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[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 17-14697
Non-Argument Calendar
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:10-cv-23512-AMS
EITZEN CHEMICAL (SINGAPORE) PTE, LTD.,
EITZEN CHEMICAL (USA), LLC,
EITZEN CHEMICAL A/S,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
versus
CARIB PETROLEUM,
a Bahamian entity,
CARIB PETROLEUM, INC.,
a Florida corp.,
CARLOS H. GAMBOA,
individually,
Defendants-Appellees.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(September 4, 2018)
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Before MARCUS, ROSENBAUM, and BRANCH, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
This is an appeal from a bench trial before a magistrate judge involving
breach of contract claims governed by maritime law. 1 The sole issue in this case is
whether the trial court erred in denying the plaintiffs’ claim seeking to pierce the
corporate veil of the defendant corporation in order to hold the individual owner
and/or a sister corporation liable for the damages awarded based on an alter ego
theory of liability. We affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Carlos Gamboa is the individual owner and operator of both Carib
Petroleum, a Bahamian corporation (“Carib-Bahamas”), and Carib Petroleum, Inc.,
a Florida Corporation (“Carib-Florida”). In December 2009, “Carib Petroleum,”
entered into a maritime contract 2 with Eitzen Chemical A/S, a company that
operates numerous petrochemical shipping vessels used to transport various
chemicals around the world on behalf of different chartering companies. “Carib
Petroleum” was specified in the contract as the charterer, with no distinction as to
whether “Carib Petroleum” referred to Carib-Bahamas or Carib-Florida. Under the
1
Pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 636(c), the parties jointly consented to the jurisdiction of the
magistrate judge to try the case and enter final judgment.
2
In the shipping industry, the initial maritime contracts are referred to as “charter
parties,” and the final contract is a “fixture recap.” However, for purposes of this appeal, we will
use the generic term “contract.”
2
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contract, the vessel MT/GLEN (“the Glen”), commercially operated by Eitzen A/S,
was to transport cargo described, in relevant part, as “5,000 MT of Tecsol (Diesel
without aromatics API abt 33)” from Venezuela to the Dominican Republic.
Tecsol is a solvent or degreaser and is frequently used as a base for paint. The
contract provided for “demurrage” in the amount of $10,000 per day, pro-rated.
Demurrage is an agreed upon amount of liquidated damages for any delays beyond
the anticipated amount of time specified in the contract for loading and unloading
the cargo (“the lay time”).
The Glen successfully loaded the cargo in Venezuela with no issues from
December 12, 2009 to December 15, 2009, and departed for the Dominican
Republic. Notably, there were three bills of lading concerning the cargo on the
Glen—one described the cargo as Tecsol, another described the cargo as a
degreaser solvent, and a third described it as diesel with no mention of Tecsol or
solvent. The Glen arrived in the Dominican Republic on approximately December
22, 2009, and issued a notice of readiness indicating that it was ready to unload the
cargo. However, there was a delay, and the cargo was not unloaded until December
24, and 25, 2009, which exceeded the lay time of 72 hours provided for under the
contract causing Eitzen to incur additional costs.
Subsequently, in June 2010, Eitzen Chemical entered into a second contract
with Carib Petroleum to transport Tecsol from Venezuela to the Dominican
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Republic aboard the vessel Sichem Challenge, which was owned by Eitzen
(Singapore), PTE, Ltd. The cargo was described as “Distillates—max 2 grads wvns
intended cargo is about 5,000 MT of Tecsol (Diesel without aromatics API apt
33).” Again, the contract did not specify which Carib entity was the charterer. On
June 29, 2010, the vessel arrived in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, and began loading
the cargo the next morning. On July 2, 2010, the Venezuelan National Guard
stopped the loading of the cargo, samples of the cargo were taken, and the Sichem
Challenge was detained under the authority of the Venezuelan prosecutor’s office.
At that time, the authorities gave no reason for the halting of the loading of the
cargo, but the vessel’s crew was instructed not to leave the port.
Eitzen retained a protection and indemnity correspondent, Jose Sabatino, to
try to resolve the dispute. Sabatino’s investigation revealed that the Venezuelan
government claimed that tests of the cargo samples indicated that the cargo was
national diesel fuel without the requisite export permit, not Tecsol.3 As a result,
the government initiated a smuggling investigation against the exporter,
Tecnopetrol, and its principal, Javier Bertucci. As part of its investigation, the
government detained the Sichem Challenge, believing it to be an asset of Bertucci
or Tecnopetrol. Over the next several weeks, Sabatino attempted to convince
Venezuelan officials that the Sichem Challenge was not such an asset and filed
3
The Venezuelan government has export controls for certain products and the ability to
regulate exports, including national diesel fuel.
