BROOKS RANGE PETROLEUM CORPORATION v. DANIEL P. SHEARER
Supreme Court Nos. S-16382
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
July 27, 2018
Opinion No. 7266
Superior Court No. 2BA-15-00300 CI
Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.
Petition for Review from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Second Judicial District, Barrow, Angela Greene, Judge.
Appearances: Elizabeth Hodes and Anne Marie Tavella, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Anchorage, for Petitioner. James K. Wilkens, Bliss Wilkens, Anchorage, and Robert Campbell, Caliber Law Group, Barrow, for Respondent.
Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger, and Carney,
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
We granted a petition for review to resolve a venue dispute in an employment case. Daniel Shearer alleges that Brooks Range Petroleum Corporation (BRPC) promised him a ten-year term of employment, then terminated his employment two and a half years later. Shearer filed suit in the Second Judicial District, where he alleged the parties had negotiated and formed their contract. BRPC filed a motion to dismiss the case or to change venue to the Third Judicial District, where the contract was executed and where Shearer had performed most of his job duties. The superior court denied the motion, thus retaining venue in the Second Judicial District.
We conclude that neither Shearer‘s tort claims nor his contract-based claims arose in the Second Judicial District, and the chosen venue was therefore not proper. We reverse the superior court‘s order denying a change of venue.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
Some of the factual background of this case is controverted. Where there is a reasonable dispute, we construe the facts in Shearer‘s favor.1
Shearer, a resident of Alberta, Canada, alleged that in October 2011 he was “working as a drilling consultant for British Petroleum” (BP) when he was “presented an attractive offer of full time employment with BP.” While considering BP‘s offer, Shearer learned that the “key drilling consultant” for another North Slope operator, BRPC, had suffered a heart attack, and he “volunteered to help.” He covered the consultant position for BRPC during January 2012 at the Mustang location near Nuiqsut.2
While working there Shearer was approached by John Jay “Bo” Darrah, BRPC‘s co-founder and then-chief executive officer, who “recruited” Shearer to “fill a permanent full-time position with BRPC.” Shearer told Darrah about BP‘s employment offer, “emphasizing the importance ... of long-term employment security.” According to Shearer, he and Darrah “verbally confirm[ed] [a] guarantee of long-term employment security of at least 10 years ... [and] shook hands on the agreement.” “In reliance on these promises and representations,” Shearer ceased negotiating for a permanent position with BP.
On January 30, 2012, Shearer traveled to Anchorage and attended a dinner hosted by BRPC, where he was “welcomed and introduced as the ‘new employee.‘” The next day the parties executed a short written employment contract at BRPC‘s Anchorage office, effective February 1, 2012. The contract made no reference to a guaranteed term of employment.
The parties dispute where the terms of their agreement were negotiated and accepted. Shearer contends that the agreement was fully negotiated at BRPC‘s Mustang location on the North Slope and that the written contract executed in Anchorage simply “memorializ[ed] the basic compensation terms of the verbal employment contract ... reached earlier.” BRPC contends that it negotiated the material terms of the agreement and hired Shearer in Anchorage.
The parties also dispute where Shearer was expected to do his work. Shearer contends that he was hired to work primarily on the North Slope, though he concedes that he “would be expected to work in BRPC‘s Anchorage office during periods when there was no activity on the North Slope.” BRPC contends that “Shearer was hired to work as a Drilling Manager in BRPC‘s Anchorage, Alaska office,” but it concedes that “Shearer did travel to the project site on the North Slope.” The parties agree that, as it turned out, Shearer worked primarily at BRPC‘s Anchorage office.
