MEMORANDUM
Courts may only exercise personal jurisdiction consistent with the due process clause and retain venue where appropriate. These bedrock principles are now tested in the evolving investment business of buying an injured plaintiffs settlement consisting of structured annuity payments and then brokering the annuity’s income stream to investors. As a caution to those investing in these sold annuities, a court can later vacate the sale of the annuity payments when the underlying plaintiff selling his annuity payments lacked authority to sell his settlement consideration, leaving the eventual investors without the purchased asset. Today, we evaluate jurisdiction and venue over a Florida defendant buying the annuity payments from a non-party Floridian plaintiff. The Florida defendant then sold the annuity payments to a New Jersey defendant who, in turn, sold the annuity payments to two Pennsylvanian investors under a preexisting agreement. In the accompanying Order, we grant the Florida defendant’s motion to dismiss as we lack general and specific personal jurisdiction over it. We retain specific personal jurisdiction over the New Jersey defendant who sold the annuity payments to the Pennsylvanian investors even though their agreement included a permissive forum selection clause suggesting a Monmouth County, New Jersey state court venue.
I. Background
With the aid of their Pennsylvania financial advisor, Pennsylvanians Robert and Linda Wall purchased a structured annuity payment under a master agreement they signed with Altium Group LLC, a Delaware limited liability company doing business in New Jersey.
Altium sold the idea of investing in structured settlement payments to the Walls on November 8, 2011 under a Master Agreement
A Florida state court granted Corona Capital’s petition to approve the transfer on March 28, 2012 entitling the Walls to receive 60 payments of $3,000 with 3% annual increase in payments beginning on June 1, 2014, and ending with the last payment on May 1, 2019.
The Walls paid $152,833.37 to Altium under the Master Agreement but never received payments from Altium or Corona Capital.
Corona Capital moves to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction or to transfer venue. Altium moves to dismiss based on fo-rwm non conveniens.
II. Analysis
A. We cannot exercise personal jurisdiction over Corona Capital.
The Walls allege we have personal jurisdiction over Corona Capital because: (1) Corona Capital had “their agent” Altium offer the structured annuity to the Walls’ Pennsylvania financial advisor; (2) Corona Capital petitioned a Florida state court to transfer annuity payments to the Walls in Pennsylvania; (3) Corona Capital referred to the Walls as their “designated assignee” in a letter to New York Life; and, (4) Corona Capital regularly conducts business with Pennsylvania residents. We do not give consideration to the Walls’ first and fourth conclusions unsupported by facts of an agency relationship or Corona Capital’s other business relationships in Pennsylvania.
We examine our exercise of personal jurisdiction over Corona Capital under the Due Process Clause and Pennsylvania’s Long Arm Statute. First, we analyze if Corona Capital had minimum contacts with Pennsylvania to “reasonably antici
The Walls argue Corona Capital has minimum contacts with Pennsylvania because it intended the Walls to be third-party beneficiaries to the structured settlement petition and directed New York Life to send payments to the Walls in Pennsylvania over the next five years. Corona Capital and the Walls never signed a contract. Even assuming we stretched the facts to hypothetically find the Walls and Corona Capital signed a contract, “[a] contract alone does not ‘automatically establish sufficient minimum contacts in the in the other party’s home forum.” There must be evidence “the defendant ‘purposefully availed [itself] of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum’ thus invoking the benefits and protections of the forums state’s laws.”
In Rotondo Weinreich Enterprises, Inc. v. Rock City Mechanical, Inc., the district court evaluated the defendant’s contacts with Pennsylvania in a breach of contract case.
The Walls do not allege Corona Capital negotiated with them while they were in Pennsylvania or Corona Capital entered into a contract with them. The Walls do not allege Corona Capital ever contacted the Walls or anyone in Pennsylvania. The Walls signed a contract with Altium, not Corona Capital. Corona Capital’s sole contact with Pennsylvania is it petitioned and obtained a Florida court order directing New York Life (by a letter from Florida) to send payments to the Walls in Pennsylvania based on the Master Agreement between Altium and the Walls.
Even assuming Walls have third-party beneficiary status under the Corona Capital and Kenneth Stevens’ agreement, we still do not have minimum contacts sufficient to satisfy “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
In finding we lack personal jurisdiction over Corona Capital, we are persuaded by the court’s reasoning in Rhodes Enterprises, LLC v. Financial Carrier Services, Inc. where a Tennessee company Rhodes sued
We cannot exercise personal jurisdiction over Corona Capital because it does not have minimum contacts with Pennsylvania. The Walls’ breach of transfer of warranties, breach of contract, negligence, and unjust enrichment claims against Corona Capital are dismissed.
B. Venue for the Walls’ claims against Altium is proper.
Venue is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b)(2), (“a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claim occurred,”) because Altium reached out to the Walls’ financial advisor in Pennsylvania to market the annuity product
The Master Agreement between the Walls and Altium governs their relationship.
