Telco Communications, Inc. v. New Jersey State Firemen's Mutual Benevolent Ass'n

669 N.E.2d 781, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 225, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 790
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 30, 1996
DocketNo. 95-P-642
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 669 N.E.2d 781 (Telco Communications, Inc. v. New Jersey State Firemen's Mutual Benevolent Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Telco Communications, Inc. v. New Jersey State Firemen's Mutual Benevolent Ass'n, 669 N.E.2d 781, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 225, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 790 (Mass. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

Summarized, the complaint herein, filed on October 4, 1993, in Superior Court, Bristol County, alleged the following. The plaintiff Telco Communications, Inc. (Telco), a Rhode Island corporation with a usual place of business in Seekonk, Massachusetts, provides fund raising services to civic organizations throughout the country. The [226]*226defendant, New Jersey State Firemen’s Mutual Benevolent Association (FMBA), is a New Jersey nonprofit corporation located in Rahway, New Jersey, that promotes the interests of professional firefighters in that State. On December 14, 1992, the parties entered into an agreement and addendum (annexed to the complaint) by which Telco undertook to solicit the purchase of advertising by companies and others in New Jersey and to publish and distribute a publication for FMBA which would include the advertising copy. Telco would supply salespersons to sell the advertising who would be independent contractors in relation to FMBA but would be directed in their work by Telco. The advertising revenues would be received by FMBA and divided by agreed percentages among Telco, FMBA, and the salespersons, with a guarantee by Telco that FMBA would receive a minimum of $30,000.

Solicitation of the advertising would not be feasible or advisable in certain localities of the State, and the agreement provided that FMBA would provide Telco with a list of these communities by December 31, 1992. Telco alleged that FMBA provided a list in January, 1993, after Telco had commenced solicitation. The list comprised some twenty-five communities.

The gravamen of the complaint was that the list was delivered late, that the restrictions imposed by the list were excessive or otherwise improper (details were not supplied), and that FMBA thus violated the agreement by impairing or impeding the program to be conducted by Telco, and preventing Telco from performing, thus disabling it to meet the guaranteed $30,000 revenue for FMBA. Nevertheless, the complaint alleged, FMBA contended that it was entitled to so much of the $30,000 as remained unpaid. Telco in count I of the complaint demanded damages for breach of contract and in count II requested a declaration of rights as between the parties.

On January 20, 1994, the defendant FMBA moved to dismiss the action under Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2), 365 Mass. 755 (1974), for lack of personal jurisdiction.

On the same day, the plaintiff Telco moved for a preliminary injunction under Mass.R.Civ.P. 65, 365 Mass. 833 (1974), to restrain the defendant FMBA from maintaining a countersuit commenced on December 13, 1993, in the [227]*227Superior Court for Union County in New Jersey, alleged to raise the same legal issues as the instant action (details not supplied).

The record also comprises an affidavit of David Mitchell, the plaintiffs national sales manager at the time, and an affidavit of Charles K. Steinel, the defendant’s president, addressed to the issue of the jurisdiction of the court.

On April 15, 1994, a judge of our Superior Court, with memorandum of decision, allowed the defendant’s motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction and, accordingly, denied the plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction. The plaintiff filed a notice of appeal from the judgment of dismissal.

1. The plaintiffs primary argument in response to the motion to dismiss was that the agreement of December 14, 1992, contained in paragraph 16 what the plaintiff chose to characterize as a “forum selection” clause naming Massachusetts as the exclusive forum.1 The judge below, after quoting from Ernest & Norman Hart Bros., Inc. v. Town Contractors, Inc., 18 Mass. App. Ct. 60, 65 (1984), the statement that the “general attitude of courts toward contractual forum selection provisions obviously has changed in the direction of recognizing them,” said that the Supreme Judicial Court had not yet gone the whole way to recognition. Not long after the judge wrote, the Supreme Judicial Court “accept[ed] the modem view that forum selection clauses are to be enforced if it is fair and reasonable to do so.” Jacobson v. Mailboxes Etc. U.S.A., Inc., 419 Mass. 572, 574-575 (1995).

This development, however, does not help the plaintiff, for, as the judge also wrote, paragraph 16 was mischaracterized by the plaintiff and was not a forum selection clause. The clause read: “This agreement shall be governed by, construed in accordance with, and only enforced pursuant to the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.” This pointed to Massachusetts law as controlling in case of dispute; it did not express an agreement of the parties that Massachusetts was to be the exclusive fomm in which a legal proceeding could be maintained. As the judge remarked, the clause bore no resemblance to any provisions of the contracts appearing in [228]*228cases cited by the plaintiff that could be identified as forum selection provisions. So, for example, in Daley v. People’s Bldg., Loan & Sav. Assn., 178 Mass. 13, 19 (1901) (“Any action . . . shall be brought ... in the County of Ontario, State of New York”); Mittenthal v. Mascagni, 183 Mass. 19, 21 (1903) (“Whatever difference or question there might arise between the parties . . . will be acted upon by the civil authorities of Florence, Italy”); Maxwell Shapiro Woolen Co. v. Amerotron Corp., 339 Mass. 252, 257 (1959) (“any arbitration shall take place in New York”); Ernest & Norman Hart Bros., Inc. v. Town Contractors, Inc., 18 Mass. App. Ct. at 62 (“Connecticut law shall have jurisdiction . . . and such disputes shall be adjudicated in Hartford County” — this clause was not enforced for reasons of justice)2; C. Pappas Co. v. E. & J. Gallo Winery, 565 F. Supp. 1015, 1016 (D. Mass. 1983) (“shall be brought only in a court having jurisdiction and venue at the home office of Winery”).

The plaintiff seems to attach choice-of-forum significance to the word “enforced” in the phrase “enforced pursuant to the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts” in paragraph 16, but that merely carries out the thought that Massachusetts law is to control, whatever the forum. On this point, see Morris v. Watsco, Inc., 385 Mass. 672, 673, 674-675 (1982), where the agreement provided that it was to be “construed and enforced according to the laws of the State of Florida”; in W.R. Grace & Co. v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co., 407 Mass. 572, 582 n.13 (1990), the court construed the clause in Morris as a choice-of-law clause rather than a forum selection clause.

2. Should its forum selection contention fail, Telco argued that jurisdiction could be sustained under G. L. c. 223A, § 3(a), as amended by St. 1969, c. 623, a portion of the long-arm statute.3 This calls for an evaluation of the relations between the parties, their respective activities under the contract, and the linkages, if any, between the defendant’s participation in the transaction and the Commonwealth of [229]*229Massachusetts. The sources are the complaint and the Mitchell and Steinel affidavits. The burden of demonstration is on Telco, which is asserting jurisdiction, see Droukas v. Divers Training Academy, Inc., 375 Mass. 149, 151 (1978); Tatro v. Manor Care, Inc., 416 Mass. 763, 767 (1994), and the statute is to be read with much generosity of breadth, as noted recently in Tatro,

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669 N.E.2d 781, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 225, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telco-communications-inc-v-new-jersey-state-firemens-mutual-benevolent-massappct-1996.