3123 Smb LLC v. Steven Horn
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
For purposes of determining diversity jurisdiction, “a corporation shall be deemed to be a citizen of every State ...
But what of a corporation that has few, if any, activities? That’s the case for a holding company, which does little other than passively own other companies and supervise their management. The corporation at issue here—Lincoln One Corporation—was formed less than a month before this lawsuit was filed, and its only act during those few weeks was to incorporate. Determining Lincoln One’s principal place of business is an existentialist exercise, yet one on which its entitlement to litigate in federal court depends.
We conclude, based on the slim record before us, that what little business Lincoln One conducted was done in Missouri—its state of incorporation—making both Lincoln One and its wholly-owned subsidiary, plaintiff 3123 SMB LLC, putative citizens of that state alone. Because defendant Steven Horn is a California citizen; there appears to be complete diversity between the parties.
There is evidence, however, that 3123 SMB and Lincoln One. were treated as alter egos, and that Lincoln One’s owners manipulated the ownership structure of the ■ real property at the center of -this lawsuit in. order to manufacture diversity-issues that .the district court didn’t consider. We therefore conditionally reverse the district -court’s jurisdictional dismissal and remand so that it- may consider in the first instance whether these entities were alter egos or there was jurisdictional manipulation that would warrant treating 3123 SMB as a.California citizen.
I.
This lawsuit, which involves a claim of legal malpractice; is part of a larger dispute regarding real property indirectly controlled by Anthony Kling and his mother, Mary Kling. The property is a building located at 3115-3125 Santa Monica Boulevard in Santa Monica, California.
In 2008, the Klings and various entities associated with their family sued several defendants in Los Angeles County Superi- or Court, claiming that a construction project next to the Santa Monica property caused subsidence damage due to inadequate methods of construction. See Kling v. Gabai Constr., No. B235367, 2012 WL 5458924s at *1 (Cal. Ct. App. Nov. 9, 2012) (unpublished). The Kling parties, which eventually included 3123 SMB, subsequently hired Horn to represent them.
The attorney-client relationship soured when the state court lawsuit was dismissed, According to 3123 SMB’s amended complaint in 'the instant case, Horn prof
In July 2011, before Horn’s representation in the state court litigation ended, 3123 SMB was organized and registered as a limited liability company with the Missouri Secretary of State. At the time, its sole member was another limited liability company, Washington LLC, which in turn was controlled entirely by Anthony Kling. 3123 SMB gained ownership of the Santa Monica property and the litigation rights in a 2012 transfer. It became a party to the state court litigation in May 2013. See Kling v. Hassid, No. B261391,
3123 SMB’s sole activity is to manage the Santa Monica property. Because the building is uninhabitable, 3123 SMB has little business to transact other than litigation related to the property damage. Its listed place of business is the Clayton, Missouri office of its litigation attorney, David Knieriem. Anthony and Mary Kling are the only persons authorized to act on behalf of 3123 SMB. It has no officers, directors, or employees.
The Klings reside in California but claim to have longstanding connections to Missouri. Mary Kling is from St. Louis, and the Klings still have family there. Anthony Kling goes to St. Louis “all the time”— usually a couple of times each year, but it “[djepends on how the Cardinals are doing.” He has operated “multiple” unnamed businesses in Clayton, Missouri, where he has unspecified real and intellectual property interests. He “regularly interact[s] with businesses [and] government entities, in ... Missouri.” However, Anthony Kling has lived in Los Angeles his entire life other than to attend school in New York, and Mary Kling has resided in Los Ange-les since at least the late 1990s.
In September 2014, nearly a year after Horn’s representation ended,
Mary Kling is Lincoln One’s president and secretary. Initially, she was the sole board member. Subsequently, Anthony Kling joined the board. He owns 75% of the corporation’s shares, and Mary Kling owns the rest.
According to Anthony Kling, Lincoln One’s board meetings take place annually in Clayton, although none had been held at the time of the lawsuit. Subsequently, Lincoln One held a board meeting in October 2015. Anthony Kling attended in person,
Lincoln One’s sole business, which it conducts at board meetings, “is to provide direction to 3123 SMB, LLC.” Currently, this direction is to prosecute the lawsuits concerning the damage to the Santa Monica property. Lincoln One does not conduct business anywhere else.
