INTRODUCTION
Petitioner Global Packaging, Inc. (Global Packaging), sought a writ of mandate pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
We now grant the petition. The trial court improperly conflated venue, forum, and jurisdiction to imply Global Packaging’s consent to personal jurisdiction. The summons should have been quashed for lack of personal jurisdiction in California.
FACTS
Global Packaging, located in Pennsylvania, produces packaging for consumer products. It licensed some software from Epicor Software Corporation (Epicor), a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Orange County. Paragraph 11 of Epicor’s end user license agreement (agreement) provides in pertinent part: “Any controversy or claims arising out of or relat[][
A dispute arose between Epicor and Global Packaging over payment for the software, and Epicor sued Global Packaging in May 2010 in Orange County. Global Packaging moved to quash service of summons under section 418.10, subdivision (a)(1).
DISCUSSION
We review de novo issues of contract interpretation not dependent on any factual findings. (Parsons v. Bristol Development Co. (1965)
At the outset, we point out that Epicor’s “forum” selection clause as it pertains to instituting a lawsuit in California is phrased in terms of a county rather than of the state. Section 395.5 limits the counties in which a corporation may be properly sued in California, and parties cannot make other arrangements by prior agreement. (See Alexander v. Superior Court (2003)
Global Packaging, however, did not object to the clause on this basis, and its motion to quash was denied on the ground that the clause was a forum selection clause constituting Global Packaging’s consent to personal jurisdiction in California. Because we can determine this issue as a matter of law, by examining the contract, we do not need to send the case back for further proceedings regarding the propriety of Orange County as a venue. Even considered as a forum selection clause, paragraph 11 of the agreement is insufficient to confer jurisdiction over Global Packaging on a California court.
State court jurisdiction is rooted in geography. As the United States Supreme Court stated in that law school favorite Pennoyer v. Neff, “The authority of every tribunal is necessarily restricted by the territorial limits of the State in which it is established.” (Pennoyer v. Neff (1878)
Generally speaking, a civil court gains jurisdiction over a person through one of four methods. There is the old-fashioned method—residence or presence within the state’s territorial boundaries. (Pennoyer v. Neff, supra,
Jurisdiction can be regarded from two points of view, that of the individual subject to it and that of the court exercising it.
Although most law-abiding citizens probably manage to escape significant involvement with a court, our legal system recognizes the importance of protecting those who do not avoid this fate. Without question, the people downtown in the black robes can set some very powerful machinery in motion. They can take away one’s house (§ 726), one’s personal property (§ 514.010) and one’s money (§695.010). They can freeze one’s bank account (§ 487.010, subd. (c)(7)) and remove part of one’s paycheck (Fam. Code, § 5230). They can put one’s children in foster care (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 360, 361.2) or even give them to someone else to rear (id., § 366.26). They can put a person in jail although he has committed no crime. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1218, subd. (a).) Every state has these machines; it is vitally important, then, to limit the number of machines with which someone may have to contend.
Our system sets these limits territorially, by state. “Any attempt to exercise authority beyond those limits would be deemed in every other forum ... an illegitimate assumption of power, and be resisted as mere abuse.” (Pennoyer v. Neff, supra,
B. Jurisdiction from the Court’s Viewpoint
Jurisdiction both defines and delimits a court’s authority. Within its territory, a court, even as constrained by law, has enormous power to bid and forbid. But its power ultimately ends at the state line. (See World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson (1980)
Courts have not looked benignly on efforts to restrain their power. They have generally sought to repel efforts of others—whether official bodies or
II. Forum Selection Clauses
In a great many situations, forum and jurisdiction are undifferentiated. The forum—the state where the court is physically located—is coterminous with the court’s jurisdiction. The term “jurisdiction” has therefore developed two meanings. Its primary meaning, at least in constitutional due process discussions, is the power or authority a court has over a person. In other contexts, however, it has also come to mean the territory within which this power is or can be exercised. Often this is a distinction without a difference. Both the power and the territory end at the state line. With forum selection clauses, however, the distinction matters. The territory is the forum; the power is the jurisdiction.
