Innovative Computer Professionals, Inc. v. Outdoors Online, LLC

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Innovative Computer Professionals, Inc. v. Outdoors Online, LLC

Trial Court Opinion

            UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Innovative Computer Professionals, Inc., a  Civil No. 24-373 (DWF/DTS)    
Minnesota corporation doing business as                                   
Digital Cash Processing,                                                  

          Plaintiff,                        MEMORANDUM               
                                       OPINION AND ORDER             
v.                                                                        

Outdoors Online, LLC, doing business as                                   
GunBroker.com,                                                            

          Defendant.                                                 
________________________________________________________________________  
Andrew H. Bardwell, Esq., Samuel Maddox Johnson, Esq., William R. Skolnick, Esq., 
Skolnick & Bardwell, P.A.; Sean A. Shiff, Esq., Sean A. Shiff, PLLC, counsel for 
Plaintiff.                                                                

Anne L. Melton, Esq., Samuel Blatnick, Esq., Lucosky Brookman LLP; Bryant D. 
Tchida, Esq., Madeline E. Davis, Esq., Moss & Barnett, counsel for Defendant. 
________________________________________________________________________  
                    INTRODUCTION                                     
This matter is before the Court on Defendant Outdoors Online, LLC, doing 
business as GunBroker.com’s (“GunBroker.com”) motion to dismiss.  (Doc. No. 22.)  
Plaintiff Innovative Computer Professionals, Inc., doing business as Digital Cash 
Processing (“DCP”) opposes the motion.  (Doc. No. 28.)  For the reasons set forth below, 
the Court denies the motion.                                              
                     BACKGROUND                                      
DCP and GunBroker.com entered into a contract, and a subsequent amended 
contract, that provided, among other things, that DCP would be the “exclusive provider” 
of payment processing services for GunBroker.com.1  (Doc. No. 20 (“Am. Compl.”) ¶ 4; 
Doc. No. 1-2 (“First Agreement”) at 2; Doc. No. 1-3 (“Am. Agreement”) at 2.) 
DCP alleges that GunBroker.com breached the contract by “moving all of 

[GunBroker.com]’s customers off the platform DCP created for [GunBroker.com] and 
refusing to allow [DCP] to perform the services under the contract.”  (Am. Compl. ¶ 9.)  
DCP alleges that GunBroker.com selected a third party to replace DCP “in violation of 
the exclusivity provision in the contract” and has refused to pay DCP fees owed under the 
agreement.  (Id. ¶¶ 11-12.)  DCP further alleges that GunBroker.com anticipatorily 

breached the contract by “express[ing] its unqualified repudiation of the parties’ contract 
and its refusal to perform its obligations under the same” and breached its duty of good 
faith and fair dealing.  (Id. ¶¶ 15, 22-29.)                              
DCP filed this action in state court, and GunBroker.com removed the case to 
federal court.  (Doc. No. 1.)  DCP amended its Complaint (Am. Compl.) and 

GunBroker.com now moves to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction and failure to state 
a claim, or, alternatively, to transfer the case to the District of Arizona. 
                      DISCUSSION                                     
GunBroker.com moves to dismiss the Amended Complaint, arguing that (1) the 
Court lacks personal jurisdiction over GunBroker.com; and (2) DCP has failed to 


1    The two agreements were not attached to the Complaint, but GunBroker.com 
provided the agreements with its notice of removal.  The Court will consider the 
agreements as the agreements are embraced by the Complaint.  See Stahl v. U.S. Dep’t of 
Agric., 
327 F.3d 697, 700
 (8th Cir. 2003) (“In a case involving a contract, the court may 
examine the contract documents in deciding a motion to dismiss.”).        
adequately plead any claim against GunBroker.com.  The Court addresses each argument 
in turn.                                                                  
I.   Personal Jurisdiction                                                

“To survive a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, a plaintiff must 
make a prima facie showing that personal jurisdiction exists.”  K-V Pharm. Co. v. J. 
Uriach & CIA, S.A., 
648 F.3d 588, 591-92
 (8th Cir. 2011).  In diversity jurisdiction cases, 
personal jurisdiction exists “only to the extent permitted by the long-arm statute of the 
forum state and by the Due Process Clause.”  
Id. at 592
 (internal quotations and citation 

omitted).  Minnesota’s long-arm statute extends personal jurisdiction as far as the Due 
Process Clause allows.  Valspar Corp. v. Lukken Color Corp., 
495 N.W.2d 408, 411
 
(1992).  “Due Process requires that the defendant purposefully establish minimum 
contacts in the forum state such that asserting personal jurisdiction and maintaining the 
lawsuit against the defendant does not offend traditional conceptions of fair play and 

substantial justice.”  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 592
 (internal quotations and citation 
omitted).  “For contractual claims, personal jurisdiction is proper where the defendant 
reaches out beyond one state and creates continuing relationships and obligations with 
citizens of another state.”  Creative Calling Sols., Inc. v. LF Beauty Ltd., 
799 F.3d 975, 980
 (8th Cir. 2015) (internal quotations and citation omitted).           

