delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case sheds light on the question of how short is the Maryland “Long Arm” statute. Maryland Code (Repl. Vol. 1965) Article 75, § 96. 1 The appeal is from a ruling of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County which granted defendant-appellee’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction over the appellee, a foreign corporation. The sole issue before this Court is whether the motion was properly granted.
Plaintiff-appellant, Vitro Electronics, is engaged in the production of sophisticated electronic devices, many of which are used by the federal government in its space and missile programs. Vitro is a Delaware corporation duly qualified to do business in Maryland. In November, 1966, Vitro contracted with Milgray/Washington, Inc., to purchase a number of electronic parts. Milgray/Washington, Inc., a Maryland corporation, was informed that any parts furnished would have to comply with a certain government specification known as MIL-E-1. Mil-
The parent corporation sent the parts to its subsidiary which then sent them to Vitro. After receiving them, Vitro became concerned that the parts might not meet government specifications and requested a certificate of compliance to which it was entitled under its contract with Milgray/Washington, Inc. The appellee addressed this certificate directly to the appellant and transmitted it to Milgray/Washington, Inc., who in turn sent it to the appellant. With this assurance, Vitro began to manufacture its product. However, the government refused to accept the finished items because specification MIL-E-1 was not complied with. Vitro then filed suit in the court below alleging breach of contract, negligence, and fraud against both Milgray/Washington, Inc., and the appellee. The appellee made a motion to dismiss the suit against it for lack of jurisdiction. After an evidentiary hearing, Judge Bowie granted a motion to dismiss. At the hearing the following undisputed facts emerged. Mil-gray Electronics, Inc., owned 100% of the common stock of Milgray/Washington, Inc. The officers of both corporations were the same. The accounting obligations of both corporations were performed by the same accountant in New York. Milgray Electronics, Inc., maintained a telephone listing in a Washington directory which covered suburban Maryland, giving a Maryland address, although in an affidavit it maintained that this listing was continued as a result of an error. Milgray/Washington, Inc., stocked a supply of the appellee’s components on inventory ; however, it often purchases such items from others. The appellee and Milgray/Washington, Inc., maintained separate corporate books, separate minutes, separate records, and separate and distinct accounting procedures, and held separate directors’ meetings. The contract between the appellee and Milgray/Washington, Inc., was executed in New York. The record is not clear as to
The appellant would have us hold that the courts of Maryland have jurisdiction over the appellee on the basis that it has maintained a sufficient presence in Maryland to subject itself to the provision of our “Long Arm” statute, Maryland Code (Repl. Vol. 1965) Article 75, § 96 which provides in pertinent part:
“Personal jurisdiction over person [includes corporations] as to cause of action arising from business, etc., in State.
“(a) A Court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person, who acts directly or by an agent, as to a cause of action arising from the person’s
“ (1) transacting any business in this State:
“(3) causing tortious injury in this State by an act or omission in this State;
“(4) causing tortious injury in this State by an act or omission outside the State if he regularly does or solicits business, engages in any other persistent course of conduct in this State
The appellant first urges upon us that Milgray/Washington, Inc., although a subsidiary of and a separate corporation from its parent, the appellee, was in effect a branch office of the appellee. It would have us pierce the veil of corporate fiction and construe the relationship between the two as that of principal and agent with the actions of Milgray/Washington, Inc., being those of the appellee. The appellant endeavors to bring this relationship within the ambit of
Thomas v. Hudson Sales Corp.,
There are numerous cases which hold that a foreign corporation is not construed as doing business within a state merely because of its ownership of all of the shares of stock of another corporation doing business in the state. See
Rucker v. Personal Finance Co.,
It is true that most of the cases cited above ante-date the decision of the United States Supreme Court in
International Shoe Co., supra,
wherein the Court expanded the area for state jurisdiction over foreign corporations and nonresident individuals where there was a showing that certain minimum contacts had been maintained in the forum state sufficient to warrant the exercise of jurisdiction without offending “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” See also
Van Wagenberg v. Van Wagenberg,
We are impressed with the opinion in
Hilton Hotel, supra,
in which Chief Judge Fuld, writing for a majority of the court, found Hilton Hotels Ltd., a British
There can be no question but that Judge Fuld in Hilton expresses the liberal trend in court decisions tending to extend jurisdiction over foreign corporations and nonresident individuals. According to the dissenting opinion in Hilton, the net result of the majority opinion is to brush aside the corporate fiction and to consider the acts of the subsidiary as those of the parent corporation. 2
In the instant case, without destroying the corporate fiction between parent and subsidiary, it is difficult to find from a review of the record even minimal contacts by the appellee in this State. We have already made the distinction on the facts between this case and Hilton, and certainly, looking at the Maryland decisions, there was no representative of the appellee in Maryland whose actions placed the corporation within the factual pattern by which jurisdiction attached in Thomas v. Hudson Sales, supra.
