Plaintiff Ahkeo Labs LLC sues Defendant Plurimi Investment Managers LLP, claiming that Plurimi Investment breached
Plurimi Investment has filed two motions to dismiss, arguing that: (1) the Court lacks personal jurisdiction over Plurimi Investment, (2) the Northern District of Ohio is an inconvenient forum for resolving the dispute, and (3) Ahkeo has failed to join an indispensable party in violation of Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
For the reasons that follow, the Court GRANTS Plurimi Investment's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The Court DENIES as futile Ahkeo's motion to amend. And the Court DENIES AS MOOT Plurimi Investment's motion to dismiss under Rule 19, its motion for summary judgment, and its request that the Court dismiss this case based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens .
I. BACKGROUND
With this decision, this Court considers whether it has jurisdiction over a lawsuit against a British investment manager who does not have any American clients, offices, or investments but whose related company employed a junior employee who entered into a contract to provide a credit facility to an Ohio-sited company.
A. Skoda's Relationship with Dupee
Some years ago, Brent Skoda, Plaintiff Ahkeo's chairman and CEO, met Alexander Dupee in Dallas through a friend of a friend.
Nonetheless, Skoda kept in touch with Dupee.
B. Dupee and the Plurimi Entities
When Skoda and Dupee met in London, Dupee was working for Plurimi Wealth LLP. Plurimi Wealth employed Dupee as an associate director, which was nominally a "partner"-level position but was in reality a lower-level position with the company.
Plurimi Wealth provides investment advice to individuals and families.
Plurimi Wealth is headquartered in London; has no offices, employees, or clients in the United States; and is not licensed to give investment advice in the United States.
Although Dupee was an employee of Plurimi Wealth, he was never authorized to give investment advice because Dupee had not passed the United Kingdom's licensure exams.
Plurimi Wealth is a sister company to the Defendant, Plurimi Investment.
Dupee has never held any position with Plurimi Investment.
C. Dupee Arranges Several Loans to Ahkeo
After Dupee expressed interest in Ahkeo at the London dinner, he and Skoda continued to communicate. Phone records and text messages show conversations and loan negotiations.
The tone of the text messages is not what one might expect in a transaction involving million dollar loans.
DUPEE: Think you should make your way to dubai [sic].
SKODA: See you in NY next weekend
DUPEE: Or Abu Dhabi
SKODA: I'm ready
DUPEE: For the Grand Prix
SKODA: Let's roll!
DUPEE: Meet my clients
DUPEE: And some others
SKODA: Let's roll
DUPEE: Party
SKODA: Let's roll
SKODA: Let's rock and roll sir41
And so on.
In any event, by October 2016, these negotiations had hardened into actual financing. On October 18, Dupee arranged for one of his clients to make a $500,000 loan to Ahkeo and both he and Skoda executed a note for Ahkeo to repay the money.
A Dupee client funded this $500,000 October 18, 2016, loan.
On October 25, 2016, Ahkeo received another loan facilitated by Dupee.
In each of these loans, the later loan repaid the earlier loan-essentially consolidating Ahkeo's debt from all three loan agreements.
D. The Credit Revolver Agreement
On February 7, 2017, Skoda and Dupee met to complete negotiations on a credit revolver agreement that would formalize the series of revolving loans that began in October 2016.
At the end of the negotiations, both Skoda and Dupee signed the credit revolver agreement.
When Dupee signed this agreement, he hand wrote Plurimi's headquarters as his address.
Things didn't work out well for Dupee either. His supervisors at Plurimi Wealth were unaware that Dupee had helped facilitate Plurimi client loans to Ahkeo.
E. Procedural History
In June 2017, Ahkeo filed this lawsuit against Dupee and Plurimi Investment.
Ahkeo later voluntarily dismissed its claims against Dupee.
Plurimi Investment moves to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
Ahkeo has moved to amend its complaint to add Plurimi Wealth as a defendant and to supplement its original factual allegations.
On February 7, 2018, the Court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
II. PERSONAL JURISDICTION
A. Legal Standard
"The plaintiff bears the burden of establishing the existence of jurisdiction."
To establish personal jurisdiction, a plaintiff in a diversity jurisdiction case
Ohio Revised Code § 2307.382, Ohio's long-arm statute, controls Ohio courts' personal jurisdiction.
The Fourteenth Amendment permits the courts of a State (and by extension federal courts sitting in diversity) to exercise personal jurisdiction only where the defendant has "certain minimum contacts with [the forum] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend 'traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.' "
First, a court might have general jurisdiction over a defendant. "A court may assert general jurisdiction over foreign (sister-state or foreign-country) corporations to hear any and all claims against them when their affiliations with the State are so 'continuous and systematic' as to render them essentially at home in the forum State."
