ESAB Group, Incorporated v. Zurich Insurance PLC , 685 F.3d 376 ( 2012 )


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  •                       PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    ESAB GROUP, INCORPORATED,            
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ZURICH INSURANCE PLC,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and                       No. 11-1243
    ARROWOOD INDEMNITY COMPANY;
    LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE
    COMPANY; TRYGG-HANSA
    FORSAKRINGS AB; ZURICH
    INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendants.
    
    2              ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    ESAB GROUP, INCORPORATED,             
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    ZURICH INSURANCE PLC,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and                          No. 11-1655
    ARROWOOD INDEMNITY COMPANY;
    LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE
    COMPANY; TRYGG-HANSA
    FORSAKRINGS AB; ZURICH
    INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendants.
    
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the District of South Carolina, at Florence.
    Thomas E. Rogers, III, United States Magistrate Judge.
    (4:09-cv-01701-TER)
    Argued: May 17, 2012
    Decided: July 9, 2012
    Before WILKINSON, DIAZ, and FLOYD, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Floyd wrote the opin-
    ion, in which Judge Wilkinson and Judge Diaz concurred.
    Judge Wilkinson wrote a separate concurring opinion.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                 3
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Mark William Mosier, COVINGTON & BURL-
    ING, LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellant/Cross-Appellee.
    Richard Mancino, WILLKIE, FARR & GALLAGHER, LLP,
    New York, New York, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant. ON
    BRIEF: Andrew A. Ruffino, COVINGTON & BURLING
    LLP, New York, New York; Mark W. Buyck, Jr., WILLCOX,
    BUYCK & WILLIAMS, PA, Florence, South Carolina; Wil-
    liam F. Greaney, COVINGTON & BURLING, LLP, Wash-
    ington, D.C., for Appellant/Cross-Appellee. J. Boone Aiken,
    III, AIKEN, BRIDGES, ELLIOTT, TYLER & SALEEBY,
    PA, LLP, Florence South Carolina; Benjamin P. McCallen,
    WILLKIE, FARR & GALLAGHER, LLP, New York, New
    York; Joseph G. Davis, WILLKIE, FARR & GALLAGHER,
    LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
    OPINION
    FLOYD, Circuit Judge:
    The Supreme Court has long recognized the importance of
    preserving the United States’ ability to "speak with one voice"
    in regulating foreign commerce. Michelin Tire Corp. v.
    Wages, 
    423 U.S. 276
    , 285 (1976); see also Japan Line, Ltd.
    v. Cnty. of L.A., 
    441 U.S. 434
    , 448–49 & n.14 (1979).
    Appellant/Cross-Appellee ESAB Group, Inc., urges us to
    allow the various views of the states to replace the federal
    government’s singular voice regarding commercial arbitration
    of insurance disputes in foreign tribunals. Specifically, ESAB
    Group contends that South Carolina law "reverse preempts"
    federal law—namely, a treaty and its implementing legisla-
    tion—pursuant to the McCarran-Ferguson Act, a federal stat-
    ute directed at protecting state insurance regulations from
    implied preemption by federal domestic commerce legisla-
    tion. See Am. Ins. Ass’n v. Garamendi, 
    539 U.S. 396
    , 428
    4                ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    (2003). We find such a reading of the pertinent law untenable.
    For this reason, we affirm as to the district court’s exercise of
    subject-matter jurisdiction, and we find no error in the district
    court’s order compelling arbitration.1
    We likewise reject the arguments of Appellee/Cross-
    Appellant Zurich Insurance plc (ZIP) that the district court
    erred in exercising personal jurisdiction over it and in
    remanding nonarbitrable claims to state court. Finding both
    parties’ appeals to be without merit, we affirm.
    I.
    This appeal presents a complex question regarding the
    intersection of a treaty and federal and state statutory law. For
    this reason, we first provide an overview of the applicable law
    before discussing the factual background.
    A.
    In 1944, to the shock of observers and commentators, the
    Supreme Court held that insurance was subject to federal reg-
    ulation under the interstate commerce clause. See United
    States v. S.-E. Underwriters Ass’n, 
    322 U.S. 533
    , 552–53
    (1944). "Prior to that decision, it had been assumed . . . that
    the issuance of an insurance policy was not a transaction in
    interstate commerce and that the States enjoyed a virtually
    exclusive domain over the insurance industry." St. Paul Fire
    & Marine Ins. Co. v. Barry, 
    438 U.S. 531
    , 538–39 (1978).
    Accordingly, the likelihood developed that, through implied
    preemption, federal statutes enacted to govern domestic com-
    merce would oust states from insurance regulation.
    In 1945, in response to South-Eastern Underwriters, Con-
    gress enacted the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C.
    1
    A magistrate judge handled all proceedings below. For readability, we
    refer to the lower court as the district court.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                 5
    §§ 1011–1015, to restore the states’ preeminent position in
    insurance regulation. See U.S. Dep’t of Treasury v. Fabe, 
    508 U.S. 491
    , 500 (1993); Life Partners, Inc. v. Morrison, 
    484 F.3d 284
    , 292 (4th Cir. 2007). Typically, of course, the
    Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution requires
    that a state law yield to a conflicting federal law. See U.S.
    Const. art. VI, cl. 2; Kurns v. R.R. Friction Prods. Corp., 
    132 S. Ct. 1261
    , 1266 (2012). The McCarran-Ferguson Act, how-
    ever, "transformed the legal landscape by overturning the nor-
    mal rules of pre-emption." Fabe, 
    508 U.S. at 507
    .
    The Act first declares that congressional silence "shall not
    be construed to impose any barrier" to state regulation or tax-
    ation of the business of insurance. 
    15 U.S.C. § 1011
    . It further
    provides that "[n]o Act of Congress shall be construed to
    invalidate, impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State
    for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance, or
    which imposes a fee or tax upon such business, unless such
    Act specifically relates to the business of insurance." 
    Id.
    § 1012(b). Thus, McCarran-Ferguson authorizes "reverse pre-
    emption" of generally applicable federal statutes by state laws
    enacted for the purpose of regulating the business of insur-
    ance. See Safety Nat’l Cas. Corp. v. Certain Underwriters at
    Lloyd’s, London, 
    587 F.3d 714
    , 720 (5th Cir. 2009) (en banc),
    cert. denied, 
    131 S. Ct. 65
     (2010).
    B.
    While Congress acted to preserve the states’ dominance in
    insurance regulation, it moved to federalize policy regarding
    arbitration. In 1925, Congress enacted the Federal Arbitration
    Act (FAA), 
    9 U.S.C. §§ 1
    –16, which established a liberal fed-
    eral policy in favor of the enforcement of arbitration agree-
    ments in maritime and commercial contracts. See
    CompuCredit Corp. v. Greenwood, 
    132 S. Ct. 665
    , 668–69
    (2012). Although the original version of the FAA protected
    the enforceability of domestic arbitration agreements, it did
    not ensure that courts would enforce agreements to arbitrate
    6              ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    in foreign tribunals or awards granted by such tribunals. For
    this, the United States entered into a multilateral treaty guar-
    anteeing the reciprocal enforcement of such arbitration agree-
    ments and awards.
    The Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of
    Foreign Arbitral Awards (the Convention), adopted June 10,
    1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517 (entered into force with respect to the
    United States Dec. 29, 1970), was crafted during a 1958
    United Nations conference. See Leonard V. Quigley, Acces-
    sion by the United States to the United Nations Convention on
    the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards,
    
