ORDER
' THIS' CAUSE comes before the Court bn the Joint Motion to Dismiss Second Amended Complaint [ECF No. 125] filed by Defendants Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. (“Royal Caribbean”); Rain Forest Adventures' (Holdings) Ltd'. (“RF Holdings”); Elite Shore Excursions Foundation (“Elite Shore”); Rain Forest Sky Rides, Ltd. (“Rain Forest Sky Rides”); Rain Forest Tram, Ltd. (“RF Tram”); Canopy Enterprises, Inc. (“Canopy”); ENT-Consulting, Inc. (“ENT”); EMJO Investments Ltd, (“EMJO”); ÁP Electrical Service, LLC (“AP Electrical”); Harald Joachim von der Goltz; John.Dalton; and.Andrew Pierce,
I. BACKGROUND
According to the allegations in the Second Amended Complaint, Plaintiff William McCullough earned a Royal Caribbean cruise for- himself and his wife, Plaintiff Lynn McCullough, through his work as an insurance agent, Second Am. Compl. ¶ 42. He then purchased excursion tickets by going to Royal Caribbean’s website and using an access code. Id, ¶ 43. One of the excursions the McCulloughs purchased was the Adrena-Line zip line course. Id. Mr. McCullough paid Royal Caribbean for two tickets on the tour for July 15, 2015, and received a receipt from Royal Caribbean for the purchase. Id. ¶ 44. On July 11, 2015, the McCulloughs boarded the Royal Caribbean Adventure of the Seas vessel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, for a sevén-day pleasure cruise. Id. ¶ 46. The McCulloughs received their tickets for the Adrena-Line tour from-Royal Caribbean while on board the ship.'M ¶ 47.
On July 15th, the Adventure of the Seas docked in St. Lucia and the McCulloughs were transported to the Rain Forest Adventure Park in Babonneau, St. Lucia (the “Park”), where the excursion would take place. Id. ¶48. At the Park, the McCul-loughs were told that there would be two “surprises” on the Adrena-Line, but were not told that rappelling' would be one of the “surprises.” Id. it 50. As they progressed through the 'tour, the McCulloughs arrived at Platform 15, whereupon they were informed for the first time that they would need to rappel down to the next platform. Id. ¶ 51. The rappelling portion was set up as a two-line system: a “live rope” (so called becáuse the rope moves with the participant as the participant rappels down) with a'figure eight attached 'to a sling fastened to a tree, and a “dead rope” (so called because the rope does not move
In participating in this activity, Mrs. McCullough did everything she was asked or told to do by the Park guide and the guides at Platform 15. Id. ¶ 55. When Mrs. McCullough stepped off the platform, however, she was not properly secured, braked, stopped, caught, or otherwise slowed down in any manner and .was allowed to free fall to the ground from the deck of the platform (a distance of nearly fifty feet) by'the employees stationed on Platform 15 and on the ground below Platform 15. Id. ¶56. The Defendants’ joint investigation concluded. that there was a breakdown in communication between the sending guide and receiving guide at Platform 15, which resulted in Mrs. McCullough being sent down without someone being prepared to receive her. Id. ¶ 57. The guides also deviated from proper protocol and Park policy in not using the two-line system; rather, they had agreed in advance to use only the dead rope for smaller or lighter participants in order to save time on a busy “cruise day.” Id. ¶¶ 49, 57. The Park’s manager was aware of this change in the procedure and did not object. Id. ¶ 58. The Defendants’ joint investigation also concluded that emergency medical technicians were not on site as advertised by the Park in its marketing brochures; Id. ¶ 59, Mrs. McCullough was moved on a backboard to-the Park’s “EMT Room” and ultimately transported to a local hospital by ambulance. Id.
Mr. McCullough was standing on Platform 15 and observed his wife’s fall. Id. ¶ 60. Because the Park did not have proper emergency equipment and personnel, he slipped and twisted his left knee. Id. Mr. McCullough alleges that he “suffered severe emotional and psychological distress, with physical manifestations, as a result of this experience.” Id. ¶ 60. As for Mrs. McCullough, she sustained a broken neck, destruction of her disc at C-7 that necessitated the fusion of C-6 to T-l, a punctured lung, a broken right leg, a shattered right heel bone, a broken left ankle, a shattered left heel bone, damage to her teeth and jaw, damage to her arms and shoulders, and paralysis from the chest (T-3 level) down. Id. ¶ 61.
