I.
The recent filing of several complaints by out-of-state plaintiffs alleging exposure to asbestos outside of Delaware has prompted certain defendants in these actions to seek dismissal for forum non con-veniens and in the interest of justice. This opinion will address forum non conve-niens; a separate opinion will address the defendants’ contention that the complaints alleging foreign exposure to asbestos implicate the “interest of justice” provision of Delaware’s long arm statute. 1
The defendants’ motions cause the Court to consider whether the well-settled principles that have emerged from Delaware’s forum non conveniens jurisprudence should be altered in the context of mass tort litigation. Specifically, the Court must determine whether the standard of review should be reconfigured or the applicable factors weighted differently to account for the number of foreign plaintiffs that recently have filed here. The Court also must determine whether to consider the so-called “public interest factors,” not typically applied in Delaware, when determining whether Delaware is a proper forum for these cases.
For the reasons that follow, the Court has concluded that it must apply the same liberal forum non conveniens standard that has evolved in the context of Delaware corporate and commercial litigation to the newly-filed mass tort cases that have been brought here. The Court also has concluded that the “public interest factors” are not ipso jure inapplicable to forum non conveniens analysis in Delawаre, and may be dispositive at some future point in this litigation if the number of foreign plaintiffs who file here grows substantially. These factors do not, however, warrant dismissal of these cases at this time given the manageable demands of the Court’s current asbestos docket. Accordingly, the motions to dismiss for forum non conveniens must be DENIED.
II.
The phenomenon now known as the “asbestos litigation” first arrived in Delaware in the mid-1970’s. Since then, Delaware has maintained a steady asbestos docket that has ranged in size from approximately 500 to 2000 pending cases at any one time. Almost all of these cases have involved plaintiffs with at least some connection to Delaware who allege exposure to asbestos in Delaware. In May of 2005, the Court received the first of several complaints filed by out-of-state plaintiffs who allege that they were exposed to asbestos in various states around the country other than Delaware. As of the time of filing of the motions sub judice, the number of these out-of-state filings had reached 129. 2
According to the defendants, none of the plaintiffs in these cases have any meaningful connection to Delaware. Indeed, most of them have never stepped foot within our borders. The defendants named by these plaintiffs are many, ranging from automobile manufacturers to automobile parts manufacturers, from boiler manufacturers
In each of these cases, it is clеar that virtually all of the evidence — documentary, testimonial and otherwise- — is located outside of Delaware. In some cases, the evidence resides primarily in one state. In others, the evidence is scattered across many states and multiple alleged exposure sites. It is also clear that Delaware substantive law likely will not apply to these disputes. Indeed, the choice of law analysis in many of the cases will point in several directions depending upon a multitude of factors including, inter alia, the plaee(s) of exposure and the domicile(s) of the parties. 3 Finally, there is little doubt that litigating this number of cases involving foreign plaintiffs, foreign exposures and foreign substantive law will pose practical and logistical сhallenges to the parties that may not exist if the cases were litigated in the home states of the plaintiffs or the state(s) where the exposure occurred. These concerns, and others, have prompted several defendants to move to dismiss the foreign plaintiffs’ complaints for forum non conveniens.
III.
The defendants contend, as an initial matter, that the number of cases that have been filed here in a relatively short time span involving out-of-state plaintiffs alleging foreign exposure to asbestos should lead the Court to the inescapable conclusion that these plaintiffs are engaging in blatant forum shopping. Under these circumstances, defendants contend that the liberal deference traditionally given by Delaware courts to a plaintiffs choice of forum is misplaced here. Instead, defendants urge the Court to scrutinize the complaints more carefully to determine if Delaware is the right forum for this litigation in a global sense, rather than focusing on the traditional notions of convenience to the parties in the context of litigating individual cases in this forum. The defendants also direct the Court to factors that consider the impact of the litigation on the public at large, rather than just the parties to the litigation, and argue that these “public interest” factors clearly reveal that the litigation of potentially hundreds of foreign asbestos cases in Delaware will affect the Court’s ability properly to attend to its other business. This, in turn, will negatively affect the сitizens of Delaware who have a right to expect that their business before the Court will come first.
