VERONICA SIVERLS-DUNHAM, individually and as Proposed Aministratrix of the Estate of JULIA MARGARET SIVERLS, Deceased, ALLEN SIVERLS, ROBERT SIVERLS, STEPHEN SIVERLS, AELEPHIA ANN GELBER, JAMES SIVERLS, JOHN SIVERLS, VIRGINA WILSON and RONALD SIVERLS, Plaintiffs, v. SEUNG HUEN LEE (a/k/a Grand Master Seung Huen Lee), et al., Defendants.
Case 1:05-cv-07518-PKC; Document 106
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
November 13, 2006
05 Civ. 7518 (PKC)
P. Kevin Castel
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiffs, all living siblings of the decedent, Dr. Julia Siverls-Dunham, Ph.D., allege that beginning in December 2001, decedent was actively solicited to join the “Dahn Hak Cult“. They further allege that, as a direct result of Dr. Siverls-Dunham‘s association with the Cult, she was drugged and killed during a hike in the course of a training retreat at the “Dahn Hak Cult” headquarters in Sedona, Arizona.
Throughout the complaint and affidavits submitted on this motion, plaintiffs refer to all defendants jointly, both moving and non-moving, as either the “Dahn Hak Cult” (the “Cult“) or the “Dahn Organization“. The complaint alleges that the corporate and individual defendants committed certain “wrongful acts” which ultimately lead to the death of plaintiffs’ decedent in Sedona, Arizona in July 2003. Plaintiffs further allege that defendants mishandled
Defendants Tao Fellowship, Dahn Institute, Inc., Healing Society, Inc., BR Consulting NJ, Inc., Dahn Center, Inc., Dahn Hak Sun Won Co., Ltd. and Dr. Seung Huen Lee (individually, “Moving Defendant” and, collectively, the “Moving Defendants” or “Movants“) now move to dismiss all claims against them, asserting, pursuant to
I. PROCEEDINGS IN THIS COURT
The complaint in this action was filed on July 12, 2005 in Supreme Court, Bronx County, and removed to this court by defendant Mago Earth, Inc. (“Mago“) on August 25, 2005 on the basis of diversity jurisdiction.
At a pretrial conference on March 17, 2006, I granted the plaintiffs leave to conduct discovery during a 60-day period, limited to the factual basis for personal jurisdiction over the defendants. Pursuant to the requests of counsel, I extended the period for jurisdictional discovery until August 4, 2006. Following the close of the jurisdictional discovery period, the Moving Defendants filed their motions to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
On October 12, 2006, defendant Bell Rock Development Co., an Arizona corporation which is authorized to do business in New York, withdrew its motion to dismiss with permission of this court. According to an affidavit submitted on behalf of defendant Bell Rock, it has merged with Dahn Meditation, Inc. and Dahn Meditation, Inc. is no longer an independent corporate entity. (Kong Aff. ¶ 3) Dahn Center Sedona is another name under which non-movant Bell Rock does business. (Kong Aff. ¶ 4) Defendant Dahn L.L.C. was dismissed with prejudice on February 23, 2006 as having been improperly and fraudulently joined by plaintiffs. (2/23/06 Order) All claims against Dahn Hak Sun Won Co., a Korean corporation, were discontinued with prejudice on August 28, 2006 by stipulation of the parties. (4/28/06 Order) In addition, the court notes that defendants John Doe (1), (2) and (3) have never been served with the complaint and the one-hundred and twenty day period, set forth in
II. BACKGROUND
A. The Complaint
According to plaintiffs’ complaint, the “Dahn Hak Cult” is comprised of “several multinational for-profit and non-profit business entities and organizations” which include, but are not limited to, the organizations named as defendants in this action. (Cmpl. ¶ 3) The complaint alleges that the individual defendant in this action, Seung Huen Lee, is the founder, leader and controller of the Cult. (Cmpl. ¶ 11) Plaintiffs assert that the Cult poses as a South Korean Dahn Yoga exercise program, employing meditation and spiritual retreat, which is based on the
Plaintiffs allege that the Cult recruits new members through advertisements and word-of-mouth solicitation by existing members, and that new members are “lured in” with free Dahn Yoga classes after which they are “pressured to take private Dahn Hak lessons and drink spiritual tea that Defendants lace with drugs.” (Cmpl. ¶¶ 7, 9) Student recruits are also allegedly pressured to attend expensive lectures and training seminars, some of which are in Sedona, Arizona, at which they are “drugged, exploited for money and brain-washed” by Cult leaders. (Cmpl. ¶¶ 6, 9-10) Plaintiffs contend that it is during one of these training seminars that decedent died.
