Case Information
*1 Before DENNIS, CLEMENT, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
DENNIS, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiff-appellant, Pervasive Software Inc. (“Pervasive”), a Delaware corporation having its principal office in Austin, Texas, sued defendant-appellee, Lexware GmbH & Co. Kg (“Lexware”), a corporation organized under the laws of the Federal Republic of Germany, for damages and injunctive relief on the basis of breach of contract, quantum meruit, unjust enrichment, and conversion in a Texas state court. Lexware removed the case to the federal district court, and that court, in response to Lexware’s motion, dismissed the case for lack of personal jurisdiction over Lexware. Pervasive appealed. We affirm, concluding that Pervasive has failed to establish a prima facie case that Lexware had minimum contacts with Texas to support the exercise of either specific or general personal jurisdiction over Lexware.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Pervasive, formerly named Btrieve Technologies, Inc., is a computer software manufacturer, incorporated under the law of Delaware, with its principal place of business in Austin, Texas. Pervasive sells its software products globally, has employees and offices in Germany, Europe, and elsewhere, and conducts business worldwide. Lexware is a German software developer based in Freiburg, Germany. It produces German tax and financial software programs for German taxpayers exclusively in the German language.
Among its software products, Pervasive has developed and sold globally the Btrieve Client Engine Version 6.15 (“Btrieve” or “Btrieve software”). In [1] 1994, Lexware purchased a copy of Btrieve software in Germany from SOS Software Service GmbH (“SOS”), a third-party German software distributor. [2] Lexware paid 1,327.25 deutschmarks to SOS for Btrieve. Included in the software package was a license agreement, the Derivative Software License Agreement (“DSLA”). By purchasing and using the Btrieve software package, Lexware signified that it entered into the DSLA with Pervasive. The DSLA specified the terms and conditions of Lexware’s Btrieve software license and contained a Texas choice-of-law clause. The DSLA was for a term of one year, to be renewed automatically until one party terminated the agreement. The DSLA did not require Lexware to make additional payments or royalties to Pervasive, and under the DSLA Pervasive had no obligation to provide Lexware with ongoing technical support or assistance for Btrieve. Two forms accompanied the DSLA: (1) a request that the purchaser identify the product that it purchased; and (2) a request that the purchaser indicate the product name, category, and description of its derivative products. Both forms requested that they be completed and mailed to Pervasive’s office in Austin, Texas. According to Pervasive, Lexware did not return these forms.
Lexware incorporated Btrieve into several of its products, German financial and tax software programs that were designed to assist German speaking taxpayers in preparing their German tax returns. The programs were not available in English. Pervasive did not agree to assist Lexware in incorporating Btrieve into its products or provide Lexware any technical assistance with Btrieve.
In 1999 and 2000, Pervasive and Lexware entered into a second, separate license agreement, the European Manufacturing Partner Agreement (EMPA). The EMPA involved a different and new Pervasive product line, the PSQL products. The parties negotiated and executed this agreement during several in- person meetings of their representatives in Germany. The EMPA required Lexware to make monthly reports to Pervasive and to incur a royalty fee to Pervasive each time Lexware sold a derivative product containing PSQL. Lexware made a one-time, non-refundable prepayment to Pervasive from which the royalty fees were to be deducted. In 2002, Lexware released a new German taxpayer product line incorporating PSQL but discontinued it less than one year later because it was commercially unsuccessful. The EMPA had an initial three- year term that Lexware did not extend. In 2000, Pervasive and Lexware negotiated two addenda to the EMPA. The first (“Addendum 1”) set forth Lexware’s agreement to purchase from Pervasive 7,500 enabling technology user seats for PSQL, and contained provisions for reporting requirements and royalty fee payments. Lexware prepaid a fee of $125,250 for the 7,500 enabling seats. Addendum 1 to the EMPA was executed by the parties effective June 30, 2000. The second addendum (“Addendum 2”) governed an Educational Grant Program. These addenda did not purport to amend or alter the DSLA. In 2006, 2008, and 2009, Lexware purchased three additional items for download from the Pervasive website that were not related to the Btrieve software it bought from SOS in 1994.
