Nguyen v. Nguyen

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 2020
Docket4:20-cv-00120
StatusUnknown

This text of Nguyen v. Nguyen (Nguyen v. Nguyen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nguyen v. Nguyen, (N.D. Tex. 2020).

Opinion

; □ Southern District of Texas ENTERED Feb 12, 2020 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT tints □□□□ Chor FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS me NILE HOUSTON DIVISION KHUE NGUYEN, § § Plaintiff, § VS. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:19-CV-2229 § HAI PHU NGUYEN, et al, § § Defendants. § ORDER Before the Court is Defendants Ngo Thi Ngoan, Hein The Ta, and Lai Xuan Ta’s (collectively, the “Foreign Defendants”)! Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction, Res Judicata, and Forum Non Conveniens.” (Doc. No. 24). Khue Nguyen (“Plaintiff”) filed a response (Doc. No. 27) and a supplemental response (Doc. No. 28). The Foreign Defendants filed a reply. (Doc. No. 29). Plaintiff then filed a sur-reply.? (Doc. No. 31). After careful consideration, the Court GRANTS the Foreign Defendants’ Motion and DISMISSES Plaintiff's case against them for want of personal jurisdiction. I BACKGROUND Except-as otherwise noted, the following factual summary is based on the allegations in Plaintiff's Amended Complaint. In 1980, Ha Thi Thy Thuy and Ta Van Viet formed a partnership in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. (Doc. No. 17 at 4). They named the partnership “Bach Tuyet”

! Ngoan and Lai Xuan Ta are citizens of Vietnam; Hein The Ta is a citizen of France. ? Plaintiff Khue Nguyen requested entry of default against the Foreign Defendants the same day that they filed their motion to dismiss. (See Doc. Nos. 21-23). 3 Plaintiff also filed a Motion for Nonrecognition and Nondeference of Alleged Vietnamese Judgments over a month after filing his sur-reply. (Doc. No. 32). That motion requests the Court disregard alleged judgments the Foreign Defendants attached to their brief in support of the Motion to Dismiss regarding its res judicata arguments. (See Doc. Nos. 25-1 & 25-2).

(“Snow White” in English). They intended to manufacture and sell embroidery-craft products. (id.). Viet contributed real property (the “Property”) to Snow White and Thuy contributed a large sum of money. (/d.). Through a 1982 partnership agreement, Viet and Thuy each owed fifty percent (50%) of the “mixed common property” of Snow White and were entitled to fifty percent (50%) of the net profits. Ud. at 6). Viet also conveyed a right to possess and use the Property to Thuy, including a right to reside there. (/d.). Thuy was essentially in charge of Snow White’s business and operations; Viet retained a technical advisory position. (See id.). In 1985, Viet married Ngoan. (/d. at 7). Four years later, Viet died. U/d.). Ngoan and one of Viet’s children, Hien The Ta, purportedly demanded redemption of Viet’s interest in Snow White.* (d. at 8). In July 1989, Thuy paid Ngoan and Hien The Ta “a large amount of gold” in exchange for Viet’s interest in Snow White; thus, “Thuy then owned 100 percent of [the] partnership, its properties, and continued to reside in the [Property].” Ud.). Thuy continued to operate Snow White for 23 years. In late 2012, she allegedly returned from a business trip to find that Ngoan had taken possession of the Property, closed Snow White’s facilities, and evicted all of its employees. (/d. at 9). Despite Thuy’s demands to turn over the partnership assets, Ngoan allegedly bribed the Vietnamese police to evict Thuy from the Property and permanently denied her access to the shop house and legal documents in it. Ud. at 10). Thuy filed an administrative dispute with a local government authority, which ruled in her favor. (/d.). Nevertheless, Ngoan allegedly bribed the police to escort Thuy out of the property every time she attempted to enter it. Ud.). Thuy then filed a lawsuit against Ngoan. (/d.). Between 2013 and 2017, Thuy and Ngoan attended multiple required mediations with the Vietnam court

