Lead Opinion
This copyright infringement action poses an interesting question under the copyright venue statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1400(a). The issue is whether Fjeld Manufacturing Company (“Fjeld”) or Janice Krueger
I. FACTS
MCS manufactures concrete statuary, including birdbaths, fountains, and planters, and distributes these products throughout the United States. MCS’ products are used primarily in commercial atriums, malls, and parks, and also in private homes and yards. MCS sometimes designs its own statuary and holds copyright registrations for more than 150 original designs. It filed this action under the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. § 101 et seq., alleging that Fjeld infringed the copyright on its “Oakwood Squirrel Birdbath” by importing an unauthorized copy from Canada (the “Canadian birdbath”). According to MCS, Fjeld delivered the Canadian birdbath to Greeley, another large manufacturer of concrete statuary located in Ells-worth, Wisconsin, so that Greeley could make a mold of the birdbath. Greeley then manufactured 500 infringing baths, which were sold throughout the State of Wisconsin. MCS sued Greeley for infringement in the Eastern District of Wisconsin, and it later filed this action against Fjeld in the same district.
Fjeld moved to dismiss the complaint for improper venue.
Civil actions, suits, or proceedings arising under any Act of Congress relating to copyrights or exclusive rights in mask works may be instituted in the district in which the defendant or his agent resides or may be found.
Because Fjeld and Krueger reside in North Dakota,
The district court found venue improper in the Eastern District. Milwaukee Concrete Studios, Ltd. v. Fjeld Mfg. Co.,
Having determined that venue was improper, the district court also sanctioned MCS $1,000 for its error in having relocated Greeley to Milwaukee. The district court reasoned that even if the error was inadvertent, it was nonetheless unreasonable because a “[rjeasonable inquiry ... would have revealed that the allegation in the complaint that venue was proper in this district was neither ‘well grounded in fact’ nor ‘warranted by existing law,’ as Rule 11 requires.” Id. at 1319. The court made MCS and its counsel jointly and -severally liable for the sanction because both had signed the verified complaint. Id. The court also ordered that if MCS were to refile its action in a proper venue and prevail, it should recover no fees relating to this action. Id.
MCS filed a Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) motion to vacate the dismissal order and to alter or amend the $1,000 judgment, advancing two arguments. It maintained that it had not originally been mistaken as to Greeley’s location because the complaint itself had alleged that Greeley was located in Ellsworth, Wisconsin. (See R. 1, at ¶ 43.) MCS provided affidavits from its attorneys and its principals to establish that the subsequent error in its memorandum was inadvertent.
The district court denied MCS’ motion but in doing so shifted the basis for Rule 11 sanctions. The district court conceded that due to “the absence of a contrary authoritative appellate decision construing § 1400(a) and the existence of ... authorities that at least eolorably support the plaintiffs interpretation,” MCS’ position was warranted by existing law. Milwaukee Concrete Studios, Ltd. v. Fjeld Mfg. Co.,
II. ANALYSIS
A. Venue
Because venue determinations are often fact specific, they generally are reviewed under the deferential abuse of discretion standard. See, e.g., Home Ins. Co. v. Thomas Indus., Inc.,
The parties agree that venue is proper in the Eastern District only if Fjeld may be found there. They also agree that section 1400(a)’s “may be found” clause has been interpreted to mean that a defendant is amenable to personal jurisdiction in a particular forum. See, e.g., Lipton v. Nature Co.,
On this issue of first impression in the federal appellate courts, we hold that section 1400(a) requires district-courts to consider a defendant’s contacts with a-particular judicial district in determining-where_thaLdefendant may be found. A defendant’s amenability to personal jurisdiction must relate to the judicial district in which the action was filed to place venue there under section 1400(a). We thus agree with the district court that Fjeld may not be found in the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
Our analysis begins with the language of section 1400(a) itself. See Milwaukee Gun Club v. Schulz,
Yet, MCS argues that because the “may be found” clause has been equated with amenability to personal jurisdiction under a state long-arm statute, Fjeld “may be found” in any federal judicial 'district in the state. We disagree. Although we rely on the tools of personal jurisdiction — namely, state long-arm statutes- — to determine where a defendant “may be found,” we must do so in a way that is meaningful to the venue analysis, for section 1400(a) is concerned solely with venue and not personal jurisdiction. The section 1400(a) inquiry must therefore focus on contacts with the particular federal judicial district in which the copyright action has been filed.
