Milena Ship Management Co. v. Newcomb ( 1993 )


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  •                                     United States Court of Appeals,
    Fifth Circuit.
    No. 92-3905.
    MILENA SHIP MANAGEMENT COMPANY, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    R. Richard NEWCOMB, Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control of the Department of the
    Treasury, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
    July 21, 1993.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
    Before SMITH, DUHÉ and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
    WIENER, Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiff-Appellant Milena Ship Management Company, Ltd. (Milena) appeals the district
    court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants-Appellees, the Office of Foreign Assets
    Control (OFAC) of the Department of the United States Treasury, and the United States Customs
    Service (collectively, the government). Milena challenges the blocking of four of its vessels pursuant
    to two Executive Orders and the denial of its petition to unblock the ships. As we find no reversible
    error in the district court's rulings, we affirm.
    I
    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)1 grants the President authority
    to regulate or prohibit international economic transactions in case of a national emergency "which has
    its source in whole or substantial part outside the United States."2 Included in this authority is the
    power to prevent "transactions involving[ ] any property in which any foreign country or a national
    thereof has any interest[ ] by any person, or with respect to any property, subject to the jurisdiction
    1
    50 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1706.
    2
    
    Id. § 1701(a).
    of the United States."3 Another Act of Congress, the United Nations Participation Act (UNPA)4
    authorizes the President to implement measures adopted by the U.N. Security Council pursuant to
    Article 41 of the U.N. Charter.
    Operating under the authority of these two statutes, then President Bush issued two executive
    orders in reaction to growing civil unrest in former Yugoslavia. Both orders, Executive Orders
    12808 and 12810, impose U.N. mandated economic sanctions against the unrecognized Federal
    Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY or Yugoslavia), consisting of the provinces of Serbia and Montenegro.
    Executive Order 12808 blocks "all property and interests in property in the name of the Government
    of Yugoslavia, that hereafter come within the United States, or that are or hereafter come within the
    possession or control of United States persons." Executive Order 12810 reiterates this restriction
    and additionally prohibits all imports to the United States from the FRY and all exports from the
    United States to the FRY.
    These Executive Orders also direct the Secretary of the Treasury (Secretary) to promulgate
    regulations necessary to "block" all property in which the FRY has an interest. On that authority,
    OFAC immediately issued General Notice No. 1, stating that all entities located or organized in the
    FRY are presumed to be owned or controlled by the Yugoslavian government. This presumption was
    based on the history of that government's involvement in business corporations and other enterprises,
    and its residual interest in those companies. Included in this category was Jugosloanska Oceanska
    Plovidba (JOP), a commercial shipping company headquartered in Kotor, Montenegro. Under
    OFAC's order, foreign subsidiaries of Yugoslavian companies are also presumed to be owned or
    controlled by the Yugoslavian government.
    In the course of implementing the Executive Orders, United States Customs agents detained
    four vessels owned and operated by various JOP subsidiaries—the M/V ZETA and the M/V
    MOSLAVINA in the port of New Orleans, the M/V DURMITOR in Baltimore, and the M/V
    3
    
    Id. § 1702(a)(1)(B).
       4
    22 U.S.C. § 287(c).
    MARTINOVIC in Savannah.5 Milena, which manages and operates all four vessels, denies that JOP
    is connected with the FRY government. Accordingly, Milena applied to OFAC for an order
    unblocking JOP's frozen assets. While this application was pending before OFAC, Milena sought
    declaratory and injunctive relief in the District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. That court
    denied the request, finding that a preliminary injunction would not serve the public interest.
    Subsequently, OFAC denied Milena's petition to unblock the vessel, citing three bases for that
    decision. First, OFAC cited the U.N. Sanctions Committee ruling that the "continued operation and
    associated transfers of funds or resources to the owners of four ships controlled and managed by the
    Milena Ship Management Company of Malta ... would be in violation of the sanctions established
    under [Security Council] Resolution 757." OFAC interpreted this language as meaning "that the
    release of the vessels would constitute a prohibited transfer of an economic resource of both the
    Government of [the FRY] and a "person' within [that country], namely, JOP."
