JULIE A. ROBINSON, District Judge.
Before the Court is Defendant Cox Communications Inc.'s ("CCI") Motion to Dismiss under Rule 12(b)(2) and 12(b)(3) for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction and Improper Venue (Doc. 31) and Defendants CCI, Cox Communications Kansas, LLC, Cox Kansas Telcom, LLC, and CoxCom, LLC's Motion to Transfer (Doc. 33). The Court granted Sprint's request to conduct jurisdictional discovery and the Court held an evidentiary hearing on August 9, 2012. The Court has considered the briefs, as well as the evidence submitted with the
Plaintiff Sprint Communications Company L.P. ("Sprint") is a telecommunications company incorporated in Delaware with its principal place of business in Overland Park, Kansas. Among its patent portfolio is a series of patents relating to voice-over-packet ("VoP") telecommunications technology. Sprint alleges in the Amended Complaint that Defendants made, used, offered to sell, and/or sold (and continue to make, use, offer to sell, and/or sell) broadband and/or packet-based telephony products and services that infringe Sprint's Asserted Patents without Sprint's permission.
On April 16, 2012, Defendants filed a declaratory judgment action for noninfringement in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware, along with several other Cox entities not named in this suit. Sprint notified this Court that on July 9, 2012, it filed a motion to sever and transfer the declaratory judgment action from Delaware to this Court (Doc. 45). CCI contends that it is not amenable to suit in the District of Kansas and that any adjudication of patent infringement by the Cox companies must include CCI and therefore should be consolidated in one action in the District of Delaware, where all of the Cox entities, including CCI and the Cox subsidiaries not named in this action, are subject to suit.
It is uncontroverted that CCI is incorporated in Delaware and maintains its principal place of business in Atlanta, Georgia. All Defendants are incorporated in Delaware. CCI is a subsidiary of Cox Enterprises, Inc. and acts as a holding company, providing certain corporate services to the Cox subsidiaries in the communications industry. Cox Enterprises, Inc. is not a party to this action. CCI in turn owns Co-Defendant CoxCom but does not directly own or finance Co-Defendants Cox Kansas Telcom or Cox Communications Kansas. CCI is not registered to do business in Kansas and it does not maintain an office here. CCI is a separate legal entity from the other Defendants. CCI concedes that it hosts the cox.com website and that it owns all copyrights, trade and service marks, and patents for its affiliates. CCI also admits that it provides a marketing platform and administrative infrastructure to Cox Kansas Telcom and Cox Communications Kansas, providing "back office functions" for all of its subsidiaries.
Sprint alleges the following jurisdictional facts in the Amended Complaint to support its contention that CCI is subject to specific jurisdiction: (1) CCI makes, uses, or offers for sale infringing products and/or services in Kansas, including the "Cox Digital Telephone," Cox's "SIP Trunking" service, and "other related telephony services"; (2) CCI receives revenues from the sale of telephony services in Kansas, including those services offered for sale by the Cox subsidiaries; (3) CCI is the registered owner of the "cox.com" domain, which hosts Cox websites that advertise, market, sell, and offer to sell the allegedly infringing products or services in Kansas; (4) one of the Kansas subsidiaries' websites includes a copyright notice identifying CCI as the owner of the copyrighted website; (5) current or former employees of CCI participated in the design, development, funding, testing, and use of Cox's nationwide telephone network; (6) CCI directs,
Sprint has also submitted evidence on the briefs to support this Court's jurisdiction. First, Sprint submits the declaration of Bruce McLeod, who is the Executive Director of Service and Enterprise Architecture for CCI.
McLeod also asserts that "Cox's Digital Telephone service was developed and designed by Cox employees located at Cox's headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia"
Sprint alleges that CCI's website advertises and markets products and services to Kansas residents, allowing them to purchase products and services that include the Cox Digital Telephone.
Sprint has submitted three white papers regarding Cox's transition to a VoP architecture and its network configurations issued by "Cox Communications."
