SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1801-95T5F
CITIBANK, N.A.,
Plaintiff,
v.
ESTATE OF JOHN A. SIMPSON,
SANDRA B. SIMPSON, as Executrix,
Defendant/Third-Party
Plaintiff/Respondent,
v.
CIRCLE CONSULTING GROUP, INC.,
CIRCLE PROPERTIES, LTD., MANHATTAN
WEST OWNER GROUP, GEORGE L. CADY, JR.,
ERNEST E. CRAUMER, CAMPBELL T. GARRISH,
THOMAS B. MARTIN, BRUCE H. SCHARF,
DAVID F. WEST, THOMAS N. KELTNER, JR.,
and WIEN, MALKIN & BETTEX,
Third-Party Defendants/
Appellants.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued April 23, 1996 - Decided May 23, 1996
Before Judges Pressler, Keefe and A.A. Rodríguez.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Morris County.
Phylis D. Sherman argued the cause for appellants
Circle Consulting Group, Inc.; Circle Properties,
Ltd.; Manhattan West Owner Group; George L. Cady,
Jr.; Ernest E. Craumer; Campbell T. Gerrish; Thomas B.
Martin; Bruce H. Scharf; and David F. West (Schekter
Rishty Goldstein & Blumenthal, attorneys; Ms. Sherman,
of counsel; David Blumenthal, on the brief).
John M. Newman argued the cause for appellants
Wien, Malkin & Bettex and Thomas N. Keltner, Jr.
(Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, attorneys; Mr. Newman,
of counsel; Mitchell I. Weitz and Robert C. Buff,
on the brief).
Richard L. Plotkin argued the cause for respondent
(Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch, attorneys; Mr. Plotkin,
on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PRESSLER, P.J.A.D.
Third-party defendants, a group of New York entities and
individuals, including a law partnership, appeal on leave granted
from an order of the trial court denying their motion pursuant to
R. 4:6-2(b) to dismiss the third-party complaint on grounds of lack
of jurisdiction over the person. Since we are satisfied that the
motion record raises an unresolved factual issue respecting the
assertion of long-arm jurisdiction over these parties, we reverse
and remand.
Because the motion to dismiss was made prior to discovery, the
record before us is sparse. This much, however, appears to be
undisputed. In 1986 defendant's decedent, John A. Simpson, a New
Jersey resident who died in October 1991, made a highly speculative
investment in New York real estate pursuant to terms set forth in
a private placement memorandum (PPM). Insofar as we can determine,
the form of the investment was the purchase of one of twenty-four
offered "units" in a New York general partnership, third-party
defendant Manhattan West Owner Group, which was formed for the
purpose of acquiring thirty occupied cooperative apartments in two
buildings in Manhattan. While each investor obtained title to a
specific apartment or apartments, the terms of the partnership
agreement allocated to each partner a pro rata interest in all
"partnership" property so acquired. The investors constituted the
designated owner group. There were also six managing partners of
Manhattan West, third-party defendants Cady, Craumer, Gerrish,
Martin, Scharf, and West, four of whom reside in New York, one in
Connecticut, and one in Florida. The investment had been
recommended to Simpson by his financial adviser, third-party
defendant Circle Consulting Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation
whose only place of business is New York. Five of the managing
partners of Manhattan West are alleged to be principals of Circle
Consulting. A related New York corporation, Circle Properties,
Ltd., provided brokerage services for Manhattan West's acquisition
of the apartments.
Simpson's investment required him to purchase two apartments
in his name but for the benefit of the partnership. He financed
the purchase by two loans from plaintiff Citibank, N.A., totalling
$134,460. Simpson himself was neither at the closing of title nor
at the closing of the Citibank loan in New York. He had designated
the six managing partners as his designated joint and several
attorneys-in-fact, and two of them appeared at the closing and
executed the documents in his name. Also present at the closing
was Manhattan West's attorney, Thomas N. Keltner, Jr., a partner in
the New York law firm of Wien, Malkin & Bettex. Keltner executed
the closing documents as the borrower's attorney. The law firm and
Keltner were also joined as third-party defendants.
