delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs-appellees Eldon and Jessie Hinshaw, individually, and Eldon Hinshaw and Kathryn Kerber, as co-executors of the estate of Mary Wade, deceased, filed a complaint in the circuit court of Cook County alleging negligence, products liability, breach of warranty, and Dramshop Act (235 ILCS 5/6 — 21 (West 1994)) violations arising from an auto accident in which Eldon and Jessie Hinshaw were seriously injured, and in which Mary Wade, the backseat occupant of the Hinshaw van, was killed. Defendants named in the complaint included Mitchell Pate, the driver of the vehicle that collided head-on with the Hinshaw van; Dramshop Act defendants Tom and Barbara Hora, Gary Jasper, and the Secor Saloon; Daimler-Chrysler Corporation, the manufacturer of the Hinshaw van; Coachmen Industries, Inc., the customizer of the van; and Flexsteel Industries and Dygert Seating, which manufactured the van’s seats. Defendants Coachmen Industries, Inc., and Coachmen Automotive (hereinafter referred to collectively as Coachmen) moved to transfer this action to Woodford County, the site of the accident, under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. The circuit court denied the motion, and Coachmen appealed pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 306(a)(2) (166 Ill. 2d R. 306(a)(2)). For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the denial of the motion.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs-appellees alleged in their complaint
In their answers to defendant Daimler-Chrysler’s interrogatories, plaintiffs identified seven persons who were present at the scene of the accident, at or near the time of the collision. Four of those seven were directly involved in the accident: Eldon and Jessie Hinshaw of Bloomington, Illinois, in McLean County; Mitchell Pate of Sheridan, Illinois, in La Salle County; and Quinn Schad, Pate’s passenger, of East Peoria, Illinois, in Tazewell, County. Two of the remaining three occurrence witnesses reside in Du Page County, and one lives in Cook County. Kathryn Kerber, the remaining plaintiff, resides in McLean County, and Mary Wade, the deceased, also lived in McLean County. Plaintiffs identified 18 other persons with knowledge of the facts of the occurrence. Fifteen of them reside in Illinois: seven in Will County, three in McLean County, two in Du Page County, two in Lake County and one in Woodford County. Plaintiffs also identified an auto pound in Cook County where the Hinshaw van was stored after the accident.
In its response to plaintiffs’ interrogatories, Daimler-Chrysler identified 48 vehicle dealerships in Cook County that sell Daimler-Chrysler vehicles. According to Daimler-Chrysler, there is one such dealership in Woodford County. Daimler-Chrysler also named two of its employees as persons with knowledge of potentially relevant matters. Both of them presumably reside in Michigan. Defendant Coachmen identified in its answers to plaintiffs’ interrogatories three dealerships in Woodford County which sell Coachmen products: one in Eureka, one in Morton, and a third in Peoria.
2
According to a purchase order attached to Coachmen’s answers to interrogatories, the Hinshaw van at issue in this case was purchased in Morton, Illinois. Coachmen also named at least seven dealerships in Cook County that sell its products. In addition,
Coachmen also filed a reply in support of its motion to transfer venue. Exhibits attached to this reply included an Illinois traffic crash report indicating that the on-scene investigation of the accident was conducted by Woodford County police, assisted by officers from Eureka and El Paso, both of which are in Woodford County. Also attached to Coachmen’s reply were medical-bill summaries for plaintiffs Eldon and Jessie Hinshaw indicating that their medical care providers were located primarily in McLean and Peoria Counties. Thirteen were in McLean County, five in Peoria County, and one each in Woodford and Champaign Counties. Also attached was an “Annual Report of the Illinois Courts” for the year 1997, upon which Coachmen relies for its assertion that the Cook County court system is more congested than Woodford County’s.
In November 1999, defendant Mitchell Pate was dismissed from the complaint pursuant to a good-faith settlement with plaintiffs. In January 2000, plaintiffs moved to voluntarily dismiss their claims against defendant Flexsteel. In the same month, a hearing was held on Coachmen’s motion to transfer venue, with Daimler-Chrysler orally joining in the motion. The trial court denied Coachmen’s motion, stating that there were “at least nine different counties or states that have potential witnesses and have some relations to this case,” that the witnesses were “spread all over,” and that Coachmen had not met its burden of showing that a transfer to Woodford County was strongly favored. The instant appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
The sole issue in this appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying Coachmen’s motion to transfer this action to the circuit court of Woodford County pursuant to the doctrine of intrastate forum non conveniens. Coachmen contends that the balance of public and private factors strongly favors that transfer, and the trial court therefore erred in denying Coachmen’s motion. Plaintiffs argue that Coachmen failed to meet its burden of showing that the relevant factors strongly favor transfer.
