Marina Presley v. N v. Masureel Veredeling

370 S.W.3d 425, 2012 WL 1441399, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 3282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 2012
Docket01-11-00636-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 370 S.W.3d 425 (Marina Presley v. N v. Masureel Veredeling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marina Presley v. N v. Masureel Veredeling, 370 S.W.3d 425, 2012 WL 1441399, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 3282 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRY JENNINGS, Justice.

Appellant, Marina Presley, challenges the trial court’s judgment entered in favor of appellee, N.V. Masureel Veredeling (“Masureel”), in Masureel’s suit against Presley for enforcement of a foreign judgment. In two issues, Presley contends that the trial court erred in recognizing a judgment entered in favor of Masureel by a court located in Belgium.

We affirm.

Background

Masureel is a company in the business of “yarns and fabrics finishing” with production facilities located in and around Ko-rujtik, Belgium. Presley is President of Sudaglass Fiber Company, Inc. (“Suda-glass”). On September 6, 2000, Presley, individually and on behalf of Sudaglass, Presley’s business partner Graham Miller, and a Masureel representative executed a joint venture agreement that provided that the parties wished to incorporate, under the laws of Belgium, a joint venture limited liability company for the purposes of representing and selling “continuous filament fiber worldwide.” The joint venture agreement provided that it was to be “governed by, and construed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Belgium.” The joint venture agreement further provided that

Any dispute between the Parties hereto arising out or in relation with the Agreement shall be exclusively and definitively settled in accordance with the rules of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), by one arbitrator appointed in accordance with these rules. The place of arbitration shall be Brussels, Belgium ....

Masureel, Presley, and Miller also executed, on September 6, 2000, a loan agreement, which was attached as an exhibit to the joint venture agreement. The loan agreement identified Masureel as the “Mender” and Presley and Miller as the “[bjorrower.” The loan agreement recited that, “[wjithin the framework of the joint venture agreement” and “subject to the terms and conditions of the present agreement,” Masureel would lend to Presley and Graham $600,000 for specified purposes; the loaned amounts would be reimbursed “on the earliest of either the moment at which” specified shares in the joint venture were sold by Presley and Miller to Masu- *428 reel “under the terms of the [jjoint [venture [a]greement, by means of set off, or December 31, 2000”; Presley and Miller were jointly and severally liable for the performance of the obligations owed by the “[bjorrower”; and Masureel would be entitled to “immediate reimbursement” of the loaned amounts if, among other things, the “financial situation” of Sudaglass, Presley, or Miller was “modified to the extent that the ability of one of them to reimburse the loan appears jeopardised.” Under a section of the agreement entitled “Law and Jurisdiction,” the loan agreement provided,

This agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with Belgian law. The courts of Kortrijk have non exclusive jurisdiction for any dispute which may arise under or in connection with this agreement.

On October 30, 2000, Masureel, as lender, and Presley and Graham, as borrowers, executed a second loan agreement, evidencing a second loan by Masureel to Presley and Graham for an additional $51,466.32 that was to be used to “constitute” the joint venture company. Similar to the first loan agreement, the second loan agreement recited that the loaned amounts were to be reimbursed “on the earliest of either” the selling of specified shares to Masureel “under the terms of the joint venture agreement ..., by means of set off, or December 31, 2000.” And Masureel would be entitled to “immediate reimbursement” of the loaned amounts if the “financial situation” of Presley or Miller was “modified to the extent that the ability of one of them to reimburse the loan appears jeopardised.” The second loan agreement contained a “Law and Jurisdiction” clause identical to the same clause in the first loan agreement, which provided that the agreement was to be governed by and construed in accordance with Belgium law and the courts of Kor-trijk, Belgium had “non exclusive jurisdiction for any dispute which may arise under or in connection with this agreement.”

Masureel funded the two loan agreements. Although the parties dispute the factual reasons for non-payment, Masureel was not reimbursed for the loan amounts by December 31, 2000, which was the date by which Masureel was entitled to reimbursement under the terms of both loan agreements. In 2001, Masureel filed a lawsuit against Presley, Miller, and Suda-glass, in the “Court of the First Instance of the District of Kortrijk (Belgium).” In its lawsuit, Masureel sought as its damages the amount of its loan payments for which it had not been reimbursed. Masu-reel argued that it was entitled to the repayment of its loans because the contractually-specified date of December 31, 2000 had passed, Presley and Graham had not fulfilled their obligations under the loan agreements, and the financial situation of Presley and Graham had changed to the extent that their ability to reimburse the loans had been jeopardized. 1

In the Belgium court proceedings, Presley challenged the Belgium court’s jurisdiction by contending that the joint venture agreement and loan agreement “constitute one whole.” Presley asserted that the arbitration clause in the joint venture agreement, which applied to disputes “arising from or relating to” the joint venture agreement, controlled and mandated that the parties’ entire dispute be submitted to arbitration. Presley also sought a judgment dissolving the joint venture agreement.

*429 On June 13, 2002, the Belgium court issued its judgment addressing all of the arguments presented by the parties. In its judgment, the Belgium court stated,

Pursuant to section 1679 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the judge to whom a dispute subject to arbitration is submitted declares that he is not competent to take cognisance of that dispute at the request of one party, unless there is no valid agreement for arbitration with regard to that dispute or if this agreement has been terminated. The plea must be put forward before any other plea or means of defence.
In this case, the plea was put forward by Marina Presley, Graham Miller and Su-daglass Fiber Company Inc. in their first pleadings of 22 November 2001 (“that the defendants, insofar as necessary, contest the competence of the court of first instance in Kortrijk”). In these pleadings, no other pleas or means of defence with regard to the merits of the case were formulated. Consequently, the plea must be examined.
Since both loan agreements that are the basis of the main claim explicitly stipulate, in their articles 9, that the courts of Kortrijk are not exclusively competent to settle any dispute arising from or in connection with these agreements, whereas these loan agreements were concluded within the framework of the Joint Venture agreement, which in turn contains an ICC arbitration clause, the court is of the opinion that the parties indeed had the intention to depart from, the stipulations in the Joint Venture agreement, so that all disputes relating to the loan agreements fall within the competence of the ordinary courts (in this case: the courts of Kortrijk). The stipulation that the courts of Kortrijk are “not exclusively

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370 S.W.3d 425, 2012 WL 1441399, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 3282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marina-presley-v-n-v-masureel-veredeling-texapp-2012.