To determine whether minimum contacts exist for personal jurisdiction, the Court 
must consider five factors:  “(1) the nature and quality of the contacts with the forum 
state; (2) the quantity of the contacts; (3) the relationship of the cause of action to the 
contacts; (4) the interest of [the forum state] in providing a forum for its residents; and 
(5) the convenience or inconvenience to the parties.”  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 592
 
(internal quotations and citation omitted).  The first three factors are “primary factors,” 
but the Court considers “all of the factors and the totality of the circumstances in deciding 

whether personal jurisdiction exists.”  
Id. at 592-93
.  And the “third factor distinguishes 
whether the jurisdiction is specific or general.”2  Digi-Tel Holdings, Inc. v. Proteq 
Telecomms. (PTE), Ltd., 
89 F.3d 519
, 522 n.4 (8th Cir. 1996).             
GunBroker.com entered into an original and amended contract with DCP, a 
Minnesota corporation, under which DCP agreed to provide payment processing services 

to GunBroker.com.  “A defendant’s solicitation of a business relationship with a 
company incorporated in the forum State that takes place within that State is a relevant 
contact in determining whether its courts may exercise personal jurisdiction.”  Creative 
Calling Sols., Inc, 
799 F.3d at 980
.  Around fifty percent of the services provided under 
the contract were performed by DCP employees or independent contractors in 

Minnesota.3  (Doc. No. 29 (“Beer Aff.”) ¶ 6.)  GunBroker.com met with DCP in 
Minnesota one or two times to discuss DCP’s obligations under the contract, and 
GunBroker.com sent and received thousands of emails to and from DCP in Minnesota.  
(Id. ¶¶ 4-5.)  The contract also contains a choice-of-law provision, requiring it to be 

2    The Court focuses on specific jurisdiction, rather than general jurisdiction, because 
GunBroker.com’s alleged contact with Minnesota relates to the facts underlying this 
action.                                                                   
3    GunBroker.com asserts that DCP “delegated or contracted out much of the work it 
was supposed to perform under the agreement.”  (Doc. No. 33 (“Second Smith Decl.”) 
¶ 10.)  DCP concedes that some work was outsourced but maintains that over fifty 
percent of the work was performed in Minnesota.  (Beer Aff. ¶ 6.)         
interpreted under Minnesota law.  (First Agreement at 9; Am. Agreement at 11.)  
Moreover, GunBroker.com facilitates the purchase and sale of firearms within 
Minnesota.4  (Second Smith Decl. ¶ 6.)                                    

The terms of the contract also contemplate future contact with Minnesota.  The 
contract provides for monthly payments to DCP in Minnesota over the contract term of 
ten years.  (Am. Agreement at 2-3, 16-17.)  The monthly payment includes fees for 
processing payment transactions.  (Id.)  As noted above, GunBroker.com facilitates gun 
sales in Minnesota and thus, under the contract, DCP would obtain fees from those sales, 

as well as for sales made in other states.                                
Based on the amount of contact that GunBroker.com has had within Minnesota, 
the Court concludes that GunBroker.com could have reasonably expected to be haled into 
court in Minnesota in the event of a breach of the contract.              
The choice-of-law provision further supports jurisdiction.  The contract contains a 

provision that states that the contract “shall be interpreted, construed and enforced in all 
respects in accordance with the laws of the State of Minnesota without reference to its 
choice of law rules.”  (First Agreement at 9; Am. Agreement at 11.)  “Although choice-
of-law provisions specifying that the forum state’s laws govern are insufficient on their 


4    GunBroker.com asserts that the sale of firearms to and from Minnesota represents 
a small number of GunBroker.com’s total sales—around 1.54% and 4.27% respectively.  
(Second Smith Decl. ¶ 6.)  The Amended Complaint alleges that GunBroker.com’s total 
sales per year amounts to nearly one billion dollars (Am. Compl. ¶ 6), which suggests 
that GunBroker.com facilitates millions of dollars of sales in and out of Minnesota every 
year.  But because GunBroker.com does not appear to target Minnesota specifically, the 
Court affords little weight to this contact.                              
own to confer personal jurisdiction, they provide further evidence of a defendant’s 
‘deliberate affiliation with the forum State and the reasonable foreseeability of possible 
litigation there.’”  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 594
 (quoting Burger King Corp. v. 

