Eastman Kodak Co. v. Kavlin

978 F. Supp. 1078, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13808, 1997 WL 570548
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 9, 1997
Docket96-2218-CIV, 96-2219-CIV
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 978 F. Supp. 1078 (Eastman Kodak Co. v. Kavlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Kavlin, 978 F. Supp. 1078, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13808, 1997 WL 570548 (S.D. Fla. 1997).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO DISMISS

RYSKAMP, District Judge.

THIS CAUSE came before the Court upon defendants’ motions to dismiss [DE 18 in 96-2218; DE 21 in 96-2219], filed October 2, 1996. 1 The two defendants in this case,-the corporation Casa Kavlin and the individual defendant Susana Kavlin, move to dismiss the two complaints on four separate grounds — a) want of personal jurisdiction over the corporation, b) forum non conveniens as to all claims, c) failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted as to the claims against Casa Kavlin arising under Bolivian law and d) failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted as to plain *1080 tiff Carballo’s claims arising under the Alien Tort Claims Act. For the reasons stated below, the Court will retain jurisdiction over the case, dismiss some of Kodak’s claims arising under Bolivian law, and defer ruling-on the personal jurisdiction issue pending an evidentiary hearing.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs tell a gripping story filled with international corporate intrigue, corrupt South American judges presiding over kangaroo courts, rat-infested prisons where survival depends on bribery, and a Bolivian judge’s tawdry affair resulting in an embarrassing love child. Defendants tell a less dramatic story about an ordinary commercial dispute between a distributor and a supplier that ended up in the wrong court. They contest many aspects of plaintiffs’ story, and plaintiffs contest many aspects of theirs. The Court cannot decide between these competing stories on these motions to dismiss. It can only try to make some sense out of the legal issues arising from the competing allegations. The facts are these.

Between 1923 and the events precipitating this litigation, Casa Kavlin, a Bolivian company with its principal place of business in La Paz, served as the exclusive Bolivian distributor for Kodak, an internationally recognized photography equipment manufacturer. Casa Kavlin works the Bolivian photographic equipment wholesale and retail markets, distributing such goods as photographic laboratory equipment, films, graphic arts materials, x-ray materials, and microfilm. The company has no sales outside of Bolivia, although it does procure many of its materials from the United States, including Florida.

According to the allegations of the two complaints, in January of 1995, Kodak was becoming dissatisfied with Casa Kavlin’s distribution services and sent Juan Carballo, a citizen of Uruguay, to Bolivia to survey the market for Kodak products in Bolivia. Approximately two months after Carballo and his family arrived in Bolivia, Kodak informed Casa Kavlin that it would no longer serve as the exclusive distributor of Kodak products in Bolivia. Instead, Carballo would be responsible for Kodak sales, supplies distribution, and representation in Bolivia. Casa Kavlin’s response to this change in the parties’ relationship is the subject of this lawsuit.

No one disputes that Casa Kavlin, acting through its Executive Vice President, Susana Kavlin, filed a written criminal complaint against Carballo in La Paz on May 9, 1995. The complaint accused Mr. Carballo of various crimes under Bolivian law, such as falsifying documents, espionage against Casa Kavlin, stealing Casa Kavlin’s clients, and the like. Defendants insist that they acted properly because Carballo’s actions threatened their Bolivian distributorship rights and violated Bolivian criminal laws. They claim that the prosecutor received evidence from various Bolivian governmental agencies demonstrating that the corporation Carballo purported to represent was fictitious and unregistered with the proper authorities, in violation of Bolivian law. Additionally, the prosecutor allegedly had evidence that Carballo had failed to register with various tax collecting agencies and had failed to obtain a required work permit.

Carballo and Kodak vigorously deny wrongdoing by Carballo. Instead, they insist that Casa Kavlin brought the charges in order to extort an advantageous financial arrangement with Kodak. Here their story takes its first sordid turn. Enter Juan Carlos Zegarra, the attorney representing Casa Kavlin, and, according to plaintiffs, an attorney notorious in Bolivia for bringing criminal charges in purely civil disputes. Plaintiffs charge, and defendants do not dispute, that Zegarra is the godfather of Instructional Judge Grover Nájera Quiroga’s (“Judge Nájera”) illegitimate child. Apparently, Zegarra’s sister conceived the child during an affair with Judge Nájera. Zegarra then became the child’s “padrino” or godfather. This matters because plaintiffs allege that after filing the criminal charges Zegarra used his connections in the Bolivian criminal justice system to have the case assigned to Judge Nájera, who would surely give a sympathetic ear to the godfather of his child. Plaintiffs allege that this relationship between Zegarra and Judge Nájera casts a *1081 sinister pall over the judge’s subsequent actions.

Responding to the criminal complaint, Judge Nájera issued a warrant for Carballo’s arrest. Carballo was arrested on May 27, 1995, and was brought before Judge Nájera for interrogation. The judge allegedly questioned Mr. Carballo for two hours, in the process revealing an overwhelming bias in favor of Casa Kavlin. Ultimately, Judge Nájera ordered him detained in San Pedro prison in La Paz without bail. . Plaintiffs allege that the only.charged offense which could have resulted in an immediate incarceration was the sabotage charge, a crime so far removed from any possible aspect of Carballo’s work for Kodak as to make the incarceration decision the obvious product of an extortion scheme.

According to Carballo, a waking nightmare followed. The San Pedro prison in downtown La Paz, the “infamous Panóptico” according to one of plaintiffs’ experts, is apparently a place barely fit for the rats it houses. For eight days, Carballo was forced to stay there, sharing a filthy cell with murderers, drug dealers, and AIDS patients. Left without food, a blanket, or protection from the inmates, he was forced to bribe his way to survival. Prisoners ran the prison, and murdered each other in Carballo’s presence on one occasion. Dangerous drug dealers discussed their deals in his presence, potentially making him someone who “knew too much.” Finally, Carballo was able to buy the right to live in a jail cell- for $5,000, but even then he had to sleep on the floor. Although the authorities eventually released him, Carballo claims that the experience left him deeply traumatized and unable to resume life as before:

Around May 30, 1995, Alejandro Quintana, a Chilean lawyer, learned of Carballo’s imprisonment and went to Bolivia on Kodak’s behalf to seek his release. While Mr. Carballo was still confined, Susana Kavlin allegedly informed Quintana that Casa Kavlin would agree to drop the charges against Carballo if Kodak would agree (1) to remove all of is representatives from Bolivia, (2) not to send any more representatives to Bolivia, and (3) within sixty days of Mr. Carballo’s release to either (a) terminate its relationship with Casa Kavlin, subject to compensation to Casa Kavlin, (b) sign an agreement with Casa Kavlin for an exclusive distributorship of Kodak products in Bolivia, or (c) purchase Casa Kavlin.

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Bluebook (online)
978 F. Supp. 1078, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13808, 1997 WL 570548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-kodak-co-v-kavlin-flsd-1997.