Italian Investor's Restaurant Purchase Dispute Resolved in Suzhou Court

An Italian chef bought a restaurant in Suzhou for 500,000 RMB from compatriots in 2022 but withheld payment, citing undisclosed unpaid capital. After a lawsuit and appeal, the Suzhou Intermediate People's Court mediated a settlement in December 2025, involving installment payments and an apology, ending the three-year dispute.

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Source: OT-Team(G), 最高人民法院

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On February 10, an Italian national identified as "Lao Yi" traveled to the Suzhou Intermediate People's Court to personally express his gratitude to judges in its foreign-related commercial tribunal, following the successful mediation of a long-running business dispute involving an Italian-owned restaurant in eastern China.

  • From Italian Cuisine to Corporate Conflict

The case traces back to 2017, when an Italian father and daughter, referred to as "Lao Su" and "Xiao Su," established a foreign-invested company in Suzhou, located in Jiangsu, China. With registered capital of €50,000, each held a 50% stake. Their business centered on operating an authentic Italian restaurant.

As operating pressures grew and long-term residence in China became impractical, the pair decided to transfer their shares to Lao Yi, a fellow Italian and experienced chef who had worked at the restaurant for years.

In June 2022, the three parties signed a bilingual Chinese-English equity transfer agreement. The contract stipulated that Lao Yi would acquire all shares for RMB 500,000. Notably, the agreement contained a jurisdiction clause stating that disputes should first be resolved through negotiation and, failing that, be brought before the people's court where the company was registered — a provision that later proved decisive.

According to presiding judge Han Xiaoan, deputy chief judge of the Suzhou International Commercial Court, the parties' choice reflected more than convenience. Having lived and conducted business in Suzhou for years, they had developed strong trust in the Chinese judicial system.

  • Payment Dispute Emerges

Following the agreement, share registration changes and operational handovers were completed smoothly. However, after the payment deadline passed, Lao Yi failed to pay the agreed transfer price.

"We repeatedly contacted him, and he always said the restaurant was struggling financially," Xiao Su later recalled. "We had no choice but to file a lawsuit."

In early 2024, the father and daughter sued, seeking payment of RMB 500,000 plus overdue interest. The first-instance court ruled in their favor.

Lao Yi immediately appealed, arguing that the sellers had failed to disclose a crucial fact: the registered capital had not actually been paid in by the original shareholders before the December 31, 2020 deadline. After acquiring the company, he said, he personally contributed the €50,000 capital — equivalent to roughly RMB 370,000 — and believed this amount should be deducted from the transfer price.

The sellers rejected the allegation, insisting the unpaid contribution had been disclosed during negotiations. During the second-instance proceedings, Lao Yi submitted more than 20 pieces of additional evidence, while mounting legal costs and unfamiliar procedures placed increasing pressure on both sides.

  • Mediation as the Practical Solution

Judge Han and the judicial team concluded that the dispute was not irreconcilable. Lao Yi's non-payment was not malicious; the restaurant faced genuine operational difficulties, and his understanding of Chinese company law — particularly rules governing shareholder capital contributions and equity transfers — was limited. Meanwhile, even with a favorable judgment, enforcement could prove difficult for the sellers.

Mediation, the court determined, offered the most practical path to a substantive resolution.

The judges conducted multiple rounds of communication. They explained relevant provisions of Chinese company law to Lao Yi and clarified the legal reasoning behind the first-instance judgment, while also encouraging the father and daughter to consider his financial circumstances. Given that the restaurant had already ceased operations and Lao Yi's income was limited, the court guided the parties toward a structured installment payment plan.

  • Settlement After Three Years

On December 30, 2025, the three Italians met again under the court's coordination. The tense atmosphere that had characterized earlier proceedings gave way to candid discussion.

Lao Yi offered a formal apology and proposed paying the remaining amount in three installments after deducting certain agreed expenses. He made the first payment on the same day. The sellers accepted the arrangement, and all parties signed the settlement agreement, bringing a dispute that had lasted nearly three years to an end.

The case highlights the growing role of Chinese courts in resolving foreign-related commercial disputes and illustrates how mediation, alongside adjudication, can provide practical solutions in cross-border business conflicts where legal, cultural, and operational challenges intersect.

