Williams, J. v. OAO Severstal v. Tri-State Safety ( 2019 )


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  • J-A02021-18
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    JOHN WILLIAMS, AN                       :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    INCAPACITATED PERSON, BY                :        PENNSYLVANIA
    BRANDY WILLIAMS, GUARDIAN (AD           :
    LITEM); JOHN WILLIAMS, BRANDY           :
    WILLIAMS                                :
    :
    :
    v.                         :
    :   No. 938 WDA 2017
    :
    OAO SEVERSTAL, SEVERSTAL                :
    RESOURCES, PBS COALS, INC; MINE         :
    SAFETY APPLIANCES COMPANY               :
    :
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    :
    TRI-STATE SAFETY TRAINING               :
    SERVICES                                :
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: OAO SEVERSTAL
    Appeal from the Order May 31, 2017
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County Civil Division at
    No(s): 1396 of 2014
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and KUNSELMAN, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                         FILED OCTOBER 03, 2019
    OAO Severstal (“Appellant”) appeals from the May 31, 2017 order
    overruling its preliminary objection to the trial court’s exercise of personal
    jurisdiction. We affirm.
    On April 19, 2012, John Williams suffered severe injuries while working
    for Merit Contracting, Inc. constructing a raw coal bin at the Shade Creek
    J-A02021-18
    Plant, a coal facility owned by Appellant’s subsidiary, PBS Coals, Inc. (“PBS”).
    On June 9, 20      14, Mr. Williams, both individually and through his guardian
    ad litem (hereinafter “Mr. Williams”), filed a complaint against Appellant and
    PBS Coals. Appellant responded by filing preliminary objections that asserted,
    inter alia, that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction. On April 6, 2017,
    following extensive discovery, including the deposition of two former PBS
    Coals executives and a former board member, who is also Appellant’s Chief
    Executive Officer (“CEO”), the trial court overruled Appellant’s preliminary
    objections as to personal jurisdiction.      On May 31, 2017, the trial court
    amended the order to certify that the case presented a substantial issue of
    personal jurisdiction. See Pa.R.A.P. 311(b)(2). This timely appeal followed.
    Appellant presents three questions for our review:
    A. Whether the trial court committed an error of law when it
    denied [Appellant’s] preliminary objection to the court’s exercise
    of specific personal jurisdiction over it . . . [pursuant to] 42 Pa.C.S.
    § 5322 . . . ?
    B. Whether the trial court’s holding that it had specific personal
    jurisdiction under 42 Pa.C.S. § 5322 over [Appellant], a Russian
    corporation, in this personal injury action is inconsistent with the
    due process requirements of the 14th Amendment?
    C. Whether a plaintiff suing an out-of-state defendant should be
    required to plead the existence of personal jurisdiction and facts
    in support thereof?
    Appellant’s brief at 6 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    At the outset, we address Appellant’s assertion that Mr. Williams was
    required to plead the existence of personal jurisdiction. This claim is identified
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    as issue “C” in Appellant’s statement of questions presented.           Id. The
    argument requires us to interpret the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure;
    therefore, it is a question of law over which our standard of review is de novo
    and our scope of review is plenary.      See Tillery v. Children’s Hosp. of
    Phila., 
    156 A.3d 1233
    , 1249 (Pa.Super. 2017).
    Appellant’s argument is without merit because this Court has repeatedly
    held that “when a defendant challenges a court’s personal jurisdiction, that
    defendant bears the burden of supporting such objections to jurisdiction by
    presenting evidence. The burden of proof only shifts to the plaintiff after the
    defendant has presented . . . evidence in support of its preliminary objections
    challenging jurisdiction.” Trexler v. McDonald's Corp., 
    118 A.3d 408
    , 412
    (Pa.Super. 2015) (cleaned up); see Scoggins v. Scoggins, 
    555 A.2d 1314
    ,
    1317 (Pa Super. 1989); Schmitt v. Seaspray–Sharkline, Inc., 
    531 A.2d 801
    , 803 (Pa.Super. 1987). Hence, Mr. Williams was not required to plead
    facts in his complaint supporting the exercise of personal jurisdiction over
    Appellant. Instead, he was entitled to aver the facts supporting the exercise
    of personal jurisdiction in his response to Appellant’s preliminary objections
    and thereafter present evidence in support of those averments. Accordingly,
    we conclude that Appellant is not entitled to relief on this claim of error.
    We address Appellant’s remaining claims collectively.          Essentially,
    Appellant argues that Mr. Williams adduced insufficient facts to demonstrate
    that his cause of action arose out of Appellant’s contacts with Pennsylvania.
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    Appellant’s primary contention is that personal jurisdiction is not conferred to
    Pennsylvania simply because PBS Coals is one of its subsidiaries. Appellant
    continues that, absent evidence that Appellant controlled PBS Coals’ decision-
    making in relation to the coal bin’s construction, it did not have sufficient
    minimum contacts with Pennsylvania to attach personal jurisdiction that
    satisfies   the   due    process    considerations   outlined   in   the   Fourteenth
    Amendment.
    Mr. Williams counters by highlighting that the trial court’s determination
    is based upon acts that stemmed from Appellant’s ownership and control of
    its subsidiary. He argues, “The undisputed acts found by the [t]rial [c]ourt all
    arose from [Appellant’s] ownership and management of PBS Coals.
    Construction at the Shade Creek Plant was merely one aspect of [Appellant’s]
    management and operation of PBS Coals.” Appellee’s brief at 8-9.1
    ____________________________________________
    1 The contentions that Mr. Williams asserted on appeal regarding the level of
    Appellant’s oversight in the parent-subsidiary relationship with PBS Coals and
    the trial court’s review of that relationship clearly implicate the alter-ego/mere
    instrumentality theory of personal jurisdiction. To the extent that Mr. Williams
    did not express this precise argument on appeal, our review is not constrained
    by the assertions leveled in an appellee’s brief. Indeed, it is well settled that
    this Court may affirm the trial court’s order on any basis supported by the
    record. See, e.g., Preferred Contractors Ins. Co., RRG, LLC v. Sherman,
    
    193 A.3d 1009
    , 1022 n.3 (Pa.Super. 2018). Thus, insofar as the certified
    record supports the trial court’s decision to overrule Appellant’s preliminary
    objections, this Court may affirm that order regardless of the arguments that
    Mr. Williams asserted in his brief.
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    We review a trial court’s order overruling preliminary objections for an
    abuse of discretion and “[we] must consider the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the non-moving party.[2]” Sulkava v. Gaston Finland Oy, 54
    ____________________________________________
    2 There are two distinct classifications of preliminary objections pursuant to
    Rule 1028(a): 1) objections that directly challenge the adequacy of the
    pleading, i.e., subparagraphs (a)(2), (3), and (4); and 2) objections that raise
    challenges that transcend the four corners of the pleading. As the note to
    Rule 1028(a) explains, objections that relate to a nonconforming pleading,
    insufficient specificity in a pleading, and a demurrer need no additional
    evidence and may be determined from the face of the pleading. However,
    unlike preliminary objections that are self-evident, preliminary objections that
    implicate, inter alia, personal jurisdiction require additional evidence.