Rudzewicz, 
471 U.S. 462, 482
 (1985)).  As GunBroker.com notes, it does not appear that 
the parties specifically negotiated the choice-of-law provision, and thus the Court will 
afford less weight to the provision.  Even so, the Court finds the existence of the 
provision in the original and amended contracts to favor personal jurisdiction.5 
As for the third factor, the majority of GunBroker.com’s contact with Minnesota 

relates to the formation and execution of the contract.  Future contact is also laid out in 
the contract, specifically the terms providing for monthly payments to DCP and DCP’s 
continued development and maintenance of its software services, fifty percent of which is 
done in Minnesota.                                                        
The fourth factor also favors jurisdiction as Minnesota “obviously has an interest 

in providing a forum for resident corporations,” like DCP.  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 595
.  And the final factor is largely neutral as a trial in Arizona would be “just as 
inconvenient for [DCP] as a trial in [Minnesota] would be for [GunBroker.com].”  
Id.
 
This case is distinguishable from Digi-Tel Holdings, Inc. v. Proteq  
Telecommunications (PTE), Ltd., 
89 F.3d 519
 (8th Cir. 1996).  In that case, none of the 


5    GunBroker.com asserts that an arbitration provision in Exhibit A of the original 
agreement, which provides for arbitration in Arizona, undercuts the significance of the 
choice-of-law provision.  The amended agreement, however, “deleted [Exhibit A] in its 
entirety and replaced [it]” with a new exhibit that does not contain an arbitration 
provision.  (See Am. Agreement at 3.)                                     
in-person meetings occurred, and none of the contract was performed, in the forum state.  
Id. at 525
.  Here, in contrast, at least one meeting occurred in Minnesota and some of 
work performed under the agreement, around 50%, was performed in Minnesota.  (Beer 

Aff. ¶ 6.)  Moreover, the contract contemplated GunBroker.com’s continued contact with 
Minnesota through its monthly payments to DCP and DCP’s continued development and 
maintenance of its software services.  While in Digi-Tel “[t]he only domestic element of 
the agreement related to the interpretation of the contract under Minnesota law,” here 
GunBroker.com has had much more contact with Minnesota.  
Id.
              

In considering all five factors, the Court concludes that GunBroker.com has 
sufficient minimum contacts in the forum state such that asserting personal jurisdiction 
and maintaining the lawsuit against it does not offend traditional conceptions of fair play 
and substantial justice.  The Court therefore denies GunBroker.com’s motion to dismiss 
for lack of personal jurisdiction and the alternative request to transfer the case to the 

District of Arizona.                                                      
II.  Failure to State a Claim                                             
GunBroker.com next argues that DCP’s Amended Complaint should be dismissed 
because DCP has failed to state a claim against GunBroker.com.            
In deciding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a court assumes all facts in 

the complaint to be true and construes all reasonable inferences from those facts in the 
light most favorable to the complainant.  Morton v. Becker, 
793 F.2d 185, 187
 (8th Cir. 
1986).  A court may consider the complaint, matters of public record, orders, materials 
embraced by the complaint, and exhibits attached to the complaint in deciding a motion 
to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).  Porous Media Corp. v. Pall Corp., 
186 F.3d 1077, 1079
 
(8th Cir. 1999).  To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain “enough facts 
to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”  Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 570
 (2007).  Although a complaint need not contain “detailed factual 
allegations,” it must contain facts with enough specificity “to raise a right to relief above 
the speculative level.”  
Id. at 555
.                                      
DCP brings three claims against GunBroker.com:  (1) breach of contract, 
(2) anticipatory breach of contract, and (3) breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing.  

