Court Opinion

ID: 4650549
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-11 22:02:21.063126+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:33.778004
License: Public Domain

Filed 1/11/21
                        CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                 DIVISION ONE

                           STATE OF CALIFORNIA

ZHI AN WANG et al.,                         D076591

       Plaintiffs and Appellants,

       v.                                   (Super. Ct. No. 37-2018-
                                            00063990)
SHIMIN FANG et al.,

       Defendants and Respondents.

       APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Randa Trapp, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part.

       Bradley & Gmelich, Barry A. Bradley, Lily Nhan and Dawn Cushman,
for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
       Skane Wilcox, Elizabeth A. Skane and Ronald J. Lauter, for
Defendants and Respondents.
       Plaintiffs Zhi An Wang, Yu Liu, Bo Xu, Yanhong Sun, Yong Li, Tao
Chen, Lina Tao, Bin Qu, Qingjiang Li, Tao Jing, Xingchuan Wu, Jun Shi, Ke
Zhang, Zhuo Xiao, and Yugang Xie (sometimes collectively, plaintiffs) appeal
the order granting the motion of defendants Shimin Fang and his spouse,
Juhua Liu (sometimes collectively, defendants), to dismiss plaintiffs’
complaint on the grounds of forum non conveniens (motion). Fang and Juhua
Liu reside in San Diego County. Plaintiffs all reside in the People’s Republic
of China.
      On appeal, plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in granting the
motion because its finding that China was a suitable alternative forum for
the litigation was not supported by substantial evidence. Plaintiffs
alternatively contend that even if China is a suitable forum, the court abused
its discretion by dismissing their action rather than merely staying it to
ensure the case can proceed in China.
      As we explain, we conclude substantial evidence supports the court’s
finding that China is a suitable forum. However, we agree with plaintiffs
that in the interest of justice, the case should be stayed and not dismissed,
with the court to retain jurisdiction over the matter pending the outcome of
the case in China.

                FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL OVERVIEW 1
      The Complaint
      In about 1994, Fang created a website in China that published articles
and other content regarding purported examples of fraud, corruption, and
bureaucratic inefficiency affecting the scientific and academic communities in
China. In about 2005, Fang publicly criticized a urologist who claimed to
have a developed a treatment for a rare disease. A year later, the urologist
sued Fang. A Chinese court “awarded judgment against Fang who never
accepted the court’s judgment in that lawsuit.” In 2010, Fang was attacked
by individuals purportedly hired by the urologist as revenge for his public
criticism of the doctor.

1    This summary is primarily derived from the allegations in plaintiffs’
complaint, many of which are based on “information and belief.”

                                        2
      As a result of the attack, which Fang claimed was an attempt on his

life, the complaint alleges he and attorney Jian Peng 2 established a business
entity in China with a “form unknown” called “Personal Safety Foundation
for Scientific Anti-Fraud Individuals” (Foundation). The Foundation, which

also is a named defendant in this case, 3 is solely owned and operated by, and
the alter ego of, defendants. The mission of the Foundation was to raise
money to “protect individuals in scientific and academic fields, and in the
general public, who may face bodily harm for exposing and criticizing acts of
scientific and academic fraud” in China. Fang used the alleged assault
against him to solicit donations in China.
      Fang used the Foundation’s website among other methods to obtain
donations. Fang represented that donated funds “would be used solely for
the protection of the personal safety of individuals engaged in anti-fraud
activities”; that funds donated to the Foundation “would be made available to
beneficiaries that included journalists, writers, researchers, and other
individuals who exposed fraud and plagiarism in the scientific community,
and who faced threats of harassment and physical harm as a result of
making such criticisms”; and that any such awards could be used by
recipients for the “purpose of protecting their personal safety.”
      Fang, as an inducement to obtain donations, “publicly represented that
no monies collected to fund the FOUNDATION would be used to pay for
personal living expenses or work expenses of any individual, and specifically
represented to potential donors and the general public that Peng would not
withdraw any money from the fund for either his own personal compensation