    Relying upon Nutrition Management Services Co. v. Hinchcliff, 
    926 A.2d 531
     (Pa.Super 2007), the concurrence asserts that the extensive
    discovery conducted in this case was superfluous because Appellant’s
    preliminary objections “did not cast doubt upon the jurisdiction-conferring
    allegations in the complaint.” See Concurring Memorandum at 7. We
    disagree. In Nutrition Management Services Co., supra at 536, this Court
    concluded that there was no need to develop an evidentiary record prior to
    sustaining a preliminary objection where “neither party presented evidence
    that raised factual issues which required the creation of an evidentiary record.”
    We highlighted, “there was no need to develop an evidentiary record
    [because] there is no indication that [the plaintiff] sought to depose any [out-
    of-state-defendants] prior to oral argument. Moreover, [the plaintiff] fails to
    identify a single factual issue that needs to be resolved.” Id. Hence, we
    concluded that, even though the out-of-state defendant “readily admitted” to
    the actions that formed the factual basis of the Pennsylvania plaintiff’s
    assertion, those allegations did not support the exercise of personal
    jurisdiction. Id. Stated in the parlance of the concurrence, discovery was not
    warranted prior to sustaining the preliminary objection in that case because
    the plaintiff failed to proffer any “jurisdiction-conferring allegations in the
    complaint” upon which the defendants were required to cast doubt. See
    Concurring Memorandum at 7.
    The case at bar presents a drastically different situation. Rather than
    sustaining a preliminary objection because the plaintiff neglected to assert a
    factual basis for the trial court to exercise personal jurisdiction, the trial court
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    J-A02021-
    18 A.3d 884
    , 889 (Pa.Super. 2012). Furthermore “ This Court will reverse the
    trial court's decision regarding preliminary objections only where there has
    been an error of law or an abuse of discretion. Once the moving party supports
    its objections to personal jurisdiction, the burden of proving personal
    jurisdiction is upon the party asserting it.” 
    Id.
    Considering the corporate dynamics that this case presents, we do not
    believe that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling Appellant’s
    preliminary objection to the trial court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction.
    Appellant is an international steel manufacturing behemoth.        PBS Coals, a
    Delaware corporation with headquarters in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, is
    ____________________________________________
    ordered discovery to “adduce and submit . . . facts that would allow [it] to
    make a determination relative to the Preliminary Objections, based upon . . .
    jurisdiction.” Trial Court Order, 11/25/14, at 2-3. Instantly, Appellant’s
    preliminary objection contested the factual bases of Mr. Williams’s assertions
    of jurisdiction, i.e., that because PBS Coals was Appellant’s agent,
    instrumentality, or alter ego in Pennsylvania, Appellant owed a duty to
    Williams as an invitee at the Shade Creek Plant owned by PBS Coals. In fact,
    in arguing that its corporate relationship with PBS Coals was insufficient for
    Pennsylvania to exercise personal jurisdiction, Appellant stressed that it did
    not have a direct ownership interest in PBS Coals or operate the subsidiary at
    the time of the accident. See Preliminary Objection at 8, ¶ 30. Furthermore,
    Appellant averred that it neither maintained bank accounts, licensing, offices,
    or a business address in Pennsylvania; nor did it employ personnel, own
    property, or pay taxes in the Commonwealth. Id. at 8, ¶ 29. As Appellant’s
    contentions challenged the factual basis of Mr. Williams’s assertion of
    jurisdiction, i.e., that Appellant’s acts, or its corporate relationship with PBS
    Coals, gave rise to the cause of action in Pennsylvania, discovery was
    warranted.
    -6-
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    one of Appellant’s myriad wholly-owned subsidiaries.3 Appellant’s ownership
    of PBS Coals twists through a series of international subsidiaries, including
    holding companies in Russia, the Netherlands, and Canada, and two domestic
    companies incorporated in Delaware.            PBS Coals’ purpose was to produce
    metallurgical coal for Appellant’s in-house consumption in its steel making
    operations in North America.            Although the caption also lists Severstal
    Resources as a defendant in this case, that is not a corporate entity. In reality,
    “Severstal Resources” is an informal sobriquet that Appellant uses to identify
    its mining units collectively. N.T. Deposition of Lori Mason, 9/9/15, at 119-
    21; Exhibit 2. In this vein, the name “Severstal” and the concomitant logo
    that was emblazoned on PBS Coals’ letterhead, business cards, and signs,
    represents a brand name, whose use and depiction were controlled by
    Appellant.4
    In addition to the enumerated acts specified in 42 Pa.C.S. § 5322(a),5
    the Pennsylvania long-arm statute confers jurisdiction to “the fullest extent
    ____________________________________________
    3In addition to PBS Coals, Appellant owned Rox Coal, Inc., a different coal
    mining subsidiary under the Severstal brand that operated out of PBS Coals’
    Somerset headquarters. The interdependent relationship between Rox Coal
    and PBS Coals existed prior to Appellant’s acquisition of those assets.
    4 The Severstal name and logo are not only imprinted on the service contract
    between PBS Coals and Merritt Construction, Mr. Williams’s employer when
    the injury occurred, but are also posted atop the insurance and compliance
    certifications that were executed simultaneously with the contract.
    This section of the long-arm statute provides:
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    ____________________________________________
    (a) General rule.--A tribunal of this Commonwealth may exercise personal
    jurisdiction over a person (or the personal representative of a deceased
    individual who would be subject to jurisdiction under this subsection if not
    deceased) who acts directly or by an agent, as to a cause of action or other
    matter arising from such person:
    (1) Transacting any business in this Commonwealth. Without
    excluding other acts which may constitute transacting business in
    this Commonwealth, any of the following shall constitute
    transacting business for the purpose of this paragraph:
    (i) The doing by any person in this Commonwealth of a series of
    similar acts for the purpose of thereby realizing pecuniary benefit
    or otherwise accomplishing an object.
    (ii) The doing of a single act in this Commonwealth for the purpose
    of thereby realizing pecuniary benefit or otherwise accomplishing
    an object with the intention of initiating a series of such acts.
    (iii) The shipping of merchandise directly or indirectly into or
    through this Commonwealth.
    (iv) The engaging in any business or profession within this
    Commonwealth, whether or not such business requires license or
    approval by any government unit of this Commonwealth.
    (v) The ownership, use or possession of any real property situate
    within this Commonwealth.
    (2) Contracting        to    supply     services   or   things   in   this
    Commonwealth.
    (3) Causing harm or tortious injury by an act or omission in this
    Commonwealth.
    (4) Causing harm or tortious injury in this Commonwealth by an
    act or omission outside this Commonwealth.
    (5) Having an interest in, using, or possessing real property in this
    Commonwealth.
    -8-
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    allowed under the Constitution of the United States and may be based on the
    most minimum         contact with       this   Commonwealth allowed under     the
    ____________________________________________
    (6)(i) Contracting to insure any person, property, or risk located
    within this Commonwealth at the time of contracting.
    (ii) Being a person who controls, or who is a director, officer,
    employee or agent of a person who controls, an insurance
    company incorporated in this Commonwealth or an alien insurer
    domiciled in this Commonwealth.