Pervasive and Lexware did not communicate directly with each other until 1999, when they began negotiations in respect to the EMPA. They then communicated several times between 1999 and 2003 regarding the EMPA and Lexware’s reporting and royalty fee requirements. In 2002, Lexware asked Pervasive for a certificate that it was a U.S. taxpayer so as to enable Lexware to obtain an exemption from German taxes in connection with its payment of royalty fees under the EMPA. In 2003, Lexware asked Pervasive for certification that Pervasive was a U.S. corporation for the purposes of U.S. federal taxation. These requests were not related to the DSLA and pertained only to the EMPA and Addendum 1. Pervasive supplied the certificate of its U.S. taxpayer status to Lexware in June 2003. The companies did not communicate again until 2007, when Lexware requested a price quote for a new version of PSQL; the e-mail was forwarded to Pervasive’s German representatives, one of whom then called Lexware to discuss PSQL and Btrieve. Lexware did not purchase the new version of PSQL. In 2009, Lexware contacted Pervasive and requested the Btrieve Ultimate Patch or update, but Pervasive ultimately did not provide Lexware with that software patch or update.
Lexware does not have an office, own property, or have agents or employees in Texas, and it does not promote, market, or sell its products inside Texas. Its products are specifically designed for the German taxpayer market and are only available in the German language. Pervasive did not assist Lexware in incorporating Btrieve into its German taxpayer products or provide it with any other technical support. Lexware has an interactive website, using only the German language, that allows customers to purchase and download free trials of Lexware’s software products. The website is accessible worldwide, including in Texas. Lexware has sent fifteen internet orders to twelve Texas billing or shipping addresses since 2007. Lexware’s materials may also be purchased on several third-party vendor websites, which are accessible by persons in Texas. Lexware books are available for purchase on Amazon’s U.S. website.
Pervasive describes itself as “a global leader in embeddable data management and data integration software,” and has sold its products to customers in more than 150 countries. It has an interactive website that is accessible worldwide and in Germany, and it has used foreign third-party distributors. Most of Pervasive’s offices are in Texas, but the company maintains a European Service and Support Center in Dublin, Ireland, and has several offices in Japan and Europe, including in Germany. Pervasive employed two German resident representatives, who used a German e-mail address (pervasive.de) to contact Lexware. Many of Pervasive’s communications with Lexware were in German. Lexware representatives also used German e-mail addresses (lexware.de).
In 2008, Pervasive representatives e-mailed Lexware, in the German language, to request the return of the Btrieve master CD and key generator. [3] Lexware replied, promising to handle the request but asking for more information about when and to whom Pervasive gave the CD and key generator. The record does not reflect whether Pervasive supplied Lexware with this information. In 2009, Pervasive’s German representatives requested that Lexware report on its distribution of Lexware software products that incorporated Btrieve. Lexware refused on grounds that the DSLA did not obligate Lexware to make such reports or to pay Pervasive any royalty on the sale of Lexware products. Pervasive then contacted Lexware to terminate the DSLA. When Lexware rejected its demand, Pervasive sent Lexware a cease-and- desist letter. On March 26, 2010, Pervasive filed a complaint against Lexware in the 200th Judicial District of Travis County, Texas, seeking damages and injunctive relief. Pervasive raised four causes of action. First, Pervasive claimed that Lexware breached its contractual obligations under the DLSA. Pervasive also claimed that it was entitled to the fair value of Lexware’s use of Btrieve under quantum meruit and unjust enrichment. Finally, Pervasive claimed that Lexware committed the tort of conversion by wrongfully exercising dominion and control over Btrieve. Lexware removed the case to the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas and filed motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(2), 12(b)(6). The district court granted Lexware’s 12(b)(2) motion, and Pervasive appealed.
II. Discussion
A. Standards of Review
We review de novo a district court’s determination that it lacks personal
jurisdiction.
Stripling v. Jordan Prod. Co.
,
B. Personal Jurisdiction
1. General Principles
A federal court sitting in diversity must satisfy two requirements to
exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant. First, the forum
state’s long-arm statute must confer personal jurisdiction. Second, the exercise
of jurisdiction must not exceed the boundaries of the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Mink v. AAAA Dev. LLC
,
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects a
corporation, as it does an individual, against being made subject to the binding
judgments of a forum with which it has established no meaningful “contacts,
ties, or relations.”
Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington
,
“Endeavoring to give specific content to the ‘fair play and substantial
justice’ concept, the Court in
International Shoe
classified cases involving
out-of-state corporate defendants. First, as in
International Shoe
itself,
jurisdiction unquestionably could be asserted where the corporation’s in-state
activity is ‘continuous and systematic’ and
that activity gave rise to the
episode-in-suit
.”
