OPINION
Case Summary
Plaintiffs Linda Keesling, Harold and Priscilla Lephart, Hagar Anderson, James
Issues
We restate Appellants' issues as follows:
I. Whether the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Winstead on the issue of personal jurisdiction; and
Whether the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Leone on the issue of personal jurisdiction.
Facts and Procedural History 1
A more detailed recitation of the facts giving rise to this appeal may be found in a companion case we decide today, Keesling v. Beegle, No. 18A04-0501-CV-10,
in 1986, Paul Rubera founded Alpha Tel-com, Inc. ("Alpha"), an Oregon company that sold, installed, and maintained telephones and business systems. S.E.C. v. Alpha Telcom, Inc.,187 F.Supp.2d 1250 , 1254 (D.0r.2002). In 1997, Charles Tummino approached Rubera and suggested selling "payphones to individuals who would then enter into a service agreement with Alpha to install, service, and maintain the payphones." Id. Rub-era consulted Alpha's attorney, Dan Lacy, who issued an opinion letter concluding that the arrangement would not constitute the sale of a security. Lacy sought an opinion from Florida attorney James Leone, who reached the same conclusion.
Id., at 982. Leone understood that his legal opinion "[wlas to be used to give assurance to Alpha Telcom that they were engaged in a legal business. It was issued to Paul Rubera, he specifically wanted his butt covered, you know, for eriminal purposes as well as civil purposes...." Appellants' App. at 456 (Leone deposition). Leone's opinion addressed whether payphone sales constituted the sale of a security under the laws of Florida, Oregon, and the Eleventh and Ninth Circuits. Id. at 478.
In October 1998, American Telecommunications Company, Inc. ("ATC"), was created to market and sell the payphone program to investors.
2
Leone allowed his opinion letter to be included in the manual provided to payphone program sales representatives. At the request of Ross Ram-bach,
At all relevant times, Winstead was either a vice president or general manager of Alpha and a resident of either Oregon, Utah, or Colorado. According to Win-stead, "[the sale of the payphone program was separate and distinct from the installation, service, and maintenance of equipment[,]" for which he was responsible. Appellants' App. at 412 (supplemental affidavit). Payphone program sales representatives gave customers several documents to sign, including an Alpha telephone services agreement and an ATC telephone equipment purchase agreement. The telephone services agreement had several exhibits, including a telephone equipment list, a buyback election form, and monthly fees and disclosure forms. After the customer signed the documents, the sales representative mailed them to the home office in Oregon. Alpha then sent the customer a copy of the telephone services agreement bearing Winstead's stamped signature. ATC sent the customer a payphone purchase confirmation bearing Winstead's stamped signature as general manager. 6
In 2000, as an employee of Alpha, Win-stead traveled to Indiana to visit the facilities of Opticom, Inc., and to discuss the possible use of Opticom as an operator service provider for Alpha's telephone operations. In May 2001, the Indiana secretary of state issued a cease and desist order against Alpha, ATC, Rubera, Win-stead, and others, instructing them to re
'In February 2002, several Appellants filed suit against Winstead and others (not including Alpha, which filed for bankruptcy, or Opticom), alleging violations of the Indiana Securities Act and the Indiana Corrupt Business Influence Act (RICO), as well as theft, conversion, and common law fraud. Winstead moved to dismiss the complaint. Appellants added Leone as a defendant in their first amended complaint in August 2002. Leone unsuccessfully sought removal to federal court and dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction. In March 2003, Appellants filed a second amended complaint, which Winstead and Leone unsuccessfully sought to dismiss. In December 2003, Appellants filed a third amended complaint, which Winstead answered and Leone unsuccessfully sought to dismiss. In May 2004, Appellants filed a fourth amended complaint, which both Winstead and Leone unsuccessfully sought to dismiss. In May 2005, Appellants, Win-stead, and Leone all filed motions for summary judgment addressing the issue of personal jurisdiction. 7 Leone also requested that he be awarded attorney's fees and expenses and that Appellants' counsel be held in contempt. On August 5, 2005, the trial court issued orders granting summary judgment in favor of Winstead and Leone and denying Appellants' summary judgment motion. The trial court also denied Leone's request for fees, expenses, and contempt. Leone filed a motion to correct error as to this ruling, which the trial court denied. 8 On March 3, 2006, the trial court certified its August 2005 orders as final appealable judgments pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 56(C).
