COLONIAL
BANK, Plaintiff, No. 82
Civ. 1898 (PNL)
JUSGE: Pierre N.
Leval, U.S.D.J. {F.
Supp. 56} OPINION AND ORDER PIERRE
N. LEVAL, U.S.D.J. Plaintiff
Colonial Bank commenced this action on March 25, 1982, to enforce a judgment
rendered against defendant Martijn L. Worms by the High Court of Justice,
Queens Bench Division, Commercial Court (1981 C. No. 7741), on February 5,
1982, for the sum of $541,331.63 together with interest from the date of judgment
at the rate {F. Supp. 57} of 15% per annum. Defendant alleges that the
judgment should not be enforced because the procedure followed by the English
court was so unfair to defendant as to amount to a denial of due process and
because the English court was a seriously inconvenient forum for trial of the
action. Plaintiff
moves for summary judgment and defendant moves for leave to amend his answer to
assert as a third affirmative defense that the judgment should not be enforced
because it is based upon a contract entered into by plaintiff in violation of
the Trading With the Enemy Act, 50 U.S.C. App. § 1, et seq., and the Rules and
Regulations promulgated thereunder. For the reasons set forth below,
defendants motion is granted and plaintiff‘s motion will be granted unless
defendant submits sufficient evidence by October 22, 1982 to raise a
substantial question of fact as to the viability of his third affirmative
defense. Facts
and Allegations Colonial
Bank entered into a loan agreement with Global Navigation Corporation
(Global) and Mutiny Shipping Corporation (Mutiny) in November, 1979. In
connection with the loan agreement, the Bank entered into a mortgage agreement
and a deed of assignment with one or more of the companies. It also entered into
an agreement with Worms, pursuant to which Worms agreed personally to guarantee
payment of the loan. The
personal guarantee provides that it is governed by the laws of England and
that, in the event it becomes necessary for the Bank to initiate legal proceedings
against Worms, the Bank could do so in the courts of England. The guarantee
further provides that Worms will instruct lawyers to accept service of legal
proceedings in [England] . . . and will not contest the validity of such
proceedings so far as the court or courts involved is concerned. The companies
agreed to similar provisions in each of the other agreements.1 Worms
is a Dutch national and in November, 1979, lived in London, England. He now
resides in New York. Global and Mutiny are each Liberian corporations. Colonial
Bank is a Connecticut corporation and maintains an office in London. The
negotiations leading to the execution of the agreements were conducted on the
part of the Bank from its London office and the agreements were executed in
London. After
making certain payments on the loan, Global defaulted. Colonial Bank then
demanded that Worms make payment of the outstanding balance. Upon Worms
failure to do so, the Bank commenced the English action in accordance with the
terms of the personal guarantee by service of process on Worms‘ designated
agent. On October 29, 1981, Worms solicitors acknowledged service on their
client‘s behalf. They later caused a summons to be issued, seeking to have the
action stayed pending the determination of a separate foreclosure action
brought by the Bank in the Cayman Islands against Global and a ship, Ulysses
I, that was subject to the mortgage agreement. Worms solicitors also sought
and obtained an extension of time in which to answer. The
solicitors frequently complained in written and telegraphic communications with
Worms that they would be unable to continue to represent him unless they
received his instructions and payment for services rendered. They advised Worms
that they would take no action in the case and would seek to withdraw as
counsel unless payment was received. They also warned Worms in a communication
dated January 29, 1982 that failure to answer by February 3, 1982 would result
in the entrance of a default judgment. Despite these warnings, Worms did not
pay his solicitors and did not make alternative arrangements to answer. True to
their word, the solicitors did not take any further action in the case and, on
February 1, 1982, sought an order pursuant to English rules of procedure
allowing them to withdraw as {F. Supp. 58} Worms‘ counsel.2 The court granted their request on
February 4, 1982 and entered default judgment in the amount of $541,331.63 on
February 5, 1982. At some point after February 9, 1982, Worms sent an undated telex
to the English court asking that the judgment be set aside. He did not formally
move to have the case reopened and did not appeal from the judgment. Discussion
This
is a diversity action. Accordingly, the New York Uniform Foreign Country
Money-Judgments Recognition Act, N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law and Rules §§ 5301-5309
(McKinney 1978), applies. The Act provides that a money judgment obtained in a
foreign country is conclusive between the parties and enforceable in New York
except in certain very limited circumstances. Id. § 5303.
