Case Information
*2
TASHIMA, Circuit Judge:
Plаintiff Bernard Picot, a resident of California, appeals the district court’s dismissal of his action against Defendant Dean Weston, a resident of Michigan, for lack of personal jurisdiction. From 2010 to 2012, Picot and Weston worked together with a third man, Paul David Manos, to develop and market an electrolyte for use in hydrogen fuel cells. After Picot and Manos sold the electrolyte technology without telling Weston, Weston claimed that he was entitled to a one- third share of the proceeds under an oral agreement. In response, Picot and Manos sued Weston in California seeking a declaration that no oral agreement was made, and for damages for intentional interference with their sales contract. The district court dismissed the suit for lack of personal *3 jurisdiction. We affirm.
I.
Weston is a resident of Waterford, Michigan.
[1]
He has
made a career of develoрing technologies for use in
Michigan’s automotive industry through his corporation,
Engineering Interests, Inc., which is incorporated in Michigan
and headquartered in Sterling Heights, Michigan. Outside the
[1]
Because the district court resolved this case without an evidentiary
hearing, we take all uncontroverted allegations in the complaint as true
and resolve all factual disputes in the Picot’s favor.
Schwarzenegger v.
Fred Martin Motor Co.
,
events involved in this suit, neither Weston nor Engineering Interests has ever conducted business in California. Picot is a resident of Santa Clara County, California.
Weston and Picot met each other through Manos, a mutual business associate and a resident of Nevada. Weston and Manos have known each other since 2005. In 2009, Manos and Picot were looking to get involved with a hydrogen technology being developed in Texas. Manos asked Weston if he could help by traveling to Texas to assess the technology, which Weston did. Eventually, the three men determined that the technology being developed in Texas was unworkable, and began efforts to develop and sell their own eleсtrolyte formula for use in hydrogen fuel cells.
Exactly how the three men decided to work together is hotly disputed. Weston claims that in 2009, he and Manos met in Michigan and reached an oral agreement under which Weston would help develop, test, fund, and market the technology. In exchange, Weston would receive $20,000 per month and a one-third share of any profits from the sale of the technology. Weston states thаt Manos claimed to have authority to enter into the agreement on behalf of Picot, as well as himself. On February 1, 2010, Manos, Picot, and Weston met at a restaurant in Howell, Michigan. Weston claims that at this meeting, Picot confirmed his agreement to the oral profit-sharing deal. Picot and Manos acknowledge the meeting, but deny the existence of any oral agreement.
Weston spent twenty to seventy hours per week working *4 to develop and market the teсhnology at his office in Sterling Heights, Michigan. Picot and Manos occasionally worked out of his office as well. Weston’s marketing efforts focused largely on soliciting investors or purchasers in the Michigan automotive industry including General Motors, Chrysler, Hummer, and Penske Automotive. He also procured a $450,000 investment from a Michigan resident, and contracted with the University of Michigan for technological help.
On two occasions, Weston left his Michigan office to travel to California. First, in January 2010, Weston traveled to southern California for approximately two weeks to help Manos set up a demonstration for a potential client Picot had contacted. Second, in June 2010, Weston went to Sacramento at Manos’ and Picot’s request to help with another demonstration. On both occasions, Manos and Picot compensated Weston for his work and related expenses.
On three occasions, Weston met with Tracy Coats, a resident of Cleveland, Ohio, at the University of Michigan. Coats is the majority owner of HMR Hydrogen Master Rights, Ltd. (“HMR”), a Delaware corporation with offices in Ohio. At one of these meetings, Coats and Weston videotaped a demonstration of the technology. At another, Weston and Coats conducted а Skype presentation for a potential customer in China.
In 2011, Manos and Picot began negotiating with Coats and another part-owner of HMR, Carl Le Souef, a resident of Australia, for HMR to purchase the technology. The negotiations were successful, and Manos and Picot agreed to sell the technology to HMR for $35 million. They agreed that the money would be paid into two pass-through trusts, one in Wyoming and one in Austrаlia. The contract was executed in Los Angeles, California, and became effective December 12, 2011. This agreement was followed by a series of emails and phone calls between Weston and Manos. On February 8, *5 6 P ICOT V . W ESTON 2012, Weston sent Manos an email referencing earlier conversations and asking about his share of the proceeds from the sale to HMR. Immediately after that email Weston called Mаnos and demanded $250,000 or he would “do everything in his power to destroy” Manos and Picot.
In March 2012, Coats told Weston about the $35 million sale price, and informed him that Manos and Picot had each already received $1.1 million. On March 20, 2012, Weston’s lawyer sent Manos and Picot an email threatening to sue if they did not pay Weston his share of the proceeds pursuant to their oral agreement. As a result of the threatenеd litigation and other unspecified statements by Weston, HMR stopped making payments to Manos and Picot.