    Second, OFAC interpreted the law of the FRY, considering affidavits and articles submitted
    by various experts. According to the affidavit of Dr. Branko Vukmir, a legal advisor to the U.N., the
    government of the FRY retains an interest in business enterprises by virtue of the system of "social
    capital" as opposed to internal (personal) shares. In addition, the government determines and limits
    the issuance of internal shares and has established a governmental fund to receive the proceeds from
    the sale of the "social capital." Finally, OFAC concluded that the interest retained by the government
    under this system justified the conclusion that all Yugoslavian vessels were owned by the government.
    Soon afterwards, Milena again filed a motion in the district court, this one being for
    declaratory and injunctive relief by way of a Motion for Summary Judgment, arguing that OFAC
    erred in denying Milena's application to have the vessels unblocked. Milena also sought appointment
    of a custodian to maintain the blocked vessels. Reviewing OFAC's order, the district court agreed
    with OFAC's interpretation of Yugoslavian law that led OFAC to conclude that JOP is in fact owned
    or controlled by the Yugoslavian government. In addition, the district court reviewed and accepted
    5
    Ownership of the blocked vessels was transferred to companies in Malta prior to the issuance
    of the Executive Orders. Thus, the vessels fly the Maltese flag, even though the companies in
    Malta are still owned by JOP.
    OFAC's factual findings regarding the Yugoslavian government's control over the economy in general
    and an enterprise's social capital specifically. Consequently, the district court denied the motion for
    summary judgment. 
    804 F. Supp. 859
    .
    Ultimately, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the government,
    dismissing Milena's claim. Milena timely appealed from this decision.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    We review the district court's decision de novo, but review the agency's decision, as did the
    district court, with the appropriate deference. We will set aside agency action if we find it to be
    "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law."6 In reviewing
    an agency action, we inquire whether the agency acted within its authority, adequately considered all
    the relevant factors, and provided a reasoned basis for its decision.7 Furthermore, we give special
    deference to an agency's interpretation of an order it is charged to administer.8 Finally, we base our
    review of an administrative action "on the full administrative record that was before t he
    [administrative officer] ... at the time he made his decision."9
    B. OFAC's Presumption
    Milena first challenges OFAC's initial presumption that the Yugoslavian government has a
    proprietary interest in all vessels owned by Yugoslavian companies. Milena stresses that at the time
    OFAC made this decision it did not possess the Vukmir article, one which plaintiffs themselves later
    supplied to OFAC. Consequently, Milena insists that OFAC had no basis for the decision and
    therefore acted arbitrarily and capriciously. The government responds that the presumption does not
    6
    Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(a).
    7
    Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 
    401 U.S. 402
    , 415-16, 
    91 S. Ct. 814
    , 823-
    24, 
    28 L. Ed. 2d 136
    (1971).
    8
    United States v. New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc., 
    553 F.2d 459
    (5th Cir.1977), cert. granted
    and vacated on other grounds, 
    436 U.S. 942
    , 
    98 S. Ct. 2841
    , 
    56 L. Ed. 2d 783
    (1978).
    9
    Overton 
    Park, 401 U.S. at 420
    , 91 S.Ct. at 825.
    constitute a final agency action and is therefore not reviewable. According to the government, the
    only final and reviewable agency action is OFAC's refusal to unblock the vessels.
    The district court rejected the government's argument regarding finality in its denial of a
    preliminary injunction. The court correctly noted that agency action is final when it results in "the
    imposition of an obligation, the denial of a right, or the fixing of a legal relationship."10 The court
    held that the presumption as applied to JOP "clearly imposes obligations (the burdens associated with
    the blocking), denies rights (the plaintiff's rights to freely use and transfer and deal with their
    property) and fixes a legal relat ionship (the relationship between the plaintiffs as the targets of a
    blocking order and the United States as the issuer of the blocking order)." We agree.
    Having concluded that the district court was co rrect in its conclusion that the initial
    presumption as applied to JOP was a final agency decision, we review the reasonableness of that
    decision. Here, again, Milena emphasizes that OFAC did not have access to the Vukmir article when
    it made its decision. Even without the Vukmir article, however, OFAC acted reasonably in issuing
    the presumption of government ownership. OFAC had to act quickly following the issuance of the
    Executive Orders; delay would have allowed the assets to leave the United States, thereby thwarting
    the purpose of the Orders. OFAC assumed, based on its knowledge of governmental involvement
    in business enterprises under the recently ended communist regime, that there were still vestiges of
    pervasive government ownership and control in the present system. This presumption is supported
    by the venerable legal maxim that a known condition is presumed to continue in existence until there
    is evidence to the contrary. Given the general confusion surrounding the fall of communist regimes
    in eastern Europe, and the indisputable fact that the existing socialist infrastructures are never
    dismantled and replaced with capitalism overnight, OFAC's presumption of state ownership and
    involvement was reasonable.