“[A] trial court is vested with broad discretion in ruling on a forum non conveniens motion; its decision will be reversed only if it is shown that the court abused its discretion in weighing the relevant considerations.” (Emphasis in original.) Griffith v. Mitsubishi Aircraft International, Inc.,
In resolving a forum non conveniens motion, a court balances private interest factors affecting the litigants and public interest factors affecting the administration of the courts. Griffith,
A further consideration under the forum non conveniens doctrine is deference to plaintiffs choice of forum. Griffith,
Coachmen argues that the trial court applied the wrong standard in denying the motion to transfer. According to Coachmen, the court failed to balance the relevant factors as required and instead held Coachmen to the standard that, in order for the motion to succeed, all of the public and private interest factors must strongly favor transfer. Referring to the transcript of the hearing on its motion, Coachmen pointed to an exchange where plaintiffs’ counsel, Thomas Harris, stated what he felt was the appropriate standard: “Defendant Coachmen has to show that all of the public and private interest factors [ ] strongly favor[ ] the transfer to Woodford County.” The court responded: “I think that’s the standard.” Coachmen thus argues that the trial court mistakenly assumed that all of the factors must strongly favor transfer. By contrast, the correct standard, according to Coachmen, is expressed in this court’s statement in Evans v. MD Con, Inc.,
Coachmen raised this point for the first time at oral argument. Supreme Court Rule 341(e)(7) (177 Ill. 2d R. 341(e)(7)) provides that points not asserted in an appellant’s brief are waived and shall not be raised for the first time in oral argument. See People v. Thomas,
Before addressing the private interest factors, we note that, as indicated, plaintiffs’ claims against Pate, the driver of the vehicle which collided with the Hinshaw van, were dismissed pursuant to a settlement. As a result, it is undisputed that the case as it stands now is limited to product liability, breach of contract, and Dramshop Act issues.
With respect to the private interest factors, Coachmen argues that they strongly favor Woodford County. In support of this contention, Coachmen asserts that plaintiffs reside in “counties contiguous to Woodford County,” that the four Dramshop Act defendants are in Woodford County, that the accident occurred in Woodford County and was investigated by officers who were employed there, that plaintiffs received their medical care from hospitals and physicians located in or near Woodford County, and that the Hinshaw van, whose design and manufacture is now the primary issue in this case, was purchased by plaintiffs in Woodford County.
Taking the last item first, we note that, according to the purchase order attached to Coachmen’s answers to plaintiffs’ interrogatories, the Hinshaw van was purchased from a dealership in Morton, Illinois. As set forth in footnote 2 above, we take judicial notice that Morton, Illinois, is in Tazewell (not Woodford) County. In addition, while the Secor Saloon is in
The accuracy of the court’s observation can be seen by looking at where the witnesses and relations are located. Plaintiffs, for example, resided in McLean County, which is also where the majority of Eldon and Jessie Hinshaw’s medical providers were located. In addition, 3 of 15 Illinois residents identified by plaintiffs as having knowledge of the facts of the occurrence (knowledge witnesses) live in McLean County, while one lives in Woodford County. Seven of these fifteen knowledge witnesses live in Will County, and two others reside in Lake County. The remaining two live in Du Page County, which is also the residence of two persons who witnessed the accident. A third person who witnessed the accident resides in Cook County, which is also the location of an auto pound where the Hinshaw van was stored after the accident. As noted, the dealership where the Hinshaw van was purchased is in Tazewell County, which is also where Quinn Schad, Pate’s passenger, resides. Pate’s residence is in La Salle County. Outside Illinois, two Daimler-Chrysler employees with knowledge of potentially relevant matters reside presumably in Michigan, and seven Coachmen employees with potentially relevant knowledge presumably live in Elkhart, Indiana.
Given that these potential witnesses and other connections are scattered in eight Illinois counties and two additional states, it was not unreasonable for the trial court to conclude that there was no predominance among the counties such that Woodford County was strongly favored. See Meyers v. Bridgeport Machines Division of Textron, Inc.,
One of the public interest factors to be considered is the interest in having localized controversies decided locally. While the instant case might have been such a localized controversy at one time, now that Pate has been dismissed, it is, as noted, primarily a products liability case. As such, any local interest on the part of, say, Woodford County is largely supplanted by a more general interest in the safety of Dodge vans. Relevant to this concern is the fact that, as noted, there are 48 dealerships in Cook County that sell Daimler-Chrysler vehicles and at least seven that sell Coachmen products. Woodford County, on the other hand, has just one of each. Given that difference, we cannot say that Woodford County would have a stronger interest than Cook County in the products liability aspects of this case. Another public interest consideration is that jury duty should not be imposed upon the residents of a community with no relation to the litigation. However, as has been shown, Cook County is not such a community. Finally, we look to the status of the court docket where the action was filed. It is undisputed that Cook County’s court docket is busier than Woodford County’s. However, “[w]ith respect to the forum docket backlog issue, courts are extremely reluctant to remove cases because of crowded dockets.” Smith,
Accordingly, it was not an abuse of discretion to conclude that the public interest factors do not strongly favor a transfer to Woodford County.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Coachmen relies upon Washington v. Illinois Power Co., 144 111. 2d 395,
In the instant case, we cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in denying Coachmen’s motion to transfer venue. The court concluded that Coachmen had not met its burden of showing that the relevant factors, viewed in their totality, strongly favored a transfer to Woodford County, and we cannot say that this conclusion was unreasonable. While we might have come to a different conclusion, we emphasize that our role here “is not to substitute our judgment for that of the trial court, or to decide whether we would have weighed the factors differently [citation], or even to determine whether the trial court ‘exercised [its] discretion wisely.’ ” Griffith,
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Coachmen’s forum non conveniens motion to transfer venue to Woodford County.
Affirmed.
CAHILL, EJ., and COUSINS, J., concur.
Notes
Counts I through XXII of the complaint were filed in December 1998, and counts XXIII through XXVIII were added in July 1999.
We note that according to the Illinois Atlas & Gazetteer 41 (DeLorme 3d ed. 2000), only one of these communities, Eureka, is in Woodford County. Morton is in Tazewell County, and Peoria is in Peoria County. Although these factors are not dispositive, we are permitted to take judicial notice of them as revealed in “recent maps.” See Sublette Exchange Bank v. Fitzgerald,