The McCulloughs filed a Complaint in this Court on January 15, 2016 [ECP No. 1], and amended that Complaint on February 16, and July 14, 2016 [ECF Nos. 12 & 71]. In the Second Amended Complaint, they sue Royal Caribbean and a complex network of other parties and entities, which the McCulloughs collectively refer to as the “Rain Forest Defendants” — Defendants Elite Shore, RF Holdings, Rain Forest Sky Rides, RF Tram, Canopy Enterprises, EMJO, ENT, and von der Goltz — as well as two employees of the so-called Rain Forest Defendants.
Defendant Elite Shore is a Panamanian company that has allegedly agreed to act as the agent for Defendant Rain Forest Sky Rides (a St. Lucia company) in negotiating agreements with cruise companies and obtaining the required insurance. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 27(a). At all relevant
The McCulloughs seek compensatory, punitive, and loss of consortium damages from the Defendants on the following nine claims: (1) negligence and gross negligence against Royal Caribbean; (2) negligent misrepresentation against .Royal Caribbean; (3) negligence and gross negligence against the Rain Forest Defendants; (4) vicarious liability on theories of apparent agency or agency by estoppel against Royal Caribbean; (5) joint venture against Royal Caribbean and the Rain Forest Defendants; (6) vicarious liability on a theory of actual agency against Royal Caribbean; (7) breach of third-party beneficiary contract against the Rain Forest Defendants; (8) strict liability against Dalton, Pierce, and AP Electrical; and (9) negligence against Dalton, Pierce, and AP Electrical. See id. ¶¶ 65-130.
The Defendants filed the instant motion to dismiss on October 24, 2016. Within the motion, EMJO, AP Electrical, Pierce, and Dalton (the “Jurisdiction Defendants”) argue that this Court cannot exercise personal jurisdiction over them. On November 28th, the McCulloughs filed a motion urging the Court to either defer ruling on personal jurisdiction pending a merits determination or completion of-jurisdictional discovery [ECF! No. 135]. After considering the parties’ arguments on the issue, the Court granted the McCulloughs' sixty days’ leave to take jurisdictional discovery of the four Jurisdiction Defendants [ECF No. 189]. Following that discovery, the McCulloughs filed an addendum brief as to personal jurisdiction [ECF No. 236], and the Jurisdiction Defendants replied to that addendum [ECF No. 243]. Imbedded in that reply, the Jurisdiction Defendants move to strike as untimely four affidavits filed by the McCulloughs with their addendum.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Personal Jurisdiction
The Court must first' decide whether it can appropriately exercise personal jurisdiction over the Jurisdiction Defendants. “A plaintiff seeking to establish personal jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant ‘bears the initial burden of alleging in the complaint sufficient facts to make out a prima facie case of jurisdiction.’ ” Louis Vuitton Malletier, S.A. v. Mosseri,
A federal court sitting in diversity undertakes a two-step inquiry in ruling on a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. First, it must determine whether the exercise of jurisdiction is appropriate under the state long-arm statute. Second, it must determine whether the exercise of jurisdiction violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. United Techs. Corp.,
Under Florida’s long-arm statute, a defendant can be subject to either specific personal jurisdiction (jurisdiction in suits arising out of or relating to the defendant’s contacts with Florida) or general personal jurisdiction (jurisdiction over any claims against a*defendant, notwithstanding any connection vel non with Florida, if' the defendant engages in “substantial and not isolated activity” in Florida). Fla. Stat. §§ 48.193(l)(a), (2). The McCulloughs appropriately contend only that this Court should exercise general personal jurisdiction over the Jurisdiction Defendants. And given that the reach of the general jurisdiction provisions of the Florida long-arm statute is coextensive with the limits of the Due Process Clause, the Court need only determine whether its exercise of jurisdiction over these Defendants “would exceed constitutional bounds.” Carmouche v. Tamborlee Mgmt., Inc.,
1. General Personal Jurisdiction over Corporate Defendants
There are two; “paradigm bases” for general jurisdiction over a corporation: its place of incorporation and its principal place of business. Daimler AG v. Bauman, 571 U.S.—,—,
. The Supreme Court has identified by name only one such' “exceptional case” where general personal jurisdiction in a third, non-paradigmatic forum- was proper: Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
a. AP Electrical
