RICHARD W. ROBERTS, District Judge.
Plaintiff Salah Osseiran brought a claim for breach of a confidentiality agreement against the International Finance Corporation ("IFC"), alleging that IFC disclosed to an unauthorized party that Osseiran was negotiating to buy certain bank shares from IFC.
Having observed and listened to the witnesses and assessed their credibility, and having considered all the evidence and the parties' post-trial submissions, I make the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.
Osseiran showed by a preponderance of the evidence that IFC breached the confidentiality
Van Bilsen testified that Osseiran did not say he wanted to achieve 51% ownership or sole control of MECG or that he wanted to buy anyone else's shares, and that Osseiran said only that he wanted to buy the MECG shares from IFC and Barclays and would convince the other shareholders to go along with a new direction for MECG. Van Bilsen Test., 5/3 a.m. Tr. 124:8-13; van Bilsen Test., 5/3 p.m. Tr. 18:20-19:13; Pl.'s Ex. 134, van Bilsen Dep. 9/2/09 at 22:5-12 (5/3 a.m. Tr. 36:19-24); see Pl.'s Ex. 3 at 443.
I credit Osseiran as the more reliable historian concerning the September 5, 2005 telephone conversation. First, in observing and listening to Osseiran during his testimony, I developed the same impression of Osseiran as van Bilsen said he had during the negotiations, namely, that Osseiran was professional, businesslike, and genuine and that he stuck to his word. Van Bilsen Test., 5/1 p.m. Tr. 36:16-37:13 (citing Pl.'s Ex. 45 at 757). I did not view him as the incredible fabricator that IFC argued that he is. Further, it makes far more sense that Osseiran would have sought to gain control in order to change the direction of the company than to merely gain a larger minority interest and try to persuade the remaining majority to go along with his change in direction for the company. Van Bilsen's explanation that he would have included Osseiran's control goal in his internal memo to his superior if Osseiran had stated such a goal because it would have affected other shareholders, van Bilsen Test., 5/3 a.m. Tr. 124:14-125:5, is far less persuasive proof that Osseiran did not mention control than Osseiran's natural inclination to mention his control goal is compelling proof that he did mention the goal. Even IFC's internal memorandum corroborates Osseiran's claim that he told that to van Bilsen. Walid Cherif, van Bilsen's IFC colleague, drafted a memorandum which stated:
Pl.'s Ex. 22 at 438 (emphasis original). It is unlikely that this declaration of Osseiran's intent was invented rather than having been stated by Osseiran. This is especially so since van Bilsen clarified in his testimony that this language in Cherif's draft memorandum that van Bilsen deleted in a re-draft was incorrect only in that Osseiran's purchase of MECG shares from IFC and Barclay's would not have gained him control, not that Osseiran was not seeking control. Van Bilsen Test., 5/2 a.m. Tr. 42:17-44:14. It makes less sense for Osseiran to have sought less than 50% of the shares of a failing company losing money every day and have no other aspiration than to hope that the other shareholders would go along with his plans. It also does not make sense for him to have had this plan and hid it or not mentioned it to van Bilsen. Moreover, it is far more likely that an investor intent upon gaining control of a company would have been more attentive and would recall with great accuracy details of his own opening bid valued at approximately $1 million than would a manager of approximately 85 projects in 20 countries with a total portfolio of "around a billion dollars" with business ranging from less than a million to "40, 50, 60 million" dollars in a division holding around 1,300 portfolios who viewed the MECG investment as comparatively "small". Van Bilsen Test., 5/3 a.m. Tr. 113:1-23; Khambata Test., 5/1 a.m. Tr. 69:8-11.
The circumstances leading to the court's disposition in Tsintolas are far afield from those present in this case. The evidence here reflects no carelessness or passivity by Osseiran, the sponsor of the confidentiality requirement, before van Bilsen disclosed to Khairallah the confidential negotiations. To the contrary, Osseiran's insistence upon confidentiality up through that point had been firm and unwavering. Further, every detail of the Tsintolas agreement was available to the public at large the very day the settlement was revealed in court. By contrast, Khairallah disclaimed knowing of any offer by Osseiran when van Bilsen told Khairallah on October 19, 2005, that IFC was negotiating with Osseiran over IFC's MECG shares. Nor did Khairallah appear to know, before van Bilsen disclosed to him on November 11, 2005, that IFC was seriously considering Osseiran's offer, or that IFC's posture was changing from keeping its options open to being inclined to accept Osseiran's offer. Tsintolas does not absolve IFC of having had an obligation of confidentiality up through November of 2005.