731 N.E.2d 226 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1999
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The record shows that on June 22, 1995, Isabelle Poole, a resident of Ripley, Ohio, arrived at Meadowview Regional Hospital in Kentucky, complaining of abdominal pain. She was treated by Dr. Grosser, her family physician since 1984, who both resided and practiced medicine in Maysville, Kentucky. He was *390 licensed only in Kentucky, and he never maintained a business office or treated patients in Ohio. Because Maysville is located just across the river from several small towns in Ohio in which there are no family physicians, Grosser treats some Ohio patients. In 1992, he took over the practice of an elderly, Ripley, Ohio, doctor, at which time the amount of his Ohio patients rose to about forty percent of his practice. Grosser maintained phone listings in regional Ohio and Kentucky phone directories. He testified that he instructed his office staff to purchase the minimum phone listing and that he had never seen a copy of any Ohio telephone listing prior to his deposition. Samples of some of the directories for several years prior to the litigation showed that he maintained a small advertisement.
Mrs. Poole had gone to Meadowview because Grosser practiced there. Kentucky Hospital Corporation, which operated Meadowview, was licensed to do business only in Kentucky and does not provide medical services in Ohio. It, too, maintained small advertisements in phone directories covering areas in both Ohio and Kentucky. Appellants also presented advertisements for Meadowview Hospital regarding childbirth and special clinics that appeared in a small Ripley, Ohio, newspaper on three occasions. They also presented a brochure from the hospital that was mailed to an individual in Ohio, which indicated that the hospital served two southern Ohio counties in addition to several counties in Kentucky.
Grosser eventually consulted with DeMoya, a surgeon practicing under the business name Maysville Surgical Associates, P.S.C. DeMoya also lived and practiced in Kentucky. He testified that "a good amount" of his patients came from Ohio, but that they constituted less than fifty percent of his practice. He did not have an office in Ohio, but, like Grosser, he maintained listings in Ohio and Kentucky phone directories in the form of small advertisements. He testified that he had not seen the listings and that he did not know how much he had paid for them.
DeMoya recommended that Mrs. Poole undergo surgery. Her husband then requested that she be transferred to Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, and DeMoya asked a member of the Meadowview staff to contact an ambulance service. Southern Ohio Ambulance Service transported her to Jewish Hospital. A nurse from Meadowview accompanied Mrs. Poole in the ambulance and monitored her vital signs. Mrs. Poole was then treated at the Ohio hospital, where she subsequently died.
The trial court granted appellees' motions to dismiss, finding that appellees did not have sufficient minimum contacts with the state of Ohio to justify an Ohio court in assuming jurisdiction over them. This appeal followed. In their sole assignment of error, appellants argue that the trial court erred in granting appellees' motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. They contend that appellees had sufficient minimum contacts with the state of Ohio to justify an *391 Ohio court in assuming jurisdiction under Ohio's long-arm statute, and that the assumption of jurisdiction would not violate appellees' right to due process. We hold that this assignment of error is not well taken.
While plaintiffs are generally entitled to have the factual allegations sustaining jurisdiction construed in their favor, they nevertheless bear the burden of making a prima facie showing of personal jurisdiction. Sherry v. Greissler U. Peher, GmbH (1995),
R.C.
A court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person who acts directly or by an agent, as to a cause of action arising from the person's:
* * *
(4) Causing tortious injury in this state by an act or omission outside this state if he regularly does or solicits business, or engages in any other persistent course of conduct, or derives substantial revenue from goods used or services rendered in this state[.]
