VERTIV, INC. v. WAYNE BURT

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJuly 23, 2021
Docket3:20-cv-00363
StatusUnknown

This text of VERTIV, INC. v. WAYNE BURT (VERTIV, INC. v. WAYNE BURT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
VERTIV, INC. v. WAYNE BURT, (D.N.J. 2021).

Opinion

*NOT FOR PUBLICATION*

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY ____________________________________ : VERTIV, INC., VERTIV CAPITAL, : INC., and GNARITIS, INC., : : Civil Action No.: 20-363 (FLW) Plaintiff(s), : : v. : : WANYE BURT PTE, LTD., and : CETEX PETROCHEMICALS LTD., : : Defendant(s) : ____________________________________: : VERTIV, INC., VERTIV CAPITAL, : INC., and GNARITIS, INC., : : Civil Action No.: 20-13050 (FLW) Plaintiff(s), : : OPINION v. : : WANYE BURT PTE, LTD., and : WAYNE BURT PETRO CHEMICALS : PRIVATE, LTD. : : Defendant(s) : ____________________________________: WOLFSON, Chief Judge: Plaintiffs Vertiv, Inc. (“Vertiv”), Vertiv Capital, Inc. (“Vertiv Capital”), and Gnaritis, Inc. (“Gnaritis”) (collectively “Plaintiffs”) filed two separate actions, alleging that, pursuant to loan agreements purportedly executed by Defendant Wayne Burt, PTE, Ltd. (“Defendant”) in 2015, Defendant owes Plaintiffs $29 million. In each action, a director of Defendant executed a certification acknowledging the debt, and consented to separate judgments in favor of Plaintiffs, in the amount of $29 million. Presently before the Court are motions seeking to vacate both judgments, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). They are brought on behalf of Defendant by a court-appointed liquidator, Farooq Mann (“Liquidator”), assigned in 2018 by the Singapore High Court to affect the liquidation of Defendant in Singapore. For the reasons set forth herein, the Liquidator’s motions are GRANTED.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND & PROCEDURAL HISTORY Plaintiffs are corporations based in Princeton, New Jersey, owned in whole or in part by Krishna Ghanta (“Ghanta”). Defendant is a Singapore-based corporation. TGS Mahesh (“Mahesh”) and R. Krishnan (“Krishnan”) are directors of Defendant. Defendant is the majority shareholder of Cetex Petrochemicals, Ltd. (“Cetex”), an India-based corporation. Cetex is named as a co-defendant, along with Defendant, in Civil Action No. 20-363 (FLW). Wayne Burt Petrochemicals Private, Ltd. (“Wayne Burt Petro”) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Defendant. Wayne Burt Petro is named as a co-defendant in Civil Action No. 20-13050 (FLW). Plaintiffs allege in each of these suits that, pursuant to loan agreements purportedly executed by Defendant in 2015, Defendant is indebted to Plaintiffs in the amount of $29 million.

Plaintiffs allege that they each entered into loan agreements with Defendant on April 5, 2015, under which a total of $16,000,000 was loaned to Defendant.1 Plaintiffs further allege that, as security for the loans, Defendant signed a Stock Pledge Agreement (“SPA”), pledging to Plaintiffs 29,651,068 shares of stock which it owned in Cetex. According to Plaintiffs, Krishnan and Mahesh, as directors of Defendant, confirmed the existence of these loans in letters dated January 21, 2018, and February 25, 2018. The Liquidator contests the legitimacy of the loans.

