Boston Telecommunications Grou v. Robert Wood

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 2009
Docket08-16358
StatusPublished

This text of Boston Telecommunications Grou v. Robert Wood (Boston Telecommunications Grou v. Robert Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Telecommunications Grou v. Robert Wood, (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

BOSTON TELECOMMUNICATIONS  No. 08-16358 GROUP, INC.; RODERICK MARSHALL, Plaintiffs-Appellants, D.C. No. v.  3:02-CV-05971- JSW ROBERT WOOD, OPINION Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Jeffrey S. White, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted October 8, 2009—San Francisco, California

Filed December 9, 2009

Before: J. Clifford Wallace, David R. Thompson and Sidney R. Thomas, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Wallace

16017 BOSTON TELECOMMUNICATIONS v. WOOD 16021

COUNSEL

Steven M. Cowley, Esq., Boston, Massachusetts, for plaintiffs-appellants Boston Telecommunications Group, Inc. and Roderick Marshall.

Susan K. Jamison, Esq., San Francisco, California, for defendant-appellee Robert Wood.

OPINION

WALLACE, Senior Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs-appellants Boston Telecommunications Group, Inc. (BTG) and Roderick Marshall (collectively, Marshall) appeal from the judgment of dismissal of claims against defendant-appellee Robert Wood arising out of an allegedly 16022 BOSTON TELECOMMUNICATIONS v. WOOD fraudulent business venture. The district court dismissed the action on forum non conveniens grounds. We have jurisdic- tion over Marshall’s appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we reverse.

I.

The following are facts as alleged in Marshall’s first amended complaint, except where otherwise stated. In late 1995 and early 1996, Marshall, a United States citizen, was living and working in Bratislava, Slovakia, providing legal services to various Slovak entities. During much of this time, he shared office space with Deloitte & Touche Slovakia, s.r.o. (Deloitte Slovakia), an entity providing consulting, auditing and other professional services. Marshall became acquainted with another American citizen, Robert Wood, who was then managing partner of Deloitte Slovakia.

Around April 1996, Wood began soliciting Marshall to invest in a business venture being pursued by a Deloitte Slo- vakia client, Global Cable Systems, Inc. (GCS), a Canadian company. Wood told Marshall that GCS was planning to acquire two Bulgarian cable television companies (the Bul- garian Venture), but needed funds to consummate the pur- chases. Wood further represented that GCS had signed a joint venture agreement (the Joint Venture) with a handful of other companies (United & Phillips Communications BV, itself a joint venture between an American company and a subsidiary of a Dutch company; Tevel Israel International Communica- tions, Ltd., an Israeli corporation; and Bezeq Israel Telecom- munications Company, Ltd., another Israeli company) pursuant to which those companies would pay GCS for the Bulgarian cable television companies.

Wood told Marshall that Deloitte Slovakia was assisting GCS with certain tasks related to the acquisition, but that financing for GCS’s purchase of the Bulgarian cable televi- sion companies had fallen through and without a replacement BOSTON TELECOMMUNICATIONS v. WOOD 16023 investor, Wood might lose his job. Wood told Marshall that if Marshall invested $250,000 in the Bulgarian Venture, Deloitte Slovakia would give Marshall business referrals, offer Marshall future partnership in Deloitte Slovakia, guaran- tee the value of the Bulgarian Venture, and loan Marshall the amount of his investment. Wood provided various documents related to the Bulgarian Venture, including a valuation report prepared for GCS by Deloitte Slovakia (the Deloitte Valua- tion) and a copy of the signed Joint Venture agreement.

Initial discussions between Wood and Marshall apparently took place in Slovakia, and another meeting was held in Israel, attended by Wood, Marshall, GCS’s chief executive officer George Mainas, and others, to discuss certain aspects of the proposed transactions. On Mainas’s invitation, Mar- shall and Wood traveled to Vancouver and San Francisco to negotiate Marshall’s investment. Mainas lived and worked in the San Francisco area and GCS was based in Vancouver. In opposition to Wood’s renewed motion to dismiss on grounds of forum non conveniens, Marshall alleged that GCS was operated, in substantial part, from Mainas’s offices in Califor- nia. At these meetings in June 1996, Wood “reiterated” his previous representations, and in reliance on these and other representations, Marshall agreed to invest $250,000. In order to carry out the contemplated transactions, Marshall formed plaintiff BTG, which would enter into a partnership (the Part- nership) with a subsidiary of GCS.

Upon their return to Slovakia, Marshall and Wood arranged for financing, through a Slovakian bank, of Marshall’s $250,000 investment. During the Summer of 1996, Marshall and Avraham Zimmerman, a shareholder of GCS, engaged in various negotiations on behalf of the Partnership for the pur- chase of the Bulgarian cable television companies. By late August 1996, Marshall believed that the Partnership agree- ment had been finalized, that one of the target Bulgarian cable television companies had been purchased, and that an agree- ment had been reached with the seller as to the other one. 16024 BOSTON TELECOMMUNICATIONS v. WOOD In September 1996, at Mainas’s invitation, Marshall returned to Vancouver for a GCS meeting. Mainas asked Mar- shall for an additional investment, allegedly because the Bul- garian Venture was undervalued and it would appear to GCS shareholders that Mainas had sold half of GCS’s business opportunity to Marshall at a fraction of its value. Mainas, Wood, Marshall and Zimmerman then traveled to San Fran- cisco and, over the course of about three days, negotiated an arrangement pursuant to which BTG would invest an addi- tional $250,000 in the Partnership. During these negotiations, Wood repeated many of the same representations he had already made. Based on those representations, Marshall agreed to invest the additional funds, and subsequently obtained financing for that investment through the same Slo- vakian bank.

By July 1997, however, Marshall learned that Mainas, GCS and its subsidiary had not taken certain necessary steps to complete the purchases of the two Bulgarian cable television companies. Marshall threatened litigation against GCS, but Wood continued, throughout the rest of 1997 and early 1998, to reassure Marshall that the necessary steps would be taken and that in any event, Marshall’s investment was protected because Deloitte Slovakia had guaranteed it. In the Spring of 1999, Wood was transferred to a job in Yugoslavia with a dif- ferent Deloitte entity, but the parties continued to communi- cate by telephone. Wood also continued to represent that he and Deloitte Slovakia were working toward completing the Bulgarian Venture. In reliance on Wood’s representations, Marshall did not sue GCS.

In 2000, Wood returned to Deloitte Slovakia. Wood’s sub- sequent conduct led Marshall to believe that Wood was trying to intimidate him, so that he would not seek to enforce Deloitte Slovakia’s guarantee of his investment or investigate the matter further. By the end of 2002, Marshall obtained information that caused him to conclude that Wood had knowingly or recklessly made a number of fundamental fac- BOSTON TELECOMMUNICATIONS v.

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