    70 Yale L.J. 1049
    , 1059–60 (1961).
    The Convention obligates signatories (1) to recognize and
    enforce written agreements to submit disputes to foreign arbi-
    tration and (2) to enforce arbitral awards issued in foreign
    nations. See 
    id.
     arts. I–III. Article II of the Convention
    describes signatories’ responsibilities with respect to the
    enforcement of foreign arbitration agreements as follows:
    1. Each Contracting State shall recognize an agree-
    ment in writing under which the parties undertake to
    submit to arbitration all or any differences which
    have arisen or which may arise between them in
    respect of a defined legal relationship, whether con-
    tractual or not, concerning a subject matter capable
    of settlement by arbitration.
    ....
    3. The court of a Contracting State, when seized of
    an action in a matter in respect of which the parties
    have made an agreement within the meaning of this
    article, shall, at the request of one of the parties,
    refer the parties to arbitration, unless it finds that the
    said agreement is null and void, inoperative or inca-
    pable of being performed.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                         7
    
    Id.
     art. II. Article III addresses signatories’ obligations to
    enforce foreign arbitral awards. It states that "[e]ach Contract-
    ing State shall recognize arbitral awards as binding and
    enforce them in accordance with the rules of procedure of the
    territory where the award is relied upon, under the conditions
    laid down in the following articles." 
    Id.
     art. III. In contrast
    with Article II, Article III omits an express instruction to
    courts to enforce these awards.
    The United States, although a participant in the drafting
    conference, did not immediately accede to the Convention.
    See Quigley, supra, at 1059–60, 1074. Rather, the Senate
    gave its advice and consent to accession in 1968, and Presi-
    dent Nixon approved the accession in September 1970. Presi-
    dential Proclamation on the United States of America’s
    Accession to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforce-
    ment of Foreign Arbitral Awards (Presidential Proclamation),
    
    1970 WL 104417
    , at *5 (Dec. 11, 1970). The Convention
    entered into force in the United States on December 29, 1970.2
    