At the time of this lawsuit, Lincoln One had no “fundamental daily real estate business operations.” It did not directly own or manage any real estate. Its fundamental business operation was to hold a meeting each year in Clayton to approve the following year’s directors and officers and any modification to the bylaws or issuance of common stock.
The district court dismissed this action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, concluding that California was Lincoln One’s principal place of business under Hertz.
II.
Our jurisdiction arises under
III.
A.
For purposes of diversity jurisdiction, a limited liability company “is a citizen of every state of which its owners/members are citizens.” Johnson v. Columbia Props. Anchorage, LP,
Under the “nerve center” test, a corporation’s principal place of business “should normally be the place where the corporation maintains its headquarters— provided that the headquarters is the actual center of direction, control, and coordination ... and not simply an office where the corporation holds its board meetings (for example, attended by directors and officers who have traveled there for the occasion).” Herfz,
Only one circuit has grappled with Hertz’s application to a holding company. In Johnson v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., the Third Circuit considered a corporation with “quite limited” activities, “consisting] primarily of owning-its interest in [a limited liability company], holding intra-compa-ny accounts, issuing and receiving dividends, and paying taxes.”
Johnson concluded that the' holding company was' a citizen solely of Delaware because its nerve center was in Wilmington, where the board meetings took place.
[T]he kind of board meetings denigrated in Hertz were being considered' in the context of a- case involving a sprawling operating company, with extensive activities carried out by 11,230 employees at facilities in 44 states. For a holding company ..., relatively short, quarterly board meetings may well be all that is required to direct and control the company’s limited work.... [T]he board generally conducts three tasks at each meeting: (1) it approves or corrects the minutes from the previous meeting, (2) it reviews the company’s financial statements with [an] accountant ..., and (3) it addresses any other business required to come before the meeting, such as authorizing agents to sign documents, making changes to the officers, paying a dividend, or, occasionally, restructuring the company’s holdings. Generally, such business .is straightforward and takes little time, yet it constitutes [the holding company’s] primary activity: managing its assets. The location of board meetings is therefore a more significant jurisdictional fact here than it was in .Hertz, and the meetings’ brevity does not necessarily reflect an absence of substantive decision-making.
Johnson,
The First Circuit applied a similar analysis in the pre-Hertz case of Taber Partners, I v. Merit Builders, Inc.,
The district court concluded that both corporations had a principal place of business in Puerto Rico because they “were formed to act as owners' of the [hotel]” and devoted “almost all of their corporate ac-. tivity to administer their assets in the partnership.”
B.
The holding company in this, case, Lincoln One, is even less active than those in Johnson and Taber Partners. Because diversity jurisdiction “depends upon the state of things at the time of the action brought,” Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Glob. Grp., L.P.,
In the somewhat analogous context of a company that is winding down, two circuits have held that a dissolved corporation has no principal place of business for diversity purposes, and is therefore a citizen only of its state of incorporation. See Holston Invs., Inc. B.V.I. v. LanLogistics Corp.,
We have not decided whether an inactive corporation must have a principal place of business. In Co-Efficient Energy, we found “a certain perverse logic” in the proposition that “an inactive corporation ... is only a citizen of the state of its incorporation.”
Here, in contrast, Lincoln One did not engage in any activity during its first 25 days. This lawsuit was filed by 3123 SMB, not Lincoln One. In concluding that California was Lincoln One’s principal place of business, the district court appears to have conflated 3123 SMB’s management of its lawsuit, which the court reasonably assumed would be directed from California, where the Klings reside, with Lincoln One’s management of 3123 SMB at its annual meetings, which had not yet occurred and would take place in Missouri. Lincoln One’s first board meeting was not held until a year after 3123 SMB filed this lawsuit.