Discussion and Decision
General Considerations/Standard of Review
"Personal jurisdiction is the court's power to bring a person into its adjudicative process and render a valid judgment over a person." Brockman v. Kravic,
Here, the trial court resolved the issue of personal jurisdiction via the parties' motions for summary judgment.
On appeal, the standard of review of a summary judgment motion is the same as that used in the trial court: summary judgment is appropriate only where the evidence shows there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Ind.Trial Rule 56(C). All facts and reasonable inferences drawn from those facts are construed in favor of the non-moving party. The review of a summary judgment motion is limited to those materials designated to the trial court. T.R. 56(H). We must carefully review decisions on summary judgment motions to ensure that the parties were not improperly denied their day in court.
Tom-Wat, Inc. v. Fink,
As our supreme court explained in Anthem,
Any discussion of personal jurisdiction in Indiana must first start with Trial Rule 44(A), Indiana's equivalent of a "long-arm statute." This trial rule provides a limit on the exercise of jurisdiction over nonresident defendants. There are two types of long-arm statutes: (1) those which direct the court to exercise jurisdiction to the extent allowed by the United States and state constitutions and (2) "enumerated act" statutes, which direct the court to assert jurisdiction over defendants who commit any act listed in the statute in the state.
The modern approach to personal jurisdiction was established in Int'l Shoe Co. v. Washington,326 U.S. 810 ,66 S.Ct. 154 ,90 L.Ed. 95 (1945), and Hanson v. Denekla,357 U.S. 235 , T8 S.Ct. 1228,2 L.Ed.2d 1288 (1958). In International Shoe, the United States Supreme Court explained that a person must have certain minimum contacts with the forum such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. The existence of personal jurisdiction depends on the nature and quality of the contacts with the forum, not a mechanical test. In Hanson, the Supreme Court added the requirement that the defendant's contacts consist of some action by which the defendant purposefully avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state, thus invoking the benefits and protections of its laws. Only the purposeful acts of the defendant, not the acts of the plaintiff or any third parties, satisfy this requirement.
Thus, there is a two-part test to determine whether personal jurisdiction exists under the Due Process Clause. First, courts must look at the contacts between the defendant and the forum state to determine if they are sufficient to establish that the defendant could reasonably anticipate being haled into court there. If the contacts are sufficient, then the court must evaluate whether the exercise of personal jurisdiction offends traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice by weighing a variety of interests.
Contacts are any acts physically performed in the forum state or acts performed outside the forum state that have an effect within the forum. There are two types of contacts that may be sufficient to establish jurisdiction: (1) the defendant's contacts with the forum state that are unrelated to the basis of the lawsuit, and (2) the defendant's contacts that are related to the subject matter of the lawsuit. Those concepts have come to be known as general and specific personal jurisdiction, respectively.
General personal jurisdiction refers to the ability to be sued for any claim in a state. In order to establish general personal jurisdiction, the court must find continuous and systematic contacts with the forum state such that the defendant could reasonably foresee being haled into court in that state for any matter. General personal jurisdiction may exist if the contacts are substantial, continuous, and systematic. The contacts required for general personal jurisdiction are greater than those needed to establish specific personal jurisdiction.
Specific personal jurisdiction is jurisdiction that stems from the defendant's having certain minimum contacts with the forum state so that the court may hear a case whose issues arise from those minimum contacts. Under this theory, the defendant's isolated contacts with a state that are not enough to establish general personal jurisdiction may be sufficient to allow jurisdiction over any incidents related to those contacts. A single contact with a forum state may be enough to establish specific personal jurisdiction if it creates a substantial connection with the forum state and the suit is based on that connection. However, the act must be purposeful, not random or attenuated or the unilateral activity of another party or a third person.