If the Court declines to adopt this more aggressive and heretofore unprecedented approach to forum non conveniens analysis, the defendants contend that dismissal is justified even under the plaintiff-friendly “overwhelming hardship” standard traditionally employed in Delaware because all of the evidence and all of the witnesses for these cases reside outside of Delaware, and Delaware substantive law likely will not apply to any of these controversies. The defendants contend that an analysis of the factors traditionally considered by Delaware courts clearly demonstrates that litigating all of these cases in Delaware will cause them overwhelming hardship in a manner that will affect the fairness of the proceedings here.
The plaintiffs counter that there is simply no basis in the law to apply a different forum
non conveniens
standard to mass tort litigation than the Court traditionally has employed when considering such motions in commercial litigation or single plaintiff personal injury actions. According to the plaintiffs, when measured
As best as the Court can discern from the docket, twelve defendants have moved to dismiss a total of forty complaints for forum non conveniens, 4 Prior to oral argument, the Court requested the parties to designate three motions that best illustrated their respective positions. These motions were argued to the Court on November 28, 2005. Thereafter, the parties submitted additional legal authorities and written argument. The matter is now ripe for decision.
IV.
The doctrine of forum non conveniens is a creature of the common law and has developed as a means by which “a court may resist imposition upon its jurisdiction even when jurisdiction is authorized[.]” 5 The doctrine empowers the host forum to decline jurisdiction when litigation within the forum would be inconvenient, expensive or otherwise inappropriate. 6 The decision to stay or dismiss an action based on forum non conveniens lies within the sound discretion of the Court. 7
The standards that govern motions to dismiss for forum
non conveniens,
although now well-settled, have evolved in Delaware after much litigation in both the trial and appellate courts.
8
A series of cases, where the Delaware Supreme Court reversed trial court orders granting motions to dismiss for forum
non conveniens,
allowed our highest court to articulate a clear preference in favor of a plaintiffs choice of forum, particularly where there are no previously filed actions pending elsewhere.
9
This preference has been expressed in the form of a “presumption” that the plaintiffs choice of forum will be respected unless the defendant carries the “heavy burden” of establishing that Delaware is not an appropriate forum for the controversy.
10
To meet its burden, the defendant must establish that it would endure “overwhelming hardship” by litigating in Delaware.
11
Stated differently, the defendant must “demonstrate that this ‘is one of the rare cases where the drastic relief of dismissal is warranted based on a strong showing that the burden of litigat
The defendant’s burden is to show “with particularity” that the so-called Cryo-Maid 14 factors, individually or together, demonstrate that litigating in Delaware would impose an “overwhelming hardship” on the defendant. 15 These factors are:
(1) the relative ease of access to proof;
(2) the availability of compulsory process for witnesses;
(3) the possibility of the view of the premises;
(4) whether the controversy is dependent upon the application of Delaware law which the courts of this State more properly should decide than those of another jurisdiction;
(5) the pendency or nonpendeney of a similar action or actions in аnother jurisdiction; and
(6) all other practical problems that would make the trial of the case easy, expeditious and inexpensive. 16
Analysis of the Cryo-Maid factors is not quantitative. 17 The Court does not take a tally of the number of factors that favor either party. 18 Indeed, the factors “do not, of themselves, establish anything.” 19 They “merely provide the framework for an analysis of hardship and inconvenience.” 20 Within this framework, the Court is not permitted to “compare Delaware, the plaintiffs chosen forum, with an alternate forum and decide which is the more appropriate location for the dispute to proceed.” 21 Such comparisons are “irrelevant” to the mandated analysis. 22 Instead, when deciding a motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens, the Court must base its determination solely upon “whether any or all of the Cryo-Maid factors establish that defendant will suffer overwhelming hardship and inconveniеnce if forced to litigate in Delaware.” 23 Without such a showing, plaintiffs choice of forum will not be disturbed. 24
A. The Overwhelming Hardship Standard
Defendants argue that by virtue of the sheer number of foreign plaintiffs who have filed here, the Court should excuse
The defendants’ characterization of the procedural and factual context in which the Delaware forum law has evolved is accurate as far as it goes. But they have offered no meaningful distinction between the cases at issue here and the legion of Delaware forum non conveniens authority upon which the Court justifiably could depart from the clear directives of the Delaware Supreme Court. Plaintiffs in tort cases are entitled to the same respect for their choice of forum as plaintiffs in corporate and commercial cases receive as a matter of course in Delaware. That several plaintiffs in separate actions are represеnted by the same law firm and claim the same injury does not justify rewriting or even refining now settled principles of Delaware law. When considering whether Delaware is an appropriate forum for litigation, in all instances where an action is first-filed in Delaware, the Cryo-Maid factors will guide the Court’s analysis of a well-defined singular standard: overwhelming hardship.
