FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
PHILIP LINNEMEIER ROGER L. PARDIECK
ROBERT B. THORNBURG SUSAN BOATRIGHT
Smith & Linnemeier Pardieck, Gill, Vargo & MacTavish
Indianapolis, Indiana Seymour, Indiana
BANJO CORPORATION, )
)
Appellant-Defendant, )
)
vs. ) No. 41A04-9902-CV-57
)
BRUCE PEMBOR and PAULA )
PEMBOR, )
)
Appellees-Plaintiffs. )
KIRSCH, Judge
claims as in the Daviess County suit, but adding a claim for damage to Bruce Pembor's
equipment and clothing. Banjo moved to dismiss the Pembors' claim, arguing that Johnson
County was not a county of preferred venue under T.R. 75(A). The trial court denied its
motion, and it now appeals.
conveyances, to foreclose liens, to partition and to assert any matters for which
in rem relief is or would be proper . . . .
(emphasis added). The trial court agreed and found that the Pembors had established
preferred venue in Johnson County under T.R. 75(A)(2) because their complaint alleged that
Bruce Pembor's clothing and equipment were damaged by the herbicide spray. Therefore,
the Pembors' claim was one for injury to chattels and preferred venue lied in the place where
Bruce Pembor's clothing and equipment were normally kept, Johnson County.
Banjo contends that the Pembors' claim is essentially one for personal injury, with
only incidental property damage. Thus, it maintains that T.R. 75(A)(2) cannot be used to
establish preferred venue because the Pembor's claim does not relate to injury to chattels.
While Banjo stipulated that Bruce Pembor's clothing and equipment were damaged in the
accident, it contends that the addition of this claim to the Pembors' suit was purely a vehicle
to obtain preferred venue in the Pembors' county of residence.
In Grove v. Thomas, 446 N.E.2d 641 (Ind. Ct. App. 1983), this court determined that
T.R. 75(A)(2) was unambiguous and clear on its face. While this conclusion has been
subject to some criticism, the application of the rule in that case has not.See footnote
2
In Grove, the
plaintiffs lived in Cass County. They were involved in two auto accidents with two different
defendants, See and Grove, in one day. They filed an action against both defendants in Cass
County, although See lived in Fulton County, where the first accident occurred, and Grove
lived in St. Joseph County where the second accident took place. Grove claimed that Cass
County was an incorrect venue. This court disagreed, noting that under T.R. 75(A)(2), if a
claim involves injury to chattels, the county where the chattel is normally kept is a preferred
venue. In this case, the Thomas' vehicle that was involved in both accidents was kept in
Cass County. Therefore, Cass County was a preferred venue. Id.
Here, although Banjo questions the Pembors' motivation in adding the claim for the
damage to Bruce Pembor's clothing and equipment, it stipulated that the items were damaged
in the incident. Based on the plain language of T.R. 75(A)(2), which establishes that
preferred venue lies in the county in which the chattels are kept if the claim relates to injury
to chattels, we hold that the Pembors established Johnson County as a preferred venue. We
decline Banjo's invitation to read the venue provision more narrowly. See Diesel
Construction, 634 N.E.2d at 1353-54
(disapproving of earlier decisions interpreting Trial
Rule 75(A)(2) more narrowly). The trial court did not err in denying Banjo's motion to
dismiss.
Affirmed.
DARDEN, J. , and BROOK, J., concur.
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