ECB USA, Inc. v. Savencia Cheese USA, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2025
Docket23-12580
StatusPublished

This text of ECB USA, Inc. v. Savencia Cheese USA, LLC (ECB USA, Inc. v. Savencia Cheese USA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ECB USA, Inc. v. Savencia Cheese USA, LLC, (11th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 23-12580 Document: 51-1 Date Filed: 07/08/2025 Page: 1 of 29

[PUBLISH] In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit

____________________

No. 23-12580 ____________________

ECB USA, INC., a Florida corporation, ATLANTIC VENTURES CORP., a Florida corporation, Plaintiffs-Appellants, versus SAVENCIA CHEESE USA, LLC, ALEX BONGRAIN, an individual, J.M. WILD, an individual, LEWIS GITLIN, an individual, PIERRE RAGNET, an individual, USCA11 Case: 23-12580 Document: 51-1 Date Filed: 07/08/2025 Page: 2 of 29

2 Opinion of the Court 23-12580

TOM SWARTELE, an individual,

Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida D.C. Docket No. 1:20-cv-21681-AHS ____________________

Before JORDAN and BRASHER, Circuit Judges, and COVINGTON, ∗ Dis- trict Judge. BRASHER, Circuit Judge: This appeal is about personal jurisdiction. After a business deal went bad, the foreign buyers of a Delaware-incorporated, New Jersey-based cheese distribution company sued the foreign sellers in Florida. ECB USA and Atlantic Ventures acquired the cheese company after five individuals allegedly misrepresented the company’s corporate governance structure and finances. Neither the sellers nor the buyers lived in Florida, and the deal was mostly negotiated in France. But the buyers hired a Florida lawyer to

∗ Honorable Virginia M. Covington, United States District Judge for the Mid-

dle District of Florida, sitting by designation. USCA11 Case: 23-12580 Document: 51-1 Date Filed: 07/08/2025 Page: 3 of 29

23-12580 Opinion of the Court 3

represent them in the deal and moved the company to Florida after the closing. The buyers sued everyone in Florida: the individual sellers for fraud and related torts and a corporate defendant, Savencia Cheese, for interfering with a key employment relationship after the closing. The district court dismissed the claims against the sellers for lack of personal jurisdiction and dismissed the claims against Savencia Cheese for failure to state a claim. The buyers ap- pealed. After thorough review, and with the benefit of oral argu- ment, we affirm the district court. The main question is whether the buyers’ use of a Florida lawyer to represent them in the deal means that the foreign sellers, which necessarily communicated with that lawyer, can be sued in Florida over their pre-deal state- ments. Because due process requires more than a plaintiff’s unilat- eral conduct to confer jurisdiction in a forum, we agree that the district court lacked jurisdiction. We also agree with the district court that the buyers failed to plead sufficient facts to state a claim against Savencia Cheese. I.

Because the buyers appeal from granted motions to dismiss, we accept the facts that they allege as true and view those facts in the light most favorable to them. Silberman v. Miami Dade Transit, 927 F.3d 1123, 1128 (11th Cir. 2019). USCA11 Case: 23-12580 Document: 51-1 Date Filed: 07/08/2025 Page: 4 of 29

4 Opinion of the Court 23-12580

Five individual defendants, the sellers, 1 found a buyer for a United States-based cheese importation and distribution company, Schratter Foods Incorporated. These sellers consisted of individu- als who held officer positions at Schratter or its parent corporations or subsidiaries. No seller lives or has worked in Florida. Schratter— at the time the sellers sought a buyer—was a Delaware corporation headquartered in New Jersey. According to the buyers, the sellers planned to strip Schrat- ter of its assets before the sale. To do so, the sellers started moving assets from Schratter to affiliate businesses. They also broke Schrat- ter’s bylaws to put a seller—replacing Alain Voss, who served as president and chief executive officer of Schratter for over twenty years—in the “de facto position of Chief Executive Officer.” To ex- ecute this replacement agreement, the sellers paid Voss $350,000. All agreements between Voss and the sellers contained confidenti- ality agreements. The sellers also paid their chief financial officer, Bertrand Proust, to assist in the scheme by influencing “the audits of Schratter’s financial statements and internal controls.” Through Voss and Proust, the sellers “conceal[ed] Schrat- ter’s true financial condition and deficiencies in internal controls, hid[] related party transactions, and misrepresent[ed] corporate

1 This dispute involves many individuals and businesses. Because the relevant

legal issues do not turn on those details, for simplicity and clarity, we refer to ECB USA and Atlantic Ventures, as well as their representatives leading up to the sale, as “the buyers.” And we refer to the five individually named defend- ants as “the sellers” even though companies, in which they held officer posi- tions, signed the documents consummating the sale. USCA11 Case: 23-12580 Document: 51-1 Date Filed: 07/08/2025 Page: 5 of 29

23-12580 Opinion of the Court 5

organization and management structure.” The sellers also misrep- resented the corporate governance structure and financial health of the company to induce an unknowing buyer to enter the sale. Negotiations with the buyers—French nationals who do not live in the United States—began in August 2014. Two months later the buyers hired a Miami-based attorney to represent them in the purchase. During negotiations, the sellers told the buyers—and their Florida-based attorney—that Voss still managed the company. They also created a virtual “data room,” from which the buyers and their representatives—including their Florida-based attor- ney—accessed the due diligence documents. Those documents failed to reveal the corporate governance structure and financial conditions of Schratter. Relying on these documents and conversations, the buyers went forward with the purchase. The buyers and the sellers met in Paris, France, to finalize the stock purchase agreement. They set out the terms of the deal in the stock purchase agreement, including closing terms and a forum selection clause. The parties agreed to close at the “offices of Morgan, Lewis, Bock- ius LLP, 200 S. Biscayne Blvd., Suite 5300, Miami, Florida 33131- 2339, or remotely by electronic exchange of executed documents and other deliverables.” The agreement also included a choice of law clause, which stated that the agreement would be interpreted consistent with Florida law, and the parties consented to an “ex- clusive jurisdiction” provision that required “[a]ny action or USCA11 Case: 23-12580 Document: 51-1 Date Filed: 07/08/2025 Page: 6 of 29

6 Opinion of the Court 23-12580

proceeding in connection with” the agreement to “be brought in a court of record of the State of Delaware in and the City of Wil- mington or in the United States District Court in such county.” Following the conversations in Paris, the parties closed the deal with a virtual closure on December 31st. The buyers’ Florida- based attorney made escrow and payment arrangements from Florida. Relying on the sellers’ representations of Voss’s role at Schratter and because they lacked the ability to work in the United States, the buyers kept Voss as Schratter’s chief executive officer. When the deal closed, they moved Schratter’s headquarters from New Jersey to Florida. That transition started in 2015 and contin- ued through 2017. About six months after the deal closed, and with Voss as the chief executive officer, Schratter signed a distribution agreement with Savencia Cheese that gave away substantial pricing discounts. Eventually, the sellers’ misrepresentations and Savencia Cheese’s inducement of Voss to negotiate away pricing discounts drove Schratter “into insolvency.” The buyers filed an initial complaint but amended it after the sellers and Savencia Cheese filed a motion to dismiss.

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ECB USA, Inc. v. Savencia Cheese USA, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ecb-usa-inc-v-savencia-cheese-usa-llc-ca11-2025.