Kohring v. Ballard , 355 Or. 297 ( 2014 )


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  • No. 26	                      April 24, 2014	297
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    Richard A. KOHRING
    and Kerstin Kohring,
    Plaintiffs-Adverse Parties,
    v.
    James C. BALLARD, M.D.,
    and Oregon Orthopedic & Sports Medicine Clinic, LLP,
    Defendants-Relators.
    (CC1111-14966; SC S060533)
    En Banc
    Original proceeding in mandamus.*
    Argued and submitted April 30, 2013.
    Janet M. Schroer of Hart Wagner LLP, Portland, argued
    the cause and filed the brief for defendants-relators. With
    her on the brief was Marjorie A. Speirs.
    Kathryn H. Clarke, Portland, argued the cause and filed
    the brief for plaintiffs-adverse parties. With her on the brief
    was Phillip C. Gilbert, Gresham.
    Lindsey H. Hughes and Hillary A. Taylor of Keating
    Jones Hughes, P.C., Portland, filed the brief for amicus
    curiae Oregon Association of Defense Counsel.
    Scott A. Shorr of Stoll Stoll Berne Lokting & Shlachter,
    P.C., Portland, filed the brief for amicus curiae Oregon Trial
    Lawyers Association.
    LANDAU, J.
    Peremptory writ of mandamus to issue ordering trial
    court to grant defendants’ motion to change venue.
    ______________
    *  On petition for alternative writ of mandamus from an order of Multnomah
    County Circuit Court, Karin Immergut, Judge.
    298	                                                   Kohring v. Ballard
    Defendant-relators moved to change venue from Multnomah County pur-
    suant to ORS 14.110, arguing that neither defendant conducts “regular, sus-
    tained business activity” for purposes of residency, and thus, venue, under ORS
    14.080(2). The trial court denied defendants’ motion, reasoning that defendants,
    by soliciting patients in Multnomah County, purposefully availed themselves of
    the court’s jurisdiction in that county and therefore conducted regular, sustained
    business activity there. Held: (1) the trial court mistakenly conflated personal
    jurisdiction considerations with the statutory requirements for venue; (2) a cor-
    poration or partnership conducts “regular, sustained business activity” under
    ORS 14.080(2) wherever it conducts its normal, ordinary business activities on
    a sustained basis, and such a determination requires evaluating the qualitative
    nature of the business activity and the frequency with which it occurs; and (3)
    none of defendants’ activities on which plaintiffs relied, taken individually or
    collectively, established that defendants conduct “regular, sustained business
    activity” in Multnomah County.
    Preemptory writ of mandamus to issue ordering trial court to grant defen-
    dants’ motion to change venue.
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	299
    LANDAU, J.
    The issue in this mandamus proceeding is whether
    the trial court correctly denied defendants’ motion to change
    venue. ORS 14.080(2) provides that venue is proper wher-
    ever a defendant engages in “regular, sustained business
    activity.” In this case, plaintiffs, a husband and wife, ini-
    tiated a medical malpractice action against defendants
    in Multnomah County. Defendants argue that venue lies
    in Clackamas County, because that is where the clinic is
    located, where the doctor who provided the husband’s medi-
    cal services resides, and where the husband received treat-
    ment. Plaintiffs argue that venue is proper in Multnomah
    County, because defendants solicit patients who live in that
    county, refer patients to imaging facilities in that county,
    use medical education programs in that county, and “iden-
    tify” the clinic’s location in its website as the “Portland
    area.” The trial court denied defendants’ motion, explain-
    ing that defendants, by soliciting patients in Multnomah
    County, “purposely availed themselves of the court’s juris-
    diction” in that county. We conclude that the trial court mis-
    takenly conflated personal jurisdiction considerations with
    the statutory requirements for venue and erred in denying
    defendants’ motion. We therefore issue a peremptory writ
    of mandamus ordering the trial court to grant defendants’
    motion to change venue.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The relevant facts are few and undisputed. Plaintiff
    Richard Kohring sustained injuries following hip replace-
    ment surgery at a medical facility in Clackamas County.
    Plaintiff and his wife initiated a medical malpractice action
    in Multnomah County for those injuries and for loss of con-
    sortium. Plaintiffs named as defendants Ballard, the sur-
    geon who performed the hip replacement operation, and
    the clinic that employs him, Oregon Orthopedic & Sports
    Medicine Clinic, LLP (“Oregon Orthopedic” or “clinic”).
    Defendants moved to change venue to Clackamas
    County. In support of that motion, they argued that the med-
    ical care that gave rise to the action occurred in Clackamas
    300	                                      Kohring v. Ballard
    County; that defendant Ballard lives in Clackamas County;
    that both of Oregon Orthopedic’s two clinics are located in
    Clackamas County; that all of the clinic’s physicians provide
    medical care in Clackamas County; that neither the clinic
    nor Ballard reside in Multnomah County; that no autho-
    rized agent to receive service for either defendant resides
    in Multnomah County; that, in fact, plaintiffs served defen-
    dants in Clackamas County; and that neither the clinic nor
    Ballard conduct “regular sustained business activity” within
    the meaning of ORS 14.080(2) in Multnomah County.