Plaintiff submitted evidence on the briefs and at the hearing that CCI owns equipment in Kansas that is used in Cox's telecommunications system. This evidence consists of Sedgwick County-created tax
Sprint also submits evidence that "Cox Communications" has employees in Kansas, including executives,
At the August 13th hearing, Robin Sangston, Esq., the Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer for CCI in Atlanta, Georgia, testified about the issues related to the motion to dismiss, including Cox's corporate organization and CCI's contacts with the State of Kansas.
Sangston testified that the Cox family consists of seventy separate franchises with CoxCom as the operating business. Cox made a deliberate decision to form "drop down subsidiaries" to hold the telecommunications licenses so that the parent corporations are not engaged in the day-to-day operation of cable business.
Cox Communications Kansas manages the network and has a shared services agreement with Cox Kansas Telcom to provide cable services. Accordingly, Sangston testified that CCI conducts no business in Kansas, either directly or through a d/b/a. CCI neither owns nor operates any telecommunications or cable systems. Sangston also testified that a certificate of public convenience and necessity is required in each state to authorize a provider to sell telephone services to the public. Typically, a franchise applies to the Secretary of State's office and must show that the entity is financially, technically, and managerially capable of providing that service. Sangston testified that Cox's certificate in Kansas was granted largely to have phone offering competitive to Southwestern Bell and Sprint. Kansas requires that Cox submit tariffs that lay out prices and terms of sale; they are filed under the name "Cox Communications Kansas, LLC." Kansas Telcom has interconnection agreements with Sprint and Southwestern Bell to permit the traffic of Cox customers to ride over their networks.
Sangston testified that Cox Communications Kansas owns the equipment and property used in Kansas and that it employs all 400 of the Kansas employees. Sangston addressed the Personal Property and Asset Detail Listing that Sprint relied on in its motion, showing that CCI is the owner of certain equipment used to provide digital telephone services. She spoke to an individual in CCI's tax department, who explained that it received this document from Sedgwick County and that the indication on that form that CCI owns the property is incorrect; she attributes the error to the fact that the taxing authority receives checks from CCI. Sangston testified that Cox Communications Kansas actually owns this property, based on CCI's internal documents and ledgers. CCI submitted Exhibit 2 at the hearing, which is the general ledger for Cox Communications Kansas, showing that it is the corporate entity responsible for paying taxes on equipment. Sangston maintains that CCI owns no personal property in Kansas.
Sangston further testified that CCI conducts all "back office" functions for the Cox Com subsidiaries, including issuing tax checks. CCI issues the checks and the funds are then charged back to the applicable subsidiary. The charge is reflected on the financial statements of the subsidiary. She testified that no income from the Kansas subsidiaries flows up to CCI. She explained that it would be too cumbersome to have twenty-four different financial statements, so Cox rolls up the local market revenues for purposes of preparing the financial statements, but then they are charged back. She stated that the revenues actually do "hit" Cox Com, but only for purposes of preparing the consolidated "look" for reporting purposes. CCI submitted the consolidated Kansas corporate income tax return for Cox Enterprises, Inc. and its subsidiaries.
Cox Communications Kansas employs about 400 individuals and has a completely separate management team from CCI; it pays its own employees.
With respect to telephony equipment, Sangston testified that CCI provides a "consultative and supply line service." She explained that the local markets must purchase and pay for their own equipment, relying on a consultative role provided by CCI. She explained that certain purchases may allow for a volume discount, in which case CCI may buy in volume and allow the subsidiaries to purchase from that inventory.
CCI provides technical and engineering support to the subsidiaries. Like McLeod, Sangston characterized the relationship between CCI and the local affiliates as a "hub and spoke" system with respect to the design and architecture of the telephone system. Local teams of technicians are the spokes that draw support from the hub in Atlanta. Cox Communications Kansas employs a regional Vice President of Field Operations, who along with a 100-person team, is responsible for installing, maintaining, and servicing equipment in the region. There is a regional operations center (the "ROC") in Oklahoma that is able to determine network problems on a regional scale and notify the Vice President of Field Operations and his team. CCI also has a network operations center (the "NOC"), consisting of CCI employees in Atlanta, that provides service if there is a network problem that exceeds a regional scope. The NOC "looks out" on the Cox network and notifies local teams about network problems such as congestion, or hacking issues that local technicians would not be able to identify as readily.
