Osorio v. Dole Food Co.

665 F. Supp. 2d 1307, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99981, 2009 WL 3398931
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedOctober 20, 2009
DocketCase No.: 07-22693-CIV
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 665 F. Supp. 2d 1307 (Osorio v. Dole Food Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osorio v. Dole Food Co., 665 F. Supp. 2d 1307, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99981, 2009 WL 3398931 (S.D. Fla. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING RECOGNITION OF JUDGMENT

PAUL C. HUCK, District Judge.

This is an action to enforce a $97 million Nicaraguan judgment under the Florida Uniform Out-of-country Foreign Money-Judgments Recognition Act (Florida Recognition Act). Fla. Stat. §§ 55.601-55.607 (2009). Plaintiffs are 150 Nicaraguan citizens alleged to have worked on banana plantations in Nicaragua between 1970 and 1982, during which time they were exposed to the chemical compound dibromochloropropane (DBCP). DBCP is an agricultural pesticide that was banned in the United States after it was linked to sterility in factory workers in 1977. Nicaragua banned DBCP in 1993. Defendants are Dole Food Company and The Dow Chemical Company, both Delaware corporations. 1 *1312 Dow manufactured DBCP from 1957 until 1977, and Dole used DBCP on its banana farms in Nicaragua until the farms were expropriated by the Sandinista regime that came to power in 1979.

The judgment in this case was rendered by a trial court in Chinandega, Nicaragua. The trial court awarded Plaintiffs approximately $97 million under “Special Law 364,” enacted by the Nicaraguan legislature in 2000 specifically to handle DBCP claims. The average award was approximately $647,000 per plaintiff. According to the Nicaraguan trial court, these sums were awarded to compensate Plaintiffs for DBCP-induced infertility and its accompanying adverse psychological effects. Defendants have appealed the judgment to an intermediate appellate court in Nicaragua. That appeal is still pending.

Defendants raise several objections to domesticating the judgment. They contend that under the Florida Recognition Act this Court cannot enforce the judgment because (1) the Nicaraguan trial court lacked personal and/or subject matter jurisdiction under Special Law 364, 2 (2) the judgment was rendered under a system which does not provide procedures compatible with due process of law, (3) enforcing the judgment would violate Florida public policy, and (4) the judgment was rendered under a judicial system that lacks impartial tribunals. 3 For the reasons set forth below, the Court holds that Defendants have clearly established their entitlement to non-recognition on each of these independent grounds.

I. BACKGROUND

A. FACTUAL HISTORY

1. Overview of DBCP Litigation

This is not the first DBCP case brought in the United States. The first DBCP lawsuits were brought in the mid-1990s, when thousands of plaintiffs from over 23 different countries filed DBCP suits in Texas against various defendants. Those cases were consolidated and the defendants, who included Dole and Dow, won dismissal on forum non conveniens grounds after arguing that the plaintiffs’ various home countries provided adequate alternative forums. See Delgado v. Shell Oil Co., 890 F.Supp. 1324, 1362 (S.D.Tex.1995) (finding that Nicaragua provided adequate remedies for Nicaraguan plaintiffs). None of the plaintiffs in Delgado are plaintiffs in this action.

In response to Delgado, which resulted in plaintiffs filing numerous DBCP claims in Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan National Assembly passed the “Special Law for the Conduct of Lawsuits Filed By Persons Affected By the Use of Pesticides Manufactured with a DBCP Base,” commonly referred to as “Special Law 364.” Since the passage of Special Law 364 in October 2000, over 10,000 plaintiffs have filed approximately 200 DBCP lawsuits in Nicaragua, most of which are still pending. To date, however, Nicaraguan courts have awarded over $2 billion in judgments, including the $97 million judgment that is the subject of this case. In a sister case *1313 tried after this one, Herrera Rios v. Standard Fruit Co., the same trial judge awarded 1248 plaintiffs over $800 million, an average recovery of approximately $648,000 per plaintiff.

Nicaraguan claimants have made one previous attempt to enforce a DBCP judgment in the United States. In 2003, more than 450 Nicaraguan plaintiffs attempted to enforce a $489 million judgment in California, but their complaint was dismissed on technical and jurisdictional grounds without reaching the merits of the defendants’ substantive objections. See Franco v. Dow Chemical Co., No. CV 03-5094 NM (PJWx), slip op. at 7-16, 2003 WL 24288299 (C.D.Cal. Oct. 21, 2003). In a related action, Shell Oil Company obtained a declaratory judgment that it was not subject to personal jurisdiction in the original Nicaraguan lawsuit, which is a requirement for recognizing a judgment under the Uniform Foreign Money-Judgments Recognition Act. See Shell Oil Co. v. Franco, No. CV 03-8846 (PJWx), 2005 WL 6184247 (C.D.Cal. Nov. 10, 2005).

In an effort to head off multiple enforcement actions in the United States, some DBCP defendants, including Dow, sought declaratory relief in federal court in California against plaintiffs who obtained judgments in Nicaragua but had not yet sought enforcement in the United States. In Dow Chemical Co. v. Calderon, 422 F.3d 827 (9th Cir.2005), the DBCP defendants asked the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to hold that the judgments obtained in Nicaragua could not be enforced in the United States on due process grounds similar to those raised in this case. The Ninth Circuit did not reach defendants’ due process arguments, however, because it found that the Nicaraguans were not subject to personal jurisdiction in the United States and therefore the DBCP defendants could not sue the Nicaraguan plaintiffs in federal district court. Accordingly, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the action without reaching the merits of whether Nicaraguan judgments obtained under Special Law 364 are enforceable in the United States.

In addition to the Special Law 364 litigation in Nicaragua, a few Nicaraguan plaintiffs have brought DBCP suits in the United States in recent years. In Tellez v. Dole Food Co., brought by 12 Nicaraguan plaintiffs and tried in 2007 in Los Angeles Superior Court, a jury awarded six plaintiffs over five million dollars and found that the defendants were not liable to the remaining plaintiffs. See Tellez v. Dole Food Co., Los Angeles Superior Court Case No. BC312852 (Nov. 5, 2007) (special verdict form).

Shortly after the verdict in Tellez, Dole alleged to the California trial court that some of the Tellez plaintiffs never worked on a banana farm, perjured themselves during the trial, and presented false documents as evidence. At the time, two other DBCP lawsuits, Mejia v. Dole Food Co. and Rivera v. Dole Food Co., were pending before the same California court, and Dole’s fraud allegations implicated the Mejia and Rivera plaintiffs as well.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 F. Supp. 2d 1307, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99981, 2009 WL 3398931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osorio-v-dole-food-co-flsd-2009.