OPINION
David Hollingsworth brings an interlocutory appeal of the trial court grant of a Motion to Transfer for Improper Venue filed by the Defendants Key Benefit Administrators, Inc. (KBA) and the Free Methodist Church of North America (the church). We affirm.
FACTS
The plaintiff-appellant Hollingsworth was an insurance agent for KBA. He wrote insurance policies for KBA and was paid on a commission basis. In 1990, the church appointed Hollingsworth as its insurance broker and agent of record for its group health insurance plan, and Hollingsworth placed the church's account with KBA. 'The corporate headquarters and principal place of business of both KBA and the church is in Marion County. The church has no office in Vander-burgh County. KBA has a branch office in Vanderburgh County staffed by one emрloyee, but that office never had any responsibility for the church's group insurance plan. Hollingsworth worked out of his home in Vanderburgh County.
In 1994, Hollingsworth was terminated as agent and insurance brokеr for the church. He brought this action in Vanderburgh County, alleging the termination was an unlawful means to escape the payment of com
DISCUSSION
Under Ind. Trial Rule 75, any case may be commenced in any county. Upon filing of a pleading or motion to dismiss for incorrect venue under T.R. 12(B)(3), however, the trial court must transfer the case to the county selected by the party which first files such motion or pleading if: 1) the court where the action was initially filed does not meet preferred venue rеquirements and 2) the county selected by the party which files the motion or pleading is a county of preferred venue. If the suit is initiated in a county of preferred venue, a transfer of venuе will not be granted. Conner Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Frericks (1994), Ind.App.,
While we have recently reviewed a number of trial court decisions on transfer of venue under TR. 75(A), we have not set forth a standard of review. When a motion brought under T.R. 12(B)(8) and TR. 75 is granted, the remedy is not to dismiss the cаse, but to transfer it to the court where it should have been brought initially. T.R. 75(B). As such, the trial court's grant or denial of the motion is an interlocutory order because it is one "made in the progress of the cause, requiring something to be done or observed, but, not determining the controversy." Cirtin v. Cirtin (1928), Ind.,
We generally review interlocutory orders under an abuse of discretion standard. See, e.g., Bellmore v. State (1992), Ind.,
Hollingsworth asserts that Vander-burgh County is a county of preferred venue under TR. 75(A)(4), which provides that preferred venue lies in "[the county where either the principal office of a defendant organization is located or the office or ageney of a defеndant organization or individual to which the claim relates or out of which the claim arose is located ..." (emphasis added). The principal office of both the church and KBA is locаted in Marion County. However, Holl-ingsworth contends Vanderburgh County is a county of preferred venue because his claim relates to or arose out of the work he did in Vanderburgh County as an agent for KBA and the church. So, we must determine whether plaintiff Hollingsworth's office was also an "office or agency of" defendants KBA and the church, and if so, whether Hollings-worth's claim relates to оr arises out of that office or agency.
Hollingsworth argues that by virtue of his status as insurance agent and broker for KBA and the church, his home in Vander-burgh County must necessarily be an "office or ageney" of KBA and the church. However, the language of T.R. 75, read as a whole, does not support Hollingsworth's interpretation of the terms "agent" and "office or agency" as synonymous for vеnue purposes. The term "agency" describes the relationship between a principal and an agent, Hope Lutheran Church v. Chellew (1984), Ind.App.,
It is the "general spirit and policy of many venue statutes to give the defendant the right to have the action triеd in the county of his or her residence." RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp. v. Dunn (1994), Ind.App.,
Even if Hollingsworth's office was an "office or agency" of the defendants, it was not an office or ageney "to which the claim relates or out of whiсh the claim arose" as required by TR. 75(A)(4). Hollingsworth alleges breach of contract, interference with contract, unlawful rebate, and improper termination in order to avoid paymеnt of commissions. We addressed the question of when a claim "relates to" or "arises out of" a particular office or agency in Conner. Frer-icks, whose principal place of business was in Allen County, sued Conner in the Allen Superior Court. Conner was located in Marion County, but the action arose out of an agreement between Frericks and Conner to jointly establish an insurance agency that would do business in Allen County. We held that the trial court properly denied Conner's motion to transfer venue from Allen County to Marion County because the combined agеncy, the "object of this dispute,"
Here, by contrast, an independent contractor agreement, and not a joint business enterprise, is the "object of the dispute." Causes of аction based on contract are generally "transitory." Burris v. Porter, (1985), Ind.App.,
Marion County is a county of preferred venue. Under TR. 75(A)(4), preferred venuе lies in the county where "the principal office of a defendant organization is located."
The trial court order transferring venue to Marion County is AFFIRMED.
