This appeal concerns a forum selection clause in a securities contract. Michael Huffington, a Massachusetts resident, made a $20 million investment in a fund raised by The Carlyle Group (“Carlyle”), a trade name for T.C. Group, LLC, a global investment management firm organized under Delaware law with its principal place of business in Washington, D.C. The investment occurred after Huffington had discussions with David Rubenstein, a founder and managing director of Carlyle.
According to the complaint, whose allegations we accept as true for purposes of this appeal,
Chmielinski v. Massachusetts,
On August 29, 2006, Carlyle formed Carlyle Capital Corporation, Ltd. (“the fund”), which was to be managed by Carlyle Investment Management with the stated goal of achieving “risk-adjusted returns.” Unlike most of Carlyle’s offerings, the fund was not private equity but was rather an independent, Guernsey-based company; 1 its aim was to invest in fixed-income securities, primarily residential mortgage-backed securities issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”). The value of such securities depends, of course, on the cash flow generated by the mortgages and the prospects that the principal and interest will be paid.
According to Huffington, Rubenstein— in a visit to the former’s home in Boston — presented the fund as a lower risk investment vehicle that would suit Huffington’s philosophy and told Huffington that Carlyle and the fund used a conservative investment strategy that avoided “overleverage.” Rubenstein followed up with a letter repeating that the fund was a lower risk investment with limited downside. Other materials from Carlyle and telephone conversations with John Stomber, who was in charge of the fund, reinforced this message.
On January 9, 2007, Huffington, using an investment vehicle whose details are irrelevant to this appeal, committed to purchasing shares of the fund for $20 million. As part of the commitment, Huffington executed a subscription agreement (“the agreement”), which governed his rights and duties as a shareholder in the fund. The agreement included a choice of law clause and a forum selection clause. The choice of law clause provided:
[T]he parties expressly agree that all terms and provisions hereof shall be governed, construed and enforced solely under the laws of the State of Delaware, without reference to any principles of conflicts of law (except insofar as affected by the state securities or “blue sky” laws of the jurisdiction in which the offering described herein has been made to the Investor).
The forum selection clause provided: “The courts of the State of Delaware shall have exclusive jurisdiction over any action, suit or proceeding with respect to this Subscription Agreement.... ”
On January 26, 2007, Huffington met with Stomber and other Carlyle representatives and was told — for the first time, he claims — that the fund would be leveraged. Nevertheless, Huffington received assurances that despite the fund’s use of leverage, he should not be concerned about its risk. On February 20, Carlyle notified Huffington that the fund had accepted his commitment, and Huffington wired his $20 million investment.
In the spring, summer, and fall of 2007, Huffington made inquiries about the status of the fund and was repeatedly assured by Stomber that his investment was safe. But even as these reassurances were given *21 to Huffington, the fund’s performance began to suffer because the value of mortgage-backed securities held by the fund started declining. In March 2008, the fund — having leveraged its equity thirty-two times to buy securities — defaulted on its loans and, its traded shares having plunged to less than ninety-eight percent of their initial offering price, went into liquidation.
On July 13, 2009, Huffington brought suit in Massachusetts state court alleging three claims against the Carlyle defendants and the Guernsey-based fund for allegedly misrepresenting the risks associated with the fund: (1) a violation of the Massachusetts Blue Sky Law (formally, the Massachusetts Uniform Securities Act), Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 110A, § 410 (2008), (2) common-law misrepresentation, and (3) a violation of the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 11. The Carlyle defendants removed the case to federal court.
On February 19, 2010, the district court dismissed Huffington’s claims without prejudice, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), concluding that the forum selection clause encompassed his claims and that the clause did not offend Massachusetts public policy.
Huffington v. T.C. Group, LLC,
A forum selection clause may make the designated forum merely available for resolution of disputes or it may make it “exclusive,” at least in the sense that either side can insist upon it as the venue.
See Rivera v. Centro Medico de Turabo, Inc.,
We start with the coverage question. The terse language of the forum selection clause, already quoted in full, makes Delaware courts the exclusive forum for “any action, suit or proceeding with respect to this Subscription Agreement.” Huffington argues that his claims are not “with respect to” the agreement because he advances no contract claim and his stated statutory and common-law tort claims rest on alleged misrepresentations that occurred before he signed the agreement.