Second, in some circumstances, a court can exercise specific jurisdiction over a defendant. Specific jurisdiction exists where: (1) the "defendant purposefully availed [itself] of the privilege of acting in Ohio or causing a consequence in Ohio," (2) "the cause of action arises out of [the] defendant's activities in Ohio," and (3) "the exercise of jurisdiction over [the d]efendant is reasonable."
B. Ohio Long-Arm Statute
The parties dispute whether Ohio's long-arm statute permits the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the Plurimi entities.
Defendant Plurimi Investment contends that the Due Process Clause prohibits the Court from exercising either general or specific jurisdiction over the Plurimi entities.
1. General Jurisdiction
Establishing that the Court has general jurisdiction over a defendant is an exceedingly difficult task. "[O]nly a limited set of affiliations with a forum will render a defendant amenable to all-purpose jurisdiction there."
To the extent that several vague statements in its complaint and proposed amended complaint were meant to do so,
Ahkeo does not contend that either Plurimi entity is incorporated in Ohio. Nor does Ahkeo contend that Plurimi Investment or Plurimi Wealth has its principal place of business here. Indeed, it admits that both are incorporated and based in the United Kingdom.
Ahkeo alleges only that the Plurimi entities "had continuous and systematic contacts with Plaintiff while Plaintiff was in Ohio for the purpose of transacting business."
2. Specific Jurisdiction
Ahkeo contends that this Court has specific jurisdiction over Plurimi.
a. Dupee's Apparent Authority to Bind the Plurimi Entities
As a preliminary matter, the parties disagree over whether Dupee's actions, and the resulting connections to the forum, can be attributed to Plurimi Investment or Plurimi Wealth.
The Court considers agency law when deciding if Dupee's actions can be attributed to either of the Plurimi entities. Specifically, because Dupee did not have actual authority to bind either Plurimi entity to the loan contract,
i. Choice of Law
But before reaching the apparent agency question, however, the Court must first determine which jurisdiction's agency law governs. There are three options: Ohio law (the law of the forum state); English law (the law of the jurisdiction where the revolver agreement was signed); and Delaware law (the law of the jurisdiction named in the contract's choice-of-law clause).
As this is a diversity case, the Court applies the choice-of-law principles of the State of Ohio.
The parties have not briefed or argued the choice-of-law issue, let alone established a genuine conflict of law. And the Court's brief review of the issue suggests
ii. Apparent Agency-Plurimi Investment
"Apparent authority arises when (1) 'the principal held the agent out to the public as possessing sufficient authority to act on his behalf,' (2) a 'person dealing with the agent knew these facts,' and (3) the person 'acting in good faith had reason to believe that the agent possessed the necessary authority.' "
Ahkeo fails to show that either Plurimi entity held Dupee out to the public as an agent empowered to enter the revolver agreement. Dupee was never an employee of Plurimi Investment,
iii. Apparent Agency-Plurimi Wealth
Ahkeo has moved to amend its complaint to join Plurimi Wealth (which did actually employ Dupee for a period of time) as a defendant.
In general, motions for leave to amend a complaint should be freely granted.
Plurimi Investment argues that leave to amend should be denied because even if Plurimi Wealth were added as a defendant and the factual allegations in the complaint were supplemented, the Court would still lack personal jurisdiction over either of the defendants.
Apart from Dupee's alleged representations, Ahkeo argues that Plurimi Wealth itself represented Dupee as having authority when Dupee used a Plurimi Wealth conference room. Ahkeo also argues that Dupee handwritten use of Plurimi's address on the revolver agreement is, somehow, a Plurimi Wealth representation of Dupee's authority.
At best, the hearing evidence suggests that Dupee represented he could find a Plurimi client who would lend money. But little shows Plurimi Wealth would lend money to Ahkeo. And less shows that Plurimi Wealth itself ever held Dupee out as authorized to commit Plurimi Wealth to $15 millions of dollars of loans.
For one thing, none of the loan documents mention Plurimi.
Ahkeo says the Credit Revolver Agreement required Plurimi to loan at least $15 million.
The lack of any mention of Plurimi, along with the informal nature of the communications between Skoda and Dupee, leads the Court to believe that Skoda (and by extension Ahkeo) knew he was dealing with Dupee and Dupee's contacts on an individual basis, not negotiating with a sophisticated London financial advising firm. Moreover, Ahkeo transferred $52,500 in commissions to Dupee's personal account and promised to pay Dupee, $105,000 in additional commissions on the credit revolver agreement.