. AP Electrical is a Vermont limited liability company. Pierce Aff, [ECF No. 125-2] ¶¶4-5. While Daimler speaks explicitly of corporations in applying its “essentially at home” standard, many courts have favored the application of the standard to non-corporate entities, as well. See Waldman v. Palestine Liberation Org.,
The answer is a resounding no. The McCulloughs have proffered no evidence whatsoever to support a claim that AP Electrical is subject to general personal jurisdiction in Florida. In fact, outside of identifying AP Electrical as one of the parties that filed the motion to dismiss and concluding that general jurisdiction should be exercised over it, the McCulloughs mention AP Electrical only three times in their twenty-page jurisdictional brief: once
b. EMJO
Before the Court can undertake a personal jurisdiction analysis as to EMJO, it must address a threshold issue. In the overarching analytical framework outlined above, the burden to provide evidence to support a claim of personal jurisdiction does not shift back to the plaintiff in the first instance when the defendant’s'affidavits challenging the plaintiffs jurisdictional allegations “contain only conclusory assertions that the defendant is not subject to jurisdiction.” Louis Vuitton,
Affidavits submitted in support of or in opposition to a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction must “set forth specific factual declarations within the affiant’s personal knowledge.” Posner v. Essex Ins. Co.,
The affidavit primarily explains Salem’s corporate structure and status; summarily asserts that ■ Salem never has done business in or directed contacts into Florida; admits certain peripheral connections with the state and denies in a conclusory way any other actions that would bring Salem within the ambit of the Florida long-arm statute. For example, paragraph five covers three-quarters of a page and contends, by reciting the long-arm statute essentially verbatim, that the jurisdictional statute does not apply to Salem. Such statements, although presented in the form of factual declarations, are in substance legal conclusions that do not trigger a duty for Plaintiffs to respond with evidence of their own supporting jurisdiction.
Id. at 1215. The court found the affidavit to be “of little significance to the jurisdictional question” and disregarded much of the affidavit’s contents in adjudicating the appeal. Id.
Willson’s affidavits suffer from some of the same infirmities as the affidavit in Posner. The affidavits summarily assert that EMJO has never done business in Florida. And most significantly, the overwhelming majority of the affidavits’ declarations are little more than a seriatim listing of conclusory denials of actions that arguably may subject EMJO to general personal jurisdiction in Florida. Thus, this Court must similarly disregard the contents of both affidavits in determining whether jurisdiction is proper.
EMJO Investments, Ltd. is a British Virgin Islands company, with its principal place of business located in Morgan & Morgan Building, Pasea Estate, Road Town, Tortola, British Virgin Islands.
Willson Aff. ¶ 3; Willson Am. Aff. ¶ 4. This factual declaration, regarding the location of EMJO’s principal place of business, is one that is plausibly within the personal knowledge of EMJO’s clerk of secretarial affairs, who was initially designated as EMJO’s corporate representative. And, more importantly, it directly contradicts the McCulloughs’ jurisdictional allegations on this point:
At all material times, Defendants Rain Forest Adventures (Holdings) Ltd., Elite Shore Excursions Foundation, Rain Forest Sky Rides, Ltd., Rain Forest Tram, Ltd., EMJO Investments Limited ... and XYZ Corporation were foreign corporations, maintaining their principal places of business in St. Lucia and/or Miami, Florida....
Second Am. Compl. ¶ 4.
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Having disposed of the issues of the affidavits and the shifting burden, the Court now turns to the parties’ jurisdictional arguments. EMJO is a British Virgin Islands company -with a principal place of business in the British Virgin Islands. Willson Aff. ¶ 3; Willson Am. Aff. ¶4. Its sole director, Owens, is domiciled in Panama. EMJO Answers to Jurisdictional In-terrogs. [ECF No. 243-1] ¶15. Its sole shareholder, Revack Holdings Foundation, is a Panama Private Interest Foundation with a single beneficiary — von der Goltz’s mother, Erika von der Goltz — who is a citizen of Guatemala. Id. ¶ 16; Erika von .der Goltz Aff. [ECF No. 243-4] (filed under seal). EMJO has no office or other physical presence in Florida, it does not conduct or solicit business in Florida, and it does not operate or control any entity or individual in Florida. EMJO Answers to Jurisdictional Interrogs. ¶8; Owens Dep. [ECF No. 243-14] at 24:5-14.
