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Jurisdiction in Transnational Business Contracts: The Case of Cole v. Mileti - Prof. Rodol, Assignments of Business and Labour Law

The legal case of cole v. Mileti, where a california resident, nick mileti, entered into a business contract with an ohio resident, joseph cole, and failed to repay a loan. The issue of jurisdiction, specifically whether phone calls and letters constituted sufficient minimum contacts for a court to exercise jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant. The facts of the case, the relevant law, the rationale behind the decision, and the holding of the case, which was in favor of the plaintiff, joseph cole.

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Pre 2010

Uploaded on 07/30/2009

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Download Jurisdiction in Transnational Business Contracts: The Case of Cole v. Mileti - Prof. Rodol and more Assignments Business and Labour Law in PDF only on Docsity! Last Name, First Name, Middle name Use 12 pt. type Student Number Use Time New Roman font BLW 3023. Sec. # Professor Sandoval September 23, 2008 Cole v. Mileti FACTS: Nick Mileti, a California resident, entered into a contract arranged through phone calls and correspondence with Joseph Cole, a resident of Ohio, to repay a $475,000 loan that Cole made to Mileti’s distribution company, Streamers International Distributors, Inc. When Mileti failed to repay the loan, Cole filed a suit against Mileti in a federal district court in Ohio. The court entered a judgment against Mileti who then appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, arguing in part that the district court’s exercise of jurisdiction over him was unfair. ISSUE: Whether or not phone calls and letters constituted sufficient minimum contacts to give a court jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant? LAW: Specific jurisdiction exists over a nonresident defendant when the following three events occur: First, the defendant must purposely avail himself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state [the state in which the court sits], second, the cause of action must arise from the defendant’s activities within the forum state and third, the acts of the defendant or consequences caused by the defendant must have a substantial enough connection with the forum state to make its exercise of jurisdiction over the defendant fundamentally fair. RATIONALE: Mileti has purposely availed himself of the forum by creating a continuing obligation in Ohio as is evident from his transacting business—that is, negotiating and executing a contract via telephone calls and letters to Cole. In refusing to pay the loan, as promised, Mileti’s breach of the contract and activities has brought about a cause of action by Cole within the forum state. The activities of the defendant which were caused by the defendant had a connection with the forum state. Therefore, Mileti’s activities—forming a contract via telephone calls and letters—provide a “substantial enough connection with the forum state to make its exercise of jurisdiction over the defendant fundamentally fair.” HOLDING: District court can exercise personal jurisdiction over Mileti. Mileti loses on appeal.
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