C. We decline to transfer venue under § 1404.
Altium moves to transfer venue to Monmouth County, New Jersey under the Master Agreement’s forum selection clause. The Walls argue while they agreed venue is proper in Monmouth County, New Jersey, the parties did not require venue in Monmouth County.
“Forum selection clauses can be mandatory or permissive.”
The Walls’ forum selection clause provides “[i]n the event of a dispute concerning this agreement, the parties agree that venue lies in a court of competent jurisdiction in Monmouth County, New Jersey.”
The parties authorized venue in Monmouth County, New Jersey. No District Court sits in Monmouth County. Our Court of Appeals instructs where a forum selection clause provides venue in a county without a situate District Court, the plaintiff could not bring suit in the District even though the selected county is within its territorial jurisdiction.
A. Private interest factors weigh against transfer.
Our analysis begins with the private interest factors: “(1) plaintiffs’ forum preference as manifested in the original choice; (2) the defendant’s preference; (3) whether the claim aróse elsewhere; (4) the convenience of the parties as indicated by their relative physical and financial condition; (5) the convenience of the witnesses-but only to the extent that the witnesses may actually be unavailable for trial in one of the fora; and (6) the location of books and records (similarly limited to the extent that the files could not be produced in the alternative forum).”
The Walls prefer to litigate here.
The convenience of the parties weighs against transfer. Altium is located in New Jersey and showed a willingness to reach out to Pennsylvania by contacting the Walls’ financial advisor with the offer. Because under Atlantic Marine, “a successful motion under forum non conveniens requires dismissal of the case” and we cannot transfer this case to a New Jersey state court, our only alternative is a “hars[h] result”: dismiss the case requiring the Walls to file a new complaint in New Jersey state court against the defendant over whom we already have jurisdiction.
B. Public interest factors weigh against transfer.
We also review the public interest factors: “(1) the enforceability of the judgment; (2) practical considerations that could make the trial easy, expeditious, or inexpensive; (3) the relative administrative difficulty in the two fora resulting from court congestion; (4) the local interest in deciding local controversies at home; (5) the public policies of the fora; and (6) the familiarity of the trial judge with the applicable state law in diversity cases.”
We find most public interest factors are neutral. We can enforce a judgment. Alti-um can litigate in this District where it solicits investors. We have no basis to find a New Jersey state court is less busy than this Court. We have a local interest in protecting Pennsylvania residents from the sometimes “unscrupulous” activities sur
The public interest factors weigh in favor of retaining venue.
III. Conclusion
We dismiss all claims against Corona Capital as we lack personal jurisdiction over it. We do not dismiss or transfer the Walls’ claims against Altium because the venue selection clause is permissive and the Jumara factors weigh against transfer.
Notes
. ECF Doc. No. 22 ¶ 5-7.
. See ECF Doc. No. 27-1, Master Structured Settlement Receivable Purchase and Sale Agreement and Non-Circumvention Agreement (“Master Agreement”).
. ECF Doc. No. 22-1 at 13.
. See ECF Doc. No. 29-2, Structured Settlement Receivable Purchase and Sale Agreement ("Sale Agreement”).
. ECF Doc. No. 22-1 at 2, 5.
. ECF Doc. No.22-1 at 8.
. ECF Doc. No. 22 ¶ 18.
. See Corporate Air, LLC v. Davis, No. 13-729,
. World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
. International Shoe. Co. v. Washington,
. Hufnagel v. Ciamacco,
. Rotondo Weinreich Enterprises, Inc. v. Rock City Mechanical, Inc., No. 04-5285,
. Id. at *4-6.
. Id. at *7.
. Id.
. Rhodes Enterprises, LLC v. Financial Carrier Services, Inc., No. 14-1723,
. Id. n.l.
. Id. at *1.
. Id. at *5.
. Id. at*l.
. Id. at *1.
. Id. at *4.
. Id. at *5,
. Id. at n.5 (citing Int’l Shoe Co.,
. ECF Doc. No. 22 ¶ 11.
. Id. ¶7.
. Id.
. William C. Coluccio’s Declaration, ECF Doc. No. 25. Leone v. Cataldo,
. Whipstock Natural Gas Services, LLC v. Trans Energy, Inc., No. 08-1084,
. ECF Doc. No. 22 ¶¶ 1, 11, 13.
. 28U.S.C. § 1391.
. Campanini v. Studsvik, Inc., No. 08-5910,
. Id.
. Id.
. ECF Doc. No. 25-1.
. ADP, LLC v. Bakshi, No. 15-8385,
. Because the venue selection clause is permissive, we do not modify the § 1404(a) balancing test for under Atlantic Marine Const. Co. v. U.S. Dist. Court for Western Dist. of Texas, - U.S. -,
. Wall Street Aubrey Golf, LLC v. Aubrey,
. Atlantic Marine,
. Jumara v. State Farm Ins. Co.,
. See Shutte v. Armco Steel Corp.,
. Atlantic Marine,
. Jumara,
. Allstate Settlement Corp. v. Rapid Settlements, Ltd.,
