over
    foreign policy and is unconstitutional, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court
    of Appeals ruled yesterday.

    The decision came the day after the same panel, with the same 2-1
    split, struck down a similar law extending the time in which to make
    claims for the restitution of Nazi-plundered artworks.

    Yesterday's ruling involved SB 1915, enacted in 2000. It created Code
    of Civil Procedure Sec. 354.4, which extended to Dec. 31, 2010 the
    deadline for suing on life insurance policies issued to "any person
    of Armenian or other ancestry living in the Ottoman Empire during
    the period of 1915 to 1923, inclusive, who died, was deported, or
    escaped to avoid persecution during that period," and expanded state
    court jurisdiction over such claims.

    The law defines the Armenian Genocide as the period from 1915 to
    1923, during which "many persons of Armenian ancestry residing in the
    historic Armenian homeland then situated in the Ottoman Empire were
    victims of massacre, torture, starvation, death marches, and exile."

    Vazken Movsesian filed a class action under the act in 2003, accusing
    three major European insurance companies of refusing to pay valid
    claims for which they were responsible. One of those companies,
    the German-based reinsurer Munich Re, moved to dismiss for failure
    to state a claim.

    District Court Ruling U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder of the
    Central District of California ruled that the class members had
    standing, and that the complaint stated causes of action for breach of
    contract and bad faith. She also ruled that the act neither deprived
    Munich Re on due process nor interfered with foreign affairs.

    The Ninth Circuit allowed Munich Re to bring an interlocutory appeal,
    leading to yesterday's ruling.

    The law, Senior Judge David Thompson noted, was patterned after
    legislation extending the time in which to sue on Holocaust-era
    insurance claims and World War II slave labor claims. Both of those
    laws were found unconstitutional, the slave labor law by the Ninth
    Circuit in 2003 and the Holocaust law by this district's Court of
    Appeal in 2005.

    SB 1915, Thompson said, is contrary to an express presidential policy
    of giving no special recognition to the Armenian Genocide. Turkey,
    a strategic ally of the United States, strongly disputes claims that
    Turks were responsible for the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians and
    the taking of their land and possessions.

    The Turkish government has called the 1.5 million figure "grossly
    erroneous" and has attributed the deaths of Armenians in that period to
    "intercommunal" political, rather than ethnic and religious, conflict.

    Presidential Opposition Thompson noted that both President Bill Clinton
    and President George W. Bush strongly opposed congressional resolutions
    that would have given official recognition to the genocide. In October
    2000, for example, Clinton wrote to then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert,
    urging him not to allow a floor vote on such a resolution.

    Such a vote, Clinton complained, would have negative effects on
    U.S. efforts to bring peace and stability to the Middle East and
    the Balkans, and to develop new energy sources, and "could undermine
    efforts to encourage improved relations between Armenia and Turkey-the
    very goal the Resolution's sponsors seek to advance."

    Other officials in both the Clinton and Bush administrations, Thompson
    noted, decried legislative entry into the "sensitive" subject matter
    and urged Congress to leave the subject alone in order to foster "a
    productive dialogue on the these events" as "the best way for Turkey
    and Armenia to build a positive and productive relationship."

    Policy Preferences Congressional adherence to the presidents'
    wishes, the judge said, "lends the presidential policy additional
    authority." By enacting legislation that expressly states that there
    was an Armenian Genocide, Thompson wrote, "California has defied the
    President's foreign policy preferences."

    The judge elaborated: "The federal government has made a conscious
    decision not to apply the politically charged label of 'genocide'
    to the deaths of these Armenians during World War I. Whether or not
    California agrees with this decision, it may not contradict it."

    Thompson rejected as irrelevant the district judge's conclusion that
    a lack of expressed opposition by the U.S. and Turkish governments
    to legislation in many states recognizing the events of that period
    as genocide means that individual state laws on the subject do not
    contravene foreign policy. He also noted that there was no evidence
    in the record regarding the content of other states' statutes, and
    said that any state involvement in foreign policy requires express
    federal authorization, not merely acquiescence.

    Senior Judge Dorothy W. Nelson concurred, while Judge Harry Pregerson
    dissented.

    Pregerson argued that the legislation dealt not with foreign policy,
    but with insurance, a traditional area of state regulation. "There
    is no express federal policy forbidding California from using the
    term 'Armenian Genocide' in the course of exercising its traditional
    authority to regulate the insurance industry," the judge wrote.

    The case is Movsesian v. Victoria Verscherung AG, 07-56722.

    Copyright 2009, Metropolitan News Company

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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