Sea Foods Co. Ltd. v. Om Foods Co. Ltd.

58 Cal. Rptr. 3d 700, 150 Cal. App. 4th 769
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 2007
DocketB184687, B190151
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 Cal. Rptr. 3d 700 (Sea Foods Co. Ltd. v. Om Foods Co. Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sea Foods Co. Ltd. v. Om Foods Co. Ltd., 58 Cal. Rptr. 3d 700, 150 Cal. App. 4th 769 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

CROSKEY, J.

When Asian shrimp exporter O.M. Foods (OM). went bankrupt, Red Chamber Co., a California importer, was in possession of shrimp it had received on consignment from. OM. Once Red Chamber had sold the shrimp, three different entities sought the $3.6 million proceeds: (1) Cooperatieve Céntrale Raiffeisen-Boerleenbank B.A (Rabobank), a bank which had funded OM’s operations, to which OM was in debt; (2) Bank of Asia (B of A), another bank which had funded OM, to which OM was in debt; and (3) Sea Foods Company Limited, OM’s parent company to which OM also was in debt. While the two banks sued Red Chamber directly, Sea Foods instead brought suit against OM, and then sought to collect the consignment sale proceeds in Red Chamber’s possession by means of a writ of attachment. A11 three entities were successful in obtaining money from Red Chamber. Red Chamber settled with Rabobank and B of A. After Sea Foods obtained a default judgment against OM, Red Chamber was ordered to pay $3.6 million to Sea Foods pursuant to its writ of attachment. We here consider Red Chamber’s appeal of the order directing it to pay $3.6 million to Sea Foods pursuant to the writ of attachment, which was entered on the basis that Red Chamber had refused to comply with the writ in bád faith.

Red Chamber also brought suit against Sea Foods, arguing that the writ of attachment was the culmination of a conspiracy between Sea Foods and others, which had been entered into some years prior with the goal of—by means of fraudulent concealment—inducing Red Chamber to go into business with a financially unstable OM, in order to be able to obtain recovery from Red Chamber for OM-caused losses. Sea Foods, which was a Mauritius *773 company which conducted no business in California, moved to quash service for lack of personal jurisdiction. Red Chamber argued that Sea Foods’ California litigation—in which it sought to collect $3.6 million from Red Chamber—constituted sufficient contacts with California to justify jurisdiction. The trial court disagreed. Red Chamber appeals. We have consolidated the two appeals for the purposes of argument and decision. We reverse the orders in both appeals.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The entity now known as Sea Foods originally operated under the name of Boulougne Investments Limited. On December 14, 1998, Boulougne entered into an agreement with Merrill Lynch Global Emerging Markets Partners, L.P. (Merrill Lynch Global). The precise nature of the agreement is not clear from the record, as it was reflected in numerous written agreements, only one of which is part of the record on appeal. However, pursuant to the agreement, Boulougne was to change its name and adopt new articles of incorporation. 1 Pursuant to the agreement, Merrill Lynch Global was to have a 45 percent ownership interest in the new entity, Sea Foods. In turn, the ordinary shares of OM were to be held by Sea Foods. 2 Key to the operation of OM was that Merrill Lynch Global was to loan $20 million to Sea Foods, to be further loaned to OM. Interest was charged by Merrill Lynch Global at a rate of 32.5 percent per year, to be paid every six months. 3 Sea Foods did not directly charge OM interest. Instead, it was agreed that Sea Foods “shall procure that” OM declares sufficient dividends to enable Sea Foods to make all necessary interest payments. As agreed, on January 29, 1999, Sea Foods entered into a $20 million loan agreement with OM. Pursuant to this agreement, any default under the Merrill Lynch Global/Sea Foods loan constituted an act of default under the Sea Foods/OM loan. By February 12, 2000, Sea Foods owed Merrill Lynch Global $7 million in interest. 4 It was not paid.

*774 Red Chamber began in 1973 as a family business-, and has grown to be one of the largest seafood importers in North America. In April 2000, representatives of Red Chamber met with various individuals from OM and Merrill Lynch Global, in Thailand, and discussed proposed business, transactions. Red Chamber would later claim that it was not informed that OM was owned by Sea Foods, nor was it told that OM was capitalized by means of a $20 million loan at a 32.5 percent interest rate, and that OM had already failed to make payments. Red Chamber takes the position that it would not have entered into business with OM had it known any of these facts. It did not know, however, and therefore agreed to import shrimp from OM.

The shrimp was shipped from OM to Red Chamber on consignment. 5 When a shipment of shrimp would arrive, it would be accompanied by several documents, including a notice of arrival, a bill of lading, an invoice, and a bill of exchange. The bill of exchange would request payment, in a fixed amount, to be made to OM’s bank, either Rabobank or B of A. Each shipment of shrimp would not be released to Red Chamber until Red Chamber had signed the related bill of exchange. However, as the shrimp was transmitted to Red Chamber on consignment, the amount that Red Chamber would ultimately pay for the shrimp could not be determined until after the shrimp was sold. Therefore, although Red Chamber signed bills of exchange obligating it to pay certain amounts in connection with each shipment of shrimp, it would ultimately pay lesser amounts, based on the sales price of the shrimp (after deducting its commission and related expenses). According to Red Chamber, when it was first faced with the discrepancy between the amount listed on the bills of exchange and the true amount due for the shrimp, Red Chamber asked “its bank” how to proceed. Following instructions from its own bank—and not Rabobank or B of A—Red Chamber notated the difference on the notices of arrival, not the bills of exchange.

Business was conducted between Red Chamber and OM in this manner for some time, a situation that ultimately led to the banks’ lawsuits against Red Chamber. Rabobank and B of A, the designated payees on the bills of exchange, assert that they were never made aware that Red Chamber’s signature on the bills of exchange was conditioned on its agreement with OM to pay lesser amounts. Whether this is a problem, however, depends on whether the banks were the ultimate payees of the bills of exchange, or were simply acting as collecting agents for OM. The nature of OM’s relationship *775 with its banks is an issue of some dispute. It is uncertain whether OM had assigned to the banks its right to the amounts to be paid by Red Chamber, or whether the banks were simply issuing the bills of exchange to facilitate OM’s collection of the amounts due from Red Chamber to OM.

In any event, this course of dealing continued until early 2002 when OM went bankrupt. 6 OM was in debt to both of its banks, as well as owing the initial $20 million (plus interest) to Sea Foods.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Cal. Rptr. 3d 700, 150 Cal. App. 4th 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sea-foods-co-ltd-v-om-foods-co-ltd-calctapp-2007.