DocketNumber: No. CV93 004 26 14
Citation Numbers: 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 10780
Judges: JONES, J.
Filed Date: 12/13/1993
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION CT Page 10781 OVER FOREIGN CORPORATION AND FOR IMPROPER VENUE Plaintiff Miami Rivet Company made an Application for Prejudgment Remedy to the Superior Court for the Judicial District of Ansonia/Milford at Milford. Defendant Hardware Designers Inc. requested the Court to dismiss the Plaintiff's Application for Prejudgment Remedy alleging that "[t]he assertion of personal jurisdiction over the [D]efendant violates its constitutional due process rights," and in the alternative, "[a]ssuming Connecticut may exercise jurisdiction over the [D]efendant with respect to the [p]laintiff's claim, the application must be brought to the same court which would have proper venue of the Plaintiff's cause of action." The Plaintiff submitted a Memorandum of Law in Opposition to the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss. Following a hearing on this Motion, the Plaintiff and the Defendant filed supplemental memoranda.
Plaintiff Miami Rivet Company is a Delaware corporation. The Plaintiff asserts that it maintains an office and place of business in Shelton, Connecticut. The Plaintiff claims that it no longer maintains an office or operates a business in Florida, nor does it have an office or place of business in New York or Pennsylvania. The Defendant maintains that the Plaintiff ceased doing business in early 1991 and at hearing on this motion, the Defendant corporations' President, Mr. Brian Fielding, testified that the Plaintiff went out of business suddenly in 1991. The Defendant alleges that the Plaintiff has no employees; no assets, other than two receivables, one of which is the subject of this suit; does not have a telephone in its name; and uses the office of its corporate parent in Shelton, Connecticut.
Defendant Hardware Designers, Inc. is a New York corporation. The Defendant alleges the following in its post-Hearing Memorandum of Law on its Motion to Dismiss: The Defendant corporation began its operations in New York in 1961 and in 1984 moved its manufacturing operations and other offices to Waterbury, Connecticut. The Waterbury operations were closed in 1989 and all manufacturing facilities and virtually all of its offices were moved to Marienville, Pennsylvania. This Pennsylvania manufacturing facility of about 70,000 square feet employs about 100 people. Subsequently the Defendant opened a small office in Danbury, Connecticut, which was in use in 1991. This Danbury sales office is now used by its president, sales manager, a secretary and CT Page 10782 a customer service representative. The Defendant's purchasing and accounting functions including accounts payable and receivable, all take place in Pennsylvania and have since its move from Connecticut in 1989. Less than 1% of the Defendant's sales are made to Connecticut purchasers.
Defendant Hardware Designers, Inc. alleges that in 1990 its certificate of authority to transact business in Connecticut was revoked. At a hearing on this Motion to Dismiss, Brian Fielding, the Defendant's President, testified that the authority of the corporation to do business in the State of Connecticut lapsed or was revoked sometime in 1990. Mr. Fielding also testified that the Defendant's entire sales department and sales staff is located at the Danbury office.
Plaintiff Miami Rivet Company asserts that in 1991 the Defendant Hardware Designers placed orders for rivets with the Plaintiff's Hialeah, Florida manufacturing plant in Hialeah, Florida and that the Plaintiff shipped the goods to the Defendant's facility in Marienville, Pennsylvania. The Defendant alleges that this order was requested in 1991 pursuant to a purchase order from the Defendant's Pennsylvania plant. The Plaintiff claims that the Defendant has failed to pay for these rivets totalling $23,094.08, despite repeated demands for payment.
The Defendant alleges the following in its Post-Hearing Memorandum of Law on its Motion to dismiss: When the Defendant received notice that the Plaintiff was closing, the Defendant asked the Plaintiff to send them whatever supply they had. The Defendant was able to use some of the shipment, but many of the rivets were defective. The Plaintiff also failed to ship a large order for rivets which the Plaintiff had accepted. This failure to fill the order "shut down" the Defendant, causing it substantial damages, which the Defendant claims exceed whatever amount may be due the Plaintiff on the rivets received. The Defendant has sent to the Plaintiff in Florida a debit memo claiming damages and receiving no response, intends to pursue its claim by counterclaim or setoff in a court of proper jurisdiction.
I. Personal Jurisdiction
A. Connecticut Statutes
According to Connecticut General Statutes section 33-396, "no foreign corporation . . . shall transact business in this state until CT Page 10783 it has procured a certificate of authority to do so from the secretary of the state." Conn. Gen. Stat. 33-396 (1993).1 "A foreign corporation shall not be considered to be transacting business in this state solely because it carries on in this state one or more of the enumerated activities [of 33-397 (b)]. This does not exclude a finding that a foreign corporation transacts business in this state of its other activities lead to that conclusion." Conn. Tool Mfg. Co. v. Bowsteel Distributors, Inc.,
Connecticut General Statutes section 33-411(a) makes a foreign corporation amenable to service of process when it has obtained authorization from the secretary of state to transact business in the state. In Wallenta v. Avis Rent-a-Car System,
In the present case, however, the Defendant's authority lapsed or was revoked in 1990. The purchase of rivets in 1991, which is the subject matter of this case, took place after the Defendant's authorization had ceased to exist. According to the Defendant, all purchasing and accounts payable/receivable activities took place Pennsylvania and the purchase order for the subject transaction was submitted from the Defendant's Pennsylvania plant.