Johnson rejected the idea that a holding company’s nerve center is where the subsidiary limited liability company’s management’is based, because that “ignores the well-established rule that a parent corporation maintains separate citizenship from a subsidiary unless it has exerted such an overwhelming level of control over the subsidiary that the two companies do'not retain separate corporate identities.” Id. at 351; accord Taber Partners,
The district court may have believed that an alter ego relationship exists between Lincoln One and 3123 SMB. The two entities are managed by the same two individuals utilizing the same attorneys, with no one else involved. But Anthony Kling provided unimpeached deposition testimony and sworn declaration statements that Lincoln One’s only business is to provide general direction to 3123 SMB—at the moment, to continue prosecuting the property-related lawsuits—and that this direction is given exclusively at board meetings in Clayton, Missouri. To reach the conclusion that Lincoln One and 3123 SMB are alter egos, the court would need to reject this evidence, which it can’t do -without explicitly finding Anthony Kling incredible. See Data Disc, Inc. v. Sys. Tech. Assocs., Inc.,
The district court found it “completely implausible” that Lincoln One had “not taken any actions other than the single board meeting.” We disagree. It’s entirely plausible that Lincoln One, which doesn’t do much at all, did nothing for 25 days. Its sole directive is to provide general direction to 3123 SMB, and at that time 3123 SMB had little business to transact other than litigation related to the Santa Monica property. Moreover, the district court’s reference to the single board meeting in the context of Lincoln One’s “implausible” inactivity suggests that it was examining a time frame well beyond the 25 days. If so, it erred by “considering] facts that arose after the complaint was filed in federal court.” In re Digimarc Corp. Derivative Litig.,
C.
The question remains how to classify the citizenship of a holding company such as Lincoln One that has engaged in no activity other than incorporation. We conclude that a recently-formed holding company’s principal place of business is the place where it has its board meetings, regardless of whether such meetings have already occurred, unless evidence shows that the corporation is directed from elsewhere.
The district court noted that Lincoln One’s sole officer, Mary Kling, resided in California, and it found “no evidence that any of the operations of Lincoln One are directed, controlled, or coordinated from Missouri or anywhere else other than California.” This was so, the court explained, because Lincoln One’s single board meet
The assumption that a holding company’s principal place of business is in the state where its officers reside is problematic for several reasons. To begin with, this approach looks to the state as a whole rather than the specific place within the state from which the officer presumably directs the company’s activity. The Supreme Court has cautioned that a corporation’s principal place of business “is a place within a State. It is not the State itself.”
In addition, “[a] corporation’s ‘nerve center’ ... is a single place.”
More generally, the connection between the state where a holding company conducts its business, on the one hand, and the states where its officers and directors reside, on the other, is tenuous. Corporations based in metropolitan areas spanning multiple states, such as New York, Chicago, or Kansas City, frequently have officers residing in a neighboring state. Many holding companies incorporate and hold board meetings in sparsely populated states like Delaware and Nevada, while their board members reside elsewhere. In Johnson, for example, the holding company had its board' meetings in Delaware, while four of its six officers and directors were based in other jurisdictions—two in Pennsylvania and two in the United Kingdom. See
Equally problematic is the assumption that a corporation’s principal place of business can shift over time without any change to the corporation’s structure or operation. Such an approach “invites greater litigation and can lead to strange results.” Hertz,
Prior to Hertz, when determining a corporation’s principal place of business, the circuits applied multiple overlapping tests that often lacked precision. See
A rule that forces courts to pick a nerve center from the potentially several states where corporate decision-makers reside and to determine whether there have been enough board meetings to establish' a different nerve center would be difficult to administer and generate unnecessary litigation on collateral issues. In contrast, a rule presuming that from inception a holding company directs its business from the place where it holds board meetings is easy to apply. See Johnson, 724’F.3d at 355 (“Even while cautioning courts to identify a corporation’s actual center of direction and control, Hertz (place[d] primary weight upon’ the need for judicial administration of a jurisdictional statute to remain as simple as possible;’ ” (quoting Hertz,
Missouri, like many states, allows a corporation to specify in its bylaws the location of annual meetings and, if none is designated, provides that the meetings by default will be held at the corporation’s registered office. See Mo. Rev.- Stat; § 351.225(1); Mod. Bus. Corp. Act § .7.01(b) (Am. Bar. Ass’n 2016) (providing that corporation’s “principal office” as designated in its annual report is location of annual meetings if not otherwise sped-, fied); see also, e.g., Cal. Corp. Code § .600(a);
D.
At the same time, courts must be alert to the possibility of jurisdictional manipulation.
However, the record also contains evidence suggesting that Lincoln One incorporated in Missouri for legitimate reasons. The Klings have deep ties to the state, and their attorneys reside there. .And there’s nothing inherently problematic about a holding company and its subsidiary having the same officers. See 6A Fletcher, supra, § 2821 (citing Haskell v, MeClintic-Marshall Co.,
IV.
Anthony Kling testified that Lincoln One holds its board meetings in Clayton, Missouri. Whether that’s true is a matter of credibility to be determined by the district court. The fact that Lincoln One had not yet held a board meeting does not in and of itself have jurisdictional significance if the meeting’s location had already been determined.
