MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs, Spherion Corporation and Spherion Atlantic Enterprises LLC (collectively, “Spherion”), filed this diversity suit against defendant Cincinnati Financial Company (“CFC”), alleging breach of a computer consulting services contract. Spherion claims that CFC breached the contract by not paying fees due under the contract prior to its termination. One minute after Spherion fled this suit, CFC and several of its subsidiaries filed suit in the Southern District of Ohio against Spherion for breach of the same contract. In the present action, CFC has moved for dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction and improper venue under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2) and (b)(3), or, alternatively, for a stay of these proceedings. CFC has also moved for transfer of venue to the Southern District of Ohio under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). For the reasons set forth below, this court grants CFC’s motion to transfer and denies as moot CFC’s motion to dismiss or stay the proceedings.
I. Background
CFC is an Ohio corporation with its principal place of business in Ohio. Spher-ion Corporation is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Florida. Spherion Atlantic Enterprises LLC is a Delaware limited liability company with its principal place of business in Florida. Spherion has offices in Oak Brook, Illinois, which oversaw at least part of its performance of the agreement. Spherion also maintained an Ohio office, which was opened specifically to work on the contract.
In 1996, CFC and its subsidiaries, collectively known as “the Cincinnati Companies,” entered into an agreement with An-atec, a Michigan company, under which Anatec was to design and deliver software called the Commercial Personal Rewrite Project, or CPR Project. Anatec was a subsidiary of Norell Corporation, a Texas company, which merged in July 1999 with Interim Services, Inc. (“Interim”), a Florida company. Interim was the surviving entity and later changed its name to Spherion. Spherion administered its role in the CPR Project from its Illinois division in Oak Brook. According to CFC, the information department of its subsidiary, Cincinnati Insurance Company (“CIC”), administered the agreement on behalf of the Cincinnati Companies.
On July 18, 2000, CIC/CFC terminated Spherion, allegedly for cause. The parties attempted to negotiate their differences informally, then participated in mediation as mandated by the contract. The parties agreed during the course of mediation that either party could declare an impasse and an intent to terminate the mediation with seven days’ notice. CFC did so on March *1055 26, 2001, setting a termination date of April 2, 2001, at 12:00 p.m. Chicago time. On April 2, Spherion filed this suit, and the Cincinnati Companies filed suit against Spherion in Ohio.
II. Personal Jurisdiction and Venue
As plaintiff, Spherion has the burden of providing sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie case of personal jurisdiction.
Michael J. Neuman & Assocs. v. Florabelle Flotvers, Inc.,
Under Illinois law, the long-arm statute permits in personam jurisdiction over a party to the extent allowed under federal due process.
See
735 ILCS 5/2-209(e);
Dehmlow v. Austin Fireworks,
Supported by affidavit, Spherion alleges that CFC management personnel traveled to the Chicago area on three different occasions for business purposes directly related to the goals of the CPR Project, that CFC solicited visits from and had numerous discussions with Spherion’s management personnel in Oak Brook, that CFC retained two consultants based in the Chicago area to perform services for a companion project to the CPR Project, and that CFC requested and approved efforts by Spherion to recruit Illinois residents to work on the CPR Project. CFC responds with its own affidavit, asserting that all of the alleged conduct was undertaken by CIC, not CFC, personnel, that the Chicago consultants were working on an unrelated project, and that any relevant contact with the Oak Brook office occurred after 1999, near1 the end of the CPR Project. Spher-ion comes back with additional declarations stating that Don Doyle, acting on behalf of CFC, engaged in telephone conferences, email correspondence, and correspondence by United States mail with Oak Brook personnel. Spherion also argues that CIC was acting as CFC’s agent.
Even after resolving these factual disputes in Spherion’s favor (as this court must), specific personal jurisdiction is not clear. It was Spherion, not CFC, that decided to transfer its management of the CPR Project to the Oak Brook office. Arguably, CFC did not
purposefully
direct its activities toward Illinois.
See Infiniti
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Div. of Nissan Motor Corp. of U.S.A. v. Gunn Infinita, Inc.,
No. 93-C-7846,
General jurisdiction is similarly murky. In addition to the project-specific contacts, Spherion cites six suits brought by CFC in Illinois since 1996 and a website through which it solicits on-line employment applications from Illinois residents. On the lawsuits, CFC counters that it was not the real party-in-interest in five and that the court in the sixth held that CFC was not subject to taxation in Illinois because, inter alia, it had not office, assets, or employees in Illinois, had conducted no business in Illinois, and was not registered to do business in Illinois.
Cincinnati Cas. Co. v. Bower,
No. 00-L-050254, at 2, 15 (Ill.Cir.Ct.2001). Even assuming that CFC was actually a plaintiff in all six lawsuits, general personal jurisdiction on this basis alone is constitutionally uncertain.
Cf. Continental Cas. Co. v. State of New York Mortgage Agency,
No. 94-C-1463,
CFC claims that the website solicited applications for its subsidiaries, not for itself, and that it has never hired anyone through the website. By inviting viewers to submit employment applications on-line, the website apparently falls in the middle ground between sites where contracts are actually entered into and purely passive sites where information is posted.
