The issue in this interlocutory appeal is whether a Texas court may, consistent with due process, exercise
in personam
jurisdiction over American Type Culture Collection (“ATCC”) in this case. The trial court found that ATCC had sufficient minimum contacts with Texas to justify the exercise of personal jurisdiction. The court of appeals agreed and affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
I.
ATCC, a nonprofit research organization, serves as a long-term repository center for living microorganisms, viruses, and cell lines. ATCC also sells biological research material to research institutes and commercial manufacturers throughout the United States and in forty-five countries.
In 1994, Marshall Coleman and approximately 1,800 veterans of the Persian Gulf War sued ATCC and eighty-two other defendants alleging that the defendants sold material, equipment, and technology to Iraq that was used to create biological and chemical weapons. They brought a class action in Brazoria County for products liability and negligence, contending they were harmed by exposure to those pathogens.
The defendants removed the case to federal court, which dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Coleman v. Alcolac,
The court of appeals affirmed, holding that jurisdiction was proper because ATCC’s Texas sales were “numerous and repetitive.”
Such a comparison ... would have gone to whether ATCC could reasonably have anticipated being sued in Texas. Moreover, if Texas was ATCC’s sixth biggest U.S. sales market despite generating only five percent of all ATCC’s U.S. business, the trial judge could have reasonably inferred most jurisdictions, foreign or otherwise, generated a very low percentage of ATCC’s overall business. Therefore, the trial judge could also have reasonably inferred the 3.5-percerit figure was not insignificant.
Id. The court also observed that ATCC did not present comparative-sales evidence regarding its Maryland site which served as a patent-repository for Texas residents. Id. at 47. The court found it significant that “ATCC [did] not state ... whether 2.7 percent [of its repository business over a twenty-year period] was a high or low figure compared to its repository business in other states or countries.” Id.
ATCC petitioned for rehearing
en banc,
which the court of appeals denied.
Id.
at 53. Although the judgment of the court of appeals is normally conclusive for interlocutory appeals, we may exercise jurisdiction if the justices of the court of appeals disagree on a question of law material to the decision. Tex. Gov’t Code § 22.225(b)(4), (c). Justice O’Connor, who did not sit on the original panel deciding the case, dissented from the denial of the petition for
en banc
rehearing.
II.
We must first determine whether we have subject-matter jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal. ATCC alleges that we have jurisdiction under Texas Government Code sections 22.001(a)(1) and 22.225(c). Specifically, ATCC contends this Court has jurisdiction because Justice O’Connor dissented from the denial of en banc review. The question is whether, in this case, “the justices of the court[] of appeals disagree[d] on a question of law material to the decision.” Tex. Gov’t Code §§ 22.001(a)(1), 22.225(c).
In dissenting to the court of appeals’ denial of
en banc
review, Justice O’Connor challenged concepts fundamental to the court of appeals’ holding. She criticized the panel for creating the concept of “comparative personal jurisdiction.”
Because Justice O’Connor’s dissent addressed the merits of the panel’s decision and disagreed expressly with a question of law material to the decision, we have jurisdiction to decide this case. Our jurisdiction is based not on the bare fact that a justice dissented from en banc review, but on the direct clash between the justice and the court on the appropriate analysis for the case. Having determined that we have jurisdiction to decide this case, we now turn to the issue before us — whether a Texas court may exercise personal jurisdiction over ATCC consistent with due process requirements in this case.
III.
Whether a court has personal jurisdiction over a defendant is a question
*806
of law.
BMC Software v. Marchand,
Texas courts may assert personal jurisdiction over a' nonresident defendant only if the Texas long-arm statute authorizes jurisdiction and the exercise of jurisdiction is consistent with federal and state due process standards.
Guardian Royal Exch. Assur., Ltd. v. English China Clays, P.L.C.,
Under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, jurisdiction is proper if a nonresident defendant established “minimum contacts” with Texas and maintenance of the suit does not • offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
The minimum-contacts analysis requires that a defendant “purposefully avail” itself of the privilege of conducting activities within Texas, thus invoking the benefits and protections of our laws.
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
A defendant’s contacts with a forum can give rise to either specific or general jurisdiction. For a court to exercise specific jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, two requirements must be met: (1) the defendant’s contacts with the forum must be purposeful, and (2) the cause of action must arise from or relate to those contacts. Id. at 227. General jurisdiction, which the plaintiffs assert here, on the other hand, allows a forum to exercise *807 jurisdiction over a defendant even if the cause of action did not arise from or relate to a defendant’s contacts with the forum. Id. at 228. General jurisdiction is present when a defendant’s contacts with a forum are “continuous and systematic,” a more demanding minimum-contacts analysis than specific jurisdiction. Id.
The plaintiff bears the initial burden of pleading allegations sufficient to bring a nonresident defendant within the provisions of the long-arm statute.
McKanna v. Edgar,
IV.
ATCC is organized under District of Columbia laws and its principal place of business is Rockville, Maryland. ATCC advertises in national and international journals and its catalogues are sent only upon request. The majority of its sales are made by phone or written orders received in Maryland and are sent free-on-board (“F.O.B.”) Rockville, Maryland. Title to the goods passes to buyers in Maryland.
