Frame v. S-H, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 4, 1992
Docket91-2396
StatusPublished

This text of Frame v. S-H, Inc. (Frame v. S-H, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frame v. S-H, Inc., (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 91–2396.

Suzanne FRAME, Plaintiff–Appellant,

v.

S–H, INC., et al., Defendants–Appellees,

Allan James, et al., Intervenors–Appellees.

Aug. 5, 1992.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

Before SNEED**, RVLEY, and BARKSDALE, Circuit Judges.

SNEED, Circuit Judge:

Suzanne Frame, described by the district court as a "disingenuous, obstreperous, obfuscating

pain," appeals from a judgment in excess of $10.2 million entered against her as a sanction for

repeated discovery abuses. It is unfortunate that we cannot put this litigation, which has lingered in

the courts for seven years, to a swift end. Because of an inconsistency in the record, we are forced

to remand. We do so only for a limited purpose.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

This case has its beginnings in a suit originally filed in late 1986 by Suzanne Frame and two

of her businesses, Tenham Company N.V. and SASI International, Ltd. They sued the named

defendants, Manuel Zepeda and two of his interests, S–H, Inc. and Pandor, Inc., alleging RICO

violations, fraud, and assorted other causes of action. Much has happened since then and to describe

these events requires considerable space. It is a story of gross abuse of discovery procedures

tolerated much too long by the district court.

* Senior Circuit Judge of the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation. A. The Genesis

In her original complaint, Frame charged that Zepeda, between 1984 and 1986, induced her

to place over $7 million with Zepeda for the purpose of importing "grey market" perfumes from

Europe. Zepeda was to line up "a seller and a buyer at set prices before money was invested and thus

[Zepeda] could predict and control profit spread." Zepeda promised a safe return of at least seven

percent of the invested monies on a 35 or 42 day trade cycle. Zepeda did not follow through on the

perfume venture, says Frame, and the $7 million has disappeared.

On June 3, 1987, the nature of this lawsuit changed drastically; a group of 28 separate

investors, who had themselves invested money in the perfume venture at Mrs. Frame's urgings, moved

the court to intervene. They alleged that it was Frame who was the true mastermind of the fraud, and

that the original lawsuit was merely an attempt to obscure the true nature of the relationship between

Frame and Zepeda. The district court granted the motion to intervene on September 4, 1987. The

intervenors filed their complaint in intervention later that day, alleging causes of action which, among

others, included state and federal securities infringements, RICO violations, common law fraud, and

violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.

In addition to the original named plaintiffs and defendants, the intervenors impleaded as

third-party defendants S.F. International and Suzanne De Lyon, Inc., both Texas corporations with

whom Frame was associated and who the intervenors believed now possessed some of their money.

To reflect the change in posture, the court realigned the parties, making the intervenors plaintiffs, and

grouping the new impleaded parties with Mrs. Frame, Tenham, and SASI, as defendants. Zepeda and

his companies remained in the case as a second distinct group of defendants. The case was restyled

Allan James, et al. v. Suzanne Frame, et al. v. S–H Inc., et al. For ease of reference, we will refer

to the intervenors-realigned-as-plaintiffs as simply the "James group."

B. The James Group Allegations According to the James group's complaint, Frame's scheme worked as follows. Suzanne

Frame would attract trusting individual investors with the alluring prospect of "no-risk" income in the

grey market perfume importation business. She described to them a proposed transaction much like

the one she claimed Zepeda had offered her, only with less profit spread. Frame would "line up a

purchaser in the United States, contact a European seller and then arrange for a shipment on behalf

of the waiting purchaser." The money was needed, represented Mrs. Frame, to secure a letter of

credit for the purchase price of a given quantity of perfume. The money received from the American

purchaser, and not the cash contributions from the local investors, would be used to pay the European

supplier. This, according to the complaint, would result in "the letter of credit not being drawn and

the capital remaining safely on deposit in the United States." There was, on the part of the James

group, some vague awareness of an ill-defined relationship between Frame and Zepeda. However,

it was their understanding that Suzanne Frame would scrupulously supervise and control the funds

at all times, and that the investment was virtually risk free.

The transaction itself would begin with a transfer of funds by an investor to a

Frame-controlled entity. Frame would then acknowledge receipt of the funds by letter, in which she

would agree to return the capital in a specified period of time along with a sum of approximately three

percent of the capital contribution. Frame called the additional amount a "commission." Along with

the letter, Frame provided the investor with a promissory note in the amount of the capital

contribution, due six weeks after it was executed. These notes did not state any interest. When the

six weeks expired, Frame encouraged the investors to forego any return of capital and instead reinvest

the funds for another six week period. According t o the James group, Frame promised that the

transactions had been sanitized by her legal counsel, and that they did not violate Texas usury laws.1

Between the summer of 1985 and November of 1986, Frame managed to raise almost $3

1 A promise which has since proved quite hollow. In Najarro v. SASI Int'l, 904 F.2d 1002 (5th Cir.1990), cert. denied, ––– U.S. ––––, 111 S.Ct. 755, 112 L.Ed.2d 775 (1991), we found that the identical arrangement was usurious as a matter of Texas law. million from the separate investors, whom we have called the James group. On Christmas Eve 1986,

Frame informed them that she would be unable to return any more money. The James group claimed

that over $1.5 million of the capital contributions was and remains outstanding.

C. Early Pretrial Maneuvering

On March 31, 1988, the court entered its scheduling order, setting a discovery cutoff for

November 1, 1988, and a trial date of January 31, 1989. After switching counsel, the James group

served Frame with its first "Request for Production of Documents and Things" on June 20, 1988.

Frame did not comply with the request to the James group's satisfaction. With the discovery deadline

steadily approaching, the James group moved to compel discovery on August 9, 1988, alleging that

"phone calls had not been returned" and that "documents had not been produced." A week later, the

court responded in a spirit of tolerant optimism (which proved to be misplaced) and instructed the

parties to "work out" the discovery disagreements informally.

On September 30, 1988, the James group filed their second motion to compel. This time they

informed the court that Frame had given them an excuse, which they distrusted, that "many of the

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