47 Conn. Supp. 319 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 2001
The motion now before the court presents a jurisdictional issue of apparent first impression in the Connecticut state courts. Does our long arm statute, General Statutes §
The jurisdictional facts, found after an evidentiary hearing conducted before the court, can be stated briefly. The corporate defendant, Wash Depot A., Inc. (Wash Depot A), is one of several wholly-owned subsidiaries of a separate corporation, Wash Depot Holdings, Inc. (Holdings). Holdings is a Delaware corporation with corporate headquarters in Massachusetts. Wash Depot A is a Georgia corporation operated out of Holdings' corporate headquarters. Wash Depot A has no paid employees. Like Holdings' other subsidiaries, it is managed by Holdings. The individual defendant, Gregory Anderson, a resident of New York, is the president and chief operating officer of Holdings. In that capacity he manages Wash Depot A at the corporate level. Anderson is not a stockholder of either Holdings or Wash Depot A.
In 1997, Wash Depot A leased real property in Meriden to operate a car wash. By April, 2001, Holdings was looking for an opportunity to sell the Meriden property. It eventually negotiated a sale with the plaintiff, Under Par Associates, LLC (Under Par). The negotiation occurred on April 30, 2001, in a telephone conversation between Anderson, who was calling from his home in New York, and Rick Perusse, the manager of Under Par, who was located in Connecticut. Under Par alleges in its complaint that Anderson and, through him, Wash *321 Depot A, made certain fraudulent representations in the course of that call. Because the issue now before the court is solely jurisdictional, the court expresses no view on the merits of Under Par's allegations.
On July 5, 2001, Under Par commenced this action against Wash Depot A and Anderson by service of process. An appearance was filed for both defendants on August 14, 2001. On August 22, 2001, Anderson filed the motion to dismiss now before the court. The motion contends that the action against Anderson should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction and insufficiency of service of process. The motion was heard on November 13, 2001. It was submitted on posthearing briefs on December 4, 2001.
The motion to dismiss claims lack of personal jurisdiction only as to Anderson. No claim has been made that there is a lack of jurisdiction as to Wash Depot A. In addition, Anderson has neither briefed nor argued the claim in his motion that the service of process upon him was insufficient. That latter claim is deemed abandoned. The sole question is whether the court has personal jurisdiction over Anderson.
Connecticut's long arm statute, §
"The statute does not define what the phrase `transact any business' means, but in Zartolas [v. Nisenfeld,
Modern New York precedent establishes that "one need not be physically present in order to be subject to the jurisdiction of our courts under CPLR 302 for, particularly in this day of instant long-range communications, one can engage in extensive purposeful activity here without ever actually setting foot in the State." Parke-BernetGalleries, Inc. v. Franklyn,
Parke-Bernet is roughly equivalent to the present case. This is well beyond "the situation where a defendant merely telephones a single order from outside the State . . . ." Id. Rather, Anderson, like the defendant in Parke-Bernet, actively participated in the business negotiation in the forum state. In acting as he did, "the defendant `purposefully' availed himself `of the privilege of conducting activities' within [the forum state] and *323
thereby `[invoked] the benefits and protections of its laws . . . .'" Id., 18, quoting Hanson v. Denckla,
Anderson does not seriously contest the court's analysis so far. His claim, rather, is that in spite of this analysis, he is protected by the "fiduciary shield doctrine." He contends that whatever business he conducted in Connecticut was solely in his capacity as an officer of the corporate defendant. Thus, he says, he "was merely furthering the corporation's interests" rather than his own.
Anderson's claim finds support in three decisions of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut. In Bross UtilitiesService Corp. v. Aboubshait,
Eginton, J., was confronted with a similar situation in Hagar v.Zaidman,
Eginton, J., again faced a similar situation in Adams v. Wex,
In light of their facts, Adams, Hagar and Bross Utilities stand for a common, unremarkable proposition. Where a corporation has not "transacted business" in Connecticut and an officer of that corporation has not transacted any business other than through the corporation, the court has no more jurisdiction over the individual than it does over the corporation. If the court lacks jurisdiction over the corporation, in these circumstances, it naturally follows that it also lacks jurisdiction over the officer. If the facts pertaining to the corporation and the officer are coterminous, an insufficiency of jurisdictional facts with respect to the corporation would, as a matter of logic, necessarily involve an insufficiency of jurisdictional facts with respect to the officer. *325
But what if the corporation has transacted business in Connecticut? What is the status of its officer then? None of the cases just cited, properly understood, stand for the proposition advanced by Anderson, that the court can have jurisdiction over the corporation but simultaneously lack jurisdiction over the officer solely because he acted in his corporate capacity. Adams confuses the issue by putting the cart before the horse and considering the case of the officer before the case of the corporation. Given its facts, however, Adams is far too thin a reed to support Anderson's claim here. That contention must be justified, if at all, by an independent analysis.