(Am. Compl.)                                                              
“To plead a breach-of-contract claim under Minnesota law, the plaintiff must 
allege that (1) an agreement was formed, (2) the plaintiff performed any conditions 
precedent to the plaintiff’s demand of performance by the defendant, and (3) the 
defendant breached the contract.”  Mono Advert., LLC v. Vera Bradley Designs, Inc., 
285 F. Supp. 3d 1087, 1089-90
 (D. Minn. 2018).  DCP alleges that it entered into a contract 
with GunBroker.com that provided that DCP would be the exclusive provider of payment 
processing services for GunBroker.com.  (Am. Compl. ¶ 10; see First Agreement at 2.)  
The contract was amended in 2023 and provided that DCP would be “the exclusive 
provider of Payment Processing Services upon DCP providing ACH payment processing 

services to [GunBroker.com].”  (Am. Agreement at 2.)  DCP alleges that it provided 
ACH payment processing services.  (Am. Compl. ¶ 8.)  DCP therefore asserts that 
GunBroker.com breached the contract by selecting a third party to replace DCP in 
violation of the exclusivity provision.  (Id. ¶ 11.)                      
Additionally, the contract provided that DCP would receive a fee for processing 
payment transactions and further made confidential certain information, such as costs and 
details of services.  DCP alleges that GunBroker.com has refused to pay DCP fees owed 

under the contract and has violated the confidentiality provision by, among other things, 
sharing information about pricing structure.  (Id. ¶¶ 12, 14.)            
Contrary to GunBroker.com’s assertion, DCP’s allegations are more than a 
“threadbare recital” of the elements of breach of contract.  (Doc. No. 25 at 21.)  While 
DCP does not cite to specific provisions of the contract in its Amended Complaint, the 

original and amended contracts are in the record and correspond with DCP’s allegations.  
DCP has adequately alleged that GunBroker.com has violated several provisions within 
the agreement, including the exclusivity provision, payment of fees, and confidentiality. 
In response, GunBroker.com argues that the contract authorizes it to disclose 
certain confidential information.  While this may be GunBroker.com’s defense as the 

case proceeds, at this time, DCP has plausibly alleged that GunBroker.com breached the 
confidentiality provision by sharing information related to pricing structure to third 
parties.  And lastly, GunBroker.com contends that the agreement “expressly authorizes 
the parties to use third-party service providers.”  (Id. at 23.)  But this assertion is 
misleading.  The agreement authorizes DCP to assign processing of services to third 

parties.  Thus, DCP has plausibly alleged that GunBroker.com’s use of third-party service 
providers to replace DCP, and without DCP’s approval, violates the agreement. 
Next, GunBroker.com argues that DCP has failed to state a claim for anticipatory 
breach.  Under Minnesota law, an anticipatory repudiation is “an unconditional 
repudiation of a contract, either by words or acts, which is communicated to the other 
party prior to the time fixed by the contract for his performance.”  Matter of Haugen, 
278 N.W.2d 75
, 79 n.6 (Minn. 1979).  GunBroker.com argues that DCP merely recites 

the elements of anticipatory repudiation without providing specific facts in support of the 
claim.  The Court disagrees.  DCP has alleged conduct that provides sufficient evidence 
of GunBroker.com’s intent to not perform future obligations under the agreement, 
namely, GunBroker.com’s hiring of a third party to replace DCP and its failure to pay 
fees owed to DCP.                                                         

DCP’s last claim is for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.  
“Under Minnesota law, every contract includes an implied covenant of good faith and fair 
dealing requiring that one party not unjustifiably hinder the other party’s performance of 
the contract.”  In re Hennepin Cnty. 1986 Recycling Bond Litig., 
540 N.W.2d 494, 502
 
(Minn. 1995) (internal quotations and citation omitted).  A party breaches the implied 

covenant of good faith and fair dealing when it “acts in bad faith,” or “refuses to fulfill 
some duty or contractual obligation based on an ulterior motive.”  Armas v. Fifth Third 
Bancorp, 
315 F. Supp. 3d 1118, 1123
 (D. Minn. 2018) (internal quotations and citation 
omitted).                                                                 
GunBroker.com again asserts that DCP has merely recited the elements of the 

claim.  DCP alleges that GunBroker.com hired a third party to replace DCP as its service 
provider, in violation of their agreement for DCP to be GunBroker.com’s exclusive 
provider of payment services.  Additionally, DCP asserts that GunBroker.com has 
“refused to pay [DCP]” fees for processing transactions and breached the agreement’s 
confidentiality provision by sharing confidential information about pricing structures to 
third parties.  The Court concludes that these facts plausibly support an inference of bad 
faith.                                                                    

Because DCP has adequately pled each claim in its Amended Complaint, the 
Court denies GunBroker.com’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.  

