North Dakota Long-Arm Statute

N.D. R. Civ. P. 4
Rule 4. Persons subject to jurisdiction --
Process -- Service.
(a) Definition of person. As used in this
rule, "person", whether or not a citizen or domiciliary of this state and
whether or not organized under the laws of this state, includes: an individual,
executor, administrator or other personal representative; any other fiduciary;
any two or more persons having a joint or common interest; a partnership; an
association; a corporation; and any other legal or commercial entity.
(b) Jurisdiction over person.
(1) Personal jurisdiction based upon presence or
enduring relationship. A court of this state may exercise personal jurisdiction
over a person found within, domiciled in, organized under the laws of, or
maintaining his or its principal place of business in, this state as to any
claim for relief.
(2) Personal jurisdiction based upon contacts. A
court of this state may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person who acts
directly or by an agent as to any claim for relief arising from the person's
having such contact with this state that the exercise of personal jurisdiction
over the person does not offend against traditional notions of justice or fair
play or the due process of law, under one or more of the following
circumstances:
(A) transacting any business in this state;
(B) contracting to supply or supplying service,
goods, or other things in this state;
(C) committing a tort within or without this
state causing injury to another person or property within this state;
(D) committing a tort within this state, causing
injury to another person or property within or without this state;
(E) owning, having any interest in, using, or
possessing property in this state;
(F) contracting to insure another person,
property, or other risk within this state;
(G) acting as a director, manager, trustee, or
officer of a corporation organized under the laws of, or having its principal
place of business within, this state;
(H) enjoying any other legal status or capacity
within this state; or
(I) engaging in any other activity, including
cohabitation or sexual intercourse, within this state.
(3) Limitation on jurisdiction based upon
contacts. If jurisdiction over a person is based solely upon paragraph (2) of
this subdivision, only a claim for relief arising from bases enumerated therein
may be asserted against that person.
(4) Acquisition of jurisdiction. A court of this
state may acquire personal jurisdiction over any person through service of
process as provided in this rule or by statute, or by voluntary general
appearance in an action by any person either personally or through an attorney
or any other authorized person.
(5) Inconvenient forum. If the court finds that
in the interest of substantial justice the action should be heard in another
forum, the court may stay or dismiss the action in whole or in part on any
condition that may be just.
(c) Process.
(1) Summons -- Contents. The summons must
specify the venue of the court in which the action is brought, contain the title
of the action specifying the names of the parties, and be directed to the
defendant. It must state the time within which these rules require the defendant
to appear and defend, and must notify the defendant that in case of the
defendant's failure to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against the
defendant for the relief demanded in the complaint. It must be dated and
subscribed by the plaintiff or the plaintiff's attorney, and include the post
office address of the plaintiff or plaintiff's attorney. (See N.D.R.Civ.P.
4(e)(8) for additional information required if the action involves real estate
and service is by publication.)
(2) Summons served with or without complaint. A
copy of the complaint need not be served with the summons in which case the
summons must state that the complaint is or will be filed with the clerk of the
court in which the action is commenced, and if the defendant within twenty days
after service of the summons causes notice of appearance to be given and in
person or by an attorney demands in writing a copy of the complaint, specifying
a place within the state where it may be served, a copy thereof within twenty
days thereafter must be served accordingly. If, in that case, the complaint is
not filed with the clerk within twenty days after service of the summons, the
action is deemed discontinued.
(3) Summons served and complaint not filed. The
defendant may serve a written demand on the plaintiff to file the complaint.
Service of the demand must be made under subdivision (d) on the plaintiff's
attorney or on the plaintiff if the plaintiff is not represented by an attorney.
If the plaintiff does not file the complaint within 20 days after service of the
demand, service of the summons is void. The demand must contain notice that if
the complaint is not filed within 20 days, service of the summons is void under
this rule.
(4) The defendant may file the summons and
complaint, and the costs incurred on behalf of the plaintiff may be taxed as
provided in N.D.R.Civ.P. 54(e).
(d) Personal service.
(1) By whom process served. Service of all
process may be made: within the state by any person of legal age not a party to
nor interested in the action; and outside the state by any person who may make
service under the law of this state or under the law of the place in which
service is made or who is designated by a court of this state.
