Unocal, a U.S.-based energy company, invested in the Yadana gas pipeline project in southern Myanmar (Burma) in partnership with the state-owned Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) and other foreign companies. The Myanmar military provided security and logistical support for the project. Burmese villagers alleged that, in connection with securing and building the pipeline corridor, military units forcibly conscripted villagers for labor and portering, conducted violent relocations, and committed grave abuses including beatings, rape, torture, and extrajudicial killings. The plaintiffs asserted that Unocal knew or should have known about these abuses from reports, on-the-ground observations, and communications with partners, and nonetheless continued to provide financial and logistical support that facilitated the military's conduct. They brought claims in U.S. federal court under the ATS for violations of international law (including forced labor/slavery, cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment, torture, and crimes against humanity), as well as claims under the TVPA and various California tort theories (e.g., negligence, assault and battery, wrongful death), asserting direct, agency, joint venture, and aiding-and-abetting theories of liability. The district court (C.D. Cal.) granted summary judgment for Unocal on the federal claims, concluding, among other things, that the evidence did not show Unocal's active participation or the requisite intent for the abuses; it allowed certain state-law claims to proceed. The plaintiffs appealed.
Under the Alien Tort Statute, may foreign plaintiffs pursue civil claims against a U.S. corporation for aiding and abetting violations of universally accepted norms of international law—such as forced labor and other severe abuses—committed by a foreign military during a joint venture project abroad, and what standards govern corporate secondary liability?
The Alien Tort Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1350, confers federal jurisdiction over civil actions by aliens for torts committed in violation of specific, universal, and obligatory norms of international law. Violations such as slavery (including forced labor), torture, extrajudicial killing, and crimes against humanity qualify as actionable norms. Aiding-and-abetting liability under the ATS is cognizable where, consistent with international law, a defendant knowingly provides substantial assistance to the principal's commission of the violation; state action is not required for all offenses (e.g., slavery and crimes against humanity), but is required for some (e.g., torture) and may be satisfied by action under color of law. Corporate entities are not categorically immune from civil liability under the ATS. The TVPA authorizes actions only against natural persons. Common defenses—such as political question, act of state, and forum non conveniens—do not bar adjudication when the claims rest on well-defined international norms and the case is justiciable. (Note: The 2002 Ninth Circuit panel articulated these principles, but its opinion was later vacated on grant of rehearing en banc before settlement.)
The Ninth Circuit panel held that (1) forced labor is a modern form of slavery that violates a specific, universal, and obligatory norm of international law actionable under the ATS; (2) corporations can be civilly liable under the ATS; (3) aiding-and-abetting liability is available under the ATS using international law standards that require knowing and substantial assistance; (4) the plaintiffs introduced sufficient evidence to create triable issues that Unocal knowingly assisted the Myanmar military's use of forced labor and related abuses, precluding summary judgment on key ATS claims; and (5) TVPA claims against Unocal, a corporation, fail because the TVPA applies only to natural persons. The court reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings. The panel opinion was later vacated when rehearing en banc was granted; the case settled before an en banc decision issued.
The panel began by identifying the relevant international law norms. Relying on sources such as Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, Kadic v. Karadžić, decisions of international criminal tribunals, and international conventions (e.g., ILO Convention No. 29), the court concluded that forced labor constitutes a universally condemned, specific, and obligatory norm akin to slavery, satisfying the ATS standard. The court rejected the view that the ATS required direct perpetration by the defendant; instead, it recognized aiding-and-abetting liability as a settled mode of responsibility under international law. Drawing on international jurisprudence (including the ICTY's Furundžija decision), the panel articulated a knowledge-based mens rea for aiding and abetting: a defendant is liable if it knew that its assistance would facilitate the violation and provided substantial aid that had a practical effect on the perpetration of the offense. Applying that standard to the summary judgment record, the court found evidence from which a reasonable factfinder could conclude that Unocal knew of the military's systematic use of forced labor and other abuses around the pipeline project and that Unocal's financial and logistical support substantially assisted those operations. Evidence included reports and communications indicating awareness of abuses, Unocal's involvement in the project's security and logistics planning, and the provision of resources to military units implicated in the misconduct. The court also addressed the scope of actionable actors, concluding that corporations are not categorically shielded from ATS liability because international law identifies the substantive norms, while domestic law supplies remedial mechanisms; nothing in international law or the ATS foreclosed suits against juridical persons. On the TVPA claim, however, the court held that the statute's text confines liability to natural persons. Procedurally and doctrinally, the panel was unpersuaded that justiciability doctrines (such as act of state or political question) barred adjudication, given the nature of the norms at issue and the posture of the case. Accordingly, the panel reversed summary judgment on the core ATS aiding-and-abetting claims and remanded. The Ninth Circuit later granted rehearing en banc, vacating the panel opinion; before the en banc court issued an opinion, the parties settled, leaving the panel's reasoning influential but nonprecedential.
Unocal became a touchstone in ATS litigation for its recognition of aiding-and-abetting liability and corporate civil liability for egregious international law violations, as well as for framing forced labor as a modern form of slavery. While the panel opinion was vacated and thus lacks precedential force, its analysis influenced subsequent cases and scholarship, and it foreshadowed later Supreme Court guidance in Sosa (requiring specificity and universality of norms) and the later narrowing of ATS reach in Kiobel (presumption against extraterritoriality), Jesner (no ATS suits against foreign corporations), and Nestlé (domestic-conduct and causation requirements). For law students, Unocal illustrates the interplay between international norms and federal common law remedies, the evidentiary burdens for secondary liability, and the strategic challenges—doctrinal and practical—of transnational human rights litigation against corporate actors.
Doe I v. Unocal Corp. occupies an outsized place in the history of ATS litigation. It synthesized international law sources to recognize forced labor as a modern form of slavery actionable under the ATS, articulated a knowledge-based aiding-and-abetting standard, and rejected categorical corporate immunity—all of which emboldened human rights plaintiffs to test the boundaries of corporate accountability in U.S. courts. Even though the panel opinion was vacated and never matured into binding precedent due to settlement, its analysis shaped legal argumentation and judicial consideration in the formative years of ATS doctrine.