SPCA OF UPSTATE NEW YORK, INC., еt al., Appellants, v AMERICAN WORKING COLLIE ASSOCIATION et al., Respondents.
Court of Appeals of New York
Argued January 4, 2012; decided February 9, 2012
[963 NE2d 1226, 940 NYS2d 525]
400
Stanclift, Ludemann & McMorris, P.C., Glens Falls (Martin J. McGuinness of counsel), for appellants. I. Long-arm jurisdiction exists over respondents because they purposefully transacted business in New York and there is a clear connection between the transaction and appellants’ claim for defamation. (Legros v Irving, 38 AD2d 53; Montgomery v Minarcin, 263 AD2d 665; Talbot v Johnson Newspaper Corp., 71 NY2d 827; Best Van Lines, Inc. v Walker, 490 F3d 239; Longines-Wittnauer Watch Co. v Barnes & Reinecke, 15 NY2d 443; Parke-Bernet Galleries v Franklyn, 26 NY2d 13; Sovik v Healing Network, 244 AD2d 985.) II. It is рoor public policy to allow defendant to become immunized from suit in New York simply because the underlying cause of action is for defamation.
Goldberg Segalla LLP, Albany (Jonathan Bernstein of counsel), for respondents. I. Personal jurisdiction in New York over defendants does not exist warranting the Appellate Division‘s memorandum and decisiоn to be affirmed. (Montgomery v Minarcin, 263 AD2d 665; Legros v Irving, 38 AD2d 53, 30 NY2d 653; Talbot v Johnson Newspaper Corp., 71 NY2d 827; GTP Leisure Prods. v B-W Footwear Co., 55 AD2d 1009; Deutsche Bank Sec., Inc. v Montana Bd. of Invs., 7 NY3d 65;
OPINION OF THE COURT
Chief Judge LIPPMAN.
The question presented in this defamation action is whether plaintiffs established personal jurisdiction over the out-of-state defendants under
Plaintiff SPCA of Upstate New York is a Nеw York corporation and plaintiff Cathy Cloutier is its executive director. Defendant American Working Collie Association (AWCA) is an Ohio not-for-profit corporation and its president, defendant Jean Levitt, is a Vermont resident. The AWCA is a volunteer-based club that is devoted to promoting the welfare and рrotection of collies. The organization has members throughout the United States—including 13 in New York at the time of the events herein—but has neither an office nor employees in New York. The AWCA maintains a Web site (www.awca.net), generally containing photographs and anecdotes about particulаr collies, as well as messages from the AWCA‘s president providing collie-related information of interest to the group‘s members. This action arises out of allegedly defamatory statements published by defendants on the AWCA Web site.
On October 17, 2007, 23 mistreated dogs (collies and dachshunds) were rescued from a residеnce in Fort Ann, New York and placed with plaintiff SPCA in its Queensbury, New York facility. Soon thereafter, while in Vermont, defendant Levitt telephoned plaintiff Cloutier to offer the AWCA‘s assistance with the subject animals. Subsequently, the AWCA sent the SPCA a donation in the amount of $1,000. Levitt placed a second telephone cаll from Vermont to advise Cloutier that the AWCA had purchased collars and leashes for the dogs and to make arrangements to deliver those materials.
After Levitt‘s return to Vermont, she generated a series of writings addressing the condition of the collies and the treatment being provided by thе SPCA. These writings were posted to the AWCA Web site periodically, beginning January 13, 2008. Based on statements contained in the writings, plaintiffs commenced this defamation action in January 2009. Defendants answered, asserting as relevant here, the affirmative defense of lack of personal jurisdiction. Supreme Court dеnied defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding that personal jurisdiction had been obtained over the defendants under
The Appellate Division reversed, granted defendants’ motion and dismissed the complaint (74 AD3d 1464 [3d Dept 2010]). The Court determined that, given New York‘s “narrow approach” to long-arm jurisdiction where defamation cases are concerned, defendants’ contacts with the state wеre insufficient to support a finding of personal jurisdiction. This Court granted plaintiffs leave to appeal (15 NY3d 716 [2010]), and we now affirm.