    (iii) Engaging in conduct described in section 504 of the act of May
    17, 1921 (P.L. 789, No. 285), known as The Insurance
    Department Act of 1921.
    (7) Accepting election or appointment or exercising powers under
    the authority of this Commonwealth as a:
    (i) Personal representative of a decedent.
    (ii) Guardian of a minor or incapacitated person.
    (iii) Trustee or other fiduciary.
    (iv) Director or officer of a corporation.
    (8) Executing any bond of any of the persons specified in
    paragraph (7).
    (9) Making application to any government unit for any certificate,
    license, permit, registration or similar instrument or authorization
    or exercising any such instrument or authorization.
    (10) Committing any violation within the jurisdiction of this
    Commonwealth of any statute, home rule charter, local ordinance
    or resolution, or rule or regulation promulgated thereunder by any
    government unit or of any order of court or other government
    unit.
    42 Pa.C.S. § 5322(a)(1)-(a)(10) (foot note omitted).
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    Constitution of the United States” See 42 Pa.C.S. § 5322(b). As explained
    below, we disagree with Appellant’s assertion that it and PBS Coals maintained
    a typical parent-subsidiary relationship that was insufficient to confer personal
    jurisdiction upon Appellant in Pennsylvania.          To the contrary, Appellant’s
    corporate structure and oversight of PBS Coals’ mining operations for its
    internal   consumption    of   metallurgical   coal    negates   the   jurisdictional
    protections that a foreign parent corporation typically enjoys pursuant to
    Daimler AG v. Bauman, 
    571 U.S. 117
     (2014), and Bristol-Myers Squibb
    Co. v. Superior Court, 
    137 S. Ct. 1773
     (2017), two decisions that limited
    states’ personal jurisdiction over out-of-state defendants.       Moreover, while
    Appellant did not specifically oversee the construction of the raw coal bin
    where Mr. Williams was injured during 2012, such a precise connection to the
    injury is not required.   Instead, Appellant’s use of PBS Coals to internally
    source its demand for metallurgical coal rendered the subsidiary the mere
    instrumentality of the parent company. Thus, acknowledging the coal bin’s
    role in the mining operations, the facts in this case support the trial court’s
    decision to exercise specific personal jurisdiction over Appellant. See Bristol-
    Myers Squibb Co., supra at 1780 (“In order for a state court to exercise
    specific jurisdiction, the suit must arise out of or relate to the defendant’s
    contacts with the forum.”) (cleaned up).
    In Daimler AG, supra at 762, the High Court explained that the
    requirement of personal jurisdiction should “permit out-of-state defendants to
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    structure their primary conduct with some minimum assurance as to where
    that conduct will and will not render them liable to suit.”         (citation and
    quotation marks omitted).6 Similarly, the Supreme Court’s holding in Bristol-
    Myers Squibb, supra at 1781, required “an affiliation between the forum and
    the underlying controversy, principally, an activity or an occurrence that takes
    place in the forum State.”        Instantly, Mr. Williams’s injury arose from the
    construction of a coal bin that PBS Coals utilized in its operations to meet
    Appellant’s demand for metallurgical coal.
    While agency-based theories such as instrumentality, piercing the
    corporate veil, and alter ego are typically utilized to exercise general
    jurisdiction, there is neither an express bar nor conceptual restraint that
    precludes applying those principles to specific jurisdiction where, as here, the
    cause of action flows from the veiled action of the foreign parent.7 Regardless
    ____________________________________________
    6 In a nod to a hypothetical that the High Court posed in Daimler, supra at
    121-22, the learned dissent posits that, by exercising general personal
    jurisdiction over Appellant in this case, we open a theoretical gateway for a
    Ukrainian citizen to sue Appellant in Pennsylvania for injures that arise in
    Alaska.     See Concurring/Dissenting Memorandum at 12 n.7.            Though
    imaginative, the dissent’s hypothetical is unpersuasive for the identical
    reasons that Justice Sotomayor rejected its counterpart in Daimler. Stated
    plainly, where “foreign plaintiffs su[e] a foreign defendant based on foreign
    conduct,” the suit has no relation to the forum state, and “given that a more
    appropriate forum is available,” the “exercise of jurisdiction would be
    unreasonable”– which is a bedrock principle of jurisdiction. Daimler supra
    at 143-44, (Sotomayor Concurring).
    7 The dissent’s reference to BNSF Ry. Co. v. Tyrrell, 137 S.Ct 1549 (2017)
    is not instructive insofar as that case does not address the principles of
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    of the name given the test to determine specific personal jurisdiction, the
    relevant jurisdictional principles of minimum contacts, fair play, and
    substantial justice remain static.         See Jennifer A. Schwartz, PIERCING   THE
    CORPORATE VEIL OF AN ALIEN PARENT FOR JURISDICTIONAL PURPOSES: A PROPOSAL FOR A
    STANDARD THAT COMPORTS       WITH   DUE PROCESS, 
    96 Cal. L. Rev. 731
    , 735 (2008)
    (advocating for “jurisdictional veil-piercing jurisprudence related to alien
    parents of U.S. subsidiary corporations in the context of specific jurisdiction.”).
    Ultimately, the analysis centers on whether it is reasonable to extend
    jurisdiction to an alien parent corporation based upon its actions within the
    forum as transmitted through the conduit of its wholly-owned subsidiary.
    This is not a novel perspective. Indeed, the Daimler Court specifically
    noted the applicability of agency theories to specific personal jurisdiction. 
    Id.
    at 759 n.13 (“Agency relationships, we have recognized, may be relevant to
    the existence of specific jurisdiction.”). Moreover, other courts have employed
    ____________________________________________
    agency, instrumentality, or alter ego that are at the heart of this case. Indeed,
    BNSF concerns a Montana court’s attempt to extend general personal
    jurisdiction to an out-of-state corporate defendant with negligible ties to
    Montana in a lawsuit with no connection to Montana. Echoing the reasoning
    that it employed in Daimler AG, the High Court concluded, inter alia, “BNSF
    [is not] so heavily engaged in activity in Montana as to render it essentially at
    home in that State.” Id. at 1559 (cleaned up). Instantly, the certified record
    is replete with evidence that ties Appellant to the underlying litigation in
    Pennsylvania through its control over PBS Coals.            Hence, the foreign
    corporation is subject to the Commonwealth’s specific personal jurisdiction
    even though Pennsylvania is not its home forum for the purpose of
    determining general personal jurisdiction.
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    J-A02021-18
    similar theories to establish specific jurisdiction over foreign parent
    corporations based upon the contacts its subsidiary has to the forum and
    litigation. See Celgard, LLC v. SK Innovation Co., Ltd., 
    792 F.3d 1373
    ,
    1379 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“For purposes of specific personal jurisdiction, the
    contacts of a third-party may be imputed to the defendant under either an
    agency or alter ego theory. In order to establish jurisdiction under the agency
    theory, the plaintiff must show that the defendant exercises control over the
    activities of the third-party”); In re Chinese-Manufactured Drywall Prods.
