OPINION
Appellants challenge the trial court’s denial of their motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted. The trial court certified both questions as important and doubtful. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
FACTS
Respondents are a class of farmers who were members of American Energy, Inc. (AEI), a North Dakota cooperative. The farmers signed grower agreements to produce grain for AEI. The farmers come from North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota. Appellant Pringle and Herig-stad is a law firm with its offices in Minot, North Dakota. It has no offices in Minnesota and its attorneys are not licensed to practice law in Minnesota. Appellant Herbert Meschke, a member of the Pringle & Herigstad law firm, provided legal services for AEI.
AEI had approximately 1,100 members; respondents comprised the majority of AEI members. AEI was headquartered in North Dakota and organized with the intention of building and operating an alcohol production plant in North Dakota. It became necessary for AEI to obtain a precon-struction loan so it borrowed two and a half million dollars from Beneficial Finance Company. Beneficial required AEI to obtain from its members binding written commitments for annual deliveries of grain to the facility for processing. Beneficial also required AEI to purchase contract repudiation insurance, which it did from Industrial Indemnity.
AEI hired Meschke to prepare a written offering circular to be used to solicit grower agreements from farmers and other AEI members. As required by law, the offering circular was filed with state securities agencies in South Dakota, North Dakota and Minnesota. Meschke hired lawyers in South Dakota and Minnesota to give their opinions concerning certain securities law requirements in those states. The grower agreements were delivered to farmers in their own states, including Minnesota.
The project failed. The plant was never built and AEI filed Chapter 7 bankruptcy in North Dakota. AEI defaulted on the pre-construction loan and Beneficial required Industrial Indemnity to abide by the contract repudiation insurance policy. In re *159 turn for payment, Industrial Indemnity took an assignment of the grower agreements from Beneficial and commenced lawsuits in North Dakota Federal Court against all the farmers who had signed the agreements. The federal court upheld the validity of the agreements and ruled Industrial Indemnity could enforce the grower agreements even though no plant was built.
Respondents commenced an action claiming appellant Meschke made negligent misrepresentations or omissions in the offering circular, growers grain supply agreement and related documents. Respondents also claim Meschke breached alleged duties he had to respondents, and induced AEI to breach an alleged contract it had with respondents. Respondents seek indemnity from appellants for attorney fees and settlement payments in the lawsuits commenced by Industrial Indemnity.
The trial court denied appellants’ motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
ISSUES
1. Did the trial court err in finding personal jurisdiction over appellants?
2. Did the trial court err when it found that respondents’ complaint states a cause action?
ANALYSIS
I. Personal Jurisdiction.
This court may assert personal jurisdiction over appellants only if respondents show appellants are subject to the applicable Minnesota long-arm statute, Minn.Stat. § 543.19 (1986) and that assertion of jurisdiction is consistent with the due process, or minimum contacts requirement of the United States Constitution.
See Sherburne County Social Serv. o.b.o. Pouliot v. Kennedy,
The Minnesota long-arm statute, Minn.Stat. § 543.19, was drafted in an effort to extend jurisdiction to the permissible limits allowed by constitutional due process.
Vikse v. Flaby,
commits any act outside Minnesota causing injury or property damage in Minnesota, subject to the following exceptions when no jurisdiction shall be found:
(1) Minnesota has no substantial interest in providing a forum; or
(2) the burden placed on the defendant by being brought under the state’s jurisdiction would violate fairness and substantial justice; or
(3) the cause of action lies in defamation or privacy.
Minn.Stat. § 543.19, subd. 1(d) (emphasis added).
The second exception represents a codification of the “minimum contacts” test. The question becomes: would the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the nonresident defendant offend due process. The United States Supreme Court has delineated the applicable constitutional standard of fundamental fairness as follows:
[D]ue process requires only that in order to subject a defendant to a judgment in personam, if he be not present within the territory of the forum, he have certain minimum contacts with it such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
To determine whether minimum contacts exist between a nonresident defendant and the state, this court examines five factors: (1) the quantity of contacts with the state, (2) the nature and quality of those contacts, (3) the connection or relationship between the contacts and the cause of action, (4) the state’s interest in providing a forum, and (5) the relative convenience of the parties.
Marquette Nat’l. Bank of Minnesota v. Norris,
We agree with the trial court that appellant Meschke’s minimum contacts with Minnesota are sufficient to confer jurisdiction under Minn.Stat. § 543.19 and the due process clause of the United States Constitution.
