City of El Paso v. Soule

991 F. Supp. 812, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 615, 1998 WL 25722
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1998
Docket1:97-cv-00458
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 991 F. Supp. 812 (City of El Paso v. Soule) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of El Paso v. Soule, 991 F. Supp. 812, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 615, 1998 WL 25722 (W.D. Tex. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

BRIONES, District Judge.

On this day, the Court considered Defendants Carlos Salas-Porras Soule (“Salas-Porras Jr.”), Carlos Salas-Porras Romero (“Salas-Porras Sr.”), Virginia Salas-Porras de Cano (‘V.Salas-Porras”), Aurora Salas-Porras Romero (“ASalas-Porras”), the Estate of Elvira Salas-Porras de Lugo (“E.Salas-Porras”), Patricia Medrano Hernandez (“Medrano”), Rukubi S.A De C.V. (“Ruku-bi,”) 1 , New World Trading Co. a/k/a New World Trading Co, Ltd. (“New World”), and Waks Development Corp.’s (‘Waks”) Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction filed on November 24, 1997, in the above-captioned cause. The Court also considered Defendant Esther Salas-Porras’ (“Es.Salas-Porras”) Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(2) filed on November 24, 1997. Plaintiff filed its Response on December 8, 1997.

In the matter before the Court, Plaintiff is seeking to collect on a final judgment rendered in its favor against Parallax Corporation N.V., a/k/a Parallax N.V. (“Parallax”), in a Texas state court condemnation proceeding. Through its Complaint, Plaintiff is attempting to recover certain funds that were held in the registry of the County Court at Law, El Paso County, Texas (“state court”) in connection with the condemnation proceedings, and other funds of Parallax. These funds allegedly were transferred to Defendants during the pendency of state court litigation. Plaintiff relies on several legal theories for the basis of its claims, including fraudulent transfer, civil conspiracy, fraud, conversion, and alter ego. 2 After due consideration, the Court is of the opinion that the Motions should be denied for the reasons set forth below.

FACTS 3

Salas-Porras Jr. and Salas-Porras Sr. formed Parallax as a Netherlands Antilles corporation in 1978. Salas-Porras Jr. was appointed and has acted as managing director of Parallax since its inception. Salas-Porras Sr. also was appointed as managing director of Parallax. Defendants Salas-Por-ras Jr., Salas-Porras Sr., E. Salas-Porras, V. Salas-Porras, and A Salas-Porras have at various time been shareholders of Parallax. Defendants Medrano and Es. Salas-Porras are relatives of the shareholders or directors of Parallax. All .the individual Defendants are members of the same family and are related to one another by blood or marriage. Defendants Rukubi, New World, and Waks are corporations affiliated with Salas-Porras Jr., Salas-Porras Sr., and Parallax through common ownership, common directors and officers, and through common assets and accounts. Parallax has maintained bank accounts with MBank N.A (“MBank”) and State National Bank (“State National”) in El Paso; 4 Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. (“Dean Witter”) in El Paso; and Union Bank of Switzerland in New York (“Union Bank”).

Shortly after its formation, Parallax purchased certain real property at the intersection of Interstate 10 and Americas Avenue in El Paso, Texas (“Americas property”) for about $1.4 million. Subsequently, Plaintiff sought to condemn a portion of the Americas property for a flood control project. Plaintiff *816 offered Parallax about $1.6 million as compensation for the condemnation, but Parallax refused the offer. Consequently, Plaintiff filed suit against Parallax in May 1991, in cause number 91-5809, County Court at Law, El Paso County, Texas, regarding the condemnation. In August 1991, the Special Commissioners Court awarded damages to Parallax in the amount of about $2.9 million, less past due taxes, for a net award of approximately $2.5 million.

Plaintiff and Parallax objected to the award and sought to have the condemnation damages determined by a jury. As required by law, Plaintiff deposited about $2.9 million — the amount of the Special Commissioner’s award — in cash into the registry of the state court' (“Registry funds”) in August 1991. At Parallax’s request, on September 12, 1991, the state court ordered that Registry funds of approximately' $2.5 million be disbursed to Parallax. Paralláx deposited these funds into its account maintained at MBank in El Paso. Salas-Porras Jr. and Salas-Porras Sr., the managing directors of Parallax, were signatories on the MBank account.

The condemnation proceeding was tried to a jury in state court in June 1993 (“condemnation litigation”). After considering the evidence, the jury found that the condemnation damages to Parallax totaled only about $1.5 million. In August 1993, the state court entered judgment against Parallax iri favor of Plaintiff for the sum of $1,397,593 (“Judgment”), representing the difference in the amount of Registry funds withdrawn by Parallax and the amount of the jury award plus post-judgment interest. Plaintiff asserts that during the pendency of the condemnation litigation, Parallax, acting through its managing director Salas-Porras Jr., transferred the Registry funds to foreign shareholders, related foreign shareholders, and an account with Union Bank. These transactions are described in greater detail below.

Parallax contested the Judgment by appealing to the Eighth District Court of Appeals and the Texas Supreme Court, both of which denied Parallax’s appeals. Since Parallax exhausted its appellate rights in 1996, the state court judgment has become final. However, Parallax has not paid Plaintiff any amounts on the Judgment and has advised Plaintiff that it is insolvent, is judgment-proof, and has no funds' to pay the Judgment.

In an effort to collect its Judgment, Plaintiff commenced post-Judgment discovery in state court against Parallax in 1996. Information and records obtained by Plaintiff in post-Judgment discovery revealed that, during the pendency of the condemnation litigation, some Defendants apparently had drained Parallax of millions of dollars in cash, including ■ the Registry funds. 5 Through its Complaint, Plaintiff seeks to recover the transfers of Registry funds by Parallax to other Defendants. 6

Post-Judgment discovery also revealed that Parallax maintained a bank account with Union Bank and a financial account with Dean Witter in El Paso. Discovery also established that, during the pendency of the condemnation litigation as well as after rendition of the state court Judgment, Parallax transferred over $7 million in non-Registry funds from MBank, Dean Witter, and Union Bank accounts to affiliated persons and entities, including Defendants. 7

Furthermore, post-Judgment discovery showed that: 1) on the day after the state *817 court jury returned its verdict against Parallax, Parallax, through Salas-Porras Jr., closed its MBank account and transferred the balance of the account to E. Salas-Por-ras; 2) about one week after the jury verdict, Parallax, through Salas-Porras Jr., transferred all funds in its Union Bank account to a Texas bank account of New World; and 3) Parallax closed its Dean Witter account in El Paso and transferred a substantial amount of the funds to New World in El Paso. Plaintiff additionally seeks to recover these non-Registry fund transfers by Parallax to Defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
991 F. Supp. 812, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 615, 1998 WL 25722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-el-paso-v-soule-txwd-1998.