KNAUF DE COLOMBIA, S.A.S., etc. v. CARLOS HAKIM-DACCACH

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 19, 2022
Docket20-1570
StatusPublished

This text of KNAUF DE COLOMBIA, S.A.S., etc. v. CARLOS HAKIM-DACCACH (KNAUF DE COLOMBIA, S.A.S., etc. v. CARLOS HAKIM-DACCACH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KNAUF DE COLOMBIA, S.A.S., etc. v. CARLOS HAKIM-DACCACH, (Fla. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed January 19, 2022. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

Nos. 3D20-1566, 3D20-1569, 3D20-1570 Lower Tribunal No. 17-1358 ________________

Amersham Enterprises, Inc., et al., Appellants,

vs.

Carlos Hakim-Daccach, Appellee.

Appeals from non-final orders from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Beatrice Butchko, Judge.

Greenberg Traurig, P.A., and Elliot H. Scherker, Brigid F. Cech Samole, Humberto H. Ocariz, James E. Gillenwater, and Bethany J. M. Pandher, Reed Smith LLP, and Edward M. Mullins, and Cristina Cardenas, Latham & Watkins LLP, and Eric F. Leon, and Jason C. Hegt (New York, NY), Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, PC, and David B. Levin (Fort Lauderdale), and Spencer Leach (Orlando), Fishman Haygood, L.L.P., and Kerry J. Miller (New Orleans, LA), for appellants.

Sequor Law, P.A., and Edward H. Davis, Jr., Arnoldo B. Lacayo, Amanda E. Finley, and Christopher A. Noel, Waldman Barnett, P.L., and Glen H. Waldman, for appellee.

Before HENDON, MILLER, and BOKOR, JJ. MILLER, J.

Appellants, Jorge Hakim-Tawil, Arkata Investment, Inc., Ukiah

International Corp., Leinster Garden Assets, Inc., Amersham Enterprises,

Inc., Gyptec, S.A. (now known as Violet Investment Corp., S.A. En

Liquidacion), Knauf Distribuidora, S.A.S., and Knauf de Colombia, S.A.S.

(formally known as Logistics and Technical Services, S.A.S), nonresident

defendants in an action brought by appellee, Dr. Carlos Hakim-Daccach, in

the circuit court, challenge the denial of their respective motions to dismiss

for lack of personal jurisdiction. The same appellants, along with Knauf

International GmbH, challenge the denial of their motions to dismiss for

forum non conveniens. 1 For the reasons that follow, we affirm the order

under review.

BACKGROUND

This proceeding traces its origins to a family dispute over Dr. Hakim-

Daccach’s ownership interests in certain foreign corporations. Mr. Hakim-

Tawil is Dr. Hakim-Daccach’s cousin. He is a Colombian national and

resident, while Arkata, Ukiah, Leinster, and Amersham are Panamanian

companies, Gyptec, Knauf Distribuidora, and Knauf de Colombia are

Colombian entities, and Knauf International is a German company.

1 We summarily reject all other contentions of error.

2 Distilled to its essence, the operative complaint alleges Mr. Hakim-

Tawil fraudulently divested Dr. Hakim-Daccach of his one-third interest in

Arkata and Ukiah, the former ninety-nine percent owners of Gyptec, a now

liquidated company, by fraudulently canceling his share certificates and

reissuing them to other entities. 2 His claims of ownership have been litigated

in various tribunals in Panama and Colombia for over a decade.

The facts giving rise to this dispute are succinctly set forth in our earlier

opinion, Gyptec, S.A. v. Hakim-Daccach, 299 So. 3d 481 (Fla. 3d DCA

2020), where we affirmed the imposition of a mandatory injunction involving

certain funds derived from the liquidation sale of Gyptec. A portion of those

funds remain escrowed in the Miami branch of Banco de Bogotá, S.A. As

salient here,

Dr. Hakim, a Florida resident and U.S. citizen, personally loaned $300,000 to his two cousins, Alejandro and Jorge Tawil. When the cousins failed to repay him, Dr. Hakim and his cousins made oral agreements to convert Dr. Hakim’s outstanding loan into equity in the Colombian corporation, Gyptec, a company started by the Tawils and owned by two other Panamanian companies [Ukiah and Arkata]. Dr. Hakim alleges that he eventually acquired a one-third equity interest in Gyptec. There is no documentation to substantiate these alleged capital contributions or agreements, as everything was apparently done by oral agreement.