    Liab. Litig., 
    753 F.3d 521
    , 531 (5th Cir. 2014) (interpreting Daimler as
    embracing significance of principal-agent relationship in specific-jurisdiction
    analysis); see also Gerlinde Berger-Walliser, RECONCILING TRANSNATIONAL
    JURISDICTION: A COMPARATIVE APPROACH     TO    PERSONAL JURISDICTION   OVER   FOREIGN
    CORPORATE DEFENDANTS    IN   US COURTS, 
    51 Vand. J. Transnat'l L. 1243
    , 1275
    (2018) (discussing Daimler and its progeny, “it remains uncertain if, in the
    future, the Court will allow the actions of a third party, including a subsidiary
    not completely dominated by its out-of-state parent corporation, to be
    transposed to the defendant who has not purposefully availed itself of that
    forum.”). Thus, a finding that an undercapitalized Pennsylvania subsidiary is
    acting as the agent, instrumentality, or alter ego of a foreign parent
    corporation can form a foundation for a court to exercise specific personal
    jurisdiction.
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    Typically, a corporate parent, such as Appellant, retains its distinct
    identity even though it may share common directors, officers, and
    shareholders with a subsidiary. See Botwinick v. Credit Exch., Inc., 
    213 A.2d 349
    , 354 (Pa. 1965). As a separate legal entity, a parent corporation is
    generally not subject to the jurisdictions of its subsidiaries, absent overt
    interaction with the forum state that would satisfy the minimum contacts
    standard established in International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 
    326 U.S. 310
    , 316 (1945). Botwinick, supra at 352-53. However, to the extent that
    the certified record demonstrates that the parent and subsidiary are so
    intertwined that the subsidiary is the instrumentality of the parent corporation,
    then the parent may be considered to be doing business within the state under
    the facade of the subsidiary. Id. at 354. In Botwinick, our Supreme Court
    addressed whether a parent company was “doing business” through its
    subsidiaries for purposes of determining personal jurisdiction. It articulated
    this determination as follows:
    Neither the similarity of names between the parent and subsidiary
    corporation nor the total ownership of the stock of the subsidiary
    by the parent nor the fact that a single individual is the active chief
    executive of both corporations will per se justify a court in piercing
    the corporate veil if each corporation maintains a bona fide
    separate and distinct corporate existence.
    Botwinick, supra, at 353-54 (citations omitted).
    The determination of whether a subsidiary is merely the instrumentality
    of its parent corporation depends on the manner in which a parent conducts
    and maintains its relationship with the subsidiary. In re Enter. Rent–A–Car
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    J-A02021-18
    Wage & Hour Emp’t Practices Litig., 
    735 F. Supp. 2d 277
    , 317 (W.D. Pa.
    2010), aff’d, 
    683 F.3d 462
     (3d Cir. 2012) (whether exercise of jurisdiction
    over parent corporation is proper under alter-ego theory depends upon details
    of relationship between parent corporation and its subsidiary). Thus, it is a
    fact-based inquiry that focuses on the specific acts that demonstrate the
    parent company’s control over its subsidiary. 
    Id.
    While there is a dearth of authoritative precedent addressing this
    principle following our High Court’s decision in Botwinick, our sister
    jurisdictions in the federal courts have honed the pertinent inquiry as follows:
    As part of this inquiry, courts in this District often consider the
    following discrete factors: (1) ownership of all or most of the stock
    of the subsidiary; (2) common officers and directors; (3) a
    common marketing image; (4) common use of a trademark or
    logo; (5) common use of employees; (6) an integrated sales
    system; (7) interchange of managerial and supervisory personnel;
    (8) performance of business functions by the subsidiary which the
    principal corporation would normally conduct through its own
    agents or departments; (9) marketing by the subsidiary on behalf
    of the principal corporation, or as the principal's exclusive
    distributor; and (10) receipt by the officers of the subsidiary
    corporation of instruction from the principal corporation. . . .
    These factors are best viewed as a non-exclusive guide to help
    resolve the broader issue of whether the companies have a “single
    functional and organic identity.”
    Simeone ex rel. Estate Of Albert Francis Simeone, Jr. v. Bombardier-
    Rotax GmbH, 
    360 F.Supp.2d 665
    , 675-76 (E.D. Pa. 2005).
    The test involves a “flexible, pragmatic inquiry into all relevant factors
    that relate to the intimacy of the parent-subsidiary relationship.”     Arch v.
    American Tobacco Co., Inc., 
    984 F. Supp. 830
    , 837 (E.D. Pa. 1997)).
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    Moreover, as the District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    explained, “[t]he alter-ego test for personal jurisdiction is ‘less stringent’ than
    the test for piercing the corporate veil to impose liability. No single factor is
    dispositive, and the court may consider all relevant evidence to determine
    whether the parent exercises actual control over a subsidiary beyond that
    which is characteristic of a usual parent-subsidiary relationship.” Sincavage
    v. Schott North America, 
    2018 WL 4852218
     (M.D. Pa. 2018) (cleaned up);
    In re Enter. Rent–A–Car, 
    supra at 319
    ; see also Clark v. Matsushita
    Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd., 
    811 F.Supp. 1061
    , 1067 (M.D. Pa. 1993) (“A
    subsidiary is an ‘alter ego’ of its parent corporation if domination and control
    by the parent renders the subsidiary its mere instrumentality.”).         Indeed,
    “[t]he significant factor in this inquiry is the degree of control that the parent
    corporation retains over the subsidiary.” 
    Id.
     (quoting 2 James W. Moore et
    al., MOORE’S FEDERAL PRACTICE ¶ 4.41–1[6], at 4–368 (2d ed. 1992)).8
    ____________________________________________
    8  The dissent cites Anwar v. Dow Chem. Co., 
    876 F.3d 841
     (6th Cir. 2017)
    in order to highlight the fact that Appellant does not micro-manage PBS Coals’
    daily operations. However, when considered in conjunction with the intricate
    corporate structure and oversight that we describe in the body of this
    memorandum, the relevant facts demonstrate a level of involvement by
    Appellant that exceeds the mere macro-management that the dissent depicts.
    For similar reasons, we are not convinced that the dissent’s discussion of
    district court cases from California and Louisiana provides any meaningful
    guidance. In describing the decisions in Kellman v. Whole Foods Mkt.,
    Inc., 
    313 F.Supp.3d 1031
     (N.D. Cal. 2018), and Ezell v. Medtronic plc, 
    2018 WL 1100901
     (W.D. La. Feb. 6, 2018) (not reported), the dissent isolates
    certain factors that the respective district courts found deficient. In Kellman,
    it was the district court’s reference to Ranza v. Nike, Inc., 
    793 F.3d 1059
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    Courts have applied the alter-ego test with variable outcomes.         In
    Barber v. Pittsburgh Corning Corp., 
    464 A.2d 323
    , 317 (Pa.Super. 1983),
    this Court affirmed a trial court order that overruled preliminary objections
    challenging, inter alia, Pennsylvania’s authority to exert personal jurisdiction
    over a foreign corporation, Charter Consolidated, Ltd, (“Charter”), that
    conducted business in Pennsylvania through two groups of wholly-owned
    subsidiaries, Cape and Pandrol. Specifically, Cape sold thousands of tons of
    asbestos to the plaintiff’s former employer, Pittsburgh Corning Corporation
    (“Pittsburgh Corning”), and Pandrol sold railroad track equipment in
    Pittsburgh.    While Charter attempted to distance itself from Cape for the
    purposes of specific personal jurisdiction in the underlying asbestos litigation,
    this Court determined that the certified record demonstrated that Cape was
    the instrumentality of its parent corporation. 
