Great Lakes Overseas, Inc. v. Wah Kwong Shipping Group, Ltd.

990 F.2d 990, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 7724, 1993 WL 109503
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1993
Docket91-3581
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 990 F.2d 990 (Great Lakes Overseas, Inc. v. Wah Kwong Shipping Group, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Lakes Overseas, Inc. v. Wah Kwong Shipping Group, Ltd., 990 F.2d 990, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 7724, 1993 WL 109503 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Great Lakes Overseas, Inc. (GLO), a shipping agent, entered an- agency agreement with a freight liner service, KKL (Kangaroo Lines) Pty., Ltd. (KKL), under which GLO booked cargo, quoted rates and issued bills of lading in exchange for a commission for all cargo carried aboard KKL’s ships. GLO had performed such services for more than two years when a liquidator assumed control of KKL, ceasing its business activities when KKL owed GLO sizable commissions for cargo already delivered or already booked. Unable to obtain relief from KKL, GLO has turned to the defendant, Wah Kwong Shipping Group, Ltd., asserting that a series of agreements or arrangements between Wah Kwong and the liner service established a partnership or alter-ego relationship that made Wah Kwong responsible for KKL’s debts to GLO and subjected it to suit in Illinois, or, alternatively, that Wah Kwong is subject to jurisdiction in Illinois under the Illinois long-arm statute because its actions in Illinois caused injury. The district court dismissed the case with prejudice for want of personal jurisdiction. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

*992 I.

Since resolution of this ease turns on the nature of the relationships among the various parties, a detailed recounting of the facts is required. The plaintiff, GLO, is a shipping agent for corporations that transport ocean marine cargo. GLO is wholly owned by the Singapore corporation Come-ta Shipping Pty. Ltd. (Cometa), which is at least 40 percent owned by Trygve Vangsnes, a Norwegian living in Australia. Wah Kwong Shipping Group, Ltd. (Wah Kwong), a corporation organized under Hong Kong law, is the parent holding company of a group of subsidiary companies, including Maritime Shipping & Investments, Ltd. (MSI), which owns ocean-going vessels, and Venture Shipping Managers, Ltd. (VSM), which manages and operates ocean-going ships. Hong Kong residents Frank and George Chao were the chief executives and managers of Wah Kwong and various subsidiaries. Karlander (Australia) Pty. Ltd. (Karlander) was an Australian company operating a liner service out of Australia. Karlander chartered until 1983 vessels from the shipowning companies in which MSI owned shares, at which time Karlander was reorganized and the liner service separately incorporated as KKL. KKL was an Australian company of which Vangsnes was owner and chief executive officer.

On August 1, 1983, GLO entered into a General Agency Agreement with KKL. Under the agreement, GLO would receive commissions as KKL’s shipping agent for booking cargo, quoting rates, issuing bills of lading and performing other related services. The agency agreement stated that it was to be governed by Illinois law. 1

GLO had performed services for KKL from August 1983 to December 1985 when in January 1986 a liquidator assumed control of KKL and discontinued its operations. KKL owed GLO substantial commissions at the time: $1.2 million for cargo already booked, carried and delivered and $2 million for cargo booked but not yet delivered. Having unsuccessfully sought compensation from KKL through the liquidation proceedings, GLO targets Wah Kwong in this case based upon a series of agreements between Wah Kwong or its subsidiaries 2 and KKL. The agreements, GLO argues, established a partnership or alter-ego relationship between the companies that made Wah Kwong responsible for KKL's debts to GLO. Among these agreements were the Loan Facility, the Heads of Agreement, the Supplemental Agreement, the Assignment of Earnings and various ancillary agreements.

In March 1983, Wah Kwong and Karlan-der entered into a “Loan Facility” under which MSI would provide up to $6 million to Karlander to pay off overdue charterhire on vessels Karlander had chartered from shipowning companies in which MSI and VSM had interests. When charterhire debts grew, Karlander’s owners decided to restructure the company by forming KKL to operate the Australian-U.S. liner service; KKL undertook Karlander’s charters with the shipowning companies and assumed outstanding charterhire that had not been paid off. About the same time, Wah Kwong sought advice from its accountants, who suggested five ways Wah Kwong might respond to the restructuring and the unpaid charterhire, including the injection of $6 million as a loan to KKL.

On November 26, 1983, Karlander, KKL and Wah Kwong executed the Heads of Agreement. Noting that Karlander was indebted to Wah Kwong and that Karlan-der’s successor, KKL, required financial assistance to pay off Karlander’s creditors, the agreement provided that MSI would make a $6 million interest-free deposit, repayable on demand, with a finance company established as a wholly owned subsid *993 iary of KKL. The finance company then would advance the deposit to KKL, which would advance the money to Karlander to pay off the outstanding charterhire. . As security for the $6 million deposit, KKL granted MSI an option to acquire half of KKL’s stock. The agreement also authorized MSI to appoint two members of KKL’s board of directors, to appoint a financial consultant to KKL and to approve KKL’s auditors. The Heads of Agreement provided that English law would apply.

The Heads of Agreement stated it would not become effective until additional documents were executed. One such document, a side letter signed the same day as the Heads of Agreement, noted that repayment of the $6 million deposit “is by mutual agreement instead of on demand.” A Supplemental Agreement, executed on January 10, 1984, to give effect to the Heads of Agreement, warranted that KKL’s total outstanding debts were not more than $10.6 million and noted that if that representation were false, MSI would be entitled to demand repayment of the $6 million. 3 The Supplemental Agreement confirmed that MSI would appoint two directors to KKL’s board — one of whom was needed for a quorum — and established a two-person committee, including one MSI-nominee, to monitor KKL’s cash flow and recommend guidelines for payments to creditors. Like the Heads of Agreement, the Supplemental Agreement provided that it was to be governed by English law. In accordance with the agreements, on February 6, 1984, VSM drew a check on MSI’s account payable to the finance company, Engum Holdings, for $6 million. Engum endorsed the check to KKL, which endorsed it to VSM as the shipowners’ agent in payment of outstanding charterhire.

Yet another agreement, the Assignment of Earnings (executed on March 2, 1984), provided for the assignment of KKL’s and Karlander’s earnings related to vessel operation to VSM as “security for the various obligations” to MSI and VSM. The agreement provided that KKL’s earnings would be paid to VSM-designated bank accounts, though such earnings first would be applied to charterhire due to shipowners. This agreement also stated that it was governed by English law. A side letter sent the next day by VSM and signed by KKL confirmed that the “purpose of this Assignment” was “to protect the Charterhire earnings” of the Wah Kwong ships. Wah Kwong states that the Assignment of Earnings was never implemented.

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990 F.2d 990, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 7724, 1993 WL 109503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-lakes-overseas-inc-v-wah-kwong-shipping-group-ltd-ca7-1993.