OPINION
1. As рersonal representative of the estate of David Siglock and as conservator for his surviving children, First Financial Trust Company seeks a writ of superintending control pursuant to Rule 12-504 NMRA 1996. First Financial filed an action under the wrongful death statute, NMSA1978, § 41-2-1 (Repl.Pamp.1996), and Linda Siglock, individually as the widow of David Siglock, joined to assert a claim for loss of spousal consortium. Plaintiffs sued the Los Alamos Ski Club, Inc., in the Second Judicial District Court within Bernalillo County where First Financial has its principal place of business. The Ski Club, which operates the Pajarito Ski Area in Los Alamos County, moved to transfer venue based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens, asserting that the First Judicial District, Los Alamos County, was the appropriate forum for the action.
2. The district court found that thе action had significantly more contacts with Los Ala-mos County than Bernalillo County and granted the motion to transfer the lawsuit. First Financial petitioned this Court for a writ of superintending control, seeking to quash the transfer of venue. After hearing oral argument, this Court granted an alternative writ of superintending control and ordered briefs and further argument on the issue whether forum non conveniens is or should be a doctrine available in New Mexico to allow intrastate transfer from one court to another. Holding that an intrastate doctrine of forum non conveniens does not exist in New Mexico, we make permanent the alternative 'writ of superintending control and quash the transfer of venue.
3. The accident. David Siglock, a resident of Los Alamos, New Mexiсo, was found dead at the foot of a ski run at the Pajarito Ski Area in Los Alamos. He apparently had lost control while skiing and was fatally injured when he struck a tree. He had been skiing down a beginners run named “I Don’t Care” or another run named “One More Time,” trails that intersect near where Siglock’s body was found. The estate alleges it was “I Don’t Care” and that the Ski Club intentionally had madе this run, the only run classified for novices, unusually and dangerously fast for the purpose of videotaping a re-creation of a downhill race the following day. An employee of the Ski Club had skied the run earlier that day and determined that the run was very “hard, icy, and fast.” The estate alleges that the employee expressed her concerns to a ski school instructor, but no аction was taken. While there were no witnesses to the fatal accident, there were many witnesses to the condition of the ski run that morning.
4. Venue. The venue statute provides in relevant part that:
All civil actions commenced in the district courts shall be brought and shall be commenced in counties as follows and not otherwise:
A. First, except as provided in Subsection F of this section relating to foreign corporations, all transitory actions shall be brought in the county where either the plaintiff or defendant, or any one of them in case there is more than one of either, resides; or second, in the county where the contract sued on was made or is to be performed or where the cause of action originated or indebtedness sued on was incurred; or third, in any county in which the defendant or either of them may be found in the judicial district where the defendant resides.
NMSA 1978, § 38-3-HA) (Cum.Supp.1996). Venue was proper in the Second Judicial District, therefore, because First Financial has its primary place of business within Bernalillo County.
5. Forum non conveniens. The doctrine of forum non conveniens recently was discussed in detail by this Court in Marchman v. NCNB Texas National Bank,
6. This Court consistently has recognized the doctrine and has allowed its аpplication on an interstate basis. See, e.g., Buckner v. Buckner,
7. The trial court determined that justice would be better served if the case were heard in Los Alamos County instead of Bernalillo County, stating:
In rendering this decision, the Court considered the lack of any substantial connections between the facts of the case and the Second Judicial District. These include:
1. The accident allegedly happened in Los Alamos County;
2. The decedent resided in Los Alamos County;
3. The minor children reside in Los Alamos County;
4. Many witnesses are located in Los Alamos County; and
5. Plaintiff Linda Siglock resides in Los Alamos County.
Plaintiff argues that because First Financial Trust Company has an office in Albuquerque, the matter should be heard in the Second Judicial District. First Financial Company is a consent Personal Representative for the purposes of the New Mexico Wrongful Death Act. This does not overcome the compelling reasons to trаnsfer venue.
8.If the doctrine of forum non conveniens were to apply in this situation, the district court would not have abused its discretion had it dismissed the complaint. Granting a motion to transfer, however, is questionable aside from the propriety of any doctrine of intrastate forum non conveniens. The common law doctrine of forum non conveniens allows only for the dismissal оf a lawsuit, not the transfer of a lawsuit. It is well established that a federal statute which allows transfer to any other federal district or division “[f]or the convenience of parties and witnesses,” 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) (1994), was enacted as an expansion of the common-law doctrine of forum non conveniens, not a codification of it. See, e.g., Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno,
Section 1404(a) of Title 28 was adopted as part of the Judicial Code of 1948. It provides that “for the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.” Prior to its enactment it had been held that a federal court might dismiss an action brought in a proper, but inconvenient, district under the doctrine of forum non conveniens, but § 1404(a) was new in allowing transfer of an action from a district and division in which venue had been properly laid to some other, more convenient, district and division.
15 Charles A Wright et al., Federad Practice and Procedure § 3841, at 319 (2d ed.1986) (emphаsis added) (footnotes omitted).
9. Although the Frost Court ruled in favor of a transfer in response to a motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens, the Court nonetheless conditioned its remand for transfer of the case to Quay County on Southern Pacific’s waiver of a potential statute-of-limitations defense that would have been applicable to dismissal rather than transfer.
10. Intrastate forum non conveniens. In Frost an employee of Southern Pacific filed a claim under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60 (1976), in the distriсt court of Guadalupe County. Southern Pacific filed a motion for change of venue on due process grounds, arguing it could not obtain a fair and impartial trial in Guadalupe County. In a special concurrence Justice Riordan addressed the merits of this motion, stating:
It appears to me, that given the statistics and considering the evidence presented, the pеtitioner has shown that it probably cannot receive a fair trial from a jury in the fourth district. It is hard to conceive of more compelling evidence for the need for a change of venue than that of the testimony of the clerk of the court, stating that a nonresident will not get a fair trial.
