ORDER SEVERING PARTIES AND CONDITIONALLY DISMISSING CLAIMS
THIS CAUSE is before the Court upon various Motions to Dismiss on Forum Non Conveniens grounds filed and adopted by several defendants.
Factual Background
This action arises from the collapse of the Venezuelan banking industry and the decision by Venezuelan banking authorities to intervene and assume control over Banco Latino, S.A.C.A. (“BLCA”), the country’s then second largest banking institution.
The complaint alleges that collectively the defendants conspired to perpetrate a massive fraud on the plaintiff financial institutions through five separate and distinct illegal banking operations. Specifically, plaintiffs maintain that certain insider defendants caused BLCA and BLI to enter into and guarantee a series of unlawful loans to other banks and financial institutions called “triangular” or “back to back” placements. 3 Plaintiffs assert that the triangular nature of the placements at issue were not acknowledged and properly accounted for by insiders at BLCA and BLI. These omissions were allegedly calculated by the insider defendants to create the illusion that the plaintiff financial institutions were fully capitalized and financially viable. Plaintiffs maintain that the financial institutions were in fact undercapital-ized and financially exposed as a result of numerous acts of fraud and concealment to wit: improper loans made to favored borrowers, the manipulation of records in attempts to hide improper transactions and illegal laundering of funds through domestic and foreign accounts.
In early 1994, the Federal Reserve expressed concerns about credit risks involving BLI’s foreign parent and instructed the bank to limit loan participation with its affiliates. Consequently, the insider defendants began reversing several of the triangular placements utilizing BLCA’s cash resources, in an attempt to recoup funds to repay improper loans. Plaintiffs allege that these acts resulted in a severe capital shortage at BLCA. In an effort to recover, BLCA tapped the assets of its Miami subsidiary. Nevertheless, mid January, 1994, authorities intervened and closed the bank.
BLCA’s collapse triggered a “run” on BLI by depositors. Unable to satisfy the demand for hard currency, BLI ultimately filed for bankruptcy. Plaintiffs maintain that the defendants’ illegal operations led directly to the failure of BLCA resulting in over $2 billion in
To mitigate hardships, FOGADE intervened and provided assistance using public funds. In exchange for doing so, FOGADE received an assignment of claims against the defendants from BLCA, Maracaibo and Con-sorcio. In February and March of 1994, Venezuelan authorities issued arrest warrants for seventeen of the twenty-two named individual defendants for the crime of taking fraudulent advantage of public funds. 4 On June 19, 1995, plaintiffs filed suit in this Court to recover damages for violations of the Racketeer Influenced & Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1961, et seq., the Florida RICO statute, 772.018 et seq., applicable provisions of Venezuelan law, common law and other statutory provisions.
Standard for Motion to Dismiss
It is well settled that a complaint should not be dismissed unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts which would entitle [him] to relief.
Conley v. Gibson,
The Doctrine of Forum Non Conveniens
Under the doctrine of forum non conveniens, a district court has inherent power to decline to exercise jurisdiction over a case when an adequate alternative forum is available.
C.A. La Segundad v. Transytur Line,
A. Adequate Alternative Forum
At the outset of any forum non conveniens inquiry, the court must determine whether there exists an alternative forum. The defendants maintain that Venezuela is not merely an adequate alternative forum, it is clearly the superior forum. To rebut this strong assertion, the plaintiffs contend that Venezuela is an inadequate forum because the Venezuelan judicial system is “rife with corruption and delays” and “lack of discovery and other pretrial procedures, as well as procedural failings” will prevent plaintiffs from obtaining adequate relief.
As a threshold matter, this Court notes that the burden of establishing whether an alternative forum exists is not a heavy one.
See Carnival Cruise Lines v. Oy Wartsila Ab,
The acts giving rise to this dispute originated in Venezuela and had a devastating impact on the country’s economic and political climate. Allegations in the complaint implicate the Venezuelan government, Venezuelan banks and companies, and the citizens of Venezuela as victims and perpetrators. Defendants assert that the Venezuelan government, through plaintiff FOGADE, should not be heard to complain that widespread corruption and other defects in its own judicial system renders Venezuela an inadequate forum. The Court agrees.
“It is not the business of our courts to assume responsibility for supervising the integrity of the judicial system of another sovereign nation.”
Blanco v. Banco Indus. de Venezuela, S.A.,
The Court also rejects plaintiffs contention that Venezuela is an inadequate forum because the legal system is rampant with delays. Delay is an unfortunate but pervasive aspect of the legal process.
Bhatnagar v. Surrendra Overseas Ltd.,
B. Private Interests
The Court now turns to a review of the factors pertaining to the private interests of the litigants. Important considerations are as follows: (1) relative ease of access to sources of proof; (2) availability of compulsory process for attendance of unwilling, and the cost of obtaining attendance of willing witnesses; and (3) all other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious and inexpensive.