Professor Moore cogently states and resolves the problem we face here:
The application of [Fed.R.Civ.P.] 4(f),10 providing that the process of the district court can be served anywhere within the state in which the court sits presents other difficulties. The state long arm statutes or rules make a defendant subject to service of process in an action commenced in the state, and are based upon the existence of contacts with that state. Venue under § 1400(a), however, is geared to district. It appears, then, that such contacts as justify service under the state statute or rule must be contacts with the district in which the action is brought, and when personal service is had within the state, the defendant must be amenable to such service within the district in which the action is brought to meet the venue requirements of § 1400(a).
1A Pt. 2 Jeremy C. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 0.344[8], at 4239-40 (2d ed. 1991) (emphasis added); see also 2 Howard B. Abrams, The Law of Copyright § 13.-05[C][1], at 13-22 to 13-23 (1991); 15 Charles
Our concurring colleague suggests that these primary and secondary authorities do not call for the rule we adopt today. (Post at 452-453.) Obviously, there is a paucity of case authority on the question presented here, and neither our footnote addressing Lumiere nor our citation to Geo-Physical suggests that those cases are directly on point, for they involved service of process on individuals rather than corporations. Those decisions thus provide only tangential support in an uncharted area. But even Judge Shadur concedes that Moore’s supports our position, yet he then diminishes Moore’s view as mere “professorial ipse dixit.” (Post at 452.) That simply reinforces the absence of existing authority rather than indicating that Moore’s view should be disregarded. Judge Shadur also acknowledges that Professor Abrams’ treatise advocates our rule. (Post at 453.) Professor Abrams states that equating the “may be found” analysis to personal jurisdiction results in “too expansive a reading of the limits of where the defendant ‘may be found.’” He thinks it
more technically correct to say that because copyright infringement is a tort, the “may be found” standard validates venue in any district where an infringing act has taken place if the defendant would be subject to personal jurisdiction in a state court for a tort committed in that district, in addition to incorporating the “doing business” standard.
Abrams, § 13.05[C][1], at 13-22 to 13-23 (emphasis added). That is also the import of the rule we adopt today.
Having concluded that contacts with the Eastern District are required, it is clear that Fjeld may not be found there. Its “local
MCS argues that venue is nonetheless proper because the copyright owner was injured in the Eastern District. According to MCS, the situs of an injury relating to a copyright or any intellectual property right is the owner’s residence. But section 801.05(3) of the Wisconsin long-arm statute, upon which MCS primarily relies, focuses on the defendant’s “act or omission,” not on the location of the plaintiffs injury. See Coté v. Wadel,
Although a separate section of the Wisconsin statute does emphasize the location of the plaintiffs injury, that section does not apply here. Section 801.05(4) addresses local injuries that result from foreign acts, but it also requires a showing either that the defendant offered or serviced its products within the state or that the defendant’s products were used in the state “in the ordinary course of trade.” See Stauffacher v. Bennett,
Because Fjeld has no contacts with the Eastern District that would be sufficient to confer personal jurisdiction under the Wisconsin long-arm statute, it is not found there for purposes of section 1400(a). Thus, the district court properly dismissed this action without prejudice for improper venue.
