OPINION
On аppeal from the district court’s denial of their motion to dismiss, nonresident appellants argue that (1) forum-selection clauses in nondisclosure agreements did not create personal jurisdiction over either parties or nonparties to the agreements; (2) requisite minimum contacts did not exist to create specific personal jurisdiction over appellants who were former employees of respondent; and (3) the district court еrred in refusing to dismiss respondent’s claims under forum non conveniens. We affirm.
FACTS
Respondent C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc., a corporation with its principal place of business in Minnesota, and appellant FLS Transportation, Inc., a Canadian corporation, are competitors in the field of transportation services. After FLS hired eight of respondent’s former employees, respondent filed a complaint in Hennepin County District Court against FLS, its officеrs, and the eight former employees. The complaint alleged that the former employees breached their nondisclosure agreements by wrongfully using respondent’s confidential and proprietary information and soliciting respondent’s customers on their own behalf and on behalf of FLS. The complaint also alleged that FLS and its top officers “embarked on a know
Five of the former employees identified in the complaint, including appellants Ar-lien Casillas, Kenton K. Geghan, and Jody Winkler, signed Confidentiаlity and Non-competition Agreements (CNA) during their employment with respondent. Each CNA contained a section entitled “Governing Law” providing that Minnesota law governs the interpretation and enforceability of the agreement; that “any legal action brought to enforce the terms of [the CNA] shall be brought in Hennepin County District Court, State of Minnesota or the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota”; and that the signing employee consents to the jurisdiction of those courts. The other three former employees, including appellants Scott Hel-ton and Peter Katai, signed agreements containing Minnesota choice-of-law provisions, but did not require them to consent to the jurisdiction of Minnesota courts. 1
Appellants moved to dismiss the claims under rule 12.02(b) for lack of personal jurisdiction and on the basis of forum non conveniens. The district court’s denial of these motions is the subject of this appeal.
ISSUES
I.Dо the CNAs suffice to subject the employees who signed them, as well as FLS and its officers, to personal jurisdiction in Minnesota?
II. Do the requisite minimum contacts exist to subject all of respondent’s former employees to personal jurisdiction in Minnesota?
III. Did the district court err in refusing to dismiss this case for forum non conveniens?
ANALYSIS
I.
Whether personal jurisdiction exists is a question of law, which an appellate court reviews de novo.
Juelich v. Yamazaki Mazak Optonics Corp.,
The district court determined that respondent made a prima facie case that Casillas, Geghan, and Winkler consented to personal jurisdiction in Minnesota by signing the CNAs, thus agreeing to
Appellants argue that the CNAs are unenforceable as contracts of adhesion. “Forum-selection clauses in contracts which are termed adhesion — ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ — contracts and which are the product of unequal bargaining power between the parties are unreasonable.”
Hauenstein & Bermeister, Inc. v. Met-Fab Indus., Inc.,
Appellants argue that the CNAs were “identical boilerplate agreements,” that respondent had superior bargaining power and sophistication, and that Casillas, Geghan, and Winkler were not presented with the CNAs until “several years after their employment [began]” and signed them “in consideration for their [continued] employment.” While the record shows that Casillas, Geghan, and Winkler signed the CNAs while already employed, it does not show that Casillas, Geghan, and Winkler received inadequate compensation for signing them or that they lacked business sophistication. The record at this point does not indicate that the CNAs were so unreasonable that their enforcement would be “clearly erroneous and against both logic and the facts on record.”
Interfund,
The district court also determined that the other appellants, though not parties to the CNAs, were bound by the forum-selection clauses therein because they were “closely related” to the dispute. “[A] third party may be bound by a forum-selection clause where it is ‘closely related to the dispute such that it becomes foreseeable that it will be bound.’ ”
Medtronic, Inc. v. Endologix, Inc.,
In
Medtronic,
the plaintiff-employer, Medtronic, sued twо former employees and their current employer, Endologix, alleging that the former employees solicited Medtronic clients on Endologix’s behalf.