Under the choice of law clause, the agreement itself — necessarily including the forum selection clause — is (the blue sky exception aside) governed by Delaware law; but the parties do not claim that Delaware law varies from ordinary contract principles. Nor do they suggest that the forum selection clause is illuminated by any extrinsic evidence, say, of pre-contract negotiations about it. So the scope question turns, as often is so with contracts, on plain language, attributed purpose, available precedent, and any background policy considerations that may bear.
Starting with language,
see Rivera,
Dictionaries describe the phrase “with respect to” as synonymous with the phrase “with reference or regard to something,” 13 The Oxford English Dictionary 732 (2d ed. 1989) (emphasis omitted); and they define the word “respect” in the context of the phrase as meaning simply “relation,” “reference,” “connection,” or “association” to a particular thing. 2 Thus, a suit is “with respect to” the agreement if the suit is related to that agreement — at least if the relationship seems pertinent in the particular context.
So, too, courts describe the phrase “with respect to” as synonymous with the phrases “with reference to,” “relating to,” “in connection with,” and “associated with,” and they have held such phrases to be broader in scope than the term “arising out of,” to be broader than the concept of a causal connection, and to mean simply “connected by reason of an established or discoverable relation.”
Coregis Ins. Co. v. Am. Health Found., Inc,
Huffington counters that the “misrepresentations at issue would be actionable regardless of whether the parties executed a contract,” but that is not quite so. On some facts a misrepresentation can be actionable without a contract, but the alleged “misrepresentations at issue” are actionable here, on Huffington’s own theories of liability, only because they caused him to enter into an agreement whereby he made an unfavorable purchase. In a nutshell, only if the misrepresentations proximately caused the agreement and consequent acquisition was there a recoverable loss.
Indeed, the purchase could not have been made without the agreement. The fund was offered privately, in reliance upon the exemption from registration under section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77d(2) (2006), and Regulation D, 17 C.F.R. § 230.501-.508 (2010). In accordance with the exemption, prospective investors were required to “execute and deliver a complete Subscription Booklet, which includes a subscription agreement.”
Each cause of action Huffington asserted has as a prerequisite the loss that flowed from the agreement and acquisition. The Blue Sky claim is for misrepresentations creating liability “to the person buying the security.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 110A, § 410(a)(2). A misrepresentation claim under Massachusetts common law requires an act causing loss in reasonable reliance upon a misrepresentation,
Masingill v. EMC Corp.,
Finally, forum selection clauses have varying purposes, but one reasonably inferred where, as here, a security is being *23 offered to a range of customers is to concentrate all related litigation in a single forum. This assures the defendant that it will be able to litigate all of the actions in one place convenient to it; that one set of rules will apply; that consolidation may be readily available; that inconsistent outcomes can be minimized; and that a single lead precedent can control all cases. We do not, in passing on a motion to dismiss, rely on Carlyle’s more specific but perhaps disputable version of its intent. 3
Forum selection clauses using embracing language are common and have usually been construed broadly.
4
Courts have often contrasted this language with narrower
language
— e.g., “to enforce,” “to construe” — that could easily have been employed if a narrower focus were intended.
E.g., John Wyeth & Bro.,
This brings us to the issue of enforceability and, once again, as in
Conbraco,
Under
Bremen,
“the forum clause should control absent a strong showing that it should be set aside,”
(1) the clause was the product of “fraud or overreaching,” id. at 15 [92 S.Ct. 1907 ];
(2) “enforcement would be unreasonable and unjust,” id.-,
(3) proceedings “in the contractual forum will be so gravely difficult and inconvenient that [the party challenging the clause] will for all practical purposes be deprived of his day in court,” id. at 18 [92 S.Ct. 1907 ]; or
(4) “enforcement would contravene a strong public policy of the forum in which suit is brought, whether declared by statute or by judicial decision,” id. at 15 [92 S.Ct. 1907 ],
See also Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
The first three conditions can be put aside. The first is triggered not by claims that the contract was induced by fraud but only by a focused showing — which Huffington does not attempt — that “the inclusion of that clause in the contract was the product of fraud or coercion.”
Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co.,
If the second condition turned on “contacts” or “convenience,” Huffington might have something to argue about since Massachusetts was his residence and he received a visit and communications in the state relating to the purchase. But both context and association with other terms (fraud, unjust, strong public policy) make clear that the second condition is more demanding.