2     Peng is not a party in this lawsuit.

3    The Foundation was not a party to the motion. It thus appears the
Foundation has not yet appeared in the action.
                                       3
or for Fang’s own personal use.” Fang also represented to potential donors
that a formal organization, with a board of directors, would be formed to
manage the money raised by the Foundation. However, the complaint alleges
no such organization was formed, allowing “Fang and Defendants to use the
funds without oversight.”
      During about an eight-year period, the Foundation collected donations
from “several thousand donors” including plaintiffs. The complaint alleges
plaintiffs’ contributions totaled a minimum of at least 6,000,000 RMB (i.e.,
Ren Min Bi, or the official currency of China, also referred to as the “yuan”),
which equated to about $872,000.00 U.S. dollars. The complaint includes the
amounts each plaintiff donated to the Foundation. These donations ranged
from 3,000,000 RMB, or about $436,046 by plaintiff Bo Xu, to 10 RMB, or
about $1.45 by plaintiff Bin Qu. All plaintiffs other than Zhi An Wang are
alleged to have made donations in some amount to the Foundation.
      The complaint alleges the Foundation “has made no grants or other
awards of . . . funds to any applicant at any time, other than to Fang, Juhua
Liu, and their family members,” despite receiving multiple requests for
grants from “journalists (including [plaintiff Zhi An] WANG), scientists,
researchers, and other ‘whistleblowers’ seeking to expose acts of fraud,
corruption, and other unethical behavior in the scientific, academic, and
government communities in China.” Defendants instead misused Foundation
funds “for personal transactions” in contravention of the stated mission and
purpose of the Foundation.
      These personal transactions included purchasing in 2014 a single-
family home in San Diego County valued in excess of $850,000; giving Peng
about $159,900 in 2014 so he could purchase his own home in Beijing; buying
two automobiles once defendants relocated to California; and paying “Peng’s

                                       4
unsuccessful defense against a lawsuit in China alleging fraud and
misappropriation of Foundation funds by Peng, as well as Fang’s defenses of
multiple personal lawsuits in China”; among many other unauthorized
expenditures of Foundation funds.

      The complaint also alleges Fang defamed Zhi An Wang, 4 a “prominent
investigative journalist,” after he and others published several investigative
reports “online and in print media” highlighting the “gross misuse” of
Foundation funds by defendants. Fang allegedly made public statements
“falsely accusing Wang of making inaccurate statements regarding Fang’s
misconduct”; and publicly disclosed Wang’s home address, and otherwise
verbally insulted him.
      The complaint states causes of action against defendants for fraud;
negligent misrepresentation; breach of contract and/or breach of the covenant
of good faith and fair dealing; unfair competition; conversion; unjust
enrichment; an accounting; and declaratory relief. The complaint further
states this lawsuit is brought to “reimburse Plaintiffs for the significant sums
they invested in the Foundation, which in reality was a scheme intended to
defraud Plaintiffs and others.” Plaintiffs in their prayer for relief sought
general and special damages, as well as punitive damages, prejudgment
interest, and attorney fees.
      Defendants’ Motion and Plaintiffs’ Opposition
      Defendants in their motion argued the complaint should be dismissed
on the ground of inconvenient forum because the matter should be litigated
in China, where all plaintiffs reside and where the Foundation is located.
Defendants stated that they travel to China from “time-to-time, and they

4    The complaint, however, notes plaintiffs are not seeking recovery on a
defamation theory.
                                        5
have no objection to submitting themselves to jurisdiction of the courts in
China for the matters alleged in the complaint”; that they have authorized an
attorney in China to accept service of process on their behalf; and that certain
plaintiffs in the present case, including Bo Xu, already had litigated their
reimbursement claims in China.
      Fang in his declaration stated under penalty of perjury that neither he
nor his wife Juhua Liu formed the Foundation, and neither of them “ever
owned, operated, or controlled [it]”; that the Foundation is located in China
and has no presence in California; that in China his agent for service of
process and legal representative is attorney Shaohua Wang of the Beijing
Jingyue law firm; and that Fang was a party to “several litigated cases in the
courts of Beijing, China, including winning a defamation case against Zhi An
Wang, the first-named plaintiff . . ., and a pending lawsuit in which [Fang
was] suing the same plaintiff.”
      Shaohua Wang declared under penalty of perjury that he was a senior
partner at “Beijing Jingyue Lawfirm” in Beijing; that since 1996, he has been
licensed to practice law in China; that as such, he was “familiar with Chinese
laws pertaining to jurisdiction of Chinese courts over civil actions”; and that
based on his review of the complaint in this case, the “courts in China are
available, and there are no legal impediments to the plaintiffs seeking
damages in China against the defendants.”
      Shaohua Wang further declared that plaintiffs’ lawsuit can be brought
in China “because the underlying disputes relate to contracts between a
Chinese foundation and its Chinese donors”; and that defendants Fang and
Juhua Liu “have designated [him] as their legal representative in China, and
they have authorized [him] to accept service of process on their behalf.”