B. Proceedings
Shearer sued BRPC for misrepresentation, breach of contract, and related claims. He served the summons and complaint on Armfield, BRPC‘s registered agent, in Anchorage in the Third Judicial District, but he filed his suit in Utqiagvik in the Second Judicial District. The parties dispute the location of BRPC‘s principal place of business: Shearer‘s complaint asserted that it was on the “North Slope, Alaska,” but BRPC responded that it was in Anchorage. In an affidavit filed in support of BRPC‘s motion to change venue, Armfield asserted that it “does not maintain any permanent offices or employees in the Second Judicial District or Barrow [Utqiagvik]” and that it “currently ha[d] no employees or active operations in” the Second Judicial District. In a responsive affidavit Shearer asserted that he was “informed and believe[d] there [was] current activity at BRPC‘s Mustang Pad” on the North Slope and that he also believed “that BRPC [was] in the process of designing a production facility that [would] be situated near Nuiqsut, within the Second Judicial District.”
BRPC filed a motion to dismiss for improper venue or alternatively to transfer venue to Anchorage in the Third Judicial District. The superior court in Utqiagvik considered the parties’ pleadings and affidavits and denied the motion. It decided that Shearer‘s contract claims arose in Anchorage for venue purposes because that was “the place of intended performance for Shearer‘s employment contract,” but that his tort claims arose in the Second Judicial District because he “was first injured when he relied on BRPC‘s alleged misrepresentations in Nuiqsut” by “ceas[ing] negotiations with BP.”
To decide whether venue for the two different types of claims could remain in Utqiagvik, the court weighed the private interests of the litigants and the interests of the public. It noted that Shearer had a private interest in the venue of his choice but that “it would be easier and cheaper for BRPC to litigate the case in Anchorage“; “it is likely that most of the witnesses reside in Anchorage“; “it would be easier for witnesses outside of Alaska to travel to Anchorage” than to Utqiagvik; and “most of the evidence is in Anchorage.” But the court also noted that the cost of transporting employment records from Anchorage to Utqiagvik was “minimal given that the entire contents could be put on a thumb drive or CD” and that “[w]itnesses c[ould] be deposed in Anchorage,” though they “would have to testify in [Utqiagvik] if the parties felt it necessary to have the live testimony.”
The superior court decided that these private interests were outweighed by the public interest of “the local community ... in having this controversy decided on the North Slope because a significant portion of the alleged wrongdoing occurred in Nuiqsut.” The court concluded that because BRPC chose to do business on the North Slope — whose residents “work in those jobs and depend on the money to sustain them” — local jurors had “a stake in the matter” that weighed heavily in favor of retaining venue in the Second Judicial District. The court also declined to transfer venue on convenience grounds, finding that it was not necessary for “the convenience of witnesses and the ends of justice.”3
- Where did the claim arise for the alleged tort of misrepresentation?
- Where did the claim arise for the alleged breach of contract?
- Should we adopt the doctrine of ancillary (or pendent) venue?
- Did the superior court abuse its discretion in denying a change of venue under
AS 22.10.040 ? - How should we address issues of overlapping venue?
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether the plaintiff‘s initial choice of venue is proper under
IV. DISCUSSION
Venue requirements “are designed to [e]nsure that litigation is lodged in a convenient forum and to protect the defendant against being sued in an arbitrary place.”6 Though important, venue has rarely been addressed in our case law. In the discussion that follows we first address how trial courts should view the evidence on a motion based on improper venue. We then address the tests used to determine where tort and contract claims arise for venue purposes. Applying those tests to Shearer‘s claims in this case, we decide that the Second Judicial District was not a proper venue because the claims did not arise there.
A. The Plaintiff Bears The Burden Of Proving Proper Venue; However, Absent An Evidentiary Hearing, The Court Evaluates The Pleadings In The Light Most Favorable To The Plaintiff.
