Builder Mart of America (BMA), Builder Mart of Albemarle (Albemarle), and William Huckabee (collectively Appellants) brought this action against First Union Corporation (First Union) alleging multiple causes of action arising from a loan transaction. An order of default was entered against First Union. Upon receiving notice of a damages hearing, First Union moved to set aside the default and to dismiss the action based on lack of personal and subject matter jurisdiction. The trial court held that it lacked both, vacated the default judgment, and dismissed the action. We affirm. 1
FACTS/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
BMA is a South Carolina corporation with its principal place of business in Greenville. Albemarle, a franchisee of BMA, is a North Carolina corporation owned by Huckabee with its principal place of business in Stanley, North Carolina. First Union is a bank holding company organized under the laws of North Carolina with its principal and only place of business in Charlotte, North Carolina, and owns 100% of the stock of First Union National Bank of North Carolina (FUNB(NC)).
FUNB(NC) loaned Albemarle $500,000 pursuant to a secured promissory note. The note specifically identified the lender as FUNB(NC), and the funds advanced were transferred to either Albemarle or Huckabee in North Carolina. The collateral which secured the obligation was located in its entirety in North Carolina, and the security interests in the collateral were filed and perfected in North Carolina. The note provided that the terms of the agreement would be governed by and construed in accordance with North Carolina law.
Albemarle was indebted to BMA and, as part of the loan transaction, BMA agreed to subordinate its rights to collateral in favor of FUNB(NC). This subordination agreement was memorialized in a letter from BMA’s president, Brian MacKenzie, to John Robertson, vice president of FUNB(NC). The letter provided in part as follows:
BMA agrees to use its best efforts to assist [FUNB(NC) ] to maximize the liquidation value of inventory and accounts receivable at [Albemarle] in the event default occurs on the [FUNB(NC)] note .... [FUNB(NC)] agrees to notify BMA in advance of its intentions to exercise its options in the event of a default by [Albemarle] with respect to the [FUNB(NC) ] loans.
Albemarle defaulted on the note, and FUNB(NC) called the loan. MacKenzie advised Robertson that BMA. had become aware of FUNB(NC)’s intent to call the loan and referred to the subordination agreement. MacKenzie stated, “we stand ready to assist you in the disposition of inventory assets at [Albemarle] so that both BMA and [FUNB(NC)] can recover the funds advanced.” FUNB(NC)’s legal counsel informed MacKenzie that Albemarle was in default and FUNB(NC) had requested Albemarle to peacefully surrender collateral, but Albermarle had failed to do so. Counsel further advised BMA that FUNB(NC) intended to institute legal proceedings against Albemarle unless the loan was satisfied in full. FUNB(NC) subsequently filed an action against Albemarle and Huckabee. The parties entered into a liquidation agreement which provided that an auctioneer would conduct a going-out-of-business sale at Albemarle and the remaining uncollected accounts receivable would be sold at public sale in North Carolina. After liquidating the collateral, FUNB(NC) filed an action against Albemarle and Huckabee for the deficiency. The parties eventually settled, and FUNB(NC) filed a voluntary dismissal with prejudice. Appellants then commenced this action against First Union Corporation.
LAW/ANALYSIS
A. Specific Personal Jurisdiction
1. Registration in South Carolina
First Union is a North Carolina corporation with its principal place of business in Charlotte, North Carolina. First Union does not own any property, have any employees or agents, loan money, provide checking accounts, borrow money or transact banking activities in South Carolina. Appellants argue that South Carolina can validly exercise personal jurisdiction because First Union is registered as a bank holding
“A corporation can be qualified to do business in South Carolina and have appointed an agent for service of process but still not be conducting sufficient activities in South Carolina to be subject to suit here.” S.C.Code Ann. § 33-15-101, Reporter’s Comments § 2 (Rev.1990). “We think the application to do business and the appointment of an agent for service to fulfill a state law requirement is of no special weight____Applying for the privilege of doing business is one thing, but the actual exercise of that privilege is quite another.”