Three days after the threatening email, Picot and Manos filed suit against Weston in California Superior Court for the County of Santa Clara seeking: (1) a declaration that no oral agreement existed between them and Weston; and (2) damages for intentional interference with the HMR sales contract. Weston rеmoved the action to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. Weston then moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction and improper venue and, in the alternative, to transfer venue to the Eastern District of Michigan. The district court concluded that it lacked personal jurisdiction over Weston on either of the two claims, granted the motion to dismiss, and denied the motion to transfer as moot. Picot, but not Manos, timely appealed.
II.
We review
de novo
a district court’s dismissal for lack of
personal jurisdiction.
Wash. Shoe Co. v. A-Z Sporting Goods
Inc.
,
III.
“Federal courts ordinarily follow state law in determining
the bounds of their jurisdiction over persons.”
Daimler AG
v. Bauman
,
Depending on the strength of those contacts, there are two
forms that personal jurisdiction may take: general and
specific.
Boschetto v. Hansing
,
We employ a three-part test to assess whether a defendant has sufficient contacts with the forum state to be subject to specific personal jurisdiction:
(1) The non-resident defendant must purposefully direct his activities or consummate some transaction with the forum or resident thereof; or perform some act by which he purposefully avails himself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum, thereby invoking the benefits and protections of its laws;
(2) the claim must be one which arises out of or relates to the defendant’s forum-related activities; and
(3) the exercise of jurisdiction must comport with fair play and substantial justice, i.e. it must be reasonable.
Schwarzenegger
, 374 F.3d at 802. The plaintiff has the
burden of proving the first two prongs.
CollegeSource, Inc.
v. AcademyOne, Inc.
,
The exact form of our jurisdictional inquiry depends on
the nature of the claim at issue. For claims sounding in
contract, we generally apply a “purposeful availment”
analysis and ask whether a defendant has “purposefully
avail[ed] [himself] of the privilege of conducting activities
within the forum State, thus invoking the benefits and
protections of its laws.”
Schwarzenegger
,
A.
A claim for declaratory judgment as to the existenсe of a
contract is an action sounding in contract.
See Stanford
Ranch, Inc. v. Md. Cas. Co.
,
“[A] contract alone does not automatically establish
minimum contacts in the plaintiff’s home forum.”
Boschetto
539 F.3d at 1017. Rather, there must be “actions by the
defendant
himself
that create a ‘substantial connection’ with
the forum State.”
Burger King
, 471 U.S. at 475 (1985)
*8
10
P ICOT V . W ESTON
(quoting
McGee v. Int’l Life Ins. Co.
, 355 U.S. 220, 223
(1957)). Merely “random, fortuitous, or attenuated” contacts
are not sufficient. (internal quotation marks omitted). A
defendant must have “performed some type of affirmative
conduct which allows or promotes the trаnsaction of business
within the forum state.”
Sher
, 911 F.2d at 1362 (quoting
Sinatra v. Nat’l Enquirer, Inc.
, 854 F.2d 1191, 1195 (9th
Cir.1988)). In determining whether such contacts exist, we
consider “prior negotiations and contemplated future
consequences, along with the terms of the contract and the
parties’ actual course of dealing.”
Burger King
,
Applying this standard, we conclude that Picot has not demonstrated that Weston had sufficient minimum contacts with California to subject him to specific personal jurisdictiоn there. Under the disputed oral agreement, Weston was obligated to develop the technology, arrange for its testing, and assist in fund-raising and marketing. In exchange, Weston would receive a one-third interest in any profits from the sale of the technology, $20,000 per month, and reimbursement of his expenses to develop and adapt the technology. The agreement was formed in Michigan, where Weston lived, where it was understood Weston would perform the majority of his work, and where Weston did indeed discharge most of his contractual duties.
Despite Weston’s lack of ties to California, Picot makes
two arguments in favor of the exercise of jurisdiction. We
find neither persuasive. First, he contends that the oral
agreement created a substantial connection between Weston
and California because Picot, a co-party to the agreement,
fulfilled his obligations under the agreement by seeking out
investors and buyers in California. This argument would
*9
mistakenly “allow[] a plaintiff’s contacts with the defendant
and forum to drive the jurisdictional analysis.”
Walden v.
Fiore
, 134 S. Ct. 1115, 1125 (2014). But our inquiry is
limited to examining contacts that “proximately result from
actions by the defendant
himself
.”
Burger King
,
Second, Picot argues that the requisite contacts were
created by “the parties’ actual course of dealing.”
