In Smart Study Co., Ltd v. Shenzhenshixindajixieyouxiangongsi, — F.4th —, No. 24-313 (2d Cir. Dec. 18, 2025), the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit addressed a question of first impression at the federal appellate level: whether the Convention on Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil and Commercial Matters (the “Hague Service Convention”) permits email service of process on mainland China-based defendants. The court held that it does not. As a result, the court held that Rule 4(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure bars email service on mainland China-based defendants with known physical addresses.
Plaintiff Smart Study is a South Korean entertainment company that owns the trademarks for the popular “Baby Shark” song. It sued dozens of mainland China-based defendants for allegedly manufacturing and selling counterfeit Baby Shark products. To stop the alleged counterfeiting, Smart Study brought suit in the Southern District of New York. Smart Study filed an ex parte motion seeking temporary restraining orders, an order to show cause as to why preliminary injunctions should not be issued, and permission to serve the defendants by email pursuant to Rule 4(f)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which states that a party may be served outside the US “by other means not prohibited by international agreement, as the court orders.” The district court granted Smart Study’s motion, and Smart Study subsequently served all defendants by email. When no defendant responded to the district court’s show cause order, the district court entered a preliminary injunction barring all defendants from manufacturing or selling counterfeit Baby Shark products.
Several months later, two defendants appeared and moved to dissolve the injunction on the ground that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction because the email service on them violated the Hague Service Convention. Before the court ruled on this issue, Smart Study voluntarily dismissed the two defendants from the action. It then moved for default judgment against the remaining defendants. The district court denied the motion. It concluded that the Hague Service Convention bars email service on mainland China-based defendants and it therefore lacked personal jurisdiction over the remaining defendants.
Smart Study then filed a renewed motion for partial default judgment, asserting that the Hague Service Convention did not apply to 49 of the defendants because their physical addresses could not be obtained despite reasonable diligence. The district court agreed and granted the motion. The district court then ordered Smart Study to show cause as to why the actions should not be dismissed as to the two remaining defendants – Shenzhenshixindajixieyouxiangongsi and Changgesshangmaoyouxiangongsi – whose addresses in mainland China were known to Smart Study, for failure to serve in accordance with Rule 4(f). Smart Study again argued that the Hague Service Convention does not prohibit email service and therefore, its email service of the two defendants was proper under Rule 4(f)(3). The district court disagreed. Smart Study appealed.
Service under Rule 4(f)(3). The court began its analysis with Rule 4(f)(3). Because Smart Study had the district court’s permission to serve the two defendants by email, the key question for the Second Circuit to address was whether the Hague Service Convention permits email service on mainland China-based defendants. The court held that it does not:
Because the court held that email service would be impermissible under either interpretation of Article 10(a), it left open the question of whether the phrase “postal channels” encompasses email.
To avoid the problems raised by the Hague Service Convention, Smart Study attempted to read an emergency exception into Rule 4(f)(3), arguing that the rule functions as an “alternative to compliance with the Hague [Service Convention]” in “exigent circumstances.” The court summarily rejected Smart Study’s position, finding no textual support in the rule for an “emergency exception”.
Service under Rule 4(f)(2). Smart Study argued in the alternative that service was proper under Rule 4(f)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which permits service “as prescribed by the foreign country’s law for service in that country in an action in its courts of general jurisdiction.” The court rejected this contention because Rule 4(f)(2) applies only “if there is no internationally agreed means, or if an international agreement allows but does not specify other means.” The court held that this condition was not satisfied because the Hague Service Convention applied and prohibits email service in mainland China.
While the court acknowledged the “difficulties companies face in policing trademark- and copyright-infringement abroad, particularly in China,” its conclusion was unequivocal: where the Hague Service Convention applies, email service on mainland China-based defendants is impermissible.
This decision has several practical implications for litigants:
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