The Sampson Farm Limited Partnership v. Parmenter , 238 So. 3d 387 ( 2018 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed January 17, 2018.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D16-1820
    Lower Tribunal No. 12-08-M
    ________________
    The Sampson Farm Limited Partnership,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    Mark D. Parmenter, as Personal Representative of the Estate of
    Marjorie A.S. Parmenter and Individually,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Timothy J. Koenig,
    Judge.
    Haile Shaw & Pfaffenberger, P.A., and Gary A. Woodfield and Susan B.
    Yoffee (North Palm Beach), for appellant.
    The Silver Law Group, P.A., and Michael J. Healy and Robert A. Bernstein,
    for appellee.
    Before SUAREZ, LAGOA, and LOGUE, JJ.
    LAGOA, J.
    Appellant, The Sampson Farm Limited Partnership (“Sampson Farm”),
    appeals from the trial court’s order granting Appellee, Mark D. Parmenter’s motion
    for summary judgment and granting the Final Judgment Determining Purchase
    Right of Partnership Interest. Because the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction
    over Sampson Farm and Sampson Farm did not waive its jurisdictional objection,
    we reverse the trial court’s order granting summary judgment and Final Judgment
    Determining Purchase Rights of Partnership Interest, and remand to the trial court
    to dismiss the Amended Petition against Sampson Farm.
    1.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    This case involves a familial dispute over ownership of a fraction of a family
    farm in Massachusetts. On April 6, 2011, Marjorie Parmenter, a Florida resident,
    died intestate. At the time of her death, Marjorie Parmenter held a 0.2% limited
    partnership interest in Sampson Farm, a Massachusetts limited partnership, which
    owns and operates a working farm in Westport, Massachusetts.1
    Marjorie Parmenter signed the Sampson Farm Agreement of Limited
    Partnership (the “Agreement”) as a limited partner. The Agreement, which has an
    effective date of November 7, 2005, expressly provides that it is governed by
    Massachusetts law.
    Section 10.5(a) of the Agreement provides that if, upon a partner’s death,
    that partner’s interest is to pass to anyone other than either another partner or
    1 At the time of her death, Marjorie Parmenter also held an undetermined
    partnership interest as a beneficiary in the estate of her uncle, Wordell Sampson,
    who predeceased her and whose estate was being administered in Massachusetts.
    2
    someone in the deceased partner’s family (specifically defined in section 10.1 of
    the Agreement to generally exclude spouses), Sampson Farm has an option to
    purchase that partnership interest within one year of the partner’s date of death. If
    Sampson Farm does not exercise its option, the Agreement grants the remaining
    partners an additional thirty-day option to purchase the decedent’s interest
    themselves. Finally, pursuant to section 10.5(c) of the Agreement, each partner
    agreed that to the extent his or her partnership interest was to pass to anyone other
    than another partner or family member, the partnership interest would be held in
    the partner’s estate until the expiration of the Agreement’s option periods.
    On January 20, 2012, Mark D. Parmenter (“Parmenter”), Marjorie
    Parmenter’s widower, filed a petition for probate proceedings to administer his
    wife’s estate (the “Estate”), and on January 25, 2012, Parmenter was appointed
    personal representative. On August 14, 2014, an Order of Discharge was entered
    closing the Estate.
    On September 4, 2014, Parmenter, as former personal representative, filed a
    petition to reopen the Estate pursuant to section 733.903, Florida Statutes (2014),
    “solely for the purpose of doing additional procedures necessary in order to clarify
    distributions.” On September 9, 2014, the trial court entered an order revoking the
    previous Order of Discharge and issued Letters of Administration to Parmenter.
    3
    On October 8, 2014, Parmenter, both individually as beneficiary and as the
    personal representative, filed an adversary petition (“the Petition”) in the probate
    action for a declaratory judgment determining that he owned Marjorie’s
    partnership interest in Sampson Farm because Sampson Farm failed to file a claim
    against the Estate and thus lost its rights to invoke the option to purchase
    Marjorie’s partnership interest. Of significance to this appeal, the Petition2 alleged
    that:
    3. Part of the assets belonging to Marjorie as
    included in the Estate of Wordell Sampson was an
    interest in Sampson Farm LLP, a limited liability
    partnership under the laws of the Commonwealth of
    Massachusetts. The Sampson Farm LLP is a partnership
    whose business enterprise is the holding [of] real
    property and operating an agriculture business thereon in
    Bristol County, Massachusetts.