By statute, “[v]enue for all actions shall be set under rules adopted by the supreme court.”7
deem the “correct” view — places the burden of proof on the plaintiff, reasoning that it is the plaintiff‘s obligation in the first instance to file suit in a proper forum.13
We follow the majority view, which is more consistent with our expectation that plaintiffs will “commence suit in the proper Rule 3 venue.”14 To withstand a motion based on improper venue, the plaintiff must present a prima facie case that the chosen venue is proper.15 The trial court may consider evidence outside the pleadings but should take the plaintiff‘s uncontradicted allegations as true and construe reasonable inferences and factual conflicts in favor of the plaintiff.16
“As a result, at least until facts are resolved, in many cases the non-moving party will survive the Rule 12(b)(3) motion” solely because of the lack of factual development.17 “To resolve such motions when genuine factual issues are raised, it may be appropriate for the [trial] court to hold a Rule 12(b)(3) motion in abeyance until [it]
holds an evidentiary hearing on the disputed facts.”18 Whether to hold a hearing is committed to the trial court‘s discretion.19 “Alternatively, the [trial] court may deny the Rule 12(b)(3) motion while granting leave to refile it if further development of the record eliminates any genuine factual issue.”20 If the court does hold an evidentiary hearing, the plaintiff must prove that the chosen venue is proper by a preponderance of the evidence.21
B. The Second Judicial District Is Not A Proper Venue For Shearer‘s Misrepresentation Claims Because The Claims Did Not Arise There.
As relevant here,
Shearer‘s complaint alleges claims in both tort and contract. His tort claims, which we address first, are for negligent22 and intentional misrepresentation.23 Both types of misrepresentation claims require that the plaintiff have suffered actual harm.24
We first decided where a tort “claim arose” for venue purposes in Ebell v. Seapac Fisheries, Inc.25 At the time, venue in cases not involving real property was governed by
the state, the action against that defendant shall be commenced in that judicial district or in the judicial district in which the claim arose.” The plaintiff in Ebell alleged that a law firm located in the Third Judicial District was negligent in failing to advise him of the need to comply with certain fisheries laws, “resulting in the seizure of [the plaintiff‘s] vessels in Norton Sound in the Second Judicial District.”26 The seized vessels were ordered to Dutch Harbor in the Third Judicial District, where eventually the fish on board were forfeited “and other losses were incurred.”27
The plaintiff served the law firm with a summons and complaint in the Third Judicial District, the firm‘s place of business, but filed suit in the Second.28 The superior court denied the defendants’ motion to change venue, determining that the “claim arose” in the Second Judicial District where “the injury occurred.”29 This court affirmed.30 We observed that “[w]hen
The last event occurred when the harmful force, set in motion by the defendant‘s negligence, first took effect on the body or the property of the plaintiff. Thus, a claim for tort arose where the harmful force first took effect, or where the plaintiff suffered injury.32
We concluded in Ebell that although the “harmful force” may have been initiated in the Third Judicial District, where the allegedly
When a tort is complete is a question that also arises in the context of statutes of limitations. “[T]he statute of limitation[s] as to torts does not usually begin to run until the tort is complete,” which ordinarily does not occur “until there has been an invasion of a legally protected interest of the plaintiff.”34 In Jones v. Westbrook we considered a claim that a lawyer, retained to help sell a business, had committed malpractice by failing to ensure that his client had a recorded security interest in the business‘s physical assets.35 Over seven years later the Internal Revenue Service filed tax liens against the assets, displacing the client‘s unsecured interest; we held it was only then
that the malpractice claim was completed by the occurrence of “an appreciable injury” to the client.36
In Austin v. Fulton Insurance Co., an insured alleged that his insurer had negligently failed to provide requested earthquake coverage.37 The alleged negligence occurred in 1961, but the insured was not aware of it until after the 1964 earthquake, when he suffered an uncovered loss.38 We concluded that the statute of limitations began to run in 1964, reasoning that the insured‘s interests were not invaded until he needed the coverage and discovered that he lacked it.39 We held that “there must be an injury or harm to [the insured] as a consequence of [the insurer‘s] negligence to serve as a basis for recovery of damages before the tort became actionable and before the period of limitation commenced to run.”40 We supported this conclusion by reference to the First Restatement of Torts, which states: “A cause of action for misrepresentation in a business transaction is complete when the injured person has been deprived of his property or otherwise has suffered pecuniary loss or has incurred liability as a result of a misrepresentation.”41
In light of these authorities, we conclude that Shearer failed to make a prima facie case that his misrepresentation claims arose in the Second Judicial District. The record, viewed in the light most favorable to Shearer, shows that the alleged misrepresentations were made in the Second Judicial District, while his contract was being negotiated near Nuiqsut, and that Shearer justifiably relied on the misrepresentations in the Second Judicial District when he ceased negotiating for a full-time job with BP. But the representation and reliance elements of a tort claim are not enough to “make the defendant liable for the tort“:42 in fact there was no tort until Shearer had suffered a pecuniary loss, and he suffered no loss as long as he continued in BRPC‘s employ. The alleged misrepresentations — “the harmful force” — “took effect” on Shearer only when BRPC terminated his employment two and a half years later by telephone from Anchorage while he was at home in Canada. Because Shearer suffered no injury in the Second Judicial District, his tort claims cannot have arisen there for venue purposes.