Equally unavailing is defendants’ argument that a lower threshold for dismissal applies here because the plaintiffs purportedly have engaged in “forum shopping.” Defendants look to Ison for support, but a careful review of that holding reveals that their reliance is misplaced:
The fact that the plaintiffs are foreign nationals does not deprive them of the presumption that their choice of forum should be respected. Although that presumption is not as strоng in the case of a foreign national plaintiff as in the case of a plaintiff who resides in the forum, we need not rest our decision on that issue because of the defendant’s weak showing of hardship ...
Certainly this defendant has not sustained its burden, even though the plaintiffs are foreign and have no connection to this forum. This is not a case of weighing the foreign plaintiffs’ choice of forum (whether it be “forum shopping” or not) against a defendant whose only connection is that it is incorporated in Delaware. We need not express anopinion on such a case because it is not before us. In this case, the key factors are that the defendant’s principal place of business is in this forum and there are significant contacts hеre with the alleged defective product. In reviewing this case, we consider the Cryo-Maid factors in the context of those key factors. 27
While it is true, as defendants allege, that Ison stated that the deference afforded a plaintiffs choice of forum “is not as strong” in the case of a foreign plaintiff, the Supreme Court did not find it necessary to explain this observation further because it concluded that the defendants had failed to show hardship. 28 Ison did not, therefore, reduce the defendant’s burden to establish “overwhelming hardship.” 29 Instead, the court reiterated that the defendant still must make a “strong showing” of overwhelming hardship, even when the plaintiff resides outside of Delaware. 30 Indeed, the Delaware Supreme Court consistently has held that “the traditional showing a defendant must make in order to prevail on a motion to dismiss on the ground of forum non conveniens’ is not varied” simply by virtue of the fact that Delaware’s only connection to the litigation is the defendant’s incorporation or residency here. 31
B. The Cryo-Maid Factors
Having determined that the moving defendants must carry the “heavy burden” of establishing overwhelming hardship, it is now appropriate to consider their proffers of hardship and inconvenience under the Cryo-Maid factors. The Court will consider the factors seriatim.
1. Relative Ease of Access to Proof
The proximity of the proposed forum to the necessary proof is a meaningful consideration in assessing the ease of access to such proof. 32 Based on this “proximity consideration,” defendants contend that dismissal is appropriate because all of the evidence in each of these cases is located outside of Delaware. Specifically, defendants сorrectly observe that plaintiffs are from at least 23 different states and one foreign country, and that plaintiffs’ coworkers, supervisors, family members, document custodians, product nexus witnesses, employers, lifestyle witnesses and treating physicians are located in at least 27 different states and two foreign countries. Moreover, based upon the eight plaintiffs that have been deposed thus far, defendants will be required to conduct investigations in at least 15 different states, scattered throughout the country, and two foreign countries. Defendants argue that this proof will not be easy to access from Delaware and, therefore, this factor weighs in favor of dismissal. 33
While the proximity of the evidence to the proposed forum is an impor
2. Availability of Compulsory Process for Witnesses
This factor is closely related to the access to proof factor. 40 It is not surprising, then, that the defendants again direct the Court to the fact that plaintiffs’ co-workers, supervisors, family members, document custodians, product nexus witnesses, employers, lifestyle witnesses and treating physicians are located throughout the United States and, in some instances, across the globe. Under thesе circumstances, compulsory process cannot issue from this Court to compel witness testimony at deposition or at trial. Defendants argue that this will cause overwhelming hardship given the number of out-of-state witnesses involved in these cases. 41
To justify dismissal under this factor, Delaware law requires a defendant to identify specifically the witnesses not subject to compulsory process and the specific substance of their testimony. 42 Defendants have failed to do this. While defendants have alleged that numerous witnesses will not be available in Delaware, with the exception of some witnesses identified as a result of the eight plaintiffs deposed thus far, they have not specifically identified the witnesses or how their testimony will be relevаnt to these cases. Consequently, the defendants have not sustained their burden on this factor. 43
Even if the defendants had identified all of the witnesses and provided the nature of their testimony, this factor still would not favor dismissal because the “problem of limited subpoena power will exist in any forum where the litigation is tried.” 44 As defendants have already iterated, the potential witnesses reside in at least two foreign countries and are scattered throughout the United States. This creates difficulties for any forum that might hear these cases. Given that Delaware and other potential forums would have identical difficulties, it is generally accepted that “these mirror-image difficulties cancel out each other.” 45 Stated differently, there would be “no clear advantage or disadvаntage to litigating” in Delaware or another forum. 46 The unavailability of compulsory process from Delaware, under these circumstances, does not create overwhelming hardship.