Likewise, Civ.R. 4.3(A)(4) provides for service of process out-of-state on a nonresident defendant under the same circumstances. Consequently, the statute and the rule both require a finding that (1) an act or omission outside the state caused tortious injury in Ohio, and (2) the defendant regularly conducted activity in Ohio. Grossi, supra, at 53,
All appellees' allegedly negligent actions occurred in Kentucky. Appellants argue that the tortious injury occurred in Ohio simply because the defendant died here. No Ohio court has adopted this "portable tort" theory, and several courts from other jurisdictions have explicitly rejected it. See Wright v. Yackley
(C.A.9, 1972),
The record unequivocally shows that appellees did not derive substantial revenue from services rendered in Ohio. Thus, personal jurisdiction over appellees depends on a finding that they regularly did or solicited business or engaged in any other persistent course of conduct in Ohio. Such a finding requires more than sporadic contact. See Jackson v. State St. Bank TrustCo. (1996),
Appellants argue that because appellees maintained telephone listings in Ohio for Ohio patients, an Ohio court can maintain personal jurisdiction over them. We disagree. In Kennedy, supra,
a case involving similar facts, the plaintiff, a Kentucky resident, brought a malpractice suit in Kentucky against a Cincinnati, Ohio, doctor. Kentucky's long-arm statute contains language identical to that in R.C.
Nor may the mere carrying of a telephone listing without additional advertising or other solicitation of business such as to make a physician situated as is the defendant subject to suit under the long-arm statute of a neighboring state where the directory is distributed. In a well-reasoned opinion also involving medical services rendered in Cincinnati *393 to a resident of a suburban area in another state, Judge Noland of the Southern District of Indiana specifically rejected the argument that the fact that the adjoining area of the two states were one economic area with a common telephone directory was a sufficient basis for the exercise of personal jurisdiction over a Cincinnati physician for alleged negligent treatment given to a resident of Southeast Indiana.
Id. at 1331. The court went on to discuss the policy reasons for its decision:
If the Kentucky courts were to exercise personal jurisdiction over every doctor of a metropolitan area in another state who permitted his name to be included in Kentucky telephone directories, or who accepted patients from Kentucky, the result might well be that Kentucky residents would be denied sorely needed medical treatment, especially in the more specialized fields, in Cincinnati or other metropolitan areas.
Id. at 1331-1332.
We agree with the Kennedy court's reasoning. The record demonstrates that the doctors in the present case did nothing more than pay for small advertisements in phone books distributed in Ohio and provide services to Ohio residents who happened to come to them in Kentucky. We do not believe that this is the sort of activity contemplated by the phrases "regularly does or solicits business" or "engages in any other persistent course of conduct." See Sherry, supra; Speck v. Mut. Serv. Life Ins. Co. (1990),
As to Meadowview, appellants presented evidence that it maintained a small advertisement in phone books distributed in Ohio. They also presented evidence that it mailed a brochure into Ohio and took out three advertisements in an Ohio newspaper. But appellants presented no evidence that the hospital conducted these activities on a regular basis. Further, appellants presented evidence that a Meadowview nurse rode in the ambulance to Ohio with the decedent. But nothing in the evidence showed that Meadowview regularly sent staff persons to Ohio or that this event was anything more than an isolated occurrence. In sum, nothing in the record demonstrates the sort of regular, continuous activity required by the long-arm statute to justify Ohio in assuming jurisdiction over the hospital. Consequently, we hold that the trial court did not *394 err in finding that appellees did not meet the requirements of Ohio's long-arm statute.
Further, we hold that an Ohio court's assertion of jurisdiction over appellees would violate their right to due process. The Due Process Clause protects an individual's liberty interest in not being subject to binding judgments of a forum with which that individual has established no meaningful contacts, ties or relations. Burger King v. Rudzewicz (1985),
The unilateral activity of those who claim some relationship with a nonresident defendant cannot satisfy the requirement of contact with the forum State. The application of that rule will vary with the quality and nature of the defendant's activity, but it is essential in each case that there be some act by which the defendant purposely avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum State, thus invoking the benefits and protections of its laws.
Hansen v. Denckla (1958),
Nothing in the record demonstrates that appellees had a substantial enough connection with Ohio to show that they purposely availed themselves of the privileges and benefits of Ohio law, thus making it reasonable for Ohio to assume jurisdiction over them. Appellees could not reasonably foresee that their actions would have consequences in Ohio, nor could they "reasonably anticipate being haled into court there." KentuckyOaks Mall Co. v. Mitchell's Formal Wear, Inc. (1990),
Judgment affirmed. Hildebrandt and Painter, JJ., concur.