Zhen Qin, AKA Nick Zhen Qin or Nick Qin Elina Qin Riverstone Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Transportation, Inc US-China Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. F/K/A Chinese Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (New Jersey) US-China Professional Tours (NY), LLC Arendelle Management, Inc. And US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (Texas) v. Yuanyuan Yang

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 27, 2023
Docket14-22-00197-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Zhen Qin, AKA Nick Zhen Qin or Nick Qin Elina Qin Riverstone Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Transportation, Inc US-China Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. F/K/A Chinese Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (New Jersey) US-China Professional Tours (NY), LLC Arendelle Management, Inc. And US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (Texas) v. Yuanyuan Yang (Zhen Qin, AKA Nick Zhen Qin or Nick Qin Elina Qin Riverstone Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Transportation, Inc US-China Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. F/K/A Chinese Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (New Jersey) US-China Professional Tours (NY), LLC Arendelle Management, Inc. And US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (Texas) v. Yuanyuan Yang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Zhen Qin, AKA Nick Zhen Qin or Nick Qin Elina Qin Riverstone Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Transportation, Inc US-China Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. F/K/A Chinese Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (New Jersey) US-China Professional Tours (NY), LLC Arendelle Management, Inc. And US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (Texas) v. Yuanyuan Yang, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified in Part, Remittitur Suggested in Part, and Memorandum Opinion filed July 27, 2023.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-22-00197-CV

ZHEN QIN, AKA NICK ZHEN QIN OR NICK QIN; ELINA QIN; RIVERSTONE TOURS, INC.; US-CHINA PROFESSIONAL TRANSPORTATION, INC; US-CHINA PROFESSIONAL TRAVEL & TOURS, INC. F/K/A CHINESE PROFESSIONAL TRAVEL & TOURS, INC.; US-CHINA PROFESSIONAL TOURS, INC. (NEW JERSEY); US- CHINA PROFESSIONAL TOURS (NY), LLC; ARENDELLE MANAGEMENT, INC., AND US-CHINA PROFESSIONAL TOURS, INC. (TEXAS), Appellants V.

YUANYUAN YANG, Appellee

On Appeal from the 268th District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 16-DCV-235702

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellee Yuanyuan Yang entered into an agreement with appellant Nick Qin to obtain a United States immigration visa in exchange for a $1 million investment in the United States economy. After Qin used Yang’s investment for purposes other than creating a business for her to obtain a U.S. visa, Yang sued Qin asserting claims of fraud, breach of contract, conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, money had and received, and conspiracy. Yang obtained favorable jury findings on all causes of action and elected to recover on her fraud claim, which provided the greatest recovery. Qin, his wife Elina Qin, and several businesses owned by Qin appeal the trial court’s judgment raising multiple issues. We affirm the trial court’s judgment of liability for fraud against Qin and his businesses. We reverse the judgment assessing fraud damages against Elina. Because the evidence is legally insufficient to support the total amount of consequential damages awarded for fraud, we suggest a remittitur to an amount supported by the evidence. If a remittitur of the unsupported damages is timely filed, we will modify the trial court’s judgment in part and affirm as modified. If it is not, we will reverse the judgment as to the fraud claims and remand those claims for a new trial.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Trial Testimony

In 1990 Congress created the Employment-Based Fifth Preference Visa (EB- 5) classification to encourage foreign investment in the United States economy, and to create jobs in the U.S. Jennifer Mizulski, an immigration attorney, testified about the EB-5 immigration program at trial. The program requires a minimum investment for an area the size of Houston of $1 million. A petition under the EB-5 program takes between three and five and a half years to process. The EB-5 program has three components: (1) monetary investment used to (2) create a company that will (3) create at least ten new jobs.

The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) requires a business plan as part of the initial EB-5 application. See 8 C.F.R. § 204.6 (“To show that a new commercial 2 enterprise will create not fewer than ten (10) full-time positions for qualifying employees, the petition must be accompanied by: . . . A copy of a comprehensive business plan showing that, due to the nature and projected size of the new commercial enterprise, the need for not fewer than ten (10) qualifying employees will result, including approximate dates, within the next two years, and when such employees will be hired.”). According to Mizulski, it is a violation of federal law to use EB-5 investment funds in a manner that differs from that set out in the business plan.