    Id. at 329
    . We reasoned,
    ____________________________________________
    (9th Cir. 2015), for the general proposition that a parent corporation’s
    financing and macro-management is inadequate, and in Ezell, it was the
    existence of distinct office space, separate accounting, and the lack of daily
    oversight. While the dissent stresses that Appellant did not share office space
    or telephone lines with PBS Coals, and emphasizes the subsidiary’s authority
    to make major capital expenditures without formal approval, we are not
    persuaded by the dissent’s approach of evaluating specific factors in isolation.
    Indeed, when viewed in their proper context, none of the foregoing factors is
    informative. More importantly, although the dissent concentrates on PBS
    Coals’ formal authority to undertake major capital expenditures without
    Appellant’s express approval, it overlooks the reality that said authority was
    illusory. In actuality, PBS coals was undercapitalized and entirely reliant upon
    Appellant’s machinations to maintain cash flow. Without the means to
    undertake capital expenditures, PBS Coals’ formal authority to do so was
    hollow.
    - 17 -
    J-A02021-18
    Charter maintains that its relationship with Cape is not such
    that Cape's business transactions in Pennsylvania should be
    significant in supporting the in personam jurisdiction of the
    Pennsylvania courts over Charter. However, although Cape may
    technically appear to be an independent business entity, the
    record shows clearly the extent to which it comprises an operating
    arm of Charter. . . . In the course of its purchase of such firm
    control of Cape over several years, Cape announced the following
    in a prospectus accompanying its offer to buy fifty percent of all
    then outstanding shares:
    It is Charter's purpose to make use of the wide experience
    of Cape's management so that Cape can become the main
    channel for the expansion of Charter's industrial activities
    of this type; this could not be satisfactorily achieved unless
    Charter acquired a considerably larger holding such as
    would give Charter control of Cape.”
    The record makes it clear that since it acquired such a
    substantial ownership of Cape, Charter has been well represented
    by its own executives placed on Cape's Board of Directors, and
    has thereby participated in Cape's important business decisions.
    This total involvement by Charter in Cape's affairs was clearly
    significant to the lower court in its finding that through Cape,
    Charter has engaged in business affairs in Pennsylvania to a
    degree sufficient to assert in personam jurisdiction over Charter.
    
    Id. at 328-29
    .
    In contrast, in Enterprise, supra, the United States District Court for
    the Western District of Pennsylvania applied the ten above-referenced factors
    and concluded that a Pennsylvania subsidiary was not the instrumentality of
    a parent company incorporated in Missouri. In sum, unlike this Court’s holding
    in Barber, the district court determined that ownership, shared directors,
    common marketing images, and a unified information technology system did
    not implicate the parent company’s control over the Pennsylvania subsidiary’s
    internal workings or daily operations.        It reasoned, “A degree of control
    - 18 -
    J-A02021-18
    naturally flows from these aspects of the parent-subsidiary relationship, but
    this incidental control does not rise to the level required to permit the exercise
    of jurisdiction over the parent.” Id. at 323.
    Importantly, however, as it relates to the eighth factor, the subsidiary’s
    performance of business functions that the parent company would normally
    conduct, the district court observed that it would have been improper to
    impute jurisdiction in that case because “the subsidiary is not performing a
    function that the parent would otherwise have had to perform itself.” Id. at
    394 (quoting Action Mfg. Co., v. Simon Wrecking Co, 
    375 F.Supp.2d 411
    ,
    422 (E.D. Pa. 2005)). In this vein, the Enterprise Court differentiated the
    relevant business relationships therein from the circumstances presented in
    two other district court decisions, wherein the courts determined that a
    Pennsylvania subsidiary was the alter-ego of its foreign parent corporation.
    See, e.g., In re Chocolate Confectionary Antitrust Litig., 
    641 F.Supp.2d 367
     (M.D. Pa. 2009) (“Chocolate Confectionary II”); and In re Latex
    Gloves Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    2001 WL 964105
     (E.D. Pa. 2001) (“Latex
    Gloves”).    For example, while the Enterprise Court recognized that the
    parent corporation provided its wholly-owned subsidiary administrative
    services for a fee, it attributed the heightened attention to the service-
    centered nature of the car rental industry in which the parent and subsidiary
    were engaged. 
    Id.
    - 19 -
    J-A02021-18
    Similarly, the Enterprise Court deemed the diminished corporate
    formalities between parent and subsidiary, i.e., shared directors, common
    marketing images, and a unified information technology system, as
    secondary. Again, the court distinguished the relevant facts before it from the
    corporate structures in Latex Gloves, supra and Chocolate Confectionary
    II, supra.     Specifically, the district court stated that in those cases,
    “numerous facts [tied] the parent to the subsidiary, such as common
    ownership and the provision of administrative services.” Id. at 324. It found
    “the failure to adhere to corporate boundaries” was “[a] key fact[or] in those
    cases that resulted in the finding of alter-ego jurisdiction.” Id. In sum, the
    Enterprise Court concluded,
    In both [Latex Gloves] and Chocolate Confectionary II,
    the failure to adhere to corporate boundaries was demonstrated
    by the exercise of managerial power over the operations and
    functions of one subsidiary or group of subsidiaries by employees
    of a separate but affiliated corporation. [Latex Gloves], 
    2001 WL 964105
    , at *6; Chocolate Confectionary II, 
    641 F.Supp.2d at 401
    . In this case, there is no evidence of a failure to operate within
    the corporate structures established among the Enterprise Rent–
    A–Car companies. This court cannot exercise in personam
    jurisdiction over [the parent company] in this case based upon the
    alter-ego theory.
    In re Enterprise, supra at 324-25.
    Subsequently, in Hooper v. Safety-Kleen Sys., Inc., 
    2016 WL 7212586
    , at *7 (W.D. Pa. 2016), another trial court from the Western District
    applied the same ten factors and determined that competent evidence of
    record supported a finding that the subsidiary was the alter ego of the foreign
    - 20 -
    J-A02021-18
    parent corporation.9 In Hooper, Clean Harbors, Inc. (“CHI”), a Massachusetts
    holding company, acquired Safety-Kleen Systems, Inc. (“Safety Kleen”), a
    wholly-owned      subsidiary     that   operated   an   industrial   facility   in   Erie,
    Pennsylvania. Including Safety Kleen, CHI owned 128 subsidiary companies
    that it referred to collectively as the Clean Harbors family of companies. The
    Clean Harbors companies had common officers, all of whom reported to Alan
    McKim, CHI’s founder, President, Chairman and CEO. All of the subsidiaries
    used the “Clean Harbors” trademark, which CHI owned. CHI utilized the board
    of directors and officers of one of its subsidiaries, Clean Harbors Environmental
    Services, Inc. (“CHESI”), to provide free administrative services to the
    remaining Clean Harbors family of companies. Through CHESI, CHI provided
    business guidelines, benefit plans, information technology, insurance, and
    legal services.    It also negotiated and provided the full panoply of human
    ____________________________________________
    9 We do not rely upon the Hooper Court’s ultimate holding as persuasive
    authority. We observe that the procedural posture of the instant case differs
    from Hooper since that plaintiff had only to demonstrate a prima facie case
    of personal jurisdiction at the preliminary stage in the proceedings that the
    district court confronted the issue. Thus, while the Hooper Court declined to
    dismiss the complaint for want of jurisdiction, the plaintiff retained the
    ultimate burden of establishing personal jurisdiction by a preponderance of
    the evidence before or during trial. See Hooper, supra at *3. Accordingly,
    rather than attempting to draw value out of the trial court’s holding, we
    discuss that case simply in order to highlight the similarities between the
    corporate dynamics presented in it and the case at bar, and to illustrate how
    that framework differed from the corporate structure in other district court
    decisions that addressed alter ego as a basis to convey personal jurisdiction
    over an out-of-state parent corporation.
