CAPP Management, LLC v. Alton Coal Development, LLC
Filing
52
MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER, granting 22 MOTION to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction by Alton Coal Development, LLC and matter is dismissed. Signed by Judge Henry R. Wilhoit, Jr on 3/26/13.(SMT)cc: COR
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
NORTHERN DIVISION
ASHLAND
Civil Action No. 11-93-HRW
CAPP MANAGEMENT, LLC,
v.
PLAINTIFF,
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
ALTON COAL DEVELOPMENT, LLC,
DEFENDANT.
This matter is before Alton Coal Development, LLC's Motion to Dismiss for Lack of
Jurisdiction [Docket No. 22]. The motion has been fully briefed by the parties [Docket Nos. 38
and 47]. The Court having reviewed the parties' briefs as well as the record, finds that it lacks in
personam jurisdiction over the Defendant.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This civil action arises from a purported contract between Plaintiff CAPP Management
("CAPP") and Defendant Alton Coal Development, LLC ("Alton"). Plaintiff alleges that
Defendant failed to perform pursuant to the contract and that it is owed commission under the
terms of the contract.
Sometime in 2004, Alton began the process of seeking approval to operate a surface
coal mine in Utah. In late 2009, Bruce Addington, a Kentucky resident, contacted a member of
the Alton Coal, LLC, Robert C. Nead, Jr., a resident of Florida. Addington explained the reason
for contacting Nead, "[1] was interested in trying to get back into some - - into the mining
business some way and it was just - - it was sort of a cold call." [Deposition of Bruce Addington,
May 15,2012, Docket. No. 25, p. 10, lines: 2025]. Addington had previously called Stonie
Barker, one of the other members of Alton and also a Florida resident, and Stonie gave him
Nead's telephone number. Id.
Following Addington's call to Nead, they exchanged emails and phone calls about the
proposed mine and the mining plan. At the time, Addington thought that he "might be able to
make a deal to buy into the mine or become a contract miner or do something." [Docket No. 25,
p. 14, lines: 15-21]. Ultimately, he began to search for other potential investors, so that he could
become the contract miner. !d. In his deposition, he stated that Nead did not ask that he solicit
for any investors in Alton. [Docket No. 25, p. 21, lines: 18-20].
Addington contacted Shannon Keeran, the sole member of CAPP Management, which
provides consulting services for coal companies. Addington came to the conclusion that Keeran
"had the wherewithal to maybe make something happen on a purchase of the half-interest in the
mine that [Nead] wanted to sell ...." [Docket Mo. 25, p. 45, lines 9-11].
Early in 2010, Addington met Keeran at his office in Ashland Kentucky and "talked to
him about the project ..." [Docket No. 25, p. 48, lines: 8-10]. This was the first time Keeran
learned about Alton Coal's project in Utah. [Docket No. 22-4, Plaintiffs Response to
Admissions, Request # 1].
After discussing Alton's project with Addington, Keeran embarked upon his own due
diligence regarding Alton and the mine, all prior to the time that Keeran spoke to any member of
Alton. [Deposition of Shannon Keeran, February 10,2012, Docket No. 23, p. 85, lines: 9-13; p.
94, line: 9, p.95 line: 13 and Docket No. 22-4 and Docket No. 22-1, Plaintiffs Response to
Request for Admissions, Request # 7].
Addington testified that during this time, he did not mention Keeran or CAPP
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Management to Nead or anyone else at Alton. [Docket No. 25, p. 48]. Addington first discussed
an entity called CAPP Resources (not CAPP Management) with Nead and told Nead that he had
been "working with them or he had worked with them on a deal and they were looking for
opportunities." Id.
On February 5, 2010 that Addington called Nead, who was in Florida, to "introduce"
Keeran to Nead. [Docket No. 25, p. 63, lines: 8-11]. During this conversation, Nead advised
Addington that if Keeran had any interest in Alton, he should call Nead. [Docket No. 24, p.1 08,
lines: 22-25].
Nead testified that "Mr. Keeran called me. I didn't have his number. And then we talked."
