Jet Wine & Spirits, Inc. v. Bacardi & Co.

298 F.3d 1, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 14466, 2002 WL 1544370
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 2002
Docket01-2481
StatusPublished
Cited by143 cases

This text of 298 F.3d 1 (Jet Wine & Spirits, Inc. v. Bacardi & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jet Wine & Spirits, Inc. v. Bacardi & Co., 298 F.3d 1, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 14466, 2002 WL 1544370 (1st Cir. 2002).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

This case raises the issue of the exercise of personal jurisdiction by a federal district court over an international corporation that has been allocated certain responsibilities within a complex corporate family. Jet Wine & Spirits, a broker of alcoholic beverages in New Hampshire, appeals the dismissal, for lack of personal jurisdiction, of its action based on state contract and tort law against Bacardi & Company (BACO), an owner of various trademarks and intellectual property related to internationally sold alcoholic beverages.

BACO owns several brands of Dewar’s Scotch and Bombay Gin, which it acquired from Diageo, which had a relationship with Jet Wine. Jet Wine had previously distributed Dewar’s in several New England states, including Néw Hampshire, and Bombay in Maine. As distributor, Jet Wine had been party to a contract with subsidiaries of the companies that merged to form Diageo. ' After BACO’s acquisition of the brands, a corporate cousin of BACO terminated Jet Wine as distributor. Jet Wine then sued a number of members of the Bacardi corporate family on several theories. In this appeal, only its claims against BACO are at issue. Jet Wine says that BACO assumed Diageo’s contractual obligations to Jet Wine and then reached into New Hampshire (among other states) to violate the contract terms and disrupt Jet Wine’s various protected interests. BACO says it has nothing to do with New *4 Hampshire, and, for that matter, nothing to do with Jet Wine’s contract. We conclude that whatever the ultimate merits of Jet Wine’s substantive claims, there is ' enough of a prima facie showing to support the exercise of personal jurisdiction, and reverse.

I.

We first describe the facts as we take them for the purpose of this appeal. As we discuss, in more detail in Part III, the facts of the case are at present merely Jet Wine’s allegations so far as evidence supports them after preliminary jurisdictional discovery, supplemented by BACO’s uncontested allegations.

Jet Wine is a New Hampshire corporation that does business in New Hampshire and is owned by the Martignetti Corporation, itself a Massachusetts corporation. New Hampshire directly controls all sales of alcohol in the state through its State Liquor Commission, and Jet Wine is licensed to sell to the Commission. In 1996 and 1997, Jet Wine signed several con-trad» with Schieffelin & Somerset Co. by which it became Schieffelin’s exclusive distributor in New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine for various alcoholic beverages, including the White Label and Ancestor brands of Dewar’s Scotch. The arrangements were to last until the end of .1999, and after that could be terminated by either party on thirty days’ notice. Each contained a clause stating that “[t]he parties hereby consent and submit to the personal jurisdiction of the United States District Courts within the State of New York.” Jet Wine also alleges an agreement with Carillon Importers, by which it became Carillon’s representative in Maine for Bombay Gin for an indefinite period.

BACO is a Liechtenstein corporation with its primary place of business in the Bahamas. It is wholly owned by Bacardi International Limited (BIL). BIL is in turn almost wholly owned (99.88%) by Bacardi Limited (BL), a Bermuda corporation with its primary place of business in Bermuda. BL also wholly owns Bacardi U.S.A. (BUSA), 1 a Delaware corporation with its primary place of business in Florida. BL serves as a holding company for the various other Bacardi corporations. BACO owns various trademarks and other intellectual property related to the sale of alcoholic beverages. BUSA imports alcoholic beverages into, and distributes them in, the United States. There is some overlap of officers and directors among the corporations: BACO’s President is among BL’s directors, the Chairman of BIL’s Board of Directors is a Senior Vice President of BL, one of BACO’s Vice Presidents is also a Vice President of BL, and the Chairman of BUSA’s Board was among BL’s alternate directors when the complaint was filed.

BACO does no business directly in New Hampshire, except possibly through its web site, as described below. The parties dispute whether BACO- does business there through an agent, as discussed in Part III. of this opinion. BACO owns an internet domain name, bacardi.com, that corresponds to a site on the World Wide Web at http://www.bacardi.com. It also owns clubbacardi.com, for which no Web site presently exists. From November 1998 to September 1999, http://www.bacar-di.com sold some Bacardi promotional items (clothing and keychains, not alcohol), including two sales to New Hampshire addresses for a total of $30.75. This money *5 went to National Corporate Services Unlimited, an unrelated company that buys merchandise from BUSA and sells it over the Web site. BACO also owns de-wars.com, dewarsscotch.com, and bombay-sapphire.com, each of which corresponds to a Web site. Jet Wine has shown no sales from those Web sites in New Hampshire. BACO owns one trademark, “Havana Club,” that is registered in New Hampshire.

Schieffelin, Jet Wine’s former source for Dewar’s, was a subsidiary of Guinness. Carrillon, Jet Wine’s former source for Bombay, was a subsidiary of Grand Metropolitan. In 1997, Guinness and Grand Metropolitan began negotiating a merger that eventually produced Diageo. The merger encountered opposition from the Federal Trade Commission, which demanded that Diageo sell some of its operations to preserve competition that the merger would otherwise eliminate. Among those operations were Dewar’s and Bombay. On March 27, 1998, BL’s CEO, acting for BACO and for William Lawson Distillers (another subsidiary of BL), signed two Asset Purchase Agreements with Diageo for assets related to the Dewar’s and Bombay brands. BACO agreed “[o]n the terms and subject to the conditions set forth [in the Agreements] ... to assume and discharge or perform when due all Assumed Liabilities.” “Assumed Liabilities” as defined in the Dewar’s Agreement include

all liabilities and obligations that arise out of or relate to the Transferred Assets (including under any Contract) [or] the Dewar’s Business ... to the extent attributable to occurrences and circumstances arising on or following the Closing, including any obligations to deliver finished ease goods following the Closing under purchase orders of, or commitments to, Persons other than Affiliates of Seller.

“Contract” is defined by reference to a schedule attached to the Agreement, which does not mention Jet Wine or New Hampshire, and in addition to include “comparable agreements ... with respect to any markets other than the Major Markets ... that are solely related to Dewar’s.” The United States is among the “Major Markets,” and Jet Wine’s agreement with Schieffelin was not solely related to Dewar’s. Another schedule, listing distributors for Dewar’s, does mention Jet Wine as the relevant New Hampshire Distributor.

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Bluebook (online)
298 F.3d 1, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 14466, 2002 WL 1544370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jet-wine-spirits-inc-v-bacardi-co-ca1-2002.