                                       6
      Defendants’ motion also included the declaration of Zhiqiang Xu. His
declaration was translated from Chinese into English by a member of the
American Translators Association. Zhiqiang Xu declared he was the
manager of the Foundation; the Foundation and all of its funds were located
in China; and neither Fang nor Juhua Liu formed the Foundation, or owned,
operated, or controlled it.
      Zhiqiang Xu further declared the following plaintiffs already had
litigated in China certain of the matters alleged in the complaint, and
described the outcomes as follows:
      * Yu Liu—complaint filed on November 16, 2015 against Peng, the
former manager of the Foundation, in the “Chaoyang People’s Court of
Beijing”; the court on December 20, 2018 ordered Peng to reimburse Yu Liu
in the amount of about $15,000;
      * Tao Jing—complaint filed in December 2015 also against Peng in the
Beijing Dongcheng District Court seeking the return of about $1,400; the
court held a hearing on June 2, 2016, but had not yet rendered a decision;
      * Yanhong Sun—complaint filed against Peng on June 22, 2016 also in
the Beijing Dongcheng District court, seeking return of about $7,400; the
court held a hearing on October 11, 2017, but had not yet rendered a decision;
and
      * Bo Xu—complaint filed against Peng and others in in the Chaoyang
People’s Court of Beijing; the court in a detailed, multipage judgment
(translated into English and attached to Zhiqiang Xu’s declaration) ordered
Peng to return with interest about $443,000 to Bo Xu within seven days after
the judgment became effective.

                                       7
      As relevant here, 5 plaintiffs in their opposition argued defendants
failed to meet their burden to show China was a suitable forum for this
lawsuit, claiming defendants failed to offer any substantive analysis or
argument of Chinese law on the issue of suitability. Plaintiffs also argued
defendants failed to explain the significance of the prior lawsuits in China
involving certain plaintiffs and the Foundation, and how such lawsuits were
germane to enforce in this action a potential judgment against defendants
and their assets in California. Plaintiffs also filed myriad objections to
portions of the declarations of Fang, Shaohua Wang, and Zhiqiang Xu,
including on the grounds of hearsay, lack of foundation, and improper expert

opinion. 6
      Defendants in reply argued China was a suitable forum to resolve
plaintiffs’ complaint. They reiterated that the cases of plaintiffs Bo Xu and
Yi Liu already had been resolved by Chinese courts, as noted in Zhiqiang
Xu’s declaration and the attachment thereto. Defendants further noted these
plaintiffs were the two biggest donors identified in the complaint, as their
collective donations comprised about 97 percent of those listed by plaintiffs.
Defendants also argued China was a suitable forum because the “defendant
foundation, its donations, its donors, its managers, and its transactions are

5     In the trial court, plaintiffs also opposed the motion by arguing the
private and public interests favored keeping the action in California.
Plaintiffs, however, have abandoned this argument on appeal.

