MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
INTRODUCTION
Defendant Cassiar Mining Corporation filed a motion with this Court on January 4, 1990. In its motion, Cassiar requested the Court, “pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2), to dismiss the complaints against it for lack of personal jurisdiction.” On February 2, 1990 this Court ordered filed Master Pretrial Order No. 1, consolidating cases Al-89-098 through Al-89-138, Al-89-145, and Al-89-146 into a master docket. After requesting and receiving additional time in which to reply to Cassiar’s motion, plaintiffs filed a memorandum in opposition to dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction on February 27, 1990. Cassiar filed an additional reply memorandum in support of its motion on April 18, 1990.
This Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441 (1990 Supp.), which provides for removal from state court for actions against a foreign state or political subdivision. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(d) affects all parties, and allows removal even if some of the defendants are of the same residence as the plaintiffs. Cassiar has claimed this Court lacks jurisdiction over its person, not that plaintiffs failed to serve it with notice of this litigation. The issue of personal jurisdiction has
*1090
already arisen and been ruled on in this case.
See Adolf v. A.P.I., Inc.,
FACTS
Defendant Cassiar is a Canadian corporation. Cassiar’s principal place of business is in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Cassiar’s sole interest since 1953 has been the mining of raw asbestos fibre in Canada. All the asbestos Cassiar mined was sold F.O.B. at shipping points in Canada. Cass-iar claims that it never shipped, sold, or delivered asbestos to any person or entity in North Dakota.
Plaintiffs do not claim that Cassiar’s allegations are untrue. Plaintiffs do assert, however, that Cassiar supplied vast amounts of raw asbestos fibres to various manufacturers of finished asbestos products, including Fibreboard Corporation; H.K. Porter Co., Inc.; Johns-Manville Sales Corp.; and Raybestos-Manhattan (Raymark). Plaintiffs assert that they or their decedents were exposed" to or used these manufacturers’, among others, finished asbestos products. Plaintiffs also claim that Cassiar was a participant in a civil conspiracy to deceive the general public about the health risks associated with asbestos.
Accompanying plaintiffs’ memorandum were several hundred pages of documents supporting their contentions. These were organized as Appendices “A” through “L.” While the documents are too numerous to list in detail, a brief summary of what this Court’s examination found will explain the basis for the jurisdictional ruling.
Appendix “A” contained a work history of every plaintiff. This work history included all dates known where a given plaintiff worked with asbestos, and the nature of the jobs performed. The work history also noted the specific asbestos products with which that plaintiff remembers having worked.
Appendix “B” was made up of copies of the answers of co-defendants Raymark, Fi-breboard Corporation, and H.K. Porter to plaintiffs’ interrogatories. Pertinent factual information contained in these includes products these defendants manufactured and lists of suppliers from whom they purchased raw asbestos. The source of asbestos includes defendant Cassiar. The manufacturers also listed those asbestos products they sold to North Dakota businesses and their activities in North Dakota.
Appendix “C” consisted of a copy of the minutes of the Asbestos Textile Institute (A.T.I.) for a meeting held June 4 to 7, 1956. Among the members listed attending were Cassiar, Johns-Manville Corp. of Canada, Johns-Manville Corp., Raybestos-Manhattan, and Southern Asbestos Co. (later H.K. Porter). At this meeting the Air Hygiene Committee discussed links between cancer, asbestosis, and asbestos fi-bres and dust. The Air Hygiene Committee discussed a copy of a report it had commissioned from the Industrial Hygiene Foundation regarding links between asbestos and cancer.
Appendix “D” is also a copy of A.T.I. minutes, these dated June 12, 1970. Cass-iar is again in attendance, as are Canadian Johns-Manville; Lake Asbestos of Quebec, Ltd. (LAQ); Garlock, Inc.; H.K. Porter; and Raybestos-Manhattan. A company officer from Cassiar gave a talk about a new asbestos mine, which concluded with a film showing how its asbestos was shipped from Vancouver to “25 countries on five continents.” The A.T.I. discussed government programs designed to punish those who misrepresent the safety of goods manufac *1091 tured and sold, new safety requirements concerning asbestos, and new booklets the A.T.I. was considering publishing about asbestos.