    Plaintiffs opposed the motion, arguing that defen-
    dants do conduct regular, sustained business activity in
    Multnomah County. In support of that assertion, they offered
    evidence that, among other things, approximately 600 of the
    clinic’s 24,000 patients reside in Multnomah County; that
    Oregon Orthopedic uses “pdxortho.com” as its website; that
    Oregon Orthopedic refers to its clinics as being located “just
    outside Portland, Oregon”; that, over a two-year period, its
    physicians met with attorneys who practice in Multnomah
    County; that, over a five-year period, clinic employees have
    attended more than 100 educational seminars conducted in
    Multnomah County; that Oregon Orthopedic advertises in
    a newspaper and a telephone book that are distributed in
    Multnomah County; that the clinic refers some of its patients
    to imaging centers located in Multnomah County; and that
    defendants send chocolates to medical clinics located in
    Multnomah County, and have provided lunches to another
    Multnomah County clinic.
    At the hearing on defendants’ motion to change
    venue, the trial court noted the lack of Oregon case law dis-
    cussing the meaning of “regular, sustained business activ-
    ity” under ORS 14.080(2). It explained that it found guid-
    ance, though, in certain federal and Washington state cases
    concerning what constitutes “transacting business.” In par-
    ticular, the court mentioned a Washington Supreme Court
    decision, State ex rel. Verd v. Superior Court for King County,
    31 Wash 2d 625, 198 P2d 663 (1948), which the court read
    to hold that “solicitation can constitute the regular, con-
    tinuous and sustained course of business.” In light of that
    case law, the court concluded that “a necessary part of the
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	301
    business of providing medical care is soliciting patients,”
    and that Oregon Orthopedic did just that in advertising in
    Multnomah County. The court explained that defendants
    “purposefully availed themselves of the court’s jurisdiction”
    and are therefore “conducting regular sustained business
    activity in Multnomah County by marketing Multnomah
    County patients.” The trial court denied defendants’ motion
    to change venue.
    Defendants petitioned for a writ of mandamus,
    challenging the trial court’s denial of their motion to change
    venue. This court issued an alternative writ ordering a stay
    of the trial proceedings until the trial court either granted
    defendants’ motion to change venue or showed cause for not
    doing so. The trial court did not grant defendants’ motion to
    change venue, and the parties filed their briefs before this
    court.
    II. ANALYSIS
    ORS 14.110 provides:
    “(1)  The court or judge thereof may change the place of
    trial, on the motion of either party to an action or suit,
    when it appears from the affidavit of such party that the
    motion is not made for the purpose of delay and:
    “(a)  That the action or suit has not been commenced in
    the proper county[.]”
    Notwithstanding the permissive wording of ORS 14.110(a),
    this court has held that defendants have a “right” to insist
    on proper venue under that statute. Rose v. Etling, 255 Or
    395, 399, 467 P2d 633 (1970). Thus, when a civil action has
    not been filed in the proper county, and a party files a timely
    motion under ORS 14.080(1)(a) to change venue that is not
    for the purpose of delaying the litigation, the trial court has
    no discretion to deny the motion; if the trial court denies the
    motion, a defendant may proceed by mandamus to enforce
    the right to change venue. Roskop v. Trent, 250 Or 397, 400,
    443 P2d 174 (1968) (“the remedy for an erroneous refusal to
    change the venue is by way of mandamus”); Mack Trucks,
    Inc. v. Taylor, 227 Or 376, 382, 362 P2d 364 (1961) (“[T]he
    defendant’s only remedy is a motion for change of venue. If
    the court rules against him and he wishes to pursue the
    302	                                                   Kohring v. Ballard
    matter further, he must then proceed by mandamus in this
    court to force the trial court to change the venue.”).1
    The standard for determining the proper place of
    trial is set out in ORS 14.080, which provides:
    “(1)  All other actions shall be commenced in the county
    in which the defendants, or one of them, reside at the com-
    mencement of the action or in the county where the cause
    of action arose. * * *
    “(2)  For purposes of this section a corporation incorpo-
    rated under the laws of this state, a limited partnership or
    a foreign corporation authorized to do business in this state
    shall be deemed to be a resident of any county where the
    corporation or limited partnership conducts regular, sus-
    tained business activity or has an office for the transaction
    of business or where any agent authorized to receive pro-
    cess resides. A foreign corporation or foreign limited part-
    nership not authorized to transact business in this state
    shall be deemed not to be a resident of any county in this
    state.”
    (Emphasis added.) The statute thus defines where a corpo-
    ration “resides” for venue purposes in terms of three pos-
    sibilities: (1) where the corporation conducts “regular, sus-
    tained business activity,” (2) where the corporation “has an
    office for the transaction of business,” or (3) where an agent
    authorized to receive service of process resides. In this case,
    it is undisputed that defendants do not have an office for
    the transaction of business in Multnomah County and that
    defendants have no agent authorized to receive service in
    Multnomah County. The parties’ dispute focuses on whether
    defendants conduct “regular, sustained business activity” in
    Multnomah County.
    Defendants argue that they do not conduct “regu-
    lar, sustained business activity” in Multnomah County. In
    their view, the statute refers to activity that is part of an
    entity’s “normal,” “core,” or “typical” occupation, and, in
    this case, that is the provision of medical care. According to
    1
    In contrast, ORS 14.110(1)(c) authorizes a trial court to change venue
    because “the convenience of witnesses and the parties would be promoted by
    such a change[.]” That determination requires the exercise of discretion and, as
    such, is not subject to review by way of mandamus. State ex rel Douglas County v.