When the real estate market, and particularly its tax shelter
component, precipitously declined in the late 1980's, Manhattan
West was no longer able to meet its obligations. Apparently,
Simpson continued to make payments to Citibank on the two notes
until his death. His estate thereafter defaulted, and this action
by Citibank against the estate to recover the balance due ensued.
The estate, claiming fraud, misrepresentation, breach of contract,
breach of the attorney-in-fact agreement, breach of fiduciary
obligation, legal malpractice and other wrongful acts, filed this
third-party complaint against all third-party defendants.
As we have noted, none of the third-party defendants resides
or does business or has an ascertainable presence in New Jersey.
Defendant, therefore, served process on the corporate and
partnership entities by certified mail sent to their respective
principal place of business, registered agent, or managing partner
at their New York addresses. Defendant served the managing
partners of Manhattan West by certified mail addressed to their
respective residences, either in New York, Connecticut or Florida.
The law firm was also served by personal service pursuant to R.
4:4-4(a)(1) upon one of its partners, John L. Loehr, at his New
Jersey residence. Loehr, however, had nothing to do with the
Manhattan West representation. All defendants, claiming that they
are not subject to an exercise of long-arm jurisdiction by this
State in respect of this transaction, unsuccessfully moved for
dismissal.
Before addressing the specific jurisdictional issues involved
in this appeal, there are several procedural issues we must
consider. We do so in light of the general rule that territorial
presence in the forum is the basic prerequisite for subjecting a defendant to its in personam judgment. In lieu, however, of actual territorial presence, in personam jurisdiction may be predicated upon the defendant's contacts with the forum provided they meet the standard of minimum contacts, that is, contacts of sufficient moment such that maintenance of the suit in the forum does not offend "traditional notions of fair pay and substantial justice." International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 316, 66 S. Ct. 154, 158, 90 L. Ed.2d 95, 102 (1945). See also Waste Management, Inc. v. Admiral Ins. Co., 138 N.J. 106, 119-120 (1994), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 115 S. Ct. 1175, 130 L. Ed.2d 1128 (1995); Lebel v. Everglades Marina, Inc., 115 N.J. 317, 322 (1989). That extraterritorial reach is what is known as long-arm jurisdiction. It is also well settled that the requisite quality and quantum of contacts is dependent on whether general or specific jurisdiction is asserted, that is, whether the defendant is subject to any claim that may be brought against him in the forum state whether or not related to or arising out of the contacts themselves, i.e., general jurisdiction, or whether the claim is related to or arises out of the contacts in the forum, i.e., specific jurisdiction. Clearly, a lesser standard is required to sustain the exercise of specific jurisdiction, see, e.g., Lebel, supra, 115 N.J. at 323, and the test to be met is whether the defendant has "purposely avail[ed] itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state...." Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 471 U.S. 462, 474-745, 105 S. Ct. 2174, 2183, 85 L. Ed.2d 528, 542 (1985). It is
specific jurisdiction that is asserted here, and thus the ultimate
question is whether the claim against each of the third-party
defendants asserted by the third-party complaint arose out of that
party's purposeful conduct in New Jersey in circumstances in which
this State's exercise of personal jurisdiction comports with
traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. See
Lebel, op. cit., supra; Charles Gendler & Co. v. Telecom Equipment
Corp.,
102 N.J. 460, 472 (1986).
In moving for dismissal pursuant to R. 4:6-2(b), third-party
defendants each argued that its respective contacts with New Jersey
in respect of Simpson's investment failed to meet the minimum
contact test as prescribed for the exercise of specific
jurisdiction. The trial judge was satisfied from the moving papers
that defendant had made sufficient allegations of minimum contacts
to warrant its continued prosecution of the third-party complaint.
Thus, for example, it was asserted that Simpson had been solicited
in New Jersey, that the investment documents had been sent to him
in New Jersey for his signature, that he was represented by the law
firm at the New York mortgage closing, and that solicitation of New
Jersey residents was within the contemplation of Manhattan West,
since the PPM contained specific caveats for New Jersey residents
as well as for residents of Connecticut, Florida, and Pennsylvania.
