ORDER
This matter is before the Court on defendant’s motion to dismiss the third count of the complaint. After a hearing on the motion, the Court took the matter under advisement.
United Dominion Industries, Inc. (“United Dominion”) brought this action against Overhead Door Corporation (“Overhead Door”) regarding its recent purchase of the assets of AEP-Span, a division of Overhead Door. The complaint alleges breaches of the asset purchase agreement through misstatements of earnings, misleading earnings forecasts, overstated inventory and concealment of a material downturn in AEP-Span’s business. The complaint seeks rescission of the sale in count one, indemnification pursuant to the agreement in count two, and damages for unfair and deceptive trade practices in count three.
Defendant has moved to dismiss count three of the complaint, which is brought under N.C.Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1. 1 The motion centers around the applicable law, rather than the sufficiency of the allegations in the count. Defendant argues that the state law of Texas should apply to the alleged unfair and deceptive acts and that therefore the count based on the North Carolina statute must be dismissed.
Under the rule of
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
I. Contractual Provision Regarding Applicable Law
The contract entered into between the parties provides in section 25.11 that “This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas applicable to contracts made and to performed therein.” Defendant argues that this provision requires that Texas law be applied to any count based on unfair or deceptive acts and that the count based on N.C.Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1 must be dismissed. Defendant also submits that plaintiff can not bring a claim on this ground under Texas law because Texas’s statute prohibiting unfair and deceptive
The contractual provision here may govern the choice of laws as to the interpretation and construction of the contract; however, it does not provide the applicable law for a claim based on unfair and deceptive acts. As explained in
ITCO Corp. v. Michelin Tire Corp., Com. Div.,
II. North Carolina’s Choice of Law Rule
The parties have identified two possible tests that North Carolina courts might apply in determining the choice of law question raised here. The North Carolina courts may apply the traditional lex loci delicti rule or the modern “most significant relationship” test. A review of the case law, as shown below, yields no clear answer because the North Carolina Supreme Court has not specifically addressed the issue and the Court of Appeals has used both tests recently.
This Court is required to make a prediction as to how North Carolina courts would resolve this question in the face of North Carolina cases applying both tests. This case is instructive in demonstrating the continued need for a procedure to allow referral of important questions such as this to the North Carolina Supreme Court to obtain a definitive statement.
The North Carolina Court of Appeals applied the
lex loci
test to a claim based upon N.C.Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1 in
United Virginia,
On the other hand, the North Carolina Court of Appeals has applied the most significant relationship test in two cases involving claims under N.C.Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1.
Michael v. Greene,
In the absence of a method to refer questions such as this to the North Carolina Supreme Court, this Court must now join other federal district courts in a prognostication of how the North Carolina Supreme Court would resolve the divergence in the case law. With due regard for the decisions of other federal courts, this Court concludes that based upon recent case law, North Carolina would apply the traditional lex loci rule rather than the most significant relationship test.
The Court places particular importance on the decision in United Virginia which rejected the most significant relationship test in favor of the traditional test. United Virginia was decided in 1986 and is the last North Carolina court decision dealing with a choice of law problem involving N.C. Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1. As shown by the Bou-dreau decision, the North Carolina Supreme Court has shown no lack of confidence in the traditional lex loci test for general torts. This Court will therefore accept the decision of the last North Carolina court to speak to this issue.
The district court decision in
American Rockwool
is dated June 18, 1986, several months after the decision in
United Virginia.
However, because the
American Rockwool
decision does not cite
United Virginia,
the court may not have had the benefit of the recent North Carolina case on the issue. The decision in
American Rockwool
to apply the most significant relationship test relied heavily on the decisions in
Michael v. Greene
and
Andrew Jackson
and “assumed” that North Carolina would apply the most significant relationship test because of these decisions.
American Rockwool,
The district court in
Simms
did have
United Virginia
before it and concluded that the North Carolina courts would still apply the most significant relationship test. However,
Simms
was decided one week after the North Carolina Supreme Court reaffirmed its use of
lex loci
for tort claims in
Boudreau
and apparently this decision was not circulated in time for the
Simms
case to consider it. More importantly,
Simms
dealt with securities fraud, and the court on reconsideration concluded that it erred in its conclusion that a conflict of laws question was even present.
Simms Inv. Co. v. E.F. Hutton & Co. Inc.,
This Court feels that Boudreau is an important case in understanding North Carolina law on this point and demonstrates a commitment in North Carolina to the lex loci test. This Court relies heavily upon the Boudreau decision and the United Virginia decision, the most recent North Carolina decision on point, in concluding that a North Carolina court would apply the lex loci test to this issue.
III. Application of the Lex Loci Test
As discussed in
United Virginia,
application of the
lex loci
test requires a determination of where the injuries were sustained; the law of the state where this occurred then governs.
United Virginia,
Plaintiff argues that it sustained injury in North Carolina because the financial damage from the asset purchase is felt at its corporate headquarters located in North Carolina. Plaintiff places importance on the location of its “pocketbook,” which suffered the damage. Defendant contends that the injury was sustained where the last act which caused the injury took place,
United Virginia
explained that the place where the injury was sustained is the place “where the last act occurred giving rise to defendants’ injury.”
United Virginia,
Plaintiff has provided several decisions in which the location of the “pocketbook” was given great consideration by courts. In
ITCO,
the Fourth Circuit in a footnote providing a “comment” on the choice of law issue opined that because ITCO sustained injury in North Carolina, where the corporation had its principal place of business, the law of North Carolina would apply.
ITCO,
In
American Rockwool,
the district court relied upon the language in
ITCO
for a conclusion in dicta that the place of injury was the principal place of business where the company loses profits.
American Rockwool,
Plaintiff has provided after the hearing several decisions in other jurisdictions for its claim that the place of injury is where the economic damage is recorded. The Court does not find these cases helpful. 4
On balance, defendant’s position seems sounder. Plaintiff’s position would allow a corporation to conduct an entire transaction in a foreign jurisdiction and urge the law of the corporation’s state of residency in subsequent litigation. Indeed, since plaintiff is a subsidiary of a Canadian corporation, by this rationale the ultimate injury may have occurred in Canada.
The last act which caused the injury which plaintiff complains of occurred in
IV. Conclusion
The rule of lex loci requires that the law of Texas apply to any claim by plaintiff based on unfair and deceptive conduct. Therefore, the third count based on North Carolina law will be dismissed. Although Texas law appears not to grant plaintiff standing to bring an action under its consumer protection statute (Texas Bus. & Commerce § 17.45(4)), the Court will freely give leave to amend the complaint to plaintiff if it has a Texas-based count that it wishes to bring in lieu of the action under N.C.Gen.Stat. § 75-1.1.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that defendant’s motion to dismiss count three of the complaint is GRANTED.
Notes
. N.C.G.S. § 75-1.1 provides in part that "Unfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce, are declared unlawful.”
N.C.G.S. §§ 75-16 and 75-16.1 provide for treble damages and attorney fees in a civil action by a party injured by a violation of the statute.
. The Court recognizes that the North Carolina Court of Appeals in
Bernard v. Central Carolina Truck Sales,
. Although the discussion in the case is not complete, the court in
Lloyd v. Carnation,
. In
Hill
v.
Equitable Trust Co.,
