In Re Hashim

188 B.R. 633, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1574, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1161, 1995 WL 642488
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona
DecidedAugust 15, 1995
DocketBankruptcy B-94-9453-PHX-CGC, 94-9454-PHX-CGC, 94-10028 and 94-9455
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 B.R. 633 (In Re Hashim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hashim, 188 B.R. 633, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1574, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1161, 1995 WL 642488 (Ark. 1995).

Opinion

*637 ORDER RE STANDING AND CAPACITY OF ARAB MONETARY FUND

CHARLES G. CASE, II, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

During the course of these consolidated bankruptcy eases, the debtors and the Arab Monetary Fund (“AMF”) have each raised issues regarding the sovereign immunity, standing and capacity of the AMF and this Court’s jurisdiction over the AMF. To bring these issues to resolution, the parties were directed on May 5, 1995 to file certain motions and responses. Accordingly, the following motions, joinders (together the “Motions”) and responses were filed 1 :

(1) Jawad Mahmoud Hashim’s Motion re: Lack of Arab Monetary Fund Standing, filed May 19, 1995
(2) Joinder of Ali Salass and Maryam Sa-lass in Motion of Jawad Mahmoud Hashim re: Arab Monetary Fund’s Lack of Capacity, filed May 19, 1995
(3) Jafar Hashim’s Joinder in Jawad Mah-moud Hashim’s Motion re: Lack of Arab Monetary Fund Standing, filed May 19, 1995
(4) Omar Hashim’s Joinder in Jawad Mah-moud Hashim’s Motion re: Lack of Arab Monetary Fund Standing, filed May 19, 1995
(5) Salwa Al-Rufaiee’s Joinder in Jawad Mahmoud Hashim’s Motion re: Lack of Arab Monetary Fund Standing, filed May 19, 1995
(6) Arab Monetary Fund’s Response to Ja-wad Mahmoud Hashim’s Motion re: Lack of Arab Monetary Fund Standing and Joinder of Ali Salass and Maryam Salass in Such Motion, filed May 26, 1995
(7) FNBC’S Statement of Position re AMF Standing, filed May 26, 1995
(8) Jawad Mahmoud Hashim’s Reply to Arab Monetary Fund’s Response, filed May 30, 1995
(9) Reply of Ali Salass and Maryam Salass in Support of Motion of Jawad Mah-moud Hashim re: Arab Monetary Fund’s Lack of Capacity, filed May 31, 1995

In addition to the foregoing filings, the parties submitted additional authority to the Court, both formally and informally, including copies of law review articles, legislative history of certain statutes and portions of the Restatement of Foreign Relations of the United States.

The debtors and Ali Salass and Maryam Salass 2 (the “Salasses”) (together the “Mov-ants”) contend that the AMF lacks capacity to sue in the United States and therefore cannot participate in any way in the debtors’ bankruptcy cases. The AMF contends that it has capacity to participate fully in these bankruptcy cases.

II. FACTS

A. The Debtors

All of the debtors in these eases are related. Dr. Jawad M. Hashim (“Dr. Hashim”) is the husband of Salwa Al-Rufaiee and the father of Jafar Hashim and Omar Hashim. Dr. Hashim was the first President and Director General of the AMF, serving in that capacity from 1977 until 1982.

B. The formation of the AMF

The AMF is an organization of Arab countries formed by treaty in 1976 and originally comprised of the following twenty-one governments:

*638 [[Image here]]

The rules and regulations of the AMF are contained in the Articles of Agreement of the Arab Monetary Fund (the “AMF Articles”) 3 , which were originally drafted in Arabic. Among the goals of the AMF, as recited in the AMF Articles, is the establishment of uniform policies governing Arab monetary issues and the development of Arab financial markets. AMF Articles p. 6. Membership in the AMF is open to all Arab states that sign and ratify the AMF Articles. AMF Articles p. 10.

According to the Preamble of the AMF Articles, “[t]he Fund shall have an independent juridical personality and shall have, in particular, the right to own, contract and litigate.” AMF Articles p. 5. The assets, papers and records of the AMF enjoy immunity in member states. AMF Articles p. 31. Title VIII of the AMF Articles is entitled Litigation. It includes the following provision:

Article Fifty-Three: Legal action may be brought against the Fund in a court of competent jurisdiction in the State where its Head Office is located. A suit may be filed in courts at the place of dispute provided that the Fund has in such a place, an agency or branch office.

The Head Office of the AMF is located in Abu Dhabi city of the United Arab Emirates. AMF Articles p. 5. The AMF has no office in the United States.

C. Protocol between AMF and United Arab Emirates

A document entitled Protocol for the Privileges and Immunities of the Arab Monetary Fund, Between the United Arab Emirates (the “U.A.E.”) and the Arab Monetary Fund (the “Protocol Agreement”), and dated August 1, 1977, delineates the privileges and immunities that the U.A.E. has granted the AMF, pursuant to the AMF Articles. Dr. Hashim executed the Protocol Agreement as President/Director-General of the AMF in 1977. The AMF Articles were duly confirmed and ratified by the U.A.E. in Federal Decree No. 35 for 1977.

D. The AMF Claims against the Debtors

The AMF alleges that during his tenure as Director-General, Dr. Hashim fraudulently used and invested AMF funds for his own personal benefit through currency transactions and precious metal investments. In 1982, Dr. Hashim’s term as Director-General ended, and he left the U.A.E. and relocated in England, where his wife had been living for some time. There, the AMF brought suit against him, his wife, his two sons, and other unrelated defendants on them various fraud and misappropriation claims (the “English Proceedings”). The AMF’s claims were litigated over a six year period in England. Some of his co-defendants 4 claimed in England, as he now claims here, that the AMF, *639 as a treaty organization of Arab states to which the United Kingdom did not (and could not) belong, lacked legal capacity to sue in the English municipal courts. Eventually, the House of Lords ruled that the AMF had capacity to pursue their claims against the Hashims in the courts of England.

The merits of the AMF’s claims against the Hashims were tried and the English chancery court, by Justice Chadwick, ultimately issued in 1993 and 1994 a four-part 606-page opinion granting judgment in favor of the AMF and against Dr. Hashim in the amount of approximately $50,000,000.00 US in principal plus interest in the approximate amount of $83,500,000.00 US (through July, 1994) (the “English Judgment”). Portions of the English Judgment are still on appeal and Dr. Hashim maintains his innocence. .

The Hashims left England, lived in Canada for some period of time and eventually settled here in Arizona. The AMF brought suit against the Hashims in Superior Court in Arizona to enforce the English Judgment, but before that case could progress, the Hashims filed for bankruptcy protection.

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Bluebook (online)
188 B.R. 633, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1574, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1161, 1995 WL 642488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hashim-arb-1995.