Third-party defendants deny that Simpson had been solicited at all,
claiming that the PPM was sent only to potential investors who
requested it and contending further that the only contact with New
Jersey, that is, use of the mails, did not constitute a sufficient
contact. The law firm denies that it was ever acting as Simpson's
attorney and asserts that it had no attorney-client relationship
with him or, indeed, any other relationship with him. Simpson's
executrix apparently had no personal knowledge of the 1986
transaction. Nor was there any discovery by way of interrogatories
or depositions by which she could seek to ascertain Simpson's
relationship with any of the third-party defendants, how those
relationships came about, what the circumstances were surrounding
Simpson's decision to become a Manhattan West investor, or what the
actual mechanics for implementing that decision were.
As we understand the record, defendant's legal position in
defense of the dismissal motion was two-fold. Relying on its
personal service in this State of one of the law firm's partners
who resides here, the estate argued first that its acquisition of
jurisdiction over the law firm was not dependent on long-arm
jurisdiction but rather on territorial presence, rendering the
minimum-contacts inquiry irrelevant. It further argued that its
allegations respecting the contacts of the other third-party
defendants provided an adequate predicate for long-arm jurisdiction
despite the dispute raised by those parties respecting the
existence, nature, and consequence of those asserted contacts. The
trial judge agreed with the estate on both issues. We are
satisfied that he erred as to both.
We consider first the jurisdictional significance of personal
service in this State of one of the law firm's partners. Defendant
relies on R. 4:4-4(a)(5), which provides that service of original
process shall be made upon a partnership by personal service upon
a general partner pursuant to R. 4:4-4(a)(1). Having made such
service upon a general partner in New Jersey, the estate contends
that it ipso facto acquired in personam jurisdiction over the New
York partnership. Not so. We point out first that R. 4:4-4 does
not undertake to define jurisdictional limits. It is rather a
mechanical rule that merely prescribes the method of acquiring
jurisdiction when constitutional principles of due process of
law....not the rule....permit assertion of jurisdiction. That is plain
from the structure of the rule as amended effective September 1994.
Thus paragraph (a) of the revised rule addresses the manner of
personal service on individuals and entities who have a territorial
presence in this State, that is, those who are subject to the
State's exercise of in personam jurisdiction on the fundamental
predicate of their being here. That predicate alone satisfies due
process requirements, and no further inquiry need be undertaken.
Paragraph (b) of the revised rule addresses the mechanics by which
in personam jurisdiction may be obtained by constructive or
substituted services over those individuals and entities who are
not present in the state but who, as a matter of due process of
law, are subject to the exercise of its long-arm jurisdiction. The
rule prescribes how they shall be served. Constitutional
principles determine whether that service is effective for
obtaining jurisdiction. The rule's express caveat in respect of
long-arm jurisdiction has always been the consistency of its
exercise with due process, a caveat now spelled out in R. 4:4-4(b)(1).See footnote 1 Clearly then, since the law firm is a New York
partnership and does not do business in New Jersey,See footnote 2 it is
paragraph (b) of the rule, namely the long-arm jurisdiction
provision, that applies and not paragraph (a).
Our conclusion rests not only on our parsing of the service
rule but, more fundamentally, on the nature of a partnership as a
juridical entity having an existence separate from that of the
partners. See, e.g., Eule v. Eule Motor Sales,
34 N.J. 537, 545
(1961); X-L Liquors v. Taylor,
17 N.J. 444, 456-457 (1955); Schultz
v. Ziegenfuss,
105 N.J. Super. 468, 471 (App. Div. 1969). Plainly,
a foreign corporation or unincorporated association would not be
subject to this State's in personam jurisdiction merely because a
person authorized to receive service on its behalf happened to be
present in this State and was personally served here. See Nehemiah
v. Athletics Congress of U.S.A.,
765 F.2d 42, 47 (3rd Cir. 1985).
We are convinced that the same is true in respect of a foreign
partnership. Indeed, that is the Restatement rule. Thus
Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 40 (1971), dealing with
jurisdiction over partnerships and other unincorporated
associations, explains as follows in comment b:
If the partnership or other
unincorporated association is subject to suit
in its firm or common name, the state may
exercise judicial jurisdiction over it under
such circumstances as would justify the
exercise of jurisdiction over an
individual....
The mere presence of one of the partners
or members in the state is not a sufficient
basis for the exercise of judicial
jurisdiction over the partnership or
association. [Emphasis added.]