The analysis of the contacts for specific personal jurisdiction is fact-specific and determined on a case-by-case basis. Factors to consider when evaluating the defendant's contacts with the forum state are: (1) whether the claim arises from the defendant's forum contacts; (2) the overall contacts of the defendant or its agent with the forum state; (8) the foreseeability of being haled into court in that state; (4) who initiated the contacts; and (5) whether the defendant expected or encouraged contacts with the state.
Onee contacts sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction, be it general or specific, are found, the court must further decide whether asserting personal jurisdiction over the defendant offends traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. In doing so, we balance a number of factors to determine whether the assertion of jurisdiction is reasonable and fair. They are: (1) the burden on the defendant; (2) the forum State's interest in adjudicating the dispute; (8) the plaintiff's interest in obtaining convenient and effective relief; (4) the interstate judicial system's interest in obtaining the most efficient resolution of controversies; and (5) the shared interest of the several States in furthering fundamental substantive social policies. The fairness inquiry is separate from the contacts question and may be used to defeat jurisdiction even if the defendant has sufficient contacts with the forum state. After the plaintiff establishes that there are minimum contacts, the defendant then carries the burden of proving that asserting jurisdiction is unfair and unreasonable. To determine if the exercise of personal jurisdiction is reasonable in a particular case, we may examine the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation, the principles of interstate federalism, and the existence of an alternative forum to hear the dispute.
Id. at 1255-57 (some citations omitted). We now address the issue of personal jurisdiction with respect to each appellee.
I. Winstead
Both parties agree that we are concerned here with specific personal jurisdiction, in that Winstead's contacts with Indiana are insufficient to establish general personal jurisdiction. The trial court made the following findings in support of its conclusion that Winstead did not have sufficient minimum contacts with Indiana for purposes of specific personal jurisdiction:
(a) does the claim arise from Win-stead's contacts with Indiana? No-the telephones were already sold; Win-stead's "contacts," such as they were, consisted of form maintenance and service contracts on which someone else stamped his signature and then mailed the contract to the customer. He did not perform these activities personally.
(b) Winstead's overall contacts with Indiana; very limited to none; the contracts noted in the finding above, and one visit to Indiana to visit Opticom, a business Alpha was thinking about hiring to assist with phone maintenance.
(ec) whether Winstead expected or encouraged contacts with Indiana; Plaintiffs presented no evidence that Winstead ever initiated or encouraged contact with Indiana.
(d) foreseeability for suit in Indiana; Plaintiffs presented no evidence bearing on foreseeability.
Appellants' App. at 348-49.
Appellants do not specifically challenge these findings, but instead contend that "Winstead is subject to jurisdiction because he is the person who, on behalf of Alpha and ATC, entered into the contracts relating to the payphone program with [Appellants]." Appellants' Br. at 14. In so contending, Appellants rely on Woodmar Coin Center, Inc. v. Owen,
The parties conducted substantial negotiations during several phone calls, each party initiating some of the calls. They agreed on the price of the coins, the method by which Owen was to inspect the coins, and the manner of payment. When the coins were shipped to Owens's bank for inspection, as agreed, Owen decided the coins were not in as good condition as represented and sent them back to Woodmar.
Id. at 619. Woodmar sued Owen for breach of contract in Indiana. We determined that the trial court erred in concluding that it did not have personal jurisdiction over Owen, who "purposely availed himself of the benefits and responsibilities of doing business in this State by soliciting, negotiating and forming a contract with an Indiana resident." Id. at 621.