Appendix “E” is A.T.I. minutes from October 8, 1971. Cassiar is again in attendance. Publication of A.T.I. booklets about asbestos was discussed, as were potential problems with new O.S.H.A. safety requirements.
Appendix “F” is a copy of an order of this Court holding that circumstantial evidence can be used to show conspiracy, and that conspiracy exists as a cause of action in North Dakota. Appendix “G” is a copy of an order from the British Columbia Court of Appeals allowing a conspiracy cause of action. Appendix “H” is a copy of a 1988 opinion by Judge Devitt denying a motion by an asbestos defendant for summary judgment under a theory of conspiracy under Minnesota law. Appendices “I,” “J,” and “K” are also federal cases refusing to grant defense motions for summary judgment on the issue of civil conspiracy.
Appendix “L” contains portions of Barry I.Castleman’s book, Asbestos: Medical and Legal Aspects (2d ed. 1986). In his book, Castleman cites certain portions of A.T.I. minutes that he claims show an agreement on the part of A.T.I. members to conceal the true risks of asbestos from the general public. The A.T.I. meeting minutes cited include those submitted by plaintiffs in appendices “C,” “D,” and “E.”
Accompanying its response brief, defendant Cassiar filed several appendices of its own. These included two North Dakota district court cases dismissing out-of-state asbestos mines for want of personal jurisdiction, two District of Columbia Superior Court cases doing the same, and copies of the minutes of two separate A.T.I. meetings. Also submitted was an affidavit of David J. Elgee, corporate counsel of Cass-iar. Elgee states that while Cassiar was a member of the A.T.I., it denies involvement in a conspiracy to suppress the potential hazards of asbestos from the general public.
The material submitted by plaintiffs in their appendices “A” and “B” are almost identical to that submitted by co-defendant and asbestos mine operator LAQ.
See Adolf v. A.P.I., Inc.,
ISSUES
I. Personal jurisdiction considerations.
A. Background.
B. Eighth Circuit treatment.
II. Civil Conspiracy.
A. Theories of recovery.
B. Elements of conspiracy.
III. Conspirator jurisdiction.
A. Conspirator theory of personal jurisdiction.
B. Necessity of a prima facie case.
IV. Consequences for North Dakota asbestos litigation.
DISCUSSION
I. Personal jurisdiction considerations.
A court must have jurisdiction over a defendant's person, property, or the
res
that is the subject of the suit. C. Wright & A. Miller, 4
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1063 (1987). Absent this type of jurisdiction, a federal court may not proceed to a valid judgment. In the past, examinations of personal jurisdiction concentrated on a defendant’s physical pres
*1092
ence within a particular court’s territorial jurisdiction.
Id.
In recent years, this has changed. Today, a plaintiff must show that a defendant has sufficient contacts with the forum so that plaintiff’s suit against the defendant in that locale does not offend traditional notions of “fair play and substantial justice.”
Id.
(citing
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
A. Background.
Plaintiffs in the instant case are North Dakota residents, who claim that they were injured by exposure to asbestos products either through their jobs, or through the occupational exposure of their loved ones. Defendant Cassiar mines and sells raw asbestos fibres to manufacturers. Cassiar has neither sold products in North Dakota nor conducted any other business here itself. At common law, if defendants’ persons or lands were not within the territory of a court’s jurisdiction, that court could not exercise jurisdiction over those defendants’ persons. C. Wright & A. Miller, 4 Federal Practice and Procedure § 1064 (1987). A necessary prerequisite to the validity of a judgment was a court’s actual physical power over the defendant. Id. The territorial concept of personal jurisdiction emerged from this. Id. Unless a defendant was actually served with process within a court's territory or consented to the court's jurisdiction, it became the rule that that defendant could not be subjected to the jurisdiction of the court. Id.
