Fehl v. S. W. C. Corp.

433 F. Supp. 939, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15523
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJune 7, 1977
DocketCiv. A. 76-335
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 433 F. Supp. 939 (Fehl v. S. W. C. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fehl v. S. W. C. Corp., 433 F. Supp. 939, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15523 (D. Del. 1977).

Opinion

CALEB M. WRIGHT, Senior District Judge.

W. B. McGuire & Co., Inc. (“McGuire”), one of three corporate defendants in this diversity personal injury action, has brought a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction on the ground that substituted service of process under 8 Del.C. § 382 was improper and ineffective. The pertinent facts are these. Plaintiff was injured in June, 1975, while operating a Gifford-Wood Model “C” ice-cubing machine. That machine was sold to plaintiff’s employer, Diamond Ice and Coal Co. of Wilmington, Delaware, by the GiffordWood Company in 1946. McGuire, a New York corporation, was not incorporated until 1959. In 1971, McGuire purchased from Columbia Precision Instruments, Inc., a Maryland corporation, all assets relating to Columbia Precision Corporation’s ice product line, including land and buildings, inventory, work in process, sales orders, patents, patent applications, trademarks and trademark applications. Included among those assets was the right to manufacture and sell a Model “370” ice-cubing machine and various ice handling tools, and the right to use the Gifford-Wood name on those products transferred by the agreement, with the reasonable consent of the seller, for a period of five years. Plaintiff alleges that the Model “370” ice-cuber is, in fact, a Gifford-Wood “CB” ice-cuber, which is claimed to be the same or very similar to the Gifford-Wood Model “C” ice-cuber involved in the accident, although McGuire itself has never held out the model as a Gifford-Wood model. In February, 1975, approximately four months prior to the accident, McGuire sold all of its assets relating to the ice product line, including the rights to the “370” model and ice-handling equipment to a third corporation, J. D. Handling, Inc., of New York. 1 From 1972 until February 1975, McGuire supplied Diamond Ice and Coal with certain new replacement parts for use in an ice-cubing machine pursuant to requests from Diamond Ice and Coal. 2 Plaintiff filed a diversity action in this Court against McGuire and three other defendants, 3 alleging strict liability and negligence in the design, manufacture, testing, and inspection of the machine, and in *943 failing to warn the ultimate users of the machine of its allegedly dangerous conditional and operational characteristics.

Substituted service was made on McGuire under 8 Del.C. § 382, which provides that:

Any foreign corporation which shall transact business is this State . . . shall be deemed to have thereby appointed and constituted the Secretary of State of this State, its agent for the acceptance of legal process in any civil action, suit or proceeding against it in any state or federal court in this State arising or growing out of any business transacted by it within this State. .

Courts have construed § 382 to require both that the corporation “transact business” in Delaware and that the cause of action “arise or grow out of” specific business transacted in Delaware. Simpson v. Thiele, Inc., 344 F.Supp. 7 (D.Del.1972).

Although McGuire contended in its opening brief that it was not transacting business in Delaware, it has now conceded that it was. 4 The only question left, therefore, is a discrete one: under what circumstances, if any, may personal jurisdiction be assumed under § 382 over a successor corporation based on specific business transacted by its predecessor. 5

The question appears to be one of first impression. 6 In those Delaware cases construing the “arising out of” requirement, there has been no dispute that the corporation itself transacted some business out of which the cause of action arose. The question faced by the courts has been whether the business out of which the cause of action arose was transacted in Delaware or elsewhere. For example, in La Chemise LaCoste v. General Mills, Inc., 53 F.R.D. 596 (D.Del.1971), the Court determined that, while the defendant apparently sold or solicited orders for the sale of apparel to stores in Delaware (and therefore was transacting business), it had never sold in Delaware toiletries, soaps, or bags using the marks which were the subject of the action. Defendant’s motion to dismiss was granted. In Simpson v. Thiele, supra, a personal injury action, the Court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction on the ground that the machine had been manufactured, sold, and delivered in Pennsylvania, and that plaintiff therefore failed to sustain the burden of proving that the injury sued upon arose or grew out of any business which defendant transacted in Delaware.

*944 In this case, it is assumed that the 1946 sale and/or delivery of the machine took place in Delaware. See n. 4, supra. It is not disputed that McGuire was not in corporate existence in 1946 and that McGuire neither manufactured nor sold the machine involved in the injury. The question remaining, therefore, is whether the “arising out of” requirement is satisfied by the acquisition by McGuire of certain assets which were once held by the corporation that manufactured and sold the machine. The question is really one of fairnesá and equity. Under what circumstances, if any, would it be consonant with notions of fairness and justice to ascribe business transacted by a predecessor corporation to its successor corporation?

Two alternative theories can be advanced in support of personal jurisdiction over McGuire. For convenience, these theories will be labeled the “corporate” and the “tort” theory. 7 The basis of the “corporate theory” is that, by acquiring substantially all the assets of the ice product line which originally belonged to the Gifford-Wood Company and taking over the ice product manufacturing operation, McGuire in effect became the present-day embodiment of the Gifford-Wood Company and therefore is amenable to service of process under § 382. The “tort theory” would impose jurisdiction over McGuire based on its own acts. Under certain circumstances, 8 the successor corporation may have a duty to warn of defects existing in products sold by the predecessor corporation. If a nexus exists between business conducted by the successor corporation within, the state and a failure to fulfill that duty, the “arising out of” requirement may be satisfied.

Sitting in diversity, this Court is bound by the construction placed on § 382 by the Delaware courts. Pioneer National Title Insurance Co. v. Sabo, 432 F.Supp. 76 (D.Del.1977). Since this particular issue has never been presented in this jurisdiction, the Court must determine how the Delaware courts would interpret the reach of § 382.

The “arising out of” requirement of § 382 is a legislatively imposed limitation on the constitutionally permissible breadth of long-arm jurisdiction. The due process clause does not require that the cause of action arise out of particular business transacted within the state.

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Bluebook (online)
433 F. Supp. 939, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fehl-v-s-w-c-corp-ded-1977.