In this case, however, Winstead did not solicit or negotiate contracts with Appellants, nor did he execute the contracts in Indiana. As such, the fact that the contracts bear Winstead's stamped signature is not as significant as Appellants would have us believe. 12 Cf. Baseball Card World, Inc. v. Pannette, 588 N.BE.2d 758, 755 (Ind.Ct.App.1991) (affirming dismissal of claim against Pennsylvania defendant for lack of personal jurisdiction where "the parties did not commence their relationship in Indiana; [the defendant] has not personally appeared or resided in Indiana; the contract which forms the basis for the suit was not executed in Indiana; no contract negotiations occurred in Indiana; and [the defendant] does not maintain any offices or other businesses in Indiana."), trans. denied (1992).
Appellants also rely on McGee v. International Life Insurance Co.,
Winstead points out, however, that he did not solicit Appellants' business in Indiana. Moreover, Appellants did not send their money to or receive any money from Winstead personally, but rather his employer, Alpha. Appellants' attempts to blur the distinction between Winstead and Alpha for purposes of personal jurisdiction are unpersuasive and unavailing. See Calder v. Jones,
Turning now to the factors we consider in evaluating Winstead's contacts with Indiana, see Brockman,
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the designated evidence establishes that Winstead did not purposely avail himself of the privilege of conducting activities within Indiana and could not reasonably have anticipated being haled into court here. See Brockman,
II. Leone
The trial court made the following findings in support of its conclusion that Leone did not have sufficient minimum contacts with Indiana for purposes of specific personal jurisdiction:
16. In summary, the facts most favorable to finding jurisdiction are that Leone wrote his opinion letter to Paul Rubera, mailed it to Oregon and Nevada, and knew that Rubera and his entities placed the letter in Sales Manuals given to sales agents all over the United States.
17. Applying these facts to the "contacts test" recited ... above, the Court finds as follows:
(a) does the claim arise from Leone's contacts with Indiana? No-Leone had no direct contact with Indiana, just indirect contact because the [opinion] letter he sent to Nevada and Oregon found its way into a Sales Manual that Indiana sales agents used.
(b) Leone's overall contacts with Indiana; very limited to none; just the letter noted in the findings above, which he did not send to anyone in Indiana.
(c) whether Leone expected or encouraged contacts with Indiana; Plaintiffs presented no evidence that Leone ever encouraged contact with Indiana, and the only evidence was that Leone knew the letter was in the Sales Manual and may have had reason to know that sales were being made in Indiana.
(d) foreseeability for suit in Indiana; Plaintiffs presented no evidence bearing on foreseeability. Under Plaintiffs' theory, apparently Leone should have expected suits in all fifty states due to this one letter being mailed to Oregon and Nevada.
Appellants' App. at 355-56.
In sum, Leone's contacts with Indiana are even more indirect and attenuated than Winstead's. Appellants contend that Leone failed to carry his burden of disproving personal jurisdiction by a preponderance of the evidence. 17 Although Leone, unlike Winstead, did not "attempt to negate travel, correspondence, telephone calls, or other contacts with Indianal,]" Appellants' Br. at 26, the fact remains that Appellants' fourth amended complaint does not assert that Leone had any such contacts with Indiana. Leone need not prove the negative of facts that Appellants did not allege in the first place.
The evidence designated on summary judgment, which the trial court construed in Appellants' favor, establishes that Leone did not know that payphone program sales representatives were showing his opinion letter-which did not address the legality of the payphone program under Indiana law-to customers in general and to Appellants in particular.
18
Cf. Wallace v. Frank,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In their brief, Appellants include numerous incidental facts that have no bearing on the issue of personal jurisdiction. We remind Appellants' counsel that an appellant's statement of facts must "describe the facts relevant to the issues presented for review[.]" Ind. Appellate Rule 46(A)(6).
. According to Appellants' fourth amended complaint, ATC was a wholly owned subsidiary of Alpha until July 2000, when its shares were transferred to Rubera, who later sold thema. Appellants' App. at 113. Appellants allege that the payphone program was a pyramid or Ponzi scheme, but the district court in Alpha Telcom attributed Alpha's financial woes to "bad advice, poor management," the acquisition of worthless or nonexistent payphone sites by one of Ross Rambach and Mark Kennison's enterprises, and "sudden artificial buyback demand created by [Strategic Partnership Alliance, LLC ('SPA'), another Rambach and Kennison enterprise], and the accompanying sudden artificial demand for new phones."