1. Quantity of contacts.
Meschke’s contacts with Minnesota -include numerous phone calls to Minnesota, many of which specifically dealt with the grower agreements, the offering circular, the preconstruction loan and the contract repudiation insurance. Meschke also sent numerous letters to individuals in Minnesota and attended meetings in Minnesota on at least four occasions. At least one of these meetings dealt with the enforceability of the grower agreements. Meschke hired four separate law firms in Minnesota to assist with work for AEI and its members.
2. Quality and nature of contacts.
In reviewing the nature and quality of the contacts, we determine whether the nonresidents “ ‘purposefully availed’ themselves of the benefits and protections of Minnesota law” or whether they were “brought into contact incidentally through the unilateral activity of the plaintiff.”
Dent-Air,
In
Hunt v. Nevada State Bank,
3.Connection between the claim and the contacts.
The defendants’ connection with the forum state must be such that they reasonably could anticipate being haled into court in the forum state. An important factor is whether the contacts involved in the case gave rise to the claim.
Dent-Air,
Meschke contends that his contacts in the course of his representation of AEI, do not become personal contacts for jurisdiction purposes. We disagree.
In
Edmonton World Hockey Enterprises v. Abrahams,
In addition, where an agent commits a tort, he is individually liable and the contact may be considered in finding personal jurisdiction over him. Washington Scientific Industries, Inc. v. American Safeguard Corp.,308 F.Supp. 736 , 739 (D.Minn.1970). Here, plaintiffs allege that defendant committed the tort of knowing misrepresentation. Defendant’s contacts with Minnesota related to the alleged tort are sufficient for the assertion of jurisdiction over him.
Id. at 608.
The contacts demonstrated here have their basis in Meschke’s alleged torts thus negating an agency/principal distinction in regards to personal jurisdiction.
4. Minnesota’s interest in providing a forum.
Minnesota has an interest in providing a forum for residents who have been wronged, but this interest is not a contact and cannot establish personal jurisdiction.
Dent-Air,
5. Convenience of the parties.
In analyzing this factor, we balance the interests of the plaintiff in trying the case in a particular forum against the inconvenience to the nonresident defendant for having to defend in the plaintiff's forum.
Anderson v. Luitjens,
Since in this case the inconvenience is not extensive and sufficient contacts have been established, the relative convenience of one forum over another is not dispositive and will not be considered.
In applying the five-factor test for determining minimal contacts, we agree with the trial court that the assertion of personal jurisdiction over appellants does not violate traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
II. Does the complaint state a cause of action?
Motions to dismiss under rule 12.02 for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted test only the sufficiency of the pleadings. D. Herr & R. Haydock, 1
Minnesota Practice
§ 12.9, at 260-61 (1985). On such motions, a court may not go outside the pleadings, and all assumptions made and inferences drawn must favor the party against whom dismissal is sought.
Northern States Power Co. v. Franklin,
A critical element in determining whether respondents’ complaint sets forth legally sufficient claims for relief is whether appellants and respondents had an attorney-client relationship. In
Viet v. Anderson,
Minnesota courts have recognized both a “contract theory” and a “tort theory” of the attorney-client relationship. An attorney-client relationship exists under the “contract theory” if the parties explicitly or implicitly agree that the attorney will provide legal services to the client. (Citations omitted.)
An attorney-client relationship exists under the “tort theory” even in the absence of an express contract “whenever a person seeks and receives legal advice from a lawyer under circumstances in which a *162 reasonable person would rely on the advice.” (Citations omitted.)
“[I]t must * * * be shown that [the attorney] rendered legal advice (not necessarily at someone’s request) under circumstances which made it reasonably foreseeable to the attorney that if such advice was rendered negligently, the individual receiving the advice might be injured thereby.” (Citation omitted.)
Viet,
Respondents allege that because of the appearance of inseparability between AEI and its members and the direct communication from Meschke, the activities performed by Meschke were being performed for them as members of the cooperative. We do not find this argument persuasive.
An incorporated cooperative is a legal entity, separate and apart from its members. 18 Am.Jur.2d Cooperative Associations, § 3, page 263. North Dakota law governing cooperatives recognizes a distinction between a cooperative and its members. North Dakota Century Code § 10-15-31, subd. 1 (1986) states that directors, trustees, officers and managers are immune from civil liability unless the act or omission constitutes gross or willful negligence or gross or willful misconduct. Subdivision 2 states that members, stockholders and patrons of a cooperative are not obligated to pay, and are not liable for, any cooperative obligation. Minnesota has similar laws. See Minn.Stat. §§ 308.05-.18 (1986).
