ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION
Before the court by consent of the parties is the motion of defendants, Turbine Design, Inc. and Douglas K. Karlsen, to dismiss plaintiffs complaint, pursuant to Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of -Civil Procedure, for lack of personal jurisdiction and failure to state a claim. The court has carefully considered the motion and response submitted by the parties, as well as the applicable law. For the following reasons, the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction is GRANTED.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiff William Gordon Bailey (“Bailey”) is a resident of the state of Tennessee. He is one of four shareholders in Phoenix Corporation (“Phoenix”), a Mississippi corporation engaged in the business of aircraft conversions. Its principal facility for this business is located in Selmer, Tennessee. Defendant Turbine Design, Inc. (“TDI”) is a Florida corporation engaged in-the business of building, designing, and developing engine applications for various types of aircraft with its principal place of business at the Deland Airport in Deland, Florida. Defendant Douglas K. Karlsen, a Florida resident, is TDI’s president. TDI is a competitor of Phoenix in the conversion of Beechcraft King Air aircraft. Both Phoenix and TDI hold Supplemental Type Certificates (“STCs”). from the Federal Aviation Administration certifying them to install a certain type of engine, known as the Walter M602E-11, on Beechcraft King Air planes. In order to advertise its services, TDI developed an Internet web page located at www.turbi-nedesign.com, on which it describes the turbine installation . kits and aircraft it builds for sale to its customers. The web site also contains information concerning technical problems associated with the Phoenix STC and the criminal history of Bailey. Phoenix is referred to at the site as a group of “con artists.”
Plaintiff also alleged that, after Phoenix obtained its STC, the company’s shareholders sold the stock of Phoenix to Mega Flight, Inc. (“Mega Flight”), a Florida corporation. In connection with the sale of stock, Phoenix and Mega Flight agreed that Mega Flight would purchase the Phoenix STC for $6 million. After the sale closed, Bailey averred that Mega Flight and the defendants conspired to misappropriate confidential and proprietary information developed by Phoenix and which was submitted to the FAA and used by Phoenix to obtain the STC. Bailey further alleged that Mega Flight and defendants *792 conspired to obtain an STC which permitted them to modify existing aircraft in competition with Phoenix and in order to avoid payment of the $6 million. Plaintiff charges that TDI and Karlsen interfered with Phoenix’s contract with Mega Flight, resulting in Mega Flight’s default thereunder. As part of the purported conspiracy, defendants,- along with Mega Flight, also interfered with prospective business advantages and conversion/modification contracts between Phoenix and its customers. Based on these alleged activities, plaintiff has brought this action against defendants for libel, slander, tortious interference with contractual relations, conspiracy, interference with prospective business advantage, and invasion of privacy.
DEFENDANTS’ MOTION
The court will first address defendants’ motion to dismiss this action on jurisdictional grounds.
See Feinstein v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
[I]n the face of a properly supported motion for dismissal, the plaintiff may not stand on his pleadings but must, by 'affidavit or otherwise, set forth specific facts showing that the court has jurisdiction.... Where the court relies solely on the parties’ affidavits to reach its decision, the plaintiff must make only a prima facie showing that personal jurisdiction exists in order to defeat dismissal.
Theunissen v. Matthews,
In diversity cases, a federal court is to apply the law of the forum state in which it sits to determine whether personal jurisdiction is appropriate. The court may maintain jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant only in accordance with the forum state’s long-arm statute and the limitations of the Due Process Clause of the Constitution.
Reynolds v. Int’l Amateur Athletic Fed’n,
The jurisdictional limits of the Tennessee long-arm statute, codified at Tennessee Code Annotated § 20-2-214,
1
have
*793
been interpreted as identical to those imposed by the Due Process Clause.
Payne v. Motorists’ Mut. Ins. Cos.,
Pursuant to the Constitution, personal jurisdiction over a defendant stems from “certain minimum contacts with [the forum] such that maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
Reynolds,
General jurisdiction exists when a defendant has continuous and systematic contacts with the forum state sufficient to justify the state’s exercise of judicial power with respect to any and all claims. Specific jurisdiction, in contrast, subjects the defendant to suit in the forum state only on claims that arise out of or relate to a defendant’s contacts with the forum.
