Civ Pro Outline
Civ Pro Outline
Civ Pro Outline
I. Personal Jurisdiction
In what states can P sue D?
Court has to have power over person or person’s property
In personam = power over person
In rem = power over property
Quasi in Rem = power over property
Must also have a statute (long arm statute) that allows jurisdiction.
General jurisdiction – D can be sued in the forum on a claim that arose anywhere
in the world.
Specific jurisdiction – D can be sued only for a claim that arose in the forum.
1877 Pennoyer v. Neff – a state has jurisdiction over everybody and everything q
w/in the forum.
General Jurisdiction Rules from Pennoyer:
Implied consent – If you drive into our state we will assume you have consented
to personal jurisdiction.
1957 McGee – Texas Ins. Co. sued in California. Had one contact (client)
a. D solicited business from California
b. Relatedness – P’s claim arises from contact with forum
c. State had an interest
1958 Hanson v. Denckla – Wealthy woman sets up trust with Delaware bank,
dies in FLA, her relatives fight over the money. Does bank have no relevant
contact with FLA? NO
a. Relevant contact must arise from D’s Purposeful availment – D must
reach out to forum.
1980 World Wide Volkswagen – car accident, sued dealer and regional
distributor in OK (they were from NY).
a. Court found there was no purposeful availment
b. No relevant contact – car got to OK by the unilateral act of P
c. Must be foreseeable that Ds would be sued in OK
1987 Asahi
Stream of Commerce – A sells to B who sells to C,D,E – Is that a relevant
contact? Court is split.
a. Brennan opinion – is a contact if you put it in the stream and you
anticipate that it will get to states C,D,E.
b. O’Connor opinion – Need stream of commerce and intent or
purpose to serve states C, D, & E. ( advertising, customer service)
Analytical Framework:
Qu. 1: Does a traditional basis apply? (Pennoyer)
Qu. 2: Minimum contacts analysis? (Shoe, Burnham)
1. must have relevant contact.
a. forseeability that D would be sued in forum
2. Fairness
a. Relatedness – Does P’s claim arise from contact?
b. Fairness factors
i. Burden on D and witnesses
ii. State’s interest
iii. P’s interest
iv. Legal system’s interest in efficiency
v. Interstate interest in shared substantive policies
Shaffer hints that with in rem the presence of prop will satisfy contacts,
especially land.
5. 4(d) – is not service of process but waiver of service of process to cut court
costs.
6. 4k(1)a – You can serve process throughout state where Fed Ct. sits and
you can reach out of state only if state law allows.
a. 4k(1)b – you can serve process outside the state w/in 100 miles of
courthouse. Does not apply to serve process on original D, just joined
Ds.
C. Opportunity to be Heard
Connecticut v. Doehr
Safeguards set out by Supreme Court:
1. P must give an affidavit a sworn statement
2. P must state specifics
3. order from a judicial officer
4. Sometimes bond is required
5. D gets a hearing on the merits
Motley case
a. Congress passes a statute that RR cannot give away free passes
b. Motleys claim they are not covered by statute and sue RR to cont.
getting free passes
c. No Federal Qu. B/c no Federal right has been breached
C. Supplemental Jurisdiction 1367
P must have 1 of (A and B) to get into Fed Ct. For every single claim in Fed Ct.
there must be SMJ
Supp. Juris – allows a Fed Ct. to hear a claim even though the claim does not have A
or B. Original Claim must but additional claims do not have to have diversity or
Fed Q.
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs 1966 – 2 claims one Fed and one state. PTN
sues DTN on Federal Labor law and state tort law
2questions:
a. Does 1367a grant supp jurisdiction?
b. Does 1367b take away supp jurisdiction?
Only applies in diversity cases. Only kills supp juris. Over
claims by p.
IV. Venue
In what Fed Dist do I lay Venue?
B. Transfer of Venue
Must transfer within same judicial system ie. Fed Dist Ct. of Minnesota to Fed
District Court of Colorado.
2 transfer statutes – In both statutes you can only transfer to a court that is a proper
venue and has p.j. over D.
2. 1406a – when the original court is an improper venue. You can dismiss or
transfer in interest of justice.
The court can however impose on cases dismissed for forum non conveniens.
• In some states challenging p.j. you have to make a special appearance and if you
argue any other issue except p.j. you have waived p.j.
• Federal rules allow Shotgun pleading in either motion to dismiss or answer. Rule
12. But must raise p.j. first or it is waived
o Within 20 days of service of process you must make a motion or you must
answer
o 12b lists 7 defenses that can be raised either by motion or answer
12b1 – SMJ
12b2 – P.J.
12b3 – object to venue
12b4 – insufficient process (rare)
12b5 – insufficient service
12b6 – failure to state a claim
12b7 failure to join an indispensable party
o Balance of Interests
Byrd – State law said it has to be decided by judge, Fed law said it has to
be decided by jury. S. Ct said Fed Ct. not bound by state law b/c jury
trial very important to Feds and there is no reason articulated why state
wants only judge to decide
o Avoid Forum Shopping
If Fed Ct. ignores state law will litigants flock to Fed Cts?
We don’t want this to happen b/c that would cause inequitable
administration