1 Under these purported agreements, Defendant agreed to pay interest on the principal at 15% per annum up and until January 10, 2018. That rate would increase to 20% if Defendant failed to repay the loan on January 10, 2018. In November 2018, in a proceeding unrelated to the present matter, the High Court of the Republic of Singapore placed Defendant into liquidation. (Mann Cert. Feb. 26, 2021, ¶ 2.) Following this proceeding, the Liquidator was appointed by the Singapore High Court to affect the liquidation of Defendant. (Id.) Defendant’s principal shareholder challenged that Order and

applied to the Singapore High Court to stay and vacate the liquidation; a temporary stay was granted. (Id. at 4.) On November 26, 2019, following a year-long trial, the Singapore High Court lifted the stay and the liquidation process resumed at the direction of the Liquidator. (Id.) Plaintiffs do not contest the occurrence or accuracy of these Singapore proceedings as presented by the Liquidator on these Motions. According to a certification set forth by Defendant’s expert in Singaporean law:2 Once the court enters such [a liquidation] order, all authority on the part of the directors and officers of the entity is terminated and vested in the liquidator. The authority of the liquidator becomes absolute, and any purported actions taken by the entity’s former management are legally ineffective. The entity under liquidation is without power to transfer assets, incur debt, make payment to creditors, or conduct its former business; instead, only the liquidator may perform these functions. If a creditor has a claim against the entity, that claim is to be presented to the liquidator in connection with his administration of the liquidation process. The liquidator makes determinations as to the validity and quantum of the creditors’ claims, subject to a process of judicial review if required. . . . [T]he process resembles a Chapter 7 bankruptcy under U.S. law. (Mann Cert. Feb. 26, 2021, ¶ 3 (emphasis added).) Again, and importantly, Plaintiffs do not contest the accuracy of these Singapore liquidation laws, or the role of a liquidator, as set forth by Defendant’s expert.

2 The Liquidator provides a certification by Raeza Khaled Salem Ibrahim, a Singaporean attorney with over ten years of experience practicing in Singapore-corporate law. (Ibrahim Cert. ¶¶ 2-3.) On January 10, 2020, Plaintiffs commenced a lawsuit against Defendant and Cetex under Civil Action No. 20-cv-363. (Id. ¶ 5.) The complaint asserts that each plaintiff entered into an identical loan agreement with Defendant in 2015, under which a total of $16,000,000 was loaned to Defendant; that no payments of principle or interest were ever made; and that $29,000,000 was then owed to Plaintiffs by Defendant.3 (Id.) The complaint also alleges that the Cetex stock owned

by Defendant was pledged to Plaintiffs to secure the alleged loans. (Id.) The complaint sought a judgment declaring that the Cetex stock owned by Defendant was the property of Plaintiffs. (Id.) Three days after the suit was filed, an acknowledgement of service was filed on the docket by Krishnan. (Id. ¶ 6.) On the same day, Krishnan executed a certification, prepared by Plaintiffs’ counsel, in which he stated that he signed the loan agreements, promissory notes and SPA on behalf of Defendant in 2015; that the funds referred in the loan agreements had been loaned to Defendant; and that Defendant had defaulted by failing to make repayment on January 10, 2018, two years earlier. (Id. ¶ 7.) The certification states that Defendant, through the Krishnan, consents to the entry of a judgment in favor of Plaintiffs in the amount of $29,000,000. (Id.)

Four days later, Plaintiffs’ counsel filed on the docket a proposed Judgment against Defendant in the amount of $29,290,000. (Id. ¶ 8.) The judgment was consented to by Plaintiffs’ counsel and Krishnan. (Id.) That judgment was entered by this Court on January 24, 2020, which also declared that Plaintiffs are the owners of the Cetex stock. (Id.) On February 13, 2020, Plaintiffs filed a motion to amend the judgment, requesting a greater level of background detail necessary to execute the judgment in proceedings in India, where Plaintiffs sought to pursue the Cetex stock. (Id. ¶ 9.) The next entry on the docket is an acknowledgement of service of the motion, signed by

3 Under these purported agreements: Vertiv Capital loaned Defendant $11,500,000, Gnaritis loaned Defendant $2,500,000, and Vertiv loaned Defendant $2,000,000; Plaintiffs calculate the current balance owed, including interested, as of January 2020, is approximately $29,000,000. Krishnan. (Id.) On February 27, 2020, this Court entered the Amended Judgment, which was consented to by Krishnan and Mahesh, as well as Plaintiffs’ counsel.

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VERTIV, INC. v. WAYNE BURT, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vertiv-inc-v-wayne-burt-njd-2021.