ORDER

Based upon the foregoing, and the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 
HEREBY ORDERED that GunBroker.com’s motion to dismiss (Doc. No. [22]) is  

DENIED.                                                                   

Dated:  May 17, 2024          s/Donovan W. Frank                          
                         DONOVAN W. FRANK                            
                         United States District Judge                

Trial Court Opinion

            UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Innovative Computer Professionals, Inc., a  Civil No. 24-373 (DWF/DTS)    
Minnesota corporation doing business as                                   
Digital Cash Processing,                                                  

          Plaintiff,                        MEMORANDUM               
                                       OPINION AND ORDER             
v.                                                                        

Outdoors Online, LLC, doing business as                                   
GunBroker.com,                                                            

          Defendant.                                                 
________________________________________________________________________  
Andrew H. Bardwell, Esq., Samuel Maddox Johnson, Esq., William R. Skolnick, Esq., 
Skolnick & Bardwell, P.A.; Sean A. Shiff, Esq., Sean A. Shiff, PLLC, counsel for 
Plaintiff.                                                                

Anne L. Melton, Esq., Samuel Blatnick, Esq., Lucosky Brookman LLP; Bryant D. 
Tchida, Esq., Madeline E. Davis, Esq., Moss & Barnett, counsel for Defendant. 
________________________________________________________________________  
                    INTRODUCTION                                     
This matter is before the Court on Defendant Outdoors Online, LLC, doing 
business as GunBroker.com’s (“GunBroker.com”) motion to dismiss.  (Doc. No. 22.)  
Plaintiff Innovative Computer Professionals, Inc., doing business as Digital Cash 
Processing (“DCP”) opposes the motion.  (Doc. No. 28.)  For the reasons set forth below, 
the Court denies the motion.                                              
                     BACKGROUND                                      
DCP and GunBroker.com entered into a contract, and a subsequent amended 
contract, that provided, among other things, that DCP would be the “exclusive provider” 
of payment processing services for GunBroker.com.1  (Doc. No. 20 (“Am. Compl.”) ¶ 4; 
Doc. No. 1-2 (“First Agreement”) at 2; Doc. No. 1-3 (“Am. Agreement”) at 2.) 
DCP alleges that GunBroker.com breached the contract by “moving all of 

[GunBroker.com]’s customers off the platform DCP created for [GunBroker.com] and 
refusing to allow [DCP] to perform the services under the contract.”  (Am. Compl. ¶ 9.)  
DCP alleges that GunBroker.com selected a third party to replace DCP “in violation of 
the exclusivity provision in the contract” and has refused to pay DCP fees owed under the 
agreement.  (Id. ¶¶ 11-12.)  DCP further alleges that GunBroker.com anticipatorily 

breached the contract by “express[ing] its unqualified repudiation of the parties’ contract 
and its refusal to perform its obligations under the same” and breached its duty of good 
faith and fair dealing.  (Id. ¶¶ 15, 22-29.)                              
DCP filed this action in state court, and GunBroker.com removed the case to 
federal court.  (Doc. No. 1.)  DCP amended its Complaint (Am. Compl.) and 

GunBroker.com now moves to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction and failure to state 
a claim, or, alternatively, to transfer the case to the District of Arizona. 
                      DISCUSSION                                     
GunBroker.com moves to dismiss the Amended Complaint, arguing that (1) the 
Court lacks personal jurisdiction over GunBroker.com; and (2) DCP has failed to 


1    The two agreements were not attached to the Complaint, but GunBroker.com 
provided the agreements with its notice of removal.  The Court will consider the 
agreements as the agreements are embraced by the Complaint.  See Stahl v. U.S. Dep’t of 
Agric., 
327 F.3d 697, 700
 (8th Cir. 2003) (“In a case involving a contract, the court may 
examine the contract documents in deciding a motion to dismiss.”).        
adequately plead any claim against GunBroker.com.  The Court addresses each argument 
in turn.                                                                  
I.   Personal Jurisdiction                                                

“To survive a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, a plaintiff must 
make a prima facie showing that personal jurisdiction exists.”  K-V Pharm. Co. v. J. 
Uriach & CIA, S.A., 
648 F.3d 588, 591-92
 (8th Cir. 2011).  In diversity jurisdiction cases, 
personal jurisdiction exists “only to the extent permitted by the long-arm statute of the 
forum state and by the Due Process Clause.”  
Id. at 592
 (internal quotations and citation 

omitted).  Minnesota’s long-arm statute extends personal jurisdiction as far as the Due 
Process Clause allows.  Valspar Corp. v. Lukken Color Corp., 
495 N.W.2d 408, 411
 
(1992).  “Due Process requires that the defendant purposefully establish minimum 
contacts in the forum state such that asserting personal jurisdiction and maintaining the 
lawsuit against the defendant does not offend traditional conceptions of fair play and 

substantial justice.”  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 592
 (internal quotations and citation 
omitted).  “For contractual claims, personal jurisdiction is proper where the defendant 
reaches out beyond one state and creates continuing relationships and obligations with 
citizens of another state.”  Creative Calling Sols., Inc. v. LF Beauty Ltd., 
799 F.3d 975, 980
 (8th Cir. 2015) (internal quotations and citation omitted).           

