MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This legal malpractice case was brought against Connecticut lawyers by the trustees of a family trust registered in Missouri. It is contended (without dispute) that the late Reverend Porter, the father of the three trustees, and trustee Boone Porter III (a resident of Kansas with law offices in Missouri) sought assistance from defendants in September, 1996, to amend a 1990 trust instrument to assure, among other things, that any tax exposure in Connecticut would be eliminated or minimized. Two months before execution of the trust amendment in February, 1998, the Connecticut appellate court ruled that a trust’s undistributed capital gains may constitutionally be taxable in Connecticut when any of the beneficiaries are Connecticut residents.
Chase Manhattan Bank v. Comm’r of Revenue Services,
Plaintiffs’ basic contention is that defendants neglected to take into account, in estate planning, the recent decision of the Connecticut court, and that costly corrections of the plan were required in late 1999, after the death of the father. Plaintiffs seek over $200,000 in such alleged corrective costs, and also punitive damages for alleged reckless or willful misconduct and breach of fiduciary obligations in allegedly concealing information about the adverse decision until some time after the father’s death.
1
Silence regarding any
Defendants move to dismiss the action for want of personal jurisdiction over them. They contend that certain Missouri aspects of the litigation, such as payment of corrective expenses from funds deposited here, and some activities in Missouri after the death of the father, are insufficient to confer personal jurisdiction, as a matter of constitutional law. After an evidentiary hearing and briefing, I have become satisfied that Eighth Circuit law, governed by rulings of the Supreme Court, requires dismissal.
In seeking to avoid undue complications I assume that both plaintiffs Porter and their father were clients of defendants from 1996 onward. I also assume that the Missouri registration of the trust gives adequate standing to litigate, in the same manner as if the three trustees were Missouri residents. From a reasonable reading of the pleadings I conclude that the principle claim asserted is of professional malpractice in Connecticut prior to execution of the trust amendment in February, 1998, but that there is a subordinate claim under Connecticut law of a continuing fiduciary duty to disclose any malpractice and any tax problems known to counsel. I agree with plaintiffs that any injury asserted relates to trust funds in Missouri that were used to rectify the structuring of the trust.
Although all cases have not reached the same conclusion, because of some variance in facts and approach, the clearly compelling body of law regarding lawyer malpractice confines personal jurisdiction to the situs of the acts and omissions complained of. A federal judge in Maryland has aptly asserted that “case law overflows on the point that providing out-of-state legal representation is not enough to subject an out-of-state lawyer or law firm to the personal jurisdiction of the state in which a client resides.”
Cape v. von Maur,
The Eighth Circuit
Austad
case, which appears to be the leading case (along with Malmo) that is dispositive of the personal jurisdiction question here, was cited and explained by another Eighth Circuit opinion,
Dakota Industries, Inc. v. Dakota Sportswear, Inc.,
Plaintiffs candidly recognize that Austad and Malmo present them with problems, but attempt to distinguish them, and all similar attorney malpractice cases, by saying they deal with “a litigation matter” being conducted in another state. None of the cases, however, makes such a distinction, and no rationale for the distinction is offered or occurs to the court. Without trying to exhaust the subject, Poole seems to deal with accountant services similar to estate planning services and the court used out-of-state litigation cases for controlling principles.
Plaintiffs rely most heavily on a recent Fifth Circuit decision.
Streber v. Hunter,
In the present case, nothing has been presented that would link a failure to act or to make disclosures with any particular communication to Missouri that gives rise to plaintiffs’ claim. Non communication seems to be one of the pertinent contentions. The affirmative misconduct alleged was in drafting documents that were harmful or inept, and the claims about silence and failure to correct appear to be Connecticut-based. Wein and Streber thus offer little or no support to the jurisdictional claim here.
The most specific claim of concealment, according to the briefing, appears to be some evasiveness in a telephone conversation with plaintiff Porter some months after his father’s death, at a time when damaging malpractice is alleged to have been completed. Stretching the claim beyond what may be permissible, this would seem to relate to punitive damages only.
Defendants are thus clearly entitled to a dismissal of the claims, insofar as specific personal jurisdiction is dependent on conduct allegedly constituting professional malpractice but essentially confined to Connecticut.
An alternate claim of general personal jurisdiction would lie, however, on a showing of persistent substantial activities in or directed toward the forum, even if not intrinsically part of the cause of action.
Helicópteros Nacionales de Colombia v. Hall,
Based on the foregoing, defendants’ motion to dismiss for want of personal jurisdiction will be sustained. A transfer of the case to federal court in Connecticut would seem appropriate to resolution of the merits. In briefing, however, plaintiffs express concerns about the effect of their appearing in Connecticut. Such concerns may be ill founded, but plaintiffs are entitled to make their own appraisal. In order to preserve that opportunity, the motion to dismiss (ECF doc. 10) will be sustained and the Clerk is directed to enter judgment in favor of defendants, without prejudice, 30 days after filing of this order, unless, before expiration of that period, plaintiffs file a motion to transfer the case to Connecticut. 4 Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction (ECF doc. 2) is denied as moot and because the court lacks jurisdiction over defendants. SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Although not pertinent to this ruling, I note that I am somewhat baffled by the signifi-
. A Colorado state court case is cited for relying on the place of injury to establish jurisdiction.
. Although disposition of this case should not turn on unrelated public policy considerations, it seems that much of the conduct relied on to tie the defendants to Missouri occurred after the death of the Reverend Porter, in an attempt to correct and restructure the estate plan that plaintiffs claim was defective. It would be unfortunate if the courts would use such conduct to hang unwanted jurisdictional effects on parties seeking to settle or alleviate the problem giving rise to litigation. Nonresident participation by the original parties in such an enterprise should not be inhibited by fear of submitting to jurisdiction.
. This order will be stayed for an additional 30 days if, for example, there are settlement negotiations that cannot be quickly completed.