Dr. Siverls-Dunham was a resident of New York and a Professor in the Department of Social Sciences at Queensborough Community College in Queens, New York. (Cmpl. ¶ 44) A sufferer of chronic back pain, decedent practiced yoga, used holistic remedies and watched her diet. (Cmpl. ¶ 57) Plaintiffs allege that decedent was solicited by the Cult when she enrolled in yoga classes at the Queens Dan Hak Center in December 2001. (Cmpl. ¶ 58) Plaintiffs further allege that as a result of her involvement with the Queens Dahn Hak Center, Dr. Siverls-Dunham was pressured to enroll in yoga retreats, including an advanced retreat at the Dahn Hak Sedona Center. (Cmpl. ¶ 62) During this retreat, plaintiffs contend that Dr. Siverls-Dunham and others had their food laced with drugs, including marijuana and methadone, and were pressured to take part in difficult and dangerous rituals and tests to prove their devotion to the Cult and to achieve the stature of Dahn Hak “Master“. (Cmpl. ¶¶ 63, 64) While plaintiffs allege that defendants were generally responsible for leading these activities, it is
B. Evidence on this Motion
Based, in part, upon evidence developed during the jurisdictional discovery period, plaintiffs have submitted affidavits in opposition to the Moving Defendants’ motions. Plaintiffs’ description of the operation and structure of the “Dahn Organization” is heavily reliant on the affidavit of Robert Rueb. Rueb was employed by non-movant Bell Rock at two New York Dahn Yoga Centers, the Woodside Dahn Center and later the Syosset Dahn Center, as a yoga instructor, “healer” and “Master“. (Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 1, 49) Rueb was on the hike in July 2003 when Dr. Siverls-Dunham died and his affidavit is descriptive of that event. There is no sworn assertion, either in Rueb‘s two-hundred and thirteen paragraph affidavit or elsewhere, that Rueb and Dr. Siverls-Dunham had met prior to their arrival in Arizona or that Dr. Siverls-Dunham ever confided in Rueb or explained her motivation for traveling from New York to Arizona. While plaintiffs also submit the affidavits of Veronica Siverls-Dunham and Robert Siverls-Dunham, both siblings of the decedent, those affidavits are not informative on the subject of personal jurisdiction. The affidavit of Veronica Siverls-Dunham describes her experience collecting the decedent‘s car and personal belongings. Robert Siverls-Dunham‘s affidavit describes his trip to Sedona, Arizona to recover decedent‘s body. Both affidavits also discuss the decedent‘s intention to give up all of her “worldly possessions“.
According to Rueb‘s affidavit, the Cult is run by Dr. Lee from his headquarters in Sedona, Arizona (the “Sedona Retreat“). The Cult is purportedly a “family business” and Dr.