To determine whether minimum contacts exist for personal jurisdiction, the Court 
must consider five factors:  “(1) the nature and quality of the contacts with the forum 
state; (2) the quantity of the contacts; (3) the relationship of the cause of action to the 
contacts; (4) the interest of [the forum state] in providing a forum for its residents; and 
(5) the convenience or inconvenience to the parties.”  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 592
 
(internal quotations and citation omitted).  The first three factors are “primary factors,” 
but the Court considers “all of the factors and the totality of the circumstances in deciding 

whether personal jurisdiction exists.”  
Id. at 592-93
.  And the “third factor distinguishes 
whether the jurisdiction is specific or general.”2  Digi-Tel Holdings, Inc. v. Proteq 
Telecomms. (PTE), Ltd., 
89 F.3d 519
, 522 n.4 (8th Cir. 1996).             
GunBroker.com entered into an original and amended contract with DCP, a 
Minnesota corporation, under which DCP agreed to provide payment processing services 

to GunBroker.com.  “A defendant’s solicitation of a business relationship with a 
company incorporated in the forum State that takes place within that State is a relevant 
contact in determining whether its courts may exercise personal jurisdiction.”  Creative 
Calling Sols., Inc, 
799 F.3d at 980
.  Around fifty percent of the services provided under 
the contract were performed by DCP employees or independent contractors in 

Minnesota.3  (Doc. No. 29 (“Beer Aff.”) ¶ 6.)  GunBroker.com met with DCP in 
Minnesota one or two times to discuss DCP’s obligations under the contract, and 
GunBroker.com sent and received thousands of emails to and from DCP in Minnesota.  
(Id. ¶¶ 4-5.)  The contract also contains a choice-of-law provision, requiring it to be 

2    The Court focuses on specific jurisdiction, rather than general jurisdiction, because 
GunBroker.com’s alleged contact with Minnesota relates to the facts underlying this 
action.                                                                   
3    GunBroker.com asserts that DCP “delegated or contracted out much of the work it 
was supposed to perform under the agreement.”  (Doc. No. 33 (“Second Smith Decl.”) 
¶ 10.)  DCP concedes that some work was outsourced but maintains that over fifty 
percent of the work was performed in Minnesota.  (Beer Aff. ¶ 6.)         
interpreted under Minnesota law.  (First Agreement at 9; Am. Agreement at 11.)  
Moreover, GunBroker.com facilitates the purchase and sale of firearms within 
Minnesota.4  (Second Smith Decl. ¶ 6.)                                    

The terms of the contract also contemplate future contact with Minnesota.  The 
contract provides for monthly payments to DCP in Minnesota over the contract term of 
ten years.  (Am. Agreement at 2-3, 16-17.)  The monthly payment includes fees for 
processing payment transactions.  (Id.)  As noted above, GunBroker.com facilitates gun 
sales in Minnesota and thus, under the contract, DCP would obtain fees from those sales, 

as well as for sales made in other states.                                
Based on the amount of contact that GunBroker.com has had within Minnesota, 
the Court concludes that GunBroker.com could have reasonably expected to be haled into 
court in Minnesota in the event of a breach of the contract.              
The choice-of-law provision further supports jurisdiction.  The contract contains a 

provision that states that the contract “shall be interpreted, construed and enforced in all 
respects in accordance with the laws of the State of Minnesota without reference to its 
choice of law rules.”  (First Agreement at 9; Am. Agreement at 11.)  “Although choice-
of-law provisions specifying that the forum state’s laws govern are insufficient on their 


4    GunBroker.com asserts that the sale of firearms to and from Minnesota represents 
a small number of GunBroker.com’s total sales—around 1.54% and 4.27% respectively.  
(Second Smith Decl. ¶ 6.)  The Amended Complaint alleges that GunBroker.com’s total 
sales per year amounts to nearly one billion dollars (Am. Compl. ¶ 6), which suggests 
that GunBroker.com facilitates millions of dollars of sales in and out of Minnesota every 
year.  But because GunBroker.com does not appear to target Minnesota specifically, the 
Court affords little weight to this contact.                              
own to confer personal jurisdiction, they provide further evidence of a defendant’s 
‘deliberate affiliation with the forum State and the reasonable foreseeability of possible 
litigation there.’”  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 594
 (quoting Burger King Corp. v. 

