Ex Parte First Tennessee Bank Nat. Ass'n
Ex Parte First Tennessee Bank Nat. Ass'n
Opinion
First Tennessee Bank National Association ("First Tennessee") petitions this Court for a writ of mandamus directing the Jefferson Circuit Court to vacate its May 23, 2007, order transferring this action to the Tallapoosa Circuit Court on the basis of forum non conveniens. We deny the petition.
First Tennessee, a Tennessee corporation, brought this action in the Jefferson Circuit Court, seeking a declaration of the rights of Mrs. Russell's estate with regard to the payment of Mrs. Russell's final expenses out of the trust assets.2
Petition at 2-3. The 16 defendants in this action, including Ben Russell (collectively "Russell"), are the current trustees and the remainder beneficiaries of the trust. Thirteen of the defendants moved the Jefferson Circuit Court to dismiss the action pursuant to Rule 12(b)(3) and (6), *Page 908
Ala. R. Civ. P., 3 or, alternatively, for a change of venue under §
First Tennessee petitioned this Court for the writ of mandamus, arguing that the Jefferson Circuit Court exceeded its discretion in transferring the action to the Tallapoosa Circuit Court; First Tennessee asked this Court to stay all proceedings pending this Court's decision on its mandamus petition. On August 15, 2007, this Court ordered answer and briefs on the mandamus petition and granted First Tennessee's motion for a stay.
"With respect to civil actions filed in an appropriate venue, any court of general jurisdiction shall, for the convenience of parties and witnesses, or in the interest of justice, transfer any civil action or any claim in any civil action to any court of general jurisdiction in which the action might have been properly filed and the case shall proceed as though originally filed therein."
"`A defendant moving for a transfer under §
Russell moved the Jefferson Circuit Court to transfer this action, pursuant to §
"This is a trust arising out of an estate of long-standing in Tallapoosa County, Alabama. The will of [Mr.] Russell was probated in Tallapoosa County, as is the estate of his widow and trust beneficiary. The Circuit Court of Tallapoosa County has already taken certain actions with regard to the administration of the said trust, whereas the Circuit Court of Jefferson County has never taken any action with regard to the probate, administration, or operation of any trust or estate involved in this matter. In fact, the only involvement of this forum with this matter, and the only fact which gives this court an interest, is the involvement of three of its residents as defendants by virtue of their having been designated as residual beneficiaries."
Petition at Exhibit F, p. 10.
First Tennessee contends that the Jefferson Circuit Court exceeded its discretion because, First Tennessee says, Jefferson County is a neutral forum and a plaintiffs choice of forum is entitled to great deference. First Tennessee argues that "the `interest of justice' analysis [under §
"We conclude that the Legislature, in adopting §
6-3-21.1 , intended to vest in the trial courts, the Court of Civil Appeals, and this Court the power and the duty to transfer a cause when `the interest of justice' requires a transfer."`[W]hen the trial judge determines that a plaintiff is guilty of "forum shopping" and that the chosen forum is inappropriate because of considerations affecting the court's own administrative and legal problems, the statute provides that the trial court "shall" transfer the cause. What has the Supreme Court of the United States said about "forum shopping" . . . That Court has stated that because plaintiffs are allowed a choice of forum by statute, a plaintiff may be "under temptation to resort to a strategy of forcing the trial at a most inconvenient place for an adversary, even at some inconvenience to himself." Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
330 U.S. 501 ,507 ,67 S.Ct. 839 ,842 ,91 L.Ed. 1055 (1947). . . .'"
First Tennessee argues that this case "bears no resemblance to the forum shopping cases which have moved this Court to correct the efforts of plaintiffs to tilt the courtroom floor in their direction." Petition at 14. First Tennessee quotes Ex parteFuller,
"The Crains [the plaintiffs], M M Trucking [a defendant], most of the witnesses, all the evidence in its various forms, and the accident site are all in Lee County. Fuller [a defendant], who resides in Macon County, works in Lee County. Thus, Fuller and M M Trucking have established that the interest of justice requires a transfer of this case [from Macon County] to Lee County. They have a clear legal right to the order sought."
Although the fact that three of the defendants here reside in Jefferson County would make venue in Jefferson County proper, we cannot conclude that the Jefferson Circuit Court exceeded its discretion when it transferred this action to Tallapoosa County. First Tennessee contends that "the sole basis for Judge Boohaker's decision to transfer this case rests on the presence in Tallapoosa County of [the Trust] . . . and the presence there of the estate of Mrs. Russell. . . ." Petition at 9. It is clear from the Jefferson Circuit Court's order, however, that the court also considered it significant that "[t]he will of [Mr. Russell] was probated in Tallapoosa County," that "the Circuit Court of Tallapoosa County has already taken certain actions with regard to the administration of the said trust," and that "the only involvement of [Jefferson County] with this matter, and the only fact which gives [the Jefferson Circuit Court] an interest is the *Page 911 involvement of three of its residents as defendants by virtue of their having been designated as residual beneficiaries." Petition at Exhibit F, p. 10.