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several petitions for release of the vessel. The prosecutor’s office eventually
ordered that the cargo be discharged, and the cargo was removed from the vessel
between August 27, 2010, and September 2, 2010. The Sichem Challenge left port
the following day.
Thereafter, Eitzen Chemical A/S, Eitzen Chemical (USA), LLC, and Eitzen
Chemical (Singapore) PTE, Ltd. (collectively referred to as “Eitzen”) initiated a
civil suit against Carib-Bahamas, Carib-Florida, and Carlos Gamboa, in his
individual capacity, for breach of contract based on the delay of unloading the
cargo on the Glen and the detention of the Sichem Challenge. In its second-
amended complaint, Eitzen sought demurrage in the amount of $10,659.72 plus
interest, costs, and attorney’s fees for the breach of contract associated with the
delay in unloading the cargo on the Glen (Count 1). Eitzen sought detention
damages4 in the amount of $897,084.19 plus fees and costs for the breach of
contract associated with the detention of the Sichem Challenge from July 2, 2010
to September 4, 2010 (Count 2). Finally, Eitzen sought to pierce the corporate veil
of Carib-Bahamas to hold Carib-Florida and Gamboa, in his individual capacity,
liable for the breach of contract as “alter egos” of Carib-Bahamas (Count 3).
At the bench trial, Luis Tewes testified that he was a broker with Southport
Maritime, Inc., a tanker broker company that makes arrangements between
4
Detention damages are a form of unliquidated damages designed to compensate the
owner for abnormal delays that prevent the vessel from pursuing its normal operation.
5
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shipping vessel owners and businesses needing to charter shipping vessels to
transport goods. Gamboa contacted Tewes in December 2009 about chartering a
vessel to transport Tecsol, which Gamboa described to Tewes as a solvent, and for
“transportation purpose[s], it was like a diesel without aromatics.” In response,
Tewes contacted Eitzen and served as the broker for both of the underlying
contracts. Tewes testified that he knew Gamboa as the representative for “Carib
Petroleum, Inc.,” and that he had brokered several contracts for Carib Petroleum
that pre-dated the formation of Carib-Florida. Tewes was unaware that there was
more than one Carib entity, and he never inquired as to where Carib Petroleum was
incorporated because that was not standard practice in the brokering business,
although he knew Gamboa lived in Miami.
Eitzen’s representative, Casper Cleeman, testified that Eitzen was unaware
that there was more than one Carib entity because Eitzen had no written procedure
for inquiring into the identity of the party chartering its vessels, and it was common
in the trade to rely on the broker to vet the charterer. He acknowledged, however,
that Eitzen did not rely on any belief that the chartering party was Carib-Florida,
and he was unaware of any representation by Gamboa that the chartering entity
was Carib-Florida as opposed to Carib-Bahamas. He acknowledged that there were
multiple bills of lading for the cargo on the Glen that had varying descriptions of
the cargo as “diesel,” “solvent,” and “Tecsol,” but explained that this was of no
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concern to Eitzen as those were all products that the vessel was permitted to
transport.
Gamboa testified, in relevant part, that he is the principal of both
Carib-Bahamas and Carib-Florida and that he controls both entities. He established
Carib-Bahamas in 2002 and Carib-Florida in 2009. Both companies are operated
primarily from either his office or his home in Miami, Florida. The companies do
not have any employees, but there are “agents” that do work for the companies and
are paid a commission for their services. Gamboa explained that Carib-Bahamas
began doing business with Southport prior to the incorporation of Carib-Florida.
When Carib-Bahamas started doing business with Southport, Gamboa completed a
company profile for Southport’s use, which contained information about the
Bahamian entity. He stated that he never informed Southport of the creation of
Carib-Florida because “[t]here was no reason to,” as the only company he uses for
conducting business is the Bahamian entity. He testified that Carib-Bahamas and
Carib-Florida each had separate bank accounts, but, because all of the business is
conducted through Carib-Bahamas, all of the money in the Carib-Florida account
was from the Bahamian entity. He explained that Carib-Florida’s account was
used solely to pay debts on behalf of Carib-Bahamas, as well as to pay some
personal expenses of Gamboa. He confirmed that, when a check was written out
of Carib-Florida’s account, he would get “reimbursement” from Carib-Bahamas’s
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account. Gamboa stated that he was the sole signatory on the accounts and that he
paid some personal expenses from the Carib-Florida account because “that’s where
I generated my funds.”