6     From the record, it does not appear the court ever ruled on plaintiffs’
objections. Nor do plaintiffs’ raise this issue on appeal. We thus deem the
issue forfeited. (See Flatley v. Mauro (2006) 39 Cal.4th 299, 306–307, fn. 4
[noting the failure to request a ruling on written evidentiary objections
waives the objections and forfeits the issue for appeal].)
                                        8
all in China”; and therefore, that this case was “a matter for the courts in
China, to be resolved under Chinese law.”
      In support of their reply, defendants submitted a supplemental
declaration by Fang in which he declared under penalty of perjury that he
and Juhua Liu had purchased their home in San Diego County in October
2013, as shown by an attached buyer’s settlement statement; and that Bo Xu
had not made his donation to the Foundation until January 13, 2014, as
referenced by the Chinese court in the (translated) civil judgment attached to
Zhiqiang Xu’s declaration.
      Fang further declared that he had independently confirmed that Yu
Liu also had obtained a judgment for the return of his donation, as previously
attested to by Zhiqiang Xu. Fang stated the judgment rendered by the
Beijing court in favor of Yu Liu was a matter of public record in China. A
copy of the judgment was attached as an exhibit to Fang’s supplemental

declaration. 7
      Plaintiffs responded to defendants’ reply by submitting the declarations
of Chuan-Guo Xiao, M.D. and Ning Tang. Chuan-Guo Xiao in his declaration

“certif[ied]” 8 to obtaining a money judgment of 30,000 RMB against Fang,

7     The Yu Liu judgment is in Chinese. Defendants requested additional
time to submit a certified English translation of the judgment. The record
does not include a translated version, however.

8     Chuan-Guo Xiao’s declaration was not made under penalty of perjury.

                                       9
which this individual claimed he had been unable to enforce in China because

Fang had transferred all of his assets to the United States. 9
      Ning Tang declared she was a Chinese attorney familiar with Chinese
jurisdiction laws in civil cases and was the attorney in China for certain
plaintiffs in the instant action. She opined Fang was not subject to a Chinese
court’s jurisdiction because he was merely a “beneficiary” under the “donation
contract” between Peng and each person who made a contribution to the
Foundation. Ning Tang stated she represented Yanhong Sun, a plaintiff in
the instant case, in China in an action against Peng. She further stated the

Chinese court in that lawsuit had refused to add Fang as a defendant. 10
      Ning Tang also stated that it was “impossible” to file an action against
Fang in China alleging “civil fraudulent conduct” (emphasis in original
omitted); that unlike in California, punitive damages were not recoverable in
China for such misconduct; and that it would be “very hard” to enforce in the
United States any judgment rendered against defendants by a Chinese

court. 11
      Court’s Ruling
      At the May 31, 2019 oral argument, plaintiffs relied on the declaration
of Ning Tang in arguing China was not a suitable alternate forum for this

9     We note that many of the same objections plaintiffs made to
defendants’ evidence in support of the motion would also apply to the
evidence proffered by plaintiffs in opposing that motion. Which brings to
mind the axiom, “What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.”

10    See footnote 9, ante.

11    The day before oral argument on the motion, plaintiffs submitted the
declaration of Haifeng Sun also in response to defendants’ reply. The court,
however, refused to consider this declaration, deeming it untimely.
                                      10
action because the “Chinese court[s had] already said that they do not have
jurisdiction over Mr. Fang.” Plaintiffs noted that Ning Tang was counsel of
record for three of the plaintiffs in the instant case, who had actions against
Peng pending in China; and that because Peng was the “principal” and
“architect” of the Foundation, a Chinese court had already ruled Fang was

not subject to its jurisdiction. 12
      At the very end of oral argument, plaintiffs’ counsel requested the court
stay and not dismiss the case if the court was inclined to follow its tentative
and grant the motion. The court refused to consider this request, instead
responding, “Counsel, you’ve extended your time. Thank you very much.”
      After taking the matter under submission, the court in its June 12,
2019 minute order confirmed its tentative. As relevant here, the court found
China was a suitable alternative forum. Specifically, the court found that
Fang and Juhua Liu in this case had agreed to submit to jurisdiction in
China; and that other cases involving certain plaintiffs seeking
reimbursement of their donations to the Foundation had been decided and/or
were still pending in China. The court thus dismissed the action.
                                      DISCUSSION
      A. Guiding Principles
      Defendants’ motion was based on the common law doctrine of forum

non conveniens, codified in Code of Civil Procedure 13 section 410.30.
Subdivision (a) of this statute provides: “When a court upon motion of a
party or its own motion finds that in the interest of substantial justice an