    Id.
    According to contemporaneous legislative materials, this
    delay occurred because "the American delegation [to the
    drafting conference] felt certain provisions of the
    [C]onvention were in conflict with some of our domestic
    laws." S. Exec. Rep. No. 90-10, at 1 (1968). Thus, the Presi-
    dent and Congress believed that "[c]hanges in the Federal
    Arbitration Act (title 9 of the United States Code) [were]
    required before the United States bec[ame] party to the
    [C]onvention." 
    Id. at 2
    ; see also H.R. Rep. No. 91-1181
    (1970), reprinted in 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3601, 3602 ("Even
    2
    The United States ultimately acceded to the Convention with two reser-
    vations: (1) it would apply the Convention on a reciprocal basis, and (2)
    it would apply the Convention only to "legal relationships . . . which are
    considered as commercial" under United States law. Presidential Procla-
    mation, supra, at *5. The parties agree that neither reservation bars the
    application of the Convention in the present action.
    8              ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    though the Convention was approved in October 1968, the
    instrument of accession will not be deposited until [chapter 2
    of the FAA] is enacted into law."). Specifically, a representa-
    tive of the State Department’s Office of the Legal Advisor
    requested changes to the United States Code "to insure the
    coverage of the [FAA] extends to all cases arising under the
    treaty and some changes in Federal civil procedure to take
    care of related venue and jurisdictional requirement prob-
    lems." S. Exec. Rep. No. 90-10, at 5–6 (statement of Richard
    D. Kearney).
    To address these concerns and to aid in the enforcement of
    the Convention, Congress enacted chapter 2 of the FAA (the
    Convention Act). The first section of this chapter states, "The
    Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign
    Arbitral Awards of June 10, 1958, shall be enforced in United
    States courts in accordance with this chapter." 
    9 U.S.C. § 201
    .
    The Convention Act then clarifies that arbitration agreements
    and awards arising out of commercial relationships, unless
    they are entirely between United States citizens and have no
    "reasonable relation with one or more foreign states," fall
    under the Convention. 
    Id.
     § 202.
    Sections 203 through 205 provide rules regarding jurisdic-
    tion and venue. Notably, § 203 grants federal district courts
    original jurisdiction over any "action or proceeding falling
    under the Convention," and § 205 allows a defendant to "re-
    move such action or proceeding" from state court to federal
    district court. Id. §§ 203, 205. Other provisions of the Con-
    vention Act permit federal district courts to "direct that arbi-
    tration be held" and "appoint arbitrators" in accordance with
    the parties’ agreement, id. § 206, and to confirm foreign arbi-
    tral awards falling under the Convention, id. § 207.
    C.
    Like federal policy, South Carolina policy favors arbitra-
    tion. Grant v. Magnolia Manor-Greenwood, Inc., 678 S.E.2d
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                  9
    435, 437 (S.C. 2009). South Carolina law establishes that, in
    general, written arbitration agreements are "valid, enforceable
    and irrevocable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in
    equity for the revocation of any contract." 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 15-48-10
    (a). But this rule does "not apply to . . . any insured
    or beneficiary under any insurance policy." 
    Id.
     § 15-48-
    10(b)(4).
    In analyzing the enforceability of domestic arbitration
    agreements in insurance policies, both the United States Dis-
    trict Court for the District of South Carolina and the South
    Carolina Court of Appeals have held that, pursuant to the
    McCarran-Ferguson Act, South Carolina’s law invalidating
    arbitration agreements in insurance policies reverse preempts
    chapter 1 of the FAA, 
    9 U.S.C. §§ 1
    –16, which governs
    domestic arbitration. E.g., Am. Health & Life Ins. Co. v. Hey-
    ward, 
    272 F. Supp. 2d 578
    , 582–83 (D.S.C. 2003); Cox v.
    Woodmen of the World Ins. Co., 
    556 S.E.2d 397
    , 399–402
    (S.C. Ct. App. 2001). ESAB Group’s appeal presents the con-
    comitant question with respect to the Convention and Con-
    vention Act: does the McCarran-Ferguson Act apply such that
    state law can reverse preempt federal law and invalidate a for-
    eign arbitration agreement?
    II.
    A.
    ESAB Group is a South Carolina-based manufacturer of
    welding materials and equipment. During the time period rel-
    evant to this appeal, it has had several foreign corporate par-
    ents. From 1989 to 1994, ESAB Group and its predecessors
    operated as subsidiaries of ESAB AB, a Swedish company. In
    1994, ESAB Group became an indirect subsidiary of Charter
    plc, a British company. It remained as such until October
    2008, when it became an indirect subsidiary of Charter Inter-
    national plc, an Irish company. Throughout this time, ESAB
    Group has maintained its principal place of business in Flor-
    10             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    ence, South Carolina, where it has a manufacturing plant,
    executive offices, and sales, engineering, and research devel-
    opment divisions.
    Between 1989 and 1996, a Swedish insurer, Trygg-Hansa,
    issued seven global liability policies (the ZIP Policies or the
    Policies) to ESAB Group’s Swedish parent, ESAB AB. Under
    these Policies, Trygg-Hansa agreed to provide coverage,
    either as direct primary coverage or in excess of primary poli-
    cies, to ESAB AB and its subsidiaries. Special endorsements
    in the Policies specifically extended coverage to ESAB Group
    and its predecessors. And according to the Policy Territory
    clauses contained in each Policy, the Policies applied to
    occurrences "worldwide."
    Five of the Policies, the 1989–1993 ZIP Policies, contain
    arbitration agreements, which mandate the resolution of dis-
    putes in Swedish arbitral tribunals in accordance with Swed-
    ish law. The other Policies, the 1994–1995 ZIP Policies,
    include Swedish choice-of-law provisions but omit arbitration
    clauses.
    Trygg-Hansa transferred its obligations under the ZIP Poli-
    cies to Zurich Insurance Company through a 1998 loss portfo-
    lio transfer agreement. Zurich Insurance Company then
    transferred these obligations to ZIP, an Irish insurer, in 2005.
    B.
    ESAB Group is currently facing numerous products liabil-
    ity suits arising from alleged personal injuries caused by
    exposure to welding consumables manufactured by ESAB
    Group or its predecessors. These suits presently are proceed-
    ing in numerous state and federal courts in the United States.
    As of June 12, 2009, ESAB Group had incurred more than
    $54 million in defense costs and suffered adverse verdicts in
    excess of $25 million.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                        11
    ESAB Group requested that its insurers defend and indem-
    nify it in these products liability actions. Several, including
    ZIP, refused coverage. As a result, ESAB Group brought suit
    against these insurers in South Carolina state court.3
    The defendant insurers removed the case to the United
    States District Court for the District of South Carolina pursu-
    ant to the Convention and the Convention Act’s grant of
    removal jurisdiction. ESAB Group disputed the district
    court’s subject-matter jurisdiction. ESAB Group maintained
    that the Convention Act implements the Convention, so the
    Convention is judicially enforceable only as incorporated into
    the Act. And, it continued, the McCarran-Ferguson Act per-
    mits South Carolina law, which would invalidate the arbitra-
    tion clauses in the 1989–1993 ZIP Policies, to reverse
    preempt the Convention Act. ESAB Group therefore con-
    tended that the ZIP Policies did not contain valid arbitration
    agreements, so they did not fall under the Convention. Thus,
    according to ESAB Group, the claims were not removable.
    ZIP, in turn, challenged the district court’s exercise of per-
    sonal jurisdiction. ZIP emphasized its limited contacts with
    South Carolina. A ZIP representative attested that ZIP main-
    tains no offices or other facilities in South Carolina, owns no
    property there, is not licensed as an insurer by South Carolina,
    and does not regularly conduct business in the state. Although
    the ZIP Policies extended coverage to ESAB Group, ZIP
    argued this was an insufficient basis for personal jurisdiction
    because the contracts were negotiated, drafted, and executed
    in Sweden by two Swedish companies, ESAB AB and Trygg-
    Hansa.
    The district court rejected both parties’ contentions. As to
    3
    Trygg-Hansa and Zurich Insurance Company were among the initial
    defendants in this action. But after ZIP agreed to assume all obligations
    under the ZIP Policies, the parties agreed to the dismissal of Trygg-Hansa
    and Zurich Insurance Company.
    12                ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    the issue of subject-matter jurisdiction, the district court
    acknowledged a split amongst our sister circuits concerning
    the interaction between the Convention, the Convention Act,
    and the McCarran-Ferguson Act. After considering the rele-
    vant precedent, the district court adopted the position of the
    Fifth Circuit, articulated in Safety National, 
    587 F.3d 714
    .
    Under this reasoning, it found that "the Convention, not the
    Convention Act, . . . directs courts to enforce international
    arbitration agreements," and because the McCarran-Ferguson
    Act’s text limits its scope to federal statutes, McCarran-
    Ferguson could not disrupt the application of traditional pre-
    emption rules.
    The district court then found that ZIP had the requisite
    minimum contacts with the forum to permit the exercise of
    personal jurisdiction and that the exercise of jurisdiction over
    ZIP was otherwise reasonable. After concluding it had juris-
    diction over both the subject matter and parties to the action,
    the district court enforced the arbitration agreements. It
    referred claims pertaining to the 1989-1993 ZIP Policies to arbi-
    tration.4
    Because it had referred to arbitration all claims providing
    a basis for subject-matter jurisdiction, the district court
    declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the
    4
    ZIP argued before the district court that the claims regarding coverage
    under the 1994–1995 ZIP Policies were also arbitrable pursuant to the
    clauses in the earlier contracts. The district court rejected this contention
    and declined to send these claims to arbitration. ZIP initially raised this
    issue in its cross-appeal.
    While the instant action was proceeding in the state and federal courts
    below, ZIP brought suit in Stockholm District Court to compel arbitration.
    The Swedish Court referred claims under all of the ZIP policies, including
    the 1994–1995 Policies, stating that it was "not evident that there [were]
    no legal grounds for arbitration" of these claims. The Swedish arbitral
    panel handling this matter subsequently dismissed for lack of jurisdiction
    the claims related to the 1994–1995 ZIP Policies. As a result, ZIP has
    withdrawn this aspect of its cross-appeal, and we do not consider it here.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                13
    remaining claims. It remanded the claims relating to the
    1994–1995 ZIP Policies to state court.
    ESAB Group timely appealed the district court’s exercise
    of subject-matter jurisdiction. ZIP filed a cross-appeal, chal-
    lenging the district court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction
    and its authority to remand the nonarbitrable claims to state
    court.
    III.
    We first consider whether the federal courts have jurisdic-
    tion over the present action or whether, as ESAB Group
    claims, South Carolina law reverse preempts federal law and
    eliminates the basis for jurisdiction. Our review of questions
    of subject-matter jurisdiction is de novo. Dixon v. Coburg
    Dairy, Inc., 
    369 F.3d 811
    , 815 (4th Cir. 2004) (en banc).
    ESAB Group asserts that the Convention is a non-self-
    executing treaty, i.e., one that requires implementing legisla-
    tion to be given effect in domestic courts. According to ESAB
    Group, it follows from this that the Convention has legal
    effect only as incorporated into its implementing legisla-
    tion—here, the Convention Act. And because the Convention
    Act is a federal statute that does not speak directly to insur-
    ance, ESAB contends, it is subject to reverse preemption
    under the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
    A.
    Two of our sister circuits, the Second and the Fifth, have
    examined whether a state law may preempt the Convention or
    Convention Act pursuant to the McCarran-Ferguson Act and
    have reached divergent conclusions.
    The Second Circuit visited the issue in Stephens v. Ameri-
    can International Insurance Co., 
    66 F.3d 41
     (2d Cir. 1995).
    Citing only the Convention Act, the Stephens court stated,
    14             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    "[T]he Convention is not self-executing, and therefore, relies
    upon an Act of Congress for its implementation." 
    Id. at 45
    .
    The court then framed the question as whether the implement-
    ing legislation, the Convention Act, is subject to preemption
    by state law under the McCarran-Ferguson Act. See 
    id.
     ("The
    Convention itself is simply inapplicable in this instance.").
    Based on the text of the McCarran-Ferguson Act, the court
    concluded, without elaboration, that state laws precluding
    arbitration of disputes with a delinquent insurer reverse pre-
    empt the Convention Act. 
    Id.
    The Second Circuit soon called its holding into question,
    however. In Stephens v. National Distillers & Chemical
    Corp., 
    69 F.3d 1226
     (2d Cir. 1995), the court held that the
    McCarran-Ferguson Act did not apply to the Foreign Sover-
    eign Immunities Act (FSIA), so the FSIA could preempt New
    York insurance law. See 
    id. at 1231
    . It based this decision, in
    part, on clear congressional intent for the FSIA to preempt all
    contrary state law. See 
    id.
     at 1232–34. Although the court
    noted in a footnote that this reasoning might apply to the Con-
    vention Act, in conflict with its earlier decision, it declined to
    consider the potential conflict at that time. See 
    id.
     at 1233 n.6.
    The Fifth Circuit, sitting en banc, took up the issue of the
    interaction between the McCarran-Ferguson Act and the Con-
    vention in Safety National. The majority in that case held that,
    even assuming the Convention was non-self-executing (and
    therefore did not have legal effect in domestic courts absent
    implementing legislation), reverse preemption did not apply.
    See Safety Nat’l, 
    587 F.3d at
    722–23. The majority first rea-
    soned that the McCarran-Ferguson Act applied only to stat-
    utes, not treaties. See 
    id. at 718
     ("Congress did not intend to
    include a treaty within the scope of an ‘Act of Congress’
    when it used those words in the McCarran-Ferguson Act.").
    It then concluded that, despite the presence of implementing
    legislation, the Convention, not the Convention Act, was
    being "construe[d]" to supersede state law. 
    Id. at 718
    , 724–25.
    And because the McCarran-Ferguson Act did not apply to
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                  15
    treaties, that Act could "not cause [state law] to reverse-
    preempt the Convention." 
    Id. at 732
    .
    Judge Elrod, joined by two other judges, provided a strident
    dissent. She too assumed that the treaty was non-self-
    executing, finding that the parties failed to preserve this issue.
    See 
    id.
     at 751 n.31 (Elrod, J., dissenting). But she observed
    that, as to non-self-executing treaties, "commentators over-
    whelmingly conclude that under current (and longstanding)
    law, it is only the implementing statute, not the non-self-
    executing treaty, that can be enforced by the courts so as to
    be capable of preemption." 
    Id.
     at 741–42 (citing sources).
    And because only the implementing legislation had preemp-
    tive effect, it was a statute—the Convention Act—that was
    being construed to supersede state law. See 
    id. at 748
    .
    The dissent charged that the majority had misconstrued the
    appropriate inquiry by analyzing whether a treaty was an "Act
    of Congress" for purposes of McCarran-Ferguson; Judge
    Elrod agreed it was not. See 
    id. at 737, 747
    . She further
    claimed that the majority had engaged in a "play on words"
    in finding that the Convention itself was being "‘construed’
    under the McCarran-Ferguson Act" to supersede state law. 
    Id. at 747
    . The Convention, as a non-self-executing treaty, was
    not judicially enforceable, so it lacked the power to preempt
    (or supersede) state law. 
    Id. at 746
    . Instead, the dissent
    argued, the Convention Act, which incorporated the Conven-
    tion by reference, must be the source of the potentially pre-
    emptive federal law to which McCarran-Ferguson’s reverse-
    preemption rule might apply. 
    Id.
     The proper question, accord-
    ing to the dissent, was whether the Convention Act was an
    "Act of Congress" within the meaning of McCarran-Ferguson,
    