Shearer argues that he first felt the harmful effect of the alleged misrepresentations in the Second Judicial District immediately after they were made, when he “gave up his
We have cautioned against blurring the reliance and loss elements of a misrepresentation claim. In Anchorage Chrysler Center, Inc. v. DaimlerChrysler Motors Corp. (Anchorage Chrysler II), a car dealership sued a manufacturer for misrepresentation in the context of failed plans to expand the dealership‘s business.43 We considered
whether the dealership had established the loss element of the misrepresentation claim.44 While noting the existence of minor and unquantifiable losses made in reliance on the alleged misrepresentation, we rejected the dealership‘s claim that a weakening of its bargaining position was itself a harm that satisfied the elements of the tort.45 We noted that “there is no precedent in Alaska for considering a change in bargaining position to constitute in itself a loss in a fraud action.”46 We explained that absent “unusual circumstances ... [i]t would not be appropriate to generally broaden the fifth element of the fraudulent misrepresentation tort by treating changed bargaining position as, in and of itself, an actual loss.”47 We reasoned:
In virtually any fraudulent misrepresentation case involving negotiations or a contract, the reliance element will involve the use of misrepresentation to influence what a party consents to do or not do. Equating a compromised bargaining position with actual loss would thus cause the loss and reliance elements of the tort to collapse into a single element. Every time a party could show that it acted in reliance on a fraudulent misrepresentation (the fourth element of the tort), it could automatically assert the misrepresentation harmed its bargaining power and caused a loss (the fifth element).48
Rejecting the dealership‘s argument that reliance itself equaled loss, we concluded that “[t]he loss in fraudulent misrepresentation must be a pecuniary loss that is caused by the
plaintiff‘s reliance on the misrepresentation.”49 Under this reasoning, we cannot accept Shearer‘s argument — adopted by the superior court — that the “harmful force” of BRPC‘s alleged tort took effect in Nuiqsut, when Shearer relied on the alleged misrepresentations to his later detriment.
It was therefore error for the superior court to conclude that Shearer‘s misrepresentation claims arose in the Second Judicial District.
C. The Second Judicial District Is Not A Proper Venue For Shearer‘s Contract Claims Because The Claims Did Not Arise There.
1. A breach of contract claim arises where a substantial part of the events giving rise to the claim occurred.
The contract-based claims asserted in Shearer‘s complaint included breach of contract, reformation, promissory estoppel, and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. In Ebell we concluded that the term “claim arose” as used in the venue statute had “a generally understood meaning” in tort law at the time the legislature adopted it and therefore “as applied to tort suits was meant to include the place of injury rule.”50 But in Ebell we did not address where a contract claim arose, nor have we done so since. We now decide that a breach of contract claim arises where a substantial
a. Other jurisdictions take a variety of approaches to determining where a “claim arose” for venue purposes.