In order to demonstrate that an individual is transacting business within the meaning of
When determining whether the necessary substantial relationship exists between a defendant‘s purposeful activities and the transaction giving rise to the defamation cause of action, we have considered whether the relationship between the activities and the allegedly offending statement is too diluted (see Talbot, 71 NY2d at 829). Certain types of conduct will plainly satisfy the required nexus (see e.g. Legros, 38 AD2d at 56 [where a book containing allegedly defamatory statements was researched and printed in New York and where the publishing contract was negotiated and executed in this state, the cause of action was deemed to arise out of the transaction]; Montgomery v Minarcin, 263 AD2d 665, 667-668 [3d Dept 1999] [an allegedly defamatory television news report that was researched (over a six-week period), written, produced аnd broadcast in New York was sufficient to establish the transaction of business within the state]). To the contrary, where the contacts are more circumscribed and not directly related to the defamatory statement, defendants have prevailed (see e.g. Talbot, 71 NY2d at 829 [defendant daughter‘s attendance at a New York college over two years prior to the allegedly defamatory statements made by her defendant father, relating a description of certain conduct observed by the daughter while a student in New York, was
Here, defendants’ activities in New York were quite limited. Levitt‘s three phone calls and two short visits—totaling less than three hours—in addition to the donation of cash and leashes, do not constitute purposeful activities related to the asserted cause of action that would justify bringing her before the New York courts. Moreover, it is of importance that the statements were not written in or directed to New York. While they were posted on a medium that was accessible in this state, the statements were equally accessible in any other jurisdiction.
Further, there is no substantial relаtionship between the allegedly defamatory statements and defendants’ New York activities. Levitt did not visit New York in order to conduct research, gather information or otherwise generate material to publish on the group‘s Web site. Instead, defendants engaged in limited activity within the state in order to helр provide financial and medical assistance for the dogs. The alleged mistreatment was observed during the course of those two brief visits but written about after Levitt returned to Vermont. The AWCA neither placed the dogs with plaintiffs in New York nor complained of its volunteers’ treatment by plaintiffs, either one of whiсh might well entail a sufficiently substantial relationship between the allegedly defamatory statements and defendants’ New York activities as to warrant a finding of long-arm jurisdiction. The connection here is too tangential to support the exercise of personal jurisdiction over defendants.
As the Seсond Circuit has observed, “New York courts construe ‘transacts any business within the state’ more narrowly in defamation cases than they do in the context of other sorts of litigation” (Best Van Lines, Inc. v Walker, 490 F3d 239, 248 [2d Cir 2007]). Through
In light of the foregoing, it is unnecessary to address defendants’ constitutional argument.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
PIGOTT, J. (dissenting). I respectfully dissent because, in my view, the American Working Collie Associatiоn (AWCA) and its president, Jean Levitt, engaged in “purposeful activities” in New York and there was a “substantial relationship” between those activities and the defamation causes of action lodged by the SPCA of Upstate New York, Inc. (SPCA) and its executive director, Cathy Cloutier.
Under
The majority classifies activities of AWCA and Levitt as being “quite limited” (majority op at 405), but the record is littered with instances where the AWCA—whose express mission is the promotion of “the well being of collies“—“purposefully avail[ed] itself of the privilege of conducting activities within [New York]” (Ehrenfeld v Bin Mahfouz, 9 NY3d 501, 508 [2007] [citations omitted]), such that it “should reasonably... expect[] to defend its actions” here (Deutsche Bank Sec., Inc. v Montana Bd. of Invs., 7 NY3d 65, 71 [2006]).
Even construing
Nor can it be said that there was no “substantial relationship” between these “purposeful activities” and Levitt‘s alleged defamatory statements. Of significance is the fact that the first alleged defamatory comment was posted by Levitt on January 13, 2008, a week after her second visit to the SPCA, detailing Levitt‘s observations during the second visit which, according to the post, was precipitated by complaints made to her by AWCA volunteers about the condition of the SPCA facility. Moreover, each of the alleged defamatory posts addressed the conditions of the rescued dogs in Nеw York, and the inference can be drawn from the complaint that Levitt‘s purpose for going to New York (and for sending volunteers to assist at the SPCA) was to garner attention for the plight of these rescued dogs in order to promote their well being. Finally, several of the alleged defamatory posts refеrence accounts given by AWCA volunteers to Levitt concerning the conditions of the SPCA facility. For an organization whose “purpose... is to promote the well being of collies,” it cannot reasonably be said that there was no nexus between AWCA‘s purposeful activities and the alleged defamatory comments.
Finally, the majority‘s “free speech” concern is illusory in the context of this case.
Judges CIPARICK, READ and JONES concur with Chief Judge LIPPMAN; Judge PIGOTT dissents in a separate opinion in which Judges GRAFFEO and SMITH concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.
