A.I. Credit Corp. v. Government of Jamaica

666 F. Supp. 629, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7584
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 20, 1987
Docket87 CIV 3442 (LBS)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 666 F. Supp. 629 (A.I. Credit Corp. v. Government of Jamaica) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.I. Credit Corp. v. Government of Jamaica, 666 F. Supp. 629, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7584 (S.D.N.Y. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

SAND, District Judge.

As a result of a depressed national economy, the Government of Jamaica (“Jamaica”) ceased paying principal on its foreign bank debt in mid-1983. This moratorium followed three reschedulings of the debt in 1978, 1979, and 1981, which were accomplished with the consent of Jamaica’s affected creditors, including foreign banks and financial institutions. Jamaica entered into a fourth rescheduling agreement on June 27, 1984 (the “1984 Agreement”). This agreement encompassed not only debt previously rescheduled, but also newly incurred debt owed to Continental Illinois Bank and Trust Company (“Continental Illinois”). This agreement affected the debts owed to a total of 113 banks and institutions (“the banks”).

In August 1984, in accordance with the 1984 Agreement, Continental Illinois assigned 90 percent of its rescheduled debt as well as all rights and obligations relating thereto, to plaintiff in this action, A.I. Credit Corporation (“AICCO”). The assignment, consisting of approximately $10,000,-000 in debt before interest, was accomplished pursuant to a Transfer Agreement executed between Continental Illinois and AICCO. In the Transfer Agreement, and in compliance with section 12.09 of the 1984 Agreement, AICCO agreed to be treated as a “Bank” for all purposes of the 1984 Agreement “subject to the terms and conditions of the [1984] Rescheduling Agreement ... as the same hereafter from time to time may be amended, modified or supplemented....” Transfer Agreement, at 4.

The 1984 Agreement provided that Jamaica’s debt would become payable in 17 quarterly payments, commencing on March 15, 1986. However, it became apparent in early 1985, if not sooner, that although it was making interest payments, Jamaica would be unable to repay principal on the schedule set forth in the 1984 Agreement. Jamaica and the banks thus entered into a fifth rescheduling agreement during that year (“the 1985 Agreement”), and yet a sixth such agreement on April 30, 1987 (“the 1987 Agreement”). The 1987 Agreement specifies that Jamaica is to make quarterly payments commencing on October 15, 1988.

Each bank that was a party to the 1984 Agreement voluntarily entered into these subsequent 1985 and 1987 agreements, with the exception of AICCO and two other banks in 1985, and AICCO and one other bank in 1987. Standing on what it claims are still its rights under the 1984 Agreement, AICCO alleges that to date, Jamaica has defaulted on six scheduled installments of principal. On this account, plaintiff asks this Court to grant it summary judgment.

The crux of this motion for summary judgment rests on the extent and nature of the relationship established between these banks pursuant to the 1984 Agreement, and the resulting standing of plaintiff to sue individually to enforce its rights under the agreement. We note at the outset that no bank other than AICCO has attempted to enforce the 1984 Agreement, and that no other bank has sought to intervene on either side of this litigation.

There is little question, however, that the banks have mutual financial interest in the outcome of this lawsuit, and in any payments an individual creditor receives from Jamaica: the 1984 Agreement provides that to the extent Jamaica makes any payment to a bank pursuant to its obligations *631 under the 1984 Agreement in a proportion greater than the payment made to any other bank, the bank must share its payment pro rata with each of the other banks. 1984 Agreement § 5.03; 1985 Agreement § 5.03; 1987 Agreement § 5.03. Furthermore, Jamaica itself is obliged to make ratable payments to all banks in the event it makes any payment of “Noncon-senting Debt.” 1984 Agreement § 4.03; 1985 Agreement § 4.04; 1987 Agreement § 4.04.

I. Plaintiff Has Standing to Bring This Action Individually

In opposition to the instant motion for summary judgment, Jamaica strenuously argues that AICCO has no standing to bring this action without the participation of the other lenders that were parties to the 1984 Agreement. Relying both on what it claims to be an “implicit covenant” and a “textual analysis” of the 1984 Agreement, Jamaica contends that each bank covenanted not to sue Jamaica unless the banks jointly agreed to do so. An examination of the 1984 Agreement and the law of New York 1 defeats this contention.

The language of the 1984 Agreement could hardly be more clear in establishing that AICCO’s right to pursue the debt owed to it by Jamaica is separate and divisible from the rights of its fellow creditors:

The amounts payable at any time hereunder to each Bank shall be a separate and independent debt and each Bank shall be entitled to protect and enforce its rights arising out of this Agreement, and it shall not be necessary for any other Bank to be joined as an additional party in any proceedings for such purpose.

1984 Agreement § 12.13.

That each bank has the right to sue Jamaica independently without the joinder of the other creditors, on what are in this respect divisible debts, is reiterated throughout the agreement. See, e.g., id. § 12.07(c) ( Nothing [in the agreement’s section on consent to jurisdiction and waiver of immunities] shall affect the right of any Bank or the Agent to bring any action or proceeding against the Borrower....”); id. § 5.04(b) (“Each Bank agrees that if it shall at any time, through ... litigation ... obtain payment [it shall share such payment ratably with the other banks]); id. § 12.03 (“No failure on the part of ... any Bank to exercise ... any right ... shall operate as a waiver_”).

We must similarly disagree with Jamaica that only the Agent specified in the 1984 Agreement, the Bank of Nova Scotia, is empowered to institute suit at the direction of the banks. The 1984 Agreement specifies that:

The Agent shall perform the mechanical and clerical functions in connection with the administration of this Agreement which are specifically set forth herein.... The responsibilities of the agent are strictly limited to those specifically set forth in this Agreement, and no unstated functions, responsibilities, duties, obligations or liabilities shall be read into this Agreement or otherwise exist against the Agent.

1984 Agreement § 11.01(a). Section 11.-01(b)(viii) of the agreement further provides, “[t]he Agent shall not in any event be required to initiate any suit, action or proceeding arising out of or in connection with this Agreement....” Id.

The case of Credit Francais International, S.A. v. Sociedad Financiera De Comercio, C.A., 128 Misc.2d 564, 490 N.Y.S.2d 670 (Sup.Ct.N.Y.Co.1985), cited by defendant for the proposition that only the agent in a multibank loan agreement has standing to sue the debtor, is distinguishable. In Credit Francais, Justice Greenfield concluded that the loan agreement in that case evinced an “overall design” of “unified action handled by a single Agent *632 who will proceed for all....” Id. at 581, 490 N.Y.S.2d at 683. Despite the similarities to the agreement in the instant case, no such overall design exists here. As in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
666 F. Supp. 629, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ai-credit-corp-v-government-of-jamaica-nysd-1987.