Capital Finance & Commerce AG v. First International Oil Corporation N/K/A First International Oil Co., Ltd FIOC Holder Representative, L.L.C. Daniel Idzal Bill D. Holland Dennis B. Tower And Sinopec Overseas Oil & Gas, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 2008
Docket01-06-00822-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Capital Finance & Commerce AG v. First International Oil Corporation N/K/A First International Oil Co., Ltd FIOC Holder Representative, L.L.C. Daniel Idzal Bill D. Holland Dennis B. Tower And Sinopec Overseas Oil & Gas, Ltd. (Capital Finance & Commerce AG v. First International Oil Corporation N/K/A First International Oil Co., Ltd FIOC Holder Representative, L.L.C. Daniel Idzal Bill D. Holland Dennis B. Tower And Sinopec Overseas Oil & Gas, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Capital Finance & Commerce AG v. First International Oil Corporation N/K/A First International Oil Co., Ltd FIOC Holder Representative, L.L.C. Daniel Idzal Bill D. Holland Dennis B. Tower And Sinopec Overseas Oil & Gas, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

NO. 01-06-00822-CV

CAPITAL FINANCE & COMMERCE AG, Appellant

V.

SINOPEC OVERSEAS OIL & GAS, LTD. AND FIOC HOLDER REPRESENTATIVE, L.L.C., Appellees

On Appeal from the 55th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2005-37036

O P I N I O N

This is an accelerated, interlocutory appeal from an order sustaining a special appearance. 1 See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 51.014(a)(7) (Vernon Supp.

The record on appeal has been partially sealed by order of the trial court. See TEX. R.

CIV. P. 76a.

challenges the special appearances rendered in favor of appellees, Sinopec Overseas Oil & Gas, Ltd. (Sinopec Overseas) and FIOC Holder Representative, L.L.C. (Holder Representative). In four issues, Capital Finance contends that Texas may properly assert personal jurisdiction, both specific and general, over Capital Finance’s claims that Sinopec Overseas and Holder Representative, in conspiracy with others, fraudulently diverted funds deriving from a merger transaction in order to prevent payment of a contingent commission, or finder’s fee, to Capital Finance. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural Background

A. Overview of Pertinent Entities

Capital Finance is a brokerage company located in Zug, Switzerland. The commission that Capital Finance seeks derives from its agreement with former First International Oil Corporation (former FIOC) and was contingent upon Capital Finance’s obtaining a purchaser of former FIOC’s stock. Former FIOC ultimately merged with Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Projection Corporation (SIPC) in a transaction that closed in August 2004 and resulted in several new entities. Capital Finance’s agreement with former FIOC predates that merger by two years. SIPC is part of a larger oil company owned by the government of The People’s Republic of China (China).

Capital Finance’s named defendants include First International Oil Co., Ltd.

and Holder Representative, Capital Finance also sued three individuals who were

officers of former FIOC, none of whom have contested jurisdiction. New FIOC is a

Bermuda limited-liability corporation, with principal headquarters in Kazakhstan.

Holder Representative, Sinopec Overseas, and new FIOC were all formed

incident to the merger of SIPC and former FIOC. Holder Representative, formed

shortly after the merger, is a Delaware limited-liability corporation with headquarters

in New York City. Sinopec Overseas is a Cayman-Islands limited-liability

corporation with principal headquarters in Beijing; it was formed by Cayman-Islands

counsel approximately three months before the actual merger. Sinopec Overseas has

many subsidiaries, which operate in many different countries and were organized

under the laws of several different countries. New FIOC is one of Sinopec Overseas’

subsidiaries.

B. Preliminaries to the Merger of Former FIOC and SIPC

Former FIOC was a Delaware corporation with headquarters, but only minimal assets, in Houston. Through subsidiaries, former FIOC owned licenses to explore oil and gas properties, almost all of which were located in the Republic of Kazakhstan.

Capital Finance’s briefing often does not distinguish between former FIOC and new FIOC, referring to both as “FIOC.” Capital Finance’s claims against new FIOC include a successor-liability claim for the finder’s fee that Capital Finance seeks in this lawsuit. Capital Finance has not sued either SIPC or Nahid deCamillis, to whom a finder’s-fee commission was ultimately paid, in the underlying lawsuit.

individuals and entities from whom former FIOC solicited assistance to locate companies with sufficient capital to purchase the stock of former FIOC. Former FIOC was introduced to SIPC in Beijing in spring 2002.

C. Letter Agreement between Capital Finance and Former FIOC

On June 2, 2002, Yousefzai and the chairman of former FIOC executed a letter agreement to “formalize” and “define” their relationship.3 Under the terms of this letter agreement, former FIOC agreed to pay Capital Finance a finder’s-fee commission equal to five percent of the purchase price. The agreement was contingent upon “direct efforts” by Capital Finance that resulted in the sale of the outstanding shares of former FIOC. The letter agreement recites that the five percent commission was an increase over a two and one-half percent commission that the parties had previously discussed and advised Yousefzai that the “commission payable will be shared with your associates,” including “Mrs. N. DeCamillis (with whom you have a formal arrangement).”

D. Memorandum of Understanding between SIPC and Former FIOC; Formation of Sinopec Overseas

On January 19, 2004, former FIOC and SIPC entered into a memorandum of

Yousefzai signed the agreement as managing director of Capital Finance. The chairman of former FIOC, who signed the agreement on its behalf, is a named defendant in the underlying lawsuit.

capital stock and other equity interests of former FIOC.” The MOU identifies the buyer as either “SIPC or a direct or indirect subsidiary or affiliated company of SIPC” and the “Merger Sub” as a “direct, wholly owned subsidiary of Buyer.” Three days later, on January 21, 2004, SIPC formed Sinopec Overseas, a Cayman-Islands, limited-liability corporation with headquarters in Beijing, as “buyer,” in accordance with the MOU. The payment-calculation provisions of the MOU stated an aggregate consideration to be paid by the buyer (by definition, by SIPC or a direct or indirect subsidiary or affiliated company of SIPC) “to all of the holders of [former] FIOC common stock and Options.” The MOU specified that a portion of the total consideration would be placed in an escrow account to protect the buyer (again, by definition, SIPC or a direct or indirect subsidiary or affiliated company of SIPC) from any breaches of merger-related warranties by former FIOC. The MOU also envisioned an escrow account to protect payments to former FIOC shareholders.5

In addition to many other items that affected calculation of the total aggregate consideration, the calculations specified that transaction costs of former FIOC would “include finder’s fees,” which would be deducted from the aggregate consideration,

4

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Capital Finance & Commerce AG v. First International Oil Corporation N/K/A First International Oil Co., Ltd FIOC Holder Representative, L.L.C. Daniel Idzal Bill D. Holland Dennis B. Tower And Sinopec Overseas Oil & Gas, Ltd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-finance-commerce-ag-v-first-international-oil-corporation-nka-texapp-2008.