Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we consider whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying a motion to dismiss premised on a forum-selection clause. We conclude that it did. The real party in interest did not overcome the presumption against the relator’s waiving its right to enforce the forum-selection clause, or satisfy her burden to demonstrate that enforcing the clause would be unreasonable and unjust. Accordingly, we conditionally grant the relator’s petition
I
Jetta Prescott executed an agreement in 2001 with ADM Investor Services, Inc., allowing ADM to trade commodities on Prescott’s behalf. Texas Trading Company Incorporated acted as a broker and guarantor in the transaction. When Prescott’s account balance reached a deficit greater than $50,000.00, ADM was authorized to close her account and collect the deficit from Texas Trading. In early 2004, Prescott’s balance reached a deficit of $57,844.29. ADM closed her account and collected the deficit from Texas Trading’s CEO, Charles Dawson. Dawson filed suit in his individual capacity in Hopkins County against Prescott and obtained a judgment against her.
Prescott then sued both Texas Trading and ADM in Rains County, alleging several legal theories including fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and negligence. Texas Trading simultaneously filed an answer and a motion to transfer venue to Hopkins County. ADM responded to the suit by filing an answer, a motion to dismiss, and, alternatively, a motion to transfer venue to Hopkins County. ADM’s motion to dismiss relied on the choice-of-law and forum-selection elause in its agreement with Prescott, which reads:
All actions or proceedings arising directly, indirectly or otherwise in connection with, out of, related to, or from this Agreement or any transaction covered hereby shall be governed by the law of Illinois and may, at the discretion and election of [ADM], be litigated in courts whose situs in [sic] within Illinois.
A hearing was set for Texas Trading’s motion to transfer venue. ADM acknowledged the setting for this hearing in a letter to Prescott’s counsel, but then elected not to appear so as to avoid potentially waiving its motion to dismiss. Instead, approximately three months after filing its answer and motion to dismiss, ADM requested a separate hearing on its motion to dismiss. After the hearing on Texas Trading’s motion to transfer venue, the trial court granted that motion. The trial court later conducted a hearing on ADM’s motion to dismiss, which it denied. The trial court explained its reasoning in a letter, stating that although the forum-selection clause would be enforceable if ADM were the lone defendant, “[i]t seems unreasonable to the Court for Plaintiff to have to pursue the same cause of action against two defendants in two different states.” Nothing in the record before us indicates whether the trial court ruled on ADM’s motion to transfer venue to Hopkins County, where Prescott’s claims remain pending against Texas Trading. The court of appeals denied ADM’s petition for writ of mandamus on the alternative ground that ADM waived enforcement.
II
Prescott primarily argues to us that ADM waived enforcement by failing to request a hearing sooner or appear at the hearing on Texas Trading’s motion to transfer venue, which prevented the trial court from being able to determine the proper forum for the entire case to be heard. Prescott also argues that Dawson, as ADM’s agent, waived the forum-selection clause by his earlier lawsuit against Prescott, and that Texas Trading, as ADM’s agent, waived the clause by moving to transfer venue. In the alternative, Prescott argues that it would be unreasonable or unjust to enforce the forum-selection clause.
Mandamus will issue if the relator establishes a clear abuse of discretion for
A party waives a forum-selection clause by substantially invoking the judicial process to the other party’s detriment or prejudice. In re Automated Collection Techs., Inc.,
We disagree with the court of appeals that ADM waived enforcement. Simultaneously filing an answer and motion to transfer venue with a motion to dismiss falls short of substantially invoking the judicial process to Prescott’s detriment or prejudice. Indeed, in both AIU and Automated, the defendants participated in the litigation process much more substantially. See AIU,
We also reject any agency theory that holds ADM as waiving enforcement because of the actions taken by Texas Trading, an initial co-defendant, or its CEO, Dawson. “An agent’s authority to act on behalf of a principal depends on some communication by the principal either to the agent (actual or express authority) or to the third party (apparent or implied authority).” Gaines v. Kelly,
Prescott has also failed to establish an exception under which the trial court’s refusal to enforce the forum-selec
Prescott failed to meet her heavy burden to establish that enforcing the forum-selection clause will be unreasonable or unjust, or seriously inconvenient. The mere existence of another defendant does not compel joint litigation, even if the claims arise out of the same nucleus of facts. See In re Int’l Profit Assocs., Inc.,
We observe that Prescott asserted in her brief to this Court that her “health will prevent her from prosecuting her claims in two different states.” The record shows that Prescott presented an affidavit to the trial court, opposing Texas Trading’s motion to transfer venue to Hopkins County. Prescott swore that she was nearing the age of 80, suffered chronic health problems including fibromyalgia and heart problems, often had difficulty walking, and had been hospitalized several times in recent months. Prescott believed that her “case will be severely prejudiced if transferred to Hopkins County.” Although we are sympathetic to Prescott’s health concerns, the record does not establish that requiring her to pursue her claims against ADM in Illinois, the forum to which she agreed in 2001, would be unreasonable or unjust. Further, even assuming that health concerns could render a selected forum sufficiently inconvenient to preclude enforcement of a forum-selection clause, we believe that Prescott’s con-clusory statements are insufficient to establish such inconvenience. Cf. Lyon,
By allowing for exceptions when enforcement of forum-selection clauses would be unreasonable or unjust, or seriously inconvenient, we, as the Supreme Court in M/S Bremen, have recognized that there may be extreme circumstances that courts cannot presently anticipate or foresee; but we have not established a bright-line test for avoiding enforcement of forum-selection clauses. See M/S Bremen,
Ill
We conclude that Prescott did not overcome the presumption against ADM’s waiving its right to enforce the forum-selection clause by showing that ADM substantially invoked the judicial process. We also conclude that Prescott failed to satisfy her burden to demonstrate that enforcement of the forum-selection clause would be unjust and unreasonable. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in denying ADM’s motion to dismiss. There is no adequate remedy by appeal when a trial court refuses to enforce a forum-selection clause. In re Pirelli Tire, L.L.C.,
Notes
. In considering the circumstances of this case, we offer no opinion as to whether, in a different case, health concerns might be sufficient grounds to preclude enforcement of a forum-selection clause, or what sort of proof of such health concerns would be required.
