Tambourine Comercio Internacional SA v. Solowsky

312 F. App'x 263
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 2009
Docket08-11192
StatusUnpublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 312 F. App'x 263 (Tambourine Comercio Internacional SA v. Solowsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tambourine Comercio Internacional SA v. Solowsky, 312 F. App'x 263 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FAY, Circuit Judge:

This appeal arises out of the allegedly unlawful conduct of an attorney and his law firm with respect to a sum of money they held in trust. Plaintiffs Hawksbay Ltd. (“Hawksbay”) and Tambourine Com-ercio International, S.A. (“Tambourine”) sued Defendants Jay Solowsky and his law firm Pertnoy, Solowsky & Allen, P.A.(eol- *267 lectively “Solowsky” or “Defendants”), claiming they unlawfully held Hawksbay’s money in trust and also unlawfully dispersed it. At the close of Plaintiffs’ case at trial Defendants made a Rule 50 Motion on all claims, which the district court granted. Plaintiffs raise the following issues on appeal: (1) the district court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on Hawksbay’s conversion and civil theft claims; (2) the district court’s grant of Defendants’ Rule 50 Motion on Tambourine’s breach of fiduciary duty claim; (3) the district court’s exclusion of David Turner’s documentary and testimonial evidence; (4) the district court’s exclusion of the outcome of a related case; and (5) the district court’s exclusion of several other pieces of evidence. For the reasons set out below, we reverse on the first and third issues, as well as some of the eviden-tiary issues.

I. FACTS

A. Background

1. Sitindustries: Tambourine and Hawksbay

Tambourine and Hawksbay are two subsidiaries of the Italian entity Sitindustrie, S.P.A. (“Sitindustrie”). Sitindustrie manufactures tubes in stainless steel, copper, and nickel alloys. The founder of Sitin-dustrie, German Bocciolone (“German”), was the CEO until he died in 1993. After German’s death, his daughter Antonella Bocciolone (“Antonella”) took over as the CEO. In 1997 at the direction of Antonel-la, Sitindustrie’s holding company, Kobarid Holdings, S.A. (“Kobarid”) acquired Hawksbay and Tambourine to control Si-tindustrie’s investments.

Antonella served on the board of both Hawksbay and Tambourine with David Brenman, Tambourine’s chief operating officer through 2002. Antonella and Bren-man later married in 2000. At their direction, Tambourine lent twenty million dollars to Lionheart International Ltd. (“Lionheart”) to be invested. Several months later Tambourine asked for the money back, but only received ten million dollars. Tambourine briefly retained Defendant Pertnoy,' Solowsky, & Allen (“PSA”) in 1999 to locate the missing ten million dollars — this sum of money was known as the “Lionheart ten million.” The Lionheart ten million, however, is not part of this litigation.

In 1998, Tambourine entered into a Management Agreement with Edward Reizen, a self proclaimed fund management expert. Tambourine agreed to pay Reizen four hundred thousand dollars annually to manage Tambourine’s assets. The Management Agreement gave Reizen full authority to act for Tambourine.

In March 1999, Antonella and Brenman appointed Reizen to the Hawksbay board. Reizen was designated as the manager of Hawksbay’s bank accounts and given the authority to transfer and invest Hawks-bay’s funds. At Antonella and Brenman’s direction, Tambourine also lent the ten million dollars it did receive back from Lionheart to Hawksbay — this sum of money was known as the “Hawksbay ten million.” From 1999 to 2002 Reizen allegedly interacted with numerous financial institutions as Hawksbay’s representative. He was later removed as a board member in November 2002.

In 2000, after learning from the Sitin-dustrie financial manager that there was financial stress, Antonella’s younger brother Fausto Bocciolone (“Fausto”) began to look for the twenty million dollars managed by Tambourine and Hawksbay. After getting the cold shoulder from Antonel-la and Brenman, Fausto secretly copied documents concerning the money from Brenman’s office. Fausto brought his con *268 cerns to the rest of the Bocciolone family and Antonella subsequently resigned as CEO in 2001. She was replaced by Faus-to. Antonella and Brenman were later removed as Hawksbay directors in November 2002 and Fausto was appointed as a director of both Hawksbay and Tambourine. Fausto is currently the CEO of.Si-tindustrie.

In December 2002 the Hawksbay loan matured, but was never repaid. Sitindus-tries created a team to look for the missing money in January 2003, including a Swiss lawyer, Yves Auberson. Auberson was able to trace the money for a while, but ultimately could not locate it. Sitindus-tries subsequently sued Antonella and Brenman in Switzerland and Canada to recover the Hawksbay ten million. That suit is not part of this case. ■

2. The Hawksbay Ten Million

In their brief, Defendants lay out the transfers of the Hawksbay ten million from 1998-2002. In 1999 the entire sum was transferred to IHAG Bank in Zurich. In 2000 the funds were combined with monies in which Reizen had an interest and used to purchase Powell Portfolio, Inc., BVI (“Powell”) bearer shares. These shares were held in a UBS account and then transferred to the Avenin Group Ltd., BVI (“Avenin”) where they were pooled in a one hundred million dollar investment. 1 The proceeds from the sale of the Avenin Note were sent to the Canadian Brokerage Firm, Pentstone Investment, and then to Walter Schumacher’s client account in Switzerland in 2001. Hawksbay’s lawyer, Auberson, was able to trace the funds to the Avenin account, but subsequently lost the trail, Auberson looked, but did not find any funds in the Swiss banks, Schu-macher’s account, or in Canada.

The parties dispute what happened to the money next. Hawksbay asserts that the funds in Schumacher’s client account were then transferred by Reizen to Solow-. sky’s Interest on Trust Account in October 2006 — the funds transferred to Solowsky’s trust account are discussed in detail below. Defendants, however, claim that after the funds were moved to Schumacher’s ac- ■ count the trail goes cold and that there is ' no evidence to link the funds in Switzerland with the funds Reizen transferred to Solowsky’s IOTA account.

3. Reizen’s Transfer to Solowsky

On October 16, 2003, Reizen transferred six million dollars from a Deming Finance Ltd. account to a PSA client trust account known throughout this litigation as the “IOTA Account.” “Hawksbay/Brenman” was written on the transfer documentation.

Reizen testified that he told Solowsky he had full authority over the funds and signed an engagement letter representing and warranting that he had:

full and complete authority over and to the funds which we are holding in escrow, including the right to pay for legal defense in the above-referenced actions and any related actions which may be filed, and that, to your knowledge, your authority has not been revoked, suspended or repudiated in any way.

(Jt.Ex.6.) Reizen further testified that he told Solowsky the transfer was intended to facilitate a settlement of the Bocciolone family dispute and that he (Reizen) believed he was entitled to over two million dollars of the funds under the Management Agreement. Reizen testified that *269 Solowsky read the Management Agreement before he agreed to accept the funds.

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Bluebook (online)
312 F. App'x 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tambourine-comercio-internacional-sa-v-solowsky-ca11-2009.