In addition to the involvement of Dr. Lee‘s family, persons who plaintiffs characterize as Dr. Lee‘s “disciples” run many of the defendant companies, including Moving Defendants Tao Fellowship and Dahn Institute, both of which are not-for-profit Arizona corporations. Tao Fellowship is a religious charity which runs seminars teaching “Tao Healing” at the Sedona Retreat. (Rueb Aff. ¶ 17, Exh. 4) While it is unclear how Tao Fellowship raises much of its revenue or how it uses the charitable donations it receives, plaintiffs do identify one source of the Fellowship‘s income as contributions from employees of non-movant Bell Rock who Rueb asserts are required to donate a percentage of their salaries to Tao Fellowship during monthly “ritualistic ceremonies.” (Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 19-20) Bell Rock employs students who have progressed through the “Dahn Organization‘s” Dahn Master training program. (Rueb Aff. ¶ 101) Tao Fellowship also publishes a newsletter read by persons in New York and elsewhere. (Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 156-65) Dahn Institute, which shares a mailing address with the Sedona Retreat, is a corporation that runs many of the training courses and seminars promoting the “Dahn Organization‘s” “values“. (Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 18, 55)
In addition to the seminars run by Tao Fellowship and Dahn Institute, plaintiffs also rely upon certificates issued by “Dahn Center” at the completion of workshops conducted in New York. (Rueb Aff. Exh. 12) It is unclear, however, whether “Dahn Center” is Moving Defendant Dahn Center, Inc. as opposed to the aggregate of all Dahn yoga centers in New York which plaintiffs refer to as “the New York Dahn Centers“. Payments for all seminars run by any defendant were made directly to the organization conducting the seminar rather than to a central entity. (Rueb Aff. ¶ 58, Exhs. 4, 13) Other than the publication of a newsletter on Dahn “beliefs”
III. DISCUSSION
“Motions to dismiss under
In order to determine whether there is a basis to exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant, a district court is required to apply a two part analysis. See Bank Brussels Lambert, 171 F.3d at 784. First, a court sitting in diversity will look to the law of the forum state, here New York, to determine whether there is jurisdiction over the defendant. Agency Rent A Car Sys., Inc. v. Grand Rent A Car Corp., 98 F.3d 25, 29 (2d Cir. 1996). Second, the court “must determine whether an exercise of jurisdiction under these laws is consistent with federal due process requirements.” Bank Brussels Lambert, 171 F.3d at 784. Due process “requires that a defendant have enough minimum contacts with the forum state so that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ” PDK Labs., Inc. v. Friedlander, 103 F.3d 1105, 1110 (2d Cir. 1997) (quoting International Shoe v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 316 (1945)). In the due process analysis, it is noted that New York‘s long-arm statute, “does not confer jurisdiction in every case where it is constitutionally permissible.” Kreutter v. McFadden Oil Corp., 71 N.Y.2d 460, 471 (1988) (citations omitted). Here, plaintiffs contend that this court has general personal jurisdiction under
Plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing a factual and legal basis for personal jurisdiction. Accordingly, in deciding this motion, I have considered only those theories and arguments that plaintiffs have advanced. I conclude that plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate a basis for personal jurisdiction over the Moving Defendants.
A. The Moving Defendants Do Not Have Sufficient Contacts to Establish Jurisdiction under CPLR § 301
As set forth below, under New York law, a court may exercise jurisdiction over a foreign defendant where the defendant is “doing business” in New York on a continuous and systematic basis. Further, a court may exercise jurisdiction over a foreign entity where there is a departmental or agency relationship between a defendant present in the forum and the foreign entity or individual. Alternatively, where the corporate veil of a corporation subject to jurisdiction is pierced, a court arguably may exercise jurisdiction over a foreign person or entity.