There can be little doubt that Endolo-gix is “closely related” to the dispute between Medtronic and [the former employees]. Indeed, it was Endologix’s employment of [the former employees] — while it was fully aware of the employment agreements and, hence, the forum-selection clauses — and [the former employees’] subsequent solicitation of Medtronic clients on behalf of Endolo-gix that gave rise to this action; this caused not only [the former employees] to be sued, but also caused Endologix to be sued in the same case. Moreover, all of the Defendants clearly share a common interest in this action: the right of [the former employees] to solicit their former Medtronic customers on behalf of their new employer, Endologix. Indeed, were Endologix’s interests not so closely aligned with [the former employees’] interests, they could not be represented by the same counsel in this action.
Id.
at 1056-57 (citations omitted);
see also ELA Medical, Inc. v. Arrhythmia Mgmt. Assocs., Inc.,
No. 06-35,
This case also presents the question of whether a forum-selection clause that subjects the parties to personal jurisdiction in a forum state can also confer personal
Talcing respondent’s allegations as true, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
Hardrives,
II.
Appеllants also challenge the district court’s ruling that the required minimum contacts existed to subject respondent’s former employees, none of whom reside in Minnesota, to specific personal jurisdiction in Minnesota. To determine whether it may exercise jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, a court determines whether jurisdiction in the forum state satisfies the federal requirements of due process.
Domtar Inc. v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co.,
To satisfy due process, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendants purposefully established minimum contacts in the forum state.
Domtar,
The district court noted respondent’s allegations that its former employees “all had on-going, regular contact with Minnesota during their employment,” via phone, e-mail, and respondent’s computer network, and that as employees they relied on respondent to handle travel, expense reimbursement, and personnel issues and “administrative matters necessary to enter into the business deals” they procured. Respondent further alleged that the former employees’ benefits were administered from Minnesota, their supervisors were located in Minnesota, they visited Minnesota for training, and they all signed agreements with respondent containing a Minnesota choice-of-law provision. Taking these allegations as true, we agree with the district court that respondent’s former employees had the requisite minimum contacts with Minnesota to subject them to specific personal jurisdiction in the state.
See U.S. Surgical Corp. v. Imagyn Med. Techs., Inc.,
Appellants, relying on an unpublished opinion from this court, argue that these contacts, which appellants describe as “routine administrative activity,” cannot constitute sufficient contacts with Minnesota to create personal jurisdiction.
Smarte Carte Inc. v. Tran,
No. C4-96-1022,
Appellants also argue that the individual types of contacts respondent alleges are not sufficient to create personal jurisdiction, citing
Bible & Gospel Trust v. Wyman,
Appellants further challenge the district court’s determination that the relationship between the employees’ contacts and respondent’s cause of action supports a finding of specific personal jurisdiction. Appellants cite
Lorix v. Crompton Corp.,
a class action in which tire purchasers accused the defendant of violating Minnesota antitrust laws by fixing prices of rubber-processing products.
Accepting respondent’s allegations as true,
Hardrives,
III.
Appellants argue that the district court erred in not dismissing the cоmplaint under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. Dismissal of a case on the
We agree with the district court that, because this case involves an alleged injury to a Minnesota resident, Minnesota has a strong interest in allowing respondent to sue within its borders, that the case was “sufficiently related to Minnesota to justify the administrative burden on the court,” and that allowing the suit to go forward would not unfairly impose jury duty on community members. As to private interests of the litigants, Minnesota is clearly the most convenient forum for respondent, and it is reasonable to presume that much of the evidence in this case would come from Minnesota as well. We further observe that the CNAs provide that Minnesota law applies to disputes. See id. at 511 n. 4 (stating that it is appropriate for the “forum that is at home with the state law” to govern the case). Appellants, who are widely geographically dispersed, fail to show that the balance of public and private interest factors favors another forum, and for this reason we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to dismiss this case for forum non conveniens.
DECISION
The district court correctly denied appellants’ motion to dismiss this action for lack of personal jurisdiction and for forum non conveniens.
Affirmed.
Notes
Retired judge of the district court, serving as judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const, art. VI, § 10.
. Three of the eight former employees are not parties to this appeal: W. Russel Harp and Jarrod Marinello, who signed CNAs, and Fred Rand, who signed a different nondisclosure agreement with respondent.