B. Rule 11 Sanctions
We review the district court’s decision to impose Rule 11 sanctions for an abuse of discretion. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
The district court initially sanctioned MCS $1,000 because it found that the venue allegation in the complaint was neither well grounded in fact nor warranted by existing law. Milwaukee Concrete Studios,
We agree with the district court that MCS’ legal position was not sanctionable. As noted above, we are the first federal court of appeals to address this section 1400(a) question. Although district court decisions from this and other jurisdictions may have been at odds with MCS’ venue position (see, e.g., Sun Hill Indus. Inc. v. Holiday Trims, Inc.,
As for its revised basis for sanctions — the factual error in MCS’ responsive memorandum — the district court presumably acknowledged that MCS had made a reasonable inquiry before filing its complaint (the complaint correctly alleged that Greeley was located in Ellsworth), but the court deemed the responsive memorandum frivolous “to the extent that it unnecessarily complicated the resolution of the defendants’ motion to dismiss — and constrained the court to resolve the real legal issues without meaningful guidance from the plaintiff.” Milwaukee Concrete Studios,
Although MCS’ factual error was admittedly a serious one, and one with which the district court was understandably perturbed, the error was inadvertent and therefore not sanctionable. Several facts support our conclusion. First, MCS seemingly knew that Greeley was located in Ellsworth, for it made such an allegation in its complaint. (R. 1, at ¶43.) Indeed, the affidavits of plaintiffs counsel affirmatively establish that MCS was aware that Greeley was located in Ellsworth and that Ellsworth was located in the Western District. (R. 17, at ¶ 8; R. 18, at ¶ 2; R. 20, at ¶ 2.) Fjeld concedes this very point in its brief. (Fjeld Br. at 3.) Thus, MCS’ pre-filing inquiry was not inadequate, nor did it learn of crucial facts only after the complaint or other Rule 11 paper had been filed. Cf, e.g., Triad Assoc., Inc. v. Chicago Hous. Auth.,
■Moreover, Greeley’s precise location was not central to MCS’ legal theory. Although the district court apparently believed otherwise, our review of the responsive memorandum suggests that MCS argued below, as it did here, that contacts anywhere within the State of Wisconsin are sufficient to establish venue under section 1400(a). MCS argued: (1) that Fjeld may be found in the Eastern District because it is “subject to jurisdiction in accordance with the Wisconsin Long-Arm Statute, Wis.Stat. § 801.05” (R. 9, at 1); (2) that personal jurisdiction existed under section 801.05(3) because “the predicate acts to the torts alleged in the Verified Complaint largely took place in the State of Wisconsin ” (id. at 8 (emphasis added)); and (3) that its allegations of copyright infringement “state causes of action sounding in tort, with their locus in the Eastern District of Wisconsin” because infringement of an intellectual property right occurs “where the owner suffers the damage” (id. at 7; see also id. at 10). MCS has made the same arguments before this Court, fully realizing that Greeley is located in the Western District. Although MCS’ error may have bolstered its contention that venue was proper in the Eastern District because a relevant “act or omission” would have occurred there, the erroneous fact was not central to the venue theory advanced in its memorandum.
Significantly, Fjeld was not confused by MCS’ error because it argued in reply that plaintiffs reliance on the Wisconsin long-arm statute “is completely irrelevant” and that contacts with the particular judicial district, rather than the State of Wisconsin in general, were required for venue purposes. (R. 12, at 2-3.) Of course, before Fjeld had filed its reply, MCS had discovered and flagged the error for Fjeld and the district court. Thus, no one was laboring under a misapprehension as to Greeley’s true location. See Navarro-Ayala v. Hernandez-Colon,
In support of its allegation of venue, [MCS] suggests that under 28 U.S.C. § 1400(a) a party “may be found” wherever it is “amenable to personal jurisdiction,” citing AED Research & Services Corp. v. International Equipment Exchange Ltd.,223 U.S.P.Q. 457 (N.D.Ill.1983). It then asserts that the defendants are “amenable to personal jurisdiction” in this forum under the Wisconsin “long-arm” statute, Wis. Stat. § 801.05(3) (1990), by virtue of their contacts with Greeley Ornamental Concrete Products, a concern located in Ells-worth, Wisconsin. Under such an interpretation, venue is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1400(a) because the defendants are amenable to personal jurisdiction in Wisconsin.