4 Viet’s other children are Hoa Le Thi Ta and Lai Xuan Ta. The other Defendants’ relation to Viet is unclear, but they are allegedly his heirs.

while Ngoan was supposed to locate and contact Viet’s heirs. (See id. at 11). In June 2017, Ngoan “accidentally” informed the Vietnam court that she had contacted all of Viet’s heirs, who signed contracts consenting to Ngoan representing their rights and to act “in their principal capacity with consolidated inheritance claims and unrestricted power” to resolve the demands of Thuy. (/d. at 11, 18; see also id. at 13 (‘Ngoan... concealed these heir contracts from [the] court in Vietnam while still asking the court for ‘more time to locate heirs’ despite all heirs had [sic] been accounted for in 2013. Later, Thuy found out this was a fraudulent tactic of ‘waiting out the limitation period.’”)). The contracts were all allegedly in writing with unified content, notarized, certified or authenticated by government officials, and attached with a copy of each heir’s passport. (/d. at 12). Thuy attempted to add the heirs as defendants in the Vietnam lawsuit, but the court did not permit her to do so. (/d. at 11). Specifically, that court told Thuy she needed to raise the claims in a new lawsuit; it also advised that it lacked jurisdiction over the non—Vietnamese defendants. Ud. at 17). At trial against Ngoan, Thuy could only litigate a title dispute because she could not access the legal documents and files in the Property because of Ngoan’s actions. Ud. at 17). It appears that the Vietnam Court ruled against Thuy in that action. In 2018, Thuy sold and assigned her partnership interest in Snow White and claims against the Defendants to her son, Plaintiff. Ud. at 19). To date, Defendants have refused to turn over the partnership’s property to Plaintiff. Ud. at 19-20). Plaintiff first sued the Defendants in the Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth Division in September 2018. (Case No. 4:18-cv-801-A, the “Fort Worth Case”).° Plaintiff's causes of action were: (1) breach of contract; (2) “[w]rongfully, illegally detention [sic] of partnership assets

> The Fort Worth Case also included Thao Xuan Ta and four additional Does as defendants; Hai Phu Nguyen, Mai Tuyet Nguyen, Que Dang Nguyen, and Anh Kim Nguyen were also named as heirs of Thin Thi Ta’s estate, not in their individual capacity. (See Fort Worth Case at Doc. No. 1).

through aid and abetting”; and (3) wrongful, illegal, intentional and malicious detention of partnership assets. (See id. at Doc. No. 1, pp. 11-15). The Foreign Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and forum non conveniens. (/d. at Doc. No. 22). The District Court granted the motion for want of personal jurisdiction because Plaintiff failed to plead facts to support the exercise of jurisdiction over the Foreign Defendants in Texas. (/d. at Doc. No. 26). The District Court also dismissed the case against Defendant Hoa Le Thi Le (who resides in IIlinois) pursuant to Rule 4(m). Ud. at Doc. No. 37). Finally, on August 2, 2019, the District Court granted the remaining defendant’s motion for summary judgment under res judicata and statute of limitations. Ud. at Doc. No. 134). A final judgment against Plaintiff was entered on the same day, which he subsequently appealed (/d. at Doc. Nos. 135, 137). His appeal is still pending before the Fifth Circuit. (See Case No. 19-10934). While the summary judgment motion was pending in the Fort Worth Case (and about six months after the Foreign Defendants were dismissed), Plaintiff filed this lawsuit in the Southern District of Texas. (Doc. No. 1). The Amended Complaint pleaded the following causes of action: (1) breach of contract; (2) wrongful, unlawful detention of partnership assets; (3) conversion of partnership property, or, alternatively, statutory theft; and (4) civil conspiracy. (Doc. No. 17 at 23- 29). As to the civil conspiracy claim, Plaintiff believes that the representation contracts revealed a common plan and that “the heirs and Ngoan conspired together” to take control of Snow White. (Id. at 11).

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Nguyen v. Nguyen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nguyen-v-nguyen-txnd-2020.