(2) How service made within the state. Personal
service of process within the state must be made as follows:
(A) upon an individual fourteen or more years of
age by (i) delivering a copy of the summons to the individual personally; (ii)
leaving a copy of the summons at the individual's dwelling house or usual place
of abode in the presence of a person of suitable age and discretion then
residing therein; (iii) delivering, at the office of the process server, a copy
of the summons to the individual's spouse if the spouses reside together; (iv)
delivering a copy of the summons to the individual's agent authorized by
appointment or by law to receive service of process; or (v) any form of mail or
third-party commercial delivery addressed to the individual to be served and
requiring a signed receipt and resulting in delivery to that individual;
(B) upon an individual under the age of fourteen
years, by delivering a copy of the summons to the individual's guardian, if the
individual has one within the state, and, if not, then to the individual's
father or mother or any person or agency having the individual's care or
control, or with whom the individual resides. If service cannot be made upon any
of them, then as directed by order of the court;
(C) upon an individual who has been judicially
adjudged incompetent or for whom a guardian of the individual's person or estate
has been appointed in this state, by delivering a copy of the summons to the
individual's guardian. If a general guardian and a guardian ad litem have been
appointed, both must be served;
(D) upon a domestic or foreign corporation or
upon a partnership or other unincorporated association, by (i) delivering a copy
of the summons to an officer, director, superintendent or managing or general
agent, or partner, or associate, or to an agent authorized by appointment or by
law to receive service of process in its behalf, or to one who acted as an agent
for the defendant with respect to the matter upon which the claim of the
plaintiff is based and who was an agent of the defendant at the time of service;
(ii) if the sheriff's return indicates no person upon whom service may be made
can be found in the county, then service may be made by leaving a copy of the
summons at any office of the domestic or foreign corporation, partnership or
unincorporated association within this state with the person in charge of the
office; or (iii) any form of mail or third-party commercial delivery addressed
to any of the foregoing persons and requiring a signed receipt and resulting in
delivery to that person;
(E) upon a city, township, school district, park
district, county, or any other municipal or public corporation, by delivering a
copy of the summons to any member of its governing board;
(F) upon the state, by delivering a copy of the
summons to the governor or attorney general or an assistant attorney general
and, upon an agency of the state, such as the Bank of North Dakota or the State
Mill and Elevator Association, by delivering a copy of the summons to the
managing head of the agency or to the attorney general or an assistant attorney
general; or
(G) if service is made upon an agent who is not
expressly authorized by appointment or by law to receive service of process on
behalf of the defendant, a copy of the summons and complaint must be mailed or
delivered via a third-party commercial carrier to the defendant with return
receipt requested not later than ten days after service by depositing the same,
with postage or shipping prepaid, in a post office or with a commercial carrier
in this state and directed to the defendant to be served at the defendant's last
reasonably ascertainable address.
(3) How service made outside the state. Service
upon any person subject to the personal jurisdiction of the courts of this state
may be made outside the state:
(A) in the manner provided for service within
this state, with the same force and effect as though service had been made
within this state;
(B) in the manner prescribed by the law of the
place in which the service is made for service in that place in an action in any
of its courts of general jurisdiction; or
(C) as directed by order of the court.
(e) Service by publication.
(1) When service by publication permitted. A
defendant, whether known or unknown, who has not been served personally under
the foregoing subdivisions of this rule may be served by publication in the
manner hereinafter provided in one or more of the following situations only if:
(A) The claim for relief is based upon one or
more grounds for the exercise of personal jurisdiction under paragraph (2) of
subdivision (b) of this rule;
(B) The subject of the action is real or
personal property in this state and the defendant has or claims a lien thereon
or other interest therein, whether vested or contingent, or the relief demanded
against the defendant consists wholly or partly in excluding the defendant from
that lien or interest or in defining, regulating, or limiting that lien or
interest, or the action otherwise affects the title to the property;
(C) The action is to foreclose a mortgage,
cancel a contract for sale, or to enforce a lien upon or a security interest in
real or personal property in this state;
(D) The plaintiff has acquired a lien upon
property or credits or the defendant within this state by attachment,
garnishment, or other judicial processes and the property or credit is the
subject matter of the litigation or the underlying claim for relief relates to
the property or credits;
(E) The action is for divorce, separation from
bed and board, or annulment of a marriage of a resident of this state or to
determine custody of an individual subject to the court's jurisdiction; or
(F) The action is to award, partition, condemn,
or escheat real or personal property in this state.