Gamboa stated that he thought he was buying Tecsol from Tecnopetrol, and
that he had previously bought Tecsol from Tecnopetrol in the past. He explained
that he believed that Tecnopetrol had obtained the appropriate permits to export
Tecsol from Venezuela, but he acknowledged that Bertucci had told him that, in
Latin America, you “have to grease palms” (meaning pay bribes). Gamboa testified
that there were many similarities between Venezuelan national diesel oil and
Tecsol, as Tecsol could be used as a degreaser solvent, which is a distillate,5 and
diesel oil could also be used for this purpose.
With regard to the cargo on the Glen, Gamboa admitted that, after the cargo
was loaded in Venezuela, but before it arrived to its destination, he instructed the
vessel master to change the description of the cargo from Tecsol to “diesel.” He
explained that he requested this change because the cargo was going to be blended
into a diesel once it arrived in the Dominican Republic. He admitted that, if he had
changed the description to diesel before the Glen left Venezuela, it would have
been a problem because Tecnopetrol’s license is for the export of Tecsol. Gamboa
acknowledged that, when dealing with past shipments of Tecsol from Tecnopetrol,
5
Gamboa testified that a “[d]istillate is a broad term for solvents, diesel, [and] marine gas
oil.”
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he had specifically stated “that the product must be referred to as Tecsol (solvent),
and not as a diesel without aromatics.”
Based on the testimony and evidence presented during the bench trial, the
trial court found that Carib-Bahamas and Carib-Florida were separate, sister
corporations with common ownership, and that Carib-Bahamas was the entity that
was a party to the underlying contracts, not Carib-Florida. The trial court found
that “the cargo loaded on the Sichem Challenge was national diesel that
Carib-Bahamas was attempting to smuggle out of Venezuela without the proper
permits.” The trial court also found that “Gamboa knew of the nature of the cargo
he was exporting,” as evidenced by (1) his repeated instructions that the cargo
should not be referred to as diesel; (2) his directions to change the description of
the cargo on the Glen after it left Venezuela; and (3) the fact that he was
responsible for selling the cargo, and, therefore, would have had to know what he
was selling and had purchased and sold the same cargo before. Accordingly, the
trial court ruled, in relevant part, in favor of Eitzen on Counts 1 and 2, concluding
that Carib-Bahamas was liable for the breach of contract damages and awarding
Eitzen a total judgment of $1,110,276.99 against Carib-Bahamas.
However, with respect to Eitzen’s veil-piercing claim in Count 3, the trial
court found that Eitzen had failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that
Carib-Florida should be held liable as the alter ego of the Carib-Bahamas. The
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trial court found that there was a lack of evidence in the record with respect to
many of the alter ego factors. For instance, although the two entities shared a
common address, had common ownership, and Carib-Florida was used to handle
Carib-Bahamas’s financial transactions, the evidence established that the two
entities maintained their separate corporate existences. Both entities had separate
bank accounts, and there was no evidence regarding common business departments
or whether the two entities filed consolidated financial statements or tax returns.
Further, although all of Carib-Florida’s funds were derived from the business of
Carib-Bahamas, there was no evidence regarding whether Carib-Bahamas used the
property of Carib-Florida as its own, or vice versa. The record was also silent as to
whether the business records of the two companies were kept separate. Moreover,
there was no evidence that Carib-Bahamas used Carib-Florida for any fraudulent
purpose or to avoid its liabilities, or that Carib-Florida engaged in any fraudulent
transactions itself. Thus, the trial court concluded that, absent a showing of fraud
in the use of the corporate form itself, it was not sufficient to pierce the corporate
veil of Carib-Bahamas to hold Carib-Florida liable merely because the two
companies shared a common address and common ownership, or because the
function of Carib-Florida was to handle Carib-Bahamas’s financial transactions.