[Docket No. 24. p.115, lines: 1416].1 This initial contact between Alton and Keeran was a phone
call from Keeran to Nead, admittedly while Keeran was in Ashland, Kentucky, but Nead was in
Naples, Florida. In its Response to Request for Admissions, Plaintiff admitted that at the time
Keeran called Nead, he knew that Nead was in Florida. [Docket No. 22-4,Response to Request for
Admissions, Request # 14]. Additionally, at the time that Keeran called Nead, Keeran understood
that the only current business activity of Alton was a coal mine planned to be operated in Utah.
[Docket No. 22-4,Response to request for Admissions, Request # 18].
On February 10,2010, Keeran met with Nead and James Wayland, the majority owner of
Alton and a resident of Florida, to discuss the Utah project. This meeting took place in Las Vegas,
I At his deposition, Keeran maintained that Nead actually called him first. [Docket No,. 23. p.
82, lines: 17-21]. Discovery, including the production of the phone records ofNead and Keeran,
establishes that "the first phone conversation between Shannon Keeran and Robert Nead was a
call placed by Mr. Keeran to Mr. Nead." [Docket No. 22-4 Response to Request For Admissions,
Request # 10].
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Nevada. This was the first time Keeran met Nead or Wayland.
Keeran testified that in Las Vegas, Nead and Wayland "asked a lot 0 f questions about me and
who were my partners were and, you know, did I really have the wherewithal to do a project like this.
It was a feel-you-out type ofmeeting". [Docket No. 23, p. 98, lines: 17-21]. Wayland that the three
had lunch together for about a hour, or an hour and a half at the Four Seasons Hotel and that Keeran
introduced himself as President of CAPP Resources. Keeran explained that he had "partners" who
may have an interest in Alton's project. [Deposition of James Wayland, May 15,2012, Docket No.
25, pp.85-86].
In March of 201 0, Keeran "introduced" Chuck Ungurean to Alton. Ungurean, one ofthe
owners ofthe company that owns SH Coal Investment, LLC. Nead, Wayland, Keeran and Ungurean
met in Columbus, Ohio in March of 2010 [Docket No. 23. p.130, lines 6-15], again in Naples,
Florida between April 3 and April 100f2010 [Docket No. 23. p.l12:lines 17-23,p.l24, lines: 22-24]
and again in Salt Lake City, Utah on April 14, 201 o
[Docket No. 23, p. 168-9].
On March 16, 2010, Nead, in Florida, sent an email to Keeran in Kentucky. It reads, in
pertinent part:
If we can get a deal done with your players we will pay you 5%
commission on the deal, once we engage Seaport then we will stay
[sic] pay you 4% on your players (as your players have been excl uded
except for the 1% breakout fee).
[Docket No. 22-1]. The agreement upon which Plaintiff bases this lawsuit emanates from
this email.
Between March and May of2010, Keeran and Nead communicated via telephone. In July
2010, Ungurean, Nead and Wayland met in Lexington, Kentucky, at the offices of Bennett
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Bayer, counsel for Alton. Although documents were exchanged, no final agreement was reached.
Keeran was not present at the meeting. Indeed, he was not aware that the meeting was taking
place.
In September, the agreement between SH Coal and the members of Alton was separately
executed by the members of SH Coal and the members of Alton and electronically exchanged.
None of the members of either company were in Kentucky when the documents were executed.
Plaintiff filed this lawsuit against Alton seeking payment of a commission or fee pursuant
to the March 16,2010 email. In it its Complaint, Plaintiff alleges Breach of Contract (Count I);
to Promissory Estoppel (Count II), Unjust Enrichment (Count III) and Quantum Meruit (Count
IV). [Docket No.
1~2].
Alton disputes the existence of the contract and asserts other defenses pertaining to the
alleged agreement. As the issue before the Court is whether the Court has in personam
jurisdiction over Alton Coal, the Court will confine its findings to that specific issue, without
del ving into the merits of Plaintiff s claim.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Two conditions must be met for a federal court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a
defendant: (1) the defendant must fall within the long~arm statute of the state in which the federal
court sits and (2) the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution must permit the exercise of
such jurisdiction. Aristech Chemical International Limited v. Acrylic Fabricators Limited, 138
F.3d 624, 627 (6th Cir. 1998). Personal jurisdiction in Kentucky arises under Kentucky's
long~arm
statute, KRS § 454.210. This statute provides that a court may exercise personal
jurisdiction over a nonresident person (induding "any commercial entity," which applies to an
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LLC) "who acts directly or by agent" as to a claim arising from the person's "transacting any
business in this Commonwealth." §454.210 (2)(a)(1).
