Jerez v. JD Closeouts, LLC

36 Misc. 3d 161
CourtNassau County District Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 Misc. 3d 161 (Jerez v. JD Closeouts, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nassau County District Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerez v. JD Closeouts, LLC, 36 Misc. 3d 161 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Michael A. Ciaffa, J.

Internet-related business transactions form a major part of our nation’s economy. According to U.S. Census Bureau statistics, http://www.census.gov/estats, “e-commerce” sales by “merchant wholesalers” in 2009 amounted to more than $1.2 trillion ($1,211,000,000,000).

Through the use of e-mails and Web sites, many formerly small local businesses now sell their goods worldwide. Thanks to the growth of sales over the World Wide Web, local merchants often have the opportunity to obtain wholesale merchandise at even greater discounts today, from businesses throughout the world.

When e-commerce transactions go smoothly, both parties benefit. But when disputes arise, the parties typically seek a judicial resolution.

Plaintiffs bringing such cases against e-commerce merchants typically want their claims heard in a local court. Defendants, in turn, typically want to litigate all matters in a single chosen forum. This case fits the same pattern. Plaintiff, Guillermo [163]*163Jerez, a Nassau County resident, brought suit in Nassau County District Court against two Florida corporations, JD Closeouts, LLC and JD Closeouts.com, Inc., seeking a refund of monies paid ($7,146) for the purchase and shipping of certain “closeout” merchandise (thousands of pairs of tube socks). Through e-mails and advertisements on their Web site, http://jdcloseouts.com, defendants sell such “closeout” merchandise all across the United States.

Defendants contend that this lawsuit should have been brought in Florida, not New York. In so arguing, they seek dismissal of the action on the ground that “a valid and enforceable forum selection clause requires jurisdiction of any disputes in Broward County, Florida.”

As demonstrated below, forum selection clauses are presumptively enforceable. They provide a predictable and important means for the orderly and consistent adjudication of disputes between merchants and their customers. However, before a forum selection clause can be deemed binding, it must somehow be incorporated into a contract or agreement between the parties.

When e-commerce transactions are involved, the same general rules apply, with a twist. Under an evolving and still-developing body of federal and state law, an e-commerce merchant can condition its sales upon a mandatory forum selection provision through various means, including an exchange of e-mails, a click-through agreement, or other circumstances allowing for the “incorporation by reference” of conspicuous “terms of sale.” But if the “terms of sale” are simply buried or “submerged” in multiple layers of Web site pages, and such terms are not specifically brought to the buyer’s attention, the “forum selection” clause will not be deemed part of the parties’ agreement. As a consequence, as long as the forum selected by the buyer is a proper one under established rules of “long-arm jurisdiction,” the action will not be dismissed simply because the “terms of sale” listed on the seller’s Web site purportedly limit the buyer’s remedies to a lawsuit in a different forum.

Facts

Defendants sell “closeout” merchandise over the Internet. This action allegedly “arises from a sale of goods between the parties over the internet” (see affirmation of Meyer Y. Silber in support of defendants’ motion ¶ 3). According to plaintiff’s complaint, he received an e-mail solicitation from defendants in [164]*164August 2010, offering for sale 50,000 pairs of white tube socks (complaint ¶ 14). Defendants’ Web site represented that its closeout merchandise “should all be first quality . . . excess inventory” from “[n]ame-brand companies” (complaint ¶ 16). Based upon that Web site representation, plaintiff alleges that it agreed to purchase 50,000 pairs of tube socks from defendants for an agreed price of $6,000, plus $1,146 in shipping costs (complaint ¶¶ 17, 19).

Upon inspection of the tube socks following delivery, plaintiff asserts that it determined that the socks “were defective,” were not “first quality,” and “in fact are useless and unsellable” (complaint ¶¶ 20, 23). In addition, plaintiff alleges that only 34,800 pairs, rather than 50,000 pairs, were delivered (complaint 1121).

Plaintiff “repeatedly” demanded return of the money paid for the socks, together with shipping costs (complaint ¶ 22). Defendants allegedly “refused to refund the payments or accept the return of the defective merchandise” (complaint ¶ 22).

Plaintiffs complaint asserts a facially sufficient factual basis for long-arm jurisdiction over defendants (see CPLR 302 [a]), through allegations (complaint ¶¶ 5-8) that JD Closeouts (i) regularly solicits and transacts business with customers in the State of New York, (ii) regularly ships merchandise from other states into the State of New York, and (iii) earns significant income from selling goods to residents of the State of New York. Defendants do not contest any of these allegations. Nor do they contest jurisdiction of the District Court under the more limited long-arm rules of UDCA 404 (a).

Through a timely motion to dismiss, made pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a), defendants seek dismissal of plaintiff’s entire case, principally on the ground that “a valid and enforceable forum selection clause requires jurisdiction of any disputes in Broward County, Florida.” In support of the motion, defendants submit an affidavit from their principal owner, Joseph Beyhan. He asserts:

“The sale of all goods transacted on the JD Closeouts website is conditioned by the ‘Terms of Sale.’
“The website contains the ‘Terms of Sale’ on its ‘About Us’ page.
“The ‘Terms of Sale’ has a hyperlink that directs the viewer to the terms of all sales, including disclosures, return policy and legal policy.
“That page titled ‘Sale Terms’ states that ‘[i]n the [165]*165event that an irresolvable situation arises, any litigation will take place in Broward County, in the State of Florida.’
“JD Closeout’s legal policy is clear and unambiguous and available to anyone who views its website.
“The forum selection clause is extremely important for JD Closeouts, so that it is not made subject to lawsuits in every potential jurisdiction in the United States.”

Plaintiff opposes the motion, contending that the “forum selection” provision found on defendants’ Web site “is not part of the contract between the parties.” Plaintiff thus asserts that he has “never seen this language before, and . . . never saw it” when he agreed to purchase tube socks from defendants. As his attorney further maintains, the language invoked by defendants is not a true “forum selection clause.” “[I]t is simply language buried in the defendant’s website that is very difficult to find.”

Defendants’ reply includes a second affidavit from Joseph Beyhan. In his view, it would be “unconscionable” to make JD Closeouts subject to jurisdiction in “every state in every county in the country.” The forum selection provision on the Web site “is an absolute necessity” to defendants’ business. Since JD Closeouts “is not a huge company,” it cannot afford to have its officers “spend time away” defending lawsuits outside of Bro-ward County, Florida.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Misc. 3d 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerez-v-jd-closeouts-llc-nydistctnassau-2012.