Molinos Valle Del Cibao, C. Por A. v. Lama

633 F.3d 1330
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 24, 2011
Docket09-11153, 09-12587
StatusPublished
Cited by286 cases

This text of 633 F.3d 1330 (Molinos Valle Del Cibao, C. Por A. v. Lama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molinos Valle Del Cibao, C. Por A. v. Lama, 633 F.3d 1330 (11th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

This case stems from a foreign currency exchange agreement. The plaintiff, a foreign corporation, bought United States dollars from the defendants, three individuals — two of whom it turns out are citizens of the Dominican Republic — in exchange for Dominican pesos. The plaintiff paid and the defendants did not; the plaintiffs sued. What was otherwise a simple state law breach of contract action became much more complicated by inartful lawyering and the allure of treble damages.

The defendants challenged subject matter jurisdiction at late junctures — on the eve of trial for one theory, on appeal for another — regarding issues they could have foreseen when they received the complaint over three years ago. The plaintiff, after being fully compensated under its breach of contract theory, contests the district court’s dismissal of its statutory worthless check claim, Fla. Stat. § 68.065. Under both claims the plaintiff would receive the same compensatory damages; the dismissed claim, however, would provide prevailing plaintiffs with treble damages.

This opinion is organized as follows. Part I lays out the facts of the case and its procedural history. Part II discusses the three issues related to subject matter jurisdiction, and concludes that we have jurisdiction to hear the merits arguments regarding one defendant. Part III addresses the plaintiffs two arguments regarding piercing the corporate veil — a necessary component for the worthless check claim. Part IV addresses the remaining defendant’s two arguments: that the district court erroneously admitted communications made during settlement negotiations; and that there was insufficient evidence to show that the currency broker who negotiated the contract was the defendant’s agent. Part V concludes.

I.

A.

This case stems from a Foreign Currency Exchange Agreement (“the Contract”) between the plaintiff, Molinos Valle Del Cibao, C. por A. (“Molinos”), and the three defendants (collectively, the “Lamas”), Oscar R. Lama (“Oscar Sr.”) and his two sons, Carlos Lama Seliman (“Carlos”) and Oscar Lama Seliman (“Oscar Jr.”). Molinos is a Dominican corporation. The Lamas themselves reside in Florida. Facts brought forward in supplemental briefing to this court show that Oscar Sr. is a dual citizen of the United States and the Dominican Republic, but that Carlos and Oscar Jr. are Dominican citizens working in the United States on non-immigrant worker visas.

Molinos operates a flour mill, selling flour to the Dominican market, for which it receives Dominican pesos. Its suppliers, however, are often American companies; Molinos must pay their bills in United States dollars. To get the best exchange rate for its pesos, Molinos often hires currency brokers to find and contract with sellers of United States dollars.

*1336 In June 2004, Molinos needed to exchange approximately 28 million pesos for United States dollars to pay its suppliers. It hired a currency broker named Marcia Gabriela Bonnelly to find the best rate. To that end, she contacted Juan Mejia, another currency broker. One of Mejia’s clients, the Lama family, was looking to sell United States dollars. Mejia contacted one of the Lamas, Carlos, who approved the Contract: 28 million Dominican Pesos for $636,596.00.

Molinos completed its side of the Contract; it drafted checks worth 28 million pesos and gave them to Bonnelly, who passed them on to Mejia. 1 The checks were not, however, made payable to any member of the Lamas family; they were payable to other individuals and another corporation controlled by the Lamas. Mejia testified at trial that this arrangement was normal for his transactions on behalf of the Lamas. The family often needed instant liquidity and therefore often requested that checks be made payable to their messengers, who would then cash the checks on their trip back to the Lamas’ office. The checks were honored and the Lamas received their pesos.

In return, Molinos received a series of checks totaling $636,596.00. These checks were drawn from the accounts of two Dominican corporations, Chipstek, S.A. (“Chipstek”) and Expertek, S.A. (“Expertek”), and signed by either Carlos or Oscar Jr. in their capacities as directors of Chipstek and Expertek. Both Chipstek and Expertek are wholly-owned subsidiaries of Globaltek, S.A. (“Globaltek”). 2 Globaltek *1337 is owned by ORLS International Holdings, which is in turn owned by L&S Corporation; members of the Lama family, including Oscar Sr., Carlos, and Oscar Jr., own L&;S Corporation. The Lamas — Oscar Sr., Carlos, and Oscar Jr. — are board members of Chipstek and Expertek, but do not own these entities directly.

Although Chipstek and Expertek wrote these checks, Molinos’s trial testimony suggests that these corporations were not parties to the Contract. Bonnelly was familiar with the Lamas but had never before done business with these entities. Rather, she testified that the Lamas had a good reputation — “they were responsible morally also and solvent” — in the business community and she had consummated similar currency agreements with the Lamas on behalf of roughly ten to twelve of her other clients. Molinos’s General Manager, Ruben Reynoso, who approved the deal on Molinos’s behalf, likewise believed that the Lamas were Molinos’s contractual counter-party; he had never heard of Chipstek or Expertek. The Lamas’ reputation played a role in his approval of the Contract.

This trust was misplaced; the checks bounced. Molinos’s bank informed Molinos that the accounts on which the checks were drawn either were overdrawn or had been closed.

Wanting to resolve this issue, Molinos’s representatives met with the Lamas on several occasions between August and October 2004. At one of these meetings, Oscar Sr. acknowledged that his family, himself included, was responsible for the sum of the bounced checks. 3 Carlos also acknowledged that his family — he, Oscar Sr., and Oscar Jr. — was responsible for the debt. At the conclusion of the October 2004 meeting, Carlos signed a settlement agreement acknowledging personal liability for part of the debt and signed a corresponding promissory note. 4 The parties met again in 2006 to discuss the debt, which the Lamas had not yet paid. Oscar Sr. attended that meeting and did not deny his personal liability under the Contract.

Molinos never received its money. Its suppliers, however, still required payment. Several of its checks to these suppliers also bounced; they were issued in reliance on the availability of funds under the Con *1338 tract. To cover its costs, Molinos had to borrow money, incurring interest.

B.

Molinos brought this suit against the Lamas in November 2007 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. 5 The amended complaint contained six counts. 6

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633 F.3d 1330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molinos-valle-del-cibao-c-por-a-v-lama-ca11-2011.