OPINION and ORDER
(JURISDICTION OVER BAXTER INTERNATIONAL)
POINTER, Chief Judge.
Under submission, after appropriate discovery, extensive briefing, and oral argument, is the motion by Baxter International Inc. (“BII”)
to be dismissed from thousands of cases in this MDL proceeding for lack of personal jurisdiction. BII, a publicly-owned holding company incorporated in Delaware, asserts that — unlike its wholly-owned subsidiary Baxter Healthcare Corporation (“Baxter
Healthcare”), also a defendant in these cases — it is subject to personal jurisdiction in only a few states.
The court concludes that BII is subject to suit throughout the United States as a consequence of its November 1985 merger with American Hospital Supply Corporation (“AHSC”), and accordingly denies BII’s motion.
The critical facts are undisputed. For a number of years before 1984, AHSC, an Illinois corporation — or one of its subsidiaries
— had been engaged in the manufacture and distribution of mammary prostheses. In March 1984, AHSC sold most of the assets constituting its breast implant line of business to a third-party, Mentor Corporation, and thereupon ceased further manufacture or distribution of mammary prostheses. Under the contract, Mentor agreed to be responsible for liabilities that might arise in connection with the distribution of mammary prostheses that had not yet become finished products, while AHSC agreed to be responsible for product liability claims that had arisen or might arise as a result of earlier prostheses.
Twenty months later, on November 25, 1985, BII and AHSC effected a corporate merger under Delaware law. BII was the surviving corporation, and the former shareholders of AHSC received various combinations of BII common and preferred stock. BII does not deny that, immediately before the merger, AHSC was, as a result of extensive business activities, subject to suit throughout the United States. It denies, however, that the merger rendered it similarly subject to the jurisdiction of those courts. BII’s position is based on the fact that, as a planned and integral part of the transaction with AHSC, all of the breast implant liabilities
that accompanied AHSC into the surviving corporation were, immediately upon consummation of the merger, assumed by a BII subsidiary, a company which ultimately became part of Baxter Healthcare.
According to BII, its operating subsidiary Baxter Healthcare — and not itself, a mere holding company — is the corporation that
should be held responsible for any breast implant liability claims against AHSC and subject to suit where AHSC could have been sued. (1) BII does not challenge the general principle that the corporation surviving after a merger is subject to all responsibilities of each of the merging corporations. (2) Nor does it challenge the general principle that the assumption of one party’s liabilities by another, while potentially effective as between those parties, does not relieve the former of its responsibility to the third-party claimants. (3) BII’s thesis, based on analogies found in certain tax cases, is that a merger followed by an immediate assignment and assumption of liabilities should be viewed as a whole transaction, independent of its separate steps, and that accordingly third-party claimants should be permitted to look only to the company ultimately agreeing to be responsible for those liabilities.
I.
The general principles governing statutory mergers are discussed in 15 FletoheR Cyc. Corp., chapter 44 (Perm. ed.). As stated in § 7082:
When corporations merge, the surviving corporation succeeds to both the rights and obligations of the constituent corporations .... Once a corporate merger has been completed, the absorbed corporation immediately ceases to exist as a separate entity, and may no longer be named a party in litigation. As a general proposition, actions and conduct of a constituent corporation may be attributed to the surviving corporation for purposes of determining the surviving corporation’s amenability to personal jurisdiction for liabilities incurred by the constituent corporation.
Paragraph 1.2 of the merger agreement between BII and AHSC contains a specific recognition of these principles:
Effect of Merger.
The Surviving Corporation [BII] shall succeed to all of the rights, privileges, powers and franchises, as well of a public as of a private nature, of the Constituent Corporations [BII and AHSC], all of the properties and assets of the Constituent Corporations and all of the debts, choses in action and other interests due or belonging to Constituent Corporations and shall be subject to, and responsible for, all of the debts, liabilities and duties of the Constituent Corporations with the effect set forth under applicable law.
The laws of Delaware, under which this merger was consummated, are consistent with these general principles and validate, if not require, the terms of the merger agreement. According to 8 Del.C. § 259(a):
When any merger ... shall have become effective ... the constituent corporations shall become a new corporation, ... being subject to all the restrictions, disabilities and duties of each of such corporations so merged ... and ... all rights of creditors ... of any of said constituent corporations shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts, liabilities and duties of the respective constituent corporations shall thenceforth attach to said surviving or resulting corporation, and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if said debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or contracted by it.