It is true that in
Gilliam v. Moog Industries, Inc.,
“It seems clear that the purpose of the Legislature in enacting these new provisions was to give the courts of the State personal jurisdiction over all out of state persons and corporations which constitutionally could be reachedas having had sufficient Maryland contacts, under the jurisdictional yardstick established by the Supreme Court in cases such as International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310 ,90 L. Ed. 95 ; McGee v. International Life Ins. Co.,355 U. S. 220 ,2 L.Ed.2d 223 ; and Hanson v. Denckla,357 U. S. 235 ,2 L.Ed.2d 1283 .” Id. at p. 111.
However, in Moog, the Court did not reach the question of whether the “Long Arm” statute (Ch. 95 of the Laws of 1964) which was effective June 1, 1964, applied to that case as the declaration in the suit, as well as a motion to quash the writ of summons, had been filed many months prior to the effective date of the Act. Chief Judge Hammond in Novack v. National Hot Rod Ass’n, supra, gave an excellent resumé of the “Long Arm” statute with reference to those activities or contacts which bring a foreign corporation within the purview of the statute. In that case we held the fact that the contract between Hot Rod, a foreign corporation, and Aquasco, the association which operated the local drag strip track in Maryland, was made in California was not decisive, and the fact that the foreign corporation had “engaged in a persistent course of conduct in Maryland in sending its agents into the state on five occasions within a period of little more than a year to inspect the certified Aquasco Track . . .” (Id. at p. 357) made it amenable to jurisdiction.
The weakness in the appellant’s case, as we have already stated, lies in the fact that the appellee engaged in none of the activities which add up to a persistent course of conduct in this state, such as:
“. . . direct solicitation by sales representatives in the state, the sending of price lists to customers through the mails, general mail advertising combined with advertising in periodicals circulated in the state, participation with the locally franchised dealer in promoting sales,and the presence in the state of service and maintenance representatives . . . .” 26 Md. L. Rev. 13 at p. 43 (1966).
Coupled with this lack of direct contact in Maryland, the record supports the fact that the appellee, although sharing officers and an accountant with its subsidiary, nonetheless, took pains to maintain separate records, separate and distinct accounting procedures, separate corporate books, and held separate directors’ meetings. We cannot, out of hand, brush aside these observed distinctions.
From the brief and argument presented by the appellant, it would however appear that the appellee may have committed a purposeful tortious act in Maryland which would have subjected it to the jurisdiction of this State by virtue of §§ (a) (3) of § 96, Art. 75. We are referring to the execution of the certificate of compliance. It is obvious from the facts that the appellee stood to realize some commercial advantage by manufacturing the components and that its certificate of compliance was a serious and important document and one upon which it knew, or should have known, the appellant would rely. The fact that the contract to supply the components was between the appellant and Milgr ay/Washington, Inc., and that the appellee was not privy to it is not decisive. We are of the opinion that had the execution of the certificate taken place in Maryland or even had manual delivery of it been made by the appellee to Milgr ay/Washington, Inc., in Maryland, or had the appellee requested Milgray/Washington, Inc., to deliver the certificate which it had addressed to the appellant, such action would have constituted a purposeful act within this State and an act which could have, if the certificate had been fraudulently or negligently executed, caused tortious injury to the appellant. 4
We fully realize that the burden of proof is on the plantiff-appellant in this case, even though the evidentiary hearing went only to the question of jurisdiction and did not reach the merits of the case. However, we are reluctant to grant either an affirmance or reversal on the basis of the record before us. We are of the opinion that “the substantial merits of the case will not be determined by affirming or reversing or modifying the judgment from which the appeal was taken” and that the purposes of justice will be advanced by remanding
Case remanded without affirmance or reversal for further proceedings in conformity with the guidelines-set forth in the above opinion, assessment of costs to await final outcome of the case.
Notes
. The ‘Long Arm’ Comes to Maryland,” 26 Md. L. Rev. 13 (1966) by Professor Bernard Auerbach.
. The dissenting opinion in Hilton noted:
“. . . The majority bridges the gap between these two rules by finding that separate but affiliated corporations perform the localized services, albeit local services of the narrowest scope, on behalf of the foreign corporation and, therefore, the foreign corporation is performing the localized services here, thus subjecting it to personal jurisdiction. This, of course, is a non sequitur, unless there is no power or privilege on the part of business enterprises to limit and segregate their assets, liabilities, and suability, if done, in fact, and if done without fraud or deception, by the utilization of separate adequately financed corporations, either subsidiary or affiliated.”227 N.E.2d 851 at 857.
. However, it is questionable whether the Maryland statute is as broad as the permissible constitutional limits of due process would allow. See 26 Md. L. Rev. 13, at p. 25 (1966).
. Restatement, 2d Conflict of Laws, § 52 incl. Comment b and
“b. Subsidiary of corporation. * * *
“If the subsidiary corporation does an act, or causes effects, in the state at the direction of the parent corporation, the state has judicial jurisdiction over the parent to the same extent that it would have had such jurisdiction if the parent had itself done the act or caused the effects.
“Judicial jurisdiction over a subsidiary corporation will likewise give the state judicial jurisdiction over the parent corporation if the parent so controls and dominates the subsidiary as in effect to disregard the latter’s independent corporate existence.”