Id.
(quoting
Int’l Shoe
,
“
International Shoe
distinguished from cases that fit within the ‘specific
jurisdiction’ categories, ‘instances in which the continuous corporate operations
within a state [are] so substantial and of such a nature as to justify suit against
it on causes of action arising from dealings entirely distinct from those
activities.’”
Id.
at 2853 (alteration in original) (quoting
Int’l Shoe
,
“Since
International Shoe
, this Court’s decisions have elaborated primarily
on circumstances that warrant the exercise of specific jurisdiction, particularly
in cases involving ‘single or occasional acts’ occurring or having their impact
within the forum State. As a rule in these cases, this Court has inquired whether
there was ‘some act by which the defendant purposefully avail[ed] itself of the
privilege of conducting activities within the forum State, thus invoking the
benefits and protections of its laws.’
Hanson v. Denckla
, [357 U.S. 235, 253
(1958)].
See e.g.
,
World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson
, [
2. Lack of Specific Jurisdiction—Breach of Contract, Unjust
Enrichment, and Quantum Meruit Claims
Specific jurisdiction requires a plaintiff to show that: “(1) there are
sufficient (i.e., not ‘random fortuitous or attenuated’) pre-litigation connections
between the non-resident defendant and the forum; (2) the connection has been
purposefully established by the defendant; and (3) the plaintiff’s cause of action
arises out of or is related to the defendant’s forum contacts. Once [the] plaintiff
makes that showing, the defendant can then defeat the exercise of specific
jurisdiction by showing (4) that it would fail the fairness test, i.e., that the
balance of interest factors show that the exercise of jurisdiction would be
unreasonable.” 1 Robert C. Casad & William B. Richman, Jurisdiction in Civil
Actions § 2-5, at 144 (3d ed. 1998) [hereinafter Casad & Richman] (footnote
citing cases omitted);
see also McFadin v. Gerber
,
In respect to Pervasive’s breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and quantum meruit claims, Pervasive has not made a prima facie showing of any act by which Lexware purposefully availed itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state of Texas, so as to invoke the benefits and protections of its laws. Accepting as true the facts alleged by Pervasive, all of Lexware’s acts giving rise to Pervasive’s claims against Lexware took place in Germany, not in Texas. Lexware purchased Pervasive’s software product, Btrieve, in Germany from SOS, a third-party German software distributor. The DSLA, the license contract between Pervasive and Lexware, was an off-the-shelf, out-of-the-box contract that was accepted and activated by Lexware’s purchase of Btrieve from SOS in Germany. There were no prior negotiations between Pervasive and Lexware and SOS was not an agent of either company. Lexware allegedly later breached the DSLA in Germany when it refused Pervasive’s demands that it terminate the DSLA and cease and desist its dominion and control over Btrieve in Germany. Likewise, Pervasive’s claims against Lexware for unjust enrichment and quantum meruit arose in Germany from Lexware’s refusal of Pervasive’s demand that it cease and desist its dominion over the Btrieve software. Consequently, because none of Lexware’s acts giving rise to Pervasive’s claims occurred in or purposefully established contacts with Texas, the assertion of specific personal jurisdiction over Lexware for those claims in Texas would offend due process. Accordingly, the district court did not err in granting Lexware’s Rule 12(b)(2) motion to dismiss the complaint against it for lack of specific personal jurisdiction over Lexware. This conclusion is clearly required by the controlling Supreme Court and circuit precedents discussed below.
a. Neither Lexware’s purchase and use of Btrieve nor its entry
into the DSLA established purposeful contacts with Texas.
“The unilateral activity of [a plaintiff] who claim[s] some relationship with
a nonresident defendant cannot satisfy the requirement of contact with the
forum State. . . . [I]t is essential in each case that there be some act 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.”
Hanson
,
Moreover, it is now well settled that “an individual’s contract with an
out-of-state party
alone
[cannot] automatically establish sufficient minimum
contacts in the other party’s home forum.”