Rudzewicz, 
471 U.S. 462, 482
 (1985)).  As GunBroker.com notes, it does not appear that 
the parties specifically negotiated the choice-of-law provision, and thus the Court will 
afford less weight to the provision.  Even so, the Court finds the existence of the 
provision in the original and amended contracts to favor personal jurisdiction.5 
As for the third factor, the majority of GunBroker.com’s contact with Minnesota 

relates to the formation and execution of the contract.  Future contact is also laid out in 
the contract, specifically the terms providing for monthly payments to DCP and DCP’s 
continued development and maintenance of its software services, fifty percent of which is 
done in Minnesota.                                                        
The fourth factor also favors jurisdiction as Minnesota “obviously has an interest 

in providing a forum for resident corporations,” like DCP.  K-V Pharm. Co., 
648 F.3d at 595
.  And the final factor is largely neutral as a trial in Arizona would be “just as 
inconvenient for [DCP] as a trial in [Minnesota] would be for [GunBroker.com].”  
Id.
 
This case is distinguishable from Digi-Tel Holdings, Inc. v. Proteq  
Telecommunications (PTE), Ltd., 
89 F.3d 519
 (8th Cir. 1996).  In that case, none of the 


5    GunBroker.com asserts that an arbitration provision in Exhibit A of the original 
agreement, which provides for arbitration in Arizona, undercuts the significance of the 
choice-of-law provision.  The amended agreement, however, “deleted [Exhibit A] in its 
entirety and replaced [it]” with a new exhibit that does not contain an arbitration 
provision.  (See Am. Agreement at 3.)                                     
in-person meetings occurred, and none of the contract was performed, in the forum state.  
Id. at 525
.  Here, in contrast, at least one meeting occurred in Minnesota and some of 
work performed under the agreement, around 50%, was performed in Minnesota.  (Beer 

Aff. ¶ 6.)  Moreover, the contract contemplated GunBroker.com’s continued contact with 
Minnesota through its monthly payments to DCP and DCP’s continued development and 
maintenance of its software services.  While in Digi-Tel “[t]he only domestic element of 
the agreement related to the interpretation of the contract under Minnesota law,” here 
GunBroker.com has had much more contact with Minnesota.  
Id.
              

In considering all five factors, the Court concludes that GunBroker.com has 
sufficient minimum contacts in the forum state such that asserting personal jurisdiction 
and maintaining the lawsuit against it does not offend traditional conceptions of fair play 
and substantial justice.  The Court therefore denies GunBroker.com’s motion to dismiss 
for lack of personal jurisdiction and the alternative request to transfer the case to the 

District of Arizona.                                                      
II.  Failure to State a Claim                                             
GunBroker.com next argues that DCP’s Amended Complaint should be dismissed 
because DCP has failed to state a claim against GunBroker.com.            
In deciding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a court assumes all facts in 

the complaint to be true and construes all reasonable inferences from those facts in the 
light most favorable to the complainant.  Morton v. Becker, 
793 F.2d 185, 187
 (8th Cir. 
1986).  A court may consider the complaint, matters of public record, orders, materials 
embraced by the complaint, and exhibits attached to the complaint in deciding a motion 
to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).  Porous Media Corp. v. Pall Corp., 
186 F.3d 1077, 1079
 
(8th Cir. 1999).  To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain “enough facts 
to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”  Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 570
 (2007).  Although a complaint need not contain “detailed factual 
allegations,” it must contain facts with enough specificity “to raise a right to relief above 
the speculative level.”  
Id. at 555
.                                      
DCP brings three claims against GunBroker.com:  (1) breach of contract, 
(2) anticipatory breach of contract, and (3) breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing.  