1. The “Doing Business” Test
New York courts have interpreted
Here, plaintiffs do not assert that any one of the Moving Defendants, considered in isolation, has sufficient contacts with New York such that he or it may be said to be present for purposes of section 301. In the affidavits submitted with the Movants’ papers, all entity Moving Defendants have submitted sworn statements that they are not authorized to do business in New York and do not maintain offices or employees in New York. While in New York during the jurisdictional discovery period, an agent for Movant Tao Fellowship made minor withdrawals from a bank account opened in Arizona. (See Oh Aff. at ¶ 9, Exh. 1) Mere presence, however, of a bank account, even one opened and maintained, in New York, is insufficient to establish jurisdiction. See Fremay v. Modern Plastic Mach. Corp., 15 A.D.2d 235, 241 (1st Dept. 1961). Plaintiffs also make much of the fact that Mr. Rueb asserts that he received solicitations in New York from Moving Defendant Dahn Institute, Inc., as well as promotional newsletters produced by Tao Fellowship and Healing Society. Crediting Mr. Rueb‘s affidavit, the distribution of such promotional materials would constitute solicitation, but “[s]olicitation of business alone will not justify a finding of corporate presence in New York with respect to a foreign manufacturer or purveyor of services.” Laufer, 55 N.Y.2d at 305. Moreover, even if the actions of the “New York Dahn Centers” in distributing promotional materials “may constitute something more than mere solicitation . . . [they] are still not enough to
Further, there is no basis on which this court may exercise jurisdiction over Dr. Lee under
Here, even assuming that the “doing business test” applies to an individual, there is an insufficient factual basis on which to exercise jurisdiction. Dr. Lee testified that he was present in New York on three or fewer occasions to deliver speeches or give seminars during the period preceding service of the complaint, January 1, 2002 through December 31, 2005. (Lee Dep. at 70) Even if the plaintiffs are correct that Dr. Lee was in New York on four occasions, this type of infrequent contact with the forum does not render Dr. Lee present under the “doing business” test. See Presidential Realty Corp. v. Michael Square West, Ltd., 44 N.Y.2d 672, 674
2. “Departmental” Theory
Jurisdiction may be exercised over a foreign corporation under
Plaintiffs assert in both their complaint and the papers submitted in opposition to this motion that all defendants are operated as a common enterprise and are, therefore, subject to jurisdiction in New York. In support of this statement, and as sole support for their section 301 argument, plaintiffs cite an “unpublished disposition” of a New York trial court, Donetto v. S.A.R.I. De Gestion Pierre Cardin, 3 Misc.3d 1106(A) (Sup. Ct., N.Y. County 2004), holding that there is jurisdiction over a foreign parent corporation where a wholly-owned subsidiary operated in New York. Plaintiffs then go on to contend that the evidence submitted demonstrates
Plaintiffs’ allegation that the Moving Defendants are a single entity is not supported by the evidence submitted in opposition to this motion. Plaintiffs’ argument, totaling less than two pages, is that “the documents and testimony demonstrate[] that Defendants have operated as an integrated business enterprise, controlled from the Dahn Headquarters at the Sedona Dahn Retreat.” (Pl. Mem. at 15-16) Rueb‘s lengthy affidavit provides a detailed narrative of his experience as a yoga instructor with the “Dahn Organization“. Rueb states that he “has always thought of the Dahn Yoga centers that are located in New York, and throughout the United States, the Dahn training workshops, the New Human School, Chakra seminars, forums, Shim-Sung weekend, Tao Fellowship, Dahn Institute, Bell Rock, BR Consulting, CGI Holistic Fitness, and Dahn Healer School at the Sedona Dahn Retreat in Arizona as an integrated business enterprise“. (Rueb Aff. ¶ 5)
Despite over four and a half months of jurisdictional discovery, plaintiffs have submitted no documentary or testimonial evidence, other than the subjective view of Mr. Rueb, from which this court could properly conclude that all defendants operate as an integrated enterprise. The only evidence of any “Dahn Organization” hierarchy is a flowchart from a website which plaintiffs fail to connect to any of the Moving Defendants. (See Rueb Aff. at ¶
Plaintiffs also point to an incident in which Rueb was given an application at his New York Dahn center for a seminar held in Arizona and conducted by Moving Defendant Dahn Institute. The application included a waiver of liability on the part of “Dahn Center/Bell Rock Company/Dahn Institute“. (See Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 53-59) The issue on this motion is not whether there is an affiliation or common economic interest between or among any of the defendants but whether the purposefully activities of any defendant is sufficient under the departmental, agency or other theories to subject it or him to jurisdiction in New York. The distribution of applications or promotional materials may indicate a relationship between independent entities for mutual benefit but it does not, standing alone, establish a jurisdictional predicate. See, e.g., Miller v. Surf Props., 4 N.Y.2d 475 (1958) (finding no jurisdiction over a foreign supplier of travel services where an independent agency in New York solicited orders in New York for the foreign defendant). Under New York law, “the presence of a local corporation does not create jurisdiction over a related, but independently managed, foreign corporation.” Volkswagenwerk, 751 F.2d at 120 (citing Delagi, 29 N.Y.2d at 426).