Frost,
11. We previously have noted that Frost “adopt[ed], without statutory authority, an intrastate forum non conveniens doctrine that did not previously obtain at common law.” Bracken,
12. Sеveral other jurisdictions have permitted the transfer of cases through analogous “convenience” rules. See, e.g., Colo.County Ct.Civ.Proc.Rule 398(d)(2) (1996); Idaho Rules Civ.Proc. 40(e) (1996); Md.Rules Civil Procedure Cir.Ct.Rule 2-327(c) & Dist.Ct.Rule 3-326(b) (1990); Wy. Court Rules Ann.Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 40.1(a)(1) (1995). Our legislature has not, however, granted the courts of this state the power to transfer lawsuits from one county to another county unless a fair trial cannot otherwise be obtained. NMSA 1978, Section 38-3-3 (Repl.Pamp.1987), provides, in pertinent part, that:
A The venue in all civil and criminal cases shall be changed, upon motion, to some county free from exception:
(1) whenever the judge is interested in the result of the case, or is related to, or has been counsel for any of the parties; or
(2) when the party moving for a change files in the case an affidavit of himself, his agent or attorney, that he believes he cannot obtain a fair trial in the county in which the case is pending because:
(a) the adverse party has undue influence over the minds of the inhabitants of the county; or
(b) the inhabitants of the county are prejudiced against the party; or
(c) because of public excitement or local prejudice in the county in regard to the ease or questions involved therein, an impartial jury cannot be obtained in the county to try the case; or
(d) any other cause stated in the affidavit.
For us to engraft a forum-non-conveniens doctrine on the legislative choice of grounds for change of venue, the doctrine must at least have existed at common law as an exception to be inferred under the venue policies adopted by the legislature.
13. Intrastate forum non conveniens did not exist at common law. As we noted earlier, intrastate forum non conveniens did not exist at common law. As authority for its adoption of intrastate forum non conveniens, the Frost Court cited only Torres v. Walsh,
14. In Walsh the plaintiff, a resident of Texas, filed suit in Cook County, Illinois, for injuries resulting from an automobile accident and medical malpractice that occurred in Sangamon County, Illinois. Venue was proper in Cook County, but the defendants requested a transfer to Sangamon County. The Illinois Supreme Court held that it was proper to transfer the case based upon an intrastate application of forum non conveniens. Id.,
15.In support of the majority position the Walsh court discussed only one case, Holmеs v. Wainwright, 102 Eng.Rep. 624 (K.B.1803). In Holmes the court allowed the transfer of a case from London to Yorkshire based upon the doctrine of forum non conveniens. Id. The Court applied a balancing test and found that “here all the witnesses live at a great distance, and the expense of bringing them up must be very great, and there is no convenience balancing on the other side.” We do not find the transfer from a county in southern England to another county in northern England at the beginning of the nineteenth century to be sufficiently analogous to the transfer between counties in the State of New Mexico at the end of the twentieth century. The Missouri Supreme Court aptly has noted that “[w]ithin the geographical confines of Missouri, transfer from one proper venue tо another proper venue ... is not required ... [because statutorily-provided venue] presupposes legislative determination that it cannot be overly inconvenient for a defendant to appear in that location.” Willman v. McMillen,
16. In Gulf Oil Co. v. Woodson,
17. Frost overruled. We have been unable to find any persuasive precedent in the common law, of this state or any other, for the continued recognition of this doctrine, and we believe it would be improper to allow Frost to stand in light of our analysis. Therefore, we expressly overrule Frost insofar as it is inconsistent with this opinion. The doctrine of stare decisis does not preclude us from overruling improvident precedent, even recent precedent. See, e.g., Hicks v. State,
18. We acknowledge that our holding in this сase may lead to forum shopping by plaintiffs. However, through the adoption of the venue statute, the legislature has given plaintiffs proper venue in several counties in many situations. Under the current scheme, therefore, a plaintiff may choose between several judicial districts for a variety of reasons. New Mexico is one of only a handful of states that hаs such an expansive venue statute without also having methods by which cases may be transferred based upon the convenience of the parties or in the interests of justice. It well may be that plaintiffs in New Mexico have advantageous options in their forum choices, but this is the power given to plaintiffs in New Mexico. The legislature is presumed to have understood the full impact of its legislation. See State ex rel. Public Employees Retirement Bd. v. Mechem,
19. We note that amicus curiae also hаs argued that Frost be overruled because intrastate forum non conveniens is unnecessary under the language of the venue statute. They contend that the language “for any .. : cause stated in the affidavit” would allow a party to transfer venue in cases in which there is gross inconvenience. Amicus fail, however, to provide any precedential support for its interpretation of this statutory provision. Since we have already overruled Frost on other grounds, we need not decide whether this interpretation of the statute is proper.
20. Additionally, it has been argued by First Financial and amicus curiae that there are many public policy reasons for not recognizing the intrastate application of the doctrine of forum non conveniens. The advent of the information age, with cellular phones, fax machines, jet travel, video taped depositions, and interstate highways, has “significantly altered the meaning of ‘non conveniens.’” Calavo Growers v. Generali Belgium,
The improvement of the highway system, the expansion of scheduled air service, and the spread of new technologies have all but eliminated the obstacles that once hindered the ability of parties to litigate their cases in different parts of the State. Long-distance communication has become routine. Travel is safe, easy, fast and affordable.
Peile v. Skelgas, Inc.,
21. Conclusion. Finding that the doctrine of forum non conveniens is inapplicable to motions to transfer a lawsuit intrastate from one county to another, we issued our writ of superintending control vacating the order of the district court.
22. IT IS SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