(2) Filing of complaint and affidavit for
service by publication. Before service of the summons by publication is
authorized in any case, there must be filed with the clerk of the court in which
the action is commenced a complaint setting forth a claim in favor of the
plaintiff and against the defendant based on one or more of the situations
specified in paragraph (1) of this subdivision and an affidavit executed by the
plaintiff or the plaintiff's attorney stating, as may be applicable, one or more
of the following:
(A) That after diligent inquiry personal service
of the summons cannot be made upon the defendant in this state to the best
knowledge, information, and belief of the affiant;
(B) That the defendant is a domestic corporation
which has forfeited its charter or right to do business in this state or has
failed to file its annual report as required by law;
(C) That the defendant is a domestic or foreign
corporation and has no officer, director, superintendent, managing agent,
business agent, or other agent authorized by appointment or by law upon whom
service of process can be made in its behalf in this state; or
(D) That all persons having or claiming an
estate or interest in, or lien or encumbrance upon, the real property described
in the complaint, whether as heirs, devisees, legatees, or personal
representative of a deceased person, or under any other title or interest, and
not in possession, nor appearing of record in the office of the register of
deeds, the clerk of the district court, or the county auditor of the county in
which the real property is situated, to have such claim, title or interest
therein, are proceeded against as unknown persons defendant pursuant to N.D.C.C.
ch. 32-17 or 32-19, and stating facts necessary to satisfy the requirement of
those chapters.
(3) Number of publications. Service of the
summons by publication may be made by publishing the same three times, once in
each week for three successive weeks, in a newspaper published in the county in
which the action is pending, and if no newspaper is published in that county
then in a newspaper having a general circulation therein although published in
another county.
(4) Mailing or delivering summons and complaint.
A copy of the summons and complaint, at any time after the filing of the
affidavit for publication and not later than ten days after the first
publication of the summons, must be deposited in a post office or with a
third-party commercial carrier in this state, postage or shipping prepaid, and
directed to the defendant to be served at the defendant's last reasonably
ascertainable address.
(5) Personal service outside state equivalent to
publication. After the affidavit for publication and the complaint in the action
are filed, personal service of the summons and complaint upon the defendant out
of state is equivalent to and has the same force and effect as the publication
and mailing or delivery provided for in paragraphs (3) and (4) of this
subdivision.
(6) Time when first publication or service
outside state must be made. The first publication of the summons, or personal
service of the summons and complaint upon the defendant out of the state, must
be made within sixty days after the filing of the affidavit for publication. If
not so made, the action is deemed discontinued as to any defendant not served
within that time.
(7) When defendant served by publication
permitted to defend. The defendant upon whom service by publication is made, or
the defendant's representative, on application and sufficient cause shown at any
time before judgment, must be allowed to defend the action. Except in an action
for divorce, the defendant upon whom service by publication is made, or the
defendant's representative, upon making it appear to the satisfaction of the
court by affidavit, stating the facts, that the defendant has a good and
meritorious defense to the action, and the defendant had no actual notice or
knowledge of the pendency of the action so as to enable the defendant to make
application to defend before the entry of judgment, and upon filing an affidavit
of merits, may be allowed to defend at any time within three years after entry
of judgment on such terms as may be just. If the defense is successful and the
judgment, or any part of the judgment, has been collected or otherwise enforced,
restitution may be ordered by the court, but the title to property sold under
the judgment to a purchaser in good faith may not be affected. A defendant who
receives a copy of the summons in the action mailed or delivered to the
defendant as provided in paragraph (4), or upon whom the summons is personally
served out of this state, as provided in paragraph (5), is deemed to have had
notice of the pendency of the action and of the judgment.
(8) Additional information to be published. In
all cases where publication of summons is made in an action in which the title
to, or an interest in or lien upon, real property is involved or affected or
brought into question, the publication must also contain a description of the
real property and a statement of the object of the action.
