TAEGER ENTERPRISES, INC. v. HERDLEIN TECHNOLOGIES, INC.; TAEGER ENTERPRISES, INC. v. OEHLER
Nos. A94A0500, A94A0501
Court of Appeals of Georgia
DECIDED JUNE 30, 1994.
445 S.E.2d 848 | 213 Ga. App. 740
McMURRAY, Presiding Judge.
DECIDED JUNE 30, 1994.
Knight & Marlowe, Terry J. Marlowe, for appellant.
J. Brown Moseley, District Attorney, Ron S. Smith, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
A94A0500. TAEGER ENTERPRISES, INC. v. HERDLEIN TECHNOLOGIES, INC. A94A0501. TAEGER ENTERPRISES, INC. v. OEHLER. (445 SE2d 848)
McMURRAY, Presiding Judge.
After it was left unpaid for labor and services provided, plaintiff Taeger Enterprises, Inc. (“Taeger“), a Florida corporation, brought an action in the Superior Court of Columbia County, Georgia, alleging a variety of contract and tort claims against defendants Wallace Herdlein & Associates, Inc. (“Herdlein“), Herdlein‘s trade name, Herdlein, Inc., Herdlein‘s president, Cole Oehler, Jr., MetoKote Corporation (“MetoKote“), and John Deere Commercial Products, Inc. (“John Deere“). By amendment, Taeger alleged that defendant Herdlein Technologies, Inc. (“HTI“) was “a corporation closely affiliated with” Herdlein and for “all purposes in Counts Three and Four of this Cоmplaint, [HTI] is incorporated within the meaning of [Herdlein].”
In support of their motions to dismiss, Oehler and HTI adduced the following, mostly undisputed, facts: Herdlein, doing business as Herdlein, Inc., submitted to MetoKote a proposal to design, build, and install a wet paint finishing system on MetoKote‘s premises in Columbia County, Georgia, which was leased from John Deere. Herdlein‘s proposal was revised on June 27, 1991, and on August 6, 1991, MetoKote gave written notice of acceptance addressed to “Wallace Herdlein.” The paint system was designed and prefabricated outside of Georgia. Herdlein is an Illinois corporation, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a Swiss company. HTI is a separate Illinois corporation, formed on April 8, 1991, and wholly-owned by George Karahalios, an Illinois resident. In his affidavit, Karahalios deposed that he is the sole shareholder and director of HTI and that he and his wife are the only officers. Karahalios formerly had been an employee and vice president of Herdlein until his resignation on April 1, 1991, and neither he nor his wife has ever been a director, or shareholder of Herdlein. HTI offers engineering and design consulting services, primarily tо Herdlein but also to anyone else engaged in a similar business or requiring such services. HTI rents space and secretarial services from Herdlein at the latter‘s corporate headquarters in Illinois but maintains its own books of account, separate from any maintained by Herdlein. Karahalios denied that HTI had ever entered into any contract with Taeger. According to him, HTI contracted with Herdlein in Illinois to provide engineering consulting services to Herdlein as a subcontraсt to Herdlein‘s MetoKote project. All
In support of his motion, Oehler deposed by affidavit that he is an Illinois resident and the former president of Herdlein. He has never been a director of or shareholder in Herdlein. As the authorized and disclosed agent of Herdlein, he negotiated with Taeger for the installation subcontract. Negotiations between Taeger and Herdlein took place in the Herdlein office in Illinois and subsequent communications with Taeger were conducted between the Illinois office of Herdlein and the Florida office of Taeger. Oehler deposed that inquiries made by Taeger to Herdlein regarding sums owed Taeger under its subcontract originated from Taeger‘s Florida office. He stated that he visited the Georgia site once and spoke briefly with Herdlein‘s project manager but that “no financial dealings were discussed with Taeger representatives or anyone else during that trip.” All financial decisions of Herdlein were made in Illinois and “all payment checks to Taeger were drafted in Illinois and sent to Taeger‘s Florida office.” Oehler further deposed that he had “never personally conducted any business on my own behalf in the State of Georgia,” in that he “never solicited business, engaged in any persistent course of conduct or derived revenue from Georgia.” He identified as true and correct a copy of the revised proposal accepted by MetoKote. This proposal was submitted by Wallace Herdlein & Associates doing business as Herdlein, Inc. and contains no reference to HTI, either as a named party nor as an entity offering a limited warranty.
In opposition to the motions to dismiss, Taeger submitted the affidavit of its president, Jerry Taeger, whom we quote at length: After he had complained to Oehler that Taeger was not getting paid, Oehler “repeatedly promised deponent that there was money coming into Wallace Herdlein & Associates, Inc. and that deponent would certainly be paid if deponent kept on working on the job.” As to HTI, Taeger deposed that Karahalios twice came to the Georgia job site “for the purpose of consulting with MetoKote Corporation and then checking Plaintiff‘s work. On each occasion Mr. Karahalios did spend time with MetoKote Corporation and then toured the job site, checked out Plaintiff‘s work, and complimented the deponent on the Plaintiff‘s work. During each of those trips Mr. Karahalios dealt with deponent regarding the construction project and the deponent‘s work on it at the job site in Columbia County, Georgia.” Taeger further
1. In related enumerations of error, Taeger contends that the dismissal of his complaint was erroneous as to each non-resident defendant because the evidence is conflicting and because that evidence shows the commission of a tort with consequences in Georgia by defendants transacting business in Georgia.
A defendant who files a motion to dismiss pursuant to
“[A]ffidavits made in support of [
The affidavits and exhibits submitted in the case sub judice to support the
MetoKote‘s answers to HTI‘s interrogatories are the bare legal conclusion asserting the existence of a contractual relationship between MetoKote and HTI, for they are unsupported by any statement of facts within the personal knowledge of the corporate officer verifying MetoKote‘s responses that HTI made any offer which MetoKote accepted. Moreover, certain answers appear to be mere unsworn statements made by counsel and not statements made under oath by a proper officer of the corporate party. See
After a careful examination of the record, with all reasonable inferences drawn in favor of authorizing the exercise of Long Arm personal jurisdiction, we conclude that the material facts are undisputed or are unrefuted by competent evidence. Pursuant to those undisputed material facts, neither Oehler personally nor HTI via its agent Karahalios “[t]ransacts any business within this state” within the meaning of
2. Additionally, the trial court correctly dismissed Taeger‘s complaint against each defendant due to the lack of personal jurisdiction as it appears that any tortious conduct committed outside of Georgia has had no in-state consequences so as to invoke the protective policy of this state to provide “‘redress in its own courts against persons who inflict injuries upon, or otherwise incur obligations to, those within the ambit of the State‘s legitimate protective policy.‘” Coe & Payne Co. v. Wood Mosaic Corp., 230 Ga. 58, 61 (195 SE2d 399). The
3. Taeger‘s remaining enumeration has been considered and is found to have been rendered moot.
Judgments affirmed. Pope, C. J., and Smith, J., concur specially.
POPE, Chief Judge, concurring specially.
In this case, a Florida corporation is suing an Illinois corporation and an individual Illinois resident for fraud and conversion. The alleged acts of fraud and conversion occurred in Illinois and caused injury in Florida. Georgia simply has no interest in this action, and the mere fact that the alleged tortious acts occurred in the context of a dispute about a contract relating to a project in Georgia does not pro-
I am authorized to state that Judge Smith joins in this special concurrence.
DECIDED JULY 1, 1994.
Jay M. Sawilowsky, for appellant.
Fulcher, Hagler, Reed, Hanks & Harper, James W. Purcell, Hull, Towill, Norman & Barrett, George R. Hall, for appellees.
