Virtualmagic Asia, Inc. v. Fil-Cartoons, Inc.

121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1, 99 Cal. App. 4th 228
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 2002
DocketD037659
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1 (Virtualmagic Asia, Inc. v. Fil-Cartoons, Inc.) 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
Virtualmagic Asia, Inc. v. Fil-Cartoons, Inc., 121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1, 99 Cal. App. 4th 228 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion

McDONALD, Acting P. J.

In 1999 respondent Fil-Cartoons, Inc. (FilCartoons) entered into a contract with a California-based company, CaseyWemer Company (CWC), to provide animation production services for CWC’s 13-episode film project known as the GDB project. Fil-Cartoons then entered into a subcontract with appellant VirtualMagic Asia, Inc. (VMA) to provide the digital ink and paint portion of the animation production services for the GDB project.

*234 Disputes arose over the amount Fil-Cartoons owed to VMA for the services VMA provided in connection with “retakes,” and VMA filed the present action against Fil-Cartoons. VMA’s action also named as defendants Kenneth E. Barackman and two corporations (Fantasia Animators Philippines, a Philippine corporation, and Fantasia Animators, Inc., a Nevada corporation), which are apparently the parent corporations of Fil-Cartoons. Although Barackman is a California resident, neither Fil-Cartoons nor its two corporate parents (collectively respondents) are California corporations. Respondents moved to quash service of the summons and complaint, arguing their California contacts were insufficient to permit a California court to exercise personal jurisdiction over them. The court granted the motion; VMA appeals.

We conclude that even if Fil-Cartoons lacks sufficient California contacts to permit a California court to exercise general jurisdiction over it, the claim asserted by VMA arises out of or is related to Fil-Cartoons’ California-based activities and therefore California may exercise specific jurisdiction over Fil-Cartoons for this claim. We also conclude that unresolved factual issues exist with regard to jurisdiction of California courts over Fil-Cartoons’ corporate parents. We therefore reverse and remand the case to the trial court.

I

Factual and Procedural Background 1

Á. The Participants

Fil-Cartoons is a Philippines corporation. Its production and animation facilities are located, and the work it performs on its animated projects occurs, in the Philippines. It performs work for clients who are situated throughout the world, including California-based companies. For fiscal years 1997 through 2000, Fil-Cartoons’ per-year gross sales averaged between $3.5 million to $4 million, over 30 percent of which was derived from projects performed for California-based companies.

*235 Fil-Cartoons is wholly owned by Fantasia Animators Philippines, a Philippine corporation (Fantasia Philippines). Another corporation, Fantasia Animators, Inc., a Nevada corporation (FAN), owns all or most of the stock of Fantasia Philippines. Barackman owns all of the stock of FAN. 2 Barack-man is the president and a director of Fil-Cartoons, the president and chairman of the board of Fantasia Philippines, and the president and sole director of FAN.

VMA is a Turks and Caicos corporation whose majority shareholder is VirtualMagic Animation, a California corporation (VMA-Calif.). VMA is in the business of providing digital animation ink and paint services using its production facilities in the Philippines. VMA-Calif. also provides digital animation ink and paint services using its Hollywood, California offices as its production facilities.

B. The Contracts

In 1999 Barackman negotiated on behalf of Fil-Cartoons the contract with CWC under which Fil-Cartoons agreed to provide the animation production services for the GDB project. The contract negotiations included meetings with CWC representatives at CWC’s offices in Southern California, and drafts of a proposed written agreement were sent by CWC to Barackman at Fil-Cartoons’ California address. However, the parties never signed a final written contract. 3

During the course of the negotiations, CWC asked Fil-Cartoons to use VMA as Fil-Cartoons’ subcontractor for the digital ink and paint services for the GDB project. Between April and July 1999 Mr. Spielvogel, president of VMA and VMA-Calif., was in regular contact with Barackman to negotiate the terms under which VMA would provide the digital ink and paint services for the GDB project. Barackman met with Spielvogel at the Hollywood, California offices of VMA-Calif. on at least two occasions to negotiate the terms of VMA’s engagement. The two men also exchanged telephone calls between VMA-Calif.’s Hollywood office and Barackman’s home in California to discuss the subcontract. They finally reached agreement on the price when Barackman called from the Philippines and told Spielvogel that VMA’s price was acceptable. During this same period, Spielvogel was in weekly contact with CWC’s representative to discuss aspects of VMA’s participation in the GDB project.

*236 C. The California Connections

The bulk of the physical production work by Fil-Cartoons under its contract with CWC, and by VMA under its subcontract with Fil-Cartoons, was performed in the Philippines. However, many aspects of the GDB project were performed in California. During August 1999 Barackman and Spielvogel met in the Los Angeles area, and exchanged telephone calls while Barackman was at home in California, to discuss VMA-Calif.’s participation in the promotional segment for the GDB project. In September 1999 FilCartoons delivered its animated production work product/film for that promotional segment to VMA-Calif. and VMA-Calif. completed the compositing work on that segment. In September, representatives from CWC, FilCartoons and VMA met at VMA-Calif.’s Hollywood office to confirm the GDB project was a “go,” and to discuss CWC’s delivery of its materials to Fil-Cartoons and the logistics of how CWC would exercise quality and production controls over the animation production activities by Fil-Cartoons and VMA. They agreed that CWC would provide an on-site representative at Fil-Cartoons’ Philippines production facility; Fil-Cartoons would deliver weekly production reports and exemplary work in progress to CWC’s Encino, California office; and the production activities involved in the GDB project would be a collaborative effort involving the California offices of CWC and VMA-Calif. and the Philippines production facilities of VMA and Fil-Cartoons. 4

During the fall of 1999, after “first-take” footage was delivered to CWC’s Encino office and reviewed by CWC, Fil-Cartoons and VMA began working on the retakes required by CWC; some retakes were ordered for technical reasons and others were ordered for creative reasons. 5 The logistics of the retake process involved numerous communications by mail, facsimile, telephone, e-mail and face-to-face meetings between personnel of CWC, VMA, *237 and Fil-Cartoons in California and in the Philippines. VMA performed its retake work but temporarily withheld delivery to CWC of the completed retakes because Fil-Cartoons declined to pay the amounts VMA demanded.

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Bluebook (online)
121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1, 99 Cal. App. 4th 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virtualmagic-asia-inc-v-fil-cartoons-inc-calctapp-2002.