Not surprisingly, many states became dissatisfied with such a limited means of exerting jurisdiction over out-of-state defendants. As society had become more complex, transportation and communication greatly improved. Id. § 1065. It became common to have a person or corporation present or working in a state for a period of time, and then leave the jurisdiction entirely. As the mobility of persons increased, the inadequacy of limiting personal jurisdiction to those situations in which an individual defendant could be personally served grew. State legislatures, seeking a solution that would allow their citizens the ability to redress their perceived wrongs in a convenient forum, passed “long-arm” statutes to achieve jurisdiction over out-of-state defendants.
Long-arm statutes first were used to allow a state’s residents to assert jurisdiction over non-resident motorists who were involved in an accident within that state. Id. § 1068. As time passed, the usefulness of such statutes became apparent, and they were drafted in increasingly broad language. Statutes were drafted that extended jurisdiction over all persons conducting business within a state, and even to those who committed an act outside the jurisdiction that somehow had consequences within it. Id. North Dakota’s long-arm statute reads in part,
RULE 4-PERSONS SUBJECT TO JURISDICTION — PROCESS—SERVICE
(b) Jurisdiction of person
(2) Personal jurisdiction is based upon contacts. A court of this state may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person who acts directly or by an agent as to any claim for relief arising from the person’s having such contact with this state that the exercise of personal jurisdiction over him does not offend against traditional notions of justice or fair play or the due process of law, under one or more of the following circumstances:
(A) Transacting any business in this state;
(B) Contracting to supply or supplying service, goods or other things to this state; [or]
(C) Committing a tort within or without this state causing injury to another person or property within this state.
Rule 4(b)(2) North Dakota R.Civ.P. The North Dakota Supreme Court has ruled that Rule 4 is to be exercised “to the fullest extent permitted by due process.”
Hust v.
*1093
Northern Log, Inc.,
The due process clause of the United States Constitution protects an individual’s liberty interest in not being subject to the binding judgments of a forum with which he has established no meaningful “contacts, ties or relations.”
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
Before a forum can assert specific jurisdiction over an out-of-state defendant who has not consented to suit there, it must ensure that the “fair warning” requirement is satisfied. Id. The fair warning requirement is satisfied if the forum determines that two factors exist. First, the forum must decide that the defendant has “purposefully directed” his or her activities at residents of the forum. Id. Second, the litigation before the forum must “arise out of or relate to” those activities. Id. These factors, and indeed the entire personal jurisdiction examination, must be applied to the facts in a given case.
The Supreme Court has applied the fair warning requirement to find that a forum state does not exceed its powers under the due process clause when asserting personal jurisdiction over a manufacturer that delivers its products into the stream of commerce with the expectation that they will be purchased by consumers in the forum state and those products subsequently injure forum consumers.
Id.
at 472-73,
The difference between the degree to which a supplier and a manufacturer purposely direct their activities can be viewed as the key difference in the treatment of them. A forum may legitimately exercise personal jurisdiction over non-residents who purposefully direct activities toward forum residents.
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
The key to determining whether personal jurisdiction exists over a given defendant is to examine its “minimum contacts” in the forum state.
Id.
at 474,
B. Eighth Circuit Treatment.
When determining the existence of minimum contacts, the Eighth Circuit requires the consideration of five factors:
1) The nature and quality of contacts with the forum state;
2) The quantity of these contacts;
3) The relationship between the contacts and cause of action;
4) The interest of the forum state; and
5) The convenience of the parties.
Wines v. Lake Havasu Boat Mfg., Inc.,
In the Eighth Circuit, a plaintiff seeking to bring a defendant into court under a long-arm statute must state sufficient facts to support a reasonable inference that such defendant can be subjected to jurisdiction within the state.
See Block Indus, v. D.H.J. Indus., Inc.,
Application of any long-arm statute requires considerations of convenience, fairness, and the avoidance of harassment.
Id.
Long-arm personal jurisdiction
cannot
be acquired against multiple third-party supplier defendants upon the mere possibility that one or more of them may have contributed to the defect or negligence which is the subject of the suit.
Id.
Personal jurisdiction can properly be asserted over a corporation not physically present in the forum state if another with sufficient minimum contacts is acting as its alter ego.