Aristech Chem. Int’l Ltd.,
The Sixth Circuit has established three criteria to be used by a court in determining whether specific jurisdiction exists.
First, the defendant must purposefully avail himself of the privilege of acting in the forum state or causing a consequence in the forum state. Second, the cause of action must arise from the defendant’s activities there. Finally, the acts of the defendant or consequences caused by the defendant must have a substantial enough connection with the forum state to make the exercise of jurisdiction over the defendant reasonable.
Southern Mach. Co., Inc. v. Mohasco Indus., Inc.,
when the defendant’s contacts with the forum state “proximately result from actions by the defendant himself that create a ‘substantial connection’ with the forum State,” and when the defendant’s conduct and connection with the forum are such that he “should reasonably anticipate being haled into court there.”
CompuServe, Inc.,
Defendants allege that personal jurisdiction is lacking in this ease because all of the work for TDI’s STC and its prepara *794 tion of the application therefor took place in Florida. Furthermore, TDI did not perform services required to complete the STC in, maintain an office in, or regularly solicit business in, Tennessee. Likewise, there is no evidence to suggest that the defendant Karlsen conducted any business activities which would provide á connection with Tennessee such as to establish jurisdiction over him in this state. Plaintiff does not disagree, but, rather, maintains that the relevant facts for purposes of determining whether personal jurisdiction exists involve the defendants’ publication of allegedly defamatory statements on the Internet.
As the Sixth Circuit noted in
CompuServe,
“[t]he Internet represents perhaps the latest and greatest manifestation of [the] historical, globe-shrinking trends [of recent decades]. It enables anyone with the right equipment and knowledge ... to operate an international business cheaply, and from a desktop.”
Id.
at 1262. Personal jurisdiction as it pertains to utilization of the Internet has created a relatively new issue for the federal courts. Some trends, however, have developed. In cases in which the contacts with the forum are based on a defendant’s website, as is the case here, courts have looked closely at the' level of interactivity occurring on the site in determining whether personal jurisdiction exists.
See
Jason H. Eaton, Annotation,
Effect of Use, or Alleged Use, of Internet on Personal Jurisdiction in, or Venue of, Federal Court Case,
155 A.L.R.Fed. 535 (1999). Several courts have cited with approval the personal jurisdiction analysis of website cases, based on three general categories along a sliding scale, set forth in
Zippo Mfg. Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc.,
At one end of the spectrum are situations where a defendant clearly does business over the Internet. If the defendant enters into contracts with residents of a foreign jurisdiction that involve the knowing and repeated transmission of computer files over the Internet, personal jurisdiction is proper. At the opposite end are situations where a defendant has simply posted information on an ■ Internet Web site which is accessible to users in foreign jurisdictions. A passive Web site that does little more than make information available to those who are interested in it is not grounds for the exercise [of] personal jurisdiction. The middle ground is occupied by interactive Web sites where a user can exchange information with the host computer. In these cases, the exercise of jurisdiction is determined by examining the level of interactivity and commercial nature of the exchange of information that occurs on the Web site.
See also Soma Med. Int’l v. Standard Chartered Bank,
The courts of this circuit are guided by the Sixth Circuit’s decision in the seminal case of
CompuServe, Inc. v. Patterson.
In that decision, the defendant, a Texas resident, subscribed to CompuServe, a computer information service based in Ohio.