Although the issue has not been addressed in a reported opinion in
this jurisdiction, we are persuaded of the correctness of the
Restatement rule. New Jersey typically gives considerable weight
to Restatement views, and has, on occasion, adopted those views as
the law of this State when they speak to an issue our courts have
not yet considered. See, e.g., H. John Homan Co. v. Wilkes-Barre,
233 N.J. Super. 91, 98 (App. Div. 1989); Dziedzic v. St. John's
Cleaners & Shirt Laund., Inc.,
99 N.J. Super. 565, 573 (App. Div.
1968), rev'd on other grounds,
53 N.J. 157 (1969); A.v.M.,
74 N.J.
Super. 104, 118-119 (Cty. Ct. 1962). We do so now, fully endorsing
and adopting the principle stated in comment b.
We add, however, this caveat. Here, the partner who was
served in New Jersey, John L. Loehr, himself had had no contact
with the transaction that is the subject of the third-party
complaint. The matter might well be different if the partner who
resided in and was personally served in New Jersey had been third-party defendant Keltner. That is to say, the conduct of each
partner binds the partnership. Thus, if the partner whose conduct
is the basis of the claim against the partnership were subject to
personal service in this State, then service upon that partner
would effect jurisdiction over the partnership. As articulated by
Donatelli v. National Hockey League,
893 F.2d 459, 466 (1st Cir.
1990),
the activities of the partner are generally
attributed to the partnership and jurisdiction
over the partnership follows from the
partner's contacts, if sufficient, regardless
of the absence of independent contacts between
the partnership qua entity and the forum.
Accord Johnson v. Shaines & McEachern, PA,
835 F. Supp. 685, 689
(D. N.H. 1993); Schmidt v. Wilbur,
775 F. Supp. 216, 221 (E. D.
Mich. 1991); Oxford Mall Co. v. K & B Mississippi Corp.,
737 F.
Supp. 962, 964 (S.D. Miss. 1990). Since, however, the law firm's
partner who was personally served in New Jersey engaged in no
conduct related to the transaction in controversy, we need not
address the issue further.
We consequently hold that in personam jurisdiction over third-party defendant law firm was not obtained by personal service in
New Jersey on a partner having no connection with the subject
representation. Whether the law firm can be sued here by an
exercise of long-arm jurisdiction depends, therefore, as in the
case of all other third-party defendants, on whether, as a matter
of fact and of law, its contacts in this jurisdiction were
sufficient to support its acquisition of specific jurisdiction.
That is the question we next consider, and we conclude that
the record on the motion is inadequate to permit us to make that
determination. As we have explained, defendant alleged a number of
facts that, if undisputed or established, might well support an
exercise of long-arm jurisdiction against these third-party
defendants. The problem is that most of these facts or their
import were disputed by certifications supporting the motion to
dismiss. The trial judge, without an evidential hearing or fact-finding to resolve the dispute, simply gave defendant the benefit
of its allegations. This was error. The jurisdictional facts had
to be found in order for the jurisdictional decision to be made and
hence defendant's right to proceed determined.
We first note that the court's error appears to have been
attributable to a misreading of Trustees Structural Steel v. Huber,
136 N.J. Super. 501, 505 (App. Div. 1975), certif. denied,
70 N.J. 143 (1976), in which we said, in reviewing an order dismissing for
lack of jurisdiction, "[i]n any case, we are not concerned here
either with the sufficiency of the complaint or the merits thereof,
but rather with whether the allegations of the complaint present a
justification for long-arm service." We were, however, not there
dealing with disputed jurisdictional allegations. Hence the
jurisdictional allegations alone permitted resolution of the issue.
When, however, they do not, as here, the facts must be found. The
point is that some allegations go to jurisdiction and others go to
the cause of action. When a motion to dismiss for lack of
jurisdiction is made, it is only the jurisdictional allegations
that are relevant, not the sufficiency of the allegations
respecting the cause of action. We attempted to make this clear in
Washington v. Magazzu,
216 N.J. Super. 23, 26 (App. Div. 1987), in
which we decided only the jurisdictional issue despite defendant's
having attempted to intertwine that challenge with a challenge to
the sufficiency of the cause of action. We there said "[w]e must
accept these allegations as true and the claim as valid for the
purposes of this appeal because the motion to dismiss was directed
solely to the jurisdiction of the court, and not to the merits of
the claim." The "allegations" to which we were referring were
clearly those relating to the cause of action and not those
relating to jurisdiction. Jurisdictional allegations cannot be
accepted on their face if they are disputed.