See Zippo Mfg. Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc.,
The more difficult question is whether the project-related contacts, the
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six Illinois lawsuits, and the website combine to establish general personal jurisdiction. Even if this court found personal jurisdiction based on the affidavits submitted thus far, in all likelihood the issue would only have been finally resolved after additional discovery and an evidentiary hearing. Fortunately, the personal jurisdiction issue is mooted by the court’s conclusion that transfer to the Southern District of Ohio best serves the interest of justice. This court may transfer an action under either section 1404(a) or section 1406(a) even if it lacks personal jurisdiction over the defendant.
See Cote v. Wadel,
Venue is equally difficult and avoidable. “A civil action wherein jurisdiction is founded only on diversity of citizenship may, except as otherwise provided by law, be brought ... in (1) a judicial district where any defendant resides .... ” 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a). For this purpose, a corporate defendant like CFC is “deemed to reside in any jurisdiction where it is subject to personal jurisdiction at the time the action is commenced.”
Id.
§ 1391(c). Thus, in diversity actions with a single corporate defendant, venue is essentially synonymous with personal jurisdiction. The issue of venue is avoidable because this court has the power to transfer an action “in the interest of justice” whether or not venue here is proper.
Id.
§ 1404(a) (venue proper);
id.
§ 1406(a) (venue improper);
see also Ces Publ’g Corp. v. Dealerscope, Inc.,
III. Transfer of Venue
There are two statutory bases for transferring venue. Section 1404(a) applies when venue in the transferor court is proper and states that: “For the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.” 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). When venue in the transferor court is “wrong,” section 1406(a) gives the court discretion to “transfer such case to any district or division in which it could have been brought,” “if it be in the interest of justice.”
Id.
§ 1406(a). Generally, it is important to decide which section applies for several reasons: (1) if venue is improper and the court declines to transfer under section 1406, then the court must dismiss the action; (2) the standard for waiver differs between the two sections; (3) the substantive law of the transferor court applies in the transferee court when transfer occurs under section 1404; and (4) the phrase “in the interest of justice” is interpreted differently in the two sections. 17 James Wm. Moore,
Moore’s Federal Practice
§ 111.02[2][a] (3d ed.2001). In this case, the distinction does not matter.
See Lasalle Nat’l Bank v. Arroyo Office Plaza, Ltd.,
No. 87-C-463,
First, because the court finds that transfer is appropriate under either section, the different consequences of non-transfer are unimportant. Second, waiver is not implicated here because CFC raised objections to venue in its earliest filing. Third, the contract expressly provides that the substantive law of Ohio will govern wherever contractual disputes may be heard.
See id.
at *5 n. 4,
A. Section If 01(a)
In passing on a section 1404(a) motion to transfer, the district judge must consider “the convenience of parties and witnesses” and “the interest of justice” in light of all the circumstances of the case.
Coffey v. Van Dorn Iron Works,
The convenience of the parties tilts slightly against transfer. Spherion prefers Illinois; CFC prefers Ohio. That Spherion’s lawyers are based in Chicago is entitled to little (if any) weight, but does militate slightly against transfer since the location of its counsel will presumably make it more expensive for Spherion to try the case in Ohio.
Blumenthal v. Mgmt. Assistance, Inc.,
Ohio is clearly more convenient for the vast majority of witnesses. Spherion’s own Rule 26(a)(1) disclosures in the Ohio action reveal that 96 of Spherion’s 137 potential witnesses reside in Ohio; only five reside in Illinois. Because it is assumed that witnesses within the control of the parties will appear voluntarily in either jurisdiction, the location of non-party witnesses is more important.
See FUL Inc. v. Unified Sch. Dist. No. 204,
Many more non-party witnesses reside in Ohio, but numbers alone are not dispositive. Rather, the materiality of the
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prospective witness testimony must be considered.
FUL Inc.,
Finally, the interest of justice favors Ohio.
See Coffey,
As explained above, the issue of whether this court has personal jurisdiction over CFC is difficult and likely to remain contested, whereas personal jurisdiction in Ohio is undisputed. Transfer to Ohio will therefore conserve judicial resources and lead to a more expeditious resolution of this lawsuit by avoiding a personal jurisdiction quagmire.
See Danuloff v. Color Ctr.,
No. 93-CV-73478-DT,
B. Section 1106(a)
Where venue is improper, transfer under section 1406(a) is an appropriate alternative to dismissal if the action “could have been brought” in the proposed transferee court and the transfer is “in the interest of justice.” Venue in the Southern District of Ohio is undisputed. Transfer is ordinarily in the interest of justice because dismissal of an action that could
*1060
be brought elsewhere is “time consuming” and may be “justice-defeating.”
Goldlawr, Inc. v. Heiman,
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons outlined above, CFC’s motion to transfer is granted and CFC’s motion to dismiss or alternatively to stay the proceedings is denied as moot.
