Wolstenholme Ex Rel. Louisiana Composite Technologies, Inc. v. Bartels , 511 F. App'x 215 ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                  NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 11-3767
    _____________
    EUGENE WOLSTENHOLME,
    Individually and Derivatively on Behalf of Louisiana Composite
    Technologies, Inc. and Its Subsidiaries,
    Appellant
    v.
    JOSEPH BARTELS
    _____________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (No. 2:10-cv-05974)
    District Judge: Hon. Edmund V. Ludwig
    Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
    January 15, 2013
    Before: SMITH, CHAGARES, and BARRY, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: January 18, 2013)
    ____________
    OPINION
    ____________
    CHAGARES, Circuit Judge.
    Eugene Wolstenholme (“Wolstenholme”) appeals an order of the District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania dismissing his lawsuit against Joseph Bartels for
    lack of personal jurisdiction. Wolstenholme first argues that the District Court abused its
    discretion by ruling on a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction before a
    motion to remand for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Second, Wolstenholme argues
    that the District Court erred in granting the motion to dismiss. For the foregoing reasons,
    we will affirm the order of the District Court.
    I.
    Because we write solely for the benefit of the parties, we recite only the facts
    essential to our disposition. Wolstenholme, a retired businessman who previously owned
    a company that manufactured parts for aircraft and other machines, met Joseph Bartels
    (“Bartels”), an attorney, at an air show in Florida in or around 2000. Bartels informed
    Wolstenholme that he was interested in purchasing an experimental air kit business called
    Lancair International, Inc. (“Lancair”), and followed up with Wolstenholme in 2002 to
    see whether he was interested in becoming a partner and helping to finance such a
    purchase. According to Bartels, it was Eugene Wolstenholme’s son, Bob Wolstenholme,
    who persuaded Bartels to seek funding for the acquisition of Lancair from Eugene
    Wolstenholme.
    In February and May 2003, after Bartels and Wolstenholme executed an Operating
    Agreement to memorialize their agreement, 1 Wolstenholme sent cash installments to
    Bartels, and Bartels made arrangements to complete the purchase of Lancair. Bartels
    received advice that the purchase of Lancair should be structured as an asset acquisition
    1
    The Operating Agreement declared that, if disputes could not be resolved by nonbinding
    mediation, “the Laws of the State of Louisiana [would] prevail,” and the parties would
    “submit themselves to the jurisdiction of said courts.” Appendix (“App.”) 216.
    2
    and, furthermore, that he should accomplish that asset acquisition by means of a separate
    corporate entity. Bartels did so by incorporating Louisiana Composite Technologies, Inc.
    (“LCTI”), which would acquire Lancair as an asset, redistribute it to various reorganized
    corporate entities, and hold shares of stock in those entities. Pursuant to the Operating
    Agreement, forty percent of the shares in Lancair and related entities would be held for
    Wolstenholme by LCTI.
    Later, in 2005 and 2006, Lancair saw diminishing sales and loss of market share.
    According to Bartels, this prompted him to redesign Lancair’s product, purportedly
    consulting Bob Wolstenholme regularly on Eugene Wolstenholme’s behalf as these
    decisions were being made. The cost of the redesign strained the corporation’s resources
    so that, from 2006 to 2008, Wolstenholme made a series of loans to Lancair at Bartels’s
    request. Bartels eventually gave up his position as chief operating officer, chairman, and
    president of Lancair. When Lancair’s new management took over, it conducted an
    investigation of the corporation’s expenses and operation under Bartels. Wolstenholme
    claims that, pursuant to this investigation, self-dealing and other acts by Bartels that
    damaged the corporation came to light.