CSR Ltd. v. Link,
ATCC is not authorized to do business in Texas and does not have offices, distributors, employees, real property, or telephone listings in Texas. ATCC is not required to and does not have a registered agent in Texas. It does not make unsolicited makings to Texas customers, it does not recruit employees in Texas, and it does not advertise in Texas journals. Nevertheless, the record reveals that ATCC has had contacts with Texas. We examine these contacts to determine whether they are “continuous and systematic.”
V.
ATCC has sold its products to Texas residents for at least eighteen years. At the commencement of this suit, ATCC’s Texas sales accounted for 3.5 percent of its total annual sales and five percent of its total U.S. sales, generating approximately $350,000 in revenue. Although Coleman argues to the contrary, the record establishes ATCC’s contention that the sales were shipped F.O.B. from Rockville, Maryland.
In addition to selling goods to Texas residents, ATCC also serves as a repository for Texas researchers seeking microorganism patents. For the fifteen to twenty-year period before this suit, nearly 2.7 percent of the 13,000 patents in ATCC’s Maryland repository came from Texas residents. In connection with these services, interested customers shipped their materials to Maryland and entered into customer safe-deposit agreements. All the services related to the safe-deposit agreements were performed by ATCC in Maryland.
Similarly, in 1991, ATCC contracted with the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center to propagate and test cell-lines. The contract was signed by ATCC in Maryland. And like its other agreements with Texas residents, ATCC per *808 formed all the services related to the contract in Maryland.
Over a five-year period, ATCC purchased approximately $378,000 of supplies from thirty-three Texas vendors. Some of the goods were sent F.O.B. from Texas. And from 1987 to 1994, ATCC representatives attended five scientific conferences in Texas. At four conferences, ATCC had an exhibit booth and distributed corporate publications.
VI.
The court of appeals stated that ATCC’s volume of Texas sales was the “bedrock” fact that supported jurisdiction.
[ ] Beech exercised its right to structure its affairs in a manner calculated to shield it from the general jurisdiction of the courts of other states such as Texas, carefully requiring the negotiation, completion, and performance of all contracts in Kansas. Beech has not afforded itself the benefits and protections of the laws of Texas, but instead has calculatedly avoided them.... We are not aware that other courts have disregarded the structure of transactions in support of general jurisdiction. And, we have held such ‘technicalities’ relevant in analyzing general personal jurisdiction questions.
Id. at 375-76. We are persuaded by this analysis. General jurisdiction is premised on the notion of consent. That is, by invoking the benefits and protections of a forum’s laws, a nonresident defendant consents to being sued there. When a nonresident defendant purposefully structures transactions to avoid the benefits and protections of a forum’s laws, the legal fiction of consent no longer applies. Thus, title passing outside of Texas is a factor that weighs against a finding that Texas has general jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant such as ATCC. As a result, ATCC’s Texas sales cannot properly be characterized as a “bedrock” fact that supports jurisdiction.
ATCC contends that its purchases from Texas vendors “do not provide evidence warranting the exercise of general jurisdiction over ATCC.” We agree. In
Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
Moreover, because ATCC signed and performed in Maryland its repository contracts and its contract with the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, those contracts do not support a finding of general jurisdiction.
Cf. U-Anchor Adver., Inc. v. Burt,
However, for general jurisdictional purposes, we do not view each contact in isolation. All contacts must be carefully investigated, compiled, sorted, and analyzed for proof of a pattern of continuing and systematic activity.
Schlobohm v. Schapiro,
Two United States Supreme Court decisions discussing general jurisdiction are
Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
The Court in
Helicópteros,
analyzing facts somewhat similar to those presented here, concluded there was no basis for the assertion of personal jurisdiction. In that case, Helicol, a helicopter company from Colombia, contracted to provide helicopter services in Peru.
The Court found Helicol’s contacts with Texas insufficient to support the exercise of general jurisdiction, even though Helicol had ventured to Texas and negotiated a contract for transportation in Texas, purchased approximately eighty percent of its helicopter fleet (worth over $4 million) and other related equipment from Texas vendors at regular intervals, and had sent pilots and other personnel to Texas for training.
Id.
at 411,
The facts before us are more closely aligned with
Helicópteros
than
Perkins.
Although the quantity of ATCC’s contacts may suggest that ATCC had a significant relationship with Texas, we are not concerned with the quantity of contacts. Instead, we must look to the quality
*810
of those contacts. And in this case, we are not persuaded that the quality of ATCC’s contacts support general jurisdiction as defined by the United States Supreme Court. ATCC does not advertise in Texas, has no physical presence in Texas, performs all its business services outside Texas, and carefully constructs its contracts to ensure it does not benefit from Texas laws.
See CSR Ltd.,
The court of appeals stated that adopting ATCC’s position would “result in virtually a per se rule preventing general personal jurisdiction over mail-order companies in any state but where they are headquartered.”
In making this determination, a trial court is bound by the facts and evidence before it. Rather than the quantity of contacts with Texas as compared to other jurisdictions, we look to the nature and quality of those contacts. Thus, “[w]hether a defendant is involved in commerce in another state to a greater or lesser extent than in Texas should have no bearing on whether that defendant has subjected itself to the jurisdiction of Texas courts.” Id. at 54 (Justice O’Connor dissenting).
VII.
In sum, because ATCC did not have sufficient minimum contacts with Texas, it is not subject to in personam jurisdiction. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment dismissing the case against ATCC for lack of personal jurisdiction.