Sangston testified about the marketing structure between the Cox entities. She testified about local marketing efforts that are required based on the different competitors in the various local markets. These efforts include customer care centers,
The cox.com website is owned by CCI. CCI also helps with the development of cox.com templates and sets up the home page for the cox.com site. The cox.com site is managed by CCI employees, but the local markets each have their own webmaster that supplies sales and marketing content for the local page. Kansas customers may purchase Cox digital telephone services through the cox.com website by navigating to the local webpage. The Kansas webpage is directed to Kansas residents and there are separate webpages for each of the particular cities in Kansas that offer Cox services. Each local page allows customers to buy, modify an existing account, or create a new account. Purchase information is housed in a Kansas database and the order is fulfilled by local Kansas employees. Kansas customers' bills are generated by a central invoicing process by CCI, but payments are made to the local Kansas affiliate.
Because this is a patent infringement suit, the Court must apply the law of the Federal Circuit in deciding the jurisdictional issue.
Here, Sprint did not assert in its response brief that this Court has general jurisdiction; instead it argued that the Court has specific jurisdiction over CCI. At the hearing, Sprint argued that general jurisdiction
CCI argues in its motion to dismiss that Sprint is unable to establish it is subject to personal jurisdiction in Kansas. CCI urges it is merely the grandparent corporation to Cox Communications Kansas and Cox Kansas Telcom, performing only administrative and support functions to those affiliates in Kansas. It further argues that none of the Kansas activities cited by Sprint arise out of or relate to the patent infringement claims in this case — Sprint is unable to show that CCI's activities in Kansas are related to making, using, selling, or offering for sale the allegedly infringing VoP products or services. Sprint argues that CCI purposefully directed its activities at residents of Kansas through the cox.com website, its interaction with the Kansas subsidiaries, and by activities such as paying taxes in Kansas, sending invoices to Kansas customers, and maintaining the Cox Digital Telephone network.
General jurisdiction exists over a nonresident defendant whose contacts with the state are "continuous and systematic."
While Sprint resurrected general jurisdiction at the hearing, it spent little time developing an argument about how CCI is subject to general jurisdiction either at the hearing or in its posthearing brief. The Court will briefly address general jurisdiction in conjunction with its minimum contacts analysis. Since the Court allowed jurisdictional discovery and conducted an evidentiary hearing, Sprint bears the burden of proving personal jurisdiction exists by a preponderance of the evidence.
Sprint points to several activities it contends CCI purposefully directed at residents of Kansas, including collecting revenue, hosting the Cox website, designing and marketing the Cox network, owning property, paying taxes, and filing corporate and regulatory filings on behalf of the Cox subsidiaries in Kansas. CCI contends that it is not licensed to do business in Kansas and it does not sell or offer to sell any allegedly infringing product; such activity is performed by the Kansas subsidiaries. CCI insists that it is a separate legal entity and that its support of the other named defendants amounts to nothing more than administrative, technical, and legal functions. Sprint responds that CCI exerts control over the subsidiaries and collects revenue on their behalf. The Court conducted a hearing on this motion primarily because CCI's role in Cox's corporate organization and degree of control over the Kansas subsidiaries appeared to be in dispute based on the allegations in the Amended Complaint and the evidence submitted on the briefs. The Court resolves these conflicts as described more fully below and finds that Sprint is unable to show by a preponderance of the evidence that CCI has sufficient contacts with Kansas under either a general or specific jurisdictional inquiry.
The Court begins its analysis with the well-settled proposition that a "holding or parent company has a separate corporate existence from its subsidiary and is thus treated separately in the absence of circumstances justifying the disregard of the corporate entity."
Sprint cites Dainippon Screen Manufacturing Co. v. CFMT, Inc., for the proposition that a patent holding company cannot be insulated from suit when it engages in activities sufficient to create personal jurisdiction.