    Sanders, 294 Or 195, 198 n 6, 655 P2d 175 (1982).
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	303
    defendants, the statutory phrase does not refer to such activ-
    ities as meeting with attorneys, attending training sessions,
    referring patients, and sending gifts to other businesses,
    because those activities are not part of the normal or typi-
    cal occupation of a medical clinic. They contend that it also
    cannot include advertising and solicitation of potential cli-
    ents, because that improperly shifts the focus from where a
    defendant resides to where potential plaintiffs might reside,
    which they contend is more appropriate to personal jurisdic-
    tion analysis than to venue.
    Plaintiffs argue that the phrase “regular, sustained
    business activity” refers to any activity of a business—
    regardless of whether it is in some sense the “core” or “nor-
    mal” occupation—so long as it is “regular” and “sustained,”
    that is, so long as it occurs on a regular basis over time. In
    this case, they contend, any number of activities related to
    defendants’ business has occurred on a regular basis over
    time in Multnomah County.
    The parties’ arguments thus present us with an
    issue of statutory construction, which we resolve by apply-
    ing the familiar principles set out in PGE v. Bureau of Labor
    and Industries, 317 Or 606, 859 P2d 1143 (1993), and State
    v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 206 P3d 1042 (2009). In accordance
    with those interpretive principles, we seek the meaning of
    the disputed phrase that the legislature most likely intended
    when it adopted ORS 14.080(2) by examining the text of
    the statute in context, along with any relevant legislative
    history, and, if necessary, pertinent canons of construction.
    Gaines, 346 Or at 171-73.
    A.  Textual Analysis
    We begin with the text. ORS 14.080(2) does not
    define the phrase “regular, sustained business activity,” so,
    assuming that the legislature intended to use those words
    in their ordinary senses, we resort to dictionary definitions
    to give these words their “plain, natural, and ordinary
    meaning.” PGE, 317 Or at 611; State v. Murray, 340 Or 599,
    604, 136 P3d 10 (2006). In this case, the parties’ dispute
    centers on the meanings of the words “regular,” “sustained,”
    and “business.”
    304	                                                   Kohring v. Ballard
    The word “regular” can mean “formed, built, arranged,
    or ordered according to some established rule, law, princi-
    ple, or type”; “NORMAL, STANDARD.” Webster’s Third
    New Int’l Dictionary 1913 (unabridged ed 2002).2 It also can
    mean “steady or uniform in course, practice, or occurrence:
    not subject to unexplained or irrational variation: steadily
    pursued.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    word can be used in either of two
    distinct senses, one connoting a particular quality of activ-
    ity and the other connoting the frequency with which an
    activity occurs. See, e.g., Burkhart v. Farmers Ins. Co, 144
    Or App 594, 599, 927 P2d 1111 (1996) (“The words ‘regular’
    and ‘regularly’ have at least two different and distinct uses.
    An example of the first is ‘Joe is a regular guy who behaves
    in a regular manner.’ An example of the second is ‘Joe is a
    regular consumer of American products.’ ”).
    We do not interpret statutes solely on the basis of
    dictionary definitions, however. State v. Cloutier, 351 Or 68,
    96, 261 P3d 1234 (2011) (“In construing statutes, we do not
    simply consult dictionaries and interpret words in a vac-
    uum.”). Instead, we examine word usage in context to deter-
    mine which among competing definitions is the one that the
    legislature more likely intended. State v. Fries, 344 Or 541,
    547-48, 185 P3d 453 (2008) (context determines which of
    multiple definitions is the one the legislature intended).
    In this case, ORS 14.080(2) joins the word “regular”
    with the word “sustained,” which, as we note below, already
    connotes the latter concept of frequency. The assumption
    that the legislature does not ordinarily employ such redun-
    dancy suggests, then, that the former meaning is more likely
    the intended one—that is, the concept of a particular quality
    of activity. See Crystal Communications, Inc. v. Dept. of Rev.,
    2
    This court consults Webster’s Third more often than any other dictionary.
    See, e.g., State v. Reinke, 354 Or 98, 107, 309 P3d 1059, adh’d to as modified on
    recons, 354 Or 570, 316 P3d 286 (2013) (resorting to Webster’s Third as the source
    of “ordinary” meaning); Dept. of Rev. v. Faris, 345 Or 97, 101, 190 P3d 364 (2008)
    (same). It has never explained that preference. Most likely, it is rooted in the
    assumption that legislatures use words in their ordinary senses, and Webster’s
    Third is a dictionary with a “descriptive” focus, reporting ordinary usage, as
    opposed to other dictionaries with a “prescriptive” focus, reporting “correct”
    usage. See generally Dictionaries and That Dictionary (James Sledd & Wilma
    Ebbit eds 1962) (describing critiques of Webster’s Third on the ground that it
    described actual, instead of correct, usage).
