Fogade v. ENB Revocable Trust

263 F.3d 1274, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19221, 2001 WL 980640
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2001
DocketNo. 99-12527
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 263 F.3d 1274 (Fogade v. ENB Revocable Trust) 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
Fogade v. ENB Revocable Trust, 263 F.3d 1274, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19221, 2001 WL 980640 (11th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

CARNES, Circuit Judge:

The plaintiffs in this lawsuit are the Venezuelan agency, Fondo de Garantia de [1279]*1279Depósitos y Protección Bancaria (FO-GADE), and Corpofin, C.A., a Venezuelan company that FOGADE placed in intervention. The individual defendants — Juan Santaella, Julio C. Leanez, and Oscar L. Zamora — -were former shareholders and controlling board members of Corpofin. The remaining defendants — the ENB Revocable Trust, Mercorp Advisors, Inc., Eastern National Bank, and ADCO Associates, Inc. — are business entities that are directly or indirectly controlled by the individual defendants.

Plaintiffs filed suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, alleging that the individual defendants had misappropriated from Corpofin the stock of Eastern National Bank (ENB), a United States chartered bank in Miami.1 The district court initially dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint (the second amended one) on forum non conveniens grounds, concluding that it involved primarily Venezuelan legal issues between Venezuelan parties, arising from transactions most of which had occurred in Venezuela. The plaintiffs subsequently requested leave to amend the complaint (for a third time) so that it would focus on defendants’ alleged misappropriation of the ENB shares, which took place primarily in Miami, and would omit claims that focused on defendants’ alleged violations of Venezuelan corporate and banking law. After reviewing plaintiffs’ revised allegations, the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file a third amended complaint. The court eventually granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs on their claims of conversion and for reclamation of shares, and it ordered that the shares of ENB be returned to Corpofin.

The defendants’ appeal brings us issues involving the jurisdiction of the district court over the case when it entered the order granting plaintiffs leave to amend after the court had already dismissed the complaint on forum non conveniens grounds, and the propriety of the court’s grant of summary judgment to plaintiffs on their conversion and reclamation of shares claims. The defendants also attempt to appeal the dismissal of certain counterclaims they filed, but we lack jurisdiction to review that dismissal.

I. BACKGROUND

A. FACTS

In early 1994, Venezuela suffered a banking crisis engendered by the failure of Venezuela’s largest bank. Several Venezuelan banks were forced to seek financial assistance from FOGADE, a Venezuelan agency, similar to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, that provides financial assistance to struggling Venezuelan depository institutions. Bancor, S.A.C.A., was one such bank. The individual defendants were minority shareholders and controlling board members of Bancor. The majority of Bancor’s shares, in turn, was owned by Corpofin, and the individual defendants were also minority shareholders and controlling board members of Corpo-fin.

Between March and June of 1994, Ban-cor received financial aid from FOGADE [1280]*1280equivalent to $300 million at the then-prevailing exchange rates. In June of 1994, on the stated grounds that Bancor had not repaid its debts or increased its capital, FOGADE caused the Superintendency of Banks to “intervene” Bancor, a process similar to placing a company in receivership in the United States. In September of 1994, upon a finding that Corpo-fin was related to Bancor and that Corpo-fin had very large unguaranteed debts with Bancor, FOGADE caused the Superintendency of Banks to intervene Corpofin as well. As part of the intervention process, FOGADE removed the individual defendants from the management of both Bancor and Corpofin and replaced them with FOGADE-appointed boards. In October 1995, the Republic of Venezuela, through its Financial Emergency Board, ordered that Bancor be liquidated. Corpo-fin remains intervened, though defendants contend that the authority for intervention of it has expired under Venezuelan law.2

Corpofín’s interventor, Juan Miguel Senior, who is responsible for marshaling the corporation’s assets for the benefit of creditors, discovered documents detailing a series of transactions between subsidiaries of Corpofin, as well as shell corporations within the exclusive control of the defendants, that had resulted in the transfer of all shares of Eastern National Bank outside of Corpofín’s ownership and control. Those documents were dated May 9, 1994, exactly one day before the individual defendants had been removed from control of Bancor by resolution of FOGADE.3 In any event, on May 9, 1994, Corpofin owed Bancor approximately $16.5 million.

Prior to the May 9, 1994 transactions (if they did take place on that date), the corporate structure was as follows: Corpo-fin, the parent company, owned 100% (70,-000 shares) of First Bancorporation (“First Bancorp”). First Bancorp in turn owned 95% of the shares of ENB and 100% of the shares of Eastern Overseas Bank (“Eastern Overseas”). Eastern Overseas owned the remaining 5% of the ENB shares. Allegedly in order to shield the ENB stock (valued at $30 million) from judicial proceedings in Venezuela, Corpofin, at the direction of the individual defendants, engaged in the following five May 9th transactions:

(1.) Corpofin transferred 64,000 shares of First Bancorp, valued at $28.5 million, to Eastern Overseas for the equivalent of $795,000.
(2.) Those 64,000 shares of First Ban-corp were then transferred by Eastern Overseas, for approximately $795,000, to Mercorp Advisors (“Mercorp”), a shell corporation allegedly created for the sole purpose of restructuring the ENB ownership.
(3.) Corpofin then transferred, for approximately $75,000, the remaining 6,000 shares of First Bancorp directly to Mer-corp, which now owned 100% of the First Bancorp stock, and Bancorp in turn owned 95% of ENB.
(4.) First Bancorp then transferred its 95% ownership of ENB to Mercorp in [1281]*1281exchange for a $28.5 million promissory note that was subsequently cancelled and never paid.
(5.) Finally, Mercorp transferred its 95% ownership interest in ENB to the ENB Revocable Trust (“the ENB Trust”), of which the individual defendants are among the trustees and beneficiaries; and Corpofin caused all of the stock of Eastern Overseas, as well as the remaining 5% of ENB, to be transferred to ADCO associates, another corporation controlled by the individual defendants. The consideration for both of these transfers also consisted of a promissory note that was subsequently can-celled.

The final corporate structure was as follows: Corpofin retained no ownership interest in any of the corporations, including ENB. ADCO owned 5% of the ENB stock and 100% of Eastern Overseas. Mercorp owned 100% of First Bancorp and the ENB Revocable Trust owned 95% of the ENB stock. Thus, Corpofin, which owed Bancor $16.5 million, received approximately $870,000 in exchange for its entire ownership interest in ENB, which was valued at $30 million while various business entities under the control of the individual defendants ended up owning all $30 million worth of those ENB shares.

B. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

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Bluebook (online)
263 F.3d 1274, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19221, 2001 WL 980640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fogade-v-enb-revocable-trust-ca11-2001.