    Sampson Farm moved to quash service of process and to dismiss for lack of
    personal jurisdiction, challenging the lack of factual allegations providing a basis
    for either personal jurisdiction under Florida’s long arm statute or minimum
    contacts with Florida under federal due process requirements. The trial court
    denied the motion, and Sampson Farm filed its answer and reasserted lack of
    personal jurisdiction as affirmative defenses.3       The parties cross-moved for
    2 Parmenter’s subsequent Amended Petition filed on October 5, 2015, did not
    make any substantive changes to these jurisdictional allegations.
    3 Specifically, Sampson Farm averred in both its initial answer and its answer to
    the Amended Petition as follows:
    4
    summary judgment. As part of its opposition to Parmenter’s motion for summary
    judgment, Sampson Farm again asserted that the trial court lacked personal
    jurisdiction over it. The trial court subsequently entered the Final Judgment in
    favor of Parmenter. Regarding the question of personal jurisdiction, the trial court,
    in its written order, concluded that it had “subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate
    this cause and personal jurisdiction over all of the parties to this action. Both
    parties have appeared herein and have sought affirmative relief from this Court
    beyond issues related to jurisdiction.”   This appeal ensued.
    II.   ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Sampson Farms raises several issues. We address only one,
    however, as this issue is dispositive of this appeal. Sampson Farm argues that the
    trial court did not have personal jurisdiction to determine the issues raised in
    Parmenter’s Petition, and further argues that the trial court erred in determining
    2. As and for its Second Affirmative Defense, this court lacks
    personal jurisdiction over Sampson Farm. This is not an in rem
    proceeding; therefore, personal jurisdiction over Sampson Farm is
    required. The Petition fails to contain any jurisdictional allegations
    over Sampson Farm, nor could it.
    3. As and for its Third Affirmative Defense, this court’s attempt to
    exercise jurisdiction over Sampson Farm violates the Florida long-arm
    statute. Section 48.193, Florida Statutes.
    4. As and for its Fourth Affirmative Defense, this court’s attempt to
    exercise jurisdiction over Sampson Farm violates the Due Process
    clause of the United States Constitution.
    5
    that it waived its jurisdictional objection. We review de novo the issue of personal
    jurisdiction over a foreign corporation. Camp Illahee Invs. Inc. v. Blackman, 
    870 So. 2d 80
    , 83 (Fla. 2d DCA 2003). We first address the trial court’s finding that
    Sampson Farm sought affirmative relief from the trial court and therefore waived
    any jurisdictional challenge.
    The law in Florida is well established that:
    “A defendant who timely asserts a challenge to the
    court’s jurisdiction over the person of the defendant is
    not prejudiced by participation in the trial of the suit and
    defending the matter thereafter on the merits. His
    challenge is preserved and he may obtain a review of the
    question of personal jurisdiction upon appeal should he
    suffer an adverse final judgment in the cause. . . .
    However, a timely objection to personal jurisdiction may
    nevertheless be waived. In jurisdictions which follow the
    rule that a defense on the merits is not a waiver, the
    courts have long held that a defendant who goes beyond
    matters of defense and seeks affirmative relief waives a
    previously asserted objection to the personal jurisdiction
    of the court. Thus a majority of federal courts have held
    that the filing of a permissive counterclaim is a request
    for affirmative relief which waives an objection to
    personal jurisdiction notwithstanding that the objection is
    timely made.”
    We agree with the above reasoning of the federal and
    Florida courts that adhere to its reasoning and hold that a
    defendant waives a challenge to personal jurisdiction by
    seeking affirmative relief.
    Babcock v. Whatmore, 
    707 So. 2d 702
    , 704-05 (Fla. 1998) (citations omitted)
    (quoting Hubbard v. Cazares, 
    413 So. 2d 1192
    , 1193 (Fla. 2d DCA 1981)
    6
    (concluding that former husband’s motion for relief from judgments did not waive
    his challenge to personal jurisdiction because it “was not a plea for affirmative
    relief but rather was a defensive motion seeking to avoid the judgments”).
    As this Court concluded in Berne v. Beznos, 
    819 So. 2d 235
    (Fla. 3d DCA
    2002), “under Babcock, so long as the defending party makes a timely objection to
    personal jurisdiction, the defendant may defend the case without waiving the
    objection.   The court’s example of affirmative relief which would waive the
    jurisdictional objection is the assertion of a permissive counterclaim.” 