But even if Dupee had made representations to Skoda, they do not establish an apparent agency relationship with Plurimi Wealth. "A belief [in an agent's authority to enter an agreement] that results solely from the statements or other conduct of the agent, unsupported by any manifestations traceable to the principal, does not create apparent authority...."
Admittedly, the final revolver agreement negotiations used a Plurimi conference room.
Dupee apparently earlier offered the completed loan opportunity to a Plurimi client without knowledge or approval from his supervisor.
That the final negotiations on the agreement took place in Plurimi Wealth's conference room is not enough to invest Ahkeo and Dupee's private bargain with the aura of apparent agency.
Nor is the Court persuaded that Dupee's use of his Plurimi Wealth email account to order the transfers of money for the October 18, October 25, and November 8 loans gives evidence that Plurimi Wealth held Dupee out as an agent empowered to enter the revolver agreement. For one thing, this was-once again-Dupee's action, not Plurimi Wealth's action. And for another, none of the emails in question were shown to be directed towards Skoda or any person affiliated with Ahkeo.
ii. Summary
Because Ahkeo fails to establish that Dupee was acting as either an agent or apparent agent of either Plurimi entity, none of Dupee's contacts with Ohio can be attributed to them. As a result, the Court would lack personal jurisdiction over the defendants in this case regardless of whether the Court granted Ahkeo's motion to amend. It follows that Ahkeo's complaint should be dismissed and its motion to amend denied as futile.
b. Contacts between Dupee and Ohio
The Court further finds that, even if Dupee's contacts with Ahkeo and Ohio
i. Lack of Meaningful Contacts with Ohio
First, Plurimi Wealth is a foreign corporation. And "the Supreme Court has held that '[g]reat care and reserve should be exercised when extending our notions of personal jurisdiction into the international field.' "
In arguing that exercising jurisdiction over Plurimi Wealth is, nonetheless, appropriate under the Due Process Clause, Ahkeo points to communications with Dupee and between Ohio and London.
Moreover, despite Ahkeo's protest to the contrary,
It is true, as Ahkeo points out, that the monetary injury in this case arguably occurred in Ohio.
That the revolver agreement was apparently part of a continuing rather than one-shot relationship is also insufficient to establish jurisdiction.
All of the truly significant contacts in this case occurred in the United Kingdom. That is where the contract was signed.
Plus, the revolver agreement's choice-of-law clause selects Delaware law, not Ohio law, to govern the agreement.
In short, the relevant background militates against the exercise of personal jurisdiction. The contacts that Ahkeo identifies pointing in the other direction are not sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction.
ii. Analogous Cases
Indeed, as Plurimi Investment suggests,
Ahkeo attempts to distinguish Kerry Steel by pointing out that the relationship in that case was an isolated transaction, not part of a continuing relationship.
iii. Cole v. Mileti
Lastly, Ahkeo's reliance on Cole v. Mileti
But in that case, Mileti (the defendant) had initiated contact with the Ohio plaintiff to Ohio to solicit an agreement. The Court is not convinced by Skoda's testimony that Dupee did something similar in this case.
According to Skoda, he happened to bring a slide show presentation about Ahkeo's vaporizer with him to London.
It is more likely that Skoda went to London intending to ask Dupee to invest in Ahkeo (as he had asked him to invest in at least one prior venture),
Moreover, even if Dupee had brought up investing in Ahkeo first, he did so at a dinner in London , so he couldn't be said to have reached out to Ohio. Again, contact with the plaintiff is not contact with the plaintiff's home forum.
iii. Summary
As a result, even if Dupee's conduct could somehow be attributed to Plurimi Wealth, Ahkeo does not show that the Due Process Clause permits the Court to exercise personal jurisdiction over Plurimi Wealth. And its proposed amended complaint does nothing to remedy that failure. It follows that Ahkeo's complaint should be dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction and its motion to amend denied as futile.
III. OTHER ISSUES
Granting Plurimi Investment's motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction moots its motions to dismiss for failure to join an indispensable and based on the forum non conveniens doctrine. Doing so also moots Plurimi Investment's motion for summary judgment.
IV. CONCLUSION
For all of those reasons, the Court GRANTS Plurimi's motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. The Court DENIES as futile Ahkeo's motion to amend the complaint. And the Court DENIES AS MOOT Plurimi's motion to dismiss for failure to join an indispensable party, its request that the case be dismissed based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens , and its motion for summary judgment.
Ahkeo's complaint is, therefore, DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE to its being filed in an appropriate forum with personal jurisdiction over the parties.
IT IS SO ORDERED
Notes
See Doc. 1.
Docs. 19, 33.
Doc. 64.
