Curtis v. Beatrice Foods Co.

481 F. Supp. 1275, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10469
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 4, 1980
Docket78 Civ. 1316(MP)
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 481 F. Supp. 1275 (Curtis v. Beatrice Foods Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis v. Beatrice Foods Co., 481 F. Supp. 1275, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10469 (S.D.N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION AND DECISION

POLLACK, District Judge.

PRELIMINARY

Gustavo G. Curtis, the manager of Industrias Gran Colombia, S.A., an industrial company incorporated in the Republic of Colombia and located in Bogota was kidnapped on Bogota’s streets by terrorists on September 28, 1976 and held for ransom demanded from his company beyond its and his capacity to pay. Defendant Beatrice Foods, the parent company of the victim’s employer, voluntarily undertook to negotiate for his release from captivity and after protracted negotiations succeeded in freeing him alive on May 17, 1977 by payment of 15,500,000 pesos in ransom. 1

Beatrice is now being sued .by Mr. Curtis and his wife, a television personality in Colombia, because it allegedly did not do enough or do enough well enough on his behalf. Multiple claims of over $200 million are asserted in the complaint. Briefly, he says that Beatrice was in fact his employer and therefore liable to him for monetary damages under provisions of the Labor Code of Colombia akin to our Workmen’s Compensation laws, or alternatively, that Beatrice having volunteered to negotiate his rescue became a so-called “officious agent” under the Civil Code and liable to him for having performed the functions of that agency inadequately. Mr. Curtis claims that he suffered a “work accident” and was emotionally disabled to return to his employment in Bogota and in consequence of the absence of any opportunity for a transfer to another locality in Beatrice’s organization, he should be paid what he would have earned in Bogota until retirement age 65 or at least what his salary from defendant as his “employer” would *1278 have totalled during two years following the termination of his employment. 2

Mrs. Curtis joined in her husband’s suit and initially asserted separate claims against Beatrice Foods for loss and impairment of consortium during and since her husband’s captivity and for alleged defamation for wrongly doubting whether the kidnapping was genuine and hiring an investigator to look into this and causing her to take a lie-detector test. However, at the close of the case she consented to dismissal of those claims. 3

The defendant, Beatrice Foods, denied legal liability to either plaintiff and claimed that its conduct was voluntary, reasonable and in good faith in freeing Mr. Curtis from his captivity and that it was not his employer or obligated to provide him with employment elsewhere.

The parties stipulated expressly that the law of the Republic of Colombia governs the open claims. Testimony as to the foreign law was adduced by defendant through Professor Henry P. deVries, an acknowledged expert in Colombian law. The plaintiffs submitted a written statement by Colombian attorneys.

The issues were tried to the Court at a Bench trial. Jurisdiction of the Court is grounded on diversity of citizenship.

For the reasons indicated hereafter, neither plaintiff is entitled to prevail herein. The Parties

At the time of the kidnapping, Gustavo G. Curtis was 51 years of age. He was born in New York City but had spent the major portion of his adult life, 25 years, living and working in Latin America. He was married in Venezuela in 1964 to a citizen of Venezuela and Colombia of European birth. Mr. Curtis had no residence of any kind in the United States during this lengthy period and was not a citizen of any state. He is a tall, well built man of strong will and constitution, having served in his early years in the cavalry division of the United States Army in the Philippines after basic training. He and his wife were well aware that the area in which they lived was in a state of great unrest; that Colombia had been a violent area for half a century and was at the times involved herein under martial law and that Bogota in particular was an unsafe city; that kidnappings for ransom were a form of fund raising; and according to the testimony of Mrs. Curtis were virtually day to day news.

Nonetheless, early in 1969, Mr. Curtis left Caracas, Venezuela, to accept employment as the manager of Fabrica de Dulces Gran (Fabrica hereafter), an industrial corporation organized in Colombia and based in Bogota. Fabrica was a subsidiary of Beatrice Foods through stock ownership. Mr. Curtis and Fabrica agreed on the salary he was to receive from it together with a percentage of the profits of Fabrica's operations.

The defendant, Beatrice Foods, is a major multinational food products enterprise organized under Delaware law with its principal place of business in Chicago, Illinois. It engages in the manufacture and distribution of food products. Prior to the events involved herein it had 76 domestic and 33 foreign wholly-owned subsidiaries and in addition controlled through more than 50% stock ownership one domestic and 37 foreign subsidiaries. This worldwide group of companies was operated on a decentralized basis. The individual managers of each subsidiary or affiliate of Beatrice Foods were given almost complete autonomy and independence in the management and operation of their individual enterprise, subject principally only to oversight by the parent corporation of capital expenditures beyond a specified amount.

*1279 The employment contract with Mr. Curtis

Fabrica, as the employer, entered into a written employment agreement with Mr. Curtis, as the employee, for his services from March 1,1969 for an indefinite time in which he agreed to “place at the service of the employer all his normal working capacity on an exclusive basis” with the express term that the employee was “Not to render either directly or indirectly employment services to other employers.” The agreement further recites that “His services inherent in the position shall be performed exclusively in the city of Bogota, D.E., legal headquarters of the Company.” The introductory portion of the contract summarizes the employment as follows:

“INDEFINITE-TIME INDIVIDUAL EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT
Employer: FABRICA DE DULCES GRAN COLOMBIA S.A.
Employee: GUSTAVO GEORGE CURTIS
Place and date of birth: New York, March 10,1925
Salary: 22,000 pesos
Position: GENERAL MANAGER
Where: COLOMBIA_
Address: Bogota, D.E. Cra. 84 No. 18-84
Address: Residencias Hotel Tequendama Rm. 857
Citizenship: U.S.A.
Payable: Monthly
Beginning: March 1,1969

Although the contract stipulated that the parties would not recognize the validity of any verbal stipulations relating to this contract, which according to the writing constituted the complete and total agreement on its subject matter, it was nevertheless orally understood that Mr. Curtis would receive additional salary beyond the stated sum, which had been fixed at the maximum deductible for tax purposes under Colombian law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
481 F. Supp. 1275, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-beatrice-foods-co-nysd-1980.