Forum Non Conveniens and Turkey Plane Crash

In 2007, an Atlasjet Airlines plane crashed into a mountain located in Turkey.  Relatives of 32 victims filed a products liability suit in Cook county Circuit Court against the airplane’s manufactures, Boeing, McDonnell Douglas Corporation, and Honeywell International Incorporated. 30 of the 32 victims were Turkish residents. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss on grounds of forum non conveniens. They argued that Turkey would be more convenient or even Washington state where Honeywell is located.  The circuit court held that private and public interest factors did not  favor dismissal and two of the defendants were headquartered in Chicago. The evidence and witnesses were also scattered through the US. The crash site was less important because jurors do not need to see the site to resolve a products liability claim. The court also pointed out that the Turkish court may decline jurisdiction over the defendants, Turkish law does not provide for pre-trial discovery, and the Turkish law requires a claimant pay a court fee of 5.4% of the amount of the substantive claim.  The defendants appealed.

The 1st District Appellate Court agreed and affirmed. Yavuz Arik, etc. v. The Boeing Co., et al., 2011 IL App (1st) 100750-U. The court stated that all of the evidence related to design, manufacture and assembly of the aircraft and its warning system is in the U.S.  Product liability actions are not localized actions,  rather they have international implications. Americans just as Turks have an interest in the safety of Boeing airplanes.   Furthermore, investigation of the crash took place in the United States and Germany but not Turkey. As the evidence is scattered throughout different states and countries, no one forum is more convenient then the other. 

 

Forum Non Conveniens

In the case of Bruce v. Atadero, the estate of Michael Bruce filed  wrongful death and survival claims against Dr. Arsenio Atadero and Sherman Hospital alleging that they failed to diagnose Mr. Bruce's deep-vein thrombosis which resulted in his death in March of 2004 while he was a patient at Sherman Hospital in McHenry County www.shermanhealth.com.  Bruce was a resident of Kane County  and Dr. Atadero was a resident of, and maintained an office in, McHenry County.

The plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the case after it had been pending in McHenry County for almost 2 years. It was refiled in Cook County and the defendants moved to transfer the case back to McHenry County under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. Judge Elizabeth Budzinski denied the motion and defendants appealed. In their appeal defendants argued that plaintiff's choice of Cook County was entitled to less deference because the plaintiff did not reside there, the accident occurred in McHenry and the public and private interest factors favored the transfer to McHenry. They also argued that the trial court gave undue weight to the fact that Sherman Hospital operates two physical therapy facilities in Cook County and therefore was a resident of Cook County.

The Appellate Court agreed. "...all of the treatment on which plaintiff's complaint is based occurred at Sherman Hospital's facility in McHenry County and at Dr. Atadero's office in McHenry County."  It further explained that the private interest factors clearly weighed in favor of the defendants because most of the potential witnesses were in McHenry County.  In addition, the public interest factors favored McHenry as the county had a public interest in the medical care provided at one of its facilities and McHenry County's court docket is much less congested than Cook County. As such the trial court was directed to transfer the case to McHenry County