Plaintiff, Bond Leather, Inc. (“Bond”), appellee here, brought this action against Martin S. Nadler (“Martin”) and Melvin Nadler (“Melvin”), brothers; Q-T Shoe Manufacturing, Inc. (“Q-T”), a corporation of which Martin is president; and Melvin Nadler, Inc. (“M.N., Inc.”), a corporation of which Melvin is president and sole stockholder. The gist of Bond’s claim was that Q-T owed it money for goods purchased on credit and that, shortly before Q-T failed as a corporation, Martin fraudulently induced Bond to release M.N., Inc. from an agreement under which M.N., Inc. had guaranteed payment to Bond for Q-T’s purchases. Following a bench trial, the district court entered judgment in Bond’s favor against all defendants, except Melvin Nadler individually, against whom all claims were dismissed. This consolidated appeal followed. Appellant M.N., Inc. now argues that it was not properly subject to the jurisdiction of the court below; appellants Martin Nadler and Q-T allege a number of legal errors in the district court’s findings as to their liability. We reverse as to M.N., Inc. and affirm as to Martin and Q-T.
The record supports the following factual findings. For many years preceding the events at issue here, Q-T, a New Jersey shoe manufacturing corporation, purchased raw leather from Bond, a Massachusetts corporation. In 1978, Martin, Q-T’s president and majority stockholder, was injured in an accident that prevented him for over a year from playing an active role in the company’s affairs. During this period, Q-T experienced severe business losses. In the summer of 1979, Q-T negotiated an agreement with its creditors, including Bond, that enabled it to tender twenty cents on each dollar it owed in full satisfaction of its debts. Together with securing a large federally insured loan, this compromise agreement enabled Q-T to continue in business. In view of Q-T’s precarious financial condition, however, Bond was willing to continue to extend it credit only upon receipt of assurances that it would be fully paid. Martin proposed that his brother Melvin’s Ohio corporation guarantee Q-T’s debts. Bond agreed, telephoned Melvin in Cincinnati, and discussed terms for the guaranty. Shortly thereafter, on January 28, 1980, Melvin sent Bond a letter setting forth the terms of M.N., Inc.’s guaranty. Over the next three months, the terms of the guaranty were modified until a final version was executed in an April 7, 1980 letter from Melvin to Bond. That letter agreed to guarantee payment for all Q-T’s purchases, without limitation as to time or amount. The record reflects that the negotiations which produced the final document took place in conversations between Martin and William Salloway, Bond’s sales manager. Martin would then relay the modified terms to Melvin, who would then send a letter embodying the terms to Bond. Four such letters were sent in all, including the first and final versions.
Q-T purchased leather from Bond under the terms of this agreement until July, 1981, when Martin told Bond that he wanted his own line of credit and wanted Bond to release M.N., Inc. from its agreement. Martin told Bond vice-president Barry Lerner that Melvin needed the release “immediately” because M.N., Inc. was “in the process of ‘going public’ ” with its stock and that the outstanding, open-ended guaranty was an obstacle to moving forward in that process. Lerner discussed Martin’s proposal with others at Bond and later indicated that Bond would give the release if Q-T would pay its credit balance of $58,-046.63 down to zero. Martin then told Bond that Q-T could not pay that sum quickly enough to meet his brother’s needs. It was finally agreed that Q-T would pay half the balance, or $29,026.52, and that Bond would unconditionally release M.N., Inc. from its guaranty. On July 17, 1981, Martin sent Bond a letter of release along with the promised half payment. Bond returned the release to Q-T, signed, on July 27, 1981.
Approximately one and a half months later, in late August, 1981, Q-T failed and its assets were seized. Bond separately notified both Melvin and Martin that it believed Bond had been deceived into granting the release by Martin’s representation that M.N., Inc. was in the process of making a public offering of its stock. Melvin responded by letter, indicating that while he had made some attempts to take his company public, he had no knowledge that those plans had any connection to Bond’s release. Rather, he said that he understood the only consideration for the release to have been Q-T’s payment of half its debt and noted that the release itself made reference only to the partial payment. No further payments were made to Bond by any of the defendants.