    id. at 748
    , and the dissenters would have held that it was, 
    id. at 749
    .
    Judge Clement concurred in the judgment but rejected the
    majority’s analysis. See 
    id.
     at 732–33 (Clement, J., concurring
    in the judgment). The dissent, she asserted, had "persuasively
    16             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    refute[d]" the majority’s position that the provisions of a non-
    self-executing, implemented treaty "have full preemptive
    effect." 
    Id. at 733
    . Judge Clement argued that the court should
    instead have found that Article II of the Convention was self-
    executing based on its plain-language directive to domestic
    courts to enforce foreign arbitral agreements. See 
    id.
     at
    733–34. Although she acknowledged that some factors indi-
    cated the Convention Act was intended as implementing leg-
    islation, she believed these were better explained by reading
    other portions of the Convention, particularly Article III, as
    non-self-executing. See 
    id.
     at 736–37. If Article II was self-
    executing, then the treaty itself preempted state law, and the
    McCarran-Ferguson Act, applicable only to statutes, could not
    disrupt the traditional rules of preemption. See 
    id. at 737
    .
    B.
    ZIP presents numerous arguments in support of its position
    that the McCarran-Ferguson Act does not authorize reverse
    preemption in this case. First, we quickly reject ZIP’s conten-
    tion that the South Carolina statute is not subject to
    McCarran-Ferguson because it is not a "law enacted . . . for
    the purpose of regulating the business of insurance." The
    Supreme Court has instructed that this category of laws is a
    "broad" one, encompassing "laws that possess the end, inten-
    tion, or aim of adjusting, managing, or controlling the busi-
    ness of insurance." Fabe, 
    508 U.S. at 505
     (quoting Black’s
    Law Dictionary 1236, 1286 (6th ed. 1990)) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). We agree with the district court and the South
    Carolina Court of Appeals that South Carolina’s law, which
    governs the manner in which disputes regarding coverage are
    resolved, falls within this category. See Heyward, 
    272 F. Supp. 2d at
    582–83; Cox, 
    556 S.E.2d at
    399–402.
    The parties also spill significant ink disputing whether Arti-
    cle II of the Convention is a self-executing treaty provision.
    Chief Justice Marshall first delineated the distinction between
    a self-executing and non-self-executing treaty in Foster v.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                  17
    Neilson, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) 253, 314 (1829), overruled on other
    grounds by United States v. Percheman, 32 U.S. (7 Pet.) 51
    (1833). He wrote that, because the Constitution establishes
    that treaties are the supreme law of the land, a court should
    regard a treaty as "equivalent to an act of the legislature," pro-
    vided that "it operates of itself, without the aid of any legisla-
    tive provision" (i.e., it is self-executing). Id.; see also
    Medellin v. Texas, 
    552 U.S. 491
    , 505–06 (2008) ("Only ‘[i]f
    the treaty contains stipulations which are self-executing, that
    is, require no legislation to make them operative, [will] they
    have the force and effect of a legislative enactment.’" (alter-
    ations in original) (quoting Whitney v. Robertson, 
    124 U.S. 190
    , 194 (1888))). But if "the treaty addresses itself to the
    political, not the judicial department," Chief Justice Marshall
    directed, it is non-self-executing, and "the legislature must
    execute the contract, before it can become a rule for the
    court." Foster, 27 U.S. at 314. It is well-established that a
    treaty may "contain both self-executing and non-self-
    executing provisions." Lidas, Inc. v. United States, 
    238 F.3d 1076
    , 1080 (9th Cir. 2001); see also United States v. Postal,
    
    589 F.2d 862
    , 884 n.35 (5th Cir. 1979).
    ZIP asserts that Article II of the Convention is self-
    executing and, therefore, should be enforced and given pre-
    emptive effect independent of the Convention Act. There is
    much to recommend this position. Most notably, the starting
    point of treaty interpretation is the text, Medellin, 
    552 U.S. at 506
    , and the text of Article II instructs domestic courts to
    enforce foreign arbitral agreements. The Supreme Court has
    signaled that this sort of "directive to domestic courts" is
    indicative of a self-executing treaty provision. 
    Id. at 508
    .
    Judge Clement, in her Safety National concurrence, see 
    587 F.3d at
    734–35, and the United States, in opposing the peti-
    tion for certiorari in that case, see Brief for United States as
    Amicus Curiae at 9, La. Safety Ass’n of Timbermen Self Insur-
    ers Fund v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London, 
    131 S. Ct. 65
     (2010) (No. 09-945), 
    2010 WL 3375626
    , adopted the
    18             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    view that the instructive language in Article II rendered it
    self-executing.
    But, as Judge Clement noted, there is an emerging pre-
    sumption against finding treaties to be self-executing. See
    Safety Nat’l, 
    587 F.3d at 737
    . And the legislative history of
    the Convention Act indicates that Congress viewed the Act as
    implementing legislation, at least as to some of the Conven-
    tion’s provisions. See S. Exec. Rep. No. 90-10, at 5–6 (state-
    ment of Richard D. Kearney) (referring to the proposed
    changes to the FAA as "implementing legislation"); H.R. Rep.
    No. 91-1181, reprinted in 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3601, 3603
    (same). Medellin, furthermore, cited the Convention Act as an
    example of implementing legislation. 
    552 U.S. at 521
    .
    Although Judge Clement urged that the Convention Act
    served to implement other provisions of the Convention (par-
    ticularly Article III), see Safety Nat’l, 
    587 F.3d at
    736–37, this
    is hardly clear because nothing in the Convention Act or leg-
    islative history differentiates between Article II and the
    remainder of the treaty.
    Moreover, the question of what constitutes a self-executing
    treaty has long confused courts and commentators. See Postal,
    