MCS thus made a colorable legal argument that was not undercut by its factual error. Cf. Forrest Creek Assocs., Ltd. v. McLean Sav. and Loan Ass’n,
Sanctions also were not necessary to deter similar conduct in the future. See Milwaukee Concrete Studios,
Finally, MCS also contests the district court’s determination that it should not recover attorney’s fees and costs relating to this case if it refiles in the proper forum and ultimately prevails. Despite the intuitive appeal of the district court’s order, the court had no authority to tie the hands of a district court that might consider the appropriateness of a fee award in a future case. We therefore vacate that portion of the district court’s judgment.
III. CONCLUSION
Because venue is improper in the Eastern District of Wisconsin under 28 U.S.C. § 1400(a), we affirm the district court’s dismissal of MCS’ complaint. However, we reverse the district court’s award of Rule 11 sanctions and vacate that portion of its judgment relating to attorney’s fees and costs in a future case.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND Vacated in Part.
Notes
.After oral argument, we were notified that Krueger had filed a petition in bankruptcy on November 9, 1992, so that the automatic stay imposed by 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1) would prohibit the prosecution of this appeal against her. We solicited the parties’ views on whether Krueger’s bankruptcy would have any effect on Fjeld. Plaintiff and Fjeld agree that it does not and that we may proceed to resolve this appeal as it relates to Fjeld. See Pitts v. Unarco Indus., Inc.,
The stay of the appeal as to Krueger does not affect the venue determination, for she stands in Fjeld's shoes in this respect. The complaint alleges that Krueger "directed and controlled” the activities of Fjeld and that her actions were taken on Fjeld’s behalf. (R. 1.) In these circumstances, Fjeld may be found in any district in which Krueger may be found. For ease of reference, we therefore refer only to Fjeld when discussing the acts giving rise to plaintiff's claim of copyright infringement.
. Fjeld alternatively argued that it was not subject to personal jurisdiction, but the district court never specifically reached that question.
. Fjeld is incorporated in the State of North Dakota and maintains its principal place of business in Minot, North Dakota. (R. 1, at ¶ 3.)
. Section 801.05(3) provides for personal jurisdiction in the following circumstance:
Local act or omission. In any action claiming injury to person or property within or without this state arising out of an act or omission within this state by the defendant.
. That section provides for personal jurisdiction as follows:
Local injury; foreign act. In any action claiming injury to person or property within or without this state arising out of an act or omission outside this state by the defendant, provided in addition that at the time of the injury, either:
(a) Solicitation or service activities were carried on within this state by or on behalf of the defendant; or
(b) Products, materials or things processed, serviced or manufactured by the defendant were used or consumed within this state in the ordinary course of trade.
.Attached to the affidavits were several earlier drafts of MCS’ responsive memorandum, none of which contained the factual error.
. The district court also refused to vacate that part of its order forbidding MCS from recovering attorney's fees and costs relating to this action in any future suit. Id. at 281.
.Our concurring colleague would look not only to state long-arm statutes in determining where a defendant may be found, but also to state venue rules. (Post at 452-453.) Judge Shadur’s analysis would make venue under section 1400(a) completely dependent upon a state venue provision, for even if a defendant had no contacts with a particular judicial district, venue would be proper in that district if the defendant could be sued statewide under state law. We are not persuaded that venue under the federal copyright statute should turn to that extent on a state venue provision. If Congress had intended such undue emphasis on state venue rules, we believe it would have said so. Indeed, Congress would have had no reason even to refer to where a defendant "may be found,” for the statute could simply have provided that suit may be brought in any district where the defendant could be sued under state law.
The concurring opinion also suggests that we are formulating a rule that is broader than necessary to resolve this case. (Post at 453, 455.) Not so. Our disagreement with the concurring opinion results from the difference in our approaches to the proper inquiry under section 1400(a). We have focused on amenability to personal jurisdiction, which we believe to be the only relevant consideration under the case law. As Judge Sha-dur points out, both Illinois and Wisconsin define amenability to process in statewide terms, meaning that the rule we announce today in this Wisconsin case would apply as well under the similar Illinois long-arm provision. Only by focusing on state venue rules in addition to long-arm statutes is it possible to suggest that we are deciding a case not before us.