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	305
    353 Or 300, 311, 297 P3d 1256 (2013) (“As a general rule, we
    construe a statute in a manner that gives effect, if possible,
    to all its provisions.”).3
    The word “sustained” is straightforward. It refers to
    an activity that is “maintained at length without interrup-
    tion, weakening, or losing in power or quality: PROLONGED,
    UNFLAGGING.” Webster’s at 2304. In the context of ORS
    14.080, it seems clear that the legislature did not intend the
    term to be understood literally. Few, if any business activ-
    ities are conducted literally “without interruption.” Rather,
    the extent to which a given activity is “sustained” necessar-
    ily depends on the nature of the activity. Weekly meetings
    that occur over a long time may safely be regarded as “sus-
    tained,” for example.
    The word “business” also has a wide variety of defi-
    nitions, including:
    “1a *  * purposeful activity : activity directed toward
    *
    some end *  * an activity engaged in toward an immedi-
    *
    ate specific end and usu. extending over a limited period
    of time : TASK, CHORE, MISSION, ASSIGNMENT *  *              *
    b (1) : a usu. commercial or mercantile activity custom-
    arily engaged in as a means of livelihood and typically
    involving some independence of judgment and power of
    decision *  *and sometimes contrasted with the arts *  *
    *                                                 *
    or professions *  * or sport *  * or other activity consid-
    *               *
    ered less practical, serious, respectful, or mundane *  *[;]
    *
    OCCUPATION, POSITION, TRADE, LINE (2) : a commer-
    cial or industrial enterprise *  * (3) : a place where such
    *
    an enterprise is carried on * * * (4) : transactions, dealings,
    or intercourse of any nature *  * c : serious activity that
    *
    requires time and effort and usu. the avoidance of distract-
    ing influences * * * d : a particular field of endeavor *  * *
    2a : AFFAIR, MATTER *  * b : a difficult or complicated
    *
    matter : PROJECT.”
    3
    The assumption, of course, is not a hard-and-fast rule. Sometimes—for
    clarity or emphasis, for example—the legislature intends to employ a measure of
    redundancy. See, e.g., Cloutier, 351 Or at 97 (“Redundancy in communication is a
    fact of life and of law.”); Thomas Creek Lumber and Log Co. v. Dept. of Rev., 344
    Or 131, 138, 178 P3d 217 (2008) (“[N]othing prohibits the legislature from saying
    the same thing twice[.]”). In this case, there is no evidence of such intent.
    306	                                                       Kohring v. Ballard
    Webster’s at 302. In the context of ORS 14.080(2), however, it
    seems clear that the legislature used the term in the sense
    of a usually “commercial or mercantile activity customarily
    engaged in as a means of livelihood” or a “commercial or
    industrial enterprise,” as opposed to any “purposeful activ-
    ity.” The statute’s focus, after all, is the residence of a cor-
    poration incorporated under the laws of this state, a limited
    partnership, or a foreign corporation authorized to “do busi-
    ness” in the state.
    From an analysis of the text of ORS 14.080(2), then,
    this much seems clear: The legislature intended that not
    just any activity suffices to establish corporate residence for
    venue purposes. Under ORS 14.080(2), only activity that is a
    “regular” and “sustained” part of the “business” is sufficient.
    That strongly suggests that an evaluation of both the quali-
    tative nature of the business activity and the frequency with
    which it occurs is required. In terms of the quality of the
    activity, it must be normal and ordinary in the light of the
    nature of the particular commercial or industrial enterprise.
    It must be something more than incidental to the ordinary
    operation of the enterprise. In terms of its frequency, the
    activity must occur often enough to be sustained; it is not
    sufficient if the activity is only infrequent and occasional.4
    4
    It is perhaps worth noting that a number of other states use the same or
    similar terminology in their venue statutes. See generally Gregory J. Swain,
    Place Where Corporation is Doing Business for Purposes of State Venue Statute,
    
    42 A.L.R. 5th 221
    (1996). Among those states, there appears to be something of
    a consensus that “doing business,” or “regularly transacting business,” or simi-
    lar terms, exclude “mere solicitation” and other activities that are incidental or
    peripheral to the normal, ordinary activities of the corporation. See, e.g., King
    Motor Company, Inc. v. Capps, 540 So 2d 62 (Ala 1989) (solicitation and advertise-
    ments in yellow pages, newspapers, radio, and television not sufficient to estab-
    lish venue); City Stores Co. v. Williams, 287 Ala 385, 252 So 2d 45 (1971) (depart-
    ment store advertisements in one county held not “doing business” there when
    the transactions would ultimately be consummated elsewhere); Baltimore & OR
    Co. v. Mosele, 67 Ill 2d 321, 333, 368 NE2d 88 (1977) (“The long-standing rule in
    Illinois is that the mere solicitation of business is not ‘doing business.’ ”); Saba v.
    Gray, 
    111 Mich. App. 304
    , NW2d 597 (1981) (advertising in newspaper that had
    some circulation in Wayne County was not “conducting business” there for venue
    purposes); Purcell v. Bryn Mawr Hosp., 525 Pa 237, 248, 579 A2d 1282 (1990)
    (“Mere solicitation of business in a particular county does not amount to conduct-
    ing business.”); Deeter-Ritchey-Sippel Associates v. Westminster College, 238 Pa
    Super 194, 357 A2d 608 (1976) (solicitation of funds and recruiting not regular
    business of college for venue purposes); Westmoreland Coal Co. v. Kaufman, 184
    WVA 195, 399 SE2d 906 (1990) (hiring attorney is incidental and does not consti-
    tute “doing business” for venue purposes).
