In this case, the trial court dismissed a lawsuit filed in Collin County, Texas be *30 tween two Michigan businesses based on common law forum non conveniens. The court of appeals reversed the dismissal, holding that the trial court abused its discretion. It agreed that the proposed forum, Michigan, was available and adequate for the lawsuit, but held that the defendant did not meet its burden to show that the private and public interest factors of the forum non conveniens analysis strongly weighed in favor of dismissal. The defendant appealed to this Court. Because the trial court did not abuse its discretion, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment.
This dispute arose between Quixtar Inc. and Signature Management Team, LLC, d/b/a Team (“Team”). Quixtar is a Virginia corporation with a principal place of business in Michigan. Team is a limited liability company organized in Nevada with a principal place of business in Michigan. Quixtar, a successor to Amway Corporation, is a multi-level marketing corporation that sells products through a network of individual business owners (IBOs). IBOs increase revenue by recruiting new IBOs for Quixtar, and Quixtar promulgates rules regulating IBO recruitment to ensure compliance with Federal Trade Commission regulations pertaining to multi-level marketing businesses.
Team is a “tools company” that sells marketing tools, self-help books, seminars, and motivational speaker appearances to IBOs to assist them in developing their businesses. Quixtar also owns a training system and sells similar tools to IBOs, making it a direct competitor with Team. Leading up to this dispute, Quixtar alleged that Team taught IBOs improper and potentially illegal business-building techniques that put Quixtar’s entire business at risk. The entities met at Quixtar’s headquarters in Michigan on August 9, 2007, to discuss Team’s alleged noncompliance with Quixtar’s rules and potential remedial measures. Quixtar alleges that Team threatened to file a “storm” of litigation initiated by Team-affiliated IBOs if Quix-tar did not capitulate to certain demands, such as waiving non-compete provisions in its contract so that Team founders Orrin Woodward and Chris Brady could recruit IBOs for a separate business endeavor. When they did not resolve their disagreements, Quixtar terminated Woodward and Brady’s IBO contracts and revoked Team’s authorization to sell training materials. The same day, Team-affiliated IBOs filed a class-action lawsuit against Quixtar in California. Over the next several days, Quix-tar sent e-mails to its IBOs. In the e-mails, Quixtar explained the terminations and warned certain Team-affiliated IBOs that their businesses would also be terminated if they continued using Team products. Team-affiliated IBOs filed seventeen lawsuits, including seven in Michigan. Michigan courts repeatedly denied the injunc-tive relief requested by the IBOs, but eventually a court in Collin County, Texas issued a temporary restraining order against Quixtar to prevent Quixtar from initiating any adverse action against Team-affiliated IBOs.
Team initiated suit in Collin County, Texas on September 4, 2007, alleging that Quixtar abused its power by interpreting rules governing IBOs to restrain Team’s trade and business with certain IBOs located in Collin County. It alleges that Quixtar’s e-mail communications were part of its basis for commencing suit. Quixtar filed a motion to dismiss based on the common law forum non conveniens doctrine, arguing that the suit arose from a business dispute centered in Michigan that had no substantial connection to Texas. At the evidentiary hearing on Quixtar’s motion to dismiss, the trial court heard testimony from three Team-affiliated IBOs and the General Counsel of Quixtar’s par *31 ent company, Alticor. It granted the motion to dismiss.
The court of appeals held that the trial court abused its discretion by granting the forum non conveniens dismissal. It reasoned that “the plaintiffs choice of forum must be respected unless evidence shows the private-interest and public-interest factors
strongly
favor dismissal in favor of another forum.”
Quixtar argues that the trial court did not abuse its discretion and that the court of appeals erred in reversing the forum non conveniens dismissal. It asserts that the court of appeals’ analysis was flawed, imposing an excessive burden of proof on Quixtar because (1) a nonresident plaintiffs forum choice deserves substantially less deference than a resident plaintiffs, and (2) it improperly required Quixtar to prove that all of the public and private interest factors “strongly” favored dismissal. We address each contention.
The
“forum non conveniens
determination is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.”
Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno,
A defendant seeking forum non conveniens dismissal “ordinarily bears a heavy burden in opposing the plaintiffs chosen forum.”