    Wolstenholme filed a lawsuit based on these claims in the Court of Common Pleas
    of Bucks County in Pennsylvania, where he resides and is a citizen. He brought suit on
    his own behalf, and on behalf of LCTI, a Louisiana corporation. Like LCTI, Bartels is a
    citizen of Louisiana, but he nevertheless removed the case to the District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania, invoking diversity jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    § 1332. Bartels claimed that Wolstenholme fraudulently joined LCTI as a plaintiff in
    3
    order to defeat diversity jurisdiction. Wolstenholme filed a motion to remand the case to
    state court for lack of federal subject-matter jurisdiction; on the same day, Bartels moved
    to dismiss the case for lack of personal jurisdiction. Finding that the remand motion was
    complex, the District Court exercised its discretion to consider the motion to dismiss first,
    and held that it did not possess personal jurisdiction over Bartels. This appeal followed.
    II.
    This appeal requires that we review the District Court’s finding that it did not have
    jurisdiction over Wolstenholme’s lawsuit — and, therefore, that we evaluate our own
    jurisdiction over the case as well. In fact, both parties agree that we do not have
    jurisdiction over the case, but for different reasons. Wolstenholme argues that the
    District Court abused its discretion by dismissing the case for lack of personal
    jurisdiction over Bartels before considering Wolstenholme’s motion to remand to state
    court for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. He further argues that, even if the District
    Court did not abuse its discretion in this way, it nevertheless erred in finding no personal
    jurisdiction over Bartels in Pennsylvania. 2 Bartels maintains that he has no minimum
    contacts with Pennsylvania that would allow a court located there to exercise its authority
    over him; accordingly, he argues, the District Court lacked personal jurisdiction over
    him.
    2
    The distinction is significant because, “[i]f a federal court dismisses a removed case for
    want of personal jurisdiction, that determination may preclude the parties from
    relitigating the very same personal jurisdiction issue in state court.” Ruhrgas AG v.
    Marathon Oil Co., 
    526 U.S. 574
    , 585 (1999). However, as the Supreme Court has
    pointed out, “[i]ssue preclusion in subsequent state-court litigation . . . may also attend a
    federal court’s subject-matter determination.” Id.
    4
    A.
    In reviewing a district court’s decision to rule on personal jurisdiction before
    subject-matter jurisdiction, we employ an abuse-of-discretion standard. Ruhrgas, 526
    U.S. at 588. In Ruhrgas, the Supreme Court held that, although “subject-matter
    jurisdiction necessarily precedes a ruling on the merits,” a federal court may nevertheless
    “choose among threshold grounds for denying audience to a case on the merits.” Id. at
    584-85. Accordingly, although “in most instances subject-matter jurisdiction will involve
    no arduous inquiry” and therefore should be decided upon first, where “a district court
    has before it a straightforward personal jurisdiction issue presenting no complex question
    of state law, and the alleged defect in subject-matter jurisdiction raises a difficult and
    novel question, the court does not abuse its discretion by turning directly to personal
    jurisdiction.” Id. at 587-88.
    In the instant case, we hold that the District Court acted within its discretion when
    it elected to dispose of the personal jurisdiction question before reaching the question of
    whether or not it had subject-matter jurisdiction. Indeed, assessing the existence of
    subject-matter jurisdiction here would have involved more “arduous inquiry” than in a
    typical situation. Id. at 587. Specifically, as the District Court found, it would have
    involved determining “whether Wolstenholme has standing to make a derivative claim on
    behalf of LCTI by reason of transactions envisioned or undertaken pursuant to the
    Operating Agreement.” App. 258 n.1. This would require consideration of the
    Pennsylvania statute governing derivative suits by shareholders, 15 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann.
    § 1717, as well as Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1506, which requires the
    5
    complaint in such an action to set forth “the efforts made to secure enforcement by the
    corporation or similar entity or the reason for not making any such efforts.” Pa. R. Civ.
    P. 1506(a)(2). Accordingly, we hold that the District Court did not err in finding that
    these state-law issues were sufficiently complex to warrant exercising its established
    discretion to dispose of the personal jurisdiction issue first.
    B.