12    See footnote 9, ante.

13   Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to the Code of Civil
Procedure.
                                          11
action should be heard in a forum outside this state, the court shall stay or
dismiss the action in whole or in part on any conditions that may be just.”
      Forum non conveniens is “an equitable doctrine invoking the
discretionary power of a court to decline to exercise the jurisdiction it has
over a transitory cause of action when it believes that the action may be more
appropriately and justly tried elsewhere.” (Stangvik v. Shiley Inc. (1991) 54
Cal.3d 744, 751 (Stangvik).) “In determining whether to grant a motion
based on forum non conveniens, a court must first determine whether the
alternative forum is a ‘suitable’ place for trial. If it is, the next step is to
consider the private interests of the litigants and the interests of the public in
retaining the action for trial in California.” (Ibid.) “Only if it finds the
alternative forum suitable does the court proceed to the discretionary
exercise of balancing the private interests of the litigants and the interests of
the public in retaining the action in California.” (American Cemwood Corp. v.
American Home Assurance Co. (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 431, 436 (Cemwood).)
      “That the law is less favorable to the plaintiffs in the alternative forum,
or that recovery would be more difficult if not impossible, is irrelevant to the
determination whether the forum is suitable unless ‘the alternative forum
provides no remedy at all.’ ” (Guimei v. General Electric Co. (2009) 172
Cal.App.4th 689, 696 (Guimei), quoting Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 764.)
“The ‘no remedy at all’ exception applies ‘only in “rare circumstances,” such
as where the alternative forum is a foreign country whose courts are ruled by
a dictatorship, so that there is no independent judiciary or due process of
law.’ ” (Guimei, at p. 697 [refusing to find the “ ‘no remedy at all exception’ ”
applicable to the transfer of an action to China].)
      Generally, an alternative forum is suitable if there is jurisdiction and
no statute of limitations bar to hearing the case on the merits. (See

                                         12
Cemwood, supra, 87 Cal.App.4th at pp. 436–437; Shiley Inc. v. Superior
Court (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 126, 132 (Shiley).) “[A] forum is suitable where
an action ‘can be brought,’ although not necessarily won.” (Shiley, at p. 132;
see Boaz v. Boyle & Co. (1995) 40 Cal.App.4th 700, 711 (Boaz) [recognizing a
“forum is suitable if the defendant is amenable to process there, there is no
procedural bar to the ability of courts of the foreign jurisdiction to reach the
issues raised on their merits (or, if there is, the advantage of the bar—
typically, the statute of limitations—is waived by defendants), and
adjudication in the alternative forum is by an independent judiciary applying
what American courts regard, generally, as due process of law”].)
      “On a motion for forum non conveniens, the defendant, as the moving
party, bears the burden of proof. The granting or denial of such a motion is
within the trial court's discretion, and substantial deference is accorded its
determination in this regard.” (Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 751.)
However, the initial determination of whether the alternate forum is suitable
is nondiscretionary. (Cemwood, supra, 87 Cal.App.4th at p. 436; Shiley,
supra, 4 Cal.App.4th at p. 132.) The question of whether the alternative
forum is suitable is a legal question we review de novo. (Cemwood, at p. 436.)
We review a trial court’s findings as to whether a suitable alternative forum
exists for substantial evidence. (See Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 754.)
      Substantial evidence is evidence of ponderable legal significance.
(Bowers v. Bernards (1984) 150 Cal.App.3d 870, 873.) “The trial court, as fact
finder, has the duty to weigh and interpret the evidence and draw reasonable
inferences therefrom. [Citation.] We cannot reweigh the evidence or draw
contrary inferences. [Citations.] We presume the trial court found every fact
and drew every reasonable inference necessary to support its determination.
[Citation.] We cannot reject evidence accepted by the trial court as true