Docs. 38, 50, 51. Plurimi Investment opposes Ahkeo's motion to amend. Doc. 57.
Plurimi Investment also moved for relief from the expert identification deadline set in this Court's case management order. Doc. 40. As the Court has decided to dismiss this case on personal jurisdiction grounds and, in any event, the expert identification deadline has now passed, the Court DENIES AS MOOT the motion for relief.
Doc 63 at 21, 23.
Id. at 23.
Id. at 23-24.
Id. at 23.
Id. at 24-25.
See id. at 66.
Id. at 66-67.
Id. at 67.
See id. at 66-67, 70-71.
Id. at 62.
Id. at 64-65.
Id. at 65, 84.
Id. at 75.
Id. at 86.
Id. at 63-64; Doc. 1 at ¶ 2.
See Doc. 63 at 64.
Id. at 65-66.
Id. at 70.
Id. at 36, 70-71; Pl's. Exh. 2.
See Doc. 63 at 57-61.
Id. at 61.
Id. at 58.
Id. at 61.
Id. at 59-60.
See id. at 58-59.
See Doc. 51-1 at 25-63.
Doc. 63 at 30; Doc. 51-1 at 60-63.
Doc. 63 at 27-32.
See id. at 27-28.
Doc. 51-1 at 26-27, 45, 54.
Id. at 37-38.
Id. at 65-70.
Doc. 51-1 at 67.
Doc. 63 at 39.
Doc. 51-1 at 65.
See id at 74.
See
See Doc. 63 at 36, 70; Pl's Exh. 2.
Doc. 51-1 at 72.
See id. at 81.
See
See Doc. 63 at 36, 70; Pl's Exh. 2.
Doc. 51-1 at 79.
See Doc. 63 at 30, 33, 43.
Doc. 51-1 at 74-77, 81-84.
See Def.'s Exh. P, S.
See Doc. 63 at 31-33.
Id. at 21-22; 25-26.
Doc. 2.
Doc. 63 at 53.
Id. at ¶ 1.1. At the evidentiary hearing, Ahkeo contended that the agreement actually called for a series of revolving loans extending into perpetuity-or at least the foreseeable future. Doc. 63 at 103. But the revolver agreement simply does not say that. And, in any event, any dispute on this point is neither here nor there because the Court would lack personal jurisdiction either way.
Doc. 2 at ¶¶ 1.1, 1.2. Despite the plain language of the revolver agreement, Ahkeo's June 2017 Balance Sheet indicates that Dupee is only owed $63,000 in commissions. Def.'s Exh. R. The Court is not sure where the $63,000 figure in that document comes from and, as a result, uses the language of the agreement.
Id. at 5.
Doc. 2 at 1.
Doc. 63 at 22; Doc. 1 at ¶ 25.
Doc. 63 at 43.
Id. at 71-73.
See id. at 72-73, 76-80.
Id. at 59-60, 65-66, 70.
Id. at 81.
Doc. 1 at ¶ 25.
Id. at ¶¶ 22-26.
Id. at 18-21, 27-31.
Doc 27.
Doc. 19.
Doc. 33.
Doc. 38, 51, 52.
Doc. 19. Ahkeo opposes that request. Doc. 51.
Doc. 64.
Doc. 50.
Doc. 57.
Doc. 61.
Estate of Thomson ex rel. Estate of Rakestraw v. Toyota Motor Corp. Worldwide ,
Serras v. First Tenn. Bank Nat'l. Ass'n. ,
See MAG IAS Holdings, Inc. v. Schmuckle ,
See Schmuckle ,
Conti v. Pneumatic Prods. Corp. ,
O.R.C. § 2307.382(A)(1)-(9).
Int'l. Shoe Co. v. State of Washington ,
Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v. Brown ,
Costaras v. NBC Universal, Inc. ,
Doc. 19-1 at 10-11; Doc. 51 at 11-13.
See King v. Ridenour ,
Doc. 19-1 at 11-18.
Daimler AG v. Bauman ,
Cf.
Doc. 1 at ¶ 6; Doc. 50-2 at ¶ 6.
Doc. 1 at ¶ 3; Doc. 50-2 at ¶¶ 3-4.
Doc. 1 at ¶ 6; Doc. 50-2 at ¶ 6.
See generally Goodyear ,
Doc. 51 at 13-19.
See id. at 11-13; Doc. 58 at 6-11.
