Graphics Leasing Corp. v. Y Weekly

1991 Mass. App. Div. 110, 1991 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 57
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 31, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1991 Mass. App. Div. 110 (Graphics Leasing Corp. v. Y Weekly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graphics Leasing Corp. v. Y Weekly, 1991 Mass. App. Div. 110, 1991 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 57 (Mass. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Furnari, J.

Plaintiff Graphics Leasing Corp. (“Graphics”), a Massachusetts corporation, financed a lease agreement which was executed for the purchase of printing equipment by defendant The Y Weekly, a newspaper in Austin, Texas. A written guaranty of the lease agreement was signed by the defendant’s publisher, Jerry D. Angerman (“Angerman”), a Texas businessman.

Upon the defendants’ default in installment payments, Graphics instituted this breach of contract suit in the Waltham Division of the District Court Department to recover $25,003.23 plus interest, costs and attorneys’ fees pursuant to lease terms.

The defendants filed a Dist/Mun. Cts. R. Civ. P., Rule 12(b) (2) motion to dismiss the action on jurisdictional grounds. After hearing, the trial court allowed the dismissal motion, ruling that

there are insufficient ‘contacts’ to warrant the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to assert jurisdiction over either defendant Also, in fairness, the defendants ought to be afforded the opportunity to defend themselves in Texas. See Charles River Data Systems, Inc. v. Integrated Management Systems of America, Inc., 1989 Mass. App. Div. 179, 192 and cases cited.

Graphics now claims to be aggrieved by the court’s allowance of the defendants’ Rule 12(b) (2) motion, and judgment of dismissal.

1. The defendants’ motion to dismiss was predicated on the following assertions: (1) that the defendants maintained no contacts with this Commonwealth sufficient to permit a Massachusetts court to exercise jurisdiction under either the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment or the Massachusetts Long-Arm Statute, G.Lc. 223A, §1 et. seq.; and (2) that Massachusetts is an inconvenient forum for the defendants whose witnesses are all in Texas, but who allege that a trial is necessary to resolve unspecified issues of law and fact which they purportedly will raise in their defense.

Graphics concedes that the defendants’ contacts with Massachusetts were insuffi-cientto permit an exercise of long-arm jurisdiction in this case. Graphics instead relies solely upon the following forum selection clause contained in the lease agreement2 executed by both parties:

This Agreement shall be considered to be a Massachusetts contract and shall be deemed to have been made in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, regardless of the order in which the signature of the parties shall be affixed [111]*111hereto, and shall be interpreted, and the rights and liabilities of the parties hereto determined, in accordance with the law and in the courts of the Commonwealth [emphasis supplied].

The dispositive issue on this appeal is, therefore, whether a contractual forum selection clause is enforceable in this Commonwealth so as to permit or require a Massachusetts court to assume jurisdiction over contractual disputes arising in other states.

2. The defendants contend that forum selection clauses are unenforceable in Massachusetts. This argument is derived from the seminal case oi Nute v. Hamilton Mut. Ins. Co., 6 Gray (72 Mass.) 174 (1856) in which the Supreme Judicial Court held that a venue clause in an insurance contract, which required that any action thereon “shall be brought at a proper court in the county of Essex,” was not binding on the plaintiff-insured so as to require dismissal of the suit commenced in Suffolk County. Until recently, and in consequence oiNute, “Massachusetts decisions, in general but not always, have disregarded forum selection provisions in contracts or treated them as invalid.” Ernest & Norman Hart Bros., Inc. v. Town Contractors, Inc., 18 Mass. App. Ct. 60, 63 (1984). It is essential to note, however, that although Ñute has never been overruled, its anachronistic reasoning, modified by subsequent cases and now in conflict with current law, renders doubtful the continued viability of this antiquated precedent.

In justifying its rule in 1856 that forum selection clauses were unenforceable, the Nute Court noted that such clauses would promote forum shopping and impose tremendous burdens upon the courts in applying foreign law, and that there was no existing authority upon which to evaluate such clauses. Id. at 184-185. Such analysis no longer reflects current law. First, contractual choice of law provisions which require courts to interpret and apply foreign law are recognized as enforceable in Massachusetts. See Morris v. Watsco, Inc., 385 Mass. 672, 674 (1982). Second, there is now considerable federal and state authority for the validity of forum selection clauses which renders Nute the minority rule. The “modem rule” (see discussion, infra) adopted by the federal courts, including the First Circuit Court of Appeals and Federal District Court for Massachusetts, is that a forum selection clause is “prima facie valid and should be enforced unless enforcement is shown by the resisting party to be ‘unreasonable’ under the circumstances.” M/S Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co., 407 U.S. 1, 92 S. Ct. 1907, 32 L. Ed. 2d 513 (1972). See also, Fireman’s Fund Amer. Ins. Co. v. Puerto Rican Forwarding Co., 492 F.2d 1294, 1297 (1st Cir. 1974); LFC Lessors, Inc. v. Pearson, 585 F. Supp. 1362, 1364 (D. Mass. 1984).

Moreover, the original rationale of Nute was largely abandoned in subsequent cases, including those which actually followed the Atonde. See, as to cases adhering to Nute, Nashua River Paper Co. v. Hammermill Paper Co., 223 Mass. 8, 13-19 (1916); Norcross Bros. v. Vose, 199 Mass. 81, 93-94 (1908); Amesbury v. Bowditch Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 6 Gray (72 Mass.) 596, 603 (1856); Cobb v. New England Mut. Marine Ins. Co., 6 Gray (72 Mass.) 192, 204 (1856). The Nute rule was instead justified in terms of the invalidity of any attempt by parties “to place limitations by contract... upon the powers of courts as to actions growing out of the particular contract, or to oust appropriate courts of their jurisdiction....” Nashua River Paper Co. v. Hammermill Paper Co., supra at 16.3 Although not overruling Nute, other cases factually distinguished its rule [112]*112because in such cases “there [was] no occasion for the protection of the dignity or convenience of the [Massachusetts] courts.” Mittenthal v. Moscagni, 183 Mass. 19, 23 (1903).4

It is indeed evident from any analysis oí Nute and its subsequent case development that there is no Massachusetts rule which constitutes an absolute bar to the enforcement of all forum selection clauses.5 Nute would instead appear to stand for only the limited proposition that

a forum selection clause entailing contractual consent to the jurisdiction of any other court will not be enforced by a Massachusetts court which itself has competent jurisdiction and chooses to exercise the same. ... [S]uch clauses... [do] not compel initial action in the other court, or... require the dismissal or transfer of an action commenced in the courts of the Commonwealth.

Leasefirst v. Decot Bros., 1990 Mass.

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1991 Mass. App. Div. 110, 1991 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graphics-leasing-corp-v-y-weekly-massdistctapp-1991.