                                       13
unless it is physically impossible or its falsity is obvious without resort to
inference or deduction. [Citation.]” (Guimei, supra, 172 Cal.App.4th at pp.
698–699.)
      B. Analysis
      As plaintiffs point out in their moving papers, defendants did not
stipulate to the jurisdiction of the courts in China. We note, however, there is
no requirement in section 410.30 that a defendant stipulate to the alternative
forum’s jurisdiction as a condition to obtaining relief under this statute. In
our view, a defendant’s agreement in a sworn declaration to be bound to the
jurisdiction of a forum outside California is sufficient.
      Plaintiffs also contend the court erred in granting defendants’ motion
because only Fang expressly agreed to submit to jurisdiction in China.
However, Fang in his declaration stated under penalty of perjury that his
wife Juhua Liu also agreed to be subject to the jurisdiction of the Chinese
courts. In addition, Shaohua Wang in his declaration stated under penalty of
perjury that he was defendants’ legal representative in China and that both
defendants had authorized him to accept service on their behalf. (See Boaz,
supra, 40 Cal.App.4th at. p. 711 [recognizing a “forum is suitable if the
defendant is amenable to process there”].) We thus independently conclude
there is substantial evidence in the record to support the finding that
defendants have voluntarily consented to the jurisdiction of the Chinese
courts. (See Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 751; see also Guimei, supra, 172
Cal.App.4th at pp. 698–699.)
      Moreover, there is ample record evidence to support the finding that
China provides plaintiffs with an adequate remedy. (See Guimei, supra, 172
Cal.App.4th at p. 696 [noting whether the alternative forum is less favorable
to the plaintiffs is “irrelevant” to suitability unless the alternative forum

                                        14
“ ‘provides no remedy at all’ ”].) Indeed, the record shows there already has
been substantial litigation in China involving some of the parties in this
lawsuit, including plaintiffs Tao Jing, Yanhong Sun, Bo Xu, and Yu Liu, the
latter two being the two largest donors identified in the complaint (i.e., about
97 percent of the total donations listed by plaintiffs). As summarized ante,
both Bo Xu and Yu Liu have successfully litigated in China the return of the
donations they made to the Foundation.
      Plaintiffs also contend the court erred in granting the motion because
defendants never agreed to waive any statute of limitations potentially
available to them to bar plaintiffs’ action in China. Plaintiffs rely on
Stangvik and its progeny to support this claim. Plaintiffs therefore contend
the court’s suitability finding is not supported by substantial evidence.
Defendants respond that, although it was their overall burden to establish
suitability (see Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 751), it was up to plaintiffs to
show their action in China would be barred by any applicable statute of
limitations, which burden plaintiffs failed to carry.
      We need not resolve which party had the burden as it pertains to the
waiver of any potential statute of limitations applicable in China. We
independently conclude under the unique facts of this case that there is
sufficient evidence to show there is “no procedural bar” to the ability of the
courts in China to hear and decide this case, which at its core seeks
reimbursement of plaintiffs’ donations to the Foundation as noted ante. (See
Boaz, supra, 40 Cal.App.4th at p. 711.)
      Indeed, as we have just noted, plaintiffs Tao Jing, Yanhong Son, Bo Xu,
and Yu Liu have already been in litigation in China regarding the donations
they made to the Foundation. In addition, defendant Fang has been in
litigation with plaintiff Zhi An Wang in China, including in an ongoing case

                                        15
ostensibly regarding certain allegations in the complaint, in which plaintiffs
contend that Fang defamed Wang and disclosed his personal information as
payback for articles Wang wrote and posted about Fang and the Foundation.
Because of the litigation between the parties in China regarding certain of
the claims and allegations in the complaint, we conclude substantial evidence
supports the finding that China is a suitable forum for plaintiffs’ action.
      Our decision neither contravenes section 410.30 nor our high court’s
decision in Stangvik. The Judicial Council comment to section 410.30
provides in part, “[T]he action will not be dismissed unless a suitable
alternative forum is available to the plaintiff [citations]. Because of . . . [this]
factor, the suit will be entertained, no matter how inappropriate the forum
may be, if the defendant cannot be subjected to jurisdiction in other states.
The same will be true if the plaintiff's cause of action would elsewhere be
barred by the statute of limitations, unless the court is willing to accept the
defendant's stipulation that he will not raise this defense in the second state
[citations].” (Judicial Council com., 14 West's Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (1973 ed.)
§ 410.30, pp. 492–493, italics added.)
      Thus, the statute of limitations, and any waiver thereof, in the
alternative forum only becomes an issue if the action in that forum would be
barred, as opposed to might be barred. (See Boaz, supra, 40 Cal.App.4th at p.
711 [recognizing a forum is suitable if “there is no procedural bar to the
ability of courts of the foreign jurisdiction to reach the issues raised on their
merits (or, if there is [as opposed to might be], the advantage of the bar—
typically, the statute of limitations—is waived by defendants (italics in
original added)”].) Here, our record is silent on this issue; there is no
evidence to show plaintiffs’ lawsuit against defendants seeking
reimbursement of their donations would be barred in China. To the contrary,