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    J-A02021-18
    resource services and benefits for the entire Clean Harbors family of
    companies.
    Upon considering the foregoing corporate structure, the Hooper Court
    concluded that the plaintiff established prima facie evidence of Pennsylvania’s
    jurisdiction. The court noted that CHI owned all of the entities in the Clean
    Harbor family of companies, that extensive overlap existed among the officers
    and directors of the organizations, and that all of the officer’s report to CHI’s
    CEO directly. In addition, the court found relevant the fact that all of the
    companies used common marketing images, and that CHI promoted the Clean
    Harbors family as one entity.
    In distinguishing these facts from the relevant considerations that had
    been determined to be insufficient to confer jurisdiction in Enterprise, the
    District Court reasoned,
    Clearly, the structure of the Clean Harbors corporate family
    creates far more inter-dependence than the corporate structure
    in Enterprise Rent-a-Car. In Enterprise, the subsidiaries paid
    for the administrative services provided by the parent; issued
    separate balance sheets and separate annual reports; and the
    subsidiaries had authority over the employment practices that led
    to the [underlying] claims in that case. By comparison, the Clean
    Harbors companies act as branches of one functionally-integrated
    organization, in which [the parent company] provides corporate
    services without cost to the subsidiaries and there is one
    consolidated financial statement and annual report for the whole
    Clean Harbors family. The Court concludes that Plaintiff has
    established a prima facie case sufficient to establish personal
    jurisdiction over [the parent company].
    Hooper, supra at *8.
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    J-A02021-18
    A review of the present case through the prism of the ten factors
    outlined in Estate Of Albert Francis Simeone, supra and applied in
    Sincavage, supra and Clark, 
    supra,
     confirms that Appellant used PBS Coals
    as its Pennsylvania instrumentality in the steel making process and provided
    the undercapitalized subsidiary essential funding.       When considered in
    conjunction with the intricate corporate structure and oversight that we
    describe below, the relevant facts demonstrate a level of involvement by
    Appellant that exceeds mere macro-management. Namely, our review of the
    relevant “alter ego” factors reveals a corporate scenario that aligns closely
    with situations that we addressed in Barber and the district courts confronted
    in Hooper, Latex Gloves, and Chocolate Confectionary II.
    As we discuss, infra, Appellant neglected to adhere to corporate
    boundaries that would distinguish PBS Coals as anything other than an arm of
    Appellant’s mining operation. Like the framework the parent employed in the
    foregoing cases, Appellant provided PBS Coals with extensive cost-free
    services and maintained a level of operational oversight that is commensurate
    with the attention given a functionally integrated division.      In this vein,
    Appellant promoted PBS Coals as a component of Severstal Resources, a
    unified entity Appellant used to control its mining operations.
    With these tenets in mind, we outline the facts that undermine the
    Appellant’s contention that Mr. Williams’s injury did not arise from Appellant’s
    connection with PBS Coals’ mining activities.       In contesting Appellant’s
    - 23 -
    J-A02021-18
    preliminary objections to the personal injury complaint based upon, inter alia,
    the lack of personal jurisdiction, Mr. Williams deposed two of PBS Coals’
    former executives, Dmitry Goryachev and Lori Mason, Esquire, the company’s
    Chief Financial Officer and the General Counsel, respectively. He also deposed
    Vadim Larin, Appellant’s CEO and board member who also served as one of
    PBS Coals’ board members during the relevant period.
    Dmitry Goryachev testified that he worked for Appellant during 2009
    and 2010 before he became the Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”) for PBS Coals
    in 2011, approximately three years after Appellant acquired it in November
    2008, and he remained in that position until Appellant sold the mining
    operation to Corsa Coal in August 2014. N.T. Deposition of Dmitry Goryachev,
    7/20/16, 7-10, 29, 34. He accepted the position and moved from Russia on
    the advice of his manager at OAO Severstal. Id. at 9-10. In addition to his
    role as the CFO, Mr. Goryachev managed the business’s finance, procurement,
    and information technology (“IT”) departments. Id. at 11. He also served on
    PBS Coals’ board of directors. Id. at 10-11, 36.
    Mr. Goryachev explained that the informal unit of Appellant commonly
    referred to as “Severstal Resources . . . managed PBS Coals.”        Id. at 8.
    Through that arm, Appellant maintained financial oversight of its subsidiary
    but only required formal approval of expenditures exceeding ten million
    dollars.   Id. at 21, 35.   Thus, smaller projects like the one on which Mr.
    Williams worked typically did not require Appellant’s authorization. Id. at 31.
    - 24 -
    J-A02021-18
    Mr. Goryachev stated that he completed several trips per year to Appellant’s
    headquarters in Moscow for budget presentations and finance conferences.
    Id. at 38-39.    In addition to attending monthly video conferences with
    Appellant regarding PBS Coals’ expenses and performance, he also was
    required to submit weekly performance sheets, monthly status reports, and a
    proposed annual budget to the Moscow headquarters in a specific computer
    format that Appellant dictated.    Id. at 22-25, 34, 39.     In fact, Appellant
    controlled PBS Coals’ information technology from Moscow and, even though
    PBS Coals managed the content of its website, Appellant hosted the site on its
    Russian server. Id at 28, 86.
    As it relates to the subsidiary’s capitalization during his tenure, Mr.
    Goryachev testified that, acting through another subsidiary, Appellant issued
    PBS Coals a line of credit in excess of $200 million soon after Appellant
    acquired it. Id. at 12, 63. PBS Coals maintained positive cash flow between
    2011 and 2013, but seemed to possess only sufficient capital to satisfy its
    payment obligations to Appellant for the $200 million loan.      Id. at 16-17.
    Eventually, however, the repayments were suspended because PBS Coals was
    unable to meet that obligation. Id. at 17-18. Thereafter, Appellant arranged
    for PBS Coals to obtain financing from a different subsidiary in order for PBS
    Coals to repay its initial obligation to Appellant. Id.at 59. As of August 2014,
    when Appellant ultimately sold PBS Coals to Corsa Coal, the debt still had not
    been repaid.    Id. at 29-30.     While Mr. Goryachev was unsure whether
    - 25 -
    J-A02021-18
    Appellant simply forgave the debt, he noted that it had not taken any legal
    action to collect the debt prior to the sale. Id. at 30. Likewise, although Mr.
