This week I mediated an interesting dispute between a Chinese
employer and it's former employee, who was an American citizen working
in America for the Company at the time of the termination of his
contract. It was interesting to learn that apparently the remedy in
China for the wrongful termination of an employment agreement is a
maximum of eight weeks of earnings. Here, the remedy may include actual
lost earnings (back pay), front pay for some reasonable period of time
(the reasonable amount of time estimated it will take to find
alternative equivalent employment), emotional distress and attorneys
fees. In California, this often results in even higher settlements when
issues surrounding wage and hours are factored in. In this case, it
amounted to a (confidential) six figure settlement. But that is where
the real cross-cultural challenge began, not ended.
As a student
of International Relations in the 1970's, there simply was no discussion
about concepts like "money laundering" and business ventures with the
New Republic of China. At that time, China was a Communist country
which was not open to conducting business with U.S. citizens. As I
recall, it was not yet open to American tourists either. So it was some
surprise to learn that the Chinese employer here considered the problem
of transferring hundreds of thousands of Chinese Yuan to America in a
lump sum completely daunting. In all likelihood, he believed it would
be held up by the Chinese government and may take many months and great
efforts to get the money out of the Country. On the other hand, there
was so much distrust between the parties that neither one were
comfortable with a protracted payment plan which could be in the maximum
of $10,000.00 USD increments. That seemed to be the magic number which
could fly under the radar of the government and not be flagged for
scrutiny or held up upon transfer.
Ultimately, the creative and
cooperative lawyers, once they arrived at a deal on the settlement of
the case, agreed to using a Chinese escrow. Defendant will put all of
the money into an account, and the escrow will be charged with sending
the funds over a period of months until fully paid directly to the
Plaintiff's lawyer. The use of a trustworthy neutral third party is,
of course in my view, brilliant!
I offer this as a lesson in
cross-cultural negotiation in an arena that I have never had to delve
into before. What creative ways have you developed to move money from
one currency and country to another safely and legally?