MOORE, Chief Justice.
William Mudd, John Whitaker, Phillip Luke, and David Wells, and the law firm in which they were members, Whitaker, Mudd, Simms, Luke, & Wells, LLC ("WMSLW") (hereinafter referred to collectively as "the defendants"),
Keri Donald Simms is a resident of Jefferson County and a practicing attorney in Birmingham, where all the law firms named as petitioners either have been located or were created. Effective May 10, 2012, Simms either resigned from WMSLW or his membership in the limited-liability company was terminated by the other members of WMSLW.
After Simms's departure from the firm, in letters dated May 10, 2012, WMSLW offered Simms's clients the option to remain with WMSLW or to continue with Simms as their attorney at his new place of employment, Webster, Henry, Lyons, White, Bradwell & Black, P.C. ("WHLWBB"), another Alabama law firm. Simms alleges that his relationship with the defendants began to deteriorate when an unspecified number of his clients informed WMSLW of their intent to remain clients of Simms and not of WMSLW. He says that he enlisted the services of the Alabama State Bar to force the defendants to release his clients' case files to him. According to Simms, between May 14, 2012, and May 17, 2012, WMSLW
One of Simms's clients is his cousin, Angie Smith of Georgia, who had suffered burn injuries in an accident in Georgia on July 23, 2011; Smith's injuries were the subject of litigation in Georgia pending at the time of Simms's departure from WMSLW. Smith had been consulting with Simms since her accident and became a client of WMSLW, by contract, on September 7, 2011. Simms was her attorney at WMSLW. In July 2011, Simms discussed Smith's case with his friend Claud E. "Skip" McCoy, Jr., while the two men were at a wedding in Chambers County, Alabama. McCoy, a resident of Chambers County who is licensed to practice law in both Georgia and Alabama, agreed to assist Simms with the case as cocounsel. McCoy helped Simms retain the Georgia
Simms was working with McCoy and PMKMN on Smith's litigation at the time of his departure from WMSLW. He alleges that WMSLW never mailed Smith the May 10, 2012, letter informing her of her option to remain with WMSLW or to continue with Simms at WHLWBB. Smith and her husband Charles Smith claim in an affidavit that, "[h]ad we been provided an ethical client notification letter or communication from anyone associated with [WMSLW], including Defendant Wells, we would have immediately terminated that entity" as Smith's legal counsel. Smith's file was one of those turned over to Simms between May 14, 2012, and May 17, 2012.
WMSLW operated as a limited-liability company in which each member contributed income based on the operating agreement of WMSLW. Each member of WMSLW not only received draws, which were based on the revenue he or she generated for WMSLW, but also served as a guarantor on a line of credit financed by ServisFirst Bank and available to WMSLW. Simms's departure involved a dispute over $146,834, a figure representing the negative balance in Simms's capital account with WMSLW.
The individual defendants and Simms discussed a variety of payment-plan options for Simms, who, according to the defendants, agreed that he and WHLWBB would transfer to WMSLW a percentage of the contingency fee Simms earned from the litigation involving Smith.
After receiving this inadvertent e-mail from McCoy and attorneys at PMKMN, the defendants contacted PMKMN by telephone in June 2012 regarding the Smith contingency fee. A member of PMKMN followed up with the defendants by e-mail on June 22, 2012, stating that PMKMN had been previously unaware of any disagreement between Simms and WMSLW regarding the Smith case but that the Smith contingency fee had been deposited in PMKMN's trust account pending resolution of the dispute between Simms and WMSLW. Smith contacted WMSLW by letter dated June 26, 2012, indicating that she was terminating her relationship with WMSLW because she wanted Simms to continue representing her.
On May 1, 2013, Simms sued the defendants in the Chambers Circuit Court, alleging defamation, libel, oppression of a minority shareholder, misrepresentation, the tort of outrage, deceit, fraud, tortious interference with business relationships, breach of contract, and accounting irregularities. He sought declaratory and injunctive relief and requested the appointment of a receiver, an accounting, or a dissolution of the limited-liability company. On May 12, 2014, he amended his complaint to add a count alleging civil conspiracy and to dismiss his requests for injunctive relief, an accounting, and a dissolution. On June 4, 2013, the defendants moved to dismiss the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and improper venue or, in the alternative, to transfer the case to Jefferson County, where, they said, venue was proper. The defendants also moved to strike the amended complaint, arguing that the original complaint, not the amended complaint, controlled the disposition of the motion to dismiss. On May 14, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on the pending motions and denied the motion for a change of venue. The defendants now petition this Court for a writ of mandamus directing the Chambers Circuit Court to dismiss the case or to transfer it from Chambers County to Jefferson County.
Ex parte Pike Fabrication, Inc., 859 So.2d 1089, 1091 (Ala.2002). We further note that, "[w]hen ruling on a motion to transfer, the trial court must determine whether venue was proper at the time the action was filed," Ex parte Canady, 563 So.2d 1024, 1025 (Ala.1990), and that, "[i]f venue is not proper at the commencement of an action, then, upon motion of the defendant, the action must be transferred to a court where venue would be proper." Ex parte Overstreet, 748 So.2d 194, 196 (Ala.1999).
