DefendanUAppellant Tyler Hill Corporation appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Feuerstein, J) enforcing a forum selection clause and remanding the case to the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of Nassau. We affirm the district court’s decision, although for somewhat different reasons from those expressed by the district court.
The facts are uncontested. PlaintiffAppellee Sara Yakin attended summer camp during the summers of 1996 through 1999 at the Tyler Hill Camp in Tyler Hill, Pennsylvania operated by Tyler Hill Corporation. In order to enroll for camp each summer, Yakin completed an application form containing various terms. Those applicable to Yakin’s enrollment for the summer of 1999 included a clause that provided:
It is agreed that the venue and place of trial of any dispute that may arise out of this Agreement or otherwise, to which Tyler Hill Camp, or its agents, is a party shall be in Nassau County, New York.
At the time Yakin submitted the application, there was a federal courthouse for the Eastern District of New York located in Uniondale, Nassau County.
On July 2, 1999, Yakin alleges she was injured while at Tyler Hill Camp after hitting a dock while waterskiing. According to her complaint, Yakin suffered “severe and permanent personal injuries” as a result of the accident. In May 2007, Yakin sued Tyler Hill in Nassau County State Supreme Court, alleging that her injuries resulted from the “carelessness and negligence” of Tyler Hill, its employees and others. By that time, the federal courthouse in Uniondale had closed and the court was re-located out of Nassau County to Central Islip in Suffolk County. The main courthouse for the Eastern District of New York remained in Brooklyn, New York. Nonetheless, Tyler Hill removed the action to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. If successfully removed, the case would have
Yakin moved to remand the action to Nassau County State Supreme Court on the ground that the forum selection clause mandated venue and trial in Nassau County. In November 2007, after first rejecting Yakin’s petition for reasons unrelated to this appeal, the district court granted Yakin’s request.
Yakin v. Tyler Hill Camp, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Tyler Hill argues that the district court erred for two reasons. First, Tyler Hill contends that the forum selection clause is not ambiguous. According to Tyler Hill’s interpretation, the clause merely designated Nassau County, New York as a geographic location for litigation and, therefore, did not exclude venue in a federal district court with jurisdiction over Nassau County. Tyler Hill argues, consequently, that the reference in the clause to venue in Nassau County does not exclude trial in the Eastern District of New York, which includes Nassau County, especially since at the time Yakin submitted the enrollment application, there was a federal courthouse in Nassau County. Second, arguing in the alternative, Tyler Hill contends that even if the forum selection clause could be held to be ambiguous, the clause would not bar Tyler Hill from a federal forum because an ambiguous clause is not a clear and unequivocal waiver of federal jurisdiction that is binding on the parties.
We review
de novo
a district court’s legal conclusion regarding remand.
See Blockbuster, Inc. v. Galeno,
We first consider whether the forum selection clause is ambiguous, a threshold question of law. An ambiguity exists where a contract term “could suggest more than one meaning when viewed objectively by a reasonably intelligent person who has examined the context of the entire integrated agreement and who is cognizant of the customs, practices, usages and terminology as generally understood in the particular trade or business.”
Morgan Stanley Group Inc. v. New England
We perceive no ambiguity in the forum selection clause. A reasonable person reviewing the statement “It is agreed' that the venue and place of trial of any dispute that may arise out of this Agreement ... shall be in Nassau County, New York,” would necessarily conclude that the parties intended that litigation take place in an appropriate venue in Nassau County and that this commitment was not conditioned on the existence of a federal courthouse in that county.
Tyler Hill contends that nothing in the wording of the clause requires that a dispute be litigated in Nassau County State Supreme Court and, as a result, the clause does not on its face exclude federal jurisdiction. This may be true,
1
but it misses the point. According to the Supreme Court, forum selection clauses “are prima facie valid and should be enforced unless enforcement is shown by the resisting party to be ‘unreasonable’ under the circumstances.”
M/S Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
Given that the forum selection clause contains only obligatory venue language, we will effectuate the parties’ commitment to trial in Nassau County. Had there been a federal court located in Nassau County at the time of this litigation, remand would have been improper. But there was none. In addition, contrary to Tyler Hill’s contention, no reasonable reading of the clause permits the interpretation that the parties had agreed to trial in Suffolk County or Brooklyn because those courthouses were within the Eastern District of New York, which spans an area including Nassau County. Had the parties intended to provide for that result, they could, of course, have drafted a different forum selection clause that communicated
CONCLUSION
The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We express no view as to whether a forum selection clause must stipulate a specific non-federal jurisdiction in order to require remand for jurisdictional purposes, as opposed to venue purposes.