In spite of these uncontrovert'ed facts, the McCulloughs, relying almost solely on Stubbs v. Wyndham Nassau Resort & Crystal Palace Casino,
(1) EMJO owns 26.7% of RF Holdings (a British Virgin Islands company that has not challenged personal jurisdiction). Pis.’ Addendum Ex. 8 [ECF No. 236-8];
(2) Boston Capital Ventures (a nonparty company of which von der Goltz is a principal) owns an additional 7.9% of RF Holdings. Id.;
(3) von der Goltz gave suggestions for potential, EMJO investments to his financial advisor,. Richard Gaffey (a nonparty), who has a residence in Florida and who executed documents and transactions on EMJO’s behalf as its vice president and listed a Boston, Massachusetts, address as his contact address. Gaffey would communicate those investment suggestions to Mossack Fonseca (also referred to throughout the record as Mossfon Asset Management and Mossack Fonseca & Co. (BVI) Ltd.), a foreign company that was the manager of EMJO until 2011. See Pis;’ Addendum Ex. 10 [ECF No. 236-10] at 140-42, 156-57, 231-36; Pis.’ Addendum Ex. 13 [ECF No. 236-13]; von der Goltz Dep. II [ECF No. 228-5] at 16; and
(4) von der Goltz is alleged to have been a “micromanager” of the Rain Forest enterprise. See Pis.’ Addendum at 15.
In sum, the McCulloughs contend, based on Stubbs and Meier, that EMJO, a nonresident company, should be subjected to general personal jurisdiction in Florida because von der Goltz, who has consented to this Court’s jurisdiction, exercises “authoritative control over the entire Rain Forest
This is, as Chief Judge Moore has described it, “a tendentious gloss on precedent” that is “more than a decade old, easily distinguishable, and do[es] hot comport with the cabined conception of general jurisdiction that now exists post-Daimler,” Thompson v. Carnival Corp.,
Notwithstanding the factual distinction, the McCulloughs face a broader problem. Daimler rejected the Ninth Circuit’s agency theory of jurisdiction, finding that it “appears to subject foreign corporations to general jurisdiction whenever they have an in-state subsidiary or affiliate, an out-come that would sweep beyond even the ‘sprawling view of general jurisdiction’ ... rejected in Goodyear.”
Despite this clearly expressed doubt of the continued vitality of Stubbs and Meier, the McCulloughs, relying on a single unpublished district court decision, argue
. Without the agency theory, the McCul-loughs have provided no evidence or authority to.support a finding that EMJO — a British Virgin Islands company with no Florida presence, contacts, or business, save a tangential, amalgamated relationship with a number of co-defendants that have not challenged jurisdiction — is “essentially at home” in Florida. Accordingly, the Court concludes that it cannot exercise general personal jurisdiction over EMJO.
2. Personal Jurisdiction over Individual Defendants
“For an individual, the paradigm forum for the exercise of general’jurisdic
Neither Pierce nor Dalton is domiciled in Florida, neither was served in Florida, and neither has consented to jurisdiction in Florida. Pierce is a domiciliary of Vermont. See Pierce Answers to Jurisdictional Interrogs. [ECF No. 243-20] ¶ 1. Dalton is a domiciliary of Colorado who presently resides on a boat in the Caribbean Sea, as he works as an independent contractor for various foreign Rain Forest Adventure-brand parks throughout the Caribbean. See Dalton Aff. [ECF No. 243-8] at 2; Dalton Answers to Jurisdictional Interrogs. [ECF No. 243-9] ¶ 3. Were the Court to rely on J. McIntyre Machinery alone, this factual showing would close the question.
And even if the Court were to assume that the Daimler “essentially at home” standard applies to individuals, neither Defendant’s contacts rises to the requisite level. Regarding Pierce, the McCulloughs allege that he communicated with Rain Forest’s Miami office and submitted invoices to “Rain Forest Adventures” at Rain Forest’s Miami address. Pis.’ Addendum at 17. Regarding Dalton, the McCul-loughs allege that he was an employee of Rain Forest, received pay-stubs from Rain Forest’s Miami office, received a cell phone from Rain Forest’s Miami office with a 305 area code, proffered himself as Rain Forest’s chief engineer in newspaper articles, used Rain Forest letterhead for sending personal and professional mail, and forwarded his personal and professional mail to Rain Forest’s Miami office. See id. at 16-17.