(f) Service upon a person in a foreign country.
Unless otherwise provided by law, service upon an individual, other than an
infant or an incompetent person, may be effected in a place not within any
judicial district of the United States:
(1) by any internationally agreed means
reasonably calculated to give notice, such as those means authorized by the
Hague Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents;
or
(2) if there is no internationally agreed means
of service or the applicable international agreement allows other means of
service, provided the service is reasonably calculated to give notice:
(A) in the manner prescribed by law to the
foreign country for service in that country in an action in any of its courts of
general jurisdiction; or
(B) as directed by the foreign authority in
response to a letter rogatory or letter of request; or
(C) unless prohibited by the law of the foreign
country, by
(i) delivery to the individual personally of a
copy of the summons and the complaint; or
(ii) any form of mail or third-party commercial
delivery requiring a signed receipt, to be addressed and dispatched by the clerk
of the court to the party to be served; or
(3) by any other means not prohibited by
international agreement as may be directed by the court. Unless otherwise
provided by law, service must be effected upon an infant or an incompetent
person in a place not within any judicial district of the United States in the
manner prescribed by paragraphs (2)(A) or (B), and (3). Unless otherwise
provided by law, service must be effected upon a foreign corporation,
partnership or other unincorporated association, that is subject to suit under a
common name, in a place not within any judicial district of the United States in
the manner prescribed for individuals in this subdivision except personal
delivery as provided in paragraph (2)(C)(i).
(g) When service by publication or outside state
complete. Service by publication is complete upon the expiration of fifteen days
after the first publication of the summons. Personal service of the summons and
complaint upon the defendant out of state is complete upon the expiration of
fifteen days after the date of service.
(h) Amendment. At any time and upon such notice
and terms as it deems just, the court, in its discretion, may allow any process
or proof of service thereof to be amended unless it clearly appears that
material prejudice would result to the substantial rights of the party against
whom the process issued.
(i) Proof of service. Proof of service of the
summons and of the complaint or notice, if any, accompanying the same or of
other process, must be made as follows:
(1) if served by the sheriff or other officer,
by the officer's certificate of service;
(2) if served by any other person, by the
server's affidavit of service;
(3) if served by publication, by an affidavit
made as provided in N.D.C.C. § 31-04-06 and an affidavit of mailing or an
affidavit of delivery via a third-party commercial carrier of a copy of the
summons and complaint in accordance with subdivision (4) of subsection (e) of
this rule, if the same has been deposited;
(4) in any other case of service by mail or
delivery via a third-party commercial carrier resulting in delivery in
accordance with paragraph (2) or (3) of subdivision (d) of this rule, by an
affidavit of mailing or an affidavit of delivery of a copy of the summons and
complaint or other process, with return receipt attached; or
(5) by the written admission of the defendant.
(j) Content of proof of service. The
certificate, affidavit or admission of service mentioned in subdivision (i) of
this rule must state the date, time, place and manner of service. If the
process, pleading, order of court, or other paper is served personally by a
person other than the sheriff or person designated by the law, the affidavit of
service must also state that the server is of legal age and not a party to the
action nor interested in the action, and that the server knew the person served
to be the person named in the papers served and the person intended to be
served.
(k) Content of the affidavit of mailing or
delivery via a third-party commercial carrier. An affidavit of mailing or
delivery required by this rule must state a copy of the process, pleading, order
of court, or other paper to be served was deposited by the affiant, with postage
or shipping prepaid, in the mail or with a third-party commercial carrier and
directed to the party shown in the affidavit to be served at the party's last
reasonably ascertainable address. The affidavit must contain the date and place
of deposit and indicate the affiant is of legal age. The return receipt, if any,
must be attached to the affidavit.
(l) Effect of mail or delivery refusal. If a
summons and complaint or other process is mailed or sent with delivery
restricted and requiring a receipt signed by the addressee, the addressee's
refusal to accept the mail or delivery constitutes delivery. Return of the mail
or delivery bearing an official indication on the cover that delivery was
refused by the addressee is prima facie evidence of the refusal.
(m) Service under statute. If a statute requires
service and does not specify a method of service, service must be made under
this rule.
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