    Id. at 238
    (citation omitted). As such, “if a defending party timely raises an objection to
    personal jurisdiction or service of process, then that defendant may plead to the
    merits and actively defend the lawsuit without waiving the objection.” 
    Id. Here, Sampson
    Farm first raised its objection to personal jurisdiction by way
    of its motion to dismiss. After the trial court denied the motion, it is undisputed
    that Sampson Farm again objected to the trial court’s lack of personal jurisdiction
    in its first responsive pleading.    Significantly, Sampson Farm did not seek
    affirmative relief, as it only pled to the merits and actively defended itself by way
    of an answer, affirmative defenses, and a motion for summary judgment.
    Affirmative relief is best defined as “‘[r]elief for which defendant might maintain
    an action independently of plaintiff’s claim and on which he might proceed to
    recovery, although plaintiff abandoned his cause of action or failed to establish
    7
    it.’” Heineken v. Heineken, 
    683 So. 2d 194
    , 197 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996) (quoting
    Grange Ins. Ass’n v. State, 
    757 P.2d 933
    , 940 (Wash. 1988) (en banc)). We
    therefore conclude that the trial court erred in finding that Sampson Farm sought
    affirmative relief by actively defending the lawsuit “beyond issues related to
    jurisdiction” and thereby waived its challenge to personal jurisdiction. Under
    Babcock and Berne, Sampson Farm did not waive its objection to personal
    jurisdiction, as neither the filing of an answer with affirmative defenses nor the
    filing of a motion for summary judgment constitute affirmative relief that would
    waive a challenge to personal jurisdiction.     Both the answer and motion for
    summary judgment are defensive in nature. See Cumberland Software, Inc. v.
    Great Am. Mortg. Corp., 
    507 So. 2d 794
    (Fla 4th DCA 1987) (holding that the
    filing of an answer and counterclaim did not waive defense for lack of personal
    jurisdiction where the answer asserted lack of personal jurisdiction in affirmative
    defenses and the counterclaim was compulsory).
    We now turn to the issue of whether personal jurisdiction exists over
    Sampson Farm. Sampson Farm argues that the entry of final judgment in favor of
    Parmenter was in error because Parmenter failed to allege any factual basis to
    establish personal jurisdiction over it.
    In determining whether the trial court had personal jurisdiction over
    Sampson Farm, we first look to whether the complaint alleges sufficient
    8
    jurisdictional facts to bring Sampson Farm within the purview of Florida’s long-
    arm statute. Am. Exp. Ins. Servs. Eur. Ltd. v. Duvall, 
    972 So. 2d 1035
    , 1038 (Fla.
    3d DCA 2008).       The plaintiff bears the initial burden of alleging sufficient
    jurisdictional facts in his or her complaint to establish the basis for the court’s
    long-arm jurisdiction under section 48.193, Florida Statutes (2014). Execu-Tech
    Bus. Sys., Inc. v. New Ogi Paper Co. Ltd., 
    752 So. 2d 582
    (Fla. 2000); Venetian
    Salami Co. v. Parthenais, 
    554 So. 2d 499
    , 502 (Fla. 1989).     If the plaintiff meets
    this hurdle, the second inquiry is whether the defendant possesses sufficient
    minimum contacts with Florida to satisfy constitutional due process requirements.
    Venetian 
    Salami, 554 So. 2d at 500
    . This requires the court to determine whether a
    non-resident defendant’s conduct in connection with Florida is such that the
    defendant “should reasonably anticipate being haled into court” here. World-Wide
    Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 
    444 U.S. 286
    , 297 (1980).
    A review of the record shows that neither the Petition nor the Amended
    Petition contained any allegations sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction over
    Sampson Farm. Indeed, Parmenter alleges in both his Petition and Amended
    Petition that Sampson Farm is a Massachusetts limited partnership whose business
    is to own and operate an agricultural business in Massachusetts.4 Moreover,
    4 Because both the Petition and Amended Petition failed to plead a legally
    sufficient basis for long-arm jurisdiction, Sampson Farm was not required to file
    affidavits or present other evidence to contest the jurisdictional issue. See
    Crownover v. Masda Corp., 
    983 So. 2d 709
    , 713 (Fla. 3d DCA 2008).
    9
    Parmenter failed to establish any factual basis for personal jurisdiction in
    opposition to Sampson Farm’s motion for summary judgment.5 Parmenter instead
    focuses his argument below and on appeal on the notion that Sampson Farm’s lack
    of contacts with Florida are not relevant for personal jurisdiction because of the
    special nature of probate. We find Parmenter’s argument unpersuasive.