Moreover, nothing in First Family limits a trial court's use of the interest-of-justice prong under §
First Tennessee argues that the Jefferson Circuit Court exceeded its discretion because, First Tennessee argues, the court's order "addressed the `interest of justice' issue in terms of simple arithmetic, by holding `venue is proper in the County with the greatest connection to the case.'" Petition at 15. Put another way, First Tennessee appears to take issue with the Jefferson Circuit Court's transfer of this action because that court determined that Tallapoosa County had the "greatest connection" to this action, rather than that Jefferson County lacked a connection with this action and that Tallapoosa County had a strong connection to this case. Although it may be true that the Jefferson Circuit Court noted that it "performed [a] nexus analysis and has found venue to be proper in the County with the greatest connection to the case," Petition at Exhibit F, p. 9, it is clear that the court transferred this action "from a county with little, if any, connection to the action, to the county with a strong connection to the action." Exparte Kane,
As the Jefferson Circuit Court noted, Mr. Russell's will, the instrument that created the trust, was probated in Tallapoosa County. Similarly, Mrs. Russell's estate is situated in Tallapoosa County. Further, the trust is domiciled in Tallapoosa County, Petition at Exhibit D, and, in 1984 and in 2004, the Tallapoosa Circuit Court took certain actions with regard to the trust. Petition at 8. In addition, of the 16 defendants, 7 are residents of Tallapoosa County, including the current trustees of the trust. Of the 9 remaining defendants, 2 reside in Elmore County, 3 in Jefferson County, and the remaining 4 are residents of Mobile County, Alabama; Baldwin County, Alabama; Atlanta, Georgia; and Scottsdale, Arizona. First Tennessee, a foreign corporation, has not provided this Court with any indication of where it conducts business in Alabama. Thus, the only apparent connection between this case and Jefferson County is the presence in Jefferson County of three remainder-beneficiary defendants who collectively own 8% of the trust assets. Petition at Exhibit E. These facts demonstrate that there is little connection between the action and Jefferson County and that there is a strong connection between the action and Tallapoosa County. *Page 912
Finally, First Tennessee argues that the Jefferson Circuit Court's decision "completely abrogated the substantial deference which the court[s] have traditionally given to the plaintiffs choice of forum."5 Petition at 15. However, as we note above, although the Jefferson Circuit Court concluded that Tallapoosa County had the "greatest" connection to the case, it is clear that the court transferred this action from a venue that had little connection to this action to one that has a strong connection. Ex parte Kane, supra. Moreover, once a trial court determines that the convenience of the parties and witnesses or the interest of justice would be best served by a transfer, §
PETITION DENIED.
COBB, C.J., and WOODALL, SMITH, and PARKER, JJ., concur.
"without in any way limiting the generality of the foregoing, but solely in order to define with particularity certain of the powers hereby vested in the Trustees, I further declare that the Trustees shall have and may, without notice to anyone or order of court, exercise, among others, each and all of the powers following, to be broadly construed with respect to the trust estate and each part thereof, viz:
". . . .
"(H) Upon the death of my said wife, to pay her reasonable funeral and burial expenses and the expenses of her last illness and any income or other taxes due and payable within the calender year of her death by her or on her account."
Petition at Exhibit A, pp. 8-9.
"Every defense, in law or fact, to a claim for relief in any pleading, whether a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim, shall be asserted in the responsive pleading thereto if one is required, except that the following defenses may at the option of the pleader be made by motion: . . . (3) improper venue, . . . (6) failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. . . ."
"Of greater significance is another Tallapoosa County case that involved the persons who are the defendants in this case but did not involve this Trust — a case which was an [adversarial] proceeding among the members of this prominent family. Ben Russell v. Nancy Gwaltney, et al., CV 05-187. When confronted with the adversarial proceeding (predominantly among the beneficiaries of this Trust), the presiding judge found it necessary to recuse himself in the midst of the litigation and bring in another judge who was not from Tallapoosa County. See attached Order. Surely, the same will happen again when the Tallapoosa County Circuit Court again finds the prominent Russell family in its courtroom."
Petition at Exhibit E, p. 3.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ex Parte First Tennessee Bank National Association. (In Re First Tennessee Bank National Association, as Successor Personal Representative of the Estate of Edith Landgrebe Russell v. Ben Russell).
- Cited By
- 42 cases
- Status
- Published