Plaintiffs’ allegations of common ownership or control over the “Dahn Organization” for purposes of the departmental theory of jurisdiction are not factually supported.
While plaintiffs’ complaint alleges “on information and belief” that Dr. Lee is the either the principal owner or an officer and/or a member of the Moving Defendants’ governing boards is, with the exception of BR Consulting (“BRC“), contradicted by Dr. Lee‘s affidavit and deposition testimony. (See Lee Aff. at ¶ 9, Lee Dep. at 54-66, 69-70) There is no evidence that
3. Piercing the Corporate Veil of Movant BRC
Plaintiffs state that Dr. Lee and Moving Defendant BRC are a single entity, as Dr. Lee was President and majority shareholder of BRC, (see Cmpl.¶ 31), and that the corporate veil of BRC should therefore be pierced. Plaintiffs have not made a factual showing sufficient to pierce the corporate veil between Dr. Lee and BRC.
Piercing the corporate veil requires more than domination by an individual over a corporation. See Lowendahl v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 247 A.D. 144, 157 (1st Dept. 1936), aff‘d, 272 NY 360 (1936); American Protein Corp. v. AB Volvo, 844 F.2d 56, 60 (2d Cir 1988), cert. denied, 488 U.S. 852 (1988). Under New York law, the party seeking to pierce the veil of a corporation must “make a two part showing: (i) that the owner exercised complete domination over the corporation with respect to the transaction at issue; and (ii) that such domination was used to commit a fraud or wrong that injured the party seeking to pierce the veil.” Morris v. New York State Dep‘t of Taxation & Fin., 82 N.Y.2d 135, 141 (1993). Control is the key in a piercing analysis. The parent must exercise complete domination “in respect to the transaction attacked” and such domination must have been used to “commit fraud or wrong” against plaintiff, which proximately caused plaintiff‘s injury. Lowendahl, 247 A.D. at 157. In order to determine whether to pierce the corporate veil, courts consider “1) the absence of the formalities which are part and parcel of normal corporate existence, i.e., the issuance of stock, the election of directors, the keeping of corporate records, etc., 2) inadequate capitalization, 3) personal use
Even if the corporate veil between BRC and Dr. Lee were to be pierced, it would not create a basis for personal jurisdiction over BRC or Dr. Lee. BRC is not a New York corporation nor is it authorized to do business in New York. (See Shin Aff. ¶¶ 3, 8) It is not present in New York for purposes of
4. Agency
Jurisdiction may also be exercised under
The facts submitted on this motion do not support the exercise of jurisdiction over any of the Moving Defendants under an agency theory. Although plaintiffs have not explicitly pled that there is an agency relationship between the Movants and a principal, many of their allegations in both the complaint and in their papers submitted to the court on this motion suggests that agency is implicitly asserted. Neither the Rueb affidavit nor plaintiffs’ complaint distinguishes between the roles of entities within the “Dahn Organization“. (See, e.g., Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 4, 6, 11, 32, 47, 88, 111) Here, the record before me does not permit a finding of an agency relationship.
B. Plaintiffs Have Hailed to Establish Personal Jurisdiction Under CPLR § 302(a)(1)
Plaintiffs also assert that this court may exercise jurisdiction over all defendants under CPLR § 302(a)(1).
