Oman International Finance Ltd. v. Hoiyong Gems Corp.

616 F. Supp. 351, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17389
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 30, 1985
DocketCiv. A. 84-0050-S
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 616 F. Supp. 351 (Oman International Finance Ltd. v. Hoiyong Gems Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oman International Finance Ltd. v. Hoiyong Gems Corp., 616 F. Supp. 351, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17389 (D.R.I. 1985).

Opinion

Opinion and Order

SELYA, District Judge.

This civil action, prosecuted by Oman International Finance Ltd., presents a tan-gram which adds measurably to the lore of Oriental intrigue. Suit was brought in this court against two defendants: Hoiyong Gems Corporation (H-RI), a Rhode Island corporation, and Hoiyong Gems Corp. (HNY), a New York corporation. 1 The comediatta was played out to the court in a bench trial which began on December 20, 1984, was heard irregularly thereafter, and limped to a close on April 11, 1985. A post-trial briefing schedule subsequently ran its course. Oral arguments having been waived, this rescript comprises the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).

I.

The pertinent facts are subject to some dispute, and the court narrates its deciphered version of them. (Further findings of fact are tucked into various nooks and crannies of the conclusions of law which follow.)

In early 1982, one Johnny Ho, a Chinese merchant, acted as a middleman in Hong Kong, bringing to the Bank of Oman and its subsidiary, Oman International Finance, Ltd. (hereinafter collectively “Oman” or “the lender”), a financing proposition on behalf of S.C. Wong Jewellery Products (Far East) Ltd. (WJP Co.). The moving force behind WJP Co. was its managing director, S.C. Wong a/k/a Wong Siu Chun (Wong). Following this initial contact, and other polite sparring which need not be recounted here, negotiations ensued. Two officers of Oman, Messrs. Maraikkadan and Charloo, became deeply involved in these dealings. Internuncioes were regularly employed due to language barriers.

In relatively short order, Oman agreed to extend significant credit to WJP Co., proposing as conditions thereto (i) an impressed subordinated compensating balance deposit of HK $2,000,000, (ii) the personal guarantees of Mr. and Mrs. Wong, and (iii) the guaranty of an entity loosely referred to as “Hoiyong Gems Corp. U.S. *354 A.” (which Oman believed to be the parent corporation, or holding company, of WJP Co.). The first two preconditions were met, and the lender began making advances in substantial amounts to the order of WJP Co. without further ado.

The proposed corporate guaranty was the topic of heated debate at the trial. The defendant contends that Oman waived this condition (and it is clear, at the least, that the lender initially put itself at risk without having a written corporate guaranty in its possession). The plaintiff insists that the furnishing of the corporate guaranty was of the essence of the transaction, and produced two such guarantees at trial (Exhibits 5 and 6). 2 (The defendants branded these documents as bogus, and offered expert testimony on the point; the court deals with this contention post.) And, assuming arguendo that a valid and binding guaranty was tendered, the parties vehemently disagree as to the identity of the putative guarantor: Oman claims that it had in hand the assurance of H-RI; the defendant asseverates that, at most, the lender held the guaranty of H-NY.

At this juncture, some comment is required as to the melange of similarly named corporations. H-NY, organized in New York in 1976, did business as an importer, receiving goods on consignment from abroad and marketing them in the United States. H-NY held the majority interest (90%-96%) in WJP Co. H-RI was incorporated under Rhode Island law some five years later. The record in uncontradicted that H-RI did no business directly in Hong Kong, although it did order merchandise from that locale (at least some of which was requisitioned through WJP Co.). H-RI was based in Providence. There was yet a third entity with much the same cognomen: Hoiyong Gems Corporation of California (H-Cal). H-Cal was chartered in 1982 or 1983; its headquarters were in Los Angeles; and its operations were substantially similar to those of H-RI. It was apparently intended to function as H-RI’s west coast counterpart. Wong was, in effect, the principal owner of each of these entities.

Though the business relationship appeared inviting to the lender in early 1982 when the arrangement materialized (after all, WJP Co. was represented as being a thriving concern, with 350-400 employees and monthly sales of HK$6,000,000 to HK$8,000,000, and had favored the bank with a sizable up-front deposit), the storm clouds soon gathered. The debtor encountered financial difficulties later in 1982 and the lender was unable to recoup its advances entirely. Faced with an unwanted potential write-off of $690,659.08, Oman instituted legal actions in Hong Kong aimed at reaching the coffers of H-NY and H-RI. The plaintiff received uncontested foreign judgments against both American corporations, and this suit followed apace.

II.

The issues in the case prescind from the second amended complaint. That pleading was framed in five counts. As the third statement of claim ran only against the defaulted defendant, it need not be discussed herein. The four remaining claims implicated H-RI. Therein, the plaintiff promulgated three basic causes of action: guarantor liability, debt on judgment and liability by association (the last of which was asserted in two separate but intertwined counts). The court will proceed to deal with these initiatives seriatim.

III.

The chief protagonists as to the guaranty issue were Charloo and Wong. Charloo was Oman’s general manager in Hong *355 Kong and the head of the bank’s credit committee there. Charloo testified that he knew from the time the negotiations commenced that Wong’s American interests had shifted their focus from New York to Rhode Island; that he insisted upon (and obtained) the corporate guaranty of H-RI for the credit line; and that the guaranty was in full force at all times material to the events which followed. Wong’s testimony was to the contrary: he denied that he agreed to give Oman any corporate guaranty, let alone H-RI’s assurance; he forswore any discussions of the Rhode Island operation with Charloo at the critical time; he branded the documents which the plaintiff produced at trial (Exhibits 5 and 6) as ersatz; and he disclaimed the notion that H-RI was in any way implicated in WJP Co.’s dealings with the lender. To the extent that Wong’s stateside operations were discussed with Oman’s officials, he said, the focus was entirely on the New York-based enterprise. The battle lines were clearly drawn. The court finds Wong’s version of the events in question to be more plausible than Charloo’s. The reasons are many.

Charloo was a disappointing witness. He contradicted himself numerous times while testifying, and keen cross-examination revealed more than one significant misstatement on his part. By way of illustration, he dissembled as to the timing of the advances vis-a-vis the paperwork and in claiming that he had seen the fully-typed guarantees before they were supposedly forwarded for signature. He struck the court as a bank officer who had fumbled the ball and who was thrashing about in some desperation to place the onus elsewhere.

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Bluebook (online)
616 F. Supp. 351, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oman-international-finance-ltd-v-hoiyong-gems-corp-rid-1985.