2 Dr. Hakim-Daccach further alleges he directly owned ten shares in Gyptec, amounting to a less than one percent interest.

3 Dr. Hakim alleges that sometime in 2004 he gave his bearer bonds (or share certificates, representing 1000 shares each and his one-third interest) to his cousin, Jorge, to hold them for him as a fiduciary. In 2008, Dr. Hakim requested the return of the shares, but Jorge did not return the shares/certificates. In 2009, Dr. Hakim entered into a stock purchase agreement with Jorge, which document indicated that Dr. Hakim was a one-third owner of the company. This agreement was voided by a Colombian arbitration panel in 2011 (the “Arbitral Award”), which found the agreement null and void because Appellants 3 improperly assigned the agreement and defaulted. The Colombian arbitration panel found, however, that Dr. Hakim had an undisputed 33.33% ownership. The arbitration panel directed that Dr. Hakim be restored his “four shares,” representing his one-third interest. 4 Tawil did not comply with the Arbitral Award, leading Dr. Hakim to litigate further in both Colombia and Panama, all of which concluded in Dr. Hakim’s favor as to his one-third ownership interest.

In 2015, Gyptec sold its assets and operations to Knauf GmBH and its subsidiaries, without notice to Dr. Hakim. After doing its due diligence on Gyptec, however, Knauf required Gyptec to place $40 million of the purchase price into a restricted escrow account, and required $20 million of that to account for Dr. Hakim’s one-third interest should his ownership claim prove valid. Those funds are held in escrow in Banco de Bogota’s Miami branch.

. . . Dr. Hakim continues to allege that he owns one-third of Gyptec as a result of his and his father’s significant monetary investments in that company, and that the Appellants have deprived him of his ownership interest. Dr. Hakim initially filed in federal court, and eventually the cause was remanded to state circuit court as a constructive trust claim.

3 The appellants in the previous case were Mr. Hakim-Tawil, Arkata, Ukiah, Leinster, Amersham, and Gyptec. 4 The Bogota Superior Tribunal affirmed this award, rendering it both final and nonappealable. The Supreme Court of Panama and the Panamanian Circuit Court subsequently granted recognition and enforcement.

4 During the pendency of this case, Appellants transferred approximately $30 million of the escrow funds to offshore accounts in Panama and Colombia. Dr. Hakim immediately moved for a mandatory injunction to compel the return of the escrow funds pending determination of Dr. Hakim’s ownership and entitlement, and a prohibitory injunction against further fraudulent transfers and dissipation of the escrow funds. After a lengthy evidentiary hearing, the trial court found that there was probable danger of dissipation of the Florida escrow funds, citing evidence of the Appellants transferring those specific, identifiable funds at issue in this case out of Florida without notice to the court or other parties to this case.

Id. at 482–83.

In addition to these facts, Dr. Hakim-Daccach alleges that, after the

Arbitral Award was issued, Mr. Hakim-Tawil created or acquired two new

Panamanian entities, Leinster and Amersham, canceled Dr. Hakim-

Daccach’s original share certificates, and reissued certificates to the two new

entities. These share certificates purportedly represented Dr. Hakim-

Daccach’s indirect one-third ownership interest in Gyptec. 5

In the current version of the complaint, Dr. Hakim-Daccach has alleged

numerous torts, including conspiracy, fraudulent transfer, breach of fiduciary

duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, fraud, and

aiding and abetting fraud. After the complaint was filed, all appellants, save

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KNAUF DE COLOMBIA, S.A.S., etc. v. CARLOS HAKIM-DACCACH, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knauf-de-colombia-sas-etc-v-carlos-hakim-daccach-fladistctapp-2022.