Ratliff v. Cooper Labs., Inc.,
2. First Union’s Involvement in the Loan
Appellants contend First Union was involved in the negotiations resulting in the subordination agreement between FUNB(NC) and BMA, which they allege was breached. We disagree.
South Carolina’s long-arm statute confers jurisdiction on state courts over “persons,” including corporations, “who act[] directly or by an agent as to a cause of action arising from the person’s (a) transacting any business in this State; ... or (g) [entering] into a contract to be performed in whole or in part by either party in this State____” S.C.Code Ann. § 36-1-201(28), (30) (1976); S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-803(l)(a),(g) (1976). Since South Carolina’s long-arm statute extends to the full reach of jurisdiction permitted by the Due Process Clause, we limit our inquiry to the issue of whether due process has been satisfied.
Atlantic Soft Drink Co. v. S.C. Nat’l Bank,
Personal jurisdiction under the long-arm statute is subject to a two-step analysis: (1) the power prong and (2) the fairness prong.
Southern Plastics Co. v. Southern Commerce Bank,
The subordination agreement was negotiated between FUNB(NC) and BMA, as evidenced in the letter addressed to the vice president of FUNB(NC) in Albemarle which stated BMA would assist FUNB(NC) in the liquidation in the event of default. FUNB(NC)’s senior vice president who handled the liquidation, the vice president of FUNB(NC)’s Albemarle branch, a FUNB(NC) employee in the special assets division who handled the Albemarle account, and the account manager involved in the transaction all provided affidavits stating they had no authority to enter into contracts on behalf of First Union. The FUNB(NC) employees also stated FUNB(NC) is a separate legal entity from First Union, and First Union was not involved in the transactions with Appellants. We agree with the trial court that any alleged breach of the subordination agreement resulted from FUNB(NC)’s actions rather than First Union’s. There is no evidence First Union had any involvement with the transactions, and the individuals involved were not acting as its employees or agents.
Even assuming for the sake of argument that the courts of South Carolina could exercise jurisdiction over FUNB(NC) because of its actions, that fact alone would not be sufficient to extend jurisdiction over First Union. Although FUNB(NC) is a subsidiary of First Union, the companies are separate legal entities operating under separate boards of directors with separate employees, assets, and places of business. “ ‘As a general rule, a parent or holding corporation is not liable on the contracts of its subsidiary. The mere fact of the ownership of a majority of all the stock of its subsidiary does not render the parent corporation liable on the contracts of the subsidiary.’ ”
Carroll v. Smith-Henry, Inc.,
3. Contract Requiring Performance in South Carolina
Appellants argue First Union’s involvement confers personal jurisdiction because the subordination agreement was a contract made in and requiring performance in South Carolina. Appellants argue that BMA’s offer to assist FUNB(NC) with liquidation of the collateral would necessitate performance of the contract in South Carolina at their outlets. However, the loan documents make no mention of any specific method or manner of disposition of the collateral. BMA asserts that its unilateral letter to FUNB(NC) necessarily implies that the contract required performance in South Carolina. Such an inference is not supported by the complaint or any other evidence in the record. Thus, inferring performance of the liquidation of collateral under the contract in South Carolina “would require this court to engage in impermissible speculation.”
Internat'l Mariculture Res. v. Grant,
4. Crutchfield Letter
Appellants also point to a letter from the president of First Union, Ed Crutchfield, to Huckabee expressing concern and thereby demonstrating some minimal knowledge of and involvement with the Albemarle loan. “Although a single act may support jurisdiction, it must create a ‘substantial connection’ with the forum.”
Aviation Assocs.
at 508,
5. Fairness Prong and North Carolina’s Interest
In addition, the fairness prong dictates that South Carolina not exercise personal jurisdiction. in this instance. Under the fairness prong, we examine such factors as the burden on the defendant, the extent of the plaintiffs interest, South Carolina’s interest, efficiency of adjudication, and the several states’ interest in substantive social policies.