    589 F.2d at 876
     ("The self-execution question is perhaps one
    of the most confounding in treaty law."); Curtis A. Bradley,
    Intent, Presumptions, and Non-Self-Executing Treaties, 102
    Am. J. Int’l L. 540, 540 (2008) ("[B]oth the theory behind the
    self-execution doctrine and its mechanics have long befuddled
    courts and commentators."). Indeed, scholars and jurists con-
    tinue to debate the proper means for determining a treaty’s
    status. See, e.g., Igartua v. United States, 
    626 F.3d 592
    , 623
    (1st Cir. 2010) (Torruella, J., concurring in part and dissenting
    in part) (urging a predominantly textual approach); David L.
    Sloss, Executing Foster v. Neilson: The Two-Step Approach
    to Analyzing Self-Executing Treaties, 53 Harv. Int’l L.J. 135
    (2012); Carlos Manuel Vazquez, The Four Doctrines of Self-
    Executing Treaties, 89 Am. J. Int’l L. 695 (1995).
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                19
    But we need not wade into these murky waters to resolve
    the question before us. To the contrary, we hold that, even
    assuming Article II of the Convention is non-self-executing,
    the Convention Act, as implementing legislation of a treaty,
    does not fall within the scope of the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
    Instead, as detailed below, Supreme Court precedent dictates
    that McCarran-Ferguson is limited to legislation within the
    domestic realm, and prior precedent of this court and our sis-
    ter circuits supports a narrow reading of the Act.
    Our aim in analyzing the McCarran-Ferguson Act, as in all
    matters of statutory interpretation, is to implement Congress’s
    intent. United States v. Abdelshafi, 
    592 F.3d 602
    , 607 (4th
    Cir. 2010). We do so by examining the text of the statute, and
    absent clear congressional intent to the contrary, we will give
    the statute its plain meaning. Id.; see also Stephens ex rel.
    R.E. v. Astrue, 
    565 F.3d 131
    , 137 (4th Cir. 2009) ("In inter-
    preting the plain language of a statute, we give the terms their
    ‘ordinary, contemporary, common meaning, absent an indica-
    tion Congress intended [them] to bear some different
    import.’" (quoting N.C. ex rel. Cooper v. Tenn. Valley Auth.,
    
    515 F.3d 344
    , 351 (4th Cir. 2008))).
    Where a statute touches upon foreign relations and the
    United States’ treaty obligations, we must proceed with par-
    ticular care in undertaking this interpretive task. As the
    Supreme Court observed in considering a prior potential con-
    flict between the Convention Act and a federal statute, "[i]f
    the United States is to be able to gain the benefits of interna-
    tional accords and have a role as a trusted partner in multilat-
    eral endeavors, its courts should be most cautious before
    interpreting its domestic legislation in such manner as to vio-
    late international agreements." Vimar Seguros y Reaseguros,
    S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 
    515 U.S. 528
    , 539 (1995). We seek,
    when possible, to "construe . . . statute[s] consistent with our
    obligations under international law." Kofa v. U.S. INS, 
    60 F.3d 1084
    , 1090 (4th Cir. 1995) (en banc) (citing Murray v.
    Schooner Charming Betsy, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 64, 118 (1804)).
    20             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    ESAB Group urges that we must construe "Act of Con-
    gress," as that term is used in the McCarran-Ferguson Act, to
    apply to every federal statute, irrespective of the international
    implications. But the Supreme Court has recently explained
    that, in enacting the McCarran-Ferguson Act, Congress
    plainly did not intend the law to apply so broadly. In Gara-
    mendi, the Supreme Court specified that McCarran-Ferguson
    was "directed to implied preemption by domestic commerce
    legislation." 
    539 U.S. at 428
    ; see also 
    id.
     ("As the text itself
    makes clear, the point of McCarran–Ferguson’s legislative
    choice of leaving insurance regulation generally to the States
    was to limit congressional preemption under the commerce
    power, whether dormant or exercised.").
    Although in Garamendi the Court was examining the inter-
    action between state law and an executive agreement, the
    Court’s statements regarding congressional intent guide our
    understanding of Congress’s intent to limit the Act’s scope.
    Specifically, that case demonstrated that Congress did not
    intend for the McCarran-Ferguson Act to permit state law to
    vitiate international agreements entered by the United States.
    Cf. FTC v. Travelers Health Ass’n, 
    362 U.S. 293
    , 300 (1960)
    (stating that McCarran-Ferguson was not intended to permit
    a state to "regulate activities carried on beyond its own bor-
    ders"), cited in Garamendi, 
    539 U.S. at 428
    .
    On several occasions, moreover, Courts of Appeals have
    refused to give the McCarran-Ferguson Act the broad scope
    urged by ESAB Group. For example, we have previously
    expressed our skepticism that Congress intended the
    McCarran-Ferguson Act to apply to statutes governing federal
    subject-matter jurisdiction. Gross v. Weingarten, 
    217 F.3d 208
    , 222 (4th Cir. 2000). And several of our sister circuits
    have joined in this view or held that such statutes are not sub-
    ject to reverse preemption. See Safety Nat’l, 
    587 F.3d at
    724
    n.39 (expressing skepticism); Hawthorne Sav. F.S.B. v. Reli-
    ance Ins. Co. of Ill., 
    421 F.3d 835
    , 843–44 (9th Cir. 2005)
    (holding that the diversity jurisdiction statute "is not reverse-
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                  21
    preempted"), amended 
    433 F.3d 1089
     (9th Cir. 2006); Martin
    Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Prudential Reinsurance Co., 
    910 F.2d 249
    , 254 (5th Cir. 1990) (holding that the McCarran-Ferguson
    Act "did not remove diversity jurisdiction from the federal
    courts in insurance matters"); Grimes v. Crown Life Ins. Co.,
    
    857 F.2d 699
    , 702–03 (10th Cir. 1988) (finding no preemp-
    tion of diversity jurisdiction statute).
    The Second Circuit has found several substantive statutes
    outside of McCarran-Ferguson’s reverse-preemption rule. It
    first held that the McCarran-Ferguson Act could not permit
    state law to exempt an insurer from compliance with Title VII
    of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.
    Spirt v. Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n, 
    691 F.2d 1054
    ,
    1064–66 (2d Cir. 1982), vacated, 
    463 U.S. 1223
    , remanded to
    