As we recognized in Ebell, the federal venue statute in effect at the time had language similar to Alaska‘s: it allowed venue in “the judicial district ... in which the
claim arose.”51 But federal interpretations of this language were never uniform. In Leroy v. Great Western United Corp., construing the same phrase in
in the unusual case in which it is not clear that the claim arose in only one specific district, a plaintiff may choose between those two (or conceivably even more) districts that with approximately equal plausibility — in terms of the availability of witnesses, the accessibility of other relevant evidence, and the convenience of the defendant (but not of the plaintiff) — may be assigned as the locus of the claim.53
Finding this exegesis unhelpful,54 federal courts continued to apply an array of approaches for determining where a “claim arose.” Some courts applied “a test that considers the ‘weight of the contacts’ between the claim and the various districts in which venue may be appropriate.”55 Under this test, “venue would be proper in the district having the most significant ties to the claim.”56 A second test was the “substantial contacts” test (sometimes called “the American Law Institute rule“), under which “venue is proper in any district in which a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred.”57 Under this test — now reflected in the federal venue statute58
if venue could be situated in either of two districts with “approximately equal plausibility,” the court did not weigh the two against each other: either district was a proper venue.59 A third test relied on “the place
In this case the superior court favored the “place of intended performance” rule adopted by the Ninth Circuit in Decker Coal Co. v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,62
which is the rule Shearer advocates on appeal.63 Decker Coal involved a contract for the delivery of coal from Decker‘s Montana mine to electrical utilities in Illinois and Indiana.64 The utility company argued “that the event giving rise to the claim was its transmittal of notice [from its Illinois offices] invoking the force majeure clause[;] therefore, the claim arose in Illinois.”65 But the Ninth Circuit decided that venue was proper in the place of intended performance, Montana, “because the place of performance is determined at the inception of the contract and therefore parties can anticipate where they may be sued.”66 It explained that this test was consistent with “[t]he overriding purpose of
The Ninth Circuit‘s rationale suited the facts in Decker Coal, in which the contract was actually performed where the parties intended it to be performed, and “the convenience of the parties” — at least of the plaintiff — was undoubtedly furthered by the plaintiff‘s choice of venue in its own home district. But the rationale falters in a case like this one, in which the plaintiff contends that the contract was intended to be performed someplace other than where it was actually performed. According to Shearer, the parties intended that he work “primarily ... on the North Slope when drilling commenced” and in Anchorage only “when there was no activity on the North Slope,” but drilling was delayed and he “ended up working primarily out of the Anchorage office.” When the parties intend to perform their contract in one location but ultimately perform it somewhere else, basing venue on their unrealized intentions would seem unlikely, as a rule, to “further the convenience of the parties” or “have a close nexus to the underlying events.”68
We note that given the facts of Decker Coal, the rule the Ninth Circuit applied was really a “place of actual performance” rule,
relevant to the plaintiff‘s claims — proper venue is the Third Judicial District, not the Second.
b. The purposes of the venue rule are best served by a test that takes account of where “a substantial part of the events” underlying the claim occurred.
In Ebell we noted the development of the predominant “weight of the contacts” approach in federal case law, including its recent “utiliz[ation] in tort suits.”71 But while applying the “place of injury” rule to tort suits, we did “not reject the ‘weight of the contacts’ approach in all respects.”72 We cautioned, though, that a test requiring the weighing of contacts in different forums “seems to produce much litigation,” and that parties could more productively focus their “attention on the statutory guidelines for changing venue” rather “than attempting the often imponderable task of enumerating and quantifying contacts in an effort to fulfill the ‘occasionally fictive’ quest for the one district in which the claim arose.”73 Ultimately, we “disapprove[d] of the weight of the contacts approach,” but “only insofar as it assumes that there is but one district in which a claim may arise.”74
Given our caveat in Ebell — that a “weight of the contacts approach” should accommodate the possibility of a claim arising in more than one district — we conclude that the American Law Institute (ALI) test, which allows venue in any district in which “a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred,”75 best serves the purposes of Alaska‘s venue doctrine. The ALI test‘s “major purpose” is “to liberalize the weight of the contacts test by [e]nsuring that venue would be proper in more than one district,”76 thus directly addressing our concern in Ebell.
