What are the facts?
This case arose from products liability suits filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Iowa following a helicopter accident allegedly involving aircraft components designed and manufactured by French companies, including Societe Nationale Industrielle Aerospatiale (SNIAS). The plaintiffs served extensive discovery requests directed to the French defendants. The defendants, located in France and subject to French law, moved for protective orders arguing that because France and the United States are parties to the Hague Evidence Convention, any discovery sought in France must proceed exclusively through Convention procedures (letters of request transmitted via the French Central Authority). They also invoked the French blocking statute, which purports to restrict the production of certain commercial evidence for use in foreign proceedings outside approved international mechanisms. The district court declined to require resort to the Convention and ordered the defendants to respond under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The defendants sought mandamus relief. The Eighth Circuit declined to compel the district court to require exclusive use of the Convention. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve a conflict among lower courts about whether the Convention is the exclusive procedure for obtaining evidence abroad from a foreign litigant.
What is the legal issue?
Must a federal court require parties seeking discovery from a foreign litigant in a Convention signatory state to proceed first or exclusively under the Hague Evidence Convention, or may it order discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure subject to principles of international comity?
What rule applies?
The Hague Evidence Convention provides optional, nonexclusive procedures for obtaining evidence abroad and does not displace the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. U.S. courts retain authority to order discovery directly under the Federal Rules. When choosing between, or tailoring, domestic discovery mechanisms and Convention procedures, courts must conduct a case-specific comity analysis that balances the interests of the United States and the foreign sovereign and considers factors such as: (1) the importance of the requested information to the litigation; (2) the specificity of the request; (3) whether the information originated in the United States; (4) the availability of alternative means to secure the information; and (5) the extent to which compliance would undermine important foreign sovereign interests or noncompliance would undermine important U.S. interests. Foreign blocking statutes do not deprive U.S. courts of the power to order discovery but may be relevant to the comity analysis.
What did the court hold?
No. The Hague Evidence Convention is not the exclusive or mandatory mechanism for obtaining discovery located abroad from a foreign party. District courts may compel discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, but they must conduct a case-by-case comity analysis to determine the appropriate means and scope of discovery. The lower courts' categorical refusal to engage in that analysis was improper; the case was remanded for application of the comity balancing.
What is the reasoning?
The Court first examined the text and structure of the Hague Evidence Convention and concluded that it was designed to facilitate cross-border evidence gathering by providing an additional set of tools, not to displace domestic discovery rules. Provisions such as those authorizing letters of request, the role of Central Authorities, and permissive language throughout the Convention indicate optionality rather than exclusivity. The negotiating history and the Executive Branch's understanding during ratification reinforced that the Convention supplements existing mechanisms. Turning to domestic law, the Court emphasized that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure confer broad authority on district courts to manage discovery, including ordering foreign parties to produce documents and respond to interrogatories. That authority is not automatically curtailed merely because evidence is located abroad. However, international comity requires sensitivity to foreign sovereign interests and the practical burdens on foreign parties. The Court therefore rejected both extremes: it declined to mandate first resort to the Convention in every case and also rejected any per se rule that domestic discovery must automatically control without regard to international concerns. To guide lower courts, the Court endorsed a balancing framework consistent with the Restatement (then-ongoing revisions, later codified in the Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law § 442). Relevant considerations include the importance of the information to the case, the degree of specificity, whether the information originated in the U.S., the availability of alternative means, and the degree to which either compliance would undermine foreign sovereign interests or noncompliance would impair U.S. interests in adjudication and enforcement of its laws. The Court also discussed foreign blocking statutes, noting that while they inform the comity analysis, they do not deprive U.S. courts of the power to order discovery or erect an automatic bar to sanctions for noncompliance. Applying these principles, the Court concluded that the lower courts erred by approving discovery under the Federal Rules without conducting the requisite comity analysis and by suggesting that the Convention had no potential role. The appropriate disposition was to remand for the district court to perform the balancing and, if warranted, to tailor discovery, sequence it through Convention channels, or adjust protective measures to respect foreign interests while ensuring fair adjudication.
Why is this case significant?
Aerospatiale is the touchstone for international civil discovery in U.S. courts. It clarifies that litigants are not required to exhaust Hague Convention procedures before invoking the Federal Rules, yet it embeds a comity-based balancing test that cabins domestic discovery when foreign sovereign interests are substantially implicated. The decision arms courts and practitioners with a flexible, factor-driven framework to manage cross-border discovery, evaluate the impact of foreign blocking statutes, and tailor orders to minimize international friction while preserving effective adjudication.
Does Aerospatiale require parties to use the Hague Evidence Convention first before they can use the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure?
No. The Supreme Court expressly rejected a mandatory first-resort rule. The Convention is optional and nonexclusive. Courts may compel discovery under the Federal Rules, provided they conduct a case-specific comity analysis to determine whether and how to use Convention procedures or other tailoring.
What factors do courts consider under the Aerospatiale comity analysis?
Courts typically weigh: the importance of the documents or testimony to resolving the issues; the specificity and narrowness of the requests; whether the information originated in the United States; whether there are viable alternative means to obtain the information; and the degree to which compliance would undermine foreign sovereign interests or noncompliance would impair significant U.S. interests. Courts may also consider the hardship of compliance, good faith, and the effectiveness and timeliness of Convention procedures in the particular country.
How does Aerospatiale treat foreign blocking statutes?
Blocking statutes do not divest U.S. courts of authority to order discovery under the Federal Rules. They are relevant to, but not dispositive of, the comity analysis. A blocking statute may support using Convention channels, narrowing requests, or sequencing discovery; however, it does not automatically immunize a party from discovery obligations or sanctions if noncompliance is unjustified.
Does Aerospatiale apply to discovery from nonparties located abroad?
Yes, the principles extend to cross-border discovery more broadly. While subpoenas to nonparties involve different mechanics (such as Rule 45 and the need for personal jurisdiction and service), courts still apply Aerospatiale's comity balancing to determine whether to use domestic procedures, Convention letters of request, or other mechanisms, and how to tailor scope and protective conditions.
What practical steps should practitioners take in light of Aerospatiale?
Draft targeted, specific requests demonstrating necessity; explain why alternative sources are inadequate; identify the origin and location of materials; address foreign law constraints with evidence (expert declarations on foreign law are common); propose sequencing or protective measures; and be prepared to use Convention procedures selectively when they are efficient or when foreign sovereign interests are substantial.