    Goryachev testified that he was uncertain whether PBS Coals would have
    maintained adequate capitalization without the money that it saved by
    postponing the repayment, he conceded that, absent the forbearance, PBS
    Coals would have had to alter its cash flow strategy to maintain a positive
    cash flow. Id. at 56-57.
    Attorney    Mason’s     deposition      confirmed   several   aspects   of   her
    colleague’s testimony. She acted as the General Counsel and Vice President
    of PBS Coals between July 2010 and August 2014. N.T. Deposition of Lori
    Mason, 9/9/15, at 30, 47.           Significantly, Attorney Mason illuminated the
    tortuous corporate structure of the holding companies, PBS Coals Canada,
    Mincorp Acquisition, and Mincorp, Inc., and the two physical companies
    located in Pennsylvania, PBS Coals and Rox Coals.10 Id. at 37, 46. Although
    she represented PBS Coals and Rox Coals in her position as General Counsel,
    Attorney Mason technically was employed by Mincorp Inc., which occupied a
    higher rung in the corporate hierarchy than the mining concern. Her salary
    was paid by yet another subsidiary, Norwich Services, which administered the
    ____________________________________________
    10 Ms. Mason described the corporate chain of the North American subsidies
    that connect Appellant to the Pennsylvania mining operation as follows:
    Appellant owned three tiers of Canadian holding companies. The lowermost
    Canadian subsidiary, PBS Coals Canada, owned Mincorp Acquisition, which, in
    turn held Mincorp, Inc., which maintained PBS Coals and Rox Coal. Id. at 58-
    59.
    - 26 -
    J-A02021-18
    executive payroll.   Id. at 43-44.     Attorney Mason confirmed that all of
    Appellant’s subsidiaries utilized the identical Severstal trademark logo. Id. at
    63. However, the various holding companies connected with the actual mining
    operations at PBS Coals and Rox Coal lacked telephone numbers or email
    addresses and, to her knowledge, did not have employees or a genuine
    purpose in the mining or steel manufacturing operation. Id. at 38-39.
    As General Counsel, Attorney Mason managed all of PBS Coals’ legal and
    government affairs. Id. at 27. Her responsibilities extended to addressing
    employment issues and reviewing the articles of incorporation and bylaws for
    PBS Coals, Rox Coal and Mincorp, Inc., because the three entities shared
    executives. Id. at 99-102, 108. She confirmed that PBS Coals was a wholly-
    owned subsidiary of Appellant, and explained that, in her role as General
    Counsel, she communicated with Appellant’s Moscow headquarters frequently,
    sometimes daily. Id. at 30, 51. She also explained that Appellant engineered
    the $200 million loan to PBS Coals through Lybica, a gold-mining subsidiary
    located in the Netherlands. Id. at 31-32, 38-39, 57. She was unsure whether
    Lybica was yet another holding company. Id. at 39.
    Like Mr. Goryachev, Attorney Mason testified that PBS Coals paid for her
    visits to Appellant’s Moscow headquarters. Id. at 23. Similarly, she stated
    that PBS Coals’ CEO Lynn Shanks was required to attend annual meetings and
    conventions with representatives from Appellant’s various subsidiaries once
    or twice per year. Id. at 24, 26. Likewise, Appellant’s executives visited the
    - 27 -
    J-A02021-18
    Pennsylvania mining plant annually to review the subsidiary’s financial
    statements and tour the facilities. Id. at 25.
    Attorney Mason acknowledged that Appellant’s annual report stated that
    it managed, inter alia, “a coking complex, PBS Coals in the USA” and used the
    collective phrasing “we” when referencing the decision of PBS Coals to idle
    inefficient mines. Id. at 76, 78. However, she maintained that Appellant was
    not involved in daily supervision of the mining operation. Id. at 73, 81. To
    the contrary, she indicated that major capital expenditures required the
    approval of Mincorp, Inc.’s board of directors, whom she did not identify,
    rather than Appellant’s, ostensibly because Mincorp Inc. was the immediate
    owner of PBS Coals under Appellant’s elaborate organizational scheme. Id.
    at 70-71. She identified at least one person, Vadim Larin, Appellant’s CEO
    and   the   operational   head   of   Appellant’s   mining   subsidiaries,   who
    simultaneously maintained positions on the board of directors for both
    Appellant and PBS Coals. Id. at 70-71, 81-82.
    According to Attorney Mason, the construction of a raw coal bin did not
    require board approval because it did not exceed the ten-million-dollar
    threshold. Id. at 103.    However, PBS Coals did not convene any board
    meetings during Mason’s four-year tenure as General Counsel. Id. at 104. If
    PBS Coals’ board was required to act, she would draft a resolution and
    transmit it to the individual members in Moscow and Pennsylvania for
    approval. Id. at 104-06. Some resolutions were transmitted to Appellant’s
    - 28 -
    J-A02021-18
    Russian headquarters “to the extent that they were sent for signature by [its]
    board members.” Id. at 110.
    Mr. Larin, Appellant’s CEO and board member, referred to Appellant
    interchangeably as Severstal and OAO Severstal throughout his testimony.
    N.T. Deposition of Vadim Larin, Vol. I, 4/14/16, at 6. He confirmed that he
    and another of Appellant’s executives, Sergey Starodubtsev, Appellant’s
    Director of Raw Material Procurement, Sales, and Logistics, maintained seats
    on PBS Coals’ four person board of directors while working for Appellant. 11
    Id. at 6-7, 20, 27-28. In his view, Appellant and PBS Coals belonged to the
    same family of companies. N.T. Deposition of Vadim Larin, Vol. II, 6/2/16, at
    57. While he confirmed that PBS Coals received the large loan from Lybica,
    he did not recall any of the specifics about the loan, terms, or interest rate, or
    state whether the principal was repaid. N.T. Deposition of Vadim Larin, Vol.
    I, 4/14/16, at 14. He did recall, however, that he discussed the credit line
    with PBS Coals and was aware that the mining operation was using it to help
    maintain a positive cash flow. N.T. Deposition of Vadim Larin, Vol.II, 6/2/16,
    at 43.
    ____________________________________________
    11 The witness later identified the board member as Sergey Kuznetsov, who
    was a different Severstal executive during the relevant period. See N.T.
    Deposition of Vadim Larin, Vol.II, 6/2/16, at 69-70. Regardless of this
    inconsistency, the record bears out that Appellant’s executives retained at
    least one-half of the seats allotted on PBS Coals’ board of directors.
    - 29 -
    J-A02021-18
    The foregoing evidence establishes that PBS Coals was the Pennsylvania
    instrumentality of its Russian parent.         The certified record reveals a
    meandering corporate structure that routed Appellant’s connection to PBS
    Coals through various international and domestic entities, some of which were
    mere holding companies that lacked any corporate operations or business
    activities.   In this regard, Appellant employed all of PBS Coals’ executives
    through an entirely different subsidiary and used yet another subsidiary to
    administer the executive payroll.       PBS Coals’ corporate finances and
    production were managed by Severstal Resources, an opaque unit that
    Appellant used to oversee natural resource assets. To add to the confusion
    created by myriad subsidiaries under a unified corporate umbrella, the
    subsidiaries utilized the identical “Severstal” trademark and logo, the manner
    and depiction of which Appellant controlled.