See Lakota Girl Scout Council, Inc. v. Havey Fund-Rais. Man., Inc.,
A federal district court may assert jurisdiction over a corporation when it has jurisdiction over its dominant shareholder by using the court’s equitable power to pierce the corporate veil. Id. at 638. Similarly, long-arm derivative jurisdiction over a foreign parent corporation has been allowed where a subsidiary corporation had minimum contacts with the forum state. Id. Such a decision was based on the control and domination the foreign parent corporation exercised over its resident subsidiary. Id. The Eighth Circuit has observed that,
[a] corporation is not doing business in a state merely by the presence of its wholly owned subsidiary. However, the *1095 fiction of corporate entity may be disregarded, where one corporation is so organized and controlled and its affairs are so conducted that it is, in fact, a mere instrumentality or adjunct of another corporation. Even a non-owned corporation may act as agent for another corporation. No all embracing rule has been laid down under which the relationship between two corporations may be determined. The circumstances in each case must be examined to determine whether a corporation through the activities of another corporation has subjected itself to jurisdiction in a state under its long arm statute.
Id. at 637. (Emphasis added.) Personal jurisdiction can thus be properly asserted over a corporation if another is acting as its alter ego, even if that alter ego is another corporation.
On the basis of Cassiar’s own minimum contacts with North Dakota, this Court could not assert personal jurisdiction over it. Other members of the A.T.I. conducted extensive business in North Dakota. If their action can be imputed to Cassiar, personal jurisdiction could properly be maintained over it. This Court must therefore examine North Dakota’s civil conspiracy law to determine if the A.T.I. or its members have acted in such a way as to become the alter ego of defendant Cassiar.
II. Civil conspiracy.
Many advantages exist for a plaintiff who can establish the existence of a civil conspiracy. Co-conspirators share vicarious liability for concerted activity. W. Prosser, The Law of Torts § 46, p. 322 (5th ed. 1984). All who commonly plan to commit a tortious act, take part in it, or further it by cooperation, or who lend aid or encouragement to the wrongdoer, or who ratify and adopt the wrongdoer’s acts done for their benefit, are equally liable. Id. Each conspirator is also liable for the acts of the others. Id. Before further discussion of just what actions may be imputed to a co-conspirator, this Court must determine how North Dakota law governs plaintiff’s claims.
A civil conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons to accomplish by some concerted action some criminal or unlawful purpose, or some lawful purpose by criminal or unlawful means, to the injury of another. 16 Am.Jur.2d, Conspiracy § 49 (1979). A great deal of discussion has taken place concerning whether conspiracy is to be regarded as a separate tort in itself. W. Prosser, The Law of Torts § 46, p. 324 (5th ed. 1984). It has been expressed that the element of combination in certain types of conduct adds such a power of coercion or undue influence that it makes unlawful acts which one person alone could legitimately do. Id. The better view, however, maintains that mere agreement to do a wrongful act can never alone be a tort, whether or not it may be a crime. Id. One of the parties must commit some act in pursuance of the agreement that is itself a tort for civil conspiracy to exist. Id. “The gist of the action is not the conspiracy charged, but the tort working damage to the plaintiff.” Id.
A. Theories of recovery.
North Dakota recognizes the theory of civil conspiracy.
See Hellman v. Thiele,
9-10-02. Deceit — Definition. A deceit within the meaning of section 9-10-03 is:
*1096 1. The suggestion as a fact of that which is not true by one who does not believe it to be true;
2. The assertion as a fact of that which is not true by one who has no reasonable ground for believing it true;
3. The suppression of a fact by one who is bound to disclose it, or who gives information of other facts which are likely to mislead for want of communication of that fact; or
4. A promise made without any intention of performing.
N.D.C.C. § 9-10-02 (1989 Supp.). The tort plaintiffs claim Cassiar committed is best labeled deceit.
While plaintiffs also claim that false facts relating to the safety of asbestos were circulated, their main contention is that the A.T.I. suppressed knowledge of the dangers of asbestos. In North Dakota, parties are liable for nondisclosure only if they had a duty to disclose the true facts.
Hellman v. Thiele,
In North Dakota a manufacturer of goods has a duty to use reasonable care in designing its products to protect users against unreasonable risks of harm while putting the product to any foreseeable use.
