Cibanco, S.A. Institucion De Banca Multiple v. Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and Miriam Rubio Garcia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 2022
Docket08-21-00115-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cibanco, S.A. Institucion De Banca Multiple v. Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and Miriam Rubio Garcia (Cibanco, S.A. Institucion De Banca Multiple v. Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and Miriam Rubio Garcia) 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.

Bluebook
Cibanco, S.A. Institucion De Banca Multiple v. Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and Miriam Rubio Garcia, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

CIBANCO, S.A., INSTITUCION DE § No. 08-21-00115-CV BANCA MULTIPLE, § Appeal from the Appellant, § 327th Judicial District Court v. § of El Paso County, Texas JESUS M. TRILLO QUEZADA and MIRIAM RUBIO GARCIA, § (TC# 2021DCV0152)

Appellees.

OPINION

This is an interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s denial of the special appearance filed

by appellant CIBanco, S.A., Institucion de Banca Multiple’s (CIBanco). On appeal, CIBanco

argues it neither has continuous and systematic contacts with Texas, nor did it waive or concede

its special appearance objecting to the trial court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction. We reverse

and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

CIBanco is a full-service banking organization incorporated under the laws of Mexico. Its

principal place of business is in Mexico City. Employing over 2,700 employees, it operates

multiple banking branches throughout Mexico. No offices or branches are in Texas. Moreover, it

neither owns nor leases real property in Texas, nor owns subsidiary companies in the state. Finally, CIBanco does not advertise or market its services in Texas. Nonetheless, to facilitate international

trade for its banking customers, CIBanco maintains a correspondent bank account with Citibank,

N.A. (Citibank). Generally, CIBanco’s customers receive payments from U.S. trading partners via

wire transfers made in U.S. dollars. Those transfers are deposited to CIBanco’s correspondent

account. On receipt of funds, CIBanco typically credits customer accounts in Mexican pesos for

an equivalent amount of such wire transfers.

Appellees Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and Miriam Rubio Garcia, husband and wife, are

residents of Texas who owned a timeshare property in Mexico. On January 13, 2021, Appellees

filed an original petition against multiple defendants, none of whom are parties to this appeal. 1

Appellees alleged the named defendants were “fraudsters” who devised a scheme to steal their

money, whereby they represented they could connect timeshare owners with “high paying buyers.”

Specifically, Appellees alleged defendants promised Appelles they would receive at least $95,000

in exchange for selling the last ten years of their forty-year timeshare.

Appellees further alleged that before they received the promised payment, defendants

demanded deposits of “refundable” fees totaling $127,257.31, which they did provide, into two

bank accounts portrayed as belonging to defendants. Appellees’ petition described the accounts as

follows: “either Citibank, N.A. bank account (supposed beneficiary name: CIBACO SA FFC TO

CONSTRUMACRO, account no. 36888793), or a Banco Santander bank account (supposed

beneficiary name: SALV AGUARDO DE BENEFICIOS, SA De CV, account no. 65507206757).”

After discovering defendants had no intent of brokering their transaction, Appellees demanded the

return of their deposits. Although promises were again made by defendants, Appellees claimed no

refund has yet been received. Based on their factual allegations, Appellees asserted claims of

1 The originally named parties include New York Twin Cities Power, Kansas Trust Company of America, Julieta Bravo, Ana Perez, Daniel de Leon, Alan Diaz, Tiffany Sullivan, and David Acker (the defendants).

2 common law fraud, statutory fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, theft liability, negligent

misrepresentations, breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and money had and received. Appellees’

petition also included a request for a temporary restraining order, a temporary injunction, and a

permanent injunction, with such orders requiring defendants to immediately deposit all funds

received from Appellees into the registry of the court.

A day after filing suit against defendants, Appellees applied for a pre-judgment writ of

garnishment against Citibank, as garnishee, using the same case number and caption as their

original petition. The application alleged, “[Citibank] is indebted to Defendants through a banking

relationship in which Defendants are depositors in one of Garnishee’s branches.” Specifically,

Appellees claimed they would show “defendants maintain the following bank account with

Garnishee”:

CITIBANK, N.A. Bank Account Number: 36888793 Bank Routing Number: 021000089 Alleged Name on Account: CIBANCO SA FFC TO CONSTRUMACRO SA DE CV

Referencing the underlying lawsuit filed against defendants, Appellees alleged they sought

recovery of a debt of not less than $127,257.31. The application included a declaration of Appellee

Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and copies of outgoing wire transfer requests from his Wells Fargo

account to the two bank accounts identified by the original petition.

On January 15, 2021, the trial court signed a temporary restraining order (TRO) against

defendants as well as an order authorizing issuance of a pre-judgment writ of garnishment against

the Citibank account owned by CIBanco. The TRO ordered defendants to deposit all funds

belonging to Appellees in their possession or control into the registry of the court and to file a

statement under oath containing a list of all transactions, investments, purchases, and acquisitions

3 made with plaintiff’s funds. The garnishment order garnished funds up to the maximum amount

of $127,257.31.

Initially, Citibank filed an original answer to the writ of garnishment utilizing the same

caption and case number as Appellees’ lawsuit though it added its own name as garnishee to the

caption. Citibank asserted two claims: first, it was not indebted to the two corporate defendants

named in the suit; and second, it lacked sufficient information to conclusively determine whether

it was indebted to the six individual defendants. As for the account belonging to CIBanco, it

answered it had debited funds from the account in the amount of $127,257.13, as instructed by the

court’s order of January 15, 2021. Citibank denied each material allegation and demanded strict

proof thereof by a preponderance of the evidence.

Days after Citibank answered, CIBanco filed two pleadings: a motion to vacate or dissolve

garnishment and an original petition in intervention “for the limited purpose of vacating and

dissolving the garnishment” issued against its Citibank account. Conforming to the actions of

Appellees and Citibank, CIBanco used the same caption and case number of the underlying suit.

In both pleadings, CIBanco asserted it did not waive its objection to lack of service of process, or

to the trial court’s lack of personal jurisdiction over it or its funds.

Subsequently, Appellees filed a first amended petition adding CIBanco as a named

defendant to the underlying suit. Appellees asserted CIBanco voluntarily submitted itself to the

jurisdiction of the court by intervening in the case. Responding to the amended petition, CIBanco

filed a special appearance under TEX. R. CIV. P. 120a., objecting to the trial court’s exercise of

personal jurisdiction. Appellees later replied, asserting CIBanco had waived its objections to the

trial court’s jurisdiction; even so, the trial court could exercise specific jurisdiction over CIBanco.

4 The trial court soon held a hearing on CIBanco’s special appearance receiving argument

from both sides. CIBanco argued that neither general nor specific jurisdiction could be established,

and additionally, its involvement in the ancillary, garnishment proceeding did not constitute a

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Cibanco, S.A. Institucion De Banca Multiple v. Jesus M. Trillo Quezada and Miriam Rubio Garcia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cibanco-sa-institucion-de-banca-multiple-v-jesus-m-trillo-quezada-and-texapp-2022.