Additionally, the trial court concluded that Eitzen had failed to prove that the
corporate veil should be pierced to hold Gamboa individually liable as an alter ego
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of Carib-Bahamas. The trial court explained that, although the evidence established
that Gamboa dominated and controlled Carib-Bahamas, there was insufficient
evidence to prove that Carib-Bahamas’s corporate form was used for a fraudulent
purpose as required to pierce the corporate veil for a breach of contract. The trial
court acknowledged that Gamboa personally fraudulently misrepresented the cargo
and attempted to smuggle it out of Venezuela, and that generally a corporate
officer is personally liable for tortious conduct, but Eitzen only brought claims for
breach of contract, not substantive fraud counts. 6 Finally, the trial court noted that,
if Eitzen wanted to hold Gamboa personally liable for damages under the contract,
it could have contracted for his liability. Accordingly, the trial court ruled in favor
of Carib-Florida and Gamboa on Count 3.
Following entry of judgment, Eitzen filed a motion for a new trial, arguing
in part that the trial court misapprehended the relevant law concerning piercing of
the corporate veil and failed to apply relevant equity principles. The magistrate
judge denied the motion for a new trial. Eitzen appealed, arguing that the trial
court erred in denying its veil-piercing claim.
6
Eitzen sought to file a third-amended complaint in the trial court to add fraud counts
against Gamboa, but the trial court denied the request as untimely, noting that Eitzen failed to
provide any explanation as to why these claims could not have been raised prior to the deadline
for amending the pleadings.
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II. Discussion
“Whether a corporate entity will be disregarded depends upon the trial
court’s findings of fact.” Talen’s Landing, Inc. v. M/V Venture, II,
656 F.2d 1157,
1160 (5th Cir. 1981). In a bench trial, findings of fact “may not be reversed unless
clearly erroneous.” United States v. Fidelity Capital Corp.,
920 F.2d 827, 836
(11th Cir. 1991). “[A] finding is ‘clearly erroneous’ when although there is
evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the
definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” Anderson v. City
of Bessemer City,
470 U.S. 564, 573 (1985) (quoting United States v. U.S.
Gypsum Co.,
333 U.S. 364, 395 (1948)). Thus, “[i]f the trial court’s account of the
evidence is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety, [we] may not
reverse it even though convinced that had [we] been sitting as the trier of fact, [we]
would have weighed the evidence differently.” Id. at 573-74. We review the trial
court’s application of the law to the findings of fact de novo. Fidelity,
920 F.2d at
836.
Federal common law applies to cases that arise under admiralty jurisdiction.
Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. Kirby,
543 U.S. 14, 23 (2004). Under general principles of
limited liability, creditors only have recourse against the corporate entity that
incurred the liability, not against related corporations or the owner of a
corporation. See Baker v. Raymond Int’l, Inc.,
656 F.2d 173, 179 (5th Cir. 1981).
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In “exceptional circumstances,” however, the courts may disregard the corporate
form and pierce the corporate veil of the corporation in order to hold alter egos of
the corporation liable for the obligations of the corporation. See
id. at 179-80.
“[T]he burden rests on the party seeking to pierce the veil,” and this burden is a
“significant one.” Edwards Co., Inc. v. Monogram Indust., Inc.,
700 F.2d 994, 999
(5th Cir. 1983).
There is no uniform standard test under federal common law for determining
whether an alter ego relationship exists, and courts must instead look to the totality
of the circumstances. United Steelworkers of Am., AFL-CIO-CLC v. Connors
Steel Co.,
855 F.2d 1499, 1506 (11th Cir. 1988) (citing United States v. Jon-T
Chemicals, Inc.,
768 F.2d 686, 691 (5th Cir. 1985)). Thus, “[r]esolution of the
alter ego issue is heavily fact-specific and, as such, is peculiarly within the
province of the trial court.”
Id. (quoting Jon-T Chemicals, Inc.,
768 F.2d at 691).
“[A] finding of control or domination of a corporation by an individual or a
corporate entity and the use of the corporate fiction are necessary prerequisites to
the application of the alter ego theory of liability.” Talen’s Landing,
656 F.2d at 1161 n.6 (quoting Bourdagain Shipping Co. v. Saudi-America Line,
S.A.,
1979 A.M.C. 1058, 1071-72 (E.D. La. 1978)). Once that is established, “it is
appropriate to brush aside the corporate veil when it appears a corporation was
organized for fraudulent purposes, illegality, or wrongdoing.” Id.; see also Jon-T
