American Indoor Air Quality Assessment Services, Ltd. v. TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc.

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 26, 2011
Docket207
StatusPublished

This text of American Indoor Air Quality Assessment Services, Ltd. v. TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc. (American Indoor Air Quality Assessment Services, Ltd. v. TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Indoor Air Quality Assessment Services, Ltd. v. TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc., (Vt. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Am. Indoor Air Quality Assessment Servs., Ltd. v. TOMI Envtl. Solutions, Inc., No. 207-9-09 Oecv (Eaton, J., Apr. 26, 2011)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Orange County Docket No. 207-9-09 Oecv

American Indoor Air Quality Assessment Services, Ltd. and Francis Finigan Plaintiffs

v.

TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc. f/k/a The Ozone Man, Inc., Halden Shane, and Richard Johnson Defendants

Decision on Pending Motions

The heart of this case involves competing claims for breach of contract arising out of the commercial relationship between an environmental consultant from Vermont and an environmental services provider from California. Plaintiffs also allege that they relied upon certain misrepresentations when entering into the consulting agreement, and thus assert claims for consumer fraud, common-law fraud, and negligent misrepresentation. A claim for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing is also stated in the second amended complaint.

Once again, the threshold issue is whether the case should be stayed in favor of a parallel action pending in the state courts of California. In the consulting agreement, the parties agreed that the forum for any disputes arising out of their business relationship would be either the courts of California or Vermont with “venue to be at the election of the plaintiff in the case.” As such, the parties engaged in an apparent race to the courthouse after their business relationship broke down. Defendants filed a complaint in California on September 18th, 2009, and served the complaint about one month later, on October 16th. In the meantime, plaintiffs filed a complaint in Vermont on September 28th and served it on October 6th.

Defendants first sought dismissal of the Vermont complaint for lack of subject- matter jurisdiction on the ground that the California complaint had been filed ten days earlier than the Vermont complaint. As this court explained in a March 2010 written decision, however, the mere existence of a pending action in another state is not sufficient to divest this court of its general-subject matter jurisdiction. Instead, the rule is that even when the same action is filed first in another state, our courts have discretion either to go ahead with the litigation here until a final judgment is reached in either state, or to stay the litigation here as a matter of comity pending the outcome in the first action. Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 86; Edward Rose Bldg. Co. v. Cascade Lumber Co., 621 N.W.2d 193, 196 (Iowa 2001). Because defendants asked only for dismissal of the action for lack of jurisdiction, and did not provide the court with enough information to determine whether a discretionary stay was warranted, this court declined to undertake the “nuanced analysis” necessary to decide the issue at that time.

Attention then shifted to California, where the parties argued whether that case should proceed. Noting that service had been perfected first in Vermont, the Los Angeles Superior Court stayed the California action “pending the outcome of the Vermont litigation.”

Defendants then returned to Vermont and suggested a new reason why the case here should be dismissed or stayed: American Indoor is a Delaware corporation that had not obtained a certificate of authority to do business in this state or to maintain civil actions in the court of this state. 11A V.S.A. § 15.02(a). Defendants argue that the case was not properly commenced here and thus should be stayed in favor of the California action.

The statute referenced by defendants is commonly referred to as the “door- closing” provision of the Model Business Corporations Act. It provides that “[a] foreign corporation transacting business in this state without a certificate of authority may not maintain a proceeding . . . in any court in this state until it obtains a certificate of authority.” 11A V.S.A. § 15.02(a). As other courts have explained, the statute serves tax-revenue purposes and is primarily meant to encourage foreign corporations to identify themselves so that they may be treated in the same manner as their domestic counterparts. Although the certification requirement is tied to the court process, it is not meant to result in “harsh or erratic sanctions” in litigation. Johnny’s Pizza House, Inc. v. Huntsman, 844 S.W.2d 320, 323 (Ark. 1992) (quoting Official Comment to the MBCA).

As such, the MBCA tempers the effect of its door-closing statute by permitting corporations to commence civil actions before obtaining certificates of authority. In other words, a corporation may commence an action in the courts of a state by filing a complaint and perfecting service before they obtain the necessary certificates of authority. 11A V.S.A. § 15.02(c); Huntsman, 844 S.W.2d at 323. A complaint filed in this manner is valid when filed; the only restriction is that the corporation may not thereafter maintain the action until the certificate is obtained. Transportation Ins. Co. v. El Chico Restaurants, 524 S.E.2d 486, 487–88 (Ga. 1999). It appears that the drafters of the MBCA specifically intended that this result replace the more punitive sanctions of earlier registration statutes. See Huntsman, 844 S.W.2d at 321–22 (recounting MBCA legislative history); see also, e.g., Pennconn Enterprises v. Huntington, 148 Vt. 603, 605 (1987) (explaining that under earlier and now-superseded Vermont statute, foreign corporations were precluded from enforcing contracts in our courts “unless it had procured a certificate of authority before it entered into the contract”).

One specific application of the MBCA door-closing statute is that complaints filed by uncertified foreign corporations are effective when filed for purposes of statutes of limitation, even if the corporation does not obtain the certificate until after the limitations period expires. El Chico Restaurants, 524 S.E.2d at 487–88. Again, the

2 policy explanation for this is that the door-closing statute serves corporate purposes rather than legal ones, and thus is not meant to be used by defendants for tactical gain. Huntsman, 844 S.W.2d at 323; Chet Adams Co. v. James F. Pedersen Co., 413 S.E.2d 827, 828 (S.C. 1992).

It stands to reason that if a complaint is valid when filed for purposes of the statute of limitations, the same is true for purposes of the “prior action pending” doctrine. Any other result would contravene the expressed policy of avoiding interpretations of the MBCA door-closing statute that result in substantive litigation consequences. Huntsman, 844 S.W.2d at 323.

For the foregoing reasons, the complaint here was effective when filed, and so the court is not persuaded that it should change its prior assessment of the case. It is true that the California action was filed first by ten days, but defendants still have not offered any persuasive reason why this court should stay this case in favor of the litigation pending in Los Angeles. In particular, it appears that the substantive issues here have been at least somewhat developed through motion practice and amended pleadings, and there is the fact that the Los Angeles Superior Court has chosen to stay the California action pending the outcome here.

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Related

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Johnny's Pizza House, Inc. v. Huntsman
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American Indoor Air Quality Assessment Services, Ltd. v. TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-indoor-air-quality-assessment-services-ltd-v-tomi-environmental-vtsuperct-2011.