Significantly, New York case law has been so liberal . . . in the recognition
of the judgments of foreign nations that the occasion for the use of Article 53
has been rare. It has received scant judicial attention‘ as a result. Siegel,
Practice Commentary to N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law and Rules § 5301 (McKinney 1978). Worms
alleges in each of his affirmative defenses that one of the conditions exists
which either precludes a New York court from recognizing a foreign judgment or
enables a New York court to exercise its discretion not to recognize such a
judgment. The
First Affirmative Defense Worms
alleges as his first affirmative defense: That the procedure followed by
the English court in allowing the withdrawal of counsel and the entry of a
default for failure of the Defendant to file timely pleadings, all without
affording the Defendant any opportunity to obtain new counsel, was a procedure
so unfair to the Defendant as to amount to a denial of due process . . .. Second
Amended Answer & Affirmative Defenses para. 9. This
defense apparently attempts to rely on general notions of the requirements of
due process and on N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law and Rules § 5304 (a), which provides
that a foreign country money judgment is not conclusive if it was rendered
under a system that does not provide procedures compatible with the
requirements of due process of law. English
procedure comports with our standards of due process. British Midland
Airways Ltd. v. International Travel, Inc., 497 F.2d 869, 871 (9th Cir.
1974); Somportex Ltd. v. Philadelphia Chewing Gum Corp., 453 F.2d
435, 444 (3rd Cir. 1971), cert. denied, 405 U.S. 1017, 31 L. Ed. 2d
479, 92 S. Ct. 1294 (1972). The British Midland and Somportex cases
make clear that a party may not attack an English default judgment on the
ground that he was denied due process where he was given reasonable notice and
opportunity to present his case in the English court but failed to do so. British
Midland, supra, at 871 (we flatly reject the due process
complaint of a party who was given and . . . waived the opportunity of making
adequate presentation in the English Court‘). Somportex, supra, at 443
(The polestar is whether a reasonable method of notification is employed and
reasonable opportunity to be heard is afforded to the person affected.). A
brief review of the facts makes clear that Worms was not denied due process. He
consented to litigate any disputes arising out of the guarantee in the English
courts. He retained English solicitors. When suit was initiated (with notice to
his solicitors and to him), they commenced an active defense. Worms, however,
failed to supply his solicitors with instructions and failed to compensate them
for services rendered. The solicitors repeatedly and frequently {F. Supp.
59} demanded payment and indicated that they would take no action in the
case until payment was received. Worms ignored those demands. Finally, the
solicitors advised Worms that they intended to withdraw from the case unless
payment was received and warned Worms of the dire consequences of failure to
answer before the deadline set by the court. Despite this warning, Worms did
not remit payment and did not make alternative arrangements to answer. The
solicitors then took advantage of an English procedure to withdraw from the
case and a default judgment was entered. Worms
was not denied due process. He was given notice of the need to answer and had
an opportunity to do so.3
He chose not to and later failed to pursue the proper procedures to
attempt to have the judgment withdrawn or reversed. Worms may now regret those
decisions but the fact remains that the default judgment resulted from Worms
failure to provide for his own defense despite notice of the consequences of
that failure and not from the denial of due process. Worms
argues that this court should not recognize the English judgment because Worms
was without counsel at the time the judgment was entered and was therefore
seriously disadvantaged. He cites two cases for the proposition that a foreign
judgment need not be recognized in such circumstances. Bouas v. Sociedad
Maritima San Nicholas, S.A., 252 F. Supp. 286 (S.D.N.Y. 1965); Perdikouris v.
The SS Olympos, 185 F. Supp. 140 (E.D. Va. 1960). Those cases,
however, are inapposite. Worms engaged counsel to represent him in the English
action and, before they withdrew from the case, those counsel advised him that
failure to answer could result in the entry of a default judgment. Worms chose
to ignore that advice. The
Second Affirmative Defense Worms
alleges as his second affirmative defense that the English judgment is not
entitled to recognition because the English court was a seriously inconvenient
forum for trial of the action. This defense relies on N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law and Rules
§ 5304(b) (7) (McKinney 1978), which provides that [a] foreign country
judgment need not be recognized if . . . in the case of jurisdiction based only
on personal service, the foreign court was a seriously inconvenient forum for
trial of the action. This
statute is inapplicable to the case at hand because jurisdiction in the English
action, while based in part on personal service, was not based only on
personal service. It was also based on Worms prior agreement to submit to the
jurisdiction of the English court, N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law and
Rules § 5305(a) (3) (McKinney 1978), and on Worms voluntary appearance in the
English court, see N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law and Rules § 5305(a) (2)
(McKinney 1978). Furthermore,
the English court was not an inconvenient forum. In fact, the transaction on
which the Bank sued had more contacts with England than with any other
jurisdiction. The transaction originated in England. The parties negotiated and
executed the loan and personal guarantee agreements in England. Worms resided
in England at the time he entered into the transaction and consented to the
jurisdiction of the English court. The agreements provided that they were to be
governed by English law. The Bank continued to administer {F. Supp. 60} the loan
through its London office even after Worms moved to New York. Finally, the loan
proceeds were used in a ship financing. The ship of course did not have a
permanent locus in another jurisdiction. In these circumstances, the English
court was a convenient forum in which to litigate. The
Prospective Third Affirmative Defense Worms
seeks leave to add a third affirmative defense. He would now allege that the
English judgment is based on a contract entered into by the Bank in violation
of the Trading With the Enemy Act, 50 U.S.C. App. § 1, et seq., and that the
judgment should therefore not be recognized because it was rendered to enforce
an obligation repugnant to the public policy of the State of New York. N.Y. Civ.