Johnson v. American Motors Corp.,
B. Elements of conspiracy.
Plaintiffs claim that by conspiring together, Cassiar and the other A.T.I. members served as the agents and alter egos of each other. Before such a determination can be made, the elements of civil conspiracy must be examined to see whether one existed. The elements of civil conspiracy have been defined as:
1) Two or more persons, and for this purpose a corporation is a person;
2) An object to be accomplished;
3) A meeting of minds on the object or course of action;
4) One or more unlawful or overt acts; and
5) Damages as the proximate result thereof.
Zelinger v. Uvalde Rock Asphalt Co.,
The Asbestos Textile Institute was a trade organization for the manufacturers of asbestos products. Plaintiffs have submitted extensive affidavits in support of *1097 their opposition to defendant Cassiar’s motion for dismissal for want of personal jurisdiction. Included in these are the minutes of several of the A.T.I.’s committee meetings held between 1956 and 1971. These documents tend to show that the A.T.I.’s members were aware of the risks associated with asbestos products, and that they were concerned about unfavorable publicity if these risks became widely known. The minutes also tend to show that the A.T.I. refused to make such risks more widely known by declining to give warnings to the public either on their products or in their trade booklets.
Listed with Cassiar as alleged members of the conspiracy are the members of A.T.I., including Raymark, Fibreboard Corporation, and H.K. Porter Co. The first element, that there be two or more persons, is therefore satisfied. The object to be accomplished by the A.T.I. members was the promotion of asbestos products and the continued supply of adequate quantities of raw asbestos. These goals satisfy the second element that a common object to be accomplished exist.
The A.T.I. members also agreed not to fund studies to investigate reports that asbestos was dangerous. Advised that asbestos had been linked with cancer, the A.T.I. members feared further investigation would “stir up a hornet’s nest and put the whole industry under suspicion.” This Court finds that such group decisions tend to show a meeting of the minds and an agreement to accomplish the A.T.I.’s goal of suppressing information concerning the knowledge of the health risks of asbestos, thereby satisfying the third element. To satisfy the third element of civil conspiracy, all that is required is that there be a tacit understanding. W. Prosser, The Law of Torts § 46, p. 323 (5th ed. 1984). Express agreement is not necessary. Id.
As stated above, under North Dakota law manufacturers have an affirmative duty to warn consumers of the dangers and risks of their products.
Johnson v. American Motors Corp.,
III. Conspirator jurisdiction.
A. Conspirator theory of personal jurisdiction.
Plaintiffs ask this Court'to assert personal jurisdiction over defendant Cassiar. Plaintiffs suggest that such an assertion could properly be made using the conspirator theory of personal jurisdiction. Defendant Cassiar maintains that the Eighth Circuit has not yet recognized this theory of asserting personal jurisdiction and that its previous rulings suggest the conspirator theory would be rejected. An examination of the law and the facts on this issue, however, suggest that this is not necessarily the case.
The theory of conspirator jurisdiction is, despite its exotic name, relatively simple. It allows a court to attribute the acts of a defendant to his co-conspirators for jurisdictional purposes if the plaintiff makes a prima facie showing of conspiracy.
Gudaitis v. Adomonis,
Plaintiffs have presented a prima facie case showing that Cassiar was involved in a conspiracy with the other A.T.I. members to suppress the health risks of asbestos. Other members of the A.T.I., including Fi-breboard Corporation, H.K. Porter, and Raymark, actively sold asbestos containing products in North Dakota. These products were known by the A.T.I. to be potentially dangerous to the general public. The products did not bear the warnings required by North Dakota law. Other research concerning the dangers of asbestos was concealed from the public.
The Eighth Circuit's five-part test for the existence of minimum contacts requires consideration of the facts of each case.
