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Service of Process Abroad: No International Agreement?

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May 23, 2022

2 minutes read

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Sequor Law

Serving a defendant outside the United States can quickly become one of the most procedurally complex stages of a case—particularly when the destination country is not a signatory to the Hague Service Convention or any other applicable international service treaty. But the absence of a treaty does not leave litigants without options. In their article for ThoughtLeaders4 FIRE Magazine (Issue 9), Sequor Law Shareholder Leyza Blanco, Attorney Juan Mendoza, and Attorney Alejandro Rodriguez Vanzetti examine how Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(f) provides workable mechanisms for effecting service abroad even when no international agreement governs.


The authors take a practical, court-centered approach to Rule 4(f), explaining how its structure allows litigants to pursue several avenues depending on the circumstances. While treaty-based service under Rule 4(f)(1) is often the first consideration, the analysis does not end there. The article discusses how courts interpret Rule 4(f)(2) and 4(f)(3), particularly in jurisdictions where no international agreement applies or where traditional channels are ineffective. 


Emphasis is placed on due process, judicial discretion, and the requirement that any proposed method be reasonably calculated to provide notice.


Importantly, the article highlights how courts assess whether a proposed method is affirmatively prohibited by foreign law, how alternative service has evolved in response to modern realities, and what evidentiary support judges expect when litigants seek court-directed service. Rather than treating service abroad as a rigid procedural obstacle, the authors frame it as a strategic issue—one that requires careful analysis of the rule, the foreign jurisdiction, and the factual record before the court.


For practitioners confronting cross-border defendants in commercial litigationfraud matters, or enforcement proceedings, this piece offers a grounded examination of the available procedural tools and the considerations that can influence a court’s decision.


To explore the full discussion and case analysis, we invite you to read the complete article in the T4 Fire magazine PDF(pages 48–50).



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