Burger King
,
Applying these principles, Lexware, by becoming a party to the DSLA in
Germany, did not make minimum contacts with Texas or purposefully avail
itself of the protections and benefits of that state’s laws. There were no prior
negotiations between Lexware and Pervasive concerning that contract. The
DSLA was an off-the-shelf, out-of-the-box contract that came with Btrieve, which
Lexware purchased in Germany from a German software distributor. Nothing
in the DSLA or the manner of purchase suggested that either party envisioned
a long-term interactive business relationship involving Lexware’s purposeful
future contacts with Texas. Thus, the DSLA was not “an intermediate step
serving to tie up prior business negotiations” by the parties in Texas or a
contract calling for Lexware’s future purposeful contacts with Pervasive in the
forum state.
Id.
at 479 (citing
Hoopeston Canning Co.
,
Although the DSLA did contain a Texas choice-of-law clause, that clause
alone is not dispositive of the issue of specific personal jurisdiction.
Burger King
,
Thus, Lexware’s acts solely within Germany that gave rise to its
contractual relationship with Pervasive under the DSLA differentiate this case
from
Burger King
,
program in Germany and thereby entered into the related licensing agreement, the DSLA, with Pervasive in Germany. The DSLA required only that the purchaser return the object code and source code to Pervasive’s office in Texas upon the contract’s termination; and purchasers were asked to fill out and return two exhibits attached to the DSLA to Pervasive’s office in Texas. It envisioned no additional contact between the purchasing party and Pervasive or its home state of Texas. Lexware’s subsequent communication about Btrieve was limited to a request for the Btrieve Ultimate Patch, which Pervasive never supplied. None of Lexware’s actions in that connection demonstrates that it [5]
purposefully “reach[ed] out” to Pervasive in Texas so as to subject it to Texas
courts’ jurisdiction.
Burger King
, 471 U.S. at 473 (alteration in original)
(“[P]arties who ‘reach out beyond one state and create continuing relationships
and obligations with citizens of another state’ are subject to the regulations and
sanctions in the other State for the consequences of their activities.” (quoting
Travelers Health Ass’n v. Virginia
,
Instead, the record demonstrates that in respect to Lexware’s purchase of the Btrieve software, and entry into the DSLA with Pervasive, Pervasive reached beyond Texas and into Germany, Lexware’s principal place of business, not vice versa. In its complaint, Pervasive described itself as “a global leader in embeddable data management and data integration software.” It went on to boast that: “For more than two decades, Pervasive Software’s products have delivered value to tens of thousands of customers in more than 150 countries, and international sales and operations currently account for a substantial part of Pervasive Software’s business.” It states that it has “servic[ed] virtually every industry and market around the world.” Pervasive sold its software to a German third-party distributor for sale in Germany. It employed representatives who lived in Germany, used German e-mail addresses, and conversed with Lexware largely in German. Thus, in respect to Lexware’s purchase of the Btrieve software and its entry into the DSLA contract with Pervasive in Germany, it was Pervasive, rather than Lexware, that reached out of its own state in order to purposefully sell its product and create a contractual relationship with Lexware in Germany.
b. Pervasive’s attempt to link the EMPA and its Addendum 1 with the
DSLA is futile because neither contract provides such a link or a purposeful contact by Lexware to the forum state.
Pervasive argues that Addendum 1 to the EMPA, in linkage with the DSLA, established purposeful contacts by Lexware with Texas. We disagree. We have just explained why Lexware’s entering into the DSLA did not involve any purposeful contact by it with Texas. For similar reasons, the EMPA and its Addendum 1 did not involve any purposeful contact by Lexware with Texas either. Pervasive’s argument that the parties agreed to link the EMPA’s Addendum 1 with the DSLA is without merit.
In 1999 and 2000, the parties negotiated and executed the EMPA and its Addendum 1 in Germany. In the EMPA, Pervasive licensed Lexware to use certain Pervasive software products, viz. , Pervasive SQL Client/Server engine for Windows NT Netware and Linux (Suse, Red Hat and Caldera); Pervasive SQL 2000 Workgroup; and Pervasive SQL 2000 Workstation. The EMPA and its Addendum 1 deal only with Pervasive’s SQL 2000 products; they do not affect or alter the DSLA by which Lexware was licensed to use Pervasive’s Btrieve software product in 1994. The DSLA and the EMPA (with its Addendum 1) are two separate contracts which license Lexware to use two different lines of Pervasive products, Btrieve and Pervasive’s SQL 2000 products, respectively.