Unlike the organizational structure in Dainippon, CCI appears to be a grandparent corporation to the Kansas subsidiaries and a parent corporation to CoxCom. It is not merely a patent holding company, but also provides administrative, technical, and legal support to its indirect subsidiaries.
Merely providing legal representation and administrative services to a subsidiary will not subject a parent company to personal jurisdiction.
The Court agrees with CCI that its relationship with the Kansas subsidiaries is insufficient to establish purposefully directed activity. Sangston, who is the Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer for CCI, testified at length about Cox's corporate structure. Her testimony established that CCI conducts no business directly in Kansas and that it merely provides "back office functions" for the local CoxCom subsidiaries. She discussed Cox's history and structure and how it made a deliberate decision to form "drop down subsidiaries" to hold the telecommunications licenses in each state so that the parent corporations would not be engaged in the day-to-day operation of cable business.
Sprint points to CCI's activities of setting strategy, providing budget targets, "guiding local marketing and sales teams," providing network support, and purchasing equipment. But the Court finds that Sangston's testimony, and the exhibits admitted through her testimony, establish that this control is insufficient to establish substantial control and direction.
While Sangston's testimony and the advertising exhibits demonstrate that some national marketing campaigns are made available to the local affiliates, the majority of marketing is conducted at the local level. Sangston testified that Cox Communications Kansas has its own marketing and sales team and that the marketing strategy differs among the Cox subsidiaries by locale based on the competitors in each market. To the extent CCI is responsible for some national advertising campaigns, it is an insufficient minimum contact with the State of Kansas,
Sangston's testimony about purchasing equipment made clear that CCI purchases equipment only under circumstances where a volume discount would be applied, allowing the subsidiaries to purchase their equipment from CCI instead of directly from the manufacturer. These purchases are charged back to the subsidiaries, so they are not purchased for use by CCI. And CCI's network support is not sufficient to establish substantial control. Sangston testified that CCI employees maintain the NOC in order to provide support in situations that are national in scope. Otherwise, support is provided at the local or regional level. In short, the Court cannot find by a preponderance of the evidence that CCI exerts such substantial
Sprint relies on CCI's interactive website to establish purposeful direction, as well as continuous and systematic contacts with Kansas. Because CCI hosts the local subsidiaries' interactive websites, Sprint argues that it directly targets each of the local markets in which those subsidiaries operate. CCI admittedly owns and hosts the cox.com website, where the Kansas Defendants sell telephony products and services to Kansas customers. The screen shots of these web pages demonstrate that they are unmistakably interactive and transaction-oriented. Kansas customers can shop online for Cox digital telephone services on this website, which includes a CCI copyright mark at the bottom of each web page. Kansas customers can also pay their bills online. But the issue in this case is not whether the Kansas web pages located on the cox.com site are interactive. Instead, the issue is whether the interactivity of those web pages may be attributed to CCI for jurisdictional purposes. Sprint argues that CCI owns and controls the website and therefore directly sells or offers to sell telephone services in Kansas by publishing Kansas-specific content on its interactive website. CCI argues that the local subsidiaries are exclusively responsible for local web page content and that all Internet purchases are directed toward those local subsidiaries; CCI's activities are akin to those of an Internet Service Provider ("ISP").
Some courts have adopted a sliding scale approach in deciding whether a defendant's internet activities support the exercise of personal jurisdiction.
CCI established at the hearing that Cox Communications Kansas, and not CCI, is licensed to sell telephone services in Kansas. Sprint points to Sangston's testimony about how a Kansas consumer navigates through the cox.com website — in order to reach the Kansas web page, the consumer selects "Kansas" from the national map on the cox.com site and then clicks through to the products or services sought after. Sprint contends that, in this way, CCI targets Kansas residents by directing those consumers to the Kansas web pages, thereby "doing business in Kansas." But the Court finds this to be a tenuous assertion. Sangston's testimony does not support Sprint's contention that CCI provides anything more than a platform, or template, upon which the Kansas subsidiaries conduct business with Kansas residents. Only Cox Communications Kansas is licensed to sell telephone services in Kansas and Sangston established at the hearing that all requests for service are handled by the Kansas employees. Indeed, Sangston testified that the cox.com website "is sort of, as I said, the template through which you access to the local information to make your purchasing decisions."
