Fustok v. Banque Populaire Suisse

546 F. Supp. 506, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14520
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 8, 1982
Docket81 Civ. 4139
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 546 F. Supp. 506 (Fustok v. Banque Populaire Suisse) 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
Fustok v. Banque Populaire Suisse, 546 F. Supp. 506, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14520 (S.D.N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

Plaintiff, Mahmoud Fustok, a citizen of Saudi Arabia and a resident of London, England, commenced this action against other foreign citizens and nonresidents charging them with having defrauded him of $250,000,000 in connection with transactions in the trading of silver futures contracts and deliveries of physical silver. The defendants against whom the charge is leveled are: Banque Populaire Suisse (“Banque”), a Swiss banking corporation; three officers and employees of Banque, Alain Brussard, Michel Blattmann and Roger Guex; Advicorp Advisory and Financial Corporation, S.A. (“Advicorp”), a Swiss financial management company; and four officers of Advicorp, Pierre-Alain Hirschi, Jean-Jacques Bally, Antoine Asfour and Paul Bisoffi.

Banque moves to dismiss the complaint on the ground of forum non conveniens. The individual defendants, Brussard, Blattmann and Guex make a similar motion. 1 The other defendants either have not been served or have not appeared.

Banque has its head office in Berne, Switzerland with branch offices in Geneva and other Swiss cities. It maintains no branches or offices anywhere in the United States nor is it registered to do business anywhere in the United States. Brussard, *508 Blattmann and Guex are citizens of Switzerland and residents of Geneva. Advicorp’s only office is in Geneva; its officers Hirschi and Bally are citizens of Switzerland and residents of Geneva; Bisoffi is a resident of France; and Asfour is a citizen of Lebanon and, apparently, a resident of England.

Advicorp was organized early in 1978, at which time Fustok authorized Asfour to represent him in its formation and to subscribe for shares in the new company. Asfour was elected a director of Advicorp. Shortly after Advicorp’s organization in April, 1978, Fustok opened an account at Banque with a deposit of $2,000,000 and authorized Asfour to instruct Banque with respect to investments on his behalf. In June, 1978, Fustok also authorized Advicorp to manage, on a discretionary basis, his deposits at Banque and to make investments. Until the middle of 1979, investments made on behalf of Fustok were of a non-speculative nature, mainly in the purchase and sale of securities. In August, 1979, Fustok extended the authorization to Advicorp specifically to include silver futures contracts transactions and deposited additional funds for that purpose with Banque. In connection with Fustok’s silver futures trading activities, Banque extended a $45,000,000 line of credit to secure which Fustok pledged certain of his Swiss assets. On instruction from Advicorp and Asfour, Banque invested Fustok’s funds in silver futures contracts and the purchase of physical silver. Banque carried out the transactions on behalf of Fustok and other Banque customers through “omnibus” accounts held in the sole name of Banque, using the European offices of American commodity brokers, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Incorporated, Conti Commodity Services, Inc. and ACLI International Commodity Services, Inc. The purchases and sales occurred in New York and Chicago both on and off the Commodity Exchange, Inc. (“Comex”) and the Chicago Board of Trade.

Fustok charges that the defendants engaged in a scheme to defraud him and other customers of Banque in violation of the Commodity Exchange Act by executing silver transactions through its omnibus accounts maintained with various brokers. The complaint alleges, among other matters, that the defendants implemented their fraudulent scheme in that

[Banque] did not immediately enter such transactions on its books and records as transactions for the account of specific [Banque] customers. Subsequently, after a lapse of time which permitted defendants to evaluate whether such transactions were likely to be profitable or unprofitable, defendants caused [Banque] to assign unprofitable transactions to customers of [Banque] and to assign profitable transactions to accounts maintained with [Banque] under code names but which, on information and belief, were accounts maintained for the benefit of one or more of the defendants and persons acting in concert with them. Sometimes, even after transactions were assigned to specific accounts on the books and records of [Banque], transactions which subsequently became profitable were retroactively reassigned from customers of [Banque] to the aforementioned code name accounts, and transactions which subsequently became unprofitable were retroactively reassigned from code name accounts to customers of [Banque]. 2

*509 The gravamen of all claims, no matter how variously stated, is the switching of transactions by the use of the omnibus accounts whereby unprofitable transactions were assigned to plaintiff or other customers of Banque and profitable transactions transferred to the defendants or their associates.

Against the foregoing background, we consider the motions . to dismiss on the ground of forum non conveniens. In Gulf Oil Corporation v. Gilbert 3 and its companion case, Koster v. Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company 4 the Supreme Court set forth a balancing test for resolving motions to dismiss on the basis of forum non conveniens. While the Court noted that a plaintiff’s choice of forum should rarely be disturbed, it also stated that when an alternative forum has jurisdiction to hear a case and when trial in the chosen forum would “establish . .. oppressiveness and vexation to a defendant out of all proportion to the plaintiff’s convenience,” or when the “chosen forum [i]s inappropriate because of considerations affecting the court’s own administrative and legal problems,” the court may, in the exercise of its sound discretion, dismiss the case. 5

To guide trial court discretion, the Supreme Court provided a list of “private interest” factors affecting the convenience of the litigants, and a list of “public interest” factors affecting the convenience of the forum. The private interest factors include the location of evidence and witnesses, the availability of process to compel attendance of unwilling witnesses, as well as other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious, and inexpensive. The public interest factors include the difficulty which arises when a forum must apply foreign choice of law rules and foreign law, the administrative problems which follow when litigation is added to existing heavy case loads in congested centers rather than being handled at its origin, and the imposition of jury duty upon a community which has no relation' to the litigation. 6 In this case, both the private and the public interest factors overwhelmingly point toward dismissal.

At the threshold of analysis is the fact that not only is an alternative forum available, but there is presently pending an action in the courts of Geneva which encompasses the major claims that plaintiff asserts in this action.

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Bluebook (online)
546 F. Supp. 506, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fustok-v-banque-populaire-suisse-nysd-1982.