FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
DENNIS R. BROWN J. DAVID YOUNG
DENNIS H. GEISLEMAN Law Offices of J. David Young
Law Office of Dennis H. Geisleman Indianapolis, Indiana
Fort Wayne, Indiana
DOUG BYRUM
Hall & Griffin
Indianapolis, Indiana
BRIAN R. LINKY, an Individual; )NATHAN GOLDENBERG, an Individual; )
Ind. T.R. 75. The rule creates no preference among the first nine
subsections. Pratt, 713 N.E.2d at 315. If no county of preferred
venue is established under Trial Rule 75(A)(1)-(9), the rule makes it clear that
preferred venue may be established under Trial Rule 75(A)(10). It is the
general rule that a lawsuit may be commenced in any county in Indiana.
Ind. Trial Rule 75(A). However, when a party files for a
motion to transfer to a preferred venue, the trial court must transfer the
case to the county selected by the moving party if it is a
preferred venue and the county in which the action was filed is not
a preferred venue. Pratt, 713 N.E.2d at 315. If the lawsuit
is initially filed in a county of preferred venue, a transfer will not
be granted. City of South Bend v. D & J Gravel Co.,
Inc., 727 N.E.2d 719 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000).
Indiana has long upheld venue and forum selections made by stipulation. The
forum selection issue was addressed in Mechanics Laundry v. Wilder Oil Co., 596
N.E.2d 248, 251 (Ind. Ct. App. 1992), where we stated, We have repeatedly
held that parties may consent by contract to the exercise of personal jurisdiction
by courts that otherwise might not have such jurisdiction. We further observed
that contractual provisions that seek to limit the litigation of future actions to
particular courts or places are enforceable if they are reasonable and just under
the circumstances and there is no evidence of fraud or overreaching such that
the agreeing party, for all practical purposes, would be deprived of a day
in court. Id. at 250.
It is clear from the record that venue properly lies in Marion County
as to Goldenberg based on the Applicable Law section of his employment contract.
Appellants App. p. 72. But for this contractual provision, Marion County
would not otherwise be a preferred venue under Trial Rule 75(A)(1)-(9). There
is no evidence in the record of fraud or overreaching in the formation
of the contract, and thus the provision is enforceable.
What remains at issue is whether Goldenbergs employment contract is enough for venue
to properly lie in Marion County as to Linky. We believe that
it is. If the venue in which the plaintiff files the case
is preferred as to one defendant, then the venue is preferred as to
all defendants. Thus, because the forum selection clause is applicable to Goldenberg,
it follows that it is applicable to all of the defendants. See
Parkison v. TLC Lines, Inc., 506 N.E.2d 1105, 1108 (Ind. Ct. App. 1987)
(finding that the drafters of Trial Rule 75(A)(1) determined that one preferable location
for a case in which all defendants resided in different counties was any
county in which a single defendant resided).
Had Midwestern originally sued Goldenberg in Marion County and Linky in Kosciusko County
but later joined the two actions in Marion County, this case would not
be before us today. We conclude, as did the trial court, that
this action would properly be in Marion County if Linky had been joined
pursuant to Trial Rule 21(B), which states:
Effect of venue or jurisdiction over part of case. The court shall
have venue and authority over all persons or claims required to be joined
or permissively joined, impleaded or included by intervention, interpleader, counterclaim or cross-claim if
it has venue or is authorized to determine any claim asserted between any
of the parties thereto, notwithstanding any requirement of venue or of jurisdiction over
the subject-matter applicable to other claims or other parties. The court may
transfer the proceedings to the proper court if it determines that venue or
authority of the court is dependent upon a claim, or a claim by
or against a particular party which appears from the pleadings, or proves to
be a sham or made in bad faith; and if another action is
pending in this state by or against a person upon the same claim
at the time he becomes a party, the court may dismiss the action
as to him, or in its sound discretion, it may order all or
part of the proceedings to be consolidated with the first pending action.
It would simply constitute a waste of judicial resources to sever the action
against Linky and transfer it to Kosciusko County only to have him subsequently
joined as a party to the action against Goldenberg in Marion County.
The sequence of the inclusion of the defendants in this action does not
change the result. Thus, the trial court correctly denied Linkys motion to
transfer venue.
See footnote
Affirmed.
BROOK, C.J., and SHARPNACK, J., concur.