This case does not involve the merits of Simms's complaint against the defendants. It involves only one issue: Whether venue in Chambers County is proper. The defendants are four individuals and WMSLW, a limited-liability company ("LLC"). In Alabama the proper venue for an action against an LLC and its members is governed by § 6-3-2, Ala.Code 1975, which governs lawsuits against individual defendants. Ex parte Miller, Hamilton, Snider & Odom, LLC, 942 So.2d 334, 336-37 (Ala.2006)(holding that the defendant law firm, an LLC, was a partnership for purposes of venue and was governed by § 6-3-2(a)(3)); Ex parte Burr & Forman, LLP, 5 So.3d 557, 565 (Ala. 2008)("The statute governing venue for individuals, § 6-3-2, Ala.Code 1975, also governs venue for partnerships. For purposes of venue, a partnership is deemed to reside where its partners reside."). Therefore, venue in the present case is governed by § 6-3-2(a), which provides:
(Emphasis added.) Accordingly, venue is proper in Chambers County only if one of the individual defendants resides in Chambers County or any of the acts or omissions of which Simms complains occurred in Chambers County. It is undisputed that each of the individual defendants resides in Jefferson County, not Chambers County; therefore, we must determine whether the parties' briefs and the materials before us reveal any act or omission in Chambers County that would give rise to venue there.
Although Simms was raised in Chambers County and has family there, he is not a resident of Chambers County. McCoy, who is not a party to this lawsuit, is a resident of Chambers County. In August 2011 Simms and McCoy attended a
Simms insists that Chambers County is "the purposeful climatic [sic] place of defendants' tortious conduct targeted against Simms," but the only discernible evidence for this claim is the January 18, 2013, e-mail from Mudd to McCoy, who may or may not have opened the e-mail in Chambers County. There is no showing that this allegedly defamatory e-mail was ever opened in Chambers County or that any injury resulting from it occurred in Chambers County. Even if Simms had shown that the e-mail was opened in Chambers County, venue still would not be proper there because "an individual who makes an allegedly defamatory statement should be sued where the defamatory remark was made," not where a recipient possibly opened an e-mail or otherwise received the defamatory remark. Ex parte Windom, 840 So.2d 885, 889 (Ala. 2002).
Although Simms suggests that the defendants intended "to use the [Smith] case as a means to an end in Chambers County and [to] conceal the secret payments made among them while Simms was a minority member of [WMSLW]"; that the defendants "chose Chambers County and Simms' personal attachment to the Smith case as the final location of their means to attempt to keep secret their accounting irregularities and payments made among them while Smith was a minority member of [WMSLW]"; and that the defendants "used Chambers County and the Smith case to extract the most harm to Simms," "to claim all of the disputed fee" from the Smith settlement, "to interfere with Simms' economic interest in the fee," "to damage his profession[al] reputation related to the case," and "to use the one case [to which] he had the most emotional attachment, his family's case, to distract him in hopes he would not discover the self-dealing secret payments," there is no evidence showing that the defendants acted in Chambers County. Simms's general claims about the defendants' intent to "use" Chambers County are not substantiated by any particular evidence indicating that the defendants ever carried out their alleged intent. Simms contends that McCoy and the Smith family possess "documentary evidence in Chambers County and [in] nearby LaGrange, Georgia," but no such evidence appears in the petition, briefs, or materials before us. Nor do the parties specifically or unambiguously name, describe, or identify that evidence.
Simms has not proffered evidence of a nexus with Chambers County that would justify his filing this lawsuit there. The fact that Chambers County and Troup County, Georgia, are contiguous does not satisfy the jurisdictional requirements of § 6-3-2(a) when there is no specific indication that any act or omission occurred within Chambers County. Likewise, the fact that McCoy, a nonparty to the action, might have opened an e-mail within Chambers County will not suffice to establish jurisdiction in Chambers County. The act complained of — sending the e-mail — occurred in Jefferson County, from where Mudd sent the e-mail, not in Chambers
Because no individual defendant is a resident of Chambers County and no identifiable act or omission occasioning this litigation took place in Chambers County, there is no basis for venue in Chambers County under § 6-3-2(a), and the defendants have a clear legal right to have the case transferred from Chambers County to Jefferson County. Overstreet, 748 So.2d at 197 (holding that the chosen forum was "not a proper venue for [the] action, and it was, therefore, an abuse of discretion for the trial judge to deny [the] motion for a change of venue"). There being no nameable or observable connection under the law to the venue in which Simms filed his lawsuit, we grant the petition for the writ of mandamus. By doing so, we pretermit any discussion of the defendants' request to transfer the case based on the doctrine of forum non conveniens, see § 6-3-21.1, Ala.Code 1975, because the doctrine of forum non conveniens "has a field of operation only where the action is commenced in a county in which venue is appropriate." Ex parte Townsend, 589 So.2d 711, 714 (Ala.1991). Here, the action was commenced in a county in which venue was inappropriate; therefore, the trial court had an imperative duty to transfer the action to Jefferson County, where venue was appropriate. Overstreet, 748 So.2d at 197. In light of the foregoing, we direct the trial court to transfer the action to Jefferson County.
PETITION GRANTED; WRIT ISSUED.
STUART, PARKER, SHAW, and WISE, JJ., concur.