Moreover, the bill payment process on the cox.com site supports Sangston's testimony that CCI itself does not interact with Kansas residents through the cox.com website. Sangston testified that although CCI generates invoices for all customers, the payments are made to the Kansas affiliates. Again, this testimony supports CCI's characterization that CCI merely provides back office functions to its indirect subsidiaries, including administrative activities such as generating bills through its database.
Sprint argued in its initial brief that CCI is a party to the service agreement available on the cox.com website for Kansas customers. Sprint refers to the definition of "Cox," referenced in the first paragraph of the agreement: "Cox Communications and any Cox affiliate authorized to provide you with our services." Sangston testified, however, that Cox Communications is a d/b/a/ for CoxCom. CCI conducts no business and has no d/b/a/. The Court finds that this testimony makes clear that Kansas consumers do not enter into service agreements with CCI through the cox.com website.
It is undisputed that CCI provided its indirect subsidiaries, in Kansas and elsewhere, with the capability to transact business with Kansas residents. But the evidence supports CCI's contention that CCI did not maintain the cox.com for the purpose of itself transacting business in Kansas. Instead, it merely enabled the Kansas affiliates to sell the Cox products and services in the Kansas market and the
Sprint alleges that CCI collects revenues from the sale of digital telephone products and services in Kansas. Sprint relies on the Federal Circuit's decision in Nuance Communications, Inc. v. Abbyy Software House to support its position that when a holding company receives profits from the sale of infringing technology in the forum state, it satisfies the purposeful direction prong.
CCI conceded in its initial briefs that it receives profits from the sale of the allegedly infringing products in Kansas. But at the hearing, it produced evidence that none of this revenue flowed up to CCI. Nuance suggests that when the overwhelming majority of profits flow to the holding company, in addition to other deliberate activities in the forum state, it may be sufficient to show that the defendant purposefully directed its activities there. There is no evidence in this case that an overwhelming majority of profits flow to CCI. Instead, the consolidated tax returns establish no taxable income to CCI from Kansas. Sprint attempts to impeach Sangston's testimony on this point with her deposition testimony that the subsidiaries' revenue is rolled up into a consolidated financial statement, but the Court does not find this testimony to be inconsistent. When asked in her deposition if it was correct that CCI does not directly make money on the sale of Cox Digital Telephone to Kansas residents, she testified: "Correct." Sangston's testimony at her deposition and at the hearing consistently explained that all of the subsidiaries' revenue rolls up into a consolidated financial statement for accounting purposes so that the ultimate parent, Cox Enterprises, can have a "consolidated look."
In sum, Sprint has presented no evidence upon which the Court could find by a preponderance of the evidence that CCI collects and retains revenue from the sale of digital telephone service in Kansas. To
Sprint points to Sedgwick County tax records that indicate CCI as the owner of equipment and land and that it is the payor of those taxes. But the evidence presented at the hearing makes clear that this is but one more example of CCI's back office functionality — it issues the tax checks on behalf of the local subsidiaries and those amounts are then charged back. Sangston's testimony, as well as the ledgers submitted at the hearing, support this finding. Sprint asserts in its posthearing brief that "[w]hether or not the subsidiaries are subsequently billed for taxes paid by CCI is of no consequence." But the Court finds that this fact is of consequence given Cox's organizational structure — this is one more function performed by CCI in its role of providing technical, legal, and administrative support services. Sangston testified that the Sedgwick County tax statement submitted by Sprint pertains to an office building in Wichita, Kansas that CoxCom acquired in 2000, and that the owner's name on this statement is incorrect. Exhibit 4, the warranty deed and title records, supports Sangston's testimony and confirms that Cox Communications Kansas currently owns the property. The Court agrees that the tax forms signed by a CCI employee in the "owner signature block" were prepared by the County; the underlying documents show that the local subsidiary, not CCI, owns the property.