The Court credits the testimony of Ramzy Rasamny to the effect that Dupee had no actual authority to bind either Plurimi entity to the revolver agreement. Doc. 63 at 61, 66-67. That assertion is not seriously contested by Ahkeo, which confines itself to primarily arguing that, in a traditional partnership, a partner like Dupee could bind Plurimi Wealth. Doc. 51 at 11. Rasamny's testimony at the hearing concerning the actual corporate structure of Plurimi Wealth, Doc. 63 at 67-69, effectively rebuts that assertion and the Court finds him to be credible. Moreover, his testimony was bolstered by evidence showing that neither Plurimi entity is licensed to enter this sort of agreement. Def's Exhs. K, L.
Sims Buick-GMC Truck, Inc. v. Gen. Motors LLC ,
Transp. Ins. Co. v. Busy Beaver Bldg. Ctrs., Inc. ,
M.P. TotalCare Servs., Inc. v. Mattimoe ,
See e.g. Nee v. State Indus., Inc. ,
Nee ,
Doc. 63 at 61.
To the extent that the use of a conference room in Plurimi's London headquarters or Dupee's statement in a text message to Skoda that he worked for "Plurimi," Doc. 51-1 at 26; Doc. 63 at 21-22, might suggest apparent agency, the Court addresses that connection below with regards to Plurimi Wealth.
See Doc. 50.
Doc. 57.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2) ("The court should freely give leave [to amend pleadings] when justice so requires.").
United States ex rel. Ibanez v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. ,
Doc. 57 at 5-6.
At the evidentiary hearing, the Court suggested that the motion to amend would be granted. Doc. 63 at 11-12. That was because the court was not persuaded by Plurimi Investment's non-futility arguments against allowing the amendment (e.g. prejudice, undue delay), particularly because, throughout this litigation, the Plurimi entities have been cagey about their relationship to each other and Dupee. The granting of the motion to amend was, of course, premised on Ahkeo's success in demonstrating the existence of personal jurisdiction over one or both Plurimi entities. But for the failure to establish personal jurisdiction, the Court would likely have granted the motion to amend.
Id. at 40-41.
Doc. 2 at 1.
Doc. 51-1 at 67, 74, 81.
Doc. 1.
See Doc. 63 at 32, 53-54.
Doc. 2 at ¶¶ 1.1, 1.2; Def.'s Exh. P.
See Restatement (Third) of Agency § 2.03 cmt. c (2006); see also Martin ,
Doc. 63 at 31.
Id. at 22, 48-49. Skoda did testify to one social occasion in Abu Dhabi where he was introduced to other, unidentified members of the Plurimi entities as someone "we're doing business with," but that hardly amounts to a discussion of any loan agreement. Id. at 49.
See Doc. 63 at 73-74, 76.
Id. at 47; Def's. Exhs. S, P, Q, R.
Doc. 63 at 73-75.
Doc. 2 at ¶¶ 1.1, 1.2.
Doc. 51-1 at 65, 72, 79.
See Martin ,
As discussed above, there is no evidence at all to suggest that Dupee was ever an agent or apparent agent of Plurimi Investment. Seesupra at 748-49. So the Court does not address Plurimi Investment in this section. That said, even if Dupee were somehow an agent of Plurimi Investment, minimum contacts would still be lacking for the reasons set out in this section.
See Euroglas S.A ,
Beydoun v. Wataniya Rests. Holding ,
Doc. 51 at 12, 14, 16-17; Doc. 63 at 100-102.
Euroglas S.A. ,
See Euroglas S.A. ,
See
See Doc. 51 at 13 (suggesting that these facts are relevant to the jurisdiction analysis).
Walden v. Fiore ,
See LAK, Inc. ,
Kerry Steel, Inc. ,
Doc. 51 at 15. Although Ahkeo also attempted to suggest that it sent Dupee's commission payments to Dupee's "Plurimi[ ] Barclays' account," Doc. 63 at 31, there is no evidence other than Skoda's say-so that Dupee's Barclays account is connected to Plurimi. Indeed, other evidence presented at the evidentiary hearing shows that the account was a personal account. Id. at 47; Def's. Exhs. S, P, Q, R.
See Walden ,
See Euroglass S.A. ,
Doc. 63 at 22.
See id. at 22; Doc. 1 at ¶ 3; Doc. 50-2 at ¶¶ 3-4; see also Kerry Steel, Inc. ,
Doc. 2 at ¶ 7.6.
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz ,
Doc. 19-1 at 15-16; Doc. 58 at 15-19.
Kerry Steel, Inc. ,
Doc. 51 at 17; Kerry Steel, Inc. ,
Euroglass S.A. ,
Cole v. Mileti ,
Id. at 23.
Id. at 23.
See id. at 23-24.
Id. at 24.
See Doc. 63 at 23.
Likewise, American Greetings Corp. v. Cohn ,
Walden ,