Because 3123 SMB presented evidence that Lincoln One’s minimal activity was directed from board meetings in Missouri, that state appears' to be the corporation’s principal place of business. Therefore, we reverse the district court’s jurisdictional dismissal. Our reversal is conditional.' On remand, the district court -is free to consider whether there is jurisdictional manipulation or an alter ego relationship- between Lincoln One and 3123 SMB., -
REVERSED and REMANDED.
. Anthony Kling denied that 3123 SMB was named after the Santa Monica property, testifying at his deposition that it was "just a made up name.”
. Although the record-does not disclose when this occurred, 3123 SMB alleges in parallel • state court litigation that it was on or about March 14, 2011. Complaint at 4, 3123 SMB LLC v. Horn, No, BC682318 (L.A. Cty. Super. Ct. filed Nov. 3, 2017).
. California has a one-year statute of limitations for legal malpractice claims. See
. In Missouri, as in many other jurisdictions, a corporation's existence begins when its articles of incorporation are filed with the secretary of state. See
. It's not within our province to make credibility findings, see, e.g., Cruz v. City of Anaheim,
. The dissent overlooks this distinction in proposing a rule that a holding company’s principal place of business is the state in which one of the directors or managers resides.
. The dissent would hold otherwise because "[t]he inquiry focuses on the location of the corporate nerve center when the suit is filed, not on future, hypothetical actions.” Dissent at 473.- If a holding company's board ’meets once per year in December, what difference does it make if the board has already met when the company is sued in January? Either ■ way, no business will be conducted over the next 11- months and, as the dissent points out, the shareholders- can easily change the meeting place during that time. Nor are we relying on ''formalism.” Dissent at 473 'Anthony Kling testified that Lincoln One’s board meets in .Clayton, and the corporate , documents merely provide additional evidence of that.
. The dissent's criticism in this regard is essentially a critique ‘ of Hertz, which directs courts to take remedial action “if the record reveals attempts at manipulation.”
. Before Lincoln One assumed control, 3123 SMB’s sole member was Washington LLC, which was controlled entirely by Anthony Kling, a California citizen. See Johnson,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The Court today holds that a corporation’s principal place of business was located in a state in which the company had done absolutely no business at the time this lawsuit was filed. Although identifying the principal place of business of a holding company is not always an easy task, the “nerve center” cannot be in a state where the corporate EEG is flat. The district court correctly found that Lincoln One’s nerve center at the time this suit was filed was in California, where its shareholders and directors resided, and where the only corporate asset—an apartment complex— was located. I therefore respectfully dissent.
I.
■ I start, as does the majority, with the basics, For purposes of diversity jurisdiction, a corporation is a citizen both of its state of incorporation and the state “where it has its principal place of business.”
It is undisputed that Lincoln One was incorporated in Missouri. But, that is only half the battle. It is also plaintiffs burden to establish the location of the corporation’s principal place of business, or its “nerve center.” See Hertz Corp. v. Friend,
Plaintiff failed to meet that burden. Rather, the district court found that Lincoln One’s principal place of business was in California, a factual determination we review for clear error. See Co-Efficient Energy Sys. v. CSL Indus., Inc.,
Indeed, even adopting the majority’s premise that Lincoln One was completely inactive during the relevant period, the district court’s dismissal must be affirmed. A corporation’s principal place of business is “the place where a corporation’s officers direct, control, and coordinate the corporation’s activities.” Hertz,
II.
The majority relies heavily on Johnson v. SmithKline Beecham Corp. for the proposition that the nerve center of a holding company is where its board meetings are supposed to take place.
The majority’s reliance on Taber Partners, I v. Merit Builders, Inc.,
III.
Today’s decision gives rise to the very dangers of jurisdictional manipulation that Hertz eschews. Under the majority’s approach, a newly formed corporation is entitled, in the absence of other activity, to a presumption that its state of incorporation is also its principal place of business. But, the “nerve center” of a corporation may shift over time. Thus, Lincoln One, having established diversity simply by virtue of its state of incorporation, can hereafter safely conduct its business entirely in California but still invoke the limited jurisdiction of an Article III court.
I respectfully dissent.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- 3123 SMB LLC, Individually, and as Assignee, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Steven HORN, Defendant-Appellee
- Cited By
- 93 cases
- Status
- Published