(Am. Compl.)                                                              
“To plead a breach-of-contract claim under Minnesota law, the plaintiff must 
allege that (1) an agreement was formed, (2) the plaintiff performed any conditions 
precedent to the plaintiff’s demand of performance by the defendant, and (3) the 
defendant breached the contract.”  Mono Advert., LLC v. Vera Bradley Designs, Inc., 
285 F. Supp. 3d 1087, 1089-90
 (D. Minn. 2018).  DCP alleges that it entered into a contract 
with GunBroker.com that provided that DCP would be the exclusive provider of payment 
processing services for GunBroker.com.  (Am. Compl. ¶ 10; see First Agreement at 2.)  
The contract was amended in 2023 and provided that DCP would be “the exclusive 
provider of Payment Processing Services upon DCP providing ACH payment processing 

services to [GunBroker.com].”  (Am. Agreement at 2.)  DCP alleges that it provided 
ACH payment processing services.  (Am. Compl. ¶ 8.)  DCP therefore asserts that 
GunBroker.com breached the contract by selecting a third party to replace DCP in 
violation of the exclusivity provision.  (Id. ¶ 11.)                      
Additionally, the contract provided that DCP would receive a fee for processing 
payment transactions and further made confidential certain information, such as costs and 
details of services.  DCP alleges that GunBroker.com has refused to pay DCP fees owed 

under the contract and has violated the confidentiality provision by, among other things, 
sharing information about pricing structure.  (Id. ¶¶ 12, 14.)            
Contrary to GunBroker.com’s assertion, DCP’s allegations are more than a 
“threadbare recital” of the elements of breach of contract.  (Doc. No. 25 at 21.)  While 
DCP does not cite to specific provisions of the contract in its Amended Complaint, the 

original and amended contracts are in the record and correspond with DCP’s allegations.  
DCP has adequately alleged that GunBroker.com has violated several provisions within 
the agreement, including the exclusivity provision, payment of fees, and confidentiality. 
In response, GunBroker.com argues that the contract authorizes it to disclose 
certain confidential information.  While this may be GunBroker.com’s defense as the 

case proceeds, at this time, DCP has plausibly alleged that GunBroker.com breached the 
confidentiality provision by sharing information related to pricing structure to third 
parties.  And lastly, GunBroker.com contends that the agreement “expressly authorizes 
the parties to use third-party service providers.”  (Id. at 23.)  But this assertion is 
misleading.  The agreement authorizes DCP to assign processing of services to third 

parties.  Thus, DCP has plausibly alleged that GunBroker.com’s use of third-party service 
providers to replace DCP, and without DCP’s approval, violates the agreement. 
Next, GunBroker.com argues that DCP has failed to state a claim for anticipatory 
breach.  Under Minnesota law, an anticipatory repudiation is “an unconditional 
repudiation of a contract, either by words or acts, which is communicated to the other 
party prior to the time fixed by the contract for his performance.”  Matter of Haugen, 
278 N.W.2d 75
, 79 n.6 (Minn. 1979).  GunBroker.com argues that DCP merely recites 

the elements of anticipatory repudiation without providing specific facts in support of the 
claim.  The Court disagrees.  DCP has alleged conduct that provides sufficient evidence 
of GunBroker.com’s intent to not perform future obligations under the agreement, 
namely, GunBroker.com’s hiring of a third party to replace DCP and its failure to pay 
fees owed to DCP.                                                         

DCP’s last claim is for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.  
“Under Minnesota law, every contract includes an implied covenant of good faith and fair 
dealing requiring that one party not unjustifiably hinder the other party’s performance of 
the contract.”  In re Hennepin Cnty. 1986 Recycling Bond Litig., 
540 N.W.2d 494, 502
 
(Minn. 1995) (internal quotations and citation omitted).  A party breaches the implied 

covenant of good faith and fair dealing when it “acts in bad faith,” or “refuses to fulfill 
some duty or contractual obligation based on an ulterior motive.”  Armas v. Fifth Third 
Bancorp, 
315 F. Supp. 3d 1118, 1123
 (D. Minn. 2018) (internal quotations and citation 
omitted).                                                                 
GunBroker.com again asserts that DCP has merely recited the elements of the 

claim.  DCP alleges that GunBroker.com hired a third party to replace DCP as its service 
provider, in violation of their agreement for DCP to be GunBroker.com’s exclusive 
provider of payment services.  Additionally, DCP asserts that GunBroker.com has 
“refused to pay [DCP]” fees for processing transactions and breached the agreement’s 
confidentiality provision by sharing confidential information about pricing structures to 
third parties.  The Court concludes that these facts plausibly support an inference of bad 
faith.                                                                    

Because DCP has adequately pled each claim in its Amended Complaint, the 
Court denies GunBroker.com’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.  

ORDER

Based upon the foregoing, and the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 
HEREBY ORDERED that GunBroker.com’s motion to dismiss (Doc. No. [22]) is  

DENIED.                                                                   

Dated:  May 17, 2024          s/Donovan W. Frank                          
                         DONOVAN W. FRANK                            
                         United States District Judge                

Reference

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