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Chemicals,
768 F.2d at 692 (explaining that, “in contract cases, fraud is an
essential element of an alter ego finding”). The focus is not on an individual’s
personal misconduct, but on whether the corporate form itself was abused and
whether the misuse of the corporate form constituted the fraud or injustice
complained of in the underlying suit. N.L.R.B. v. Greater Kansas City Roofing,
2 F.3d 1047, 1053 (10th Cir. 1993).
In determining whether a subsidiary is the alter ego of its parent
corporation,7 courts should consider various factors, including whether:
(1) the parent and the subsidiary have common stock ownership;
(2) the parent and the subsidiary have common directors or officers;
(3) the parent and the subsidiary have common business
departments;
(4) the parent and the subsidiary file consolidated financial
statements and tax returns;
(5) the parent finances the subsidiary;
(6) the parent caused the incorporation of the subsidiary;
(7) the subsidiary operates with grossly inadequate capital;
(8) the parent pays the salaries and other expenses of the subsidiary;
7
Notably, Carib-Bahamas and Carib-Florida are not parent-subsidiary corporations, but
sister corporations with common ownership. This Circuit has yet to address whether a corporate
veil may be pierced horizontally between sibling corporations under an alter ego theory of
liability. However, this issue was not raised on appeal. Therefore, we assume, without deciding,
for the purposes of this opinion, that a corporation may be held liable for the debts of a sister
corporation and that the same factors applied in the parent-subsidiary context to determine alter
ego status apply in the sibling corporation context.
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(9) the subsidiary receives no business except that given to it by the
parent;
(10) the parent uses the subsidiary’s property as its own;
(11) the daily operations of the two corporations are not kept separate;
and
(12) the subsidiary does not observe basic corporate formalities, such
as keeping separate books and records and holding shareholder
and board meetings.
Jon-T Chemicals,
768 F.2d at 691-92. It is not necessary that the party seeking to
pierce the corporate veil prove all of the factors, but enough of the factors must
exist to indicate the necessary degree of control by one company over the other to
constitute an alter ego relationship. United Steelworkers,
855 F.2d at 1506. The
fact that two companies have “one-hundred percent” common ownership is, alone,
“an insufficient basis for applying the alter ego theory to pierce the corporate veil.”
Jon-T Chemicals,
768 F.2d at 691.
Eitzen argues that the trial court erred in denying its veil-piercing claim
because there was “ample evidence” that Carib-Florida and Gamboa were the alter
egos of Carib-Bahamas. In particular, Eitzen asserts that the following factors
support the alter ego theory of liability and justify piercing Carib-Bahamas’s
corporate veil: (1) Gamboa owned, operated, and was the principal of, both Carib
entities; (2) both Carib entities operated out of the same office in Miami, Florida;
(3) Carib-Bahamas is undercapitalized; (4) Gamboa testified that “the function of
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Carib-Florida is to receive funds from or on behalf of Carib-Bahamas and monies
owed by Carib-Bahamas and disburse funds to or on behalf of Carlos Gamboa for
personal use”; (5) Gamboa operates and controls both Carib entities and neither
entity has any employees; (6) “[a]s the sole owner, operator and controller of both
Carib entities, it is doubtful that Mr. Gamboa convenes and conducts shareholder
meetings or other corporate formalities”; and (7) Gamboa used one or both of the
entities to commit fraud and wrongdoing by unlawfully attempting to smuggle
diesel out of Venezuela. 8
The trial court’s determination that Eitzen failed to meet its burden of proof
on its veil-piercing claim is supported by the record and the findings of fact.
Although Eitzen presented some evidence in support of its position that
Carib-Florida and/or Gamboa were the alter egos of Carib-Bahamas—namely, that
the business of both Carib entities was conducted from Gamboa’s home; both
Carib entities were owned and operated by Gamboa; all of the money in
Carib-Florida’s account was from Carib-Bahamas’s business transactions,9 and
Carib-Florida was used to pay the expenses and debts of Carib-Bahamas, as well as
8
Although Eitzen asserts that Carib-Bahamas is undercapitalized, there was no evidence
presented at trial regarding the capitalization of either Carib entity. Additionally, Eitzen’s
assertion that it is “doubtful” that Gamboa convenes and conducts shareholder meetings or
observes other corporate formalities is purely speculative and not supported by any of the
evidence submitted at trial.
9
Notably, there was no evidence presented that Carib-Bahamas was fraudulently
transferring all of its money or assets to Carib-Florida in order to defraud creditors, nor was such
an allegation made by Eitzen.