. As the district court explained, if a contact with one part of a state could place venue in a different part, the result would be problematic in large states such as Illinois and Wisconsin. See
. [Footnote by this Court] Rule 4(f) permits service of process "anywhere within the territorial limits of the state in which the district court is held ...," meaning that it is not limited to the district in which the court sits. Here, MCS did not rely on Rule 4(f), but on Rule 4(e), which provides for service outside the state in accordance with "a statute or rule of court of the state in which the district court is held” — i.e., the state long-arm statute.
. In Lumiere v. Wilder, Inc.,
. After addressing each of our authorities, Judge Shadur returns, in his view, "to what the cases really say.” (Post at 454.) Yet he proceeds to reference cases that only state the general rule, which we have acknowledged above, that section 1400(a)'s "may be found” clause traditionally has been equated with where a defendant is amenable to personal jurisdiction. (See post at 454, 455.) Those cases, and in particular the Mihalek decision on which Judge Shadur primarily relies, did not address the unique situation presented here — where a defendant has contacts with one federal judicial district within a state but absolutely no contacts with the district in which it has been sued. See, e.g., Mihalek,
. See also Wis.Stat.Ann. § 801.05(3) Revision Notes — 1959, at 59 ("it is the occurrence of the act in the state, not the injury, which furnishes the contact relied on for jurisdiction.’’). The Wisconsin Supreme Court has noted that it often utilizes the "revision notes” drafted by Professor G.W. Foster, Jr. to aid its interpretation of section 801.05. Lincoln,
. Honeywell, Inc. v. Metz Apparatewerke,
.The district court declined Fjeld's invitation to award attorney's fees and costs pursuant to 17 U.S.C. § 505, which permits the court, in its discretion, to award costs and attorney's fees to the prevailing party in a copyright infringement case. The district court determined that Fjeld was not a "prevailing party” because MCS' complaint had been dismissed without prejudice,
. In fact, MCS never specifically argued that a tort occurred in the Eastern District of Wisconsin because that is where Greeley was located.
. As our discussion makes clear, we also do not believe that the responsive memorandum was interposed for an improper purpose. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 11; Mars Steel,
. Had we been inclined to affirm the $1,000 sanction, we would have been required to remand because the district court's award does not comply with our decision in TMF Tool Co., supra. There, we explained that a district court's decision to award sanctions must "clearly specify who is to pay the monetary sanction, who is to receive the monetary sanction and the amount of the monetary sanction.”
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the result.
Determining where an individual “may be found” ordinarily poses no difficulties: That locution is normally understood in its literal sense of the individual’s physical presence. Indeed, for a long time the one-to-one correlation between the concept of being “found” in a place and being physically present there marked the outer limit of a court’s — and hence of an opposing litigant’s — ability to
But when we shift from the individual to an incorporeal entity — a corporation — the notion of where the defendant “may be found” shifts from the physical to the metaphysical. Corporations do present enough of a parallel to individuals to say, without fear of disagreement, that a corporation is certainly “found” where its plant and its principal offices are located. But once the jurisdictional ties are attenuated — as in determining what “contacts” the corporation has with the forum (“contacts” is itself a term that sounds physical, but that also requires personification when it is applied to a disembodied legal concept such as a corporation) — any attempt to define where the corporation “may be found” necessarily involves one or more legal fictions.
Of course most of the law as to this particular legal fiction (the question as to where a corporation is considered “found”) has been generated in the course of deciding where the corporation is subject to suit. Little wonder, then, that the cases dealing with the problem that we are considering today — the meaning of the phrase “may be found” in 28 U.S.C. § 1400(a) (“Section 1400(a)”), a venue statute — have uniformly drawn on the amenability of the defendant to be sued in the forum under applicable state law. More on this subject a bit later.
