Antonio F. MENDES, et al., Appellants,
v.
DOWELANCO INDUSTRIAL LTDA., Appellee.
DOWELANCO INDUSTRIAL LTDA., Appellant,
v.
Antonio F. Mendes, et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*777 Alan S. Fine, Miami, for Antonio F. Mendes, et al.
Weil, Lucio, Mandler, Croland & Stеele and Ronald P. Weil and John C. Hanson, II, Miami, for Dowelanco Indus. LTDA.
Before SCHWARTZ, C.J., and NESBITT and LEVY, JJ.
SCHWARTZ, Chief Judge.
Both sides challenge an order staying the cause in its entirety pending the resolution of an action, involving thе same parties and issues, which is being maintained in Brazil. To make a very long story appropriately short for present purposes, the plaintiff, Dowelanco Industrial, LTDA., a Brazilian corporation, claims that multiple Brazilian corporate and individual defendants embezzled a great deal of money from it in Brazil and eventually plaсed over one million dollars of it in several South Florida banks. In the present action, Dowelanco sued the Brazilian defendants on various counts, including for civil theft, to impose a constructive trust for conversion, and for RICO violations. At the commencement of the proceeding, it secured an ex parte temporary injunction freezing the bank accounts. In the order now under review,[1] the trial court stayed the entire litigation *778 including the defendants' various attacks on the validity of the temporary injunction. We approve the order in part and reversе it in part.
I.
First, we reject Dowelanco's contention that the trial court should not have stayed its substantive claims and that the entire litigation should therefore go forward in Flоrida. As the trial court stated:
[A]ll of the parties (other than the Stakeholder Defendants) are Brazilians in Brazil, they were served in Brazil (the validity of that service is an issue awaiting rеsolution), the language of the parties as well as the documentation is Portuguese, and there is a lawsuit proceeding in Brazil. Stay of these proceedings is an appropriate means of accomplishing resolution of the dispute in Brazil. .. .
It is obvious that there was no abuse of discretion in this ruling. See Carolina Power & Light Co. v. Uranex,
II.
On the Brazilian defendants' appеal from that portion of the order under review which continued the temporary injunction freezing the bank accounts, we reverse in part.
1. The defendants' primary contention is that the application of the doctrine of forum non conveniens requires an outright dismissal of the case. We do not agree with this position. Even if as we are inclined to believе but find it unnecessary directly to determine the doctrine applies to this case, see Envases Venezolanos, S.A. v. Collazo,
*779 2. Such a ruling is obviously appropriate only, however, if the defendants' аssets their Florida bank accounts are properly the subject of the orders of the Florida court. It is thus improper, in turn, to hold the defendants' property in indefinite limbo without a ruling which the lower court has never made as to whether this is the case or not. See Neale v. Aycock,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
NOTES
Notes
[1] * * * * *
After almost two years of litigation (the initial complаint was filed 5/15/92) the case posture is such that issues relating to the validity of service of process remain to be resolved, evidencing a significant lack of progress tоward ultimate resolution of the case, notwithstanding the fact that the court files have swelled to nine volumes, a great portion of which consists of Portuguese documents and translations of those documents.
With the currently assigned undersigned judge, the litigants attempted resolution of some of the preliminary issues beginning with those relating to service of process as mentioned above. Hearing was scheduled for evidence as to Brazilian law and procedure on service of process with Brazilian legal experts brought to Miami to testify on the propriety of the attempted service, but that hearing had to be deferred because of the attorneys' scheduling conflicts. Among the other preliminary issues awaiting resolution is a motion of 15 of the defendants (none of whom include those designated in the Amended Verified Complaint as "Stakeholder Defendants") for dismissal under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. This court determined that that issue should be resolved first, and therefore invited memoranda and conducted а hearing. This order addresses that issue.
The case involves the alleged improper removal by the defendants (not the Stakeholder Defendants) of funds of the plaintiff. All of thе parties some 24 in number (other than the Stakeholder Defendants) are Brazilians (two defendants, Dayse Cristina Quevedo and Jodemar Catharini, were alleged in the comрlaint to be residents of Dade County, Florida, but neither has been served). The parties acknowledge that there is a civil action pending in Brazil involving the same parties аnd the same subject matter.
Remaining active is the Amended Ex Parte Order Granting Temporary Injunction entered 5/18/92, which in effect froze the accounts of the non-stakeholder defendants held in the Stakeholder Defendant Institutions.
The defendants' motion argues for dismissal because "[t]he case was brought by a Brazilian corporation against Braziliаn residents for tortious acts they are alleged to have committed in Brazil."
The Plaintiff's opposition is based, among other reasons, on the allegations that the defеndants traveled to this forum, they used agents in this state to divert proceeds of their involvement in a criminal enterprise, they continue to own property in Florida which is pаrt of those proceeds, that the Stakeholder Defendants hold funds which constitute the res of a constructive trust, and that dismissal would allow the funds to dissipate.
The plaintiff reminds thе court that dismissal for forum non conveniens is only appropriate when all of the parties are citizens of and the cause of action accrued in another jurisdiction. Envases Venezolanos, S.A. v. Collazo,
Although it could be argued that the real parties to this lawsuit (as distinguished from the Stakeholder Defendants) are Brazilians, the court concludes that dismissal would still be inappropriate, mainly because of the realistic potential for dissipation of the funds now frozen рursuant to the injunction referred to above.
It is assumed that the action here was initiated first (in one of the parties' memoranda it was mentioned that the action in Brazil wаs started in May of 1993) and therefore the lawsuit here ordinarily should be the one to proceed. See Sunshine State Service Corporation v. Dove Investments of Hillsborоugh,
Given all of the above, it is nevertheless the opinion of this court that Brazil is the proper forum for resolution of this dispute. The overriding сonsiderations are the facts that all of the parties (other than the Stakeholder Defendants) are Brazilians in Brazil, they were served in Brazil (the validity of that service is an issue awaiting resolution), the language of the parties as well as the documentation is Portuguese, and there is a lawsuit proceeding in Brazil. Stay of these procеedings is an appropriate means of accomplishing resolution of the dispute in Brazil, while still protecting the funds in the hands of the Stakeholder Defendants. See e.g. A.J. Armstrong Co. v. Romanach,
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that this action is stayed pending resolution of the litigation between the parties in Brazil. The Amended Ex Parte Order Granting Temрorary Injunction dated May 18, 1992 shall remain in full force and effect during the pendency of the stay and until further order of this court.
[2] While their resolution is in the first instance for the trial court alone, see City of Coral Gables v. Puiggros,
