This сase, which initially was before us on an appeal and cross-appeal from a judgment entered against defendant
pro se
Philip Baptiste in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, John E. Sprizzo,
Judge, see Fort Knox Music, Inc. v. Baptiste,
The factual background of the litigation is set out in Fort Knox I, II, and III, familiarity with which is assumed. In brief, plaintiffs Fort Knox Music Inc. (“Fort Knox”), a New York corporation headquartered in New York, and Trio Music Compаny Inc. (“Trio Music”), a California corporation headquartered in California, are successors in interest to Kamar Publishing Company (“Kamar”) with respect to the publishing rights in “Sea of Love,” a song as to which Baptiste claims sole authorship. Baptiste is a Louisiana resident who signed a song publishing agreement with Kamar, which was then located in Louisiana, and he contests thе designation of one George Khoury, also a Louisiana resident, as coauthor of the song. Plaintiffs allege that Baptiste engaged in a letter-writing campaign to their offices mаintaining that Khoury was not a coauthor and challenging plaintiffs’ rights to the song, and they commenced the present action seeking declaratory and in-junctive relief prohibiting Baptistе from claiming that he is the sole author of, or challenging their publication rights in, “Sea of Love.”
In
Fort Knox I,
the district court granted plaintiffs the requested declaratory and injunctive relief, though it deniеd them an award of attorneys’ fees. Baptiste appealed from the judgment against him, challenging it on the merits and contending, as he had in the district court, that personal jurisdiction ovеr him was lacking; plain
On remand, the district court asked the parties for additional briefing as to whether personal jurisdiction was properly asserted over Baptiste pursuant to various sections of New York’s long-arm jurisdiction statute, and as to whether this action should properly be transferred to the Western District of Louisiana pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). Following receipt of the parties’ submissions, the district court concluded that plaintiffs had failed to show that Baptiste had sufficient contacts with New York to permit invocation of the New York long-arm statute, finding,
inter alia,
that Baрtiste was not alleged ever to have been present in New York, or to have had property or offices in New York, or to have had a New York-based agent, or to have сommitted a tort with consequences in New York; and it found that Baptiste’s stream of letters to Fort Knox did not constitute the transaction of business within New York.
See Fort Knox III,
The court went on to conclude that “transfer of this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) to the Western District of Lоuisiana would most appropriately serve the interests of justice.”
Fort Knox III,
Following that decision, in accordance with Fort Knox II, jurisdiction was automatically restored to this Court with respect to the original appeal and cross-appeal, and the parties filеd supplemental letter briefs. Plaintiffs, in their supplemental brief, “solely address[ ] the jurisdictional issue raised by ... Baptiste” (Plaintiffs’ supplemental brief on appeal at 1), and ask us to “affirm the distriсt court’s original finding of personal jurisdiction over Baptiste” (id. at 10). Given the new posture of the case, however, several well-established principles compel us to dismiss both the appeal and the cross-appeal.
A. The Challenges to the Original Judgment Are Moot
The judgment originally challenged in these appeals has been vacated. A vacated judgment has no effect.
See generally Stone v. Williams,
We note parenthetically that there can be no question that the district
Upon remand, thé district court asked the parties to brief the various aspects of New York long-arm jurisdiction аnd to brief as well the question of venue. This was ample notice that the court’s original assumption that it had personal jurisdiction over Baptiste would be revisited and that venue might be transferred.
In sum, we see no procedural error in the court’s vacatur of the original judgment; and given that vacatur, the original appeal and cross-appeal challenging that judgment are moot. We have no jurisdiction to hear a moot appeal,
see generally Altman v. Bedford Central School District,
B. The Venue Order Is Not Appealable
If, after vacating the original judgment, the district court had entered a new final judgment, e.g., one dismissing the action, it is possible that we would have allowed the parties, within the present apрeals, to challenge the new judgment. However, the court did not enter a final judgment or any other immediately reviewable order.
The court ordered that venue of the present action be transferred to the Western District of Louisiana pursuant to § 1404(a), which allows the district court “[f]or the convenience of parties and wit
An order transferring venue pursuant to § 1404(a) is not a final judgment; rather it is an interlocutory order that is not immediately reviewable by appeal.
See, e.g., SongByrd, Inc. v. Estate of Albert B. Grossman,
In sum, the only previously appealable judgment having been vacated, the challengеs to that judgment are moot. The current order of the district court is unre-viewable. The appeal and cross-appeal are therefore dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
Costs to plaintiff.
