—Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Charles Ramos, J.), entered August 31, 1998, which, insofar as ap
Jurisdiction is lacking over Massie and Bino for failure to show sufficient New York purposeful activity in connection with the memorandum of understanding that defendants attack as the product of fraud in their first and second counterclaims. While both are officers and directors of plaintiff Alas International Limited, as is additional defendant Yosef, who is domiciled and resides in New York, neither signed the memorandum, which was not executed in New York. While the memorandum contains New York choice-of-law and forum provisions, the separate, but highly related facility letter, executed by Alas and the corporate defendant, subjects those entities to the law of England and requires service of process there. Massie’s only in-State activity in connection with the memorandum was one visit here prior to its execution to discuss its terms with Yosef; thereafter his visits to New York were to attend settlement discussions, or to prepare for or testify at a deposition, in this case. Bino came to New York only once, after the memorandum’s execution, to attend settlement discussions. The only other New York-related activities by Massie and Bino are telephone calls and facsimiles made to or received from Yosef, who was in New York, and Massie also was in telephone contact with Yosef in New York during the Venezuelan auction of the assets, control of which the parties are contesting. There is no evidence that Yosef acted as Massie’s and Bino’s agent (see, Lehigh Val. Indus. v Birenbaum, 527 F2d 87, 92). Such contacts, alone or collectively, do not show that Massie or Bino transacted business in New York within the meaning of CPLR 302 (a) (1) (see, Sternberg v Nathan,