Under Connecticut General Statutes Section 33-411 (b) "[e]very foreign corporation which transacts business in this state in violation of section . . . 33-396 shall be subject to suit in this state upon any cause of action arising out of such business."2
The court in Wallenta found that "General Statutes section 33-411 CT Page 10784 (b), in effect, puts a Defendant in the same position it would have been in, had it . . . appointed an agent for service of process because it was conducting business in this state." Wallenta, supra, at 206,
Section 33-411 (b), therefore, restricts consideration to those activities out of which the cause of action arose. See Electric Regulator Corp. v. Sterling Extruder Corp.,
"In determining whether the Plaintiff's cause of action arose from the Defendant's transaction of business within this state [the Court] does not resort to a rigid formula. Rather [the Court] balances considerations of public policy, common sense, and the chronology and geography of the relevant factors." Hill v. W.R. Grace Co.,
In Guthrie v. Ciba-Geigy,
In contrast to Guthrie, Judge Dupont in the case of The Richardson Co. v. Rotuba Extruders, Inc.,
Judge Licari in Hill v. W. R. Grace Co.,
B. Constitutional Due Process
Constitutional due process limitations provide further evidence of a lack of causal connection between the Defendant's purchase of rivets, and the Defendant's sales of drawer slides in Connecticut. The obligation which was sued upon in International Shoe v. Washington Co.,
"The relationship between the Defendant and the forum must be such that it is ``reasonable . . . to require the corporation to defend the particular suit which is brought there.'" World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
II. Quasi in Rem Jurisdiction
The present case also involves an issue of quasi in rem jurisdiction because the Plaintiff has made Application for Pre-Judgment Remedy seeking attachment of Defendant's property in satisfaction of the Defendant's alleged debt, including property located in Danbury, Connecticut. (Application for Pre-Judgment Remedy at 2); see Pennington v. Fourth National Bank,
As in the case at bar, Louring involved an action to recover on a debt, attended by an application for pre-judgment remedy under Connecticut General Statutes section
In the present case, however, Connecticut is not the only forum available to the Plaintiff because the Defendant is not a corporation foreign to this country. "The Schaeffer court was persuaded to apply the standards of International Shoe to quasi in rem jurisdiction in part because an in personam jurisdiction could be obtained ``in a forum where the litigation could be maintained consistently with International Shoe,' and because the state in which the property is located would then be obliged to honor such a judgment under the full faith and credit clause." Louring, supra, at 633 (citing Schaeffer, supra, at 210).
III. Venue
Even if the Defendant were amenable to personal jurisdiction or quasi in rem jurisdiction within the State of Connecticut the Judicial District of Ansonia/Milford is not the proper venue. Under Connecticut General Statutes section 52-278 (c)(1), an Application for Pre-Judgment Remedy must be directed to the superior court to which the action was made returnable. "In all actions by a corporation, except actions returnable under subsection (c) [actions involving land] of this section, civil process shall be made returnable: If the plaintiff is a foreign corporation and the defendant is a corporation, domestic or foreign, to the judicial district where (A) the injury occurred, (B) the transaction occurred, or (C) the property is located or lawfully attached." Conn. Gen Stat.
The Plaintiff has asserted that section
If the Court had found the Defendant amenable to personal jurisdiction, the Plaintiff could have corrected the improper venue by filing a motion to transfer. Clearly, "venue is distinct from jurisdiction. Venue may be proper or improper, independent of questions of subject matter or personal jurisdiction." Guthrie, supra, at 92 (quoting Driscoll v. New Orleans Steamboat Co.,
Inasmuch as Defendant Hardware Designers, Inc. is not subject to personal jurisdiction under Connecticut General Statutes section 33-411(b) and the assertion of in personam or quasi in rem jurisdiction would offend constitutional due process limitations, the Court hereby grants the Motion to Dismiss.
Clarance J. Jones, Judge
This court acknowledges the research assistance provided by Ms. Lisa Arpaia, Law Clerk, relative to the preparation of this Memorandum of Decision.
Richardson Co. v. Rotuba Extruders, Inc. , 36 Conn. Supp. 262 ( 1980 )
Hill v. W. R. Grace & Co. , 42 Conn. Super. Ct. 25 ( 1991 )
Milliken v. Meyer , 61 S. Ct. 339 ( 1941 )
Lombard Brothers, Inc. v. General Asset Management Co. , 190 Conn. 245 ( 1983 )
Connecticut Tool Mfg. v. Bowsteel Distributors , 24 Conn. Super. Ct. 290 ( 1963 )
International Shoe Co. v. Washington , 66 S. Ct. 154 ( 1945 )
Eleanor Driscoll v. New Orleans Steamboat Company , 633 F.2d 1158 ( 1981 )
Pennington v. Fourth National Bank of Cincinnati , 37 S. Ct. 282 ( 1917 )