Personal Jurisdiction - BarBri - Civil Procedure Flashcards
What question does personal jurisdiction ask?
Can the plaintiff sue the defendant in this state?
Define Personal Jurisdiction
The power the Court has over the parties, specifically the defendant, in a case.
Is personal jurisdiction analyzed differently in state v. federal court?
No. They are analyzed the same.
What are the Court’s jurisdictional predicates regarding personal jurisdiction?
(1) Court has power over the defendant himself
(2) Court has power over the defendant’s property (meaning her property resides in a state’s jurisdiction)
List the three kinds of personal jurisdiction
(1) In Personam
(2) General Jurisdiction
(3) Specific Jurisdiction
Describe In Personam jurisdiction
The court has power over the defendant himself.
- Domicile in the state, sold products there, used the roads.
Describe General Jurisdiction
The defendant can be sued in this state for a claim that arose anywhere in the universe.
EX: If California has general jurisdiction over you, you can be sued in California for something you did in California, for something you did in Florida, NY, or Chicago.
Which cases have changed the test regarding how courts decide if there is general jurisdiction over a defendant?
(1) Goodyear
(2) Daimler
(3) BNSF
General Jurisdiction is now proper only where the defendant is at home or essentially at home.
General Jurisdiction is now proper only where _________________.
What is the test used?
the defendant is at home or essentially at home.
TEST: Is the defendant at home or essentially at home in this forum?
What does “at home” mean regarding general jurisdiction?
For a human, at home is where you are domiciled.
- Every human has a domicile but ONLY ONE. And so you are subject to general jurisdiction in the state of your domicile.
Describe Specific Jurisdiction
With specific jurisdiction, the plaintiff’s claim arises from the defendant’s contact with the forum state. It is related to the defendant’s contact with the forum state.
EX: If California has specific jurisdiction over you, you are being sued in California for something you did in California.
(notion of relatedness)
What is a Forum?
The state that is conducting the hearing or proceeding.
Describe the notion of relatedness
The idea of whether a case has general or specific jurisdiction
Does the plaintiff’s claim arise from the defendant’s contact with the forum?
‘Whether a case has general or specific jurisdiction depends upon what?
Relatedness
Describe In Rem (personal jurisdiction)
The does not have power over the defendant himself but over her property in that state.
Property refers to any kind of property: land, car, watch, bank account, etc.,
Describe Quas-in-rem
Same as In Rem where the court has power over the defendant’s property but involves a situation where the defendant’s property is seized to satisfy the plaintiff’s claim.
What is the difference between In Rem and Quasi-in-rem?
The _______ tells courts how far they can go in exercising personal jurisdiction of any of the three types.
Due Process Clause
What are the two analyses for personal jurisdiction?
(1) Statutory
(2) Constitutional
What does the statutory analyses for personal jurisdiction ask?
- Is there a state statute that allows PJ in this case?
- If no, then there’s no PJ even if the case falls within the due process circle
- If yes, then you perform the second analysis of constitutionality
True or False:
The fact that a case falls within the due process circle and is constitutional allows for the exercise of personal jurisdiction.
FALSE
- We only get personal jurisdiction if state law has allowed us to exercise personal jurisdiction in the case.
- In other words, personal jurisdiction is not self-executing.
(remember there is a two-step personal jurisdiction analysis (1) statutory (2) constitutional
Describe the Pennoyer v. Neff case.
Traditional Bases of In Personam Jurisdiction
What are the traditional bases of In Personam jurisdiction as established in Pennoyer?
(1) Presence
* The defendant is served with process while voluntarily present in the forum state.
(2) Agent/Representative
* Defendants agent is served with process while in the forum state.
(3) Domicile
* The defendant is domiciled (resides) in the forum state.
(4) Consent
* The defendant consents to jurisdiction even if the court has no jurisdiction over the defendant.
Describe an Agent
An agent is a representative who may have the authority to accept process of service on one’s behalf.
If you’re suing a defendant who is not domiciled in the forum state, does not consent, and does not have an agent, then the only way to get him under Pennoyer is what?
Serve process on him in the forum state.
Serving process on someone because more difficult as society became more mobile. How did the court react to those technological changes?
For a couple of generations, it expanded the traditional bases of Pennoyer.
The best example being Hess v. Pawloski
(Hess v. Pawloski- not a case covered in book)
Hess v. Pawloski
(Note: Not covered in Book)
A Pennsylvanian drove his car to Massachusetts. He’s involved in a car wreck and injures the plaintiff, who is a Massachusetts citizen. The plaintiff sues the Pennsylvanian in Massachusetts. But by the time he’s sued, the defendant had gotten back to Pennsylvania, so he couldn’t serve process on him in Massachusetts.
Is there jurisdiction?
Yes. Because of the Nonresident Motorist Act (which is still in effect today)
Massachusetts had a statute that said, when you drive a motor vehicle into our state, you’re doing two things.
(1) Consenting to specific jurisdiction (consenting jurisdiction for a claim that arises from your use of the motor vehicle)
(2) Appointing a state official, the Registrar of Motor Vehicles as an agent for service of process.
The SC upheld this in Hess v. Pawloski