OPINION
Appellant reseller sued its former supplier for various contract-related claims. The district court dismissed the claims for lack of personal jurisdiction, enforcing the forum-selection clause in the parties’ reseller authorization. Appellant contends
FACTS
In June 1998, appellant Apha Systems Integration, Inc., a Minnesota corporation, and respondent Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI), a California-based corporation, signed a reseller agreement. This agreement made appellant an authorized, nonexclusive reseller of SGI’s computer products. In December 1998, the parties renewed the agreement, and in February 2000, the parties again renewed, this time by signing a contract entitled “Indirect Reseller Authorization” (Authorization). This contract contained a forum-selection clause providing that
[i]n the event that any dispute or controversy between the parties arises out of or is related to this Authorization, and/or performance or termination thereof, such dispute or controversy shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the California state courts in and for Santa Clara County, California.
In February 2001, appellant terminated the relationship, and in March 2001, appellant filed suit against SGI and its salesman, respondent Brett Vieillard. The complaint alleged (1) breach of contract; (2) tortious interference with contract; (3) tortious interference with prospective business/contractual obligations; (4) unjust enrichment; (5) trade-secret violations; and (6) common-law misappropriation of confidential information. Appellant claimed that the parties entered into a separate contract (Account Agreement), giving appellant exclusive customers, and that Vieil-lard wrongfully sold SGI’s products to those customers. Respondents moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, and in November 2001, the district court dismissed the complaint without prejudice based on the forum-selection clause.
ISSUES
I. Do appellant’s claims arise out of or relate to the Authorization and its forum-selection clause?
II. Did the district court abuse its discretion in enforcing the forum-selection clause?
ANALYSIS
I.
Whether a forum-selection clause applies is a question of law, which this court reviews de novo.
See Northwest Airlines, Inc. v. Friday,
Respondents contend that appellant has the burden of producing evidence to show that the clause does not apply because forum-selection clauses are presumptively valid. But appellant only has the burden of proving the clause unreasonable, not proving that it applies.
See Hauenstein & Bermeister, Inc. v. Met-Fab, Indus., Inc.,
Appellant argues that this court must assume appellant’s factual allegations in the complaint and affidavits as true when deciding whether the forum-selection clause should apply.
See Northwest Airlines, Inc.,
Appellant principally argues that its claims arise out of the Account Agreement — not the Authorization — and thus the forum-selection clause should not govern its claims. But the language of the forum-selection clause covers “any dispute or controversy between the parties [that] arises out of or is related to this Authorization, and/or performance or termination thereof.” The Authorization created and defined the parties’ entire business relationship by authorizing appellant to resell SGI’s products. A plain reading of the forum-selection clause leads us to conclude that any dispute arising out of “performance” of the Authorization must include sales-related disputes, such as disputes over customers. In particular, appellant’s claims are based on a right to resell SGI’s products exclusively to certain customers — a right bargained for in the Account Agreement. But this exclusive right could not exist without the basic right to resell SGI’s products as granted in the Authorization. Because appellant’s claims based on the Account Agreement amount to a dispute based on appellant’s right to resell SGI’s products, appellant’s claims arise out of and relate to the Authorization and are thus governed by the forum-selection clause.
Thus, counts one through four of the complaint — breach of the Account Agreement, tortious interference with the Account Agreement, tortious interference with prospective business/contractual obligations, and unjust enrichment — directly arise out of the right to resell SGI’s products. Counts five and six, moreover, allege misappropriation of confidential information and trade-secret violations based on respondents’ alleged wrongful use of the Account Agreement; thus, they too relate to the Authorization.
See Terra,
Appellant contends that the Authorization neither imposed any contractual obligations on respondents nor provided appellant with any rights. Appellant claims
II.
Whether to enforce a contract’s forum-selection clause lies within the sound discretion of the district court.
Personalized Mktg. Serv., Inc. v. Stotler & Co.,
When parties agree to bring contract disputes in a particular forum, courts generally enforce that agreement unless the party seeking to avoid the contractual forum shows that the agreement is unfair or unreasonable.
Hauenstein,
a. Seriously inconvenient forum
The chosen forum is seriously inconvenient if, by litigating there, one party would be “effectively deprived of a meaningful day in court.”
Id.
(quotation omitted). Location and convenience of witnesses are generally not considered a serious inconvenience.
Id.; see also Interfund Corp. v. O’Byrne,
Appellant argues that filing suit in California would be unreasonable because this dispute is between Vieillard, a Minnesota resident, and itself, a Minnesota corporation. Appellant also points out that all of the witnesses and evidence are in Minnesota. But appellant could still “have his day in court” in California, and traveling expense does not necessarily render a location seriously inconvenient. Also, appellant may fully plead all of its claims in California, and appellant has not argued that it cannot afford to sue in California. In addition, Vieillard has consented to California’s jurisdiction, so our decision will not cause split litigation.
b. Adhesion contract
An adhesion contract is one that is presented on a take-it-or-leave-it basis and is the product of unequal bargaining power.
Hauenstein,
Appellant argues that the Authorization is “one-sided,” “overweening,” and grants no rights to appellant. Both parties freely signed the Authorization, and appellant exercised its bargaining power by turning down SGI’s initial offer of employment in favor of becoming an independent reseller of SGI’s products. Moreover, appellant had the opportunity to negotiate the terms of the Authorization, and thus it was not the product of unequal bargaining power. In fact, other resellers have negotiated the terms of the Authorization, and appellant alleges that it bargained for the Account Agreement-evidence that there was room to negotiate.
Appellant adds that the usual reasons for enforcing forum-selection clauses— such as freedom of contract, certainty, and convenience — do not exist here because the sole purpose of the clause is to secure tactical litigation advantages for respondents. We disagree. Appellant did not have to sign the Authorization; it could have sold similar products for competitors. Appellant also could have negotiated the Authorization’s terms. And when signing the Authorization, appellant knew that any litigation would take place in Santa Clara County, California. Appellant also compares its 2000 sales of $925,000 with SGI’s 2000 sales of $1 billion.
See Nelson v. Master Lease Corp.,
c. Otherwise unreasonable
A forum-selection clause is also unreasonable if its enforcement would contravene a strong public policy of the forum in which the suit is brought.
Interfund,
Appellant argues that enforcing the forum-selection clause would violate Minnesota’s public policy favoring unified resolution of multi-party disputes because Yieillard would remain a defendant in Minnesota.
See Personalized Mktg.,
Appellant argues that a New Jersey case supports its position.
See Kubis & Perszyk
Assocs.,
Inc. v. Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
DECISION
We conclude that the forum-selection clause in the parties’ Authorization governs appellant’s claims based on the Account Agreement because those claims directly relate to appellant’s right to sell SGI’s products — a right conferred on appellant in the Authorization. Moreover, the district court did not abuse its discretion by enforcing the forum-selection clause because the clause is not unfair or unreasonable.
Affirmed.