In the present case Meschke was hired by the cooperative. Correspondence from Meschke, included in respondents’ complaint, was always addressed to AEI and not to individual farmers. We do not find the language in the correspondence was meant to establish an inseparable entity. The letters relied on by respondents were only an attempt to explain the various documents that potential members would execute to join the cooperative. Thus the correspondence did not establish a contractual relationship between Meschke and respondents.
Moreover, it is clear from the pleadings that under the “tort theory” no attorney-client relationship existed. The requirement under this theory is that an attorney must have provided legal advice or service, and the plaintiff must demonstrate that the information was such that under similar circumstances a reasonable person would have relied on the information.
See Viet,
In Viet, the appellant alleged that he sought and received inaccurate legal advice from his attorney whom he had consulted in the past. In the present case respondents did not seek advice and Meschke had never represented any of the respondents. Moreover, the information supplied by Meschke would not be the type of information that would establish an attorney-client relationship even if relied upon. The information was strictly informative.
The respondents’ complaint asserts five causes of action: (1) negligent misrepresentation; (2) constructive fraud (intentional or reckless); (3) breach of fiduciary duty; (4) wrongful interference with contract; and (5) common law indemnity.
1. Negligent misrepresentation.
Respondents first cause of action alleges negligence on the part of the appellant Meschke in making false, inaccurate, incomplete and/or misleading representations to respondents and negligently omitting disclosure of certain facts.
Minnesota courts have not extended the theory of negligent misrepresentation to claims by non-clients against an attorney. This approach was expressly rejected by this court in
Eustis v. David Agency, Inc.,
The trial court applied the well-established rule that an attorney will not be liable to a non-client third party for negligence. Liability arises only if that attorney acted with fraud, malice, or has otherwise committed an intentional tort.
Eustis,
2. Intentional or reckless fraud.
The respondents ask this court to both recognize a new cause of action— reckless misrepresentation — and hold that it is equivalent to intentional fraud.
As support for this theory respondents rely on
Florenzano v. Olson,
3. Breach of fiduciary duty.
Respondents’ third cause of action alleges that Meschke was in a fiduciary capacity with regard to the farmers and breached that duty. In
Midland National Bank of Minneapolis v. Perranoski,
The allegation that Meschke had a fiduciary duty to respondents is contrary to the rule in Minnesota that an attorney acting within the scope of his employment is immune from liability to third parties.
In
Marker v. Greenberg,
The cases extending the attorney’s duty to non-clients are limited to a narrow range of factual situations in which the client’s sole purpose in retaining an attorney is to benefit directly some third party.
Id.
at 5. Privity of contract or an attorney-client relationship is a requirement to an action against an attorney by a third party. It is not enough that respondents might have been intended beneficiaries of the work done by Meschke.
See Langeland v. Farmers State Bank of Trimont,
4.Wrongful inducement of breach of contract.
For their fourth cause of action, respondents allege Meschke wrongfully and without justification caused or induced AEI to breach its contract with respondents, and respondents suffered resulting damage.
There are five elements to this tort: (1) the existence of a contract; (2) the alleged wrongdoer’s knowledge of the contract; (3) intentional procurement of its breach; (4) without justification; and (5) damages.
Furlev Sales v. North American Automotive,
An examination of the pleadings leads us to the conclusion that the complaint does not set forth sufficient allegations that Meschke intentionally procured the breach of the contract without justification.
*164
The general rule is that officers of a corporation are shielded from personal liability for interference with contracts if they merely cause the corporation not to perform the contract.
Furlev,
Accordingly, we hold that respondents’ complaint regarding this cause of action fails to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
5. Common law indemnity.
Respondents’ complaint alleges that they were exposed to the liability of Industrial Indemnity on the grower agreements “solely because of appellants’ wrongful acts and omissions in concealing from Beneficial and Industrial Indemnity the circumstances under which the grower agreements were obtained.”
In
Hendrickson v. Minnesota Power & Light Co.,
However, the law implies a promise of indemnity from a principal to his agent for any damages resulting from the acts of the agent in the good faith execution of that agency.
Hill v. Okay Construction Company, Inc.,
DECISION
We affirm the trial court’s finding that minimum contacts exist between the nonresident defendant and the State of Minnesota sufficient to sustain the state’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over the defendant. However, we hold respondents’ complaint fails to state a claim for which relief can be granted and therefore the complaint is dismissed.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.