    Appellant and PBS Coals shared overlapping membership on their
    respective boards of directors, and Appellant controlled supervision over the
    subsidiary’s operations.   While PBS Coals maintained corporate formalities
    insofar as it maintained separate bank accounts and financial records, avoided
    common officers, records, and active personnel, and developed clearly defined
    functions, it shared two of its four directors with Appellant, including
    Appellant’s CEO and its Director of Raw Material Procurement.       The third
    director, Mr. Goryachev, was employed by Appellant immediately before he
    accepted a position as the subsidiary’s CFO.      Moreover, PBS Coals did not
    - 30 -
    J-A02021-18
    convene any board meetings.          If board action was required, PBS Coals
    generated a resolution and transmitted it to the board members individually,
    including the two executives at Appellant’s headquarters in Moscow, for
    approval.
    Other indicia of Appellant’s influence and oversight include the fact that
    Appellant trained Mr. Goryachev, who accepted the position as PBS Coals’ CFO
    at the suggestion of his Severstal manager. In addition, Appellant required
    all of the executives of PBS Coals, including Mr. Goryachev, to travel to
    Appellant’s Russian headquarters several times per year.                Similarly,
    Appellant’s executives visited the PBS Coals mining operation annually to
    review business records and tour facilities. Appellant maintained daily contact
    with the legal department of PBS Coals, as Appellant deemed necessary, and
    mandated that other departments submit regular financial and performance
    reports as often as once per week. Appellant not only designated the manner
    in which PBS Coals submitted the periodic reports, it instructed the subsidiary
    to utilize technology that Appellant controlled from Moscow.
    PBS Coals amounted to little more than an instrument of Appellant to
    source metallurgical coal for Appellant’s in-house consumption, and was
    undercapitalized.     It relied upon the $200 million loan that Appellant
    orchestrated through another subsidiary in order to maintain positive cash
    flow.   In this vein, Mr. Goryachev testified that the capital that PBS Coals
    managed to generate was used to repay the substantial loan. Despite the
    - 31 -
    J-A02021-18
    subsidiary’s diligent efforts, however, it was unable to satisfy its loan
    obligations, and Appellant was required to eventually suspend repayment.
    The certified record does not reveal whether PBS Coals repaid the loan before
    Appellant cleaved it from the Severstal brand by selling it to a third party.
    Several of the foregoing factors are consistent with a parent
    corporation’s typical governance of a subsidiary which, when viewed
    individually, do not impart personal jurisdiction over the parent company per
    se. When severed from the remaining conditions, any one or two of these
    facts typically would be insufficient to convey personal jurisdiction in
    Pennsylvania. See, e.g., Clark, 
    supra at 1067
     (“The mere ownership of a
    subsidiary, even one hundred percent ownership, is not sufficient to assert
    that a subsidiary is the alter ego or agent of its parent corporation.”);
    Botwinick, supra at 353-54 (neither similarity of names, total ownership of
    the stock, nor commonality of leadership “will per se justify a court in piercing
    the corporate veil if each corporation maintains a bona fide separate and
    distinct corporate existence.”).   However, this case does not present the
    typical parent-subsidy relationship insofar as PBS Coals is not the archetypal
    mining subsidiary engaged in a commercial enterprise. In the same manner
    that this Court found Charter’s acquisition of Cape for the express purpose of
    channeling its industrial activities through the subsidiary to be compelling
    evidence of instrumentality in Barber, we highlight that Appellant acquired
    PBS Coals to mine an essential element in its steel-making operation. In fact,
    - 32 -
    J-A02021-18
    the certified record bears out that PBS Coals was not an independently-viable
    company under Appellant’s ownership.           In actuality, PBS Coals was an
    undercapitalized,   wholly-owned     subsidiary   that   was   dependent    upon
    Appellant’s financial assistance, whether directly or indirectly. Although PBS
    Coals observed corporate formalities as to separate accounts, records, and
    personnel, it shared one-half of its board of directors with Appellant.
    Moreover, considering that PBS Coals diverted its primary asset to Appellant,
    the significance of those corporate formalities is diminished by the reality that
    PBS Coals was little more than a source of coal for Appellant’s steel
    manufacturing machine.
    Correspondingly, in contrast to the diminished import of the corporate
    formalities, the same reality which reveals PBS Coals’ function as the
    instrumentality of its parent heightens the significance of the countervailing
    factors that militate in favor of conveying personal jurisdiction. Stated plainly,
    unlike the dynamics of the corporate relationship required in the service-based
    industry that the district court addressed in Enterprise, PBS Coals is
    performing an essential function in the steel making process that Appellant
    would otherwise have to perform internally.         Thus, notwithstanding the
    complex corporate structure that Appellant used to purchase and govern PBS
    Coals, we conclude that the facts associated with the international titan’s
    utilization of the regional mining operation as an internal source of
    metallurgical coal subjected it to personal jurisdiction in Pennsylvania.
    - 33 -
    J-A02021-18
    Finally, consistent with the requirements outlined in our long-arm
    statute and Bristol-Myers Squibb, supra at 1781, that an affiliation exist
    among the party, forum, and underlying controversy, we observe that the
    facts of this case establish Appellant’s relationship with the Pennsylvania
    litigation.12 Despite Appellant’s artful manipulation of multiple subsidiaries to
    insulate it from responsibility for the subsidiary’s liabilities, Appellant failed to
    maintain an arm’s length relationship with the internal mining operation.
    Although the coal bin’s construction did not require Appellant’s formal
    approval, that fact is not dispositive considering the patent cash flow problems
    that PBS Coals endured after its acquisition by Appellant. It reasonably follows
    that the $200 million loan to PBS Coals that Appellant engineered through its
    other wholly-owned subsidiaries permitted PBS Coals to make capital
    improvements at the facility, such as the raw coal bin that Mr. Williams was
    constructing when the underlying injury occurred. In short, since Appellant
    controlled the subsidiary’s purse strings and relied upon the Pennsylvania
    mining operation for its in-house supply of the metallurgical coal that was vital
    to its international steel making endeavor, its connection with Mr. Williams’s
    injury was sufficient to extend jurisdiction over Appellant.
    ____________________________________________
    12 Pursuant to § 5322(c), Scope of jurisdiction, “When jurisdiction over a
    person is based solely upon [§ 5322], only a cause of action or other matter
    arising from acts . . . forming the basis of jurisdiction under subsection (b),
    may be asserted against him.
    - 34 -
    J-A02021-18
    In conclusion, consistent with U.S. Supreme Court in International
    Shoe Co., and our High Court in Botwinick, and reviewing the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the plaintiff, we conclude that the certified record
    reveals that Appellant and PBS Coals were so intertwined that the
    Pennsylvania mining operation was the mere instrumentality of its parent.
    Under these circumstances, we find that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in exercising personal jurisdiction over Appellant.
    For all of the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s May 31, 2017
    order overruling Appellant’s preliminary objections to Mr. Williams’s complaint
    on the basis that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction.
    Judge Kunselman files a Concurring Memorandum.
    Judge Olson files a Concurring/Dissenting Memorandum.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/3/2019
    - 35 -