Pervasive argues that “[b]y its own language, Addendum 1 to the EMPA (the ‘Btrieve Addendum’) licensed 7,500 Btrieve ‘enabling’ seats to Lexware for US $125,250.” But this is simply not so. Addendum 1 to the EMPA clearly licensed Lexware to use 7,500 “user seats of the Software authorized for distribution by [Lexware] as specified in Attachment 1 paragraph 1.1 of the European Manufacturing Partner Agreement.” That Attachment 1 paragraph 1.1 of the EMPA provides: “1. Software Authorized for Distribution by [Lexware]: 1.1 Pervasive SQL 2000 Client/Server engine for Windows NT; Netware and Linux (Suse, Red Hat and Caldera)[.]” Thus, Addendum 1 to the EMPA licensed Lexware to use only the Pervasive SQL products and not the Btrieve Client Engine Version 6.15, which we have referred to in shorthand in this opinion as “Btrieve.” Consequently, Addendum 1 to the EMPA did not link the DSLA with the EMPA or link the Btrieve and the Pervasive SQL software products, as Pervasive contends.
Pervasive’s argument appears to be based on the appearance of the term “Btrieve” in a single instance in Addendum 1 of the EMPA in which it provides:
1. Btrieve Enabling Technology Program (“Enabling”) “Enabling” means the utilization of a Btrieve connection for internal (internal to the application) use by application software developed, marketed and installed by Lexware. This prerequisit [sic] is linked to the fact that all Lexware application software independent of the database management system used, requires “Enabling” in order to function properly.
Pervasive, as the drafter of the contract, presumably could have explained exactly what this provision means, but it did not undertake to do so. Instead, Pervasive assumes, without explaining how, that the Addendum 1 to the EMPA somehow links the EMPA with the DSLA and thereby makes both contracts applicable to the otherwise separate and distinct software products dealt with by each contract, viz. , “Btrieve Client Engine Version 6.15” and “Pervasive SQL Client/Server engine for Windows NT; Netware and Linux (Suse, Red Hat and Caldera),” respectively. In the absence of further alleged facts or explanation by Pervasive, we do not think the EMPA and its Addendum 1 can reasonably be read to merge them with the DSLA or to confuse the software products dealt with separately by each contract. Furthermore, even if the DSLA and the EMPA were to be linked as Pervasive supposes, this would not come any closer to conferring specific jurisdiction upon the Texas forum over Lexware in this case. The EMPA and its Addendum 1, like the DSLA, did not involve any purposeful contact with Texas by Lexware. Thus, the two contracts, together or apart, fail to establish specific jurisdiction over Lexware in Texas.
c. Lexware’s internet website sales did not establish personal
jurisdiction over Lexware in Texas
Pervasive adduced evidence that twelve persons or businesses in Texas bought fifteen software programs from Lexware over the internet during a four- year period. Consequently, Pervasive argues, Lexware made sufficient minimum contacts to subject it to specific personal jurisdiction in Texas. Considering, however, that these internet sales averaged only about $66 each, that none of them resulted in actionable harm to anyone in Texas, that only nine of the fifteen products were derived from Btrieve, and that none of Pervasive’s causes of action arose or resulted from those internet sales, this jurisdictional argument is meritless. [6]
The Supreme Court has recognized that the internet is “‘a unique and
wholly new medium of worldwide human communication.’”
Reno v. Am. Civil
Liberties Union
,
“The exercise of specific personal jurisdiction based on the defendant’s
contacts with the forum through the Internet requires that the plaintiff satisfy
the terms of the appropriate jurisdictional statute, and then show that the
exercise of jurisdiction will not violate the Constitution.”
Id.
at 332. “This due
process analysis has been refined . . . into a three-part test that seems fully
applicable to jurisdiction questions generated by the new technologies: (1) Did
the plaintiff’s cause of action arise out of or result from the defendant’s
forum-related contacts? (2) Did the defendant purposely direct its activities
toward the forum state or purposely avail itself of the privilege of conducting
activities therein? (3) Would the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the
defendant be reasonable and fair?”
Id.
at 334 (citing
Mink
, 190 F.3d at 336;
Bancroft & Masters, Inc. v. Augusta Nat’l Inc.
,
purposeful conduct,
see Mink
,
Pervasive fails the first part of the three-part test because the causes of
action it asserts, based on Lexware’s alleged breach of the DSLA in Germany
and Lexware’s alleged dominion and control of Btrieve in Germany, did not arise
out of or result from the relatively sparse contacts involving Lexware’s fifteen
internet website sales of its products to twelve Texas billing addresses.
