Precision Polymers, Inc. v. Nelson, 45596
Decision Date | 19 June 1973 |
Docket Number | No. 45596,45596 |
Citation | 512 P.2d 811 |
Parties | PRECISION POLYMERS, INC., Petitioner, v. Fred NELSON, Judge of the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, Respondent. |
Court | Oklahoma Supreme Court |
Sanders, McElroy & Carpenter, Tulsa, for petitioner.
Clyde J. Watts, Oklahoma City, Paul E. Garrison, Tulsa, for respondent.
This original proceeding requires an interpretation of 12 O.S.1971, § 187; and 12 O.S.1971, § 1701.01 et seq., sometimes referred to as our 'Long Arm' statutes.
Bowline Construction Company commenced proceedings against Precision Polymers, Inc., et al, to recover damages allegedly sustained by Bowline on separate construction projects in Oklahoma and Missouri. Bowline alleged five separate causes of action and sought recovery against Precision in its Second and Fifth causes. The Second cause involved the Missouri project and the Fifth cause involved the Oklahoma project.
The 'Long Arm' statutes were invoked to subject Precision to the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma Court and to obtain service of process upon it.
Precision challenged the venue and jurisdiction of the trial court as to Bowline's Second cause of action against it on the grounds that that cause of action arose in Missouri and did not arise in Oklahoma. The trial court overruled Precision's plea to the venue and jurisdiction.
In this original proceeding Precision (Petitioner) requests this Court to assume original jurisdiction and issue a writ of prohibition restraining and enjoining the trial court from exercising further jurisdiction over it as to Bowline's Second cause of action.
Petitioner is a Delaware Corporation and its principal place of business is in New Jersey. It is not domesticated and does not have a registered service agent in Oklahoma. Petitioner manufactured certain supplies and materials that were used in the Oklahoma and Missouri projects. Bowline's two causes of action against Petitioner are based upon breach of implied warranty, i.e., certain supplies and materials manufactured by Petitioner and used in the projects were allegedly defective.
The Oklahoma and Missouri projects were separate and distinct. Petitioner had sold the allegedly defective material and supplies to another defendant, Cement Asbestos Products Company, whose principal place of business was in Alabama. At the direction of Asbestos, Petitioner delivered the material and supplies it had sold to Asbestos to the Bowline job sites in Oklahoma and Missouri.
Apparently Petitioner concedes the trial court had jurisdiction over it to adjudicate the Fifth cause of action which involved the Oklahoma project. However, in reference to the second cause (the Missouri project), Petitioner contends that it committed no acts and transacted no business within the purview of 12 O.S.1971, § 187, or 12 O.S.1971, § 1701.03, that would subject it to the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma Courts.
Section 187, supra, provides:
'Any person, firm or corporation * * * who does, or who has done any of the acts hereinafter enumerated, * * * submits himself * * * to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State as To any cause of action arising, or which shall have arisen, from doing any of said acts:
'(1) the transaction of any business within this State;
'(2) the commission of any act within this State;
'(3) the manufacture or distribution of a product which is sold in the regular course of business within this State and is used within this State;
'* * *.' (emphasis ours)
12 O.S.1971, § 1701.03, provides that a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person who acts directly or indirectly or by an agent, As to a cause or claim for relief arising from the person's transacting any business in this State. Other acts are enumerated which would subject the actor to the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma Courts.
If Petitioner would be subject to the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma Court under the latter statute, it would be subject to the same jurisdiction under § 187 under the record herein presented. Therefore, we shall consider only the question of jurisdiction as affected by the provisions of § 187, supra.
In Crescent Corporation v. Martin (1968), Okl., 443 P.2d 111, the trial court overruled a plea to the venue and...
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