. Rambach was co-owner of SPA, which hired, trained, and supervised the payphone program sales representatives.
. The payphones sold to one of the Appellants, Ruth Amick, were installed in Bellevue, Washington. Appellants' App. at 395. There is no indication that any of the payphones sold to Appellants were installed in Indiana.
. Leone alleges that these affidavits are perju-rious and are contradicted by Appellants' deposition testimony. Leone's Br. at 20. Appellants' reply to this allegation is troubling:
Leone's repeated claims that the Plaintiffs' affidavits were "perjurious" ignore the summary judgment context in which the personal jurisdiction issue was decided and, more importantly, are incorrect. Plaintiff Keesling testified that she recalled reading legal opinions concerning the deal, and Plaintiff Bridges testified that Van Deusen had a "Legal Opinion, he had something in his sales brochure said that everything was legal, Van Deusen did." Excerpts from these two depositions are included in the addendum to this brief.
Appellants' Reply Br. at 15 n. 5. Those depositions were not part of the record on summary judgment, however. We therefore grant Leone's motion to strike as to footnote 5 of Appellants' Reply Brief and Appellants' Addendum and deny the motion in all other respects. Leone's challenge to the veracity of the affidavits is one of the bases for his appeal in Leone v. Keesling, No. 18A04-0510-CV-626,
. The confirmation form does not mention Alpha. According to Winstead, "the confirmations were sent as a matter of course by employees under [his] general responsibility, who used a stamp of [his] signature for that purpose. But they were sent as a matter of company policy, not at [his] express initiative." Appellants' App. at 411 (supplemental affidavit).
. Appellants' summary judgment motion also addressed the merits of their claims, which the trial court did not reach based on its finding that it did not have personal jurisdiction over Winstead and Leone.
. The denial of Leone's request for fees, expenses, and contempt is the subject of his appeal in Keesling v. Leone, No. 18A04-0601-CV-73. Leone also filed a motion to supplement summary judgment record and a supplemental affidavit, which the trial court denied.
. In Anthem, our supreme court noted that "[the majority of these opinions ... proceed directly to discussion of the limits of federal due process and the accompanying federal and state case law without first determining whether the conduct in question falls under Indiana Trial Rule 4.4(A)." 730 NE.2d at 1232. "Although the result in many of these cases would likely have been the same, this one-step analysis has the effect of ignoring TR. 4.4(A)." Id. (footnotes omitted).
. Effective January 1, 2003, the following sentence was added to the eight subpara-graphs of Trial Rule 4.4(A) enumerating various acts serving as a basis for jurisdiction: "In addition, a court of this state may exercise jurisdiction on any basis not inconsistent with the Constitutions of this state or the United States." In LinkAmerica Corp. v. Albert,
was intended to, and does, reduce analysis of personal jurisdiction to the issue ofwhether the exercise of personal jurisdiction is consistent with the Federal Due Process Clause. Retention of the enumerated acts found in Rule 4.4(A) serves as a bandy checklist of activities that usually support personal jurisdiction but does not serve as a limitation on the exercise of personal jurisdiction by a court of this state.
Id., slip. op. at 967. For the reasons given infra, LinkAmerica does not affect our due process analysis.
. Because we conclude that they do not, we need not address the validity of the trial court's assumption that it had a basis for personal jurisdiction under Trial Rule 4.4(4).
. Appellants argue that "[the fact that a party delegates to underlings the authority to sign documents on his behalf does not relieve him of the consequences of signing them." Appellants' Br. at 21. While this may be true for purposes of liability, it is not necessarily dispositive for purposes of personal jurisdiction. Appellants assert that "at least one court has explicitly held that a nonresident officer's stamped signature on a letter sent to the plaintiff was enough to subject him to personal jurisdiction." Appellants' Reply Br. at 3 (citing Wegerer v. First Commodity Corp. of Boston,
. In other words, any misrepresentations about the nature of the payphone program had already been made. Therefore, we are unpersuaded by Appellants' cited cases involving defendants who signed documents upon which investors subsequently relied in purchasing securities.