Prior to trial, Melvin and M.N., Inc. twice sought to be dismissed for lack of
in per-sonam
jurisdiction. The court denied both motions pending further development of the facts. In denying the second motion, the court indicated that if the evidence failed to show an agency relationship between Martin and either Melvin or M.N., Inc., it would dismiss the claims against both on jurisdictional grounds. At the close of the plaintiff’s case at trial, the court determined that no such agency relationship existed; it therefore dismissed
The district court proceeded to find that Martin’s representations to Bond as to M.N., Inc.’s going public were fraudulent and that Bond would not have released M.N., Inc. from its guaranty had it known that the company was not in the immediate process of going public. This finding proved central to the case. On the basis of this fraud, the court found (1) that Martin had committed the tort of misrepresentation and had violated Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 93A, § 2 by engaging in an unfair, deceptive trade practice and (2) that, by virtue of the fraud, the release was ineffective and M.N., Inc. was liable to Bond under the term of its guaranty. Having rejected Martin’s counterclaim, the court, therefore, ruled that Bond was entitled to recover the sum it alleged it was owed— $29,013.26 — plus statutory interest from either Martin or M.N., Inc., under any of the above counts. In addition, the court had previously entered a default judgment against Q-T, which had failed to answer or otherwise defend the action. The court also awarded attorneys’ fees to Bond, under the provisions of M.G.L.A. ch. 93A, § H.
THE APPEAL BY M.N., INC.
Massachusetts law governs our approach to the question whether M.N., Inc. was amenable to the jurisdiction of the district court.
Hahn v. Vermont Law School,
We turn first to the statutory inquiry. The parties agree that only one section of the Massachusetts long arm statute is relevant to this appeal. Section 3(a) provides that:
A court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person, who acts directly or by an agent, as to a cause of action in law or equity arising from the person’s
(a) transacting any business in this commonwealth____
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 223A, § 3(a).
The language “transacting any business” is to be construed broadly,
Hahn v. Vermont Law School,
In arguing that its activities were insufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement, M.N. Inc. points to two sets of cases. First, noting that the guaranty in question was its only Massachusetts-related activity,
3
appellant cites cases in which § 3(a) jurisdiction was found wanting because the defendants’ undertakings were thought too isolated or untethered to any ongoing course of business in the commonwealth to constitute the transaction of business there.
See, e.g., “Automatic” Sprinkler Corp. of America v. Seneca Foods Corp.,
The second set of cases upon which appellant relies in arguing that a statutory basis for jurisdiction is absent here is the one concerning jurisdiction over nonresident guarantors.
See Kahn Paper, Inc. v. Crosby,
The familiar constitutional inquiry focuses on whether M.N., Inc.’s contacts with Massachusetts were such that requiring it to defend a lawsuit there does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
We have held that the fact that a nonresident enters into a single commercial contract with a resident of the forum state is not necessarily sufficient to meet the constitutional minimum for jurisdiction. In
Whittaker Corp. v. United Aircraft Corp.,
Scrutinizing the record before us, we find absolutely no supplemental contacts linking M.N., Inc. to Massachusetts. The guaranty agreement called for no active role by M.N., Inc., nor did M.N., Inc. participate directly (after Melvin was first telephoned by Salloway of Bond) in negotiating the agreement’s evolving terms. The evidence was that Martin relayed the latest agreement to Melvin, who then sent Bond a letter embodying the terms it had agreed upon with Martin. M.N., Inc.’s role was passive.
Moreover, appellee fails to identify any contract rights created by the guaranty in M.N., Inc., which could have been enforced in the Massachusetts courts and which could fairly be said to represent an intent by M.N., Inc. to reap the benefits of Massachusetts law. While Q-T, the principal ob-ligor, no doubt availed itself of the privilege of doing Massachusetts business, and could have invoked Massachusetts law to protect its rights, it does not follow that its benefits and protections may simply be derivatively ascribed to M.N., Inc. We believe that to casually impute these benefits and protections to M.N., Inc. would be fundamentally inconsistent with the minimum contacts inquiry, which looks to the due process rights of the defendant and “properly focuses on ‘the relationship among the
defendant,
the forum and the litigation.’ ”
Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, supra,
Nor is there any basis, on the record before us, to conclude that any commercial benefits did, in fact, flow to M.N., Inc. as a result of its guaranty. It is undisputed that M.N., Inc. received no compensation for its guaranty. It is similarly undisputed that, unlike the nonresident guarantors in Bergreen, supra, and Salter, supra, over whom jurisdiction was upheld, M.N., Inc. had no financial interest in Q-T. Nor had M.N., Inc. any plans to acquire such an interest in Q-T. Likewise, the record reflected that M.N., Inc. had no presence in Massachusetts, no direct business dealings with parties there and no intent to initiate its own business dealings with Bond or any other Massachusetts party. Rather than marking any move by it into the Massachusetts marketplace, M.N., Inc.’s action represented an apparently isolated attempt to assist Martin Nadler’s flagging corporation in the wake of his illness.