3. Viewing the Premises
Defendants concede that this factor is not implicated given that the alleged exposures to asbestos occurred many years ago and, in any event, there is rarely a need in asbestos cases to view or inspect the site of exposure. 47 This factor, therefore, does not favor or disfavor dismissal.
Notwithstanding their concession, the defendants observe that if a jury or potential expert did wish to view one of the plaintiffs former work sites in order, for example, to ascertain the general layout of
4. The Applicability of Delaware Law
Plaintiffs recognize (for purposes of this motion) that Delaware law likely will not apply to these disputes. 50 This factor, in the Court’s mind, is the most compelling factor in favor of the defendants’ application. 51 Nevertheless, the fact that Delaware law likely will not apply in these cases, standing alone, is not sufficient to warrant dismissal. 52 Delaware courts regularly interpret and apply the laws of other states and have consistently held that the “need to apply another state’s law will not be a substantial deterrent to conducting litigation in this state.” 53
The Court also finds that defendants so far have failed to establish that the inapplicability of Delaware law imposes upon them an overwhelming hаrdship. Defendants’ briefs addressing this factor principally argue that dismissal is appropriate because of the burden these controversies will place upon the Court. They fail to articulate how the application of foreign law will cause hardship to them. For instance, defendants Ford and GM state:
With respect to the 37 cases brought against Ford and GM, these cases will involve the Court’s having to research and interpret the laws of at least 27 different states and two foreign countries. The Court’s job with respect to interpreting and applying the law fromall of these different states is complicated by the fact that there are, on average, 51 defendants in each case, and each Complaint contains, on аverage, ten counts. Therefore, the Superior Court will have to determine which state’s substantive law applies in each of these cases, and will have to apply the law to the facts of each case.
The Superior Court does not have the luxury of being able to slowly and methodically research and learn the law from all of these different states. Rather, the Court will have to immediately engage in this laborious process for each of these cases so that the Court can begin to address motions to dismiss, motions for summary judgment, motions in li-mine, jury instructions and the jury verdict sheet. The onerous burden placed upon the Court, its law clerks and its staff with respect to this monumental and never ending task of learning, interpreting and applying thе substantive law from all of these jurisdictions is sufficient, in and of itself, to balance the equities in favor of dismissal. 54
For their part, CertainTeed and Dana offer the conclusory observation that “the parties will be required to brief, and the Court to consider, the laws of multiple foreign jurisdictions — an onerous task that must be undertaken for each out-of-state case filed or to be filed.” 55
The appropriate inquiry under Cryo-Maid is whether the defendants have established that the application of foreign law will cause the defendants to suffer overwhelming hardship, not whether the Court will suffer hardship. 56 Without more, the Court must find that defendants have not sustained their burden of establishing overwhelming hardship under this factor. 57
5. The Pendency or Nonpendency of a Similar Action in Another Jurisdiction
In the forum non conveniens analysis, the absence of a prior pending action in another jurisdiction “is an important, if nоt controlling, consideration.” 58 It is well-established that, without such other pending action, judicial discretion is to be exercised sparingly in favor of dismissal. 59 In connection with the cases that are the subject of the motions sub judice, the parties agree that there are no related actions pending elsewhere. If not dispositive, this fact weighs heavily against dismissal. 60
6. Other Practical Considerations
Defendants contend that other practical considerations warrant dismissal of these lawsuits from Delaware. Specifically, they urge the Court to “carefully scrutinize” the plaintiffs’ motive for filing in Delaware because it appears that the primary incentive to file all of these cases here is to achieve a tactical advantage in the form of settlement leverage. That is, once a substantial number of cases are filed, plaintiffs request expedited trials of multiple cases grouped together in a single trial setting, all in an attempt to overwhelm the defendants and the Court and thereby coerce settlements
en masse.
