GEORGE T. O'TOOLE, Jr., District Judge.
In this case, the plaintiffs, Maximiliaan Van Ossenbruggen and Lu Ann Melanson, are seeking recovery of wages allegedly due them and other similarly situated workers. The plaintiffs and the classes they seek to represent worked as drivers for the defendants, Cowan Systems, LLC and Joseph W. Cowan. Among other things, the plaintiffs allege that the defendants violated the Massachusetts Wage Act.
This case was originally filed in Suffolk Superior Court and removed here. Both sides have moved to transfer the case. The plaintiffs seek transfer of this case to the Western Division of this district. The defendants seek transfer to the District of Maryland, Baltimore Division, pursuant to a contractual forum selection clause. For the reasons discussed below, the defendants' motion is granted.
The plaintiffs request a transfer to the Western Division. They allege that they originally brought the case in Suffolk Superior Court because of its Business Litigation Session. Van Ossenbruggen lives in the Western Division, and the plaintiffs argue that the case would have been filed in a county in that division but for the Business Litigation Session offered elsewhere. The other plaintiff, Melanson, lives in the Eastern Division. The plaintiffs agree that none of the mandatory assignment provisions of Local Rule 40.1(D)(1) apply, and argue that they should be able to choose the division in which their case is litigated.
The plaintiffs' request for transfer is denied. Cases are removed from state court "to . . . the district and division embracing the place where such action is pending." 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) (emphasis added). The Eastern Division embraces Suffolk County. L.R. 40(C)(1). The plaintiffs' choice of venue was embodied in their original choice to file in Suffolk County. No good cause for transfer has been shown. See L.R. 40.1(F).
The plaintiffs individually signed contracts with Cowan Systems when they began work as drivers for the company. Those contracts contain a forum selection clause. They also contain a choice of law clause. The contracts appear to be identical form contracts, and no party argues that the provisions vary in any relevant way among the plaintiffs or the proposed classes. The relevant provisions read:
(Mem. of P. & A. in Supp. of Defs.' Mot. to Transfer Venue, Ex. A, at ¶ 24 (dkt. nos. 25-1, 25-2) (emphasis in original).)
The defendants seek to transfer this case to the District of Maryland, Baltimore Division under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). Their argument is relatively simple. Forum selection clauses should be honored unless "extraordinary circumstances unrelated to the convenience of the parties clearly disfavor a transfer."
The plaintiffs counter that
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has said that forum selection clauses covering Wage Act claims are presumed to be enforceable and should be enforced.
The plaintiffs make a fundamental error in their argument: they assume without support that the choice of law clause covers their Wage Act claims. The contract language suggests otherwise. While the forum selection clause covers "any claim or dispute arising from or in connection with this Agreement or otherwise with respect to the overall relationship between the parties," the choice of law clause states only that "[t]his Agreement shall be governed" by Maryland law. The Wage Act is a statutory right, not a contractual term. Maryland courts have not hesitated to limit choice of law clauses to their express language.
Indeed, the Maryland Court of Appeals has recognized the distinction between a contractual claim—which here would likely be governed by the choice of law clause—and a claim under Maryland's wage statute:
The issues raised by a choice of law clause with regard to the Wage Act were addressed by the Supreme Judicial Court in
That ends the inquiry here. The plaintiffs have assumed that a Maryland court, applying the choice of law clause in the contract, would choose Maryland's wage statute over the Wage Act as the controlling law for the plaintiff's claims. It appears otherwise. The plaintiffs have failed to carry their "substantial burden" that the other forum would violate fundamental public policy.
"The courts of the Commonwealth," and this Court, "must respect the ability of the courts of sister States to apply their choice-of-law rules fairly, to give effect to Massachusetts fundamental public policy, and, when appropriate, to adjudicate wage claims under Massachusetts law."
The plaintiffs' Motion to Transfer Case to the Western Division of the District of Massachusetts if Not Remanded to State Court
It is SO ORDERED.