Sealed 1 v. Sealed 1

625 F. App'x 628
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 2015
Docket14-20204
StatusUnpublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 625 F. App'x 628 (Sealed 1 v. Sealed 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sealed 1 v. Sealed 1, 625 F. App'x 628 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

The plaintiffs in the district court sued a Saudi Arabian corporation, to which we will refer as Father’s Co., and an executive of that company who is a Saudi Arabian citizen, to whom we will refer as Father. The plaintiffs rely on a contract containing a forum-selection clause to establish personal jurisdiction over these defendants, although neither of the defendants is actually a signatory to the contract.. The plaintiffs assert that the contract was signed by authorized agents of the defendants, one of whom is the son of Father. We will refer to this individual (also a Saudi national) as Son. The other alleged agent is a Saudi company, to which we will refer as Son’s Co., that plaintiffs contend is an affiliate of Father’s Co. and managed by Son. The district court held that the plaintiffs failed to provide any competent evidence that the signatories to ‘the contract containing the forum-selection clause were acting as agents of the defendants in any of the dealings or contacts with the plaintiffs. The district court accordingly dismissed the suit for lack of personal jurisdiction. We affirm.

I

Each of the plaintiffs expected to receive commissions and fees from a purchase by Father and Father’s Co. of an international investment instrument known as a Bank Guarantee. An individual residing in Néw Mexico, to whom we will refer as PltfNM, and a company with which he was connected, to which we will refer as the NM Corp., expected to be involved in the transaction on the buyer’s side. A Texas businessman, to whom we shall refer as PltfTX, and an Illinois businessman, to whom we shall refer as PltflL, expected to participate on the. seller’s side of the transaction,-

An employee of Father’s Co., to whom we will refer as Smith, contacted PltfNM. Smith allegedly informed PltfNM that Father had asked Smith to seek international investment opportunities in Bank Guarantees. According to PltfNM, Smith stated that Father’s Co. and Father would be the principals and signatories on the buyer’s side of the ■ transaction. Relying on Smith’s statements, PltfNM, on behalf of his corporation, and with the assistance of others, began seeking a Bank-Guarantee transaction.

PltfNM attempted to find a potential Bank-Guarantee seller but was met with resistance to investing with Father’s Co. and Father, and PltfNM reported this to Smith. Smith purportedly told PltfNM that Father believed there, would be less resistance if Son. and Son’s Co. acted on behalf of Father’s Co. and Father. PltfNM understood that although Son and Son’s Co. would appear as the buyers of the Bank Guarantees, Father’s Co, and Father would be the actual buyers and Father’s Co. would fund the purchase, Because of this understanding, PltfNM requested Smith to provide proof of Father’s Co.’s good standing. Smith subsequently sent PltfNM á copy of a 2003 letter from the U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia affirming Father’s Co.’s good standing in the international business community. The *630 contacts and transactions at issue in this suit commenced in 2009, approximately six years after the date of this letter. In June 2009, PltfNM contacted the U.S. Consulate in Jeddah, Sahdi Arabia, and with Smith’s assistance, PltfNM requested and received a letter from the Consulate dated June 23, 2009, stating that Son and Son’s Co. were an “established business” that had a positive reputation in the Jeddah business community.

PltfTX is a businessman-who is very familiar with international investment instruments. Smith contacted PltfTX, and PltfTX involved PltflL in seeking to structure a transaction. A telephone conference between Smith, Son, and PltfTX occurred in which Son confirmed that he was interested in purchasing an international investment, instrument, hopefully a Bank Guarantee, and Son asked PltfTX if he would assist in finding a seller. PltfTX advised Son that he had the resources and contacts to do so, and Son instructed PltfTX to contact PltfNM and NM- Corp. Son told PltfTX that NM Corp; and PltfNM were his legal representatives in the United States regarding these investment opportunities. PltfTX was successful in locating Bank Guarantees of the type that Son had said he was seeking to purchase.

When Bank Guarantees to be purchased had been located. Smith introduced PltfNM by telephone to a man who identified himself as the account manager at a Saudi bank for both Father’s Co. and Son’s Co. PltfNM requested, and the bank sent, a letter purporting to explain the relationship between these two companies., This June 24, 2009, letter stated: “We’re here to confirm that [Son’s Co.] is a part of [Father’s Co.] ... This letter was provided as requested by the client....” Enclosed with the letter was a screenshot of Father’s Co.’s bank account information, which reflected substantial liquid and cash equivalent assets. Six weeks later, when the banking information required updating, the bank sent another, nearly identical letter, and another screenshot -of the account’s position.

In early July, Smith informed PltfNM that Father approved of the transaction, and Smith sent PltfNM the Non-Circumvention, Ñon-Disclosure & Working Agreement (the Agreement) signed by Son, Son’s Co., and Smith. The plaintiffs allege that the Agreement entitled them to receive a commission for every tranche of Bank Guarantees purchased. The Agreement contained a forum-selection clause that read: “in the event of dispute, the laws of the State of Texas will apply first with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas as the court of venue.... The signing parties hereby accept such selected jurisdiction as the exclusive venue.”

The plaintiffs believe that Bank-Guarantee transactions were consummated that would have entitled them to commissions under the Agreement. They commenced this diversity action in the district .court alleging numerous state-law claims against Son, Son’s Co., Father, and Father’s Co. Father’s Co. and Father moved to dismiss for lack- of personal jurisdiction and submitted affidavits from Smith and Son, which stated in part that they were not acting on behalf of Father’s Co. or Father when they signed the Agreement and that Son’s Co. was not affiliated with Father’s Co. in any way. Without holding' an evi-dentiary hearing, the district court originally denied the motion, concluding that the plaintiffs had established a prima face case that the signatories to the Agreement were acting as agents for Father’s Co. and Father. However, a motion to reconsider was filed, and the court changed course. The court held that the plaintiffs had pre *631 sented no admissible evidence to, establish an agency relationship, and therefore, the plaintiffs had not established a prima facie case of personal jurisdiction. The district court dismissed the suit against Father’s Co. and Father. The plaintiffs appeal.

II

The plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing personal jurisdiction. 1 We review the district court’s dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction de novo. 2 Because the district court did not hold an evidentia-ry hearing, the plaintiffs were required to present only a prima facie case of personal jurisdiction. 3

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625 F. App'x 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sealed-1-v-sealed-1-ca5-2015.