See Southern Plastics
at 263,
North Carolina is clearly the more appropriate forum for resolution of this dispute. While the existence of another forum will not always preclude our exercise of jurisdiction, to do so in this case would contravene the limited jurisdiction exercised by each state’s courts and impinge on the sovereignty of our sister state. While primarily viewed as a due process concept, “[t]he concept of minimum contacts ... [also] acts to ensure that the States through their courts, do not reach out beyond the limits imposed on them by their status as coequal sovereigns in a federal system.”
World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
the Framers also intended that the States retain many essential attributes of sovereignty, including, in particular, the sovereign power to try causes in their courts. The sovereignty of each State, in turn, implied a limitation on the sovereignty of all of its sister States — a limitation express or implicit in both the original scheme of the Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
at 293,
B. General Personal Jurisdiction
Appellants finally argue that South Carolina has general personal jurisdiction over First Union through the activities, unrelated to the loan in this case, of its wholly owned subsidiary, First Union National Bank of South Carolina (FUNB(SC)). Appellants contend that South Carolina should exercise jurisdiction based on First Union’s unified marketing and advertising strategy and its holding itself out to the general public as a single entity, rather than separate subsidiary corporations. Because the activities of FUNB(SC) are unrelated to this loan transaction, we hold that South Carolina cannot exercise general personal jurisdiction over First Union based on the mere presence in this state of a wholly owned subsidiary and unified advertising strategy.
Courts in a few earlier decisions refused to allow corporations to escape jurisdiction by flawless corporate structuring on paper where the corporation in reality holds itself out to the public as a unified public entity.
See, e.g. FDIC v. British-Am. Corp.,
A large majority of courts in more recent cases have uniformly declined to extend jurisdiction to the parent based
solely
on the activities of a subsidiary where those activities are
unrelated to the cause of action
and do not bear a substantial connection to the case at hand. “The presence of the subsidiary alone does not establish the parent’s presence in the state.”
Jazini v. Nissan Motor Co.,
In making this determination, the courts look at four factors: (1) common ownership, (2) financial independence, (3) degree of selection of executive personnel and failure to observe corporate formalities,
and
(4) the degree of control over marketing and operational policies.
Jazini
at 185. It is essential that
all four factors be present with sufficient factual specificity
to confer jurisdiction on state courts.
Id; accord Weiss v. La Suisse,
is the consequence of the problems inherent in attempting to sue a foreign corporation that has carefully structured its business so as to separate itself from the operation of its wholly-owned subsidiaries ... — as it may properly do. The rules governing establishment of jurisdiction over such a foreign corporation are clear and settled, and it would be inappropriate for us to deviate from them or to create an exception to them because of the problems plaintiffs may have in meeting their somewhat strict standards.
Jazini
at 185. Likewise, the third circuit declined to extend liability or jurisdiction to the parent based on agreements entered by its subsidiary.
E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. v. Rhone Poulenc Fiber & Resin Intermediates, S.A.S.,
As the United States Supreme Court has explained, “when the'
‘minimum contact
’ that is a substitute for physical presence consists of property ownership it
must, like other minimum contacts, be related to the litigation.” Burnham v.Super. Ct. of Cal.,
Thus, while the weight of authority is somewhat split, the few courts that have addressed the issue have found unified marketing and advertising and holding out to the public as a
The record before us is devoid of annual reports, brochures, or evidence to establish that First Union exercises a unified marketing and advertising strategy. Typically, the burden is on the appellant to provide an adequate record to support its claims. Rule 210(h), SCACR (“[T]he appellate court will not consider any fact which does not appear in the Record on Appeal.”);
see, e.g. Crestwood Golf Club, Inc. v. Potter,
The circuit court properly concluded it did not have personal jurisdiction over First Union. Because South Carolina cannot exercise personal jurisdiction consistent with the limits of due process, we need not decide whether subject matter jurisdiction is proper under the door closing statute. S.C.Code Ann. § 15-5-150 (1976 & Supp.2001).
AFFIRMED.