    Bartels argues before this Court, as he did below, that there is no personal
    jurisdiction over him in Pennsylvania because he is not a resident thereof and does not
    have the requisite minimum contacts. We review a district court’s decision as to personal
    jurisdiction de novo; however, we review the district court’s factual findings in
    connection with that determination for clear error. Telcordia Tech Inc. v. Telkom SA
    Ltd., 
    458 F.3d 172
    , 176 (3d Cir. 2006). Wolstenholme bears the burden of showing that
    personal jurisdiction over Bartels exists. See Marten v. Godwin, 
    499 F.3d 290
    , 295-96
    (3d Cir. 2007) (“If an issue is raised as to whether a court lacks personal jurisdiction over
    a defendant, the plaintiff bears the burden of showing that personal jurisdiction exists.”).
    “A federal court may assert personal jurisdiction over a nonresident of the state in
    which the court sits to the extent authorized by the law of the state.” Carteret Sav. Bank,
    FA v. Shushan, 
    954 F.2d 141
    , 144-45 (3d Cir. 1992). Pennsylvania’s long-arm statute
    permits courts to exercise jurisdiction over nonresidents “to the fullest extent allowed
    under the Constitution of the United States,” and also indicates that jurisdiction “may be
    based on the most minimum contact with this Commonwealth allowed under the
    Constitution of the United States.” 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 5322(b). Accordingly, the
    6
    exercise of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident is limited by the strictures of due
    process, which “require[] only that in order to subject a defendant to a judgment in
    personam, if he be not present within the territory of the forum, he have certain minimum
    contacts with it such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions
    of fair play and substantial justice.” Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 
    326 U.S. 310
    , 316
    (1945) (quotation marks omitted).
    Personal jurisdiction may be exercised generally or specifically. Helicopteros
    Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall, 
    466 U.S. 408
    , 414-15 & n.9 (1984). In the instant
    case, Wolstenholme concedes that “Joseph Bartels did not regularly conduct business in
    Pennsylvania sufficient to exercise general jurisdiction.” Wolstenholme Br. 31. Instead,
    Wolstenholme claims that Pennsylvania has specific jurisdiction over Bartels because he
    “specifically targeted an elderly resident of Pennsylvania.” Id. As we have previously
    explained, an inquiry into the existence of specific jurisdiction proceeds in three parts.
    O’Connor v. Sandy Lane Hotel Co., Ltd., 
    496 F.3d 312
    , 317 (3d Cir. 2007). First, we ask
    whether the defendant’s activities were “purposefully directed” at the forum. Burger
    King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 
    471 U.S. 462
    , 472 (1985). We then consider whether the
    litigation arises out of or relates to at least one of those activities. Helicopteros, 466 U.S.
    at 414. Finally, if we answer the first two parts in the affirmative, we consider the
    “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice” underscored in International Shoe,
    326 U.S. at 316.
    Wolstenholme correctly points out that the complaint in this case alleges fraud,
    breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    7
    dealing — intentional torts — and therefore invokes a “slightly refined version” of the
    specific-jurisdiction test we outlined in O’Connor. 3 496 F.3d at 317 n.2. Specifically,
    consideration of jurisdiction over Bartels for the alleged intentional torts calls for
    application of the “effects test” first outlined by the Supreme Court in Calder v. Jones,
    
    465 U.S. 783
    , 789-91 (1984). This Court’s three-pronged effects test requires the
    plaintiff to show: (1) the defendant committed an intentional tort; (2) the forum state is
    the focal point of the harm suffered by plaintiff; and (3) the forum state is the focal point
    of the defendant’s tortious activity, because the defendant expressly aimed its tortious
    conduct there. Marten, 499 F.3d at 297.
    In applying this test, we have underscored that the scope of the law established in
    Calder is narrow, employing “a conservative reading” to reflect the fact that Calder did
    not “carve out a special intentional torts exception to the traditional specific jurisdiction
    analysis, so that a plaintiff could always sue in his or her home state.” IMO Indus., Inc.
    v. Kiekert AG, 
    155 F.3d 254
    , 265 (3d Cir. 1998). Moreover, “the effects test prevents a
    defendant from being haled into a jurisdiction solely because the defendant intentionally
    caused harm that was felt in the forum state if the defendant did not expressly aim his
    conduct at that state.” Marten, 499 F.3d at 297. Therefore, “[o]nly if the ‘expressly
    aimed’ element of the effects test is met need we consider the other two elements.” Id.