None of these attenuated contacts make Florida the equivalent to either Dalton or Pierce’s domicile — the sole paradigmatic place of general jurisdiction for an individual. “A person’s domicile is the place of ‘his true, fixed, and permanent
The Court will also not extend jurisdiction over Dalton based on his use of a Florida address for mail forwarding purposes. Dalton testified in deposition that he occasionally “pass[es] through Miami going fi"om island to island” and uses the Rain Forest Miami office as a mail-forwarding address “as a matter of convenience.” Dalton Dep. [ECF No. 236-18] at 74:18-79:9. This use of a mail-forwarding facility for purposes of convenience will not operate to confer general jurisdiction over Dalton in Florida. See Wolf v. Celebrity Cruises, Inc.,
Based on the above, the Court concludes that it cannot exercise general personal jurisdiction over Pierce or Dalton.
3. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(k)(2)
Finally, the Court rejects the McCulloughs’ alternative argument that the Court can exercise jurisdiction over any of the Jurisdiction Defendants pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(k)(2) — the so-called “national long-arm statute.” Where a defendant “is not subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of general jurisdiction of any one state, Rule 4(k)(2) permits a court to aggregate a foreign defendant’s nationwide contacts to allow for service of process provided that two conditions are met: (1) plaintiffs claims must ‘arise under federal lav/; and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction must be ‘consistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States.’ ” Consol. Dev. Corp. v. Sherritt, Inc.,
Any attempt to apply this rule against AP Electrical, Pierce, and Dalton does not survive past the preamble. Each of these Defendants is subject to general jurisdiction in a state (Vermont for AP Electrical and Pierce, Colorado for Dalton).
And regarding EMJO, “[i]n the wake of ... Daimler, it appears unlikely that general jurisdiction over a foreign defendant could ever be available under 4(k)(2).” Thompson,
4. Possibility of Severance and Transfer Under 28 U.S.C. §.1631
In the event the Court concluded it could not exercise jurisdiction over the Jurisdiction Defendants the McCulloughs request that the Court — -instead of dismissing the claims against Dalton, Pierce, and AP Electrical — sever the claims against these Defendants and transfer the severed actions “to the District Courts where [they] are subject to general personal jurisdiction.” Pis.’ Addendum at 20 n.2. While it is true that, if a district court lacks jurisdiction over an action, “the court shall, if it is in the interest of justice, transfer such action ... to any other such court in which the action ... could have been brought at the time it was filed,” 28 U.S.C. § 1631, there currently exists a circuit split regarding whether a court may transfer less than a full action under this statute. Compare Hill v. U.S. Air Force,
Transfer of these claims is not as straightforward a process as the McCul-loughs make it seem, however. “When transferring a portion of a pending action to another jurisdiction, district courts first must sever the action under Rule 21 before effectuating the transfer.” Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Country Chrysler, Inc.,
the court must weigh carefully whether the inconvenience of splitting the suit outweighs the advantages to be gained from the partial transfer. It should not sever if the defendant over whom jurisdiction is retained is so involved in the controversy to be transferred that partial transfer would require the same issues to be litigated in two places.
Liaw Su Teng v. Skaarup Shipping Corp.,
If this Court were to sever and transfer the strict liability and negligence claims against Pierce and AP Electrical to Vermont and the strict liability and negligence claims against Dalton to Colorado, the other eight claims against Royal Caribbean and the Rain Forest Defendants would remain here. But because all of the McCulloughs’ claims against all of the Defendants arise from the single zip-line incident, transferring, the claims against Dalton, Pierce, and AP Electrical while simultaneously retaining the claims against Royal Caribbean and the Rain Forest Defendants would result in the same facts and issues being litigated in three different judicial districts. “Such duplicitous litigation is not in the interest of justice?’ Kennedy v. Phillips, No. 11-1231,
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The motion to dismiss all claims against EMJO, AP Electrical, Pierce, and Dalton for lack of personal jurisdiction is granted.
B. Sufficiency of Claims
To survive a motion to dismiss brought pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a claim “must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face,’” meaning that it must contain “factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
The Court has reviewed the Defendants’ other arguments and the allegations in the Second Amended Complaint and finds that the McCulloughs have plausibly alleged their claims sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss. The Court will resolve any outstanding issues at the summary judgment stage, after the Court has made the determination as to which jurisdiction’s substantive law will apply to the various claims in this case.
III. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, it is ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the Defendants’ Joint Motion to Dismiss Second Amended Complaint [ECF No. 125] is GRANTED IN PART. All claims against Defendants EMJO Investments Ltd.; AP Electrical Service, LLC; John Dalton; and Andrew Pierce in the Second Amended Complaint [ECF No. 71] are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
The motion is otherwise DENIED. The remaining Defendants shall ANSWER the Second Amended Complaint by August 4, 2017.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants EMJO, AP Electrical, Pierce, and Dalton’s Motion to Strike Supporting Affidavits [ECF No. 243] is DENIED AS MOOT.
DONE AND ORDERED in Chambers at Miami, Florida, this 21st day of July, 2017.
Notes
. On March 17, 2016, upon stipulation of the parties, the Court stayed this action as to the following Defendants: Rainforest Adventures; Rain Forest Adventures; Rain Forest Adventures St, Lucia; Rain Forest Sky Rides d/b/a Elite Shore Excursions; Elite Shore Excursions; Elite Shore Excursions d/b/a St. Lucia Sky Rides, Ltd.; St. Lucia Sky Rides, Ltd.; Raid Forest Sky Rides Ltd,; Rain Forest Sky Rides St. Lucia, Ltd,; Convi Ltda.; Panama Excursiones S.A.; Teleféricos RFAT de Costa Rica S.A.; and Dosel S,A, [ECF No. 32],
. While the Defendants grouped as die “Rain Forest Defendants” in the Plaintiffs' Complaint contest this designation and its implications, the Court will refer to these Defendants collectively by this designation for ease of reference for purposes of this motion.
. It is worth noting that the McCulloughs challenge affidavits that existed before the Court granted jurisdictional discovery. Now, they essentially argue that the jurisdictional discovery they requested — both in their opposition to the Joint Motion and in a separate, affirmative motion — should nevpr have .been granted in the. first place (at. least as to EMJO). ■
. The parties dispute the consideration of Willson’s affidavits, but for the wrong reason. The McCulloughs contend that Willson was not the correct person to proffer the affidavits because he lacked personal knowledge of their contents. The Defendants respond by arguing that Willson was designated as EMJO’s corporate representative at the time the affidavits were proffered (he was later swapped out in this role 'for Owens during jurisdictional discovery), and “[i]t is not necessary” that a person designated as a corporate representative “have direct, personal knowledge of each and every fact discussed in her affidavit or deposition.” Harrington v. RoundPoint Mortg. Servicing Corp., No. 15-0322,
. Upon scrutinizing this particular jurisdictional allegation, the Court could appropriately have found that this allegation was a "vague and conclusory allegation! ]” that is “insufficient to establish a prima facie case of jurisdiction.” Snow v. DirecTV, Inc.,
. The Court is unable to discern how EMJO can be considered a "Rain Forest subsid-iarily]” by the McCulloughs, Pis. Addendum at 4, when the evidence shows that EMJO owns RF Holdings, a Rain Forest company.
. To the extent the McCulloughs believe that the Supreme Court in Daimler "merely disagree[d] with the Ninth Circuitos] theory on agency," Pis. Addendum at 10, that belief is ill-founded. See Williams v. Yamaha Motor Co.,
, This conclusion tracks Justice Sotomayor’s concurring opinion in Daimler, in which she, citing Meier, lamented that under the majority's decision, "a parent whose child is maimed due to the negligence of a foreign hotel owned by a multinational conglomerate will be unable to hold the hotel to account in a single U.S. court, even if the hotel company has a massive presence in multiple States,” Daimler,
. Even if whatever theoretically remained of any agency theory in this Circuit did apply here, the McCulloughs fail to satisfy it. The Ninth Circuit, for example, has adjusted its analysis post -Daimler to require that a plaintiff show that a non-resident entity "is not really separate from its domestic affiliate”:
[A] parent-subsidiary relationship does not on its own establish two entities as "alter egos,” and thus does not indicate that general jurisdiction over one gives rise to general jurisdiction over the other. Rather, I... [t]o satisfy this [alter ego] test, “a plaintiff must make out a prima facie case (1) that there is such unity of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of 'the two entities no longer exist and (2) that failure to disregard their separate identities would result in fraud or injustice.' ”
Williams,
.The Court need not address EMJO’s argument that service upon it was not properly effected.
. The statement ‘‘the factors favoring transfer” is a reference to the factors considered in a venue transfer analysis under 28 U.S.C, § 1404(a). See White v. ABCO Eng'g Corp.,
. Because the Court ruled on the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction without needing to consult or rely on the McCul-loughs’ allegedly untimely jurisdictional affidavits, the Defendants' motion to strike these affidavits is denied as moot.