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some of Gamboa’s personal expenses—as the trial court found, there was
insufficient evidence concerning the two companies’ bank records to establish a
comingling of funds or that the corporate form was not observed. Further, with
regard to the payment of some of Gamboa’s personal expenses, no evidence was
presented regarding how the payments to Gamboa were made or whether those
payments were part of his salary or distributions of profits. Similarly, no evidence
was presented that Gamboa improperly treated the funds of Carib-Bahamas as his
own. Moreover, in order to prevail on its claim, Eitzen was required to establish
that the corporate form of Carib-Bahamas itself was abused. In other words,
Eitzen needed to show that Carib-Bahamas was a mere sham or organized to
accomplish a fraudulent or illegal purpose. Talen’s Landing,
656 F.2d at 1161 n.6;
see also Jon-T Chemicals,
768 F.2d at 692 (“[I]n contract cases, fraud is an
essential element of an alter ego finding.” (emphasis added)).
Eitzen maintains that the fraud element was satisfied because the trial court
found that Gamboa knew of the true nature of the cargo and personally
fraudulently misrepresented the cargo in order to facilitate the smuggling of
national diesel fuel out of Venezuela. However, in veil-piercing cases, the focus is
not on an owner’s personal misconduct, but on whether the corporate form itself
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was abused.10 See Greater Kansas City Roofing,
2 F.3d at 1053. In other words,
although Gamboa’s personal fraudulent misconduct may have caused
Carib-Bahamas to breach the underlying conducts, in order to pierce the corporate
veil the fraud complained of had to be the result of the inequitable use of the
corporate form itself. Id.; see also N. Am. Clearing, Inc. v. Brokerage Comput.
Sys., Inc.,
666 F. Supp. 2d 1299, 1307-08 (M.D. Fla. 2009) (explaining that, even
if an officer’s misconduct causes “a corporation to intentionally breach a contract
or commit conversion,” piercing of the corporate veil is not justified unless the
misconduct involved improper use of the corporate form). The evidence presented
at the bench trial established that Carib-Bahamas was a functioning company that
engaged in legitimate business transactions prior to the origination and breach of
the underlying contracts. No evidence was presented that established that Gamboa
failed to observe corporate formalities, or that he was using the corporate form of
Carib-Bahamas to mislead or defraud Eitzen or other creditors. Accordingly,
because Eitzen failed to present sufficient evidence that Carib-Bahamas was
organized for a fraudulent or illegal purpose or that the corporate form itself was
10
In order to hold Gamboa liable for his personal misconduct, Eitzen needed to plead a
substantive fraud count in its complaint, which it did not. See L.C.L. Theatres, Inc. v. Columbia
Pictures Indus., Inc.,
619 F.2d 455, 457 (5th Cir. 1980) (explaining that an individual officer or
other agent of a corporation may be held individually liable when he personally participates in
the tortious conduct that is the subject of the underlying suit). Therefore, Gamboa’s personal
misconduct was not relevant to the determination of whether the corporate veil of
Carib-Bahamas should be pierced in this case.
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misused, the trial court properly denied the veil-piercing claim. 11 Talen’s Landing,
656 F.2d at 1161 n.6.
Finally, Eitzen argues that, in denying its veil-piercing claim, the magistrate
judge failed to apply the equitable principles called for in maritime cases because it
effectively leaves Eitzen without a remedy, as there is no way for it to collect on its
judgment against Carib-Bahamas because all of the money is tied up in the
Carib-Florida account. However, absent some other wrong or injustice that would
result if the corporate veil is not pierced, a creditor’s inability to collect a judgment
alone is insufficient to justify piercing the corporate veil. See Greater Kansas City
Roofing,
2 F.3d at 1053 (explaining that “the mere fact that a corporation is
incapable of paying all its debts is insufficient for a finding of injustice,” as “[t]hat
condition will exist in virtually all cases in which there is an attempt to pierce the
corporate veil” (internal citations omitted)).
11
Eitzen also argues that the denial of Count 3 directly conflicts with the trial court’s
denial of the defendants’ pre-trial motion to dismiss the second-amended complaint for failure to
state a claim, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). This argument is
unpersuasive because a trial court’s determination that a complaint states a facially sufficient
claim to survive a motion to dismiss is not indicative that the claim is necessarily meritorious.
Jackam v. Hosp. Corp. of Am. Mideast, Ltd.,
800 F.2d 1577, 1580 (11th Cir. 1986) (explaining
that, in evaluating a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, the issue is not whether the plaintiff “may
ultimately prevail on [its claim], but whether the allegations are sufficient to allow [the plaintiff]
to conduct discovery in an attempt to prove [its] allegations).
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Accordingly, in light of the findings of fact, the trial court did not err in
denying Eitzen’s veil-piercing claim, and the judgment of the trial court is
AFFIRMED.
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