See
Revell v. Lidov
,
Moreover, Pervasive also fails the second part of the three-part test
because Lexware’s actions of making its German tax and financial software
internet-accessible were not purposely directed toward Texas or purposely
availing of the privilege of conducting activities in Texas. In
Hanson
, the Court
said that jurisdiction cannot exist unless “there be some act 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.”
“The objective of the purposeful availment requirement is to provide
predictability and give notice to the defendant that it is subject to suit in the
forum state, so that the company ‘can act to alleviate the risk of burdensome
litigation by procuring insurance, passing the expected costs on to customers, or,
if the risks are too great, severing its connection with the State.’”
Hy Cite Corp.
v. Badbusinessbureau.com, LLC
,
Applying these principles, we conclude that Pervasive failed to show that
Lexware had purposeful minimum contacts with Texas such that it should have
reasonably anticipated being haled into court there. Lexware has no offices or
sales agents in Texas and solicits no business there through advertising targeted
specifically to Texas. Lexware’s only contact with Texas is a commercial,
interactive website which is accessible globally but available only in the German
language. This only coincidentally, and not purposely or deliberately, includes
contact with a relatively few German taxpayers who happen to access it from
Texas. Because Lexware’s website and products were not available in English
and have little utility for Texas or U.S. taxpayers, Lexware’s contacts with Texas
via its website cannot be interpreted as purposeful attempts to develop a market
for Lexware’s German tax return preparation programs in Texas or to avail itself
of the protections of that state’s laws. “[T]he foreseeability that is critical to due
process analysis is not the mere likelihood that a product will find its way into
the forum State. Rather, it is that the defendant’s conduct and connection with
the forum State are such that he should reasonably anticipate being haled into
court there.”
World-Wide Volkswagen
,
In essence, Lexware’s actions toward Texas and its affiliation with that state were not so deliberate and substantial that Lexware should have reasonably anticipated being haled into court in Texas.
3. Lack Of Specific Jurisdiction—Conversion
The Texas long-arm statute states that a nonresident is considered to be
doing business in the state—and therefore is subject to personal jurisdiction—
if it “commits a tort in whole or in part in [Texas].” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
§ 17.042;
see also McFadin
,
as “‘the wrongful exercise of dominion and control over another’s property in
denial of or inconsistent with his rights.’”
Bandy v. First State Bank, Overton,
Tex.
,
It is undisputed that Lexware lawfully received dominion, control, and
license to use the Btrieve software under the DSLA when Lexware purchased
the Btrieve software package from SOS in Germany in 1994. There is no
allegation or evidence that Lexware acted to exercise dominion and control over
the Btrieve software by refusing to return it to Pervasive in any country other
than Germany. In its complaint, Pervasive alleges that Lexware committed the
tort of conversion by “wrongfully exercising dominion or control over the Btrieve
Software in a manner inconsistent with Pervasive Software’s rights.” In effect,
Pervasive alleges that Lexware’s license to use and control Btrieve ceased when
Pervasive notified Lexware that it was terminating the DSLA and demanded
that Lexware cease and desist dominion and control over Btrieve. However, that
conversion, if it occurred as alleged by Pervasive, was committed in Germany,
not Texas. Pervasive argues that Lexware, which has offices only in Germany,
retained a copy of the Btrieve software after Pervasive attempted to terminate
the DSLA, and therefore converted that copy of the software. The Btrieve
software therefore was converted, if at all, in Germany, not in Texas. Because
the tort was not committed, in whole or in part, in Texas, it does not fall under
Texas’s long-arm statute.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. § 17.042;
Tuscano v.
Osterberg
,
In its complaint, Pervasive alleged only that Lexware converted the Btrieve software. In response to Lexware’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion, Pervasive also argued that Lexware converted a master CD and key generator by retaining them after Pervasive attempted to terminate the DSLA. However, these alleged conversions also occurred in Germany and therefore the Texas long-arm statute is not applicable. Therefore, because Pervasive has not pleaded or argued that Lexware committed the alleged conversions in whole or in part in Texas, Pervasive did not make a prima facie showing that Lexware can be haled into Texas courts under the Texas long-arm statute.