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	307
    B.  Legislative History
    Nothing in the legislative history of ORS 14.080(2)
    suggests that the Oregon legislature intended something
    different from what we have noted the text suggests.
    1.  Background: Early Venue Statutes and Case Law
    Modern venue rules are predominantly statutory,
    but they derive from early common-law principles. See gen-
    erally Robert C. Casad and Laura J. Hines, Jurisdiction and
    Forum Selection § 426 at 4-88 (2d ed 2012). At common law,
    courts distinguished between “local” actions, usually those
    involving real property, and “transitory” actions, usually
    involving disputes over goods and chattels. See generally
    William Wirt Blume, Place of Trial of Civil Cases: Early
    English and Modern Federal, 
    48 Mich. L
    Rev 1, 23-25 (1949).
    Common-law courts required local actions to be tried where
    the property was located, while transitory actions could be
    “laid” anywhere that personal jurisdiction over the defen-
    dant could be obtained. 
    Id. Oregon’s first
    venue statute was patterned after
    that tradition. Actions for the recovery of property were to
    be tried “in the county in which the subject of the action or
    some part thereof is situated.” General Laws of Oregon, Civ
    Code, ch I, title IV, § 41, p 147-48 (Deady 1845-1864). In
    other, transitory, cases, the action was to be tried where the
    defendant resided or could otherwise be found:
    “In all other cases, the action shall be commenced and tried
    in the county in which the defendants or either of them
    reside, or may be found, at the commencement of the action;
    or if none of the parties reside in this state, the same may
    be tried in any county which the plaintiff may designate in
    his complaint.”
    Depending on the nature of the business at issue, such activities as solic-
    itation can nevertheless be relevant, as when the orders solicited are actually
    filled or completed at the place where the solicitation occurred. See, e.g., Canter
    v. American Honda Motor Corp., 426 Pa 38, 231 A2d 140 (1967) (newspaper and
    radio advertising followed by personal appearances to demonstrate vehicles con-
    stitutes “regularly conduct[ing] business” for venue purposes); Verd, 31 Wash 2d
    at 629, 198 P2d at 665 (“ ‘Solicitation in regular course of business, together with
    acceptance and performance of the contract *  * will give ample ground for the
    *
    conclusion of corporate presence.’ ” (citation omitted)).
    308	                                        Kohring v. Ballard
    Id. § 43, p 148. The early venue statute made no mention
    of corporations; it simply referred to “defendants” generally.
    In 1876, the legislature added a provision concern-
    ing the method of service of process on corporate entities.
    Under the new provisions, corporations could be served by
    delivering a copy of the complaint on the managing agent or
    other corporate officers where they reside, “or in case none
    of the officers of the corporation above named shall reside or
    have an office in the county when the cause of action arose,”
    then by leaving a copy at “the residence or usual place of
    abode of such clerk or agent.” The Codes and General Laws
    of Oregon, ch I, title V, § 55 (Hill 1887).
    The Oregon Supreme Court first addressed how
    those statutes applied to corporate entities in Holgate v.
    O.P.R.R. Co., 16 Or 123, 
    17 P. 859
    (1888), overruled in part
    on other grounds by Mutzig v. Hope, 176 Or 368, 158 P2d
    110 (1945). In that case, the court concluded that, under the
    venue provision, “[t]he residence of the corporation, if an
    artificial person can be said to have a residence, must be
    deemed to be * * * where it has its principal office and place
    of business, and where it is required to pay its taxes.” 
    Id. at 125.
    But, in addition, the court held that the 1876 ser-
    vice-of-process amendments implicitly assumed that venue
    also is proper in the county in which the action arose. 
    Id. at 125-26.
    	        In 1909, the legislature essentially codified the
    court’s holding in Holgate, at least as to tort actions. The
    amendment was part of a legislative package that the legis-
    lature found necessary to respond to the fact that “irrespon-
    sible and dishonest persons have instituted or are about to
    institute actions in counties many miles distant from the
    place of residence of the defendants thereto on mere pretexts
    for the sole purpose of annoying said defendants and putting
    them to unjust and unnecessary expense.” Or Laws 1909,
    ch 43, § 2. The new legislation modified the venue statute to
    read:
    “In all other cases [than local actions] the action shall be
    commenced and tried in the county in which the defendants
    or either of them reside or may be found at the commence-
    ment of the action; provided that in any action founded on
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	309
    an alleged tort, unless the same is instituted in the county
    where the cause of action arose or where the defendants
    or one of them resides, then, either such action shall at
    any time before trial thereof be transferred, upon motion
    of defendants, to a county where at least one of the defen-
    dants thereto resides; or the plaintiff in such action shall
    file a good and sufficient bond securing to defendants the
    payment of any judgment that may be rendered therein in
    favor of said defendants and against plaintiff[.]”
    Id. § 1 (emphasis in original).
    In 1929, the legislature eliminated supplying a
    bond as an alternative to transferring venue in tort actions.
    Or Laws 1929, ch 239 § 1. From that point until 1983, an
    action against a corporation could lie either where the cor-
    poration resides—that is, the county of its principal place of
    business—or where the cause of action arose. See, e.g., Hope,
    176 Or at 388 (referring to “the firmly established doctrine
    of this state to the effect that a domestic corporation can be
    sued only in the county where its principal place of business
    is located, or where the cause of action arose”); State ex rel.
    v. Updegraff, 172 Or 246, 256, 141 P2d 252 (1943) (“In our
    opinion, the only proper venue of transitory actions against
    foreign corporations is either the county where they main-
    tain their principal place of business or that in which the
    cause of action arose.”).