    This Court is bound by prior precedent, and this Court’s opinion in Wolf
    Sanitary Wiping Cloth, Inc. v. Wolf, 
    526 So. 2d 702
    (Fla. 3d DCA 1988), receded
    from on other grounds by C.A.T. LLC. v. Island Developers, Ltd., 
    827 So. 2d 373
    ,
    374 (Fla. 3d DCA 2002) (en banc),6 is indistinguishable from the facts of the
    instant case. In Wolf, at the time of his death, Mr. Wolf owned five hundred
    shares in Wolf Sanitary Wiping Cloth, Inc., a family-owned Michigan corporation.
    5 Because Parmenter failed to establish a basis for the exercise of long-arm
    jurisdiction under section 48.193, we need not address the issue of minimum
    contacts and constitutional due process. It is clear, however, that with respect to
    this second prong, the record contains no evidence that Sampson Farm has engaged
    in any business in Florida, bought or sold property in Florida, or engaged in any
    other contact with Florida such that Sampson Farm could reasonably expect to be
    haled into court here. Indeed, the record shows that the petition was served on
    Sampson Farm’s registered agent in Massachusetts. Based on the record here,
    exercise of personal jurisdiction would “offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and
    substantial justice.’” Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 
    326 U.S. 310
    (1945) (quoting
    Milliken v. Meyer, 
    311 U.S. 457
    , 463 (1940)).
    6 In C.A.T., this Court receded from the holding in Wolf that a stockholder’s
    derivative suit cannot be brought through a declaratory proceeding in a probate
    
    proceeding. 827 So. 2d at 374
    . Wolf’s alternative holding that the trial court
    lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendant is applicable here and remains
    binding precedent.
    10
    
    Id. at 703.
      Mr. Wolf’s shares were subject to a stock repurchase agreement
    executed in Michigan by the corporation prior to Mr. Wolf’s death. 
    Id. Mr. Wolf’s
    estate was probated in Miami-Dade County, and the personal representative
    brought an action for declaratory relief requesting that the trial court construe the
    rights of the estate under the terms of the repurchase agreement. 
    Id. Of significance
    to this appeal, this Court in Wolf held, in the alternative,7
    that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over the Michigan corporation. 
    Id. at 705.
    First, this Court noted that the company was a foreign corporation and that
    there were no allegations that it had contacts sufficient to subject it to personal
    jurisdiction in Florida. 
    Id. This Court
    further rejected the argument that the
    corporation was an “interested person” and thus subject to formal notice pursuant
    to section 731.301(1), Florida Statutes (1985).8 
    Id. Specifically, this
    Court found
    that section 731.301(1) was not “a shorthand method of subjecting all potential
    litigants to the jurisdiction of the probate court.” 
    Id. While recognizing
    that
    personal representatives have a duty to marshal estate assets with dispatch, this
    Court concluded that duty “does not empower a personal representative to enforce
    7 “[W]here a decision rests on two or more grounds, none can be relegated to the
    category of obiter dicta.” Clemons v. Flagler Hosp., Inc., 
    385 So. 2d 1134
    , 1136
    n.3 (Fla. 5th DCA 1980).
    8 Substantively, the 1985 and current versions of that statute are not significantly
    different, although procedural portions of the 1985 statute were subsequently
    removed from the statute and moved to Florida Probate Rule 5.040.
    11
    contract rights against a foreign corporation where jurisdiction has not been
    obtained.” 
    Id. at 706.
    Moreover, it is well established—both generally, and specifically with
    regard to adversary actions arising out of probate—that a pleading must make the
    requisite allegations of personal jurisdiction. Galego v. Robinson, 
    695 So. 2d 443
    ,
    444 (Fla. 2d DCA 1997); In re Estate of Tyler, 
    543 So. 2d 1307
    , 1307-08 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 1989); 
    Wolf, 526 So. 2d at 705
    ; see also Kountze v. Kountze, 
    20 So. 3d 428
    ,
    432-33 (Fla. 2d DCA 2009). Thus, even if Sampson Farm fell within the scope of
    section 731.301(1)’s notice provision, Parmenter failed to provide any evidence of
    Sampson Farm’s minimal contacts with Florida sufficient to meet the
    constitutional due process requirements necessary to exercise personal jurisdiction
    over it. Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the trial court to vacate the Final
    Judgment in favor of Parmenter and dismiss the Amended Petition against
    Sampson Farm for lack of personal jurisdiction.
    Reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with opinion.
    12