ORDER
Pending before this Court is a motion to dismiss (Document # 2) filed by defendant The Mounties, Inc. (“The Mounties”).
On December 22, 1989, The Mounties, a Washington corporation, filed suit against Igloo Products Corporation (“Igloo”), a Texas corporation, in an Oregon state court. On January 18, 1990, Igloo filed this action against The Mounties. Igloo subsequently removed the Oregon state court proceeding to Oregon federal court.
The Mounties alleges that Igloo wrongfully terminated a sales agreement between Igloo and The Mounties. Under the contract at issue, The Mounties became the sales representative for Igloo in Oregon and Washington beginning in 1987. Problems arose in 1989, and Igloo terminated the arrangement in September 1989. Although some settlement discussions occurred between the parties, both filed suit against the other without informing the opposite party.
The Mounties moves for dismissal of this action on three grounds: (1) that this Court does not hold personal jurisdiction over it, (2) that this Court should abstain from hearing this case in light of the ongoing Oregon proceeding, and (3) that Oregon is a more convenient forum under 28 U.S.C. *216 § 1404(a) (1982). The Court need only address The Mounties’ first two arguments.
The Mounties alleges that this Court lacks personal jurisdiction over it. The Court must address this claim by referring to fourteenth amendment due process concerns: the Texas long-arm statute at issue reaches the limit of due process.
Holt Oil & Gas Corp. v. Harvey,
This Court must determine whether the nonresident defendant has had minimum contacts with Texas such that maintenance of the suit in this forum does not offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
Despite The Mounties’ argument to the contrary, the Court finds that
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
Like the parties in
Burger King,
who contracted for a long-term relationship, Igloo and The Mounties have entered into successive contracts for a period of at least 13 years. Furthermore, the most recent contract (as well as, according to Igloo’s uncontroverted assertions, all previous contracts) provides that Texas law would apply.
1
This fact also places the instant action within
Burger King,
a case in which the contract provided that the law of Florida, the jurisdictionally challenged state, would apply.
Id.
at 483,
Moreover, The Mounties does not suggest that it entered into the contract as the result of Igloo’s undue influence or unequal bargaining power. In light of the above, The Mounties’ contacts with Texas can “in no sense be viewed as ‘random,’ ‘fortuitous,’ or ‘attenuated.’ ”
Id.
at 480,
Courts in the Fifth Circuit generally follow a “first-filed rule” in deciding which Court should maintain jurisdiction over claims that arise out of the same subject matter but are pressed in different suits.
West Gulf Maritime Association v. ILA Deep Sea Local 2b,
The Court must initially determine which proceeding was commenced first for purposes of the first-filed rule. Although the proceeding in the Oregon state court was filed on December 22, 1989, Igloo did not remove that proceeding until after it had initiated this suit. The question is whether in applying the first-filed rule, the Court should look to the date on which the Oregon state court suit was filed or the date on which it was removed to federal court. The Court considers the date of filing in state court to be the relevant benchmark. This conclusion seems inescapable, as a district court takes the case as it finds it when it is removed from state court.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. v. Taylor,
In determining whether to apply the first-filed rule, the Court must also determine whether sufficiently “compelling circumstances” exist to avoid the rule’s application. In reviewing the submissions of the parties, the Court finds an absence of any compelling circumstances that would dictate that this Court not apply the first-filed rule.
The
Mann Manufacturing
court did not delineate the “compelling circumstances” that might preclude application of the first-filed rule. However, one of the special circumstances cited by courts that have declined to apply the first-filed rule is an indication that the first-filed suit was initiated in anticipation of the subsequent suit.
See Amerada Petroleum Corp. v. Marshall,
*218
In determining whether this case presents “compelling circumstances,” this Court might also look by analogy to the considerations that govern transfer of venue for forum non conveniens under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a).
See Superior Savings Association,
By analogy, Igloo has not shown that any “oppressiveness or vexatiousness” associated with an Oregon forum is “all out of proportion” to the convenience of that forum to The Mounties. First, this is a contract dispute, and the substantial performance of the contract took place in Oregon and Washington, not Texas.
See American Carpet Mills, Etc. v. Gunny Corp.,
The Court thus concludes that it should abstain from hearing this case based on the pendency of a related federal court proceeding. The Court is therefore presented with the options of staying, dismissing, or transferring the action.
See West Gulf Maritime Association,
Based on the foregoing, the Court
ORDERS that this action is hereby TRANSFERRED to the United States District Court for the District of Oregon.
Notes
. Clause 22 of the 1987 Sales Agreement provides: "Governing Law. This agreement shall be governed by the laws of the state of Texas, United States of America.”
. That The Mounties dealt primarily with a sales agent in California does not distinguish this case from
Burger King.
Indeed, unlike in
Burger King,
Igloo never established an office in The Mounties’ home state.
Burger King,
. This principle was clearly stated in
Bryant v. Thompson,
. As Igloo states in one of its memoranda in discussing the personal jurisdiction question, “[s]ince modern transportation and communications make it less burdensome to defend in a state where one engages in economic activity, it usually is not unfair to subject the party to the burden of litigating in a forum for disputes relating to such economic activity." Plaintiff's Response and Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendant's Fed.R.Civ.P. 12 Motions to Dismiss and, Alternatively, to Transfer Venue at 10.