. The Supreme Court clarified in Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute that its use of "serious inconvenience of the contractual forum” in M/S Bremen was. in the context of a hypothetical agreement between two Americans to resolve a local dispute in a remote alien forum, not an agreement to resolve the dispute in another state.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the Court’s result and write separately only to add a brief word on the evidentiary burden borne by a party asserting medical hardship to escape a forum-selection clause, an issue of first impression in this Court. Also, while today’s case is a sub-par vehicle given its slim record, I believe the Court should one day clarify something else in medical-hardship cases: the meaning of phrases like “seriously inconvenient” and “unreasonable or unjust” — two of the bases for avoiding a forum-selection clause — and, relatedly, whether physical ailments can qualify as
1. What sort of health-related evidence would suffice to escape a forum-selection clause?
I agree that Jetta Prescott’s affidavit detailing her myriad health woes is, standing alone, insufficient to avoid the contracted-for forum. The lesson of In re Lyon, as the Court notes, is that the mere assertion of “financial and logistical difficulties” is not enough to negate a forum-selection clause, lest such clauses become “practically useless.”
I would go a step further, however, and make clear for the bench and bar what sort of evidence ivould suffice. Boiled down, a party opposing a forum-selection clause bears a “heavy burden”
2. In a forum-selection clause case involving a medically infirm party, what do “seriously inconvenient” and “unreasonable or unjust” mean?
A litigant may defeat enforcement of a forum-selection clause by showing one of four things:
(1) enforcement would be unreasonable or unjust,
(2) the clause is invalid for reasons of fraud or overreaching,
(8) enforcement would contravene a strong public policy of the forum where the suit was brought, or
(4) the selected forum would be seriously inconvenient for trial.6
Today’s case focuses on grounds (1) and (4) above, and while I understand that the slender record makes this case a less-than-ideal vehicle for extended analysis, I believe we should one day explain more fully how these rather opaque phrases apply to assertions of medical hardship.
Most Texas cases avoid fleshing out the term “seriously inconvenient”; the only discernible “definition” seems to emerge from piecing together examples of what various courts have held not to be seriously inconvenient.
Cases involving medical hardship strike me as somewhat unique. Financial or logistical burdens may be easily anticipated; not so with many medical burdens.
The Court never mentions this “special and unusual circumstances” basis for negating a forum-selection clause, but that is immaterial here. Mrs. Prescott’s only evidence of post-contract medical problems is her lone affidavit, which even if wholly persuasive, is wholly insufficient. Accordingly, we need not consider the affidavit’s substance (or lack thereof) and whether Mrs. Prescott’s ailments qualify as “special and unusual circumstances.”
In sum, this Court has never addressed, nor has any Texas appellate court, whether medical concerns can negate a forum-selection clause. Given the ubiquity of such clauses in everyday contracts, both commercial and consumer, I hope a future ease with a more-developed record gives us an opportunity to clarify how the various bases for avoiding enforcement apply when a party asserts serious medical hardship. This seems only fair. Actions to enforce forum-selection clauses reach us via mandamus,
I understand why the Court declines to use today’s imperfect case to dive deeper and provide greater specificity for forum-selection cases involving medical hardship,
. In re Lyon Fin. Servs., Inc.,
. In re AIU Ins. Co.,
. See Caputo v. Holland Am. Line, Inc., No. 08-CV-4584,
. Id. at *1-2.
. Id. at *4.
. Lyon,
. See, e.g., In re Int’l Profit Assocs., Inc.,
.
. See, e.g., AIU,
. Parties ought not bear an expectation of prognostication when it comes to their health, required to foretell whether future maladies might make a potential out-of-state trial too onerous. Infirmities are inevitable, but that doesn’t make them foreseeable such that healthy parties who execute a forum-selection clause must consider whether health woes years or decades down the road might pose a travel problem. Cross-country travel may be undemanding for a healthy 60-year-old who signs a forum-selection clause but inconceivable for an ailing almost-80-year-old who contests one.
.
. Int'l Profit Assocs.,
. See Lyon,
. Int’l Profit Assocs.,