See Wines v. Lake Havasu Boat Mfg., Inc.,
Cassiar was a member of the A.T.I. from 1954 until the A.T.I.’s dissolution in 1975. Plaintiffs worked during this period as pipefitters, boilermakers, millwrights, insulation workers, and ironworkers. The plaintiffs claim their work exposed them to asbestos and asbestos-containing products mined and manufactured by the A.T.I. members. Several family members claim they were exposed to asbestos by their family member’s asbestos-contaminated clothing. The plaintiffs involved in this litigation are residents of North Dakota, most of whom also suffered their alleged injuries within its borders. The interest of the forum state in both providing a remedy for its residents and the convenience of the parties is, therefore, high.
Other courts have used the conspirator theory to assert personal jurisdiction over an out-of-state defendant.
See e.g., Wegerer v. First Commodity Corp. of Boston,
As stated above, the issue of whether personal jurisdiction exists ultimately comes down to a question of fairness. Is it fair to assert personal jurisdiction over one who conspired to deprive forum residents of information necessary to protect themselves from a dangerous product? Is it fair to hold one responsible for a co-conspirator's actions that aid the conspiracy within the forum state? It is fair. Consequently, this Court finds it has personal jurisdiction over defendant Cassiar.
B. Necessity of a prima facie case.
Plaintiffs in the present case were required to present prima facie evidence showing that a civil conspiracy existed. “Prima facie evidence” is that which if unexplained or uncontradicted is sufficient in a jury case can carry a case to the jury and to sustain a verdict in favor of the issue it supports. 29 Am.Jur.2d, Evidence § 5 (1967). Prima facie evidence may, of course, be contradicted by other evidence. Id. A jury will be the ultimate trier of fact in this case. Any decision by this Court concerning the adequacy of evidence refers only to the satisfaction of the elements of a certain claim, and should not be interpreted *1099 as an opinion as to the ultimate outcome of this case.
IV. Consequences for North Dakota asbestos litigation.
Recently, this Court held that asserting jurisdiction over out-of-state asbestos suppliers who had no contacts with North Dakota would violate the due process clause.
See Adolf v. A.P.I., Inc.,
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs have made a prima facie showing that defendant Cassiar participated in a civil conspiracy to deceive the public of the dangers of asbestos. North Dakota’s long-arm statute is designed to exert jurisdiction over those who commit torts, within or without the state, that cause injury to persons or property within the state. Such a statute is constitutional because it is based upon contacts within North Dakota. A co-conspirator is liable for the acts of the other members in the conspiracy, including those which establish jurisdiction.
THEREFORE IT IS ORDERED:
1) THAT DEFENDANT CASSIAR’S MOTION ASKING THE COURT “PURSUANT TO FED.R.CIV.P. 12(b)(2), TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINTS AGAINST IT FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION” IS DENIED.
2) THAT DEFENDANT CASSIAR’S REQUEST FOR ORAL ARGUMENT IS DENIED.
Notes
. Cassiar submits another case involving Lavonne Matthews, one of the plaintiffs in the present case. This case was Matthews v. Asbestos Corporation of America, et al., Civil No. 87-2028, slip op. East Central Judicial District for Cass County (Jan. 3, 1990). In his order, Judge LeClerc dismissed against Ms. Matthews without prejudice for lack of personal jurisdiction. Under ordinary principles of comity, I would use res judicata to preclude Ms. Matthew’s claim here, since there is no evidence of an appeal. Since there is no showing that the claim of conspirator jurisdiction was raised before Judge LeClerc, and the dismissal was without prejudice, I must consider the new Matthews claim.
. For purposes of this opinion, the term "manufacturer" shall apply to those who place a finished product into the stream of commerce. A manufacturer expects its products to come into the hands of the public in virtually the same form they were in when they left the manufacturer’s hands. A "supplier" will identify one who sells a manufacturer the commodities necessary to make its products.
. Professor Shapo’s treatise is an excellent starting place for research in the area of complex products liability litigation. It offers a clear examination of many of the issues which are often confused in such cases. Shapo notes, for example, the necessity of "scienter” in fraud or deceit cases. Id. Some courts have approved findings of fraud or deceit where the seller or promoter had no knowledge their assertions were false. Id. This view is properly referred to as Shapo as "Draconian” because of its characterization of good faith as fraud. Id. Where an alleged civil conspiracy is grounded in deceit or fraud, the court must be vigilant in the requirement of scienter.