See also Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
Huffington invokes an unpublished district court decision,
Nutracea v. Langley Park Invs. PLC,
No. 2:06-cv-2019-MCE-DAD,
The same broad-based balancing [in a motion to transfer venue] is not appropriate where, as here, a party seeks to have an action dismissed or remanded to state court, rather than transferred, on the basis of a forum selection clause that purports to preclude litigation from a venue other than a specific state court.
Jones v. Weibrecht,
Huffington’s core challenge rests on
Bremen’s
fourth factor: that “enforcement would contravene a strong public policy of the forum in which suit is brought, whether declared by statute or by judicial decision,”
However, by its terms, the Massachusetts Blue Sky Law simply creates a cause of action making liable — for any material misrepresentation causing loss — a person who offers or sells a security in Massachusetts. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 110A, *25 § 410(a)(2). Nothing cited to us suggests that the cause of action can be litigated only in a court located in Massachusetts or that Massachusetts forbids dismissals where a forum selection clause specifies a different forum. Massachusetts securities law claims are not uncommonly brought in other jurisdictions. 7
Huffington points us to the anti-waiver provision of the Massachusetts Blue Sky Law, which invalidates any agreement by the buyer to “waive compliance with any provision of this chapter or any rule or order hereunder,” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 110A, § 410(g). In the analogous federal securities context, a “chorus of authority,”
Haynsworth v. The Corporation,
Finally, Huffington argues that the Massachusetts statute has terms quite favorable to the buyer.
E.g., Marram v. Kobrick Offshore Fund, Ltd.,
However, while a Delaware choice of law clause (quoted above) appears in the agreement, that clause — unlike the forum selection clause — is addressed to interpretation and enforcement of the agreement and not to all claims “with respect to” the agreement; and, anyway, the choice of law clause provides that Delaware law controls “except insofar as affected by the state securities or ‘blue sky’ laws of the jurisdiction in which the offering described herein has been made to the Investor.” This seems at first blush to preserve Huffing-ton’s Massachusetts Blue Sky Law claim at issue.
Huffington does not directly argue that a Delaware court would refuse to enforce the Massachusetts Blue Sky Law — he has filed a protective action in Delaware setting forth that very claim — and apart from
Nutracea,
In all events, Huffington agreed that “related to” claims would be litigated
in
Delaware — where he remains free to argue that the Massachusetts Blue Sky claim survives by virtue of Massachusetts law, the choice of law clause’s narrower language, or this clause’s blue sky exception. Here, as in
Conbraco,
*26 There remains to be addressed only Huffington’s suggestion that the enforceability of the forum selection clause should be certified to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court if we have any doubt about state law on the issue. Certification is not routine, is rarely done where not requested in the district court, and is not necessary here — this case having been excellently briefed and argued on both sides in this court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Carlyle asserts that the fund is a Guernsey limited company now in liquidation proceedings and is not controlled by Carlyle, T.C. Group, Carlyle Investment Management, or Rubenstein (together "the Carlyle defendants”). The fund did not join the brief submitted by the Carlyle defendants and did not file its own brief.
. E.g., The American Heritage Dictionary 1052-53 (2d coll. ed. 1991) (defining "respect” as "[rjelation; reference”); The Random House Dictionary of the English Language 1640 (2d ed. unabr. 1987) (defining "respect” as "relation or reference”); Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1934 (unabr. 2002) (defining "respect” as "a relation or reference to a particular thing or situation”); West’s Legal Thesaurus/Dictionary 644, 657 (spec, deluxe ed. 1986) (defining "respect” as "relation” and "relation” in turn as a "connection or association”).
. The Carlyle defendants say that centralization was important to Carlyle because, among other reasons, the fund was a foreign entity, incorporated in Guernsey; was marketed to investors in foreign countries; and, after early rounds of private financing, traded on a foreign exchange in Amsterdam.
.
E.g., ACE Capital Re Overseas Ltd. v. Cent. United Life Ins. Co.,
.
Ingres Corp. v. CA, Inc.,
. Nutracea also relied on what it understood to be public policy considerations adopted by the California courts to protect claims under its state securities law statute. Even assuming that Massachusetts courts took the view attributed to California, Massachusetts' interest in its statute is adequately protected in this case for reasons discussed below.
.
E.g., F.W. Webb Co. v. State St. Bank & Trust Co.,
No. 09 Civ. 1241(RJH),