Prac. Law and Rules § 5304(b) (4) (McKinney 1978) (A foreign country judgment
need not be recognized if . . . the cause of action on which the judgment is
based is repugnant to the public policy of this state). The
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide that leave to amend the pleadings should
be freely given. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a). Nevertheless, leave to amend should not
be given in circumstances involving undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive
on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments
previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of
allowance of the amendment, futility of amendment, etc. Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S.
178, 182, 9 L. Ed. 2d 222, 83 S. Ct. 227 (1962). Worms
asserts that the defense is offered in good faith and the delay in its
presentation is the result of its late discovery as investigation by counsel
into the law and facts of Plaintiff‘s underlying claim were made in the course
of this litigation. Defendants Memorandum of Law at 2-3. I grant leave to
amend. I
note, however, that on the current state of the record the defense appears to
be frivolous. The Bank asserts that it entered into no contracts in connection
with the personal guarantee agreement other than the loan agreement, the
mortgage agreement and the deed of assignment. The only parties to these
several agreements are Worms, Global, Mutiny and the Bank. Worms is a Dutch
national who resided in London at the time of the transaction and now resides
in New York. Global and Mutiny are both Liberian corporations. The Bank is a
Connecticut corporation and maintains an office in London. So far as I am
aware, the Trading With the Enemy Act does not prohibit the Bank from entering
into these agreements. The liberal amendment policy of
the Federal Rules was not intended to allow a party to circumvent the effects
of summary judgment by amending the [pleading] every time a termination of the
action threatens. The time must arrive in every case when [a party opposing
summary judgment] must demonstrate that there is a genuine issue for trial or
have summary judgment rendered against him. Glesenkamp
v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., 71 F.R.D. 1, 4 (N.D. Cal.
1974) Worms is entitled to have his defense adjudicated on the merits. He is
not, however, entitled to delay the Bank‘s enforcement of its judgment by the
assertion at this late date of a frivolous defense. An
order will be entered as of October 22, 1982, granting the plaintiffs motion
for summary judgment unless prior to that time Worms produces evidence
sufficient to raise a substantial question as to the viability of his third
affirmative defense.4 SO
ORDERED. 1 The mortgage agreement provides that certain of
its terms are governed by Panamanian law and that the agreement is otherwise
governed by English law. 2 The solicitors first sought leave to withdraw in
a petition submitted on December 4, 1981. That petition was granted by order
dated December 11, 1981. Thereafter, Worms apparently remitted funds and
instructions to them and they reappeared and obtained an order providing Worms
with an extension of time to answer. Worms then failed to pay and instruct the
solicitors a second time, prompting them eventually to move on February 1,
1982, to withdraw from the case. 3 Worms could have answered either by paying his
solicitors or by making alternative arrangements. He did neither. Worms now
contends that he failed to act because he could not afford attorneys fees. That
fact, however, even if true, does not affect his due process claim. Worms could
have personally attempted to obtain from the English court an additional
extension of time to enable him to arrange a means through which to pay his
English counsel and thereby protect his interest in the $550,000 litigation.
But he did not. Furthermore, Worms was not a hapless worker threatened with
the loss of his job. He was a sophisticated businessman, well able to defend
[his] interests in court, as this litigation amply shows. United States v.
Bedford Associates, 657 F.2d 1300, 1314 n. 13
(2d Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 456 U.S. 914,
102 S. Ct. 1767, 72 L. Ed. 2d 173, 50 U.S.L.W. 3802 (1982). Significantly,
Worms was able to secure counsel in this litigation. 4 Worms is of course also free to submit memoranda in support of his defense. |