Huzhou Chuangtai Rongyuan Investment Management Partnership et al v. Qin

  1. May 10, 2023

    Investors Say Movie Tycoon Owes Them $161K In Fees

    Several investors who convinced a New York judge to enforce a $457 million arbitral award against a Chinese entertainment tycoon have asked the judge to make him pay an additional $161,000 in attorney fees, saying he wasted their attorneys' time and ignored court orders.

  2. April 03, 2023

    Chinese Cinema Owner Loses Bid To Undo $457M Award

    A New York federal judge will not reconsider a Chinese movie theater company owner's motion that she reconsider her award of approximately $457 million to three investors, ruling that the owner failed to convince her that he wasn't properly notified about the arbitration.

  3. February 15, 2023

    Cinema Investors Seek Sanctions In $457M Award Fight

    A group of investors trying to enforce a $457 million arbitral award against a Chinese entertainment tycoon urged a New York judge to sanction him for ducking their efforts to pin down his assets in the months since the court confirmed the award last fall.

  4. November 09, 2022

    Chinese Cinema Owner Says $457M Award Can't Be Enforced

    A Chinese movie theater company owner has urged a New York federal judge to reconsider her award of approximately $457 million to three investors that say they were burned in a failed initial public offering, saying she wrongly found that he was properly notified about the arbitration.

  5. September 28, 2022

    Chinese Movie Theater Co. Must Pay $457M Award, Court Says

    A federal judge in Manhattan said the owner of a Chinese movie theater company must dole out more than $457 million to three investors that say they were burned in a failed IPO, rejecting a slew of objections, including a fraud allegation, that he claimed should nullify the arbitral award.

  6. April 06, 2022

    Chinese Movie Theater Award Can't Be Enforced, Court Hears

    A businessman is calling on a New York court not to enforce an allegedly illegal arbitral award obligating him to pay nearly a half-billion dollars to a trio of investors in his Chinese movie theater company following a failed IPO, arguing Tuesday that it's based on a fraud.