The due process analysis requires an initial finding that the defendant has significant
contacts within the forum state showing a "purposeful availment" of the benefits and privileges
of doing business in the forum state. General jurisdiction requires that the defendant's contacts
are substantial, continuous, and systematic, such that it is reasonable and just to hold the
defendant amenable to suit even if the action does not arise out of these contacts. Helicopteros
Nacionales de Columbia, S.A. v. Hall, 466 U.S. 408, 414 (1984). However, for specific
jurisdiction, contacts with the forum state need not be as "continuous and systematic",
nonetheless they must still satisfy the purposeful availment requirement and they must give rise
to the action. Id. In addition, in the context of specific jurisdiction, the contacts must be
substantial enough that maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play
and substantial justice. Int'l Shoe Co. v. State of Wash., Office of Unemployment Compo &
Placement, 326 U.S. 310 (1945).
The Court is mindful that the burden is upon Plaintiff to establish that jurisdiction exists.
In this case Plaintiff is only required to make a prima facie showing for personal jurisdiction
and the Court is to resolve any controverted facts in a light most favorable to Plaintiff. Serras v.
First Tennessee Bank National Association, 875 F.2d 1212, 1214 (6 th Cir. 1989).
III. ANALYSIS
A.
Kentucky's Long-Arm Statute does not extend to Alton.
I.
Alton was not "transacting business" in Kentucky.
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In order to fall within the purview of Kentucky's Long Arm statute, Alton must have been
"transacting business" in Kentucky. The Kentucky Supreme Court recently explained that
"transacting business", as contemplated by the statute, requires that there be a "reasonable and
direct nexus" between a defendant's business directed toward the state and the [plaintiffs]
claim." Caesar's Riverboat Casino v. Beach, 336 S.W,3d 51, 59 (Ky. 2011).
Alton did not reach out to CAPP Resources, LLC, Keeran or the Plaintiff. To the
contrary, it is undisputed that Keeran found out about Alton from Addington and Keeran was
analyzing Alton material before he ever spoke with Nead. Moreover, it was Keeran who asked
Alton ifhe could show the project to other investors. In his deposition he was asked, "did you
ask and say to them, look, can I go ahead and try to pass this on to somebody else?" to which he
replied: I said, I - - you know, it's a small community. Remember that conversation? I know a
lot of guys up here. I can show it to somebody else, if you would like. [Deposition of Shannon
Keeran. Docket No. 23, beginning at page 143, line 24 and continuing through line 5 on page
144])
Plaintiffs broadly brushed in favor ofjurisdiction argument ignores a crucial distinction
who reached out to whom. As the Court of Appeals of Kentucky explained:
On the one hand the non-resident seller is actively promoting the
sales of its products in the forum state and invoking the benefits
and protections of its laws while the nonresident purchaser
occupies a passive role and usually enjoys no particular privilege or
protection in purchasing products from a resident seller.
First National Bank o/Louisville v. Shore Tire Company, 651 S.W.2d 472,473 (Ky. Ct.
App.1982).
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As Judge Heyburn noted in a similar case,
that Defendant may have communicated with the Plaintiff through
letters, telephone calls, e-mails or facsimiles directed to Kentucky.
The only reason the communications in question were directed to
Kentucky is because Plaintiff found it convenient to be located
there.
Spectrum Scan, LLC v. AGM California, 519 F.supp.2f 655,658 (W.D. Ky. 2007).
Plaintiff does not, indeed, cannot, dispute that Keeran solicited Alton on behalf of CAPP
Resources, LLC. Plaintiff is the seller, so to speak. Nor can Plaintiff contradict that the only time
that Keeran ever met with anyone from Alton to discuss the Utah project was either in Utah,
Nevada, Ohio or Florida, never in Kentucky. It would seem that it was immaterial to Alton
where it met or sent emails to discuss the Utah project. Rather, it appears that Alton was willing
to communicate with Keeran regardless of locale. Id.
Notably, the one and only meeting of Keeran and Nead in Kentucky was with regard to
settling the claims which give rise to this lawsuit. However, an attempt to negotiate a settlement
does not create personal jurisdiction. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company v. Tryg
International, 91 F.3d 790, 796 (6 th Cir. 1996).
