PanAmerican Mineral Services, Inc. v. KLS Enviro Resources, Inc.

916 P.2d 986, 1996 Wyo. LEXIS 75, 1996 WL 260881
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1996
Docket95-166
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 916 P.2d 986 (PanAmerican Mineral Services, Inc. v. KLS Enviro Resources, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PanAmerican Mineral Services, Inc. v. KLS Enviro Resources, Inc., 916 P.2d 986, 1996 Wyo. LEXIS 75, 1996 WL 260881 (Wyo. 1996).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice.

The question posed is whether a Wyoming court can exercise personal jurisdiction over a parent corporation, KLS Enviro Resources, Inc. (KLS), and its sister corporation, Dateline Internacional, S.A. de C.V. (DIMSA), neither of which has the requisite minimum contacts with Wyoming, if a subsidiary corporation, Dateline Drilling, Inc. (Dateline), which has the requisite minimum contacts, is an alter ego of the parent or the sister. The district court had personal jurisdiction over Dateline, but ruled it lacked personal jurisdiction over KLS and DIMSA and dismissed the complaint against them filed by PanAm-erican Mineral Services, Inc. (PanAmerican) to enforce arbitration. We hold that piercing the corporate veil between KLS and Dateline and Dateline and DIMSA affords personal jurisdiction over KLS and DIMSA as alter egos of Dateline. The order of the district court dismissing the case against KLS and DIMSA is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

In the Brief of Appellant PanAmerican Mineral Services, Inc., the issues are stated to be:

The issues before this Court are whether under the facts presented herein the Defendants KLS Enviro Resources, Inc., a Nevada Corporation and Dateline Interna-cional, S.A. de C.V., a Mexican National Corporation and subsidiary of KLS Enviro Resources, Inc., are, by their actions, subject to In Personam jurisdiction in the State of Wyoming by virtue of an “Agreement” between Appellant PanAmerican Mineral Services, Inc., a Wyoming Corporation, and Dateline Drilling, Inc., a Montana Corporation, wholly-owned subsidiary of KLS Enviro Resources, Inc. and sister *987 corporation to Dateline Internacional S.A de C.V.

In the Brief of Appellees KLS Enviro Resources, Inc. and Dateline Internacional, S.A de C.V., the issues are stated to be:

While Appellees do not quarrel with PanAmeriean’s statement of the issues, a more precise statement of the issue would be as follows:
May this Court exercise vicarious personal jurisdiction over the non-resident corporate Defendants?

PanAmerican and Dateline contracted with respect to mineral drilling in Mexico. The agreement was made on March 20, 1991 and amended on August 16, 1991. It provided, for the five-year term of the agreement, that if PanAmerican wished to bid on a drilling project in Mexico or Central America, PanAmerican was to give Dateline all pertinent information in order for Dateline to bid the project. With respect to any drilling project in either country, if Dateline decided to bid, it would submit the completed bid to PanAmerican. PanAmerican then would pass the bid along to a potential Mexican or Central American client. Upon acceptance by the client of the Dateline bid, PanAmeri-ean agreed to provide consulting services to Dateline and “assistance with border crossing, customs clearance, and transportation of Dateline’s rigs and equipment within Mexico or Central America to the job site.” The purpose of the agreement was to provide that all drilling operations performed by Dateline in either Mexico or Central America would be accomplished through, and in the name of, PanAmerican or its foreign subsidiary.

The agreement provided that any disputes between the parties regarding interpretation of its provisions were to be resolved by a “mutually agreeable arbitration procedure.” PanAmerican and Dateline specifically provided for the contract to be binding on their respective successors, assigns, subsidiaries, and other entities owned or controlled by either of them. The contract invoked the law of Wyoming providing that the “agreement shall be construed as to validity, interpretation and effect according to the laws and court decisions in Wyoming.” It was executed in Casper, and the amendment was sent to Dateline’s Montana office on letterhead from PanAmericaris corporate office in Cas-per.

PanAmerican and Dateline conducted business in Mexico through June 1993, utilizing PanAmericaris Mexican subsidiary, Ser-vicios Mineros PanAmericanos S.A. de C.V. Both PanAmerican and Dateline received remuneration for their services according to the contract during this period of time. In August 1992, Dateline’s representative telephoned PanAmerican’s Casper office and informed PanAmericaris president that Dateline, in conjunction with KLS, wished to buy out the agreement from PanAmerican. PanAmerican presented an offer to KLS/Dateline, but it was refused. Subsequently, PanAmerican rejected a counteroffer to buy out the contract for $50,000.

KLS then sent a letter, dated February 17, 1993, from Montana to PanAmerican in Wyoming. The letter advised PanAmericaris president that Dateline had been acquired by KLS and no longer would perform drilling operations in Mexico or Central America. The letter was signed by the vice-president of KLS, who previously had been Dateline’s representative in the failed buy-out negotiations with PanAmerican. On February 19, 1993, PanAmerican replied in a letter from its president, expressing concern over PanAmericaris and Dateline’s mutual drilling commitment in Sonora, Mexico. That letter advised KLS that the original agreement bound the successors and affiliated entities of Dateline for five years, until March 20, 1996. In a response dated February 25, 1993, KLS advised PanAmerican that KLS “may very well engage in core drilling in Mexico, Central America and elsewhere, and need not account to PanAmerican nor does it need its approval.”

A meeting, was held in Missoula, Montana, on March 6,1993, in an attempt by KLS and PanAmerican to iron out differences. Neither KLS nor Dateline wanted to continue under the terms of the agreement, so proposed amendments were drafted. The parties did agree to operate under the existing agreement until the amendments were executed. Drilling activity in Mexico proceeded even though the amendments never were *988 incorporated into the agreement, and Dateline submitted invoices for work completed in June 1993. The business arrangement was interrupted by a letter, dated June 7, 1993, from Dateline’s attorney in Dallas in which he demanded remittance for funds PanAmer-ican had been withholding to pay its Mexican tax liability. Subsequently, on August 6, 1993, Dateline’s Wyoming attorney sent a letter to PanAmerican in Casper demanding arbitration of their differences pursuant to the agreement.

So far as this record discloses, PanAmeri-can received no further payment under the terms of the agreement after June 1993. The record reflects, however, that DIMSA continued to drill in Mexico, but made no accounting to PanAmerican as the “successor and assign” of Dateline. Documentation presented by PanAmerican further shows that KLS acquired Dateline by trading 48% of KLS stock to Dateline’s sole shareholder. In return, Dateline’s sole shareholder turned over all Dateline stock to KLS and became a director, officer, and shareholder of KLS. Consequently, PanAmerican alleges in its complaint that KLS utilized its wholly-owned subsidiary, DIMSA, to accomplish the business in Mexico and Central America that previously had been accomplished through PanAmerican’s Mexican subsidiary.

The pre-incorporation agreement of KLS is part of the record. In that agreement, the following language appears:

Foreign Operations.

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Bluebook (online)
916 P.2d 986, 1996 Wyo. LEXIS 75, 1996 WL 260881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panamerican-mineral-services-inc-v-kls-enviro-resources-inc-wyo-1996.