JANE TRICHE MILAZZO, District Judge.
Before the Court is a Motion for Default Judgment (R. Doc. 20). For the following reasons, the Motion is GRANTED.
This is a civil action for breach of contract. Plaintiff The Receivables Exchange, LLC ("TRE") operates an exchange in New Orleans, Louisiana through which businesses can sell certain debts owed to the business by its customers ("receivables"). A business wishing to sell receivables through TRE must enter into a contract. This contract, which all buyers and sellers execute, governs the sale of receivables through TRE. Defendant, Advanced Technology Services, Inc. ("ATS"), executed this contract and registered several receivables for sale through TRE. The contract provides, inter alia, that a seller may be obliged to repurchase a receivable sold through TRE if the debtor fails to make timely payment after the receivable is sold. ATS successfully sold several receivables through TRE. After the receivables were sold, the debtors on the receivables failed to tender timely payment to the buyers. This obligated ATS to repurchase the receivables as provided in the contract. When ATS failed to do so, TRE filed the instant suit to collect the repurchase price.
Rule 55(a) requires the clerk of court to enter default against a party that has failed to plead or otherwise respond to the plaintiff's complaint.
Before entering default judgment, the Fifth Circuit has admonished district courts to examine the basis of jurisdiction "both over the subject matter and the parties."
Subject matter jurisdiction in this case is premised upon diversity of citizenship. The Court may not exercise diversity jurisdiction unless the parties are completely diverse and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.
"The concept of complete diversity requires that all persons on one side of the controversy be citizens of different states than all persons on the other side."
TRE alleges that it is an LLC. The sole member of TRE is The New Orleans Exchange, Inc., a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New York City. TRE further alleges that ATS is a Georgia Corporation with its principal place of business in Georgia. Accepting these allegations as true,
The Court may also exercise personal jurisdiction over ATS. Jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant is proper when (1) the defendant is amenable to service of process under the long-arm statute of the forum state; and (2) the exercise of personal jurisdiction is consistent with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
"The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects a corporation, as it does an individual, against being made subject to the binding judgments of a forum with which it has established no meaningful `contacts, ties, or relations.'"
A defendant's contacts with the forum state are sufficient to establish specific jurisdiction when the defendant has purposely directed its activities toward the forum state and the controversy arises out of or is related to those activities.
In this diversity case, Louisiana substantive law applies, including its principles of contract interpretation.
The contract's provisions with respect to this case are clear and unambiguous. They require ATS to repurchase the receivables in the event that the account debtors fail to timely remit payment. TRE has provided an affidavit stating that the account debtors failed to timely remit payment. Therefore, ATS's repurchase obligations were triggered.
The contract is similarly clear with regard to the calculation of the repurchase price. The "Repurchase Price" is defined as:
TRE argues, and the Court is convinced, that the larger amount in this case is the "unpaid Advance Amount and accrued Discount Fees with respect to the repurchased Receivable[s]." In response to supplemental briefing ordered by the Court, TRE submitted auction summaries that detail the Advance Amounts paid with respect to the auctions and the manner in which the Discount Fees are Calculated.
Additionally, ATS is liable for all accrued Late Charges and any Seller Reimbursable expenses. The contract provides for a Late Charge of .049315% of the unpaid Advance Amount per day that the Repurchase Price remains unpaid following the Repurchase Date. TRE has provided an affidavit that establishes the amount of the accrued Late Charges and Seller Reimbursable Expenses.
Having verified jurisdiction and finding that ATS is liable to TRE, the remaining issue is whether entry of default judgment is appropriate. Judgment by default is warranted "when the adversary process has been halted because of an essentially unresponsive party" thereby making impossible the "just, speedy, and inexpensive disposition of [a] case[] on [its] merits."
For the foregoing reasons, the Motion is GRANTED. The Court will enter judgment against ATS and in favor of TRE in the amount of $1,418,526.26, plus costs of this proceeding and attorney's fees as determined by the Magistrate Judge. Post-judgment interest will accrue at the federal rate.