                                         16
as we have found there is substantial evidence to show otherwise, based on
the number of actions in China seeking relief on certain claims and
allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint.
      Stangvik also does not compel a different result. There, the defendants
moved to stay or dismiss the actions of two families brought on behalf of their
respective decedents who received what plaintiffs claimed were defective
heart valves implanted in Norway and Sweden. (Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d
at pp. 749–750.) The trial court granted the motion, stayed the actions, and
“retained jurisdiction to make such further orders as might become
appropriate.” (Id. at p. 750.)
      In finding it was “clear” that Norway and Sweden were suitable forums
to hear the cases (Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 752), our high court
recognized the defendants had agreed to submit to jurisdiction in Norway or
Sweden “as well as to the tolling of the statute of limitations during the
pendency of the actions in California.” (Ibid.) As noted by the Stangvik
court, the trial court there also imposed myriad other requirements on the
defendants as a condition to granting their motion under section 410.30,
including: complying with discovery orders of the Scandinavian courts;
agreeing at the defendants’ expense to make past and present employees
reasonably available to testify in Sweden and Norway; agreeing to make
documents in the United States available for inspection in Sweden and
Norway; and agreeing to pay any final judgments rendered in the
Scandinavian actions. (Stangvik, at p. 750, fn. 2.)
      We find Stangvik factually inapposite here. Unlike the situation in the
instant case, there was no evidence in Stangvik that certain of the parties
had been previously involved in litigation in the plaintiffs’ home countries

                                        17
involving one or more claims and/or allegations that were included in the
plaintiffs’ actions against the defendants in California.
      In addition, we note Stangvik did not hold that a section 410.30 motion
required the moving party to waive the statute of limitations as a condition to
obtaining relief under the statute. Instead, the case merely pointed out that
doing so, in addition to submitting to the out-of-state forum’s jurisdiction,
“clear[ly]” satisfied the suitability prong before turning to what the court
deemed to be the “second and more difficult question” in its analysis, namely
the private interests of the litigants and the interests of the public in keeping
the action in California. (Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 752.) In our view,
a moving party’s agreement to waive any statute of limitations in an out-of-
state forum is a factor, perhaps an important—and maybe a deciding—factor,
but in the end, only a factor, to be considered by a trial court in determining
whether the alternative forum is suitable for purposes of section 410.30.
      But this does not end our analysis.
      Because defendants did not agree to waive or toll the statute of
limitations during the pendency of the California action, we conclude the
court abused its discretion and thus erred in dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint,
as opposed to merely staying the action pending the outcome of the case in
China. By staying the case and retaining jurisdiction to “make such further
orders as might become appropriate” (see Stangvik, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p.
750), the court can ensure plaintiffs’ action will remain viable in California in
case their action in China is rejected for any reason. (See § 410.30, subd. (a)
[ensuring the granting of a motion under section 410.30 is based on
“conditions” that are “just”].)

                                       18
                                 DISPOSITION
      The court’s order granting defendants’ motion for forum non conveniens
under section 410.30 is modified such that the case is stayed and not
dismissed. This will allow the court to retain jurisdiction over the matter in
case plaintiffs’ action is rejected in China. In all other respects the order is
affirmed. The parties are to bear their own costs of appeal.

                                                            BENKE, Acting P. J.

WE CONCUR:

HALLER, J.

IRION, J.

                                        19