This was doubtless a purposeful act for which some consideration, even if non-pecuniary, flowed to M.N., Inc. Viewing this transaction as a whole, however, we conclude that, absent any intent by M.N., Inc. to exploit the local economy, as has been required not only in prior cases addressing jurisdiction over nonresident guarantors, but more generally in cases upholding jurisdiction,
see, e.g., Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, supra,
THE APPEAL BY MARTIN NADLER AND Q-T SHOE
We turn first to appellant Martin Na-dler’s claim that the district court erroneously applied governing principles of Massachusetts law, which was applied here, when it found that he fraudulently induced Bond to release M.N., Inc. from its guaranty-
Recovery in an action for the tort of misrepresentation (sometimes referred to as fraud or deceit) requires a showing that
the defendant made a false representation of a material fact with knowledge of its falsity for the purpose of inducting the plaintiff to act thereon, and that the plaintiff relied upon the representation as true and acted upon it to his damage.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Ditmore,
The district court found that Bond justifiably relied on Martin’s statement that M.N., Inc. was in the immediate process of going public in releasing him from the guaranty; that M.N., Inc. was not in the
Martin first argues that his representations to Bond were not actionable because, rather than statements of existing fact, they were “statements of opinion, of conditions to exist in the future, or of matters promissory in nature ...”
Pepsi Cola Metropolitan Bottling Co. v. Pleasure Island, Inc.,
Martin next argues that, even if deemed factual statements, his representations were not “material” because of their subject matter. To the extent that we understand appellant’s argument, he appears to suggest that the fact he represented to Bond — that M.N., Inc. was in the process of going public — bore only a “collateral” relation to the contractual relationship among the parties,
see Hedden v. Griffin,
A misrepresentation is material if it is shown that the misrepresentation was one of the principal grounds, though not necessarily the sole ground, that caused the plaintiff “to take the particular action that the wrongdoer intended he would take as a result of such representations and that otherwise he would not have taken such action.”
National Car Rental System, Inc. v. Mills Transfer Company,7 Mass.App. 850 , 852,384 N.E.2d 1263 (1979) (quoting National Shawmut Bank v. Johnson,317 Mass. 485 , 490,58 N.E.2d 849 (1945)).
Cf. Restatement of Torts (Second) § 538(2)(a) (1981) (“the matter is material if ... a reasonable man would attach importance to its existence or nonexistence in determining his choice of action in the transaction in question”).
Martin’s final challenge to the district court’s ruling on the misrepresentation issue is his claim that Bond’s reliance on his statements was unjustifiable, in light of (1) Bond’s familiarity with Q-T’s financial dif
First, we fail to see how knowledge of Q-T’s uncertain financial condition is legally relevant to Bond’s reliance on Martin’s statements that
his brother’s company
required an immediate release. We trust that appellant is not making the improbable claim that Bond should have suspected that Martin was only seeking to extricate M.N., Inc. from its commitment before that commitment became costly. Second, Martin’s contention that Bond was required to independently investigate whether M.N., Inc. was, in fact, making a public offering of its stock before relying reasonably on Martin’s statement to that effect, is unsupported in law. The Massachusetts courts have consistently held that failure to investigate the veracity of statements does not, as a matter of law, bar recovery for misrepresentation.
See, e.g., Friedman v. Jablonski,
In an argument closely linked to those challenging the district court’s ruling on the common law misrepresentation issue, Martin next attacks the court’s finding that his conduct violated Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 93A. Relying on section two of that statute, which proscribes “unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce,” the district court found that Martin’s representation to Bond constituted an unfair, deceptive practice under the statute. Martin argues that, to be actionable under ch. 93A, “[t]he objectionable conduct must attain a level of ras-cality that would raise an eyebrow of someone inured to the rough and tumble of the world of commerce,”
Levings v. Forbes & Wallace,
Finally, appellant Q-T argues that the district court erred in denying its motion for relief from the default judgment entered against it.
We have said on numerous occasions that motions to set aside default judgments are committed to the sound discretion of the . district court and that the district court’s decision should not be disturbed unless clearly wrong.