Where I part company with the majority is in its abandonment of that universally-accepted principle — in its having stated instead, as a universal rule, that a corporation “may be found” throughout a state so as to be suable anywhere within the state, yet that it somehow “may [not] be’found” throughout that same state for venue purposes. As it happens, a narrower notion of where a corporation “may be found” does not pose a problem in Wisconsin, so that I have no difficulty in concurring in the result reached by the majority.
Let us examine that last question by turning to the contrast between Wisconsin law and Illinois law as posed by the case at hand, for that contrast demonstrates the more limited scope of pronouncement that would resolve this case without creating problems in any cases that are not now before us. Illinois law (like that of most states) defines amenability to process in statewide terms (see 735 ILCS 5/2-209, the Illinois long-arm statute). But quite unlike Wisconsin, Illinois also expressly permits any foreign corporation over which jurisdiction is obtained via that long-arm statute to be sued in any county in the state. That result flows from the interaction of 735 ILCS 5/2-102(a), which defines such a corporation as a nonresident of Illinois, and id. 5/2-101, which says that an action against any Illinois nonresident “may be commenced in any county.”
In Illinois, then, a foreign corporation that may be haled into court only via long-arm treatment (that is, under circumstances exemplified by those involving Fjeld Manufacturing here) is considered to be “found” in every one of Illinois’ 102 counties. It does not matter that its only Illinois “contacts” may be with East St. Louis or Champaign— it may still be sued in Cook County, because the Illinois statutory fiction that defines where the incorporeal entities that we -call corporations are “found” treats such a foreign corporation as being “found” everywhere in Illinois.
Do the authorities cited at pages 446 and 447 in the majority opinion call for a different result? Not at all. To deal with them in the order of citation there (and not their importance):
1. It is true that the editor of Moore’s Federal Practice does say that “it appears” that the contacts for venue purposes must be with the particular district. But (a) such a professorial ipse dixit, advanced without any support, does not of course control the judicial function and (b) perhaps more important, nothing suggests that the editor has ever thought about (or even thought of) the point that is made here.
2. As for the Abrams text, the discussion therte presents a more extended analysis of a set of related questions, and it does advocate the rule that the majority adopts. But like Moore’s it does not at all address the kind of situation posed by Illinois law — and as with Moore’s there is no hint that the author has considered (or even thought of) the very different (and distorted) application of the rule under such circumstances. In fact, a number of the cases that Abrams cites (a group of those referred to in his Section 13.05[C][1], at 13-22 n. 76) specifically state the “may be found” venue test in ways that would indeed cause an Illinois long-arm defendant to be considered “found” for venue purposes in every district court in this state, so long as its Illinois-oriented activities (whether in or out of the district where suit is later brought) have made it subject to personal jurisdiction anywhere in the State of Illinois.
3. As for the other procedural treatise cited by the majority, Wright & Miller does not state any such rule as Moore’s— instead, it merely cites to the Geo-Physical case as an illustration.
4. In turn, Geo-Physical deals with the physical service of process (that is, the Pennoyer v. Neff type of service) on a nonresident individual within a district. In that situation the case says (understandably and quite correctly) that the district was the only one in that state in which the individual was “found.” That of course is very different from the analysis that properly applies to a corporation that is metaphysically “found” in a state only through application of the long-arm statute, and that is physically served with process outside of that state.
5. Professor Goldstein’s brief statement simply draws on the same few cases that are cited in the majority opinion and discussed here, so it adds nothing to the analysis beyond what is said in this opinion.
6. Finally, Lumiere v. Mae Edna Wilder, Inc. really comes within the selfsame category as Geo-Physical: It too deals with the very different issue of where an individual “may be found” based on physical service within the jurisdiction. It is worth observing that Lumiere stems from an era when amenability to process was limited to an individual’s physical presence (again in the Pennoyer v. Neff mold), before all of the developments in the law that now allow defendants to be haled into court in jurisdictions where they have no.1) actually been physically served with a summons. And Lumiere simply said in that context that the then-existing venue statute, which permitted suit in a district where a corporation’s individual agent “may be found,” required that he or she be served in a district while engaged in corporate business (that is, while acting qua “agent”) and not while he or she is a temporary visitor on his or her own private account.
