Jhirmack Enterprises, Inc. v. Superior Court

96 Cal. App. 3d 715, 158 Cal. Rptr. 192, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2111
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 5, 1979
DocketCiv. 55939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 96 Cal. App. 3d 715 (Jhirmack Enterprises, Inc. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jhirmack Enterprises, Inc. v. Superior Court, 96 Cal. App. 3d 715, 158 Cal. Rptr. 192, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2111 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

KINGSLEY, J.

Pursuant to section 400 of the Code of Civil Procedure, petitioner seeks review of an order of respondent court, denying its motion for change of venue. We grant the peremptory writ.

Petitioner is a California corporation, with its residence in Shasta County. The real party in interest, and two individuals who are stockholders in it, brought suit in Santa Barbara County against petitioner. The complaint alleges in its first cause of action, a breach by petitioner of a distributorship agreement; in its second cause of action the tort of interference with contractual obligations and in the third cause of action, the tort of interference with prospective economic advantage. The fourth cause of action seeks reformation of the distributorship agreement and the fifth cause of action seeks an injunction restraining petitioner from continuing its breach and interference with contractual obligations and prospective economic advantages. 1

In the complaint, which has not been answered, the following relevant facts are alleged:

(a) In 1972, the two individual plaintiffs entered into an exclusive distributorship agreement with the petitioner (Enterprises), which provided that these plaintiffs were to purchase from Enterprises certain products—“f.o.b. . . . Redding or at such other place as Distributor shall select from time to time”—which products plaintiffs would then distribute in a specified territory which was extended in 1974 to include Santa Barbara County and Ventura County. The defendant corporation had its principal place of business in Shasta County at all times up to and including the filing of the complaint. The complaint does not allege where the agreement was entered into or was to be performed.
(b) In 1975, the defendant entered into an amended agreement with the individual plaintiffs which altered the term of the 1972 agreement from the original 20 years to an indefinite period. In 1976, the defendant *718 entered into another successor agreement with the corporate plaintiff, Associates (which corporation had apparently been formed in the interim by the individual plaintiffs to carry on the expanding business), which substituted Associates as the distributor in place of the individual plaintiffs. The 1976 agreement decreased the term of the distributorship to 1 year, thereafter subject to termination by either party at will upon 30 days’ written notice. The parties performed under these contracts from 1972 to 1979, and Associates was successful in creating a local market for its products in the Santa Barbara County area.
(c) The agreement was breached by the petitioner in Santa Barbara County when an officer of Associates read, in that county, a letter dated January 26, 1979, mailed from defendant’s officer in Shasta County to Associates’ officer in Santa Barbara. The letter informed Associates that the distributorship was canceled as of that date and that Associates had no authorization to distribute Enterprises’ products. The complaint also alleges that the refusal by Enterprises to supply products, at Santa Barbara, constituted a breach in that county.
(d) On or about January 26, 1979, Enterprises notified all subdistributors with which Associates had contractual relations in the distributorship territory that Associates was as of that date no longer the authorized area distributor of Enterprises’ products and that the subdistributors were offered distributorships for their areas. Enterprises also notified the “ultimate customers” of Associates, retailers in the area, by form letter and by telephone that Associates was no longer the authorized area distributor and that Enterprises’ products could, as of January 26, 1979, only be purchased directly from Enterprises.
(e) The complaint further alleges that the breach of contract (first cause) and the intentional interference with prospective economic advantage (third cause) were done with the personal motive of injuring the plaintiffs’ business in Santa Barbara County.
(f) The complaint alleges (fourth cause) that the term of the distributorship agreement was lessened from 20 years to only 1 year by the fraud and economic duress practiced by the defendant on the plaintiffs. In essence, plaintiffs allege that defendant lied as to the nature of the changes contained in the 1975 and 1976 agreements and intentionally failed to disclose to them that these agreements modified the original term of the distributorship.

*719 The petitioner, by declarations and reference to the distributorship agreements incorporated in the complaint by reference, alleges that Shasta County is the proper venue as to the contract causes of action (first and fourth), as that is where the contract was entered into, where the contract was to be performed and where the obligation arose, where the contract was allegedly breached, and where the petitioner’s corporate residence is located.

The petitioner does not dispute that venue is properly laid in Santa Barbara County as concerns the causes of action in tort for interference with contractual obligation, interference with prospective economic advantage, fraud, and economic duress.

The trial court ruled that the contract was entered into, was to be performed in, and was breached in Shasta County, and that venue as to the causes for breach of contract was proper only in that county. It ruled that as to the causes stated in tort, venue was properly laid in Santa Barbara County.

Solely because the defendant is a corporation, however, the court ruled that Code of Civil Procedure section 395.5 and Karson Industries, Inc. v. Superior Court (1969) 273 Cal.App.2d 7, 10 [77 Cal.Rptr. 714], required that the defendant negate the propriety of venue in Santa Barbara County “on all possible grounds” to be entitled to a change of venue of the action. The court interpreted this language to mean that venue as to all causes stated must be improper as laid.

The question of first priority is whether corporate defendant’s rights are to be treated differently from those of an individual defendant in a multiple cause of action case by requiring the corporate defendant to show that venue as laid is improper in the forum as to all causes of action while an individual defendant need show only that venue is improper as to any one cause of action.

If, as the real party in interest (Associates) contends, a corporate defendant in a multiple cause of action case must negate the ‘propriety of venue as laid on all possible grounds” as to all causes of action stated, then the showing that the tort causes of action (interference with contract obligations, interference with prospective economic advantage, fraud, and economic duress) are properly laid in Santa Barbara County where the liability (injury) occurs, is sufficient to defeat petitioner’s request for *720 transfer and eliminates the necessity of determining the propriety of venue as laid concerning the contract causes of action (first and fourth).

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Bluebook (online)
96 Cal. App. 3d 715, 158 Cal. Rptr. 192, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jhirmack-enterprises-inc-v-superior-court-calctapp-1979.