Defendants submit
Accusing the plaintiffs of forum shopping may offer some rhetorical satisfaction, but it does little to advance the defendants’ legal position, even if true. 62 As stated in Williams:
It is a fact of life that a party’s choice of forum will more likely than not be motivated by strategic considerations. What is pivotal is not the litigant’s subjective motivation but the objective impact of its actions. If “forum shopping” means filing an action in a location that the plaintiff considers advantageous, then most plaintiffs in litigation involving significant commercial disputes will be guilty of it. If such behavior were considered inequitable, a stay would become virtually automatic in most litigations involving large economic stakes. 63
This is not to say that litigants are given an “unbridled choice of a Delaware forum.” 64 The decision to litigate in Delaware “will not be honored if it will inflict inconvenience and hardship upon the opposing party.” 65 But the Court cannot concern itself with the plaintiffs’ “subjective motivation” in bringing their claims to Delaware. The Court’s focus is, and must be, vel non the defendants have established that they will suffer overwhelming hardship by litigating these cases in Delaware. The Court already has determined that the defendants have failed to make this requisite showing.
C. The “Public Interest” Factors
The Court’s determination that the Cryo-Maid factors do no warrant dismissal does not end the inquiry. Defendants suggest that the Court should broaden its focus and consider the impact that the numerous foreign asbestos filings will have on the Court’s operations and on the citizens of Delaware. Plaintiffs disagree.
In the seminal case Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 66 the United States Supreme Court first articulated the factors courts should consider when confronted with an application to dismiss litigation for forum non conveniens. The Court separated the analysis into two distinct categories: “private interest” factors and “public interest” factors. 67 The “private interest” factors identified in Gulf Oil are similar in scope to the Cryo-Maid factors previously discussed. 68 The “public interest” factors are:
(1) the administrative difficulties caused by court congestion which arise when cases are not litigated at their origins;
(2) the unfairness of imposing jury duty on people of a community with no real rеlation to the litigation;
(3) the local interest in having localized controversies decided at home;
(4) difficulties associated with application of foreign law; and
(5) any other burdens imposed on the forum. 69
The Court of Chancery did not predicate its decision upon the inherent power of a trial court to control its own docket, manage its affairs, achieve the orderly disposition of its business and promote the efficient administration of justice. We do not decide this question, but we note that nothing we decide herein is intended to preclude such an argument from being made in a proper case ... It is conceivable that this comparative analysis may be relevant in a proper case where there is an evidentiary record supporting the burden on the Delaware court and litigants compared to more expeditious and less burdensome litigation in another forum. 70
The Court here is faced with complex litigation due, in large part, to the number of litigants involved, the potential application in each case of substantive law from several different jurisdictions (and in some cases the substantive laws of many jurisdictions may apply in a single case), and the scattering of witnesses and evidence throughout the United States and foreign countries. 71 Therefore, given the complexity of these controversies and the Court’s inherent power to control its own docket, manage its affairs, achieve the orderly disposition of its business and promote the efficient administration of justice, the Court concludes that these are “proper” cases for application of the “public interest” factors.
After due consideration of the previously enumerated “public interest” factors, the Court finds that dismissal of these cases is not warranted at this time. In its current state, the asbestos litigation in Delaware neither encumbers nor overwhelms the Court’s judicial or administrative faculties in a manner that would adversely affect the Court’s ability to administer justice efficiently and effectively in either these cases or the Court’s docket as a whole. Nor do these asbestos cases impose an unreasonable burden on Delaware citizens by hindering their access to this Court or unfairly requiring them to serve as jurors.
As to the future, it may well be that a substantial increase in asbestos filings will have a deleterious impact on the efficiency of this Court and cause unmanageable congestion. That said, the Court is unwilling to speculate about such consequences or even to assume, as the defendants predict, that the “floodgatеs” will open to future filings as a result of this decision. Such conjecture would not only be improper, it would be illusory at best as the Court cannot possibly predict the ramifications of an increase in asbestos filings on the im
y.