Here, plaintiffs have failed to come forward with facts which, if proven, establish jurisdiction over defendants under CPLR § 302(a)(1). Plaintiffs contend that the “Dahn Organization,” and, therefore, the Moving Defendants, engaged in a long string of activities, beginning in December 2001 when Dr. Siverls-Dunham entered a New York Dahn Center, which culminated in Dr. Siverls-Dunahm‘s death in Arizona in 2003. However, under the law of New York, “a defendant may not be subject to personal jurisdiction under
Other than being part of the alleged “Dahn Organization” and therefore allegedly transacting business in New York in the aggregate, there is no factually demonstrated relationship between defendants BR Consulting, Healing Society, Dahn Center, Inc. and Dr. Siverls-Dunham. As to defendant Dahn Institute, Inc., it appears, from the exhibits submitted in connection to Veronica Siverls-Dunham‘s affidavit, that Dahn Institute was responsible for running and organizing seminars attended by Dr. Siverls-Dunham. (Siverls-Dunham Aff. Exh.11) While Mr. Rueb swears that he was given solicitations by his New York Dahn center on behalf of Dahn Institute, it is clear that “mere solicitation of business within the state does not
According to Rueb, the President of Movant Tao Fellowship, Byuk Woon, ran the Dahn Master training seminar at which Dr. Siverls-Dunham died but he is not a named defendant and there are no assertions of direct involvement by Tao Fellowship itself. (Rueb Aff. ¶ 72, Exh. 17) Moreover, it is uncontested that the seminar at which Dr. Siverls-Dunham died was conducted by a non-New York entity and held at a facility allegedly owned or controlled by non-movant Bell Rock in Arizona. Other than the fact that Dr. Siverls-Dunham, a New Yorker, attended the seminar, there is no evidence of a connection between the Dahn Master training program, any Moving Defendant and New York. Plaintiffs have failed to come forward with evidence of any other New York directed activities on the part of Moving Defendants BR Consulting, Healing Society, Dahn Center, Inc., Dahn Institute, Inc. and Tao Fellowship.
Plaintiffs do endeavor to connect Dr. Lee to New York and to Dr. Siverls-Dunham by relying on Mr. Rueb‘s statements that many individuals who attended New York Dahn Centers also attended speeches given by Dr. Lee in New York (on the three or possible four occasions that he was present in New York). (Rueb Aff. ¶¶ 104, 111) Assuming that these lectures or forums would constitute a transition of business for purposes of
Additionally, even assuming that the Moving Defendants did advertise in New York, that Dr. Lee occasionally visited the state to deliver speeches attended by “members” of New York Dahn centers and that those speeches resulted in increased enrollment or interest in Dahn centers, there is an insufficient basis to establish the cause of action arose from any purposeful activity by a Moving Defendant in the forum. See, e.g., Appicella v. Valley Forge Military Acad., 103 A.D.2d 151 (2d Dept. 1984) (finding no jurisdiction where plaintiff was injured in Pennsylvania but foreign defendant advertised in New York on a regular basis, recruited players for the school‘s football team in New York and even interviewed students for the school in New York.); Dromond v. Great Am. Recreation, Inc., 116 F.Supp.2d 368, 373 (E.D.N.Y. 2004) (finding that “[i]njuries resulting from recreational activities held outside the New York State, but advertised within the state have regularly been found to bear ‘too remote a relationship to the advertising and contractual activity claimed to be the transaction of business
IV. CONCLUSION
The motions of defendants Tao Fellowship, Dahn Institute, Inc., Healing Society, Inc., BR Consulting NJ, Inc., Dahn Center, Inc., Dahn Hak Sun Won Co., Ltd. and Mr. Seung Huen Lee, to dismiss, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(2), are GRANTED.
SO ORDERED.
P. Kevin Castel
United States District Judge
Dated: New York, New York
November 13, 2006