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New China Psychiatric Hospitals Exposed in Insurance Fraud Scam

Summary: An investigation reveals psychiatric hospitals in Hubei province recruiting healthy people as fake patients to fraudulently claim public medical insurance funds. Patients receive little to no treatment while hospitals bill for fabricated procedures.




A number of psychiatric hospitals in central China have been exposed over a scam in which they lure healthy people to become patients in a bid to defraud the public medical insurance scheme.

According to an undercover report by the Beijing News, most of the patients in such privately run psychiatric institutions in Xiangyang, Hubei province, do not show any abnormal behaviour and receive little treatment.

The healthy individuals told the newspaper that they stayed there because of a "free hospitalisation, free living costs" promise on offer.

In China, patients have to bear a percentage of their medical bills; public insurance covers the rest.


Many of the so-called patients, like those above, have little idea what is going on. Photo: bjnews
Many of the so-called patients, like those above, have little idea what is going on. Photo: bjnews


After they are admitted, they become cash cows for the hospital because the institutions use their personal information and fabricate medical treatments to swindle funds from the medical insurance scheme, the report said.

There are more than 20 psychiatric hospitals in Xiangyang, a city with a population of 5.3 million. Most of them opened in recent years.

When the reporter posed as a relative of a patient and checked with over 10 psychiatric centres, all of them told him that they would not charge the patient anything and that he was only required to pay a small amount for living costs.

"What we hope is that your relative can live here for a long period of time," one worker told the reporter. "He can live here for however long he wants."


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A group of "mentally ill" men play cards in one of the hospitals implicated in the scam. Photo: bjnews


In early December, the reporter was recruited as a nurse at Xiangyang Hongan Psychiatric Hospital, which opened last summer and accommodates about 50 patients.

Most of the patients have zero or very light symptoms, a senior nurse told him.

Some patients in their 70s are not able to move around independently.

"They are tended by us. They regard our hospital as a nursing centre because it is much cheaper than ordinary nursing homes," said the senior nurse.

Another nurse who worked alongside the undercover reporter said he was also "hospitalised" and his personal information has been retained by the institution's patient system.


A cramped ward in one of the institutions which are now under investigation by the authorities. Photo: bjnews
A cramped ward in one of the institutions which are now under investigation by the authorities. Photo: bjnews


"I do not need to take any medicine or receive any treatment. I can enter and leave the hospital freely. I work as normally as others," he was quoted as saying. "I cooperated with them to cheat the insurance authority ."

In the hospital's inpatient charging system, the reporter found a patient who stayed for 90 days was required to pay 12,426 yuan (US$1,800).

This included only 500 yuan (US$70) for medication and expenses of more than 6,000 yuan (US$900) for various treatments.

However, the patient told the reporter that he only took the medicine and had never heard of the treatments.

"I only had the medicine every day, without even having an injection. It is like staying at home," said the patient.

Medical equipment at this hospital is scarce, a doctor told the reporter.

Many of the psychiatric institutions in Xiangyang apply to the medical insurance authority saying that they charge a patient a medical treatment fee of 130 yuan (US$20) a day.

"The hospitals will be compensated by the insurance for this amount. So the more patients and the longer they stay in hospitals, the more money they can make," another hospital employee said.


A patient lies strapped to a bed in one of the hospitals. They are usually allowed little contact with their families. Photo: bjnews
A patient lies strapped to a bed in one of the hospitals. They are usually allowed little contact with their families. Photo: bjnews


Hospitals award their staffers between 400 and 1,000 yuan (US$60 and US$145) commission for recruiting each new patient.

The reporter also found nurses at Hongan hospital often slapped patients in the face, kicked them and beat them with a water pipe.

In Yiling Caring Hospital in Yichang, a city near Xiangyang, where the reporter performed a stint as a nurse, the insurance fraud and beatings of patients also occurred.

Both hospitals seized patients' mobile phones and limited their time communicating with their families.

Hospital workers tried every means to prevent patients from being discharged.

A patient who stayed at Yiling hospital for five years told the reporter: "The rules here are strict. I have no freedom. It feels like I have been in jail for five years."




Source: 

Editor: Crystal H


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