    C. OFAC's Refusal to Unblock the Vessels
    Milena next challenges OFAC denial of Milena's petition to unblock the vessels. The
    10
    United States Dep't of Justice v. Federal Labor Relations Authority, 
    727 F.2d 481
    , 493 (5th
    Cir.1984).
    cornerstone of OFAC's decision was its interpretation of Yugoslavian law, based on the Vukmir
    article and the current Yugoslavian law on privatization. Milena disputes OFAC's interpretation of
    that law and insists that OFAC's interpretation is subject to de novo review. The district court applied
    a deferential standard of review, yet recognized that OFAC's interpretation would also prevail under
    a de novo review. We again agree with the district court.
    Even under the more stringent de novo review, OFAC's interpretation of Yugoslavian law is
    correct. The Vukmir article describes the Yugoslavian system as based on the concept of "social
    capital." As such, society has an interest in each business enterprise, albeit the exact nature of that
    interest is somewhat obscure. Although Milena stresses the difference between a societal interest and
    a state interest (as in other communist systems), there is little practical difference. As the Vukmir
    article makes clear, the trend towards privatization has created a dilemma: when a heretofore public
    business enterprise goes private (i.e., sells private shares), who or what receives the proceeds from
    the sale of society's interest? Under the 1990 law, the proceeds are placed in one or more funds
    controlled by the government.
    In the instant case, JOP is not a private company. Therefore, "society"—through its
    representative, the government—still retains an interest in the enterprise. Should JOP go private, the
    government would receive a portion of the proceeds, placed in a government controlled fund. In light
    of the fact that the societal interest reverts to the government, we conclude that the Yugoslavian
    government retains an interest in JOP.
    D. Appointment of a Custodian for the Vessel
    Finally, Milena seeks a writ of mandamus compelling the government to appoint a custodian
    for the vessels and pay for their maintenance. Although the IEEPA is silent on the appointment of
    a custodian, its predecesso r The Trading With The Enemy Act (TWEA)11 did provide for the
    appointment of a custodian. Milena argues that the TWEA provides guidance for interpreting the
    IEEPA; therefore, because the TWEA provides for appointment of a custodian, Congress intended
    the same pro vision to apply under the IEEPA. This bit of legal legerdemain is wholly specious.
    11
    50 U.S.C.App. § 5.
    Exhibit "A" for the proposition that if Congress had wanted to impose an obligation on the
    government to appoint a custodian, it knew how to say so directly. This is doubly true in the case
    of IEEPA, wherein Congress incorporated certain TWEA provisions and omitted others. Under these
    circumstances, Congress's omission of the custodian provision evidences a conscious intent not to
    assume that obligation.
    In addition, were we to find that the government had a duty to appoint a custodian—or had
    a duty to reimburse Milena for maintenance—the effect would be to shift the costs of the blocking
    from the sanctioned nation to the United States. This obviously would run counter to the purpose
    of economic sanctions, which is to exert economic pressure on the offending government, not to
    mitigate it.
    III
    CONCLUSION
    In this appeal of an administrative agency's decision to block vessels owned by the
    Yugoslavian government pursuant to two Executive Orders, Milena, as operator of the vessels,
    challenges the reasonableness of the agency's decision. The agency's initial presumption that the all
    vessels owned by Yugoslavian companies were subject to blocking was reasonable given the need to
    act quickly and the general knowledge t hat, under the communist system, the government had a
    proprietary int erest in all business enterprises. Moreover, in view of this system, in which the
    government retains an interest in business ent erprises in the form of "social capital," the agency's
    refusal to unblock the vessels was reasonable. Finally, there is no statutory basis for Milena's claim
    that the government is obligated to appoint a custodian for the vessels. To the contrary, the omission
    by Congress of such provision when it adopted the IEEPA was clearly deliberate, following as it did
    on the heels of the predecessor act, the TWEA, which contained such a provision.
    For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.