In 1995, appellant Nick Zhen Qin created a travel company in Atlanta called China Professional Tours (Tours-Atlanta). Qin expanded his travel company to California (Tours-Riverstone), New York (Tours-New York), New Jersey (Tours- New Jersey), and Houston (Tours-Texas). Qin solicited investors, primarily from China, to fund his expansion. Some of his investors participated in the EB-5 visa program. An attorney named Deacon Zhang helped the investors with their EB-5 applications.

Appellee, YuanYuan Yang, testified that she met Qin in November 2014 in Athens, Greece to discuss Yang’s participation in the EB-5 visa program. Shuyang Wu is a friend of Yang’s and the father of her two children. Wu traveled with Yang in 2014 to Greece to discuss Yang’s participation in the EB-5 program. Qin told Yang he would use her investment to establish a new company, buy a building to be used for the business, and create ten new jobs in the U.S. Qin also told Yang that her company’s profit margin would be 20 percent and she could obtain a U.S. visa within one year. Yang believed Qin’s representations, and decided to invest $1 million with him. Over the course of two months Yang had $1 million transferred to Qin.1 Qin

1 Due to limitations on currency exchange by the Chinese government, the $1 million had to be split into $50,000 increments sent by twenty different people.

3 instructed Yang to work with Zhang, the immigration attorney, on the EB-5 application. Yang submitted her EB-5 visa application with Zhang’s help.

In February 2015, Wu, who lived in the U.S., traveled to Los Angeles to meet with Qin and Zhang. Zhang presented a business plan for Yang’s investment and promised the business would be run according to the plan. The company Qin created with Yang’s investment was called US-China Professional Training and Consulting Company, Inc. (Training).

In exchange for her investment Yang received a stock certificate reflecting 90-percent ownership in Training. Yang subsequently asked Wu to obtain the company’s financial statements and operation status. Yang wanted to learn about Training’s operation status because Qin had not communicated anything about the company or its finances. After more than a year, in June 2016, Wu spoke with Qin and learned that the $1 million investment had been spent. Qin communicated to Yang, through Wu, that Yang would need to invest more money to allow Training and her EB-5 application to continue.

In September 2016, after Yang’s unsuccessful attempts to obtain financial records, Yang filed suit. Up until that time Yang lived in China and had no way to interfere with the business or learn of its operation except through Qin.

In October 2016 Qin met with Wu and promised to return Yang’s $1 million investment in two installments. Yang, who participated by phone, accepted Qin’s offer, and agreed to withdraw the suit if Qin made the payments. Qin handwrote an agreement in which he stated that he agreed to return $500,000 to Yang before December 31, 2016, and the remaining $500,000 before the end of June 2017. Qin failed to make either payment. After Qin refused to repay Yang’s investment, she withdrew her EB-5 application because she could not comply with the program. There was no way to create ten jobs through Training, and she “would not want to 4 cheat USCIS.”2

In January 2017, as an attempt to “save [her] company,” Yang called for a shareholders’ meeting of Training. Yang gave Qin notice of the meeting, but Qin did not attend. As a 90-percent shareholder, Yang voted to remove Qin as the sole director of Training, and appointed herself as sole director, president, and secretary.

Qin testified that he owned several businesses in the U.S., several of which were created pursuant to the EB-5 program. Qin created two other businesses in Houston: Arendelle Group, a real-estate company, and US-China Professional Transportation, Inc. (Transportation). Qin created Transportation for the purpose of owning the other companies’ vehicles. Qin intended to use Training as an entity to help Chinese citizens come to the U.S. and train in Houston’s Medical Center and oil community. Despite having three separate entities in Houston, Qin testified he treated them as “just one business.”

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Zhen Qin, AKA Nick Zhen Qin or Nick Qin Elina Qin Riverstone Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Transportation, Inc US-China Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. F/K/A Chinese Professional Travel & Tours, Inc. US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (New Jersey) US-China Professional Tours (NY), LLC Arendelle Management, Inc. And US-China Professional Tours, Inc. (Texas) v. Yuanyuan Yang, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zhen-qin-aka-nick-zhen-qin-or-nick-qin-elina-qin-riverstone-tours-inc-texapp-2023.