[¶ 1] Miсhael Dorf appeals from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (Oxford County,
Perkins, A.R.J.)
dismissing his complaint against Complastik Corpo
[¶ 2] Dorf and Evans worked for Qua-drax Corporation, a Rhode Island corporation which manufactures and distributes thermoplastic composites. In 1997, the two men ceased working for Quadrax and met several times in Massachusetts to discuss forming a company to compete with their former employer. In November of 1997, those negotiations resulted in an agreement “to own and operate a business to manufacture fiber reinforced thermoplastic composites.” Their agreement provided that Dorf and Evans would form a Massachusetts corporation under the name Complastik, and, in December of 1997, that company was incorporated pursuant to the laws of Massachusetts. Dorf was to be president and Evans vice-president and secretary of Complastik, each owning 10,-000 of the initial stock issuance of 20,000 shares.
[¶ 3] Shortly after the incorporation of Complastik, a dispute arose between Dorf and Evans. Dorf filed a complaint against both Complastik and Evans, contending that Evans: wrongfully dismissed Dorf as an officer of the corporation; failed to issue stock to Dorf; and threatened Dorf with legal action for alleged infringement of Complastik’s patented method of producing thermoplastic composites, a process which Dorf contends he co-invented. The complaint sought damages for breach of contract, wrongful dissolution of a partnership, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, and a declaration of the parties’ rights with respect to the patent.
1
Evans filed a motion to dismiss the complaint for insufficient service of process and laсk of personal jurisdiction. Both parties submitted affidavits concerning Evans’s and Complastik’s contacts with Maine. The Superior Court granted the motion to dismiss for insufficient service of process and lack of personal jurisdiction.
2
[¶ 4] As to the issue of personal jurisdiction, the affidavit submitted by Dorf asserts as true the following facts: Both Dorf and Evans were residents of Massachusetts until November of 1997, when Dorf sold his home and permanently moved to a cottage he owned in Oxford, Maine. Prior to moving to Maine, he and Evans met at Dorfs cottage in Oxford and engaged in initial discussions and negotiations to enter into a joint venture. Both parties agreed that Complastik would conduct business from two principal locations, Massachusetts and Maine, and that Dorf would spend one day a week in Massachusetts and the rest of the week working from his home in Maine. Business conducted by Dorf on behalf of Complastik, from his home in Maine, included: co-inventing the process for manufacturing reinforcеd thermoplastic composites; negotiating and signing a lease for office space for Complastik in Massachusetts; purchasing office furniture for use at Com-plastik’s office; and obtaining commercial insurance for Complastik. Dorf also traveled to Texas and California on behalf of Complastik, and visited potential customers in Maine, Vermont, and New Jersey.
[¶ 5] Dorf further asserts that, in addition to the work done by Dorf on behalf of Complastik in Maine, Evans, on at least one occasion, conducted Complastik business in Maine. In June of 1998, Evans traveled to Maine to attend a regional trade show and to negotiate a development contract with Brunswick Technologies, Inc. (BTI). The negotiations lead to the signing of a nondisclosure agreement between Complastik and BTI. According to Dorf, that nondisclosure agreement constitutes a continuing business relationship in Maine.
[¶ 6] Evans and Complastik alleged a different factual scenario in two affidavits signed by Evаns and submitted in support of his motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. Those affidavits assert as true the following facts: Complastik maintained an office and conducted business in Massachusetts. All phone calls, banking, and the signing of important corporate documents and IRS statements occurred in Massachusetts. Moreоver, Dorf barely participated in Complastik business. Between October and December of 1997, Dorf claimed that his severance agreement with Quadrax prevented him from overtly involving himself with Complastik and he therefore did not assist in developing Com-plastik’s patented method for producing thermoplastic composites. Instead, Dorf spent the time refurbishing his cottage in Maine. In April of 1998, Dorf did state that he planned to work at Complastik four days a week and become a full-time participant in the company. He never did so, however, and later told Evans that he was seeking alternate employment. Moreover, Evans contends that Dоrfs travel to Texas and California was associated with Dorfs search for other employment and was not to further Complastik’s business.
[¶ 7] Evans claims to be unaware of any Complastik business conducted in Maine. Evans never agreed to allow Dorf to work from his home; the corporate insurance that Dorf contends he purсhased from Maine was obtained through an insurance broker in Boxborough, Massachusetts; and Dorfs purchase of office furniture was never authorized by the corporation. Evans does admit meeting with BTI to discuss a prospective development contract. He contends, however, that other than a nondisclosure аgreement with BTI, signed to explore the possibility of a future business relationship, and a few telephone calls and e-mails with Dorf, neither he nor Complastik had any contact with Maine.