    Throughout that time, the court emphasized “the
    general rule that statutes relating to the right to change
    the venue of actions filed in the wrong place are to be lib-
    erally construed so as to attain the objectives of such stat-
    utes.” Etling, 255 Or at 400 (footnote omitted). In reference
    to those objectives, the court cited cases from other jurisdic-
    tions, noting that the purpose of venue statutes has always
    been to ensure fairness to defendants by preventing them
    from being haled into court in counties where they have lit-
    tle or no connection. 
    Id. at n
     6.
    2.  Enactment History of ORS 14.080(2)
    That was the state of the law as of 1983, when the
    Oregon legislature adopted the venue statute that is now
    ORS 14.080. The bill that became ORS 14.080 was first intro-
    duced as Senate Bill (SB) 198 (1983). The bill was proposed
    310	                                                     Kohring v. Ballard
    by the Oregon State Bar. As originally introduced, SB 198
    provided that, for purposes of venue, a corporation or lim-
    ited partnership resides in “any county where the corpora-
    tion or limited partnership transacts business.” University
    of Oregon Law School Professor Fred Merrill, representing
    the Bar, explained to a Senate committee that the bill was
    designed to allow suit not only where the corporation has its
    principal place of business, but also “any place where it does
    business, which would be broader.” Tape Recording, Senate
    Committee on Local Government and Elections, SB 198,
    Feb 9, 1983, Tape 14, Side A (statement of Fred Merrill).5
    The bill passed out of the Senate with little debate
    and was referred to the House Judiciary Committee. When
    the bill was taken up by that committee, another represen-
    tative of the Bar, Diana Godwin, similarly explained that
    it was intended to “clean[  up and partly expand[  ORS
    ]                          ]”
    14.080. Tape Recording, House Committee on Judiciary, SB
    198, Apr 18, 1983, Tape 250, Side A (statement of Diana
    Godwin).
    At that point, however, the bill ran into opposition
    from representatives of the business community who com-
    plained that the bill defined corporate residence too broadly.
    During the hearing before the House Judiciary Committee,
    committee counsel Kirk Hall said that a member of the
    banking industry had spoken with him about amending SB
    198 “to get at the problem of allowing venue anywhere the
    corporation does business.” Minutes, House Committee on
    Judiciary, SB 198, April 18, 1983, 3.
    The matter was referred to a subcommittee of
    the House Judiciary Committee. In that subcommittee,
    an amendment was proposed to change the definition of
    5
    The original version of the bill was modeled after former 28 USC § 1391(c)
    (1982), which provided that “[a] corporation may be sued in any judicial district in
    which it is incorporated or licensed to do business or is doing business, and such
    judicial district shall be regarded as the residence of such corporation for venue
    purposes.” Congress amended the statute in 1988 so that it currently provides
    that venue is proper “in any judicial district in which any defendant resides.” 28
    USC § 1391(b). The statute then provides that the “residence” of a defendant is
    “any judicial district in which such defendant is subject to the court’s personal
    jurisdiction with respect to that action.” Id. § 1391(c). See generally Charles
    Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, 14D Federal Practice and
    Procedure: Jurisdiction 3d § 3811 (2007).
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	311
    corporate residence from wherever it “transacts business” to
    wherever it engages in “regular, sustained business activ-
    ity.” At a hearing before the subcommittee, Hall explained
    that
    “there was some concern that the phrase ‘transact busi-
    ness’ could mean that * * * a business entity that maybe did
    some business in a particular county of the state * * * on an
    irregular basis, didn’t have an office there *  * might still
    *
    be subject to venue in some county that otherwise it had
    virtually no contacts with other than occasional business
    transactions. So the suggested change—instead of transact
    business—is ‘conducts regular, sustained business activity’
    simply to raise the threshold a little bit, and this is accept-
    able to Professor Merrill and his group.”
    Tape Recording, House Committee on Judiciary Subcom-
    mittee 2, May 3, 1983, Tape 288, Side A (statement of Kirk
    Hall). As Hall noted, the change was intended to “raise the
    threshold a little bit” for the benefit of defendants. 
    Id. Those amendments
    were adopted without objections, and the bill
    as amended was passed by the legislature without further
    discussion of that issue.
    The legislative history thus makes clear that, while
    SB 198 was intended to “partly expand” the definition of cor-
    porate residence for venue purposes, the legislature rejected
    wording that would have defined corporate residence in
    terms of any place that the corporation or limited partnership
    does business. Instead, it adopted wording that was intended
    “to raise the threshold” and exclude activities that amount
    to doing only “some business” on an “irregular basis” where
    the corporation or limited partnership had “virtually no con-
    tacts” other than “occasional business transactions.” 
