Jackson v. Fie Corp.

302 F.3d 515, 2002 WL 1904438
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2002
Docket01-30679
StatusPublished
Cited by178 cases

This text of 302 F.3d 515 (Jackson v. Fie Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Fie Corp., 302 F.3d 515, 2002 WL 1904438 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal turns on whether a defendant that knowingly suffers a default judgment to be rendered against it may thereafter employ Rule 60(b)(4) to contest a factual finding that was vital to both (1) the rendering court’s specific personal jurisdiction — here, as a putative minimum contact with the forum state — and (2) the merits of the default judgment — here, as proof that the defendant manufactured the offending product in this product-liability suit. We conclude, apparently for the first time in this Circuit, that when a court rendering a default judgment makes a factual finding that has that kind of dual significance, such a finding has no preclu-sive effect in a subsequent Rule 60(b)(4) challenge to personal jurisdiction. Put differently, despite the importance of such a factual finding to the merits of the default judgment, the finding’s jurisdictional significance remains amenable to attack under Rule 60(b)(4). In the instant case, the district court’s refusal to permit such a challenge constituted legal error, leaving us no choice but to vacate and remand.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The Default Judgment

In May 1992, while moving into his new home in New Orleans, Plaintiff-Appellee Arnold Jackson accidentally dropped an envelope that contained a loaded but un-cocked .25 caliber pistol. The pistol discharged, firing a bullet that struck Jackson in the neck, severing his spinal cord and rendering him a permanent quadriplegic.

Jackson, together with his wife and son, Plaintiffs-Appellees Linda Jackson and Brian Jackson, brought suit in Louisiana state court against parties that he alleged were responsible for, inter alia, manufacturing the pistol and its component parts, ‘namely Defendant-Appellant Fratelli Tan-foglio di Tanfoglio Bortolo & C.S.nx. (hereafter, “Fratelli Tanfoglio” 1 ), an Italian firearms manufacturer; and two other, confusingly-named Italian firearms firms, Fabrica D’Armi di Tanfoglio Giuseppe, S.r.l. (hereafter, “Tanfoglio Giuseppe”), and Giuseppe Tanfoglio, S.p.a. Whether *519 these three firms (collectively, the “Tan-foglio firms”) were truly independent of each other at all times relevant to this action is disputed, but the record suggests that Fratelli Tanfoglio was founded by the children of the founder of Tanfoglio Giuseppe.

Whatever their degree of corporate interrelationship, none of the Tanfoglio firms chose to make an appearance in this case, either before or after another defendant removed it to federal court. Over time, the defendants that did make appearances were dismissed, 2 leaving the three absent Tanfoglio firms as the only defendants.

The Jacksons filed for a default judgment against the Tanfoglio firms. After an intervening appeal, the district court held several days of hearings, taking testimony from the Jacksons and their expert witnesses in medicine and economics. Also in evidence was the deposition of Lama S. Martin, the Jacksons’ firearms expert. Martin testified that the design of the pistol was unsafe; specifically, that it was obsolete in ignoring specified principles of gun design and safety that had been established for a century. Hence the proffered product defect: The pistol’s firing pin assertedly was too long, which caused the uncocked pistol to fire on impact when it was dropped.

Given this testimony, identification of the pistol’s manufacturer and distributor loomed large. The pistol itself bears the trademark of Firearms Import and Export Corporation, a Florida firm. The only record evidence identifying Fratelli Tanfoglio as the manufacturer of the pistol or any of its parts is a short passage from Martin’s deposition, when he answered a compound question:

Q. Now, Mr. Martin, have you had occasion to do some research and study in your reference materials as to the origin of this gun, the Tan-foglio and Giuseppe Tanfoglio [sic]?
A. I have, yes.
Q. And was this gun made by Giuseppe Tanfoglio and Fratelli Tanfoglio?
A. Yes, in — in their plant in Gardone, Italy.

On the strength of this testimony, and seemingly absent any further evidence linking any of the Tanfoglio firms to the pistol, the court entered a default judgment in the Jacksons’ favor, finding that the pistol had been “manufactured and distributed by the Italian defendants” and concluding that the Tanfoglio firms were liable under Louisiana’s product liability law. The district court also concluded that it had the jurisdictional power to bind the Tanfoglio firms to a judgment, noting that the Jacksons had properly served the Tan-foglio firms under both the Louisiana long-arm statute 3 and the Hague Service Convention. 4 The court did not, however, analyze whether personal jurisdiction of the *520 Tanfoglio firms otherwise comported with due process. 5

The court awarded the Jacksons $11.02 million in compensatory and special damages, plus interest and costs. No appeal was taken, so in March 1999, the district court declared the judgment to be final and executory.

B. The Rule 60(b)(4) Motion

In October 2000, nearly two years after the district court entered judgment, Fra-telli Tanfoglio, acting alone, filed in the district court a Rule 60(b)(4) motion to vacate judgment, contending that the default judgment was void ab initio because the court had lacked personal jurisdiction to enter judgment against that defendant.

At the heart of Fratelli Tanfoglio’s challenge to personal jurisdiction lies its assertion that it never manufactured .25 caliber pistols until 1993, well after Jackson’s injury occurred. That being so, argues Fra-telli Tanfoglio, it could not possibly have made Jackson’s pistol or any of its parts. Rather, this argument goes, the legally unrelated firm of Tanfoglio Giuseppe made the firing pin, and Tanfoglio Giuseppe is now defunct, having been properly liquidated and dissolved under Italian law. Therefore, reasons Fratelli Tanfoglio, it lacked the minimum contacts with Louisiana vis-á-vis this cause of action to support the court’s exercise of specific personal jurisdiction without violating due process. Fratelli Tanfoglio contends further that any contacts it may have had with Louisiana that were unrelated to this cause of action do not rise to the “continuous and systematic” level required before general personal jurisdiction can attach.

To prove these assertions in prosecuting its Rule 60(b)(4) motion in the district court, Fratelli Tanfoglio submitted several affidavits. It also sought to depose Jackson and his firearms expert and to engage in other discovery. Limited discovery of jurisdictional facts did occur, but the magistrate judge in charge appears to have regarded inquiry into the identity of the gun’s manufacturer as an impermissible attempt to reopen the merits of the default judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
302 F.3d 515, 2002 WL 1904438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-fie-corp-ca5-2002.