Sinochem Int'l Co. v. Malaysia Int’l Shipping Corp.,
*32
Team argues that we should not defer to
Pirelli’s
“less deference” language because
Pirelli
is a plurality opinion and only addressed Texas’s forum non conveniens statute. But
Pirelli’s
significance should not be dismissed so easily. First, while it addressed Texas’s forum non conveniens statute and not the common law doctrine, the statute has “deep roots in the common law.”
Pirelli,
In addition to
Pirelli,
precedent from the United States Supreme Court supports the proposition that a defendant’s “heavy burden” applies with “less force” when seeking a forum non conveniens dismissal to a nonresident plaintiffs forum choice.
See Sinochem,
Here, the court of appeals acknowledged
Pirelli,
but dismissed it as a plurality opinion and followed language from its opinion in
Sarieddine v. Moussa,
Team is not a Texas resident.
1
It is organized in Nevada with a principal
*33
place of business — like Quixtar- — in Michigan. It claims a connection to Texas because Team-affiliated IBOs reside here, but only one of these IBOs testified to material facts of firsthand knowledge at the evidentiary hearing in the trial court. There are Team-affiliated IBOs all over the world- — including in Michigan — that could supply substantially the same testimony. As a result, the presumption that Team filed in Texas as a matter of convenience applies with less force and deserves “substantially less deference” than it would if Team were a Texas resident.
See Pirelli,
Next, Quixtar alleges that the court of appeals further placed an excessive burden of persuasion on it, contrary to our opinion in
In re General Electric Co.,
by requiring it to prove that each of the
Gulf Oil
factors strongly favored dismissal.
See generally In re Gen. Elec. Co.,
The “central focus of the
forum non conveniens
inquiry is convenience.”
Reyno,
In
Reyno,
the United States Supreme Court purposefully refused to “lay down a rigid rule to govern discretion” in these cases because “ ‘[e]ach case turns on its facts.”’
Quixtar presented sufficient evidence for the trial court to determine that the private interest factors weighed in favor of dismissal. Both entities’ principal places of business are in Michigan; a key meeting leading up to this dispute occurred in Michigan; and the vast majority of evidence that would be produced and key witnesses that would testify at trial are located in Michigan. In contrast, Team argues that the case should proceed to trial in Collin County because Team-affiliated IBOs reside there whose testimony is material for trial. At the evidentiary hearing, Team presented evidence of three IBOs who testified that it would be inconvenient for them to travel to Michigan for trial, only one of which appeared to have material, firsthand knowledge of events leading up to Team filing this lawsuit.
Despite recognizing that Quixtar identified sixteen important witnesses residing in Michigan and that an “overwhelming majority” of records that it intended to use in the lawsuit were maintained in Michigan, the court of appeals determined the evidentiary showing was “weak.”
However, parties do not need to quantify the extra costs of litigating in an undesirable forum in detail for a forum non conveniens dismissal. They only must provide enough information for the trial court to weigh the interests at hand. The
*35
court of appeals inappropriately disregarded Quixtar’s evidence about the location of its witnesses and records.
Reyno,
The court of appeals also held that the public interest factors did not “on the whole, strongly favor Michigan as a more appropriate forum for Team’s lawsuit than Texas.”
Ultimately, the court of appeals recognized the trial court’s legitimate dismissal, but did not give the trial court’s decision appropriate deference. There was sufficient evidence to uphold the dismissal, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion. The court of appeals mechanically re-weighed the Gulf Oil factors under the scope of an excessive burden of proof. But, forum non conveniens dismissals are within the sound discretion of the trial court and involve weighing various factors that may be difficult to quantify. We decline to establish a formulaic application for a trial court’s forum non conveniens determination.
The trial court’s dismissal in this case was not an abuse of discretion in light of the evidence before it and Quixtar’s burden of proof. For these reasons, and without hearing oral argument, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and reinstate the trial court’s dismissal. See Tex.R.App. P. 59.1.
Notes
. Team argues it should be considered a Texas resident because it is registered to do business and has numerous contacts here. However, Team was not registered to do business in Texas until
after
it filed suit against Quixtar in Collin County. Even so, Team's authority to do business in Texas does not govern residency.
See In re Smith Barney, Inc.,
. While we disagree with the court of appeals’ reliance on the “strongly favors” standard from Sarieddine as applied to nonresident plaintiffs' forum choices, we express no opinion on the validity of the holding in that case.