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
Sources of Proof
To the extent that Venezuelan pretrial procedure renders sources of proof less accessible, as discussed above, this factor is entitled to little weight. Plaintiffs assert that counsel and an investigative team have spent more than a year gathering relevant documentary evidence from Venezuela, the Netherland Antilles, the United States and other countries. Plaintiffs further contend that relevant documents will be made available to all
Access to Witnesses
The plaintiffs concede that the number of fact witnesses is split almost equally between the United States and Venezuela. (See Pis. Consolidated Opp’n to Defs. Mot. to Dismiss, p. 12). There are also several witnesses in other parts of the world. Id. No one country can claim an overwhelming number of witnesses. It appears that the relative advantages or disadvantages related to the cost of obtaining attendance of witnesses are at or near equipoise. Likewise, any difficulties a court might encounter regarding witnesses whose attendance can not be compelled may be resolved by the use of deposition testimony or letters rogatory. In light of the Court’s deference to the plaintiffs’ choice of forum, the private interest factors are considered to be in equipoise. An analysis of the public interest factors in this case is therefore warranted.
C. Public Interests
In considering public interests, some important factors are the sovereign’s interest in deciding the dispute, the administrative burdens posed by trial, and the court’s application of law with which it is not familiar.
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
The American interests in this matter are limited to the transactions involving BLI. Venezuela has a substantial interest in adjudicating the remaining claims. This interest justifies requiring the plaintiffs to defend this action in the courts of their own nation. Considerations of efficiency and cost strongly favor dismissal in part. Likewise, the possibility that foreign law will apply as to the claims of the other plaintiffs, favors the Venezuelan forum. See
Proyectos Orchimex de Costa Rica,
II. Conclusion
Having duly considered the motions, responses and pertinent portions of the record, it is ORDERED AND ADJUDGED as follows:
1. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 21, Plaintiff BLI’s claims are SEVERED from the claims of the other plaintiffs.
2. The Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss on Forum Non Conveniens grounds is GRANTED without prejudice as to the claims of Plaintiffs BLCA, Maracaibo, Consorcio and FOGADE.
3. Dismissal is conditioned on the following: 6
(a) The defendants must submit to the jurisdiction of the Venezuelan courts and designate a representative in Venezuela to accept service of process on their behalf;
(b) The defendants waive any statute of limitations defense that would make a Venezuelan forum unavailable;
(c) Defendants shall make available all relevant documents and witnesses within their control; and
(d) Defendants shall satisfy any judgment entered in Venezuela and can not contest any such judgment on the grounds that it was entered in their absence.
It is further ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the defendants shall have fifteen (15) days from the entry of this order to file an affidavit with the Court agreeing to the above conditions. The plaintiffs shall have the right to reinstate this action within
Notes
. BLCA also has substantial ownership interest in Maracaibo and Consorcio.
. The defendants are a diverse group of persons and entities who collectively consist of "insiders” who held positions of authority at the plaintiff institutions; friends, family and business associates of the insiders with whom "operations” were conducted; financial institutions who facilitated operations; and persons and companies that laundered and received the proceeds of the alleged fraud.
. BLI alleges that in one operation, four of the insider defendants, with the knowledge and consent of BLI's board of directors, caused the Miami subsidiary to enter into numerous fraudulent loan placements over a period of several years. These acts are alleged to have made approximately $65 million available to BLCA through Banco Latino, N.V. ("BLNV”), BLCA’s offshore bank in Curacao.
A legitimate placement is a loan that would have been recorded as an asset on the books of BLI. The defendants allegedly caused BLI to make placements, not as investments for the bank, but for their own personal benefit, in violation of United States banking laws and regulations.
According to the plaintiffs, the "triangular or back to back” placements were loans made to "independent" financial institutions on the condition that the institutions receiving the loans make a corresponding loan in the same or similar amount, at a slightly higher interest rate, to BLNV. BLNV then made the funds available to the insider defendants by advancing them to BLCA. To insure that the intermediary financial institutions faced no real economic risk, the plaintiffs contend that BLI “guaranteed” the intermediaries' placements to BLNV through a series of "comfort" letters. By these letters, BLI promised, illegally, that it would not demand repayment of its placements if BLNV failed to repay the corresponding loans made to BLNV by the intermediaries.
. At oral argument counsel for all parties agreed that parallel civil proceedings are ongoing in Venezuela in addition to the aforementioned criminal proceedings.
. The Court fully expects the defendants to provide records relevant to the plaintiffs’ claims as contemplated by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
See generally Carnival Cruise Lines,
. Defendants Hans Abate and Alejandro Rivera are not subject to the following conditions as they are only alleged to have participated in the BLI operations.
