North Fork Shenandoah, Inc. v. Bunning

7 Va. Cir. 327, 1986 Va. Cir. LEXIS 156
CourtWarren County Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1986
DocketCase No. (Law) 7157
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Va. Cir. 327 (North Fork Shenandoah, Inc. v. Bunning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Warren County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Fork Shenandoah, Inc. v. Bunning, 7 Va. Cir. 327, 1986 Va. Cir. LEXIS 156 (Va. Super. Ct. 1986).

Opinion

By JUDGE HENRY H. WHITING

The Court must decide whether certain of the non-resident defendants are subject to service of process in Virginia.

The plaintiff, hereafter North Fork, had in its employ one William Bunning known to David Broderick, an employee of the defendant, hereafter Vacation, a California corporation, as a salesman and sales manager of vacation properties. Both North Fork and Vacation were engaged in the sale of vacation properties, and Vacation desired to employ a large number of salesmen to market some properties it proposed to develop in the Mid-west. Broderick's first contact for Vacation was a telephone call he made to Bunning in Virginia in January, 1984, seeking to hire him for Vacation, and the second contact was by a letter written in early February to Bunning (Tr., 19). Apparently for a period of about a month Mr. Bunning would not give a commitment but Broderick testified that:

[328]*328In fact, [he] advised us on or about March 14th that beginning the next — the following week, officially March 19th, that he was going to join the firm, give notice to [North Fork] and join our firm. That’s the first time that Mr. Bunning told me that he was going to join the company. (Tr., 20.)

Prior to March 14, 1984, Bunning solicited several other North Fork salesmen to join him at a recruiting meeting to be conducted by Vacation on that day in Illinois and advanced their air fare and hotel bills for the meeting. Although there was no prior expressed agreement proven that Vacation would reimburse Bunning for those advances prior to that recruitment meeting, when Bunning told Vacation he was leaving North Fork, Vacation agreed to reimburse him for not only his out-of-pocket expenses but also the air fare and hotel bills for others which Bunning had advanced. One of the salesmen (Dan Browning) solicited by Bunning, said in his affidavit that: "They would get [his wife] a ticket also." (Emphasis added.) I infer "they" to be Vacation and Bunning and there to have been a prior agreement to reimburse Bunning for the air fare and hotel costs advanced to other salesmen. The depositions show that Vacation, through Broderick, initiated a number of telephone calls to Virginia and wrote a number of letters to Virginia, as well as responding to telephone calls from Virginia, in pursuance to its plan to get Bunning- to join its mid-western operation and to have Bunning solicit other salesmen to join him in the proposed mid-western sales activities.

The Court must decide whether this California corporation has subjected itself to the "single act" Virginia long-arm statute in an alleged tortious interference with a contract seeking to entice one of the plaintiff's employees to leave its employ and induce other plaintiff’s employees to join him in the employ of the defendant.

We must first determine whether the Virginia statute subjects Vacation to its jurisdiction. North Fork contends that if Vacation or its agent transacted any business in Virginia or caused tortious injury by an act or omission in Virginia under the provision of Virginia Code Section 8.01-328.1(A)(1), (3) it can be required to answer this action for tortious interference with its contract with Bunning.

[329]*329The cases are in confusion as to whether the injury must have resulted from the act of the defendant or his agent while the defendant or his agent was physically present in the state. A careful study of the statute suggests that this is necessary, otherwise there would have been no reason to enact the following section, Virginia Code § 8.01-323.1(A)(4), providing for jurisdiction where a defendant has caused "tortious injury in this Commonwealth by an act or omission outside this Commonwealth.1 The plaintiff maintains that if the tort originates outside the state but the tortfeasor must necessarily' know that the injury would occur in the state he has subjected himself to this third basis for jurisdiction, "causing tortious injury by an act or omission in this Commonwealth," referring to the launching of a mortar shell outside Virginia aimed at a place within the Commonwealth and suggesting that unless his construction were adopted there would be no basis for jurisdiction in this Commonwealth. That is the very situation postulated by the annotator of almost exactly the same statute enacted in New York, and in his comments on a New York case, Feathers v. McLucas, 261 N.Y. Supp. 2d 8, 209 N.E.2d 68 (N.Y. 1965). There a pressure tank sold in Missouri exploded in New York while en route to Vermont and the New York Court held that the tortious act was not committed within the state and New York had no jurisdiction,2 the Court indicating: "Mere occurrence of the injury in this state certainly cannot serve to transmute an out-of-state tortious act into one committed here, within the sense of the statutory wording." 209 N.E.2d at 77. The commentat- or said in response to that case:

[330]*330Accordingly, if a New Jersey domiciliary were to lob a bazooka shell across the Hudson River at Grant’s Tomb, Feathers would appear to bar the New York courts from asserting personal jurisdiction over the New Jersey domiciliary in an action by an injured New York plaintiff. Yet, if the New Jersey domiciliary permitted his son to drive an automobile into the state, New York could acquire personal jurisdiction. . . The sole distinction between the cases is that in the automobile case the defendant has, in person or through an agent, physically entered the state, the factor which Feathers found to be of controlling significance. McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York, Yol. 7B, page 85.

The extremes in views as to whether writing a letter out of the state intending to be read and published in the forum state subjects the letter writer to long-arm jurisdiction is illustrated in a comparison of federal cases in Virginia and the Massachusetts cases cited by the plaintiff, Murphy v. Erwin-Wasey, Inc., 460 F.2d 661 (1st Cir. 1972). Murphy, in considering the Massachusetts long-arm statute, almost identical with ours, pointed out:

[W]e would be closing our eyes to the realities of modern business practices were we to hold that a corporation subjects itself to the jurisdiction of another state by sending a personal messenger into that state bearing a. . . [message]. . . but not when it follows the more ordinary course of employing the United States Postal Service as its messenger.

On the other hand, the federal courts in Virginia have construed the Virginia statute not to apply to an out-of-state letter writer of an alleged libelous letter directed to a Virginia resident. St. Clair v. Righter, 250 F. Supp. 148, 151 (W.D. Va. 1966).

A careful consideration of the allegations in the pleadings, coupled with a study of the cases and statutes cited, together with others obtained upon independent research, convinces me that the allegations and proof [331]*331of telephone calls and letters alone in this case would not be sufficient to find that Vacation by itself either "acted in the Commonwealth" under § 8.01-328.1(A)(3) or "transacted any business in this Commonwealth" under Section 8.01-328.1(A)(1).

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Bluebook (online)
7 Va. Cir. 327, 1986 Va. Cir. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-fork-shenandoah-inc-v-bunning-vaccwarren-1986.