The ALI test is the basis for the current version of the federal venue statute, which in 1990 replaced the phrase “the judicial district ... in which the claim arose”77 with the more inclusive phrase “a judicial district in which a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred.”78 Federal courts have observed that
possible districts was the single one in which “the claim arose“; the amendment makes clear “that when the events underlying a claim have taken place in different places, venue may be proper in any number of districts.”81
But federal courts have also observed that the amended statutory language did not change “the purpose of statutorily specified venue,” which is still “to protect the defendant against the risk that a plaintiff will select an unfair or inconvenient place of trial.”82 The “substantial part” language “is intended to preserve the element of fairness so that a defendant is not haled into a remote district having no real relationship to the dispute.”83 Thus, “[e]vents or omissions that might only have some tangential connection with the dispute in litigation are not enough.”84 “[S]ignificant events or omissions material to the plaintiff‘s claim must have occurred in the district in question, even if other material events occurred elsewhere.”85 “And of the places where the events have taken place, only those locations hosting a ‘substantial part’ of the events are to be
considered.”86 The test is thus not to be confused with the “minimum contacts” test used for determining personal jurisdiction; “contacts” matter only to the extent they are the “events or omissions giving rise to the claim.”87 The evolving federal standard, based on the ALI test, thus remains consistent with the operative phrase of our own venue rule, which turns on where the “claim arose” rather than where the parties have the most contacts.88
2. A substantial part of the events giving rise to Shearer‘s breach of contract claim did not occur in the Second Judicial District.
In his affidavit opposing BRPC‘s venue motion, Shearer identified the contacts between his suit and the Second Judicial District. First, he alleged that it was on the North Slope that BRPC offered, and he accepted, a ten-year term of employment. Second, he alleged that the parties’ expectation
A breach of contract claim depends on proof of the existence of a contract, breach, and damages.89 “[E]ntry into an agreement does not automatically qualify as a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to a breach of contract claim.”90 Where a contract was negotiated, while sometimes important, may fade into insignificance if the contract is largely performed and breached somewhere else.91 The “place of intended performance” rule which Decker Coal found to be consistent with the purpose of the venue doctrine — “to further the convenience of the parties”92 — is thus
still given primary, and often dispositive, weight by federal courts in the Ninth Circuit.93 Where the contract was breached is usually an important factor.94 And where the damage occurs may also be significant.95
The only one of the contacts Shearer identifies that is directly relevant to his breach of contract claims is the first — that the Second Judicial District was where employment was first discussed and offered. But in this case the site of the parties’ alleged oral agreement appears to have had little to do with the alleged breach. Shearer‘s contract claims, based on the alleged oral promise of a ten-year term of employment, would be exactly the same if the discussions had occurred in Anchorage, Honolulu, or London. The intended place of performance was apparently not material to the parties’ agreement; the alleged breach occurred after Shearer had spent three and a half years working primarily in Anchorage. There is no “close nexus to the wrong”96 in either the
parties’ expectation
The agreement discussed on the North Slope was reduced to writing and signed when the parties were in Anchorage. The contract was largely performed in Anchorage, and for the duration of the parties’ contractual relationship no events significant to Shearer‘s claims occurred in the Second Judicial District. Nothing about the breach itself — not the first oral notice to Shearer that he was to be terminated, the follow-up telephone call, the letter confirming his termination, his receipt of these messages, or any resulting harm — is alleged to have occurred in the Second Judicial District.
Finally, it is noteworthy that Shearer does not dispute BRPC‘s contention that there are no witnesses or relevant documents on the North Slope. In light of the purpose of the venue doctrine — which is still to protect a defendant against an unfair choice of venue with “no real relationship to the dispute”97 — we conclude that the North Slope was not a place where “a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred.”98
D. We Do Not Need To Address The Remaining Issues On Which We Granted Review.
Given our conclusion that Shearer‘s tort and contract claims did not arise in the Second Judicial District and that venue was not proper there for either type of claim, we do not need to decide the remaining issues on which we granted review.
V. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the superior court‘s order and REMAND with instructions to transfer the case to the Third Judicial District.
MAASSEN
Justice
Notes
- the party accused of misrepresentation must have made the statement in the course of his business, profession or employment;
- the representation must supply “false information“;
- the plaintiff must show “justifiable reliance” on the false information; and
- the accused party must have failed “to exercise reasonable care or competence in obtaining or communicating the information.”