    735 F.2d 23
     (2d Cir. 1984). But see Murff v. Prof’l Med. Ins.
    Co., 
    97 F.3d 289
    , 292 n.4 (8th Cir. 1996) (questioning Spirt’s
    holding); NAACP v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    978 F.2d 287
    ,
    294–95 (7th Cir. 1992) (same). It reasoned that Title VII’s
    "broad and explicit pre-emptive provision" evinced congres-
    sional intent to displace all contrary state laws. Spirt, 
    691 F.2d at 1065
    .
    Likewise, as noted previously, the Second Circuit subse-
    quently held that McCarran-Ferguson’s reverse-preemption
    rule was inapplicable to the FSIA. Nat’l Distillers, 69 F.3d at
    1231. The "international-law origins of the FSIA," it declared,
    were "so different from the kind of congressional statutory
    action that the McCarran-Ferguson Act was enacted to deal
    with," that they "virtually compel[led] the conclusion" that the
    McCarran-Ferguson Act did not authorize state law to dis-
    place the FSIA. Id. In addition, it concluded that the
    McCarran-Ferguson Act did not alter the rules of preemption
    "so drastically as to force a federal law that clearly intends to
    preempt all other state laws to give way simply because the
    22               ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    insurance industry is involved." Id. at 1233. And it found that
    the FSIA evidenced such an intent.5 Id. at 1232.
    The Convention Act, which provides, without exception,
    that the Convention "shall be enforced in United States
    courts," 
    9 U.S.C. § 201
    , similarly intends to replace all con-
    trary state laws. The Supreme Court has opined that the Con-
    vention and Convention Act demand that courts "subordinate
    domestic notions of arbitrability to the international policy
    favoring commercial arbitration." Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v.
    Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 
    473 U.S. 614
    , 639 (1985).
    Thus, although the Court acknowledges that the Convention
    permits Congress to "specify categories of claims it wishes to
    reserve for decision by our own courts," it has "decline[d] to
    subvert the spirit of the United States’ accession to the Con-
    vention by recognizing subject-matter exceptions where Con-
    gress has not expressly directed the courts to do so." 
    Id.
     at 639
    n.21.
    The McCarran-Ferguson Act contains no such express direc-
    tion.6 Indeed, the Supreme Court has told us that the aim of
    McCarran-Ferguson is not arbitration or treaties, but "domes-
    tic commerce legislation." Garamendi, 
    539 U.S. at 428
    . We
    therefore hold that the Convention Act, as legislation imple-
    menting a treaty, is not subject to reverse preemption, so
    insurance disputes are not exempt from the Convention Act
    pursuant to McCarran-Ferguson’s reverse-preemption rule.
    5
    As we recounted above, the National Distillers panel acknowledged
    that its decision was in tension with the Second Circuit’s earlier decision
    in Stephens v. American International because this reasoning might also
    apply to the Convention Act, but it found no need to revisit that holding
    in the case before it. See Nat’l Distillers, 69 F.3d at 1233 n.6.
    6
    Of course, to the extent the McCarran-Ferguson Act and Convention
    Act are in irreconcilable conflict, the more recent Convention Act would
    prevail. See Branch v. Smith, 
    538 U.S. 254
    , 273 (2003); cf. Whitney v.
    Robertson, 
    124 U.S. 190
    , 194 (1888) (establishing that if a self-executing
    treaty and statute are inconsistent, "the one last in date will control the
    other").
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                         23
    As we have observed, the federal government must be per-
    mitted to "speak with one voice when regulating commercial
    relations with foreign governments." Michelin Tire Corp., 
    423 U.S. at 285
    . With the Convention and Convention Act, the
    government has opted to use this voice to articulate a uniform
    policy in favor of enforcing agreements to arbitrate interna-
    tionally, even when "a contrary result would be forthcoming
    in a domestic context." Mitsubishi Motors, 
    473 U.S. at 629
    .
    To allow "parochial refusal[s]" to enforce foreign arbitration
    agreements would frustrate the very purposes for which the
    Convention was drafted: achieving the predictable and orderly
    resolution of disputes "essential to any international business
    transaction" and ensuring parties are not haled into hostile or
    inappropriate forums. Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 
    417 U.S. 506
    , 516–17 (1974); see also Mitsubishi Motors, 
    473 U.S. at
    639 n.21.
    Congress might opt to exclude insurance disputes from the
    Convention. But it has not done so with the McCarran-
    Ferguson Act. Nothing in McCarran-Ferguson suggests that,
    by enacting that statute, Congress intended to delegate to the
    states the authority to abrogate international agreements that
    this country has entered into and rendered judicially enforce-
    able. We will not read it to do so.
    Because the Supreme Court has made clear that McCarran-
    Ferguson is limited to domestic affairs, we hold the Conven-
    tion Act falls outside of its scope.7 Hence, we affirm the dis-
    trict court’s exercise of subject-matter jurisdiction.
    7
    This is not to say that, in enacting the McCarran-Ferguson Act, Con-
    gress merely "‘turn[ed] back the clock’ to the time prior to South-Eastern
    Underwriters"; the Court has made clear that it did not. Fabe, 
    508 U.S. at
    506–08. We recognize that, within the domestic context, McCarran-
    Ferguson broadly empowered states to tax and regulate insurance. 
    Id. at 508
    . Here, we are simply heeding the Court’s instruction in Garamendi
    that McCarran-Ferguson did not extend states’ authority over foreign
    affairs or allow them "to regulate activities carried on beyond [their] own
    borders." 
    539 U.S. at 428
     (quoting Travelers Health Ass’n, 
    362 U.S. at 300
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    24               ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    In addition, as the 1989–1993 ZIP Policies contain valid
    arbitration clauses subject to the Convention and Convention
    Act, we find the district court properly compelled arbitration
    in Sweden of ESAB Group’s claims under these Policies.
    IV.
    Having established that the district court had jurisdiction
    over the subject matter of this action, we now consider the
    issues presented by ZIP’s cross-appeal.
    A.
    ZIP avers that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction
    over it. It notes that it maintains no office, employees, or
    agents in South Carolina, and it owns no property there. It fur-
    ther stresses that the ZIP Policies were executed outside of the
    United States between foreign companies, and these contracts
    designate Swedish law for the resolution of disputes. Thus,
    ZIP urges that, although the ESAB Group and its predecessors
    were covered under the ZIP Policies, its contacts with the
    state are too weak to provide a basis for jurisdiction and that
    the exercise of jurisdiction is otherwise unreasonable.
    We review de novo the exercise of personal jurisdiction
    over a defendant, although we accept the district court’s
    underlying factual findings absent clear error. Consulting
    Eng’rs Corp. v. Geometric Ltd., 
    561 F.3d 273
    , 276 (4th Cir.
    2009). The plaintiff bears the burden to make a prima facie
    showing of a basis for jurisdiction. 
    Id.
    In general, "[a] federal district court may only exercise per-
    sonal jurisdiction over a foreign corporation if such jurisdic-
    tion is authorized by the long-arm statute of the state in which
    it sits and application of the long-arm statute is consistent
    with the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment."8
    8
    At oral argument, counsel for ESAB Group suggested that we should
    consider ZIP’s contacts with the United States, rather than its South Caro-
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                          25
    