The Court finds that Sprint is unable to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that CCI has contacts with Kansas sufficient to give rise to specific or general jurisdiction. To the extent certain facts about Cox's organizational structure and ownership of certain property in Kansas was in question on the prehearing briefs, the Court finds that discovery and the evidentiary hearing clarified that CCI does not exert substantial control and direction over its indirect subsidiaries, does not conduct business through the cox.com website, and does not own property or pay taxes in Kansas.
Sprint asserts direct patent infringement claims in the Amended Complaint, that "some act of making, using, offering to sell, selling, or importing products or services by the defendant constitutes an infringement of the presumptively valid patent named in the suit."
As described above, the evidence shows that CCI conducts no business in the State of Kansas. It is not licensed to sell digital telephone service and exists only as a back office headquarters for its indirect subsidiaries. None of these back office functions arise out of or relate to the direct infringement claims asserted in this case. For this additional reason, the Court finds that Sprint cannot establish that this Court has jurisdiction over CCI.
In this district, the standards for deciding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(3) for improper venue are generally the same as those for deciding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(2) for lack of personal jurisdiction.
The Court now must determine whether to dismiss CCI or grant Defendants' motion to transfer this matter to the District of Delaware, where both personal jurisdiction and venue are proper.
The burden of proving that the existing forum is inconvenient lies with the moving party.
The parties do not dispute whether this action "might have been brought" in Delaware. All parties are incorporated in Delaware and Sprint does not dispute that it could have filed this patent infringement
"`[U]nless the balance is strongly in favor of the movant[,] the plaintiff's choice of forum should rarely be disturbed.'"
Defendants suggest that Sprint's incorporation in Delaware should weigh in favor of transfer. But the cases on which Defendants rely are inapposite. They deal with the significance of a party's state of incorporation for purposes of either a personal jurisdiction analysis,
In considering the accessibility factor, "convenience of witnesses is the
Sprint has submitted evidence of its anticipated witnesses, most of whom are located in the Kansas City metropolitan area. It has also submitted evidence that its documents related to the asserted patents are located in Overland Park, Kansas. Defendants argue that their documents and witnesses are spread across the country, and point out that Sprint's principal inventor is deceased and that much of the evidence is housed at the Patent and Trademark Office in Washington, D.C., or with the Cox entities. But Defendants submit no evidence about the potential witnesses who will be required to testify in this matter, whether they are subject to compulsory process or whether their deposition testimony will be adequate. Conclusory assertions are insufficient.
The Court find these factors weigh against transfer, but notes that some of the witnesses Sprint has identified are Sprint employees, not third-party witnesses, and that Sprint has not established the "quality or materiality" of their anticipated testimony. The Court does not find that this factor strongly weighs against transfer on this record.
As to this factor, the parties dispute whether this Court can enforce a judgment against CCI, for the same reasons set forth in the motion to dismiss. Because the Court lacks personal jurisdiction over CCI, it may not enforce a judgment against it. Because Delaware can enforce a judgment against CCI, this factor weighs strongly in favor of transfer.
In considering this factor, "the most relevant statistics are the median time from filing to disposition, median time from filing to trial, pending cases per judge, and average weighted filings per judge."
The Court does not find that the existence of related cases standing alone weighs in favor of transfer, as these cases will all be appealed to the Federal Circuit, ensuring against inconsistent adjudications of the same patents.
The parties appear to agree that there are no issues here implicating conflict of laws or facts that would make it advantageous for this Court to determine questions of local law. And the Court is unable to find on this record any obstacle to a fair trial in either venue. So the Court proceeds to consider issues of judicial economy.
Defendants argue that this case should be transferred to Delaware and consolidated with the declaratory judgment action filed there in April 2012, on behalf of themselves and all of the other Cox entities, including CCI, in order to avoid piecemeal litigation against the various Cox entities.
The Court declines to make a determination about whether the additional parties named in the Delaware action are necessary
In sum, the Court finds that the balance of convenience factors strongly favor Defendants' request for transfer of this matter to Delaware, such that Sprint's choice of forum in Kansas properly may be disturbed. Rather than dismiss this case against CCI based on lack of personal jurisdiction, the Court will transfer the matter under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a).