CompuServe, Inc.,
In considering whether Patterson had purposefully availed himself of the privilege of doing business in Ohio, the court determined in this case of first impression that the defendant created a substantial connection with Ohio when he subscribed to CompuServe, entered into a contract with the Internet provider, and proceeded to send his software to and advertise that software on plaintiffs system for a period of some three years. Id. at 1264. Patterson made sales of his software from Texas through the CompuServe system in Ohio and received the proceeds of those sales through Ohio. Id. at 1266. Therefore, the defendant was “far more than a purchaser of services; he was a third-party provider of software who used CompuServe, which is located in Columbus[, Ohio], to market his wares in Ohio and elsewhere.” Id. at 1264. The court noted that, while entering into a contract with an Ohio company or injecting a product into the stream of commerce in themselves would not be sufficient alone to establish the minimum contacts necessary for personal jurisdiction, taken together, the two factors were enough to survive an attack oh personal jurisdiction. Id. at 1265.
In support of personal jurisdiction in this ease, the plaintiff asserts that the alleged defamatory attacks from which this lawsuit arose were published on the Worldwide Web and that the acts were intended to cause injury within the forum state. Bailey avers that TDI’s website displays the following link: “There is another STC for a King Air with Walter engines, ... it is controlled by some con artists in Tennessee. Click here to do some due diligence.” (PL William Gordon Bailey’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction at 3.) When a user connects to the link, he sees a mug shot of plaintiff along with arrest records from 1991.
Here, there is no indication whatsoever that TDI’s website is anything other than wholly passive. The evidence reveals that the allegedly defamatory statements were merely posted on the website to be viewed by whomever cared to do so. There is no evidence that either TDI or Karlsen had any contacts with Tennessee other than the posting of the site which, it is assumed, is available to anyone anywhere with access to the Internet. Nor is there evidence to suggest that any effort was made to reach out to Tennessee residents any more than to persons residing elsewhere. Indeed, there is no indication that any Tennessee resident, except for Bailey, ever visited the website. Accordingly, the court finds that the plaintiff has failed to show that defendants purposefully availed themselves of the benefits of the state of Tennessee.
See Soma Med. Int’l,
In support of his opposition to defendants’ motion to dismiss, plaintiff cites
Calder v. Jones,
The effects test articulated by the Court in
Calder
has been applied to Internet eases. In
Panavision Int’l, L.P. v. Toeppen,
Panavision is distinguishable from this case, however. Here, the defendants attacked the plaintiff in their website as a business competitor who Bailey has conceded “solicit[s] conversions nationwide and worldwide.” Plaintiff was not attacked as a Tennessee businessman. Indeed, the alleged defamatory comments had nothing to do with plaintiffs state of . residence. Thus, it cannot be said that the defamatory statements constitute actions “expressly aimed” at Tennessee. As the court stated in Barrett, another Internet defamation action,
It is certainly foreseeable that some of the harm would be felt in [the forum state] because Plaintiff lives and works there, but such foreseeability is not sufficient for an assertion of jurisdiction. While we agree, that [forum] residents are among the recipients or viewers of such defamatory statements, they are but a fraction of other worldwide Internet users who have received or viewed such statements. The mere allegations that the Plaintiff feels the effect of the *797 Defendant’s tortious conduct in the forum because the Plaintiff is located there is insufficient to satisfy Calder. Unless [the forum state] is deliberately or knowingly targeted by the tortfeasor, the fact that harm is felt in [the forum state] from conduct occurring outside [it] is never sufficient to satisfy due process.
Barrett,
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, the court finds that plaintiff has failed to satisfy his burden of proof that personal jurisdiction over defendants exists in this case. Thus, the defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction is GRANTED. As a consequence, the court need not address defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
Notes
. Section 20-2-214 states in pertinent part as follows:
Persons who are not residents of Tennessee ... are subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state as to any action or claim for relief arising from:
(1) The transaction of any business within the state;
(2) Any tortious act or omission within this state;
(3) The ownership or possession of any interest in property located within the state;
(4) Entering into any contract of insurance, indemnity, or guaranty covering any person, property, or risk located within this state at the time of contracting;
(5) Entering into a contract for services to be rendered or for materials to be furnished in this state;
*793 (6) Any basis not inconsistent with the constitution of this state or of the United States;
Tenn.Code Ann. § 20-2-214(a).
