Categories · Lawsuits
USA, by State · Florida
non-USA, by Country · Honduras
· Belize
· Ecuador
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Jump to full article: Law.com, 2003-08-20 Author: Richmond Eustis / Fulton County Daily Report
Intro: Lawyers for five U.S. tobacco companies have persuaded the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to adopt a 225-year-old common law principle that bars three Latin American countries from suing them in U.S. courts.
That principle, called the revenue rule, prohibits one country from trying to enforce its own revenue laws in another country's courts.
In the defense's brief, Goodwin Proctor's Kenneth J. Parsigian, who represented the tobacco companies, cited cases from 225 years of Anglo-American jurisprudence
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Categories · Lawsuits
· Cross-Border/Crime
USA, by State · Florida
non-USA, by Country · Honduras
· Belize
· Ecuador
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Jump to full article: AP, 2003-08-18 Author: CATHERINE WILSON, AP Business Writer
Intro: Tobacco manufacturers have won an appeal challenging lawsuits by the governments of Belize, Ecuador and Honduras that claim the companies conspired to smuggle cigarettes into their countries to boost profits and evade taxes.
The racketeering suits against Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds, Brown & Williamson, Lorillard and Liggett boil down to attempts to enforce foreign tax claims in U.S. courts, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decided, upholding an earlier ruling by a Miami federal judge throwing out the lawsuit.
The court ruled that the strategy violates 18th century English common law and cannot be pursued. The ruling Friday did not address whether the companies smuggled cigarettes.
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Categories · Lawsuits
non-USA, by Country · Honduras
· Belize
|
Jump to full article: Reuters, 2001-05-08 Author: Michael Connor
Intro: Honduras and Belize, already trying to force U.S. cigarette makers to pay the healthcare costs of sick smokers, on Tuesday claimed in lawsuits that the companies systematically smuggled tobacco to avoid duties and taxes.
The U.S. lawsuits seek unspecified billions of dollars in damages and allege that Philip Morris Cos. Inc., the maker of Marlboros, and the No. 2 U.S. cigarette group, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc., participated in rings organized to avoid taxes. The suits also ask that the practices stop.
The suits allege the defendants violated laws by participating in a smuggling ring that shipped tobacco products from the two Central American nations as tax-free exports and then re-imported them as a way of beating taxes and duties. . .
In addition to the new tax claims by Honduras and Belize, which have health-costs suits against tobacco companies pending in Florida courts, 14 Brazilian state and city governments also filed suits that seek damages from the cigarette makers for treating sick smokers.
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