As noted, BII does not challenge the proposition that, had AHSC’s breast implant assets and liabilities never been assigned to BII’s subsidiary, it would, as a result of the merger, have been responsible for these liabilities and subject to suit wherever AHSC could have been sued.
Perhaps because this principle is so fundamental to the law of corporate mergers, few reported decisions address the issue of personal jurisdiction over a surviving corporation following a merger. Most directly on point is
Goffe v. Blake,
605 F.Supp. 1151 (D.Del.1985). In deciding where it could transfer a case under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1404 and 1406, the court held that, following a merger under Delaware law, the surviving corporation was subject to suit in any jurisdiction where one of the merging corporations could have been sued. It distinguished an older Delaware state court decision containing arguably contrary dicta,
and noted that its
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OPINION and ORDER
(JURISDICTION OVER BAXTER INTERNATIONAL)
POINTER, Chief Judge.
Under submission, after appropriate discovery, extensive briefing, and oral argument, is the motion by Baxter International Inc. (“BII”)
to be dismissed from thousands of cases in this MDL proceeding for lack of personal jurisdiction. BII, a publicly-owned holding company incorporated in Delaware, asserts that — unlike its wholly-owned subsidiary Baxter Healthcare Corporation (“Baxter
Healthcare”), also a defendant in these cases — it is subject to personal jurisdiction in only a few states.
The court concludes that BII is subject to suit throughout the United States as a consequence of its November 1985 merger with American Hospital Supply Corporation (“AHSC”), and accordingly denies BII’s motion.
The critical facts are undisputed. For a number of years before 1984, AHSC, an Illinois corporation — or one of its subsidiaries
— had been engaged in the manufacture and distribution of mammary prostheses. In March 1984, AHSC sold most of the assets constituting its breast implant line of business to a third-party, Mentor Corporation, and thereupon ceased further manufacture or distribution of mammary prostheses. Under the contract, Mentor agreed to be responsible for liabilities that might arise in connection with the distribution of mammary prostheses that had not yet become finished products, while AHSC agreed to be responsible for product liability claims that had arisen or might arise as a result of earlier prostheses.
Twenty months later, on November 25, 1985, BII and AHSC effected a corporate merger under Delaware law. BII was the surviving corporation, and the former shareholders of AHSC received various combinations of BII common and preferred stock. BII does not deny that, immediately before the merger, AHSC was, as a result of extensive business activities, subject to suit throughout the United States. It denies, however, that the merger rendered it similarly subject to the jurisdiction of those courts. BII’s position is based on the fact that, as a planned and integral part of the transaction with AHSC, all of the breast implant liabilities
that accompanied AHSC into the surviving corporation were, immediately upon consummation of the merger, assumed by a BII subsidiary, a company which ultimately became part of Baxter Healthcare.
According to BII, its operating subsidiary Baxter Healthcare — and not itself, a mere holding company — is the corporation that
should be held responsible for any breast implant liability claims against AHSC and subject to suit where AHSC could have been sued. (1) BII does not challenge the general principle that the corporation surviving after a merger is subject to all responsibilities of each of the merging corporations. (2) Nor does it challenge the general principle that the assumption of one party’s liabilities by another, while potentially effective as between those parties, does not relieve the former of its responsibility to the third-party claimants. (3) BII’s thesis, based on analogies found in certain tax cases, is that a merger followed by an immediate assignment and assumption of liabilities should be viewed as a whole transaction, independent of its separate steps, and that accordingly third-party claimants should be permitted to look only to the company ultimately agreeing to be responsible for those liabilities.
I.
The general principles governing statutory mergers are discussed in 15 FletoheR Cyc. Corp., chapter 44 (Perm. ed.). As stated in § 7082:
When corporations merge, the surviving corporation succeeds to both the rights and obligations of the constituent corporations .... Once a corporate merger has been completed, the absorbed corporation immediately ceases to exist as a separate entity, and may no longer be named a party in litigation. As a general proposition, actions and conduct of a constituent corporation may be attributed to the surviving corporation for purposes of determining the surviving corporation’s amenability to personal jurisdiction for liabilities incurred by the constituent corporation.
Paragraph 1.2 of the merger agreement between BII and AHSC contains a specific recognition of these principles:
Effect of Merger.
The Surviving Corporation [BII] shall succeed to all of the rights, privileges, powers and franchises, as well of a public as of a private nature, of the Constituent Corporations [BII and AHSC], all of the properties and assets of the Constituent Corporations and all of the debts, choses in action and other interests due or belonging to Constituent Corporations and shall be subject to, and responsible for, all of the debts, liabilities and duties of the Constituent Corporations with the effect set forth under applicable law.