The question of in personam jurisdiction is a mixed question
of law and fact that, if timely raised, must be resolved before the
matter may proceed, and if it cannot be resolved on pleadings and
certifications, it must be resolved by a preliminary evidential
hearing after affording the parties an appropriate opportunity for
discovery. See, e.g., Meeker v. Meeker,
52 N.J. 59, 72 (1968);
Corporate Dev. Spec. Inc. v. Warren-Teed Pharm.,
99 N.J. Super. 493
(App. Div. 1968); First National Bank of Freehold v. Viviani,
60 N.J. Super. 221, 224-225 (App. Div. 1960). And see R. 4:6-3.
We also think it plain that in the circumstances here, it is
the third-party plaintiff who bears the burden of proof on the
question of the adequacy of the third-party defendants' contacts to
sustain an exercise of specific jurisdiction. We are aware that
lack of jurisdiction is an affirmative defense and that ordinarily
the party relying on the defense has the burden of establishing it.
See, e.g., Pagano v. United Jersey Bank,
276 N.J. Super. 489, 500
(App. Div. 1994), affirmed,
143 N.J. 220 (1996); Rendine v.
Pantzer,
276 N.J. Super. 398, 435 (App. Div.), aff'd as modified,
141 N.J. 292 (1994). We have, however, no doubt that it is the
party asserting the adequacy of defendant's contacts to support
specific jurisdiction who bears the burden of persuasion on that
issue. See, so holding, Catalano v. Lease & Rental Mgt.,
252 N.J.
Super. 545, 547 (Law Div. 1991). Conceptually, the matter is
analogous to application of the discovery rule by which the accrual
date of the cause of action is deferred. Ordinarily, the party
relying on the defense of the statute of limitations has the
burden. But, as made clear by Lopez v. Swyer,
62 N.J. 267, 275-276
(1973), it is the party relying on the indulgence of the discovery
rule for relief from strict application of the statute of
limitations who bears the burden of proving his entitlement
thereto. So here. Once third-party defendants have shown that
they have no territorial presence in this state, the burden shifts,
as it were, to third-party plaintiff, who must then demonstrate
their amenability, nonetheless, to an exercise of in personam
jurisdiction based on minimum contacts.
We make this final observation in respect of the evidential
hearing for which we remand. It is, in our view, plain that mere
use of the mail to transmit transactional documents is not by
itself a sufficient contact with this state to justify its exercise
of long-arm jurisdiction. Pfundstein v. Omnicom Group, Inc.,
285 N.J. Super. 245, 251 (App. Div. 1995). On the other hand,
purposeful, persistent and direct solicitation of New Jersey
residents, in the context of the totality of the circumstances,
might constitute such purposeful availment as would suffice. See
Lebel v. Everglades Marina, Inc.,
115 N.J. 317 (1989). The PPM
that was the basis of the investment was apparently drafted with
the intention that New Jersey residents be solicited. New Jersey
securities law was referenced. Many months passed between
decedent's first introduction to the investment opportunity in
Manhattan West and its consummation. There were presumably
contacts between Simpson and third-party defendants during that
time whose explication might be helpful.
Defendant must be given a reasonable opportunity to explore,
through discovery, the nature of the solicitation of decedent, the
nature of his business and fiduciary relationships with third-party
defendants, and the facts surrounding the inception and conduct of
these relationships. We leave to the trial judge the expeditious
scheduling of necessary discovery and an ensuing evidential
hearing.
The order appealed from is reversed, and we remand to the
trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Footnote: 1Paragraph (c) of the revised rule, not relevant here, provides for optional mailed service, effective only if an answer is filed and served within sixty days. Footnote: 2We think it plain that the fact, as asserted by defendant, that a partner and several associates of the firm are also admitted to practice in New Jersey does not by itself constitute the firm's doing business here unless those attorneys undertake representation of clients in New Jersey on behalf of the firm, a fact not alleged by the estate.