Taylor v. Boston and Taunton Transp. Co.,
First, the district court expressly rejected Q-T’s proffered explanation of its failure to answer or otherwise defend itself in the almost two year period in which the action had been pending before trial. Martin Nadler’s affidavit said that he believed that only he, and not Q-T, had been served in May, 1982. In the face of a Sheriff’s certificate on file with the court, stating that Martin and Q-T had both been served on the same date, as well as the fact that Q-T had been notified of all proceedings and conferences throughout the course of the litigation, we find that the district court was within its rights to reject this explanation.
Second, the record supports the district court’s conclusion that Q-T had delayed inexcusably in seeking to set aside the default. The original notice of default was issued on December 1, 1983 and Q-T took no action to remove it. The court entered its default judgment on January 3, 1984, but invited Q-T to move to set that judgment aside. Yet, Q-T chose to do nothing
Third, Q-T failed to meet its burden to show the district court that it had meritorious defenses to Bond’s claims, which it would be unfairly prevented from asserting. Because the court expressly allowed Martin to raise Q-T’s defenses, such a showing could hardly have been made. It is true that Q-T was unable to raise its counterclaims through Martin. But where, as here, Q-T took no action to participate in this case until the morning of trial, despite the fact that, as we have discussed, it was fairly on notice that it had been served, we find that it must bear the blame for losing the chance to press these counterclaims in this action.
The judgment of the district court is reversed as to appellant Melvin Nadler, Inc. 7 and affirmed as to appellants Martin S. Nadler and Q-T Shoe.
. Having affirmed the district court’s judgment that the release of M.N., Inc.’s guaranty was procured by fraud, it follows, as a matter of law, that the release was legally ineffective. Lacking in personam jurisdiction over M.N., Inc., however, we cannot make any finding as to its liability under the guaranty agreement.
Notes
. Although the Supreme Judicial Court has said that section 3(a) “functions as 'an assertion of jurisdiction over the person to the limits allowed by-the Constitution of the United States,’"
Good Hope Industries, Inc. v. Ryder Scott, supra,
at 6,
. We do not include on the list of relevant transactions any communications which followed the July, 1981 letter purporting to release M.N., Inc. from its guaranty.
See Whittaker Corp. v. United Aircraft Co.,
. The parties do not dispute the fact that M.N., Inc. has no office, agents, phone or presence of any kind in Massachusetts, nor has it had any other dealings with Bond. It is likewise undisputed that neither Melvin nor Martin Nadler has any financial interest in the business of the other, nor does either hold any position or office in his brother’s company. The record reflects no commercial ties between Q-T and M.N., Inc., other than the guaranty in question.
. Just prior to publication of this opinion, the Supreme Court announced its decision in
Burger King v. Rudzewicz,
— U.S. -,
If the question is whether an individual's contract with an out-of-state party alone can automatically establish sufficient minimum contacts in the other party’s home forum, we believe the answer clearly is that it cannot____ [W]e have emphasized the need for a 'highly realistic’ approach that recognizes that a ‘contract’ is 'ordinarily but an intermediate step serving to tie up prior business negotiations with future consequences which themselves are the real object of the business transaction.’ ... It is these factors — prior negotiations and contemplated future consequences, along with the terms of the contract and the parties’ actual course of dealing — that must be evaluated in determining whether the defendant purposefully established minimum contacts within the forum.
at —,
. We need not address Martin’s argument that passive nondisclosure does not constitute actionable fraud under Massachusetts law and that, therefore, the court below erred in denying his motion for summary judgment on Bond's claim that it was defrauded by his failure to apprise it of Q-T’s deteriorating financial condition when he sought a release of his brother’s guaranty. Having affirmed the district court’s judgment against Martin solely on the basis of his affirmative misrepresentations, we intimate no view as to the separate passive nondisclosure question.
. Appellant calls our attention to the court’s finding, made in the course of its discussion of the damages available under ch. 93A, that Martin induced Bond to release M.N., Inc. from the
challenged false statements,
id.
at 445,
On the basis of its finding as to motive, the district court ruled that Bond was not entitled to double or treble damages under ch. 93A. The statute requires that multiple damages be assessed whenever the violation of its terms is "willful” or “knowing”. M.G.L.A., ch. 93A, § 11. Because Bond has not cross-appealed the district court’s ruling on this issue, we have no occasion to consider the question. Our silence should not, however, be construed as approval of the district court’s reasoning.
See Computer Systems Engineering, Inc. v. Qantel Corp.,
