Capitol Specialty Ins. Corp. v. Splash Dogs, LLC

801 F. Supp. 2d 657, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76309, 2011 WL 2748636
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 14, 2011
Docket1:10-cv-00432
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 801 F. Supp. 2d 657 (Capitol Specialty Ins. Corp. v. Splash Dogs, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capitol Specialty Ins. Corp. v. Splash Dogs, LLC, 801 F. Supp. 2d 657, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76309, 2011 WL 2748636 (S.D. Ohio 2011).

Opinion

*661 OPINION AND ORDER

ALGENON L. MARBLEY, District Judge.

This declaratory judgment action is before the Court for a ruling on defendant Randy Woods’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and improper venue, or in the alternative, to transfer venue. (Doc. # 24). Mr. Woods, who is not an Ohio resident, argues that this case cannot or should not proceed in an Ohio district court. The motion has been fully briefed. For the reasons stated below, the Court concludes that the Southern District of Ohio is a proper forum in which to resolve the underlying dispute between Mr. Woods and his insurer, and the motion to dismiss or transfer will be denied.

I. Background

On April 16, 2008, a company known as J4 Promotions, Inc., which does business as DockDogs, sued Splash Dogs, LLC, and five individuals, including Randy Woods, accusing them of copyright infringement, defamation, engaging in deceptive trade practices, and tortious interference with business relationships. Ml of its claims relate to the business in which both Dock-Dogs and Splash Dogs compete, which is known as “canine dock jumping” (and which apparently involves sporting competitions in which dogs jump from docks into pools of water, with the object (at least from the human competitors’ or spectators’ vantage point) of making the longest jump). That case was filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, where DockDogs has its principal place of business. Ml of the defendants in that case are California residents except for Mr. Woods, who resides in Indiana.

The defendants did not agree that the case was properly filed in the Northern District, and they jointly filed a motion to dismiss or transfer venue. Judge Kathleen O’Malley, to whom the case had been assigned, agreed in part. She found that most of the defendants (except for Thanh K. Nguyen) had sufficient contacts with the State of Ohio to justify the exercise of personal jurisdiction over them under Ohio’s long-arm statute, but that the proper district in which the “anchor” claims of the complaint (the claims for copyright infringement, unfair competition, and violation of the Ohio Deceptive Trade Practices Act) should have been brought was the Southern District of Ohio. Consequently, in an order filed on February 13, 2009, she dismissed the claims against Mr. Nguyen and transferred the balance of the case to the Southern District. See J4 Promotions, Inc. v. Splash Dogs, LLC, 2009 WL 385611 (N.D.Ohio February 13, 2009). The case was received in this district on February 24, 2009, and assigned Case No. 2:09-cv-136.

During some or all of the time when they allegedly violated DockDogs’ legal interests, Splash Dogs and Mr. Woods had insurance through Capitol Specialty Insurance Corporation. They asked Capitol to defend them in the Promotions Case (which the Court will also refer to as the “DockDogs case”) and to indemnify them should a judgment be entered against them in that case. Capitol does not believe that its policy covers the claims made in the DockDogs case. It has been defending Splash Dogs and Mr. Woods, but in order to get some legal clarification of its obligations to those parties, Capitol filed this declaratory judgment action. The gist of its argument concerning coverage is that the claims which DockDogs has made against Splash Dogs and Mr. Woods are not claims for personal or bodily injury, which are covered occurrences under the policy, or are claims which are specifically excluded from coverage.

II. Mr. Woods’ Motion

Before describing in detail the arguments Mr. Woods makes in his motion to *662 dismiss or transfer, it is helpful to explain why Judge O’Malley concluded that Mr. Woods could properly be sued by Dock-Dogs in Ohio. As in most cases, that decision focused on what Mr. Woods did in Ohio and whether DockDogs’ claims related to the things he did here.

Judge O’Malley found, first, that Mr. Woods had transacted business in Ohio as that phrase is defined in Ohio’s long-arm statute. Specifically, the evidence presented to her showed that Splash Dogs, acting through Mr. Woods and Mr. Reed, held a jumping competition in Columbus in March of 2007, and that both of them had previously done work for DockDogs and had been paid for that work from an Ohio bank account. In connection with the March, 2007 competition, Ohio residents were targeted as spectators and permitted to register for the event through the Splash Dogs website. Space was rented in Columbus and participants were invited to travel to Columbus to compete. All of these activities had a commercial impact in the State of Ohio, as did Mr. Woods’ prior work for DockDogs.

The next question Judge O’Malley addressed was whether any of DockDogs’ claims arose out of Mr. Woods’ Ohio-based business activities. She noted a conflict between the parties as to whether Dock-Dogs had drafted its rules and regulations, which the defendants allegedly infringed, before the March, 2007 event, but, as the case law instructs, she drew an inference favoring DockDogs as the non-moving party. Given that inference, she found that some of the copyright infringement claims arose from Mr. Wood’s Ohio business activities. She also concluded that even if that were not so, to the extent that he or the other defendants used DockDogs’ copyrighted materials elsewhere, that use had an effect on DockDogs within Ohio, and that this was enough to permit personal jurisdiction to be exercised on that claim. She used a similar rationale to find that any defamatory statements made by the defendants had an effect on DockDogs in Ohio, especially because some of them were allegedly posted on an Ohio-based website. Because the deceptive trade practices claim arose from the same allegedly defamatory statements, she found the defendants subject to personal jurisdiction in Ohio on that claim as well, and also found that to the extent these or other comments may have dissuaded DockDogs’ sponsors from continuing to do business with it, the injury to DockDogs from that type of tortious interference with business relations occurred in Ohio.

After conducting the required analysis under the long-arm statute, Judge O’Malley turned to the due process question, and held that the exercise of personal jurisdiction over Mr. Woods was reasonable as to some of DockDogs’ claims because he personally availed himself of the right to do business in Ohio and some of the claims in the complaint arose from his transaction of business in Ohio or from the effects of conduct which occurred outside of Ohio but which was intended to, and did, affect DockDogs in Ohio. She did find that a handful of claims (specifically the deceptive trade practices and defamation claims) did not have a sufficient connection to Ohio to subject Mr. Woods to jurisdiction here, but she concluded that these claims were properly brought in Ohio under the doctrine of “pendent personal jurisdiction” (which this Court will discuss more fully below) because they were factually related to claims over which personal jurisdiction could properly be exercised. As noted above, because many of these claims related, directly or indirectly, to the March, 2007 competition held in Columbus, she transferred the case to this district.

Mr.

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801 F. Supp. 2d 657, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76309, 2011 WL 2748636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capitol-specialty-ins-corp-v-splash-dogs-llc-ohsd-2011.