    Id. at 277
    . Because the scope of South Carolina’s long-arm
    statute is coextensive with the Due Process Clause, see Cock-
    rell v. Hillerich & Bradsby Co., 
    611 S.E.2d 505
    , 508 (S.C.
    2005), we proceed directly to the constitutional analysis, see
    ESAB Grp., Inc. v. Centricut, Inc., 
    126 F.3d 617
    , 623 (4th Cir.
    1997).
    We employ a three-part inquiry to determine whether the
    exercise of specific jurisdiction over a party comports with
    due process. Consulting Eng’rs, 
    561 F.3d at 278
    . Under this
    test, "we consider (1) the extent to which the defendant pur-
    posefully availed itself of the privilege of conducting activi-
    ties in the State; (2) whether the plaintiff[’s] claims arise out
    of those activities directed at the State; and (3) whether the
    exercise of personal jurisdiction would be constitutionally
    reasonable." 
    Id.
     (quoting ALS Scan, Inc. v. Digital Serv. Con-
    sultants, Inc., 
    293 F.3d 707
    , 712 (4th Cir. 2002)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). We agree with the district court
    that, as to ZIP, each prong of this test is satisfied.
    To meet the first prong, the court must find that the defen-
    dant has established "minimum contacts" with the forum state
    by "purposefully avail[ing itself] of the privilege of conduct-
    ing business under the [state’s] laws." 
    Id.
     A defendant’s
    actions that are directed at the forum state in only "a random,
    fortuitous, or attenuated way" are insufficient to support juris-
    diction. ESAB Grp., 
    126 F.3d at 625
    . Thus, the Supreme
    Court has rejected the exercise of jurisdiction where a defen-
    dant has merely placed a product into the stream of commerce
    lina contacts. But because we conclude that ZIP would be subject to juris-
    diction in a court of general jurisdiction in South Carolina, as required for
    jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(k)(1)(A), we need not
    consider ZIP’s nationwide contacts. See CFA Inst. v. Inst. of Chartered
    Fin. Analysts of India, 
    551 F.3d 285
    , 292 (4th Cir. 2009) (declining to ana-
    lyze the possibility of jurisdiction based on nationwide contacts pursuant
    to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(k)(2) because Rule 4(k)(1)(A) autho-
    rized jurisdiction).
    26               ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    foreseeing that it might ultimately reach the forum state. See
    J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd. v. Nicastro, 
    131 S. Ct. 2780
    , 2785
    (2011) (plurality opinion). But where a defendant has "tar-
    geted the forum" with its goods, sufficient contacts exist. 
    Id. at 2788
    .
    In Rossman v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
    Co., 
    832 F.2d 282
    , 286–87 (4th Cir. 1987), we identified
    unique aspects of the business of insurance relevant to the
    evaluation of an insurer’s contacts with a forum. Litigation,
    we observed, is often a necessary part of the insurance busi-
    ness. 
    Id. at 286
    . Therefore, by agreeing to furnish a defense
    to its policyholder within a specified policy territory, an
    insurer indicates its willingness to be haled into court in for-
    eign forums within this territory. 
    Id.
     And because the insurer
    offers "broad coverage to induce customers to buy its policies
    and to pay higher premiums for them," these contacts "are
    neither fortuitous nor incidental." 
    Id. at 287
    . Based on these
    principles, we determined in Rossman that a district court in
    Virginia could exercise jurisdiction over a foreign insurer
    based on an automobile liability insurance contract written,
    issued, and delivered in Illinois, because the contract’s policy
    territory included Virginia. See 
    id.
     at 286–87.
    Not only do the ZIP Policies9 include South Carolina in the
    policy territory, which is worldwide, but the Policies also
    identify as covered insureds ESAB Group and its predeces-
    sors, companies based in South Carolina. We infer that ZIP
    obtained financial benefits, in the form of higher premiums,
    for agreeing to provide this coverage. These facts demonstrate
    that ZIP targeted the forum state and purposefully availed
    9
    It is of no moment that Trygg-Hansa, rather than ZIP, originated these
    Policies. In agreeing to assume Trygg-Hansa’s obligations under the ZIP
    Policies, ZIP knowingly entered into an agreement to defend ESAB
    Group, a company headquartered in South Carolina, in courts throughout
    the world. Thus, ZIP’s successor status does not lessen its contacts with
    the state.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                   27
    itself of the privilege of conducting business under South Car-
    olina law. Accordingly, the first prong, minimum contacts, is
    satisfied. The parties also agree that the suit arises out of these
    contacts, fulfilling the second prong.
    The third prong, constitutional reasonableness, protects a
    party from "litigation ‘so gravely difficult and inconvenient’
    that [the] party unfairly is at a ‘severe disadvantage’ in com-
    parison to [its] opponent." Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
    
    471 U.S. 462
    , 478 (1985) (quoting The Bremen v. Zapata Off-
    Shore Co., 
    407 U.S. 1
    , 18 (1972); McGee v. Int’l Life Ins. Co.,
    
    355 U.S. 220
    , 223 (1957)). To defeat jurisdiction on this
    basis, a defendant must establish, despite the presence of
    minimum contacts, "a compelling case that the presence of
    some other considerations would render jurisdiction unreason-
    able." Id. at 477.
    It is clear that the burden on ZIP of litigating in South Car-
    olina is not so great—particularly in relation to the interests
    of South Carolina and of ESAB Group—to render the exer-
    cise of jurisdiction unreasonable. We are cognizant that
    requiring a party to defend itself in a "foreign legal system"
    imposes "unique burdens" that "should have significant
    weight in assessing the reasonableness of stretching the long
    arm of personal jurisdiction over national borders." Consult-
    ing Eng’rs, 
    561 F.3d at
    282 n.12 (quoting Asahi Metal Indus.
    Co. v. Superior Ct., 
    480 U.S. 102
    , 114 (1987)) (internal quo-
    tation marks omitted). But in contracting to defend ESAB
    Group worldwide, ZIP indicated that the burden of appearing
    in a forum in South Carolina is not exceedingly onerous. See
    Rossman, 
    832 F.2d at 287
    .
    In contrast, South Carolina "has a manifest interest in pro-
    viding effective means of redress for its residents when their
    insurers refuse to pay claims." McGee, 
    355 U.S. at 223
    . And
    ESAB Group, as a company based in South Carolina and fac-
    ing litigation throughout the United States, has a substantial
    interest in the convenience of litigating in South Carolina.
    28             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    Foster v. Arletty 3 SARL, 
    278 F.3d 409
     (4th Cir. 2002), cited
    by ZIP, does not dictate otherwise. In that case, Foster, a
    French citizen, first sought relief in France, and he brought
    suit in South Carolina only after the French courts issued an
    adverse decision. See 
    id. at 416
    . Thus, Foster, unlike ESAB
    Group, could not show that South Carolina was his forum of
    choice, and it was clearly convenient for Foster to litigate in
    France. See 
    id.
    We will affirm the district court with respect to personal
    jurisdiction.
    B.
    The Convention Act provides that "[a]n action or proceed-
    ing falling under the Convention shall be deemed to arise
    under the laws and treaties of the United States," and it grants
    federal district courts "original jurisdiction over such an
    action or proceeding." 
    9 U.S.C. § 203
    . Seizing on this lan-
    guage, ZIP contends that the district court had original juris-
    diction over all claims against it in this action, regardless of
    whether each claim involved a contract containing a foreign
    arbitral agreement. Thus, it argues that the court erred when,
    after referring the claims pertaining to the 1989–1993 ZIP
    Policies to arbitration, it exercised its discretion under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    , the statutory grant of supplemental jurisdic-
    tion, to remand the remaining, nonarbitrable claims to state
    court.
    We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s decision
    to remand state law claims after declining to exercise supple-
    mental jurisdiction. Jordahl v. Democratic Party of Va., 
    122 F.3d 192
    , 203 (4th Cir. 1997). Of course, an error of law is,
    by definition, an abuse of discretion. Koon v. United States,
    
