ORDER
The Petition for Review came before the court at conference on June 11, 1991. On consideration,
IT IS ORDERED that the Petition for Review is denied. Vice Chief Justice Feldman and Justice Cameron voted to grant for the following reasons:
The exercise of
in personam
jurisdiction is based on considerations of due process and on principles of “fundamental fairness.”
State v. Velasco,
Our view is quite the opposite. This tort occurred in Arizona, the victim resided in Arizona, and her family are residents of Arizona. The alleged tortious conduct would foreseeably cause the very harm that occurred in Arizona.
Given modern conditions, it is difficult to see why it is unfair to require these defendants to answer and defend in Arizona. Logistics certainly present no greater difficulty for the governmental defendants and even the individual defendants to appear and defend in Tucson than in Yreka, Riverside, or Azusa. It is no longer necessary to send counsel instructions via Wells Fargo. The telephone, the facsimile machine, and *178 the photocopier answer the logistical problems as easily for lawsuits pending in Arizona as those in Imperial County, California. Law firms capable of handling cases such as this practice on a national and regional basis, and defendants will not be deprived of competent counsel even if forced to respond in Arizona.
Depriving these victims of a forum to redress their grievances is a greater violation of due process than compelling the defendants, whose conduct may have caused this tragedy, to defend themselves in Arizona. Reality tells us that it is time to reexamine some of our previous conclusions, even those in so recent a case as
Batton v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Insurance Co.,
We would grant review.