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds that defendants have not met their burden of establishing that they will suffer overwhelming hardship and inconvenience if forced to litigate the foreign asbestos cases in Delaware. The Court further finds that the “public interest” factors do not presently warrant dismissal of these cases. Accordingly, defendants’ motions to dismiss are DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Del.Code Ann. tit. 10, § 3104(1) (1999)("In any cause of action arising from any of the acts enumerated in this section, the court may provide for a stay or dismissal of the action if the court finds, in the interest of justice, that the action should be heard in another forum.”).
. Transaction Identification (“T.I.”) 7776388 at 12. T.I. is the number assigned to a docketed item filed through "LexisNexis® File & Serve” at http://www.lexisnexis.com/ ñleandserve.
. See generally Restatement (Second) of Conflicts §§ 6, 145, 146 (1971).
. With the much appreciated assistance of the defense coordinator, the Court has identified motions to dismiss for forum non conveniens filed by the following defendants: Certain-Teed Corp., Cummins, Inc., D & F Distributing, Inc., DaimlerChrysler Corp., Dana Corp., Ford Motor Company, General Motors Corp., Occidental Chemical Corp., Owens-Illinois, Inc., Raytheon Aircraft Corp., Reichold, Inc., and Yamaha Motor Corp.
.
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
.
See Gulf Oil,
.
Williams Gas Supply Co. v. Apache Corp.,
.
Mar-Land Indus. Contractors, Inc. v. Cаribbean Petroleum Ref., L.P.,
.
See e.g. Candlewood Timber Group v. Pan Am. Energy, LLC,
.
Mar-Land,
. Id.
.
Id.
(quoting
Ison,
.
Ison,
.
See Gen. Foods Corp. v. Cryo-Maid, Inc.,
.
Mar-Land,
.
Taylor,
.
Taylor,
.
Mar-Land,
.
Taylor,
. Id.
.
Mar-Land,
. Id.
.
Taylor,
. Id.
.
See Candlewood.,
. See T.I. 7776388 at 13-16, 27; T.I. 6666084 at 6.
.
Ison,
. Id. at 835.
. Id. at 842-843.
. See id. at 842.
.
Mar-Land,
.
Am. Home Prods. Corp. v. Adriatic Ins. Co.,
. See T.I. 6951505 at 15-17; T.I. 6666084 at 8-12.
.
Friedman v. Alcatel Alsthom,
.
See Taylor,
.
See Ison,
.
See Friedman,
.
Sequa Corp. v. Aetna Cas. and Sur. Co.,
.
Admiral,
.
Ison,
. See T.I. 6951505 at 17-18; T.I. 6666084 at 12-13.
.
Sequa,
.See Fres-Co,
.
Admiral,
.
Taylor,
.
Id. See also Ison,
. T.I. 6951505 at 19; T.I. 6666084 at 13-14.
. Id.
.
Fres-Co,
. T.I. 7776388 at 23.
. See Detenancour v. Abex Corp., Del.Super. Ct., C.A. No. 92C-12-89, at 2-3, Gebelein, J. (Mar. 9, 1993) (Stating that the non-applicability of Delaware law “weighs heavily in favor of dismissal.”). As discussed below, this factor, and the attendant difficulties of engaging in a choice of law analysis in each of the foreign cases, applying the foreign law, and potentially having to explain many varying principles of law to the same jury (dеpending on the circumstances), in the context of a "public interest” analysis, may justify dismissal of these actions at a later time if this process becomes too disruptive to the Court’s orderly administration of justice.
.
Taylor,
.
Sequa,
. T.I. 6951505 at 19-20.
. T.I. 6666084 at 14.
.
See Taylor,
.
See Mar-Land,
.
States Marine Lines v. Domingo,
.
See Taylor,
.
See id.; Admiral,
. T.I. 6951505 at 23-24.
.
Williams Natural Gas Co. v. Amoco Prod. Co.,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
.
.
Id.
at 508-509,
.
Ison,
.
Gulf Oil,
.
Taylor,
.
See Am. Home Products,
.
See Przywara v. State Pers. Comm'n of the State of Delaware,