[¶ 9] “The jurisdictional reach of Maine’s long-arm statute ... is coextensive with the permissible exercise of personal jurisdiction under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment.”
Interstate Food Processing Corp. v. Pellerito Foods, Inc.,
[¶ 10] We have stated:
[i]n order for Maine to exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, due process requires that (1) Maine have a legitimate interest in the subject matter of the litigation; (2) the defendant, by [its] conduct, reasonably could have anticipated litigation in Maine; and (3) the exercise of jurisdiction by Maine’s courts comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Id.
(quoting
Murphy v. Keenan,
[¶ 11] The plaintiff bears the burden of satisfying the first two of the three prongs of the test to determine whether personаl jurisdiction has been established: that Maine has a legitimate interest in the subject matter of the litigation; and that the defendant, by its conduct, could reasonably have anticipated litigation in Maine.
See Murphy,
[¶ 12] A motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(2), may be considered and deсided prior to trial, unless, in certain limited circumstances, the court, in its discretion, defers ruling on the motion until trial.
See
M.R. Civ. P. 12(d). “Facts regarding jurisdictional questions may be determined by reference to affidavits, by a pretrial evidentiary hearing, or at trial when the jurisdictional issue is dependent upon a decision on the merits.”
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Oaklawn Apartments,
[¶ 13] Courts most commonly rule on a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction prior to trial, without holding an evidentiary hearing. The plaintiffs showing in opposition to the motion “must be made on specific facts set forth in the record .... ”
Suttie,
[¶ 14] Wfiien “the court proceeds only upon the pleadings and affidavits of
[¶ 15] If the facts neсessary for a determination of personal jurisdiction are disputed in the written affidavits, as they are in this case, the court may hold a pre-trial evidentiary hearing.
See Serras,
[¶ 16] In this case, Dorfs affidavit submitted in opposition to the motion to dismiss alleged that he conducted business on behalf of Complastik from his home in Maine. Because the court appears to have decided the issue of personal jurisdiction based solely on Dorfs and Evans’s affidavits, we must view Dorfs allegations of jurisdictional facts as true.
See Sutbie,
[¶ 17] Because Dorf alleged sufficient facts to establish a prima facie case of personal jurisdiction, we must vacate the сourt’s dismissal. Evans, however, is entitled to have the court resolve the factual disputes in the affidavits and reach a final determination of the issue of personal jurisdiction. Whether the court determines that issue through a pretrial evidentiary hearing, taking additional evidence through corroborating affidavits, deposition, or oral testimony, or postpones such a determination until trial, is within its sound discretion. 8
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed as to defendant Evans. Judgment vacated as to defendant Complastik Corporation. Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Federal jurisdiction statute 28 U.S.C. § 1338(a) (1993) provides that "[t]he district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action arising under any Act of Congress relating to patents.” Jurisdiction under section 1338(a) applies to all cases in which either " 'federal patent law creates the cause of action or that the plaintiff’s right to relief necessarily depends on a resolution of a substantial question of federal patent law.’ ”
McArdle v. Bornhofft,
. .Three months after Dorf filed his complaint in Maine, Complastik and Evans filed a complaint in Massachusetts Superior Court asserting numerous claims against Dorf arising from his relationship with Complastik and Evans. Dorf filed a motion to dismiss or stay the Massachusetts action, in deference to this action filed earlier in Maine. Dorf withdrew the motion without prejudice after the Maine Superior Court dismissed his complaint' in this case because hе "anticipated that the
.
Accord New Moon Shipping Co., v. Man B & W Diesel,
. Holding an evidentiary hearing is appropriate when the plaintiff alleges sufficient facts to defeat a motion to dismiss under the prima facie standard and the defendant challenges those facts. Most often it would be unfair to postpone addressing personal jurisdiction until trial, forcing the out-of-state defendant to incur the expense and burden of a trial on the merits.
See Boit,
. "If the written submissions raise disputed issues of fact or seem to require determinations of credibility, the court retains the power to order an evidentiary hearing ... and to order discovery of a scope broad enough to prepare the pаrties for that hearing.”
See Serras,
. The “trial court should not require [the] plaintiffs to mount ‘proof which would, in effect, establish the validity of their claims and their right to the relief sought.' ”
Id.
(quoting
Milligan v. Anderson,
.
But see Foster-Miller,
. Although Dorf alleges substantial contacts with Maine, most of the facts central to the merits of his claims occurred in Massachusetts. Complastik is therefore free to seek a dismissal of the complaint under the doctrine of
forum non conveniens. See Alley v. Parker,