    3
    Although Wolstenholme suggests that the standard for exercising specific jurisdiction
    “is relaxed to a certain extent” in the case of intentional torts, we have actually remarked
    that the intentional-tort context invokes the “more demanding relatedness requirement of
    the effects test.” Miller Yacht Sales, Inc. v. Smith, 
    384 F.3d 93
    , 99 (3d Cir. 2004).
    8
    Like the District Court, we hold that Wolstenholme has failed to meet his burden
    of showing personal jurisdiction over Bartels because he has not satisfied the third prong
    of the effects test — that is, he has not shown that Bartels’s allegedly tortious activity
    was “expressly aimed” at Pennsylvania. Wolstenholme argues that Bartels expressly
    aimed his allegedly tortious conduct at Pennsylvania because he knew that Wolstenholme
    lived there; because “all of the transactions were based on phone calls initiated by Bartels
    to Wolstenholme in Pennsylvania, as well as e-mails and faxes,” Wolstenholme Br. 14;
    because the original Operating Agreement was sent to Pennsylvania for Wolstenholme’s
    signature, id.; and because Bartels’s alleged actions “caused Wolstenholme harm in
    Pennsylvania,” id. at 35. This contact with an individual residing in Pennsylvania does
    not “insure[] that the defendant . . . ha[s] sufficiently directed his tortious conduct at the
    state to render him subject to personal jurisdiction there.” Miller Yacht Sales, Inc., 384
    F.3d at 99. Moreover, this contact with Wolstenholme does not “enhance defendant’s
    contacts with the forum,” IMO Indus., 155 F.3d at 265; rather, it constitutes Bartels’s
    only contact with the forum. Therefore, these facts do not establish the required showing
    that Pennsylvania is the focal point of Bartels’s activity. They fail to point to “some
    affirmative act ‘by which the defendant purposefully avails itself of the privilege of
    conducting activities within the forum State, thus invoking the benefits and protections of
    its laws.’” Grand Entm’t Grp., Ltd. v. Star Media Sales, Inc., 
    988 F.2d 476
    , 482 (3d Cir.
    1993) (quoting Hanson v. Denckla, 
    357 U.S. 235
    , 253 (1958)). Wolstenholme’s
    residence in Pennsylvania is inconsequential to the case at issue, as Wolstenholme has
    failed to show that Bartels (a nonresident) and his alleged scheme (which concerned
    9
    transactions and companies outside of Pennsylvania) somehow benefited from
    Wolstenholme’s living in Pennsylvania, or received some protection from that forum’s
    laws.
    In Grand Entertainment, a case on which Wolstenholme relies, we concluded that
    the exercise of personal jurisdiction was authorized because the nonresident defendant
    had directed at least twelve communications to the forum state while negotiating an
    agreement with individuals who resided in the forum state. Grand Entm’t, 988 F.2d at
    482. However, the existence of those communications alone was not dispositive in that
    case; we also held that the defendant’s activities were “deliberately and personally
    directed . . . toward the state,” and that those directed activities were “significant.” Id. at
    483. Most importantly, the agreement at issue in Grand Entertainment not only
    contemplated binding a citizen of the forum, but also “contemplated significant ties with
    the forum” itself. Id. In the instant case, the Operating Agreement created ties between
    Bartels and a resident of the forum; however, Wolstenholme’s residence is the sole link
    to the forum, such that we cannot conclude that Bartels deliberately sought to invoke “the
    benefits and protections” of Pennsylvania’s laws. Id. at 482.
    IV
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s order dismissing the
    case for lack of personal jurisdiction over Bartels.
    10