The laws of Delaware, under which this merger was consummated, are consistent with these general principles and validate, if not require, the terms of the merger agreement. According to 8 Del.C. § 259(a):
When any merger ... shall have become effective ... the constituent corporations shall become a new corporation, ... being subject to all the restrictions, disabilities and duties of each of such corporations so merged ... and ... all rights of creditors ... of any of said constituent corporations shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts, liabilities and duties of the respective constituent corporations shall thenceforth attach to said surviving or resulting corporation, and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if said debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or contracted by it.
As noted, BII does not challenge the proposition that, had AHSC’s breast implant assets and liabilities never been assigned to BII’s subsidiary, it would, as a result of the merger, have been responsible for these liabilities and subject to suit wherever AHSC could have been sued.
Perhaps because this principle is so fundamental to the law of corporate mergers, few reported decisions address the issue of personal jurisdiction over a surviving corporation following a merger. Most directly on point is
Goffe v. Blake,
605 F.Supp. 1151 (D.Del.1985). In deciding where it could transfer a case under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1404 and 1406, the court held that, following a merger under Delaware law, the surviving corporation was subject to suit in any jurisdiction where one of the merging corporations could have been sued. It distinguished an older Delaware state court decision containing arguably contrary dicta,
and noted that its
interpretation of § 259(a) of the Delaware Corporation Law was not inconsistent with § 252(d) of that Law.
Goffe
cited two district court decisions
and
Duris v. Erato Shipping, Inc.,
684 F.2d 352 (6th Cir.1982). In
Duris,
the Sixth Circuit had reversed a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction in a case involving Ohio law and held that the contacts with the state by one corporation sufficed to establish jurisdiction over a corporation into which it subsequently merged. In reviewing, and affirming,
Duris
on another issue in the case, the Supreme Court did not question this jurisdictional ruling.
Pallas Shipping Agency Ltd. v. Duris,
461 U.S. 529, 103 S.Ct. 1991, 76 L.Ed.2d 120 (1983).
This court has not found any case involving an actual merger of corporations (as distinguished from a transfer of assets, assumption of liabilities, or guarantee) in which the surviving corporation was permitted to escape jurisdiction in a state where one of the merging corporations had been subject to suit. Therefore, as a result of its merger with AHSC, BII became subject to suit wherever AHSC could have been sued unless some different result flows from the assumption of liabilities by its subsidiary.
II.
It is beyond dispute that one company’s transfer of assets to another under circumstances resulting in the transferee’s becoming responsible for tort liabilities to third-parties — as upon an express agreement to assume such liabilities — does not, as to the third-parties, relieve the transferor of those same responsibilities. As stated in 15 FletoheR Cyc. CORP. § 7123 (Perm, ed.):
Although the sale of assets may allow an injured plaintiff to proceed against the successor corporation it does not vitiate the original company’s liability. The right of the injured party to elect to proceed against the defunct corporation, the successor corporation, or both cannot be altered per se by the corporations, although the corporations can regulate how much liability will be allocated among themselves.
See, e.g., Grant-Howard Associates v. General Housewares Corp.,
63 N.Y.2d 291, 482 N.Y.S.2d 225, 472 N.E.2d 1 (1984);
Haynes v. Kleinewefers & Lembo Corp.,
921 F.2d 453 (2nd Cir.1990).
BII does not challenge the proposition that, if properly treated as having become responsible for AHSC’s liabilities, it could not have escaped those liabilities by having them assumed by its subsidiary. As it acknowledged in footnote 6 of its reply brief (p. 14), “BII’s point is not that plaintiffs cannot sue [AHSC] as well as [Baxter Healthcare]; it is, instead, that BII, which did not hold the contractual liability for silicone breast implants, is not a proper party in these product liability actions.”
III.
BII contends that, given the integrated nature of the merger and the immediate assignment and assumption, one should, as in tax cases, disregard the form and consequences of the intermediate steps and, look
ing to the net substantive effect, treat the transaction as if AHSC had merged into Baxter Healthcare rather than into BII.
