JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge.
Defendant Mechel Langner moves for relief from default judgment, claiming the Court lacks subject matter and personal jurisdiction over Plaintiff's claims.
For the reasons stated below, the Court DENIES Langner's motion to set aside judgment.
On December 3, 2013 Plaintiff Procom Supply, Inc ("Procom") sued Langner and Aharon Mann, as well as four limited liability companies.
On April 6, 2016 Langner failed to appear for a properly noticed deposition related to efforts to enforce the default judgment.
On August 15, 2019 Langner filed a Rule 60(b) motion to set aside the default judgment and to set aside the August 9, 2016, bench warrant.
On October 7, 2019 the Court ordered Procom to provide supplemental briefing on whether Defendant Mann was diverse. On October 21, 2019 Procom responded.
Langner argues that he was not properly served with summons in this action and argues that this Court had no personal jurisdiction over him.
Rule 60 requires that motions for relief from a final judgment "be made within a reasonable time."
Procom filed this case on December 3, 2013.
Langner claims that he first became aware of this case on November 30, 2017 and has been challenging the judgment in Israeli courts since then.
Langner asserts that he could not have been personally served then, as he was traveling with his family outside of the country.
Langner knew of the Court's order granting default judgment in late 2015, and he could have raised any challenges to the Court's personal jurisdiction and subject-matter jurisdiction immediately. Instead he delayed for nearly four years. Langner's delay in filing the Rule 60(b) motion is not reasonable. Therefore, the Court rejects his challenge to the Court's personal jurisdiction as untimely.
Langner argues that the Court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over himself and his co-defendant Aharon Mann.
As explained above, Langner has not raised his challenge to the Court's jurisdiction within a reasonable time. Yet the Sixth Circuit has noted that a "motion seeking to vacate a judgment for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction might not be subject to a reasonable-time requirement" because "objections to subject-matter jurisdiction may not be waived or forfeited."
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1), federal district courts have diversity jurisdiction over civil matters where the controversy is between citizens of different states and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000, exclusive of interest and costs. The United States Supreme Court has "read the statutory formulation [of 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1)] to require complete diversity between all plaintiffs and all defendants."
"In elemental terms, domicile consists of (1) residence and (2) an intent to remain there."
"One acquires a `domicile of origin' at birth, and that domicile continues until a new one (a `domicile of choice') is acquired."
Plaintiff Procom was domiciled in Colorado when it sued.
The burden rests on the party seeking exercise of the Court's jurisdiction to demonstrate that the Court indeed has jurisdiction.
The Court accepts as uncontested that Langner was born in New York and lived for many years in Brooklyn.
According to Langner, he moved to Israel in 1996 for school.
Langner offers evidence that he has established a new residence in Israel. He states that he lives in Jerusalem with his wife and children, has leased a home there since 2000, and his children attend school there.
Procom does not provide any evidence to show that Langner does not have a residence in Israel. The weight of the evidence thus suggests that Langner has indeed established a residence in Israel.
Procom does provide evidence, however, that Langner did not intend for Israel to be his permanent home.
Procom submitted copies of Langner's Israeli visas that were valid from September 2009 to September 2013.
Procom also gives evidence that Langner maintained a residence at 406 Avenue I, Brooklyn, New York (the Brooklyn residence) and that this residence was Langner's true home. It notes that Langner used bank accounts in New York in 2008.
Procom also submitted the testimony of Daniel Kasnett, Langner and Mann's business partner, who in 2012 indicated that Langner was "located" in Brooklyn.
Langner's evidence suggests that his current residence is in Israel, but this evidence has limited utility in determining when, if ever, he decided to make the Jerusalem residence his permanent one. Taken as a whole, the evidence does not support an inference that Langner changed his intent before December 2013.
Furthermore, Langner's assertion that "[s]ince 2000, Jerusalem has been [his] permanent and exclusive residence and home," made in an affidavit,
Considering the foregoing, the weight of the evidence suggests that Langner did not intend for Israel to be his permanent residence after 2000. And absent a permanent change in residency, Langner cannot have changed his domicile.
Procom alleges that Mann was domiciled in Brooklyn, New York, when this case was filed.
Langner offers evidence to counter Procom's position. In a 2018 affidavit Mann states that he was born in Israel, but resided in Brooklyn, New York between 1986-1991 on a Permanent Resident Card.
The record does not show when, if ever, Mann became domiciled in New York. Though he may have resided there between 1986 and 1991, Procom has offered no evidence to suggest that Mann intended to permanently remain in Brooklyn during that time. Similarly, Procom's evidence suggests that Mann may have had a New York residence in 2008. But Langner's evidence suggests that Mann also had an Israeli residence at that time, and neither party provides evidence identifying which residence was Mann's permanent home.
Mann's domicile of origin is in Israel, and that domicile continues until a new one is acquired.
Since Mann was not diverse with Procom, it follows that each of the limited liability companies of which he is a member is not diverse with Procom either.
To determine whether Mann is indispensable, Procom and Langner shall file briefing discussing whether Defendant Mann or any of the four limited liability companies are indispensable parties.
Langner's Rule 60(b) motion for relief was not filed within a reasonable time and is denied; the Court has personal jurisdiction over Defandant Langner. The Court also finds that Defendant Langner was diverse with Plaintiff Procom when this case was filed. But the Court finds that Defandants Mann, First National Group LLC, First National Management LLC, Real Investors LLC, and L & M Realty Brokers LLC are not diverse with Plaintiff Procom. The Court orders Procom and Langner to file briefing discussing whether any of these defendants are indispensable. The parties will file simultaneous briefing on or before December 23, 2019.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court
IT IS SO ORDERED.