To return to what the cases really say, let me scotch any notion that what is set forth here is just my own ipse dixit, to be set in opposition to that in Moore’s. On the contrary, my independent research has led to some dozens of cases that justify the statement made in Sollinger v. Nasco Int’l, Inc.,
The cases are virtually legion which hold that for purposes of § 1400(a), a corporate is “found” in any district in which personal jurisdiction may be asserted over it.
Those many cases of course may employ slightly differing locutions, but they are all variants on the identical theme — for example, my former colleague Judge Nicholas Bua said in Gallery House, Inc. v. Yi,
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1400(a) the test for determining whether a nonresident defendant “may be found” within a district is the same as that for determining personal jurisdiction.
And in that respect Judge Bua then addressed the question in terms of whether “the defendant could reasonably anticipate being subject to suit in the forum state.’’
At least one case out of that host of authorities — all of which point in the identical direction — may be worth mentioning specifically, for it speaks to a concept of “may be found” that is wholly parallel to the one employed by Illinois law. In Mihalek Corp. v. State of Michigan,
Nor has the “legion” of cases stopped marching with Sollinger. Despite my general aversion to string citations (not the least of the reasons being the need to read all of the cases before citing them), in this instance it may be worth referring to what a quick U.S.C.A. and LEXIS search of post-Sollinger decisions in this area turns up: over a dozen decisions, including (to list only those that are reported in F.Supp. or that the LEXIS printout indicates are awaiting such reporting) Editorial Musical Latino Americana, S.A. v. Mar Int’l Records, Inc.,
It is scarcely worth heaping Pelion on Ossa — every court that deals with the issue continues to speak in terms of equating where a defendant (most particularly a corporate defendant) “may be found” in Section 1400(a) to where that corporation may be sued (that is, where it is subject to personal jurisdiction). And once that is recognized, the very fact that under Illinois law a foreign corporation such as Fjeld Manufacturing would be considered as “found” in every county in Illinois necessarily carries with it the conclusion that the corporation would be deemed “found” in each of Illinois’ three federal districts that embrace all those counties. And so a literal reading of Section 1400(a) — starting with “the language of the statute itself,” as the majority urges at page 8 — would lead to a totally different conclusion in Illinois from the one that the majority announces here as a universal rule.
Having said all this, let me deal briefly with the reason that the majority’s handling of this case poses no such problem. Wisconsin (like most states, I believe) permits a foreign corporation over which jurisdiction is obtained under its long-arm statute to be sued only in a county where it “does substantial business” (Wis.Stat. § 801.50(2)(e), construed for the first time as to the “substantial business” test in Enpro Assessment Corp. v. Plus, Inc.,
This opinion might be prolonged by responding point by point to the majority opinion’s references to what I have written here. But that would not add much to the dialogue, for it is unfortunately all too evident from reading those comments in the majority opinion that we are like ships that pass in the night. In my view the majority has succumbed to the tyranny of labels in stating its rule overbroadly, but of course I respect the fact that judicial perceptions may differ in that regard.
In sum, for the reasons stated here, I respectfully concur only in the result reached by the majority opinion.
. As for the majority opinion’s other two rulings — its disposition of the sanctions issue and its vacation of the district court's attorneys' fees and costs ruling — I concur in those results as well.
. Amenability to suit in a location (in the venue sense) is, of course, a question quite separate from and antecedent to the question whether an application of the forum non conveniens doctrine
. After dispatching the bulk of plaintiff’s claims on Eleventh Amendment grounds (id. at 905-06), Judge Joiner found that the copyright action seeking injunctive relief against the state officials survived. That then provided the framework for deciding the venue issue that corresponds to the one before us.