    Id. To be
    sure, the foregoing legislative history consists
    principally of statements of nonlegislators, which sometimes
    provides limited assistance in determining the legislature’s
    intent. See, e.g., State v. Guzek, 322 Or 245, 260, 906 P2d
    272 (1995), rev’d on other grounds, State v. Moore, 324 Or
    396, 927 P2d 1073 (1996) (noting that the testimony of a sin-
    gle nonlegislator says little “about the intent of the Oregon
    Legislative Assembly as a whole”). In some cases, however,
    312	                                      Kohring v. Ballard
    it is appropriate to give greater weight to such legislative
    history, as when the nonlegislators were the drafters and
    principal proponents of a bill, and it is clear that the leg-
    islature relied on their explanations. See, e.g., Assoc. Unit
    Owners of Timbercrest Condo. v. Warren, 352 Or 583, 596-
    97, 288 P3d 958 (2012) (relying on testimony of a represen-
    tative of the Oregon State Bar regarding a bill proposed by
    the Bar); State ex rel Engweiler v. Felton, 350 Or 592, 626-27,
    260 P3d 448 (2011) (considering statements made by the
    Chair of the Board of Parole, proponent of the bill at issue);
    Snider v. Production Chemical Manufacturing, Inc., 348 Or
    257, 266-67, 230 P3d 1 (2010) (considering testimony from
    a representative of the Oregon State Bar, the proponent of
    the bill).
    In short, the legislative history confirms what the
    text of ORS 14.080(2) suggests. Although the legislature
    intended to expand the definition of corporate residence for
    venue purposes to cover more than just a single “principal
    place of business,” it also intended to limit corporate resi-
    dence to those places where an enterprise conducts its nor-
    mal, ordinary business activities on a sustained basis.
    C.  Application
    With the foregoing in mind, we turn to the trial
    court’s denial of defendants’ motion to change venue. As we
    have noted, the trial court, finding no controlling Oregon
    case law, relied on the Washington Supreme Court’s deci-
    sion in Verd in concluding that the determination of corpo-
    rate residence for venue purposes is essentially the same
    as the evaluation of the sufficiency of business contacts for
    personal jurisdiction purposes. Based on a personal juris-
    diction analysis, the trial court then concluded that defen-
    dants’ solicitation and advertising activities constituted
    “purposely avail[ing]” themselves of the court’s jurisdiction
    in Multnomah County, and that such purposeful availment
    sufficed to establish their residency for venue purposes.
    In so doing, the trial court erred. First, personal
    jurisdiction and venue are not the same thing. Jurisdiction
    refers to the authority of the court to hale a defendant into
    court, while venue concerns the particular location where it
    is appropriate for the court to exercise that authority. See
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	313
    generally Casad & Hines, Jurisdiction and Forum Selection
    § 426 at 4-87 (“A defendant who has the requisite contacts to
    a state may be subject to personal jurisdiction in every court
    of that state, but the venue rules will designate one or more
    counties or districts as the place where the action should be
    brought.” (Emphasis in original)).
    As we have noted, the current federal definition of
    corporate residence for venue purposes does equate venue
    and personal jurisdiction. Many states, however, define
    venue to require more than just the minimum contacts neces-
    sary to establish personal jurisdiction. See generally Swain,
    Place Where Corporation is Doing Business for Purposes of
    State Venue 
    Statute, 42 A.L.R. 5th at 237-38
    . And nothing
    in the wording of ORS 14.080(2) or its legislative history
    suggests that the Oregon legislature intended to define cor-
    porate residence for venue purposes to extend to any place
    where personal jurisdiction would lie.
    Second, on its own terms, Verd is distinguishable. In
    that case, the Washington Supreme Court recognized that,
    even for personal jurisdiction purposes, the “mere solicita-
    tion” of orders does not suffice. 31 Wash 2d at 629, 198 P2d
    at 665. The court explained that only “if the solicitation by
    the corporation’s agents was regular and systematic and
    had resulted in a continuous flow of its products into this
    state,” or if “there were additional activities by the corpora-
    tion’s agents”—in particular, “acceptance and performance
    of the contract within the state”—would solicitation be suffi-
    cient to establish jurisdiction. 
    Id. In this
    case, there is no such “regular and systematic
    flow” of products or services into Multnomah County. Nor
    did defendants’ solicitation and advertising activities result
    in acceptance and performance in Multnomah County. To
    the contrary, it is undisputed that all of defendants’ medical
    services were rendered in Clackamas County only.
    The question remains whether, using a proper
    analysis under ORS 14.080(2), the trial court’s denial of
    defendants’ motion nevertheless was correct. As we have
    noted, plaintiffs contend that a number of activities estab-
    lish the sort of “regular, sustained business activities” that
    ORS 14.080(2) requires. We conclude that none of those
    314	                                                    Kohring v. Ballard
    activities, individually or collectively, establishes what the
    statute requires.
    We begin with evidence that 600 of Oregon
    Orthopedic’s patients reside in Portland. At the outset, it is
    debatable that such a relatively small portion of defendants’
    clientele—2.5 percent—is sufficient to satisfy the statute’s
    requirement of “regular, sustained business activities.” See,
    e.g., Hernandez v. East Coast Barge and Boat Co., 85 Va Cir
    103, 103 (2012) (finding a lack of substantial business activ-
    ity for venue purposes for revenue or expenditures below 10
    percent). We need not decide that, however, because where
    defendants’ patients happen to reside is not a “business
    activity” that is “conducted” by defendants. If, for instance,
    one of defendants’ patients traveled from her residence in
    Uruguay to receive medical services in Clackamas County,
    defendants would not have conducted any business activi-
    ties in Uruguay. The focus of ORS 14.080(2) is defendants’
    activities not their patients’ place of residence.6
    We turn to defendants’ advertising and solicita-
    tion activities. The record shows that Oregon Orthopedic
    advertised in three ways. First, it maintained a web page in
    which it referred to its location as being near Portland and
    listed its site as “pdxortho.com.” Second, it posted seven job
    openings in the Oregonian newspaper in 2007. Third, over
    a period of five years, it advertised in the local yellow pages
    telephone directory that is distributed in, among other
    places, Multnomah County.
