Obb Personenverkehr Ag v. Sachs
Decided December 1, 2015. John Glover Roberts Jr. delivered the opinion of the Court.
Docket 13-1067 · 577 U.S. 27 (2015) · Cited 130 times
Holding
Sachs's suit falls outside the commercial activity exception and is therefore barred by sovereign immunity.
The Court’s statement of the holding, from the opinion’s syllabus. The syllabus is prepared by the Reporter of Decisions and is not part of the opinion of the Court — read the official opinion for authority.
How the Justices voted
Decided 9–0.
Majority · 9
“Concurring” means agreeing with the outcome; any split shown is the Court’s judgment, not each Justice’s reasoning. Source: the Supreme Court Database (Spaeth et al.), Washington University.
Precedents cited
Supreme Court decisions this opinion relies on, ordered by how often it cites each. Cases in our collection link through; others are named.
- Saudi Arabia v. Nelson · 507 U.S. 349 (1993)
- Argentine Republic v. Amerada Hess Shipping Corp. · 488 U.S. 428 (1989)
- Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz · 503 U.S. 638 (1992)
Cited by
Later Supreme Court opinions in our collection that cite this case.
- Fry v. Napoleon Community Schools · 580 U.S. 154 (2017)
- Kingdomware Technologies, Inc. v. United States · 579 U.S. 162 (2016)
- Lockhart v. United States · 577 U.S. 347 (2016)
- Bank Markazi v. Peterson · 578 U.S. 212 (2016)
- Jam v. International Finance Corp. · 586 U.S. 199 (2019)
- FDA v. R. J. Reynolds Vapor Co. · 606 U.S. 226 (2025)
Official text
Read the official opinion (U.S. Reports, govinfo.gov)
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John Glover Roberts Jr.’s profile · All Supreme Court opinions · The Supreme Court
Source: Supreme Court of the United States, slip opinions (2015). Citation count from the Free Law Project’s CourtListener bulk data. Data last verified 2026-07-03. Informational only; verify against the primary source before relying. Not a consumer report (FCRA).