The court rejects this attempt to define corporate responsibilities to third-persons by-borrowing concepts developed under the Internal Revenue Code. Even if otherwise persuasive, however, this argument would fail on the particular facts of the present motion for an independent reason; namely, because not all of AHSC’s assets and liabilities were transferred to Baxter Healthcare. Under the assignment and assumption agreement, some of AHSC’s assets were transferred to two other subsidiaries of BII, while still other of AHSC’s assets and liabilities
were retained by BII. The court need not address whether the particular assets and liabilities assigned to various subsidiaries or retained by the parent actually resulted in an underfunding of those liabilities assumed by Baxter Healthcare. The point, rather, is that acceptance of BII’s argument would permit a company surviving a merger to impair, if not destroy, the rights of creditors of the merging corporations by the simple device of contemporaneously assigning particular assets and liabilities to subsidiaries. Such a result would clearly contravene statutory mandates, such as found in 8 Del.C. § 259(a), that “all rights of creditors ... shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts, liabilities and duties shall thenceforth attach to said surviving ... corporation, and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if said debts, liabilities, and duties had been incurred or contracted by it.”
BII correctly asserts that, when measuring the tax consequences upon corporations and stockholders affected by inter-corporate transfers and reorganizations, courts have often considered the substance of transactions to be more significant than their form, utilizing on occasion what has been described as a “step-transaction” analysis. The principal case cited by BII for this proposition is
Commissioner v. Clark,
489 U.S. 726, 109 S.Ct. 1455, 103 L.Ed.2d 753 (1989).
Clark
involved a “triangular merger,” in which Basin Surveys, Inc. merged into a subsidiary of N.L. Industries in exchange for both stock in N.L. Industries and cash. The controversy involved whether Basin’s sole stockholder should be taxed on the cash (or “boot”) at capital gain rates or, in part, at the higher rates for ordinary income. The key to that determination depended on various sections of the Internal Revenue Code which recognize various forms of corporate reorganizations, and particularly whether the exchange had “the effect” of a dividend. It was in this context that the Supreme Court discussed the need to consider each of the steps, not in isolation, but as interrelated, in order to determine the economic significance of the entire transaction.
Nothing in
Clark
suggests that, even in cases involving tax statutes, the Supreme Court was holding that the legal consequence of steps taken during a corporate merger and reorganization should be disregarded. Indeed, the Court would not have been confronted with the issue before it but for the acknowledgement by the parties that the three-party arrangement conformed to the requirements of law of both a statutory merger under I.R.C. § 368(a)(1)(A) and a special form of reorganization recognized under I.R.C. § 368(a)(2)(D).
If anything, the facts involved in the
Clark
case provide insight into how — if BII was to be insulated from the liabilities of AHSC— that could have been achieved. The 1985 merger could presumably have been structured, like that in
Clark,
so that AHSC was merged into BII’s subsidiary rather than into BH itself, but with BII stock being distributed as consideration for the AHSC stock. If that had been done, this court would not now be making the ruling contained in this opinion. No doubt there were reasons for not selecting that type of merger — perhaps be
cause of the desire to transfer some AHSC assets to other BII subsidiaries or to keep some of AHSC’s assets and liabilities in BII.
In any event, BII should not now be heard to complain about the legal consequences resulting from a series of transactions it agreed to, if not dictated.
In a supplemental brief, BII has cited some eases
in which courts have looked beyond the formalities of the devices used to effect a corporate reorganization in deciding whether, in fairness to creditors, to
impose
liability on a “successor” corporation following a transfer of assets where there was no merger. These cases might be appropriate if the issue were whether to impose some liability on Baxter Healthcare that it had not agreed to assume.
No case, however, has been cited or independently located by the court that supports BII’s contention that, by immediately transferring assets or liabilities, a surviving corporation can escape from its legal responsibilities resulting from a statutory merger. Contrary to BII’s argument,
La Chemise Lacoste v. General Mills, Inc.,
53 F.R.D. 596 (D.Del.1971), does not provide such support. There is a factual similarity, for in
Lacoste
there had been a statutory merger of “Crystal II” into General Mills with a simultaneous transfer of Crystal II’s assets and liabilities to General Mills’ wholly-owned subsidiary “Crystal III.”
At this point, however, any similarities end. Although the court dismissed General Mills from the law suit, the reason for dismissal was not that General Mills had no responsibility for the obligations of Crystal II. Rather, the ruling was based on the fact that neither General Mills nor Crystal III — which had been added as additional parties in plaintiffs reply to a counterclaim by the original defendant, “Alligator,” also a General Mills subsidiary — was a proper party to the dispute between plaintiff and Alligator. There is nothing in
Lacoste
to suggest that, had some claim against Crystal II been appropriate for inclusion in the litigation, General Mills or Crystal III would have been dismissed.
IV.
For the reasons stated, the motion of Baxter International Inc. to dismiss is hereby DENIED. This ruling applies in all eases in this court, now pending or subsequently filed or transferred, to which the motion applies.