Plaintiff attempts to ensnare Alton within the Long-Arm statute by arguing that either
Addington or Alton's counsel, Bennett Bayer, were acting as its agents in Kentucky and therefore
Alton can be deemed as "transacting business" in Kentucky,. The Court is not persuaded.
The notion of Addington as an agent of Alton is undermined by his repeated testimony that
the reason he contacted Keeran regarding Alton was to pursue his personal interests, not that of
Alton. He wanted to become an investor or the contract miner. He clearly stated that Nead did
not ask him to solicit on behalf of Alton.
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As for Alton's Kentucky counsel, Plaintiff rests its argument upon a single email
communication between Keeran and Bayer, with regard to settling Keeran's dispute with Alton.
As stated above, settlement talks do not confer in personam jurisdiction. Further, there is no
binding authority which stands for the proposition that a lawyer, simply by virtue of the attomey
client relationship, is one's agent for the purposes of determining jurisdiction.
B. Due Process precludes in personam jurisdiction over Alton.
The crux of the Due Process analysis is purposeful availment. It is established: (1) when a
defendant conducts business, creates obligations or sets in motion business operations in a state,
(2) where that conduct has an impact on that state's commerce and (3) in cases where the
defendant "should have reasonably foreseen that the transaction would have consequences in that
state." Tri-State Equipment Rentals, LLC v. Chevalier, 2007 WL 2571672 at *3 (E.D. Ky. 2007)
(citing Southern Machine Company v. Mohasco Industries, Inc., 401 F.2d 374 (6 th Cir. 1968)).
Alton never intended to do business in Kentucky, and agreements between Alton and
Addington and CAPP Resources were never intended for Alton to do business in Kentucky.
Alton's only continuing relationship in Kentucky was that with its outside counsel.
Capital Dredge & Dock Corp. v. Midwest Dredging Co. 573 F .2d 377 (6th Cir. 1978)
IS
instructive. The defendant in Capital Dredge was sued in Ohio, and removed on diversity
grounds. The defendant was incorporated in Minnesota and had its principal place of business in
Arkansas. The action arose from a breach of contract for dredging services. In finding that it
lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendant, the District Court judge wrote:
[The] agreement was sought by [plaintiff]. All negotiations were
conducted outside [Ohio]. The only direct contact between Midwest and
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plaintiffs [regarding the claim] was its vice president delivering the final
contract to [plaintiff's offices] in Ohio and his receiving the first payment
under the contract. Plaintiff was to produce no goods in Ohio, nor was
any of its performance under the contract to have any impact on Ohio
other than its obligation to pay money under the agreement. These facts
are simply insufficient to establish long-arm jurisdiction over defendant.
Id. at 380. The Court of Appeals agreed
Even if the March 16, 2010 Nead e-mail can be assumed to be a bone fide contract,
Capital Dredge holds this insufficient. The alleged agreement required nothing more than the
introduction of a potential investor. No continuing obligation thereafter. If an investor is found,
there is payment, no further work, no ongoing activity
Furthermore, while phone and email exchanges are "contacts", they are insufficient to
establish jurisdiction. See also, Hinners, 336 S.W.3d 891 ,901 (Ky. 2011) ("Jurisdiction over a
nonresident purchaser is not obtained where nonresident's only contact within the state was
negotiation by telephone and mail culminating in a single transaction", citing Tube Turns Div. of
Chemetron v. Patterson Co., 562 S. W.2d 99 (Ky.App.1978)).
Plaintiff strenuously argues in favor ofjurisdiction, listing, in great detail Keeran's
actions within Kentucky. However, Keeran is not the focal point of the in personam jurisdiction
inquiry. Plaintiff's activities are irrelevant to the question ofjurisdiction. Spectrum Scan, 519
F .Supp.2d at 658.
IV. CONCLUSION
Plaintiff failed to make a prima facie showing. The allegations within its own Complaint
have been contradicted by the Plaintiff in the deposition of Keeran and its admissions. Based
upon the record, the Court finds that requirements of neither Kentucky's Long Arm statute nor
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Due Process have been met.
Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Alton Coal Development, LLC's Motion
to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction [Docket No. 22] be SUSTAINED and this matter is
dismissed.
This 26th day of March 2013.
Signed BY'
Jienry R. Wilhoit. Jr
Jnited States Dlstnct Judg~
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