    We begin by noting that the fact that defendants’
    advertising refers to “Portland” or “pdx” hardly establishes
    that they conduct regular, sustained business activity in
    Multnomah County. The City of Portland, after all, is located
    in three different counties—Multnomah, Clackamas, and
    Washington. We also conclude that seven job postings in
    2007—even assuming for the sake of argument that they
    constitute “regular” business activities—do not amount to
    the sort of “sustained” business activity that ORS 14.080(2)
    requires.
    6
    That is not to say that where a patient or customer resides is always irrel-
    evant. In the case of a doctor who makes house calls, for example, or a plumber
    or electrician who provides services in a customer’s home, patient or customer
    residence is relevant, because it determines where the business activities occur.
    Cite as 355 Or 297 (2014)	315
    Aside from that, defendants’ advertising in the yel-
    low pages directory and its posting of occasional job open-
    ings is not a “regular” part of defendants’ business in this
    case. That is not to say that advertising and solicitation are
    never relevant. Their relevance will depend on the nature of
    the business at issue and where products and services are
    actually provided. In this case, defendants’ advertising and
    solicitation are incidental to their regular business activity.
    That only makes sense. If where a business adver-
    tises determines its corporate residence for venue pur-
    poses, then advertising (particularly with the advent of the
    Internet) would subject it to legal action anywhere that per-
    sonal jurisdiction could be established. As we have noted,
    nothing in the text or legislative history of ORS 14.080(2)
    suggests that the legislature intended that.
    Plaintiffs also rely on the fact that some of the
    physicians who work at Oregon Orthopedic conferred with
    attorneys who practice in Multnomah County for the pur-
    pose of providing information in relation to patients’ work-
    ers’ compensation claims. It is debatable whether such meet-
    ings are “regular” business activities of defendants. See, e.g.,
    Westmoreland Coal Co., 399 SE2d at 906 (hiring attorney is
    incidental and does not constitute “doing business” for venue
    purposes). Nor is it beyond dispute that such activities were
    “sustained” within the meaning of the statute. But we need
    not resolve those uncertainties, because the record estab-
    lishes that only one of those meetings actually took place in
    Multnomah County.7
    Plaintiffs contend that some physicians who work
    for Oregon Orthopedic attended educational seminars that
    were offered in Multnomah County. The record does show
    that, during a five-year period, Oregon Orthopedic sent
    employees to 68 educational seminars and 44 continuing
    medical education seminars that took place in Multnomah
    County. We conclude that a total of 112 seminars over
    7
    The record on this point consists of a declaration of defendants’ counsel list-
    ing 39 meetings concerning mostly workers’ compensation claims that occurred
    between January 2010 and May 2012. In nine instances—each referring to a
    physician giving deposition or trial testimony—the location of the meeting
    is included. And, in all but one of those instances, the location was outside of
    Multnomah County.
    316	                                       Kohring v. Ballard
    a course of five years is not the sort of “sustained” activi-
    ties contemplated by ORS 14.080(2). Moreover, there is no
    evidence that defendants conducted the seminars. Merely
    attending a seminar put on by someone else is not a busi-
    ness activity that defendants “conducted.”
    Plaintiffs also rely on evidence that Oregon Orthopedic
    has referred patients to medical imaging centers located
    in Multnomah County. That defendants may refer some of
    its patients to other medical service providers located in
    Multnomah County, however, does not constitute a business
    activity of defendants conducted there. Moreover, the record
    is silent on the number of such referrals. It is therefore
    impossible to determine whether they constitute the sort of
    “sustained” business activities required by ORS 14.080(2).
    Finally, plaintiffs contend that defendants “culti-
    vate[  relationships with Multnomah County clinics, send-
    ]
    ing Christmas gifts and on occasion providing lunches.”
    What the record reveals, however, is that Oregon Orthopedic
    sends Christmas chocolates to two clinics, and provided a
    single lunch in 2009. Even assuming for the sake of argu-
    ment that those are the sort of “regular * * * business activ-
    ities” that ORS 14.080(2) refers to, the fact remains that
    they are not in any sense “sustained.”
    In short, none of the activities on which plaintiffs
    rely satisfies the statutory requirement of “regular, sustained
    business activities” within the meaning of ORS 14.080(2).
    Nor, when taken collectively, do they establish defendants’
    residence in Multnomah County for venue purposes. The
    trial court therefore erred in denying defendants’ motion to
    change venue.
    Peremptory writ of mandamus to issue ordering
    trial court to grant defendants’ motion to change venue.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CC1111-14966; SC S060533

Citation Numbers: 355 Or. 297, 325 P.3d 717, 2014 WL 1641418, 2014 Ore. LEXIS 306

Judges: Landau

Filed Date: 4/24/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024