As it happens, a substantial body of jurisprudence on the "fiduciary shield" doctrine exists. The numerous authorities — squadrons of citations can be mustered in support of either side of the debate — are gathered in S. Larsen, annot., Validity, Construction, and Application of "Fiduciary Shield" Doctrine — Modern Cases, 79 A.L.R.5th 587 (2000), and there is no need to repeat that compilation here. The judicial focus must be on the doctrine's analytical underpinnings.
"This doctrine of `fiduciary shield' . . . emerged `with little notice and with no critical examination' as a novel principle by way of dicta in a series of decisions of the New York state and federal courts in the mid-sixties just as a more liberal and relaxed rule was developing in federal courts in favor of the application of state long-arm statutes themselves." Columbia Briargate Co. v. First National Bank,
Kreutter explains that the "fiduciary shield" doctrine "is based upon the notion that it is unfair to subject a corporate employee personally to suit in a foreign jurisdiction when his only contacts with that jurisdiction have been undertaken on behalf of his corporate employer." Id., 467-68. The doctrine, however, finds no support in the long arm statute itself. "Nothing in the statute's language or the legislative history relating to it suggests that the Legislature intended to accord any special treatment to fiduciaries acting on behalf of a corporation or to insulate them from long arm jurisdiction for acts performed in a corporate capacity." Id., 470.
"Nor" Kreutter reasons, "is the rule necessary as a matter of fairness." Id. "The equitable concerns which motivated development of the doctrine are amply protected by constitutional due process requisites which guarantee that jurisdiction over a nonresident will be sustained only when the demand for his presence is reasonable and consistent with notions of `"fair play and substantial justice"' . . . International ShoeCo. v. Washington,
Finally, Kreutter explains, the "fiduciary shield" doctrine is undesirable "as a matter of public policy." Id., 471. It unfairly prejudices "plaintiffs who seek relief against defendants conducting affairs in this State." Id. The unfairness of the doctrine is exemplified by the numerous exceptions created along the way by the courts adopting it. "That the application of this purportedly equitable rule has required the courts to develop so many exceptions to it to avoid inequitable results suggests that the foundation of the rule is unsound, or at a minimum, that the rule is unworkable." Id., 472. *327
Kreutter is important not only for its lucid policy analysis but because it interprets the very New York long arm statute that the Connecticut legislature used as a model for the text of §
Anderson next argues that the application of Connecticut's long arm statute to him "would be inconsistent with constitutional principles of due process." No authority is cited in support of this contention. His argument has been effectively answered by the Supreme Court of the United States, which has emphatically rejected automatic jurisdictional immunity for corporate agents. In Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
A similar analysis applies to Anderson in the present case. The long arm statute applies to him because he *328
was transacting business in Connecticut. The plaintiff's demand for his presence in a Connecticut judicial forum is reasonable and consistent with notions of "fair play and substantial justice." Anderson was the president and chief operating officer of a corporation transacting business in Connecticut. He himself effectively transacted business in Connecticut in his April 30, 2001 telephone negotiation with Perusse. Although there is no evidence that Anderson gained any direct benefit from the negotiation in question, Kreutter pertinently observes that, "rarely, if ever, does a corporate agent not derive some benefit from acting on behalf of his principal." Kreutter v. McFadden Oil Corp., supra,
Under these circumstances, a Connecticut court's exercise of jurisdiction over Anderson is not unfair. This conclusion is reinforced by the nature of the most likely trial scenario. The court's jurisdiction over the corporate defendant, Wash Depot A, is unquestioned. Anderson would undoubtedly be a witness in any trial of Under Par's case against Wash Depot A and would have to come to Connecticut for that purpose. (Indeed, Anderson uncomplainingly traveled to Connecticut for the purpose of giving testimony on his motion to dismiss.) "That being so," asKreutter notes, "the inconvenience he faces if made a party to the suit individually is minimal and, as a result, notions of fairness do not require us to shield him from the reach of the long arm statute." Id., 471.
The motion to dismiss is denied. *329