CPS International, Inc. v. Dresser Industries, Inc.

911 S.W.2d 18, 1995 WL 259950
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 1995
Docket08-93-00250-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 911 S.W.2d 18 (CPS International, Inc. v. Dresser Industries, Inc.) 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
CPS International, Inc. v. Dresser Industries, Inc., 911 S.W.2d 18, 1995 WL 259950 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

BARAJAS, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment dismissing Appellants’ claims for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, misappropriation of trade secrets, tortious interference with contractual relations, and civil conspiracy. The trial court found Saudi Arabian law controlling and dismissed the case after concluding that Saudi Arabian law did not recognize Appellants’ causes of action. We affirm in part and reverse in part. We further remand Appellants’ claims for breach of contract to the trial court for a new trial.

I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

Critical to our decision is the complex set of relationships that existed between the parties at various times and each party’s conduct with regard to those relationships. We therefore set out these relationships and chronicle the parties’ conduct in some detail.

*20 A. The Parties

Appellants are a Delaware corporation (Creole) with its headquarters and principal place of business in Houston, Texas, and its wholly owned subsidiary, a Panamanian corporation. Appellants provide project management, maintenance, repair, installation, overhaul, design, and other services in connection with compressors, pumps, turbines, engines, and related equipment used in the energy and refining industry. Creole has no offices outside the United States. Although Creole provides (from its Houston headquarters) to CPS all physical facilities, employees, resources, and capabilities to enable CPS to provide services, CPS is not registered to conduct business in Texas or any other state of the United States, nor does it have any offices in the United States. The record shows, in accordance with a judicial decision in a previous federal anti-trust lawsuit, that CPS was formed by Creole to operate outside the United States, while Creole performs essentially the same work in the United States.

Appellee Abdullah Rushaid Al-Rushaid is a Saudi Arabian citizen and businessman. Appellees Al-Rushaid Trading Corporation (ARTC), Al-Rushaid General Trading Corporation (ARGTC), and Al-Rushaid Investment Company (ARIC) are Saudi Arabian business entities and the business interests of Abdul-lah Rushaid Al-Rushaid. 1 Appellants sued the Al-Rushaid Appellees for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, misappropriation of trade secrets, and conspiracy.

Appellee Dresser Industries, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its headquarters and principal place of business in Houston, Texas. Appellee Dresser AG. (Vaduz) is a Liechtenstein corporation and a wholly owned subsidiary of Appellee Dresser Industries. We shall refer to these entities collectively as the Dresser Appellees. Appellants sued the Dresser Appellees for tortious interference with contractual relations and conspiracy.

In 1978, CPS and Abdullah Rushaid Al-Rushaid formed a Saudi Arabian company called Creole Al-Rushaid, Ltd. (CARL), whose purpose was to conduct business in Saudi Arabia. This business relationship was embodied in a writing called the Contract of Kriol El Rashid Company, Ltd. (the Kriol contract). Three other contracts accompanied the Kriol contract: (1) a Working Agreement, which provides for a 70-30 ownership division between CPS and ARGTC; (2) a Technical Assistance Agreement, which provides for the supply of staff, technical, and other resources to CARL; and (3) a Loan Agreement, under which CPS agreed to loan two million Saudi Riyals to CARL, apparently to satisfy initial capitalization requirements of Saudi Arabian law.

In 1981, Dresser A.G. (Vaduz) and ARIC formed Dresser Al-Rushaid Machinery Company, Ltd. (DARMCO), a Saudi Arabian company whose purpose was to conduct business in Saudi Arabia. Appellants sued DARMCO for tortious interference with contractual relations and conspiracy.

B. The Conduct

CARL was formed to satisfy the requirements for qualifying to do business in Saudi Arabia. Appellants’ CEO, Richard Flowers, understood that CARL would be formed under Saudi Arabian law and would have to abide by the law of Saudi Arabia. Flowers several times traveled to Saudi Arabia to meet with Al-Rushaid for the purpose of setting up a Saudi Arabian company in accordance with Saudi Arabian law. On one of these visits, Flowers met with Al-Rushaid’s lawyer, Ahmed Audhali. Audhali explained to Flowers that Saudi Arabian law required disputes to be brought in a Saudi Arabian forum. He further explained that a CPS representative would have to sign before a Saudi Arabian notary a Memorandum of Association, which sets out the foregoing requirements and operates as the company’s charter after publication in the Saudi Arabian Official Gazette.

CARL’s articles of association provide that it will operate under the laws of Saudi Arabia, that disputes will be submitted to arbi *21 tration in Saudi Arabia and, if arbitration fails, they -will be resolved in Saudi Arabia. CARL was intended to operate exclusively in Saudi Arabia and never conducted operations outside Saudi Arabia. Appellants claim that the Al-Rushaid Appellees’ violated contractual and other duties they owed to Appellants by their involvement with the Dresser Appel-lees and that the Dresser Appellees conspired to and did interfere with Appellants’ relations with the Al-Rushaid Appellees.

C. The Litigation

In 1983, both CPS and Al-Rushaid stated they wished to dissolve CARL. Dissolution under Saudi Arabian law, however, proved cumbersome and difficult, and Appellants accuse Al-Rushaid of deliberately slowing the process.

In 1985, CPS brought a federal anti-trust action against Dresser Industries and the Al-Rushaid defendants, claiming a conspiracy to drive CPS out of the Saudi Arabian market. This suit was dismissed the following year for lack of a sufficient impact on United States commerce. Before dismissal, Appellants collectively filed a separate suit in the same court against all present Appellees. This second federal suit was dismissed in 1988, the court finding that “[i]f there are any anticompetitive effects, surely they are in Saudi Arabia, where CARL was eliminated as a competitor.” In finding only a tenuous relationship between the United States and the subject matter of the suit, the court reasoned that it concerned merely the “decline of a Saudi joint venture [that] indirectly affected the parent company [Creole] whose foreign subsidiary [CPS] participated in the venture.”

In 1985, CPS also brought suit in a Saudi Arabian court against Al-Rushaid for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, misappropriation of confidential information, and conspiracy. The cause was heard by a three-judge panel of the court, which deemed the claims not actionable under Saudi law, but went on to seek alternative methods to resolve the dispute. Both sides agreed before the court to settle the suit, Al-Rushaid agreeing to cooperate in CARL’s dissolution and CPS agreeing to drop the then pending federal anti-trust suit. This agreement is contained in a letter from CPS to Al-Rush-aid, which letter was notarized by a Texas notary, the Texas Secretary of State, and verified by United States Secretary of State George P. Schultz.

II. DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
911 S.W.2d 18, 1995 WL 259950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cps-international-inc-v-dresser-industries-inc-texapp-1995.