4. General Personal Jurisdiction
Pervasive also failed to make a prima facie case of general personal
jurisdiction. “A court may assert general jurisdiction over foreign (sister-state
or foreign-country) corporations to hear any and all claims against them when
their affiliations with the State are so ‘continuous and systematic’ as to render
them essentially at home in the forum State.”
Goodyear Dunlop
,
The Supreme Court has held that a court may exercise general personal
jurisdiction over a company in only one case that postdated
International Shoe.
In
Perkins v. Benguet Consol. Mining Co.
,
Measured against
Goodyear Dunlop, Helicopteros,
and
Perkins
, it is clear
that Lexware has not had continuous and systematic contacts in Texas such that
it would be permissible to subject Lexware to general personal jurisdiction in the
forum state of Texas. Unlike the defendant in
Perkins
, whose sole wartime
business activity was conducted in Ohio, Lexware is in no sense at home in
Texas. Lexware’s attenuated connections to the state fall far short of the “‘the
continuous and systematic general business contacts”’ necessary to make
Lexware “at home” in the forum. These connections therefore do not empower
Texas to entertain suit against Lexware on claims unrelated to anything that
connects Lexware to the state.
Goodyear Dunlop
,
C.
In its January 4, 2011 order, the district court granted Lexware’s Rule
12(b)(2) motion and dismissed the case without prejudice. It therefore did not
reach Lexware’s 12(b)(6) motion. Pervasive argues that the district court should
have addressed Pervasive’s conversion claim only in the 12(b)(6) motion and that
it erred by conflating merits issues raised in the 12(b)(6) motion with its analysis
of the 12(b)(2) motion. The district court did not err in first addressing the
12(b)(2) motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction over Lexware or in
granting that motion. “Personal jurisdiction, [like subject matter jurisdiction],
is ‘an essential element of the jurisdiction of a district . . . court,’ without which
the court is ‘powerless to proceed to an adjudication.’”
Ruhrgas AG v. Marathon
Oil Co.
,
D.
Finally, Pervasive argues that the district court should have granted its
requests for leave to amend the complaint.“Whether leave to amend should be
granted is entrusted to the sound discretion of the district court, and that court’s
ruling is reversible only for an abuse of discretion.”
Wimm v. Jack Eckerd Corp.
,
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
[1] Btrieve is a software product that provides a database module that stores, edits, and searches data, and was produced with the purpose of being purchased and used by other software developers, who incorporate Btrieve into their own derivative software products.
[2] The parties disagree about whether this software sale took place in 1994 or 1996.
“When, as here, the district court conducted no evidentiary hearing, the party seeking to assert
jurisdiction must present sufficient facts as to make out only a prima facie case supporting
jurisdiction. We must accept as true that party’s uncontroverted allegations, and resolve in its
favor all conflicts between the facts contained in the parties’ affidavits and other
documentation.”
Alpine View Co. Ltd. v. Atlas Copco AB
,
[3] Neither party has provided a description of these items. The Btrieve master CD was likely the CD on which Lexware’s copy of Btrieve was stored. Neither party explains the exact nature of the “key generator.” Although the record does not state this, we assume that the CD and key generator were contained in the Btrieve product package that Lexware purchased from SOS in 1994.
[4] Pervasive cites to two Texas court cases,
Michiana Easy Livin’ Country Inc. v. Holten
,
[5] Indeed, the DSLA specifically stated that Pervasive was not responsible for providing any technical assistance or upgrades to purchasers of Btrieve, which further suggests that Pervasive itself did not intend the DSLA to create any long-term contacts between Pervasive and the purchaser.
[6] Pervasive also argues that the mere availability of some Lexware products on third- party websites accessible from Texas is a relevant contact by Lexware with Texas. Pervasive produced no allegations or evidence that any Texas resident actually purchased a Lexware product from a third-party website, or that Lexware intended its products to be purchased by persons or entities in Texas. Therefore, this argument is without merit.
[7] In
International Shoe
, the Court warned that “[i]t is evident that the criteria by which
we mark the boundary line between those activities which justify the subjection of a
corporation to suit, and those which do not, cannot be simply mechanical or quantitative.”
Int’l
Shoe
,
[8] “The plaintiff bears the initial burden of pleading allegations sufficient to bring a
nonresident defendant within the provisions of the long-arm statute.”
American Type Culture
Collection, Inc. v. Coleman
,