Forum selection clauses traditionally faced intense judicial hostility arising from a perceived threat to the court’s power within its territory, as discussed above. The hostile courts interpreted such a clause as forbidding them to hear cases when they indisputably had territorially based jurisdiction. (See, e.g., Parker, Peebles and Knox v. El Saieh (1928)
Eventually a formula was contrived to present these clauses in a way that smoothed ruffled judicial feathers. Parties moving to enforce forum selection clauses said, in effect, “We are not saying you cannot hear this case, Your Honor. Of course you can hear it. Instead, we are asking you to exercise your discretion and decline to hear it in favor of enforcing the bargain between the parties.” This is the formula adopted by the United States Supreme Court in The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co. (1972)
California’s Supreme Court, not to be outdone in keeping up with modem trends, endorsed forum selection clauses in Smith, Valentino & Smith, Inc. v. Superior Court (1976)
In giving its blessing to the enforcement of forum selection clauses, the United States Supreme Court in effect approved severing forum from territorially based jurisdiction in this setting. A party could now find itself bound to litigate a dispute in a territory—a forum—where it had no “presence” whatsoever, either literally or in the minimum-contacts sense, and in which it had made no general appearance. In fact, that is what the forum selection clause in The Bremen contemplated. The American oil company and the German towing company that were the parties in The Bremen chose London in part because it lacked any ties to either party. They were looking for a neutral forum. (The Bremen, supra,
In such a situation, there might well be no territorially based means of obtaining personal jurisdiction. Does an agreement to litigate in a certain location, a fomm, then necessarily imply an additional, separate agreement to submit to the jurisdiction of that fomm, one in which personal jurisdiction would not otherwise be available? We hold it does not. Given the cmcial role played by limits on jurisdiction in the American legal system, and in particular their importance as a preserver of individual liberty, we cannot agree that consenting to a location in and of itself carries with it a consent to personal jurisdiction.
The implied waiver of due process protection underlying this situation finds an analogy in the cases involving motions to compel arbitration. Courts addressing this issue hold that a party’s constitutional right to trial by jury is not waived by implication or inference. (See, e.g., Adajar v. RWR Homes, Inc. (2008)
Enforcement of forum selection clauses is an offshoot of the principle of inconvenient forum. (See, e.g., Olinick v. BMG Entertainment (2006)
Respondent poses a similar rhetorical question, “Why would Epicor include such a clause unless it intended to be able to subject customers to jurisdiction in the chosen forum?” To which we might pose other rhetorical questions: If Epicor meant paragraph 11 to include a consent to jurisdiction, why not say so? Why leave it to implication? It is ridiculously easy to prepare and insert a clause embodying a consent to jurisdiction. In this case it could have been accomplished by adding some such words as “and the parties hereto consent to personal jurisdiction for this purpose in the forum chosen by the plaintiff bringing the action” after “determined by the choice of the plaintiff bringing the action” in paragraph 11. Such explicitness would have had two salutary effects: it would have apprised Global Packaging that it was consenting to jurisdiction outside Pennsylvania, and it would very probably have kept this contract interpretation dispute out of the court.
A court should not be called upon to function as a backstop for sloppy contract drafting. A judge should not have to spend court time sorting out the meanings and applications of common legal terms—“venue,” “forum,” and “jurisdiction.” Failing to pay attention does and should have consequences. As the court stated, with obvious exasperation, in General Motors Accept. Corp. v. Codiga (1923)
DISPOSITION
The petition is granted. The superior court is ordered to enter an order granting the motion of Global Packaging Corporation to quash service of summons. Petitioner is to recover its costs.
Rylaarsdam, Acting P. J., and Moore, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
The agreement as it appears in the record seems to have been copied in such a way as to lose a small portion of text at the right margin. We have indicated with empty brackets where text looks to be missing.
Paragraph 11 includes a specific California choice-of-law clause in addition to the other reference to choice of law.
Global Packaging based its motion in part on improper service. It later agreed to drop this basis for the motion.
A defendant can, of course, waive this defect by failing to object at the appropriate time after suit is filed. (See, e.g., § 396b, subd. (a).)
The clause is also ineffective to get the parties into federal court in Orange County. The federal court cannot hear a case unless the parties meet the requirements for federal jurisdiction; a private agreement is unavailing. (Mitchell v. Maurer (1934)
Federal courts, being courts of limited jurisdiction, function according to a different system. The federal venue statutes, 28 United States Code section 1391 et seq., deal with the distribution of cases among the various districts. We do not address federal jurisdiction in this opinion. It should be noted, however, that “venue” in federal court does not have the same meaning as “venue” in state court.
Acquisition of this type of jurisdiction is usually discussed in terms of consent. (See, e.g., Dial 800 v. Fesbinder (2004)
The court in The Bremen also noted that courts’ hostility to forum selection clauses rested on “historical judicial resistance to any attempt to reduce the power and business of a particular court” and remarked that, while this resistance was perhaps understandable in an earlier and more leisured age, it was completely outmoded in an era of overcrowded dockets. (The Bremen, supra,
Whether a court would accept such a case is another matter, one we need not address here.
We are aware of one California case that has held the opposite. (Berard Construction Co. v. Municipal Court (1975)
They are distinct in other contexts as well. For example, section 410.40 allows big-ticket contract actions brought by and against nonresidents to have a forum in California, but only if the out-of-state defendant agrees to personal jurisdiction in California (among other conditions).
Inserting such a clause would by no means repair all of the numerous deficiencies of paragraph 11, only the lack of consent to jurisdiction.
