Plaintiff appeals as of right from the Wayne Circuit Court’s order declining jurisdiction with respect to plaintiff’s product liability claim against defendant MacGregor Athletic Products and severing the product liability claim from plaintiff’s medical malpractice claim against defendant Theodore Cole, M.D. We affirm.
Plaintiff is a resident of Ohio. In October, 1978, while playing high school football in Toledo, Ohio, he incurred an injury which rendered him quadriplegic. About ten weeks after his injury, plaintiff was treated in Ann Arbor at the University of Michigan Hospital by Dr. Cole.
Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that his injury was due to a defect in his football helmet, which was designed and manufactured by MacGregor. In an amended complaint, plaintiff included his claim against Dr. Cole.
MacGregor does business in Michigan and Wayne County, but its design and manufacture of football helmets is done elsewhere. MacGregor brought a motion to decline jurisdiction based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens. The court expressed its agreement with MacGregor, assuming MacGregor was the only party defendant, but denied the motion because Dr. Cole’s presence in the suit provided numerous contacts with Michigan. The court did, however, request briefing on the possibility of severing the claims.
The next time the parties appeared, Dr. Cole stated he had no opposition to MacGregor’s motion, and both MacGregor and plaintiff expressed *276 their views as to what prejudice would result from the court’s ruling. The court was not persuaded that the allegations of prejudice were sufficiently supported and denied MacGregor’s motion.
Some months later, MacGregor renewed its motion and focused on the possibility of a third-party action against Ohio school officials which, for jurisdictional reasons, would have to be in Ohio. The court held the matter in abeyance for thirty days to give the parties an opportunity to investigate further the availability of jurisdiction over the Ohio coaches and school board and the applicability of Ohio governmental immunity law to the Ohio school officials.
The parties once again returned to court and MacGregor stated that the attorneys for the school board and coaches had given notice that their clients would not submit to Michigan jurisdiction. The court was prepared to grant MacGregor’s motion but, nevertheless, gave plaintiff thirty days to make a "last-ditch effort” to investigate whether the Ohio school board and coaches would submit to the jurisdiction of the Michigan court.
Plaintiff returned to court with a hold-harmless agreement in return for which the Ohio coaches agreed to submit to Michigan jurisdiction. MacGregor, however, had a letter from the school board in Ohio refusing to consent to jurisdiction. The court granted plaintiff an additional two weeks to try and obtain a hold-harmless agreement for the school board.
When plaintiff returned with the agreement, the court denied MacGregor’s motion to sever and decline jurisdiction. MacGregor, however, raised the possibility that the medical malpractice claim against Dr. Cole was instituted solely to keep the product liability claim in Michigan. The court refused to consider MacGregor’s "naked suspi *277 cions”, but warned that, if it ever became convinced that such was plaintiffs purpose for suing Dr. Cole, it would be sympathetic to MacGregor’s motion.
MacGregor subsequently filed a motion for rehearing and also a motion for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether plaintiff had fraudulently joined Dr. Cole in order to retain jurisdiction. To counter a major difficulty that the court had with declining jurisdiction, MacGregor assured the court that, if severance were granted, MacGregor would not attempt at trial to put the blame on Dr. Cole for plaintiffs injuries. In support of its motion, MacGregor pointed to the "peculiar” facts that almost no discovery had taken place between plaintiff and Dr. Cole, counsel for Dr. Cole did not attend the various hearings held on MacGregor’s motions, Dr. Cole had not moved for a change of venue to Washtenaw County, and plaintiff was too willing to "cut a deal” with potential third-party defendants. Counsel for Dr. Cole denied an agreement with plaintiff, but acknowledged that plaintiff had previously requested that Dr. Cole file a third-party action against MacGregor solely on the basis of jurisdiction. At the time, Dr. Cole had declined to assist plaintiff but, subsequently, the doctor did file a crossclaim against MacGregor. After hearing the arguments of all the parties, the court concluded that plaintiff was adequately protected and that application of the factors inumerated in
Cray v General Motors Corp,
Plaintiff brought a motion to reconsider and argued that it was too late to sever since a trial date had already been set and he had acted in *278 reliance on the court’s earlier rulings in obtaining the hold-harmless agreements. The court denied this motion and rejected MacGregor’s efforts, then and later, to sever and decline jurisdiction regarding Dr. Cole’s crossclaim. The court also dismissed plaintiff’s crossclaim against MacGregor.
On appeal, plaintiff brings a three-part attack on the trial court’s decision to sever plaintiff’s product liability and medical malpractice actions. First, plaintiff argues that the court’s ruling is inconsistent with case law construing GCR 1963, 505.2, primarily
Osgerby v Tuscola Circuit Judge,
The exercise of the power to separate claims rests within the discretion of the trial court.
Detloff v The Taubman Co, Inc,
We are not persuaded by plaintiffs assertion that the trial court based its order to sever on its assessment of the merits of plaintiffs medical malpractice claim. Certainly, the court did refer to and consider statements about the weakness of plaintiffs claim; however, it clearly appears that the court used the statements to support its belief that plaintiff had included Dr. Cole in his suit solely for jurisdictional reasons. The court was focusing on plaintiffs motivation and did not use the perceived weakness of plaintiffs case as a criterion for severing the claims.
Furthermore, we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in shifting grounds and granting MacGregor’s motion after plaintiff had procured consent to Michigan jurisdiction from the potential third-party defendants in Ohio. MacGreg- or’s efforts to have the court sever the claims and decline jurisdiction because of the lack of compulsory process and jurisdiction over potential witnesses and third-party defendants was not deliberately calculated to mislead plaintiff.
Lothian v Detroit,
Finally, plaintiff argues that, even if the severance ruling was proper, the court should not have declined jurisdiction in favor of an Ohio forum. We disagree. The circuit court’s decision to decline jurisdiction was not an abuse of discretion. The court carefully balanced the competing interests and advantages in declining jurisdiction. As in
Anderson v Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co,
Affirmed.