. Appellants note that Winstead is mentioned on one page of the payphone program sales manual, which summarizes his work experience and describes him as the person ''responsible for the company's day to day operations." Appellants' App. at 429. According to Winstead, he "had nothing to do with the preparation or the distribution of" the sales manual. Id. at 411 (supplemental affidavit). We fail to see how the mere inclusion of Winstead's curriculum vitae in the sales manual serves as a basis, either in whole or in part, for establishing specific personal jurisdiction. Appellants also note that Win-stead signed a consent decree in Ilinois regarding the payphone program in January 2000 and was named in a cease and desist order in Indiana in May 2001. While these orders may well "show[ ] how much authority Winstead had in his daily operations of Al-phal,]" as Appellants claim on page 8 of their reply brief, they do not constitute "minimum contacts" with Indiana for purposes of our jurisdictional analysis. See Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, SA. v. Hall,
. See World-Wide Volkswagen,
. Consequently, we need not determine whether "the exercise of personal jurisdiction offends traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice[.]" Brockman,
While certainly an individual's contact with a forum exclusively as a corporate officer or agent cannot, standing alone, give rise to jurisdiction over that person in an individual capacity, Supreme Court jurisprudence has made clear that this means only that the contacts of each defendant must be assessed individually, not that one's corporate status automatically places that person beyond the court's jurisdiction.
Id. at 899 (citing, inter alia, Calder,
. The summary judgment order states, "Leone's briefs have caused the Court great difficulty in deciding this Motion. Leone seems more concerned with saying as many negative things as he can say about opposing counsel, rather than focusing on the issues' merits." Appellants' App. at 352. See, eg., id. at 244 (Leone's supplemental summary judgment brief: "If the Courts don't care enough to clean up the sewage clogging their dockets, the shady shysters like Mr. Bell and the monetary jackals of Cohen & Malad, the self proclaimed 'Broker Busters', will come back again and again in lots of little towns."). Unfortunately, Leone has taken a similar tack on appeal. See, eg., Leone's Br. at 23 ("Gosh, Leone hates to raise more negative questions about Pls. counsel but they just keep pumping out the stink!"); id. at 30 (accusing Appellants of "smearing Leone with horse manure accusations thrown by other strikesuit jackals like the self-proclaimed 'Broker Busters' Cohen & Malad"). Such puerile and intemperate language has no place in an appellate brief. Therefore, we admonish Leone-a practicing attorney-to adopt a more dignified tone in any future proceedings before this Court. See Hoosier Outdoor Advertising Corp. v. RBL Mgmt., Inc.,
. In its summary judgment order, the trial court noted, "Leone's deposition states that Leone understood his opinion would be presented to the agents, not the investors, and he did not know investors had seen his opinion. His opinion letter, he stated, specifically made his opinion confidential and not to be disclosed to the public." Appellants' App. at 354 {referring to pages 35 and 36 of Leone's deposition). Page 35 of Leone's deposition, which appears on page 456 of Appellants' appendix, does not mention these statements. Curiously, page 36 of the deposition does not appear in the appendix.
. We are unpersuaded by Appellants' reliance on Black & Co. v. Nova-Tech, Inc.,
. Given our resolution of this issue, we need not specifically address matters such as whether Leone properly cited to his appellant's appendix in a related appeal and whether Leone properly moved to strike his own opinion letter from the record for the first time on appeal. Suffice it to say that we have found no precedent for these tactics. Likewise, we need not address Leone's arguments regarding the merits of Appellants' claims against him. We also decline Leone's invitation to consider his allegations of Appellants' misconduct and the trial court's failure to take disciplinary action against Appellants, which we address in Leone v. Keesling, 18A04-0510-CV-626,