    518 U.S. 81
    , 100 (1996).
    We find that the district court had authority to decline to
    exercise jurisdiction over the nonarbitrable claims and to
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                 29
    remand these claims to state court. Although § 203 refers to
    jurisdiction over an "action or proceeding," the statutory grant
    of federal-question jurisdiction, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    , similarly
    confers upon district courts "original jurisdiction of all civil
    actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the
    United States." Notwithstanding the potential breadth of this
    language, the Supreme Court has interpreted § 1331 to require
    supplemental jurisdiction (or its antecedents) over certain
    claims within a constitutional case that do not themselves give
    rise to federal jurisdiction.
    In United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs, 
    383 U.S. 715
    (1966), the Court articulated the theory of pendent jurisdic-
    tion, the precursor to supplemental jurisdiction, by adopting
    an "expansive interpretive approach" to § 1331. Exxon Mobil
    Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc., 
    545 U.S. 546
    , 553 (2005).
    Under this approach, so long as one claim in an action pre-
    sented a federal question on the face of the well-pleaded com-
    plaint, a court could exercise jurisdiction over the entire con-
    stitutional case or controversy. See 
    id.
     at 552–53. It does not
    follow, however, that the federal court had original jurisdic-
    tion over the entire case; rather, it had original jurisdiction
    over at least one claim, allowing the exercise of supplemen-
    tal/pendent jurisdiction over the remaining claims. And the
    Supreme Court subsequently recognized that, when the exer-
    cise of pendent jurisdiction over these claims became "inap-
    propriate," district courts had inherent authority to remand
    them to state courts. Carnegie-Mellon Univ. v. Cohill, 
    484 U.S. 343
    , 351 (1988).
    With 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    , Congress largely codified the doc-
    trine of pendent jurisdiction (and the related doctrine of ancil-
    lary jurisdiction) as supplemental jurisdiction. See § 1367(a)
    ("[I]n any civil action of which the district courts have origi-
    nal jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental
    jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims
    in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form
    part of the same case or controversy . . . ."). Section 1367(c)
    30             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    recognizes courts’ authority to decline to exercise supplemen-
    tal jurisdiction in limited circumstances, including, as
    occurred here, where the court dismisses the claims over
    which it has original jurisdiction. Id. § 1367(c); see also Hin-
    son v. Norwest Fin. S.C., Inc., 
    239 F.3d 611
    , 616 (4th Cir.
    2001). And we have held that district courts retain inherent
    authority, once they have decided under § 1367(c) not to exer-
    cise jurisdiction, to remand these claims to state court. Hin-
    son, 
    239 F.3d at
    616–17.
    In light of this history, we read § 203 to authorize federal
    jurisdiction over all claims within an action, but, as to those
    claims not falling under the Convention, this jurisdiction is
    supplemental in nature. And when those claims falling within
    a court’s original jurisdiction are no longer in the case—here,
    because they have been referred to arbitration—the court has
    authority under § 1367(c) to decline to exercise such supple-
    mental jurisdiction and inherent authority to remand the
    remaining claims to state court. Thus, the district court com-
    mitted no error of law in finding it had authority to do so here.
    Nor did the district court abuse its discretion in exercising
    this authority. ZIP urges that 
    9 U.S.C. § 3
     obligated the dis-
    trict court to stay the remaining claims pending arbitration.
    But we have held that, as to nonarbitrable claims, the decision
    to stay under § 3 is discretionary. Am. Recovery Corp. v.
    Computerized Thermal Imaging, Inc., 
    96 F.3d 88
    , 97 (4th Cir.
    1996). Although a district court may be compelled to stay
    nonarbitrable issues within an otherwise arbitrable claim, see
    Aggarao v. MOL Ship Mgmt. Co., 
    675 F.3d 355
    , 376 & n.18
    (4th Cir. 2012), there is no like requirement that the court
    exercise supplemental jurisdiction over nonarbitrable claims
    where all claims within the court’s original jurisdiction have
    been sent to arbitration. Accordingly, the district court was
    well within the scope of its discretion to remand the nonarbitr-
    able claims in this action.
    ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE                  31
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    AFFIRMED
    WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I am happy to concur in Judge Floyd’s fine opinion in this
    case. At oral argument, I expressed the view that appellant’s
    able counsel was leading this court into a nest of "machine
    gun fire."
    Here’s why. To hold that the McCarran-Ferguson Act
    empowers state law to displace the Convention on the Recog-
    nition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards would (1)
    ignore the Convention’s express statement that contracting
    states "shall recognize an agreement in writing under which
    the parties undertake to submit to arbitration," and its direc-
    tive that "[t]he court of a Contracting State . . . shall, at the
    request of one of the parties, refer the parties to arbitration,"
    art. II, June 10, 1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517, 330 U.N.T.S. 3
    (emphases added); (2) ignore the implementing legislation’s
    instruction that "[t]he Convention . . . shall be enforced in
    United States courts," 
    9 U.S.C. § 201
     (emphasis added), and
    its conferral of jurisdiction to federal district courts for "ac-
    tion[s] [and] proceeding[s] falling under the Convention," 
    id.
    § 203; (3) require this court to interpret the phrase "Act of
    Congress," as used in the McCarran-Ferguson Act, to encom-
    pass a treaty, see Safety Nat’l Cas. Corp. v. Certain Under-
    writers at Lloyd’s, London, 
    587 F.3d 714
    , 722-23 (5th Cir.
    2009); (4) cause a treaty to lose its character as a treaty simply
    because it has been implemented by federal legislation, see
    id.; (5) contradict American Insurance Ass’n v. Garamendi,
    
    539 U.S. 396
     (2003), where the Supreme Court indicated that
    the McCarran-Ferguson Act "was not intended to allow a
    State to ‘regulate activities carried on beyond its own bor-
    ders’" and "cannot sensibly be construed to address preemp-
    32             ESAB GROUP v. ZURICH INSURANCE
    tion by executive conduct in foreign affairs," 
    id. at 428
    (citation omitted); see ante at 20; (6) ignore the intent of Con-
    gress, as expressed in the Federal Arbitration Act, to establish
    a "liberal federal policy favoring arbitration agreements, not-
    withstanding any state substantive or procedural policies to
    the contrary," Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Con-
    str. Corp., 
    460 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1983) (citing 
    9 U.S.C. § 2
    ); (7)
    ignore the repeated admonitions of the Supreme Court that
    arbitration provisions are a valid way of resolving interna-
    tional commercial disputes, see, e.g., Mitsubishi Motors Corp.
    v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 
    473 U.S. 614
    , 638-40
    (1985); Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 
    417 U.S. 506
    , 516-17
    (1974); (8) cause the nation to speak with more than one
    voice in a matter of international commercial trade by
    enabling each of the fifty states to employ its own arbitration
    regime, see generally Crosby v. Nat’l Foreign Trade Council,
    
    530 U.S. 363
    , 376-77, 381-82 (2000); (9) cause other nations
    to doubt this country’s commitment to its international cove-
    nants; and (10) invite retaliation when an American insurer
    (or, for that matter, any American company) seeks to enforce
    an arbitration agreement with an insured (or an agreement that
    relates to any number of commercial matters) in another
    country.
    One might go on, but there is something to be said for end-
    ing at a round number, and so I do here.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1243, 11-1655

Citation Numbers: 685 F.3d 376

Judges: Diaz, Floyd, Wilkinson

Filed Date: 7/9/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/5/2023

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Aggarao v. MOL SHIP MANAGEMENT CO., LTD. , 675 F.3d 355 ( 2012 )

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