WILLIAM H. STEELE, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on the defendants' motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. (Doc. 14). The parties have filed briefs and evidentiary materials in support of their respective positions, (Docs. 14, 16-20, 21-1),
According to the complaint, (Doc. 1), the plaintiff's predecessor loaned money to non-party Neverve, LLC ("Neverve"). David A. Stewart is half owner of Neverve and a guarantor of the loans to Neverve. In 2015, the plaintiff foreclosed on the defaulted loans and received a deficiency judgment of almost $20 million.
Stewart is also an owner or part owner of several other entities. In 2011, he and other individuals, along with most of these entities, entered an agreement to pledge all BP oil spill claims, and the proceeds therefrom, as collateral to the plaintiff's predecessor. Although Neverve is not named as a party to the agreement and is not within the defined term, "Affiliate," the plaintiff asserts that any BP claim and/or proceeds of Neverve were pledged as collateral under this agreement, giving rise to a security interest in any such proceeds.
In early 2015, the plaintiff placed Stewart in involuntary bankruptcy in Alabama, which proceeding was transferred to Oklahoma. The defendants (collectively, "Welch") are an Oklahoma attorney and his law firm. After his bankruptcy proceeding was transferred to Oklahoma, Welch became Stewart's bankruptcy counsel.
In January 2016, Stewart executed an agreement pursuant to which Welch would provide bankruptcy and other representation to Stewart's entities, including Neverve, and the entities guaranteed payment of Welch's legal fees, including those associated with Stewart's bankruptcy case. The plaintiff believes the guaranty is invalid because the permission of the trustee in Stewart's bankruptcy case (standing in Stewart's shoes as owner or co-owner) was not sought or obtained.
In 2016, Neverve retained an Alabama law firm ("Taylor Martino") to pursue its BP claim. Welch then entered a fee-sharing agreement with Taylor Martino with regard to the BP claims of certain of Stewart's entities, purportedly including Neverve. The plaintiff believes this agreement is invalid for want of the trustee's authorization.
The Neverve claim rapidly settled and, in August 2016, Taylor Martino wired from its IOLTA account to Welch's IOLTA account funds representing both Welch's share of the contingency fee on the BP claim and the net proceeds of the claim. Between August 2016 and September 2017, Welch transferred over $277,000 from the Welch IOLTA account to the firm account to cover attorney's fees for Welch's bankruptcy representation of Stewart.
The complaint asserts causes of action for fraudulent transfer under Alabama and Oklahoma law; conversion; civil conspiracy; unjust enrichment; constructive trust; and equitable lien.
"A plaintiff seeking to establish personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant bears the initial burden of alleging in the complaint sufficient facts to make out a prima facie case of jurisdiction." Louis Vuitton Malletier, S.A. v. Mosseri, 736 F.3d 1339, 1350 (11
An evidentiary hearing on a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction is discretionary, not mandatory. E.g., Snow v. DirecTV, Inc., 450 F.3d 1314, 1317 (11
A forum state's personal jurisdiction over a defendant may be either general or specific. The plaintiff does not invoke general jurisdiction, and it will not be considered.
Waite v. All Acquisition Corp., 901 F.3d 1307, 1313 (11
"In this Circuit, we have held that a tort arises out of or relates to the defendant's activity in a state only if the activity is a but-for cause of the tort." Waite, 901 F.3d at 1314 (internal quotes omitted). The plaintiff acknowledges this standard. (Doc. 17 at 19). According to the plaintiff, "[w]ithout the co-counsel agreement and transfer of funds from Alabama, Defendants could not have committed the wrongful transfer of the BP claims proceeds at issue in this action." (Id.). It was the "fee sharing agreement with an Alabama law firm" that "directly led to Defendants' gaining access to Neverve's BP monies from Alabama and Defendants' opportunity to distribute/transfer/convert those monies to themselves." (Id.). The plaintiff thus relies on an attenuated form of but-for causation that the Eleventh Circuit has rejected.
In Oldfield v. Pueblo de Bahio Lora, S.A., 558 F.3d 1210 (11
The Oldfield Court contrasted its factual scenario with that presented in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Carrillo, 115 F.3d 1540 (11
The fraudulent transfers made the basis of the plaintiff's lawsuit occurred when Welch periodically moved BP attorney's fees and proceeds from its IOLTA account to the firm account. (Doc. 1 at 21; accord id. at 23-24). The other claims as well are based on those transfers and on acts of concealing the receipt of the funds from Alabama. (Id. at 25-30; Doc. 17 at 5, 9, 17). That is, all the torts and other wrongs for which the plaintiff seeks redress occurred in Oklahoma, after the funds had transferred unremarkably from Alabama to Oklahoma. The plaintiff concurs with this assessment. (Id.).
Nor did the plaintiff experience any injury in Alabama. The plaintiff did not own the disputed funds but had at best a security interest in them, and the plaintiff does not assert that it had any right to prevent the funds from leaving Alabama. Moreover, the plaintiff is an Ohio entity with its principal place of business in that state, (Doc. 1 at 1), and it has failed to address how any injury to it from movement of the funds to Oklahoma could be said to have occurred anywhere but in Ohio.
The plaintiff ignores Oldfield, even though Welch quoted its key passage. (Doc. 14 at 27). It is nevertheless incumbent on the plaintiff to articulate how Welch — which neither did anything wrongful in, or with respect to, Alabama nor caused injury to the plaintiff (or anyone else) in Alabama — had fair warning and should have reasonably foreseen that it could be haled into an Alabama court by an Ohio entity, with which it had no contact, for misconduct occurring only in Oklahoma. The plaintiff in its one-page "but-for" argument offers no explanation for such a remarkable proposition.
The plaintiff does suggest that other contacts of Welch with Alabama "further cement the sufficiency" of its contacts for purposes of the first Waite element. (Doc. 17 at 20). It is unnecessary to address these contacts since, even if they are accepted as factually accurate,
The parties address at length the second, "purposeful availment" prong of the Eleventh Circuit's test for personal jurisdiction. Because the plaintiff fails the first prong, the Court declines to address the second.
For the reasons set forth above, the defendants' motion to dismiss is
DONE and ORDERED.