Burger
King
, 471 U.S. at 479. Specifically, he contends that
Weston’s two trips to California are sufficient to subject him
to the state’s jurisdiction. While “physical entry into the
State . . . is certainly a relevant contact,”
Walden
, 134 S. Ct.
at 1122, a defendant’s transitory presence will support
jurisdiction only if it was meaningful enough to “create a
‘substantial connection’ with the forum State,”
Burger King
Here, given “the limited nature of the transaction at issue,” Boschetto , 539 F.3d at 1017, that substantial connection is lacking. Neither trip was envisioned in the initial oral agreement; rather, both grew incidentally out of broader efforts to develop and market the technology. In both cases, Weston traveled to California at Manos’ and Picot’s request and expense to assist in presentations Manos and Picot had planned for clients that Manos and Picot had identified. Weston’s role in the presentations was relatively small: he primarily prepared prototypes and demonstrations. His first visit lasted only two weeks. The exact length of his second visit is unclear, but appears to have been about the sаme.
Moreover, Weston’s two trips to California hold no special place in his performance under the agreement as a whole. In addition to the two trips to California, he also traveled to Mexico for a presentation and spoke over the Internet with potential customers in China. The bulk of his efforts in developing and marketing the technology were centered in Michigan. He worked out of his office in Sterling Heights, Michigan, contracted with the University of Michigan, and met with possible purchasers in Michigan and Ohio. Manos, Picot, and Coats all traveled to Michigan to meet with Weston. At most, Weston’s contacts with California were merely “random, fortuitous, or attenuated.” *10 Burger King , 471 U.S. at 475 (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, we hold that the oral agreement and Weston’s two trips to California did not create sufficient minimum cоntacts to subject him to personal jurisdiction there. [2]
B.
Picot’s second cause of action alleges that Weston
tortiously interfered with Picot’s contract to sell the
technology to HMR. In analyzing whether a court has
specific personal jurisdiction over a tort claim, we apply our
three-part “effects” test derived from
Calder v. Jones
,
1.
The meaning of the term “intentional act” in our
jurisdictional analysis is essentially the same as in the context
of intentional torts; namely, the defendant must act with the
“intent to perform an actual, physical act in the real world.”
Schwarzenegger
,
2.
The second prong of our test, “express aiming,” asks
whether the defendant’s allegedly tortious action was
*11
“expressly aimed at the forum.”
Brayton Purcell LLP v.
Recordon & Recordon
,
In assеssing Picot’s arguments, we are guided by the
Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Walden
. There, the Court
reinforced the traditional understanding that our personal
jurisdiction analysis must focus on the defendant’s contacts
with the forum state, not the defendant’s contacts with a
resident of the forum. In
Walden
, a Georgia police officer,
working with DEA agents, seized money belonging to two
professional gamblers in a Georgia airport and later helped
draft a false affidavit to show probable cause for the seizure.
P ICOT V . W ESTON
15
Applying the principles of
Walden
, we conclude that
Weston’s actions did not connect him with California in a
way sufficient to suppоrt the assertion of personal jurisdiction
over him. Weston’s allegedly tortious conduct consists of
making statements to Coats (an Ohio resident) that caused
HMR (a Delaware corporation with offices in Ohio) to cease
making payments into two trusts (in Wyoming and Australia).
Weston did all this from his residence in Michigan, without
entering California, contacting any person in California, or
otherwise reaching out to California. In short, “nоne of
[Weston’s] challenged conduct had anything to do with
[California] itself.”
[3]
Id.
Moreover, as in
Walden
, Picot’s
injury, an inability to access out-of-state funds, is not tethered
to California in any meaningful way. Rather, his injury is
entirely personal to him and would follow him wherever he
might choose to live or travel. The effects of Weston’s
actions are therefore “not connected to the forum State in a
way that makes those effects a propеr basis for jurisdiction.”
[3]
Picot also contends that the “express aiming” requirement is met
because, shortly before the alleged tortious interference, Weston called
Manos and threatened to “destroy” Manos and Picot unless they paid him
immediately. These threats, Picot argues, amount to extortion expressly
targeted at California. However, Picot did not assert an extortion claim in
his complaint. We therеfore do not address the alleged extortion other
than to say that it has no bearing on the jurisdictional issues before us.
Our specific jurisdiction inquiry is limited to “the defendant’s suit-related
conduct.”
Walden
,
[4] Accordingly, Picot has failed to make a prima facie showing of specific personal jurisdiction over Weston on his intentional interference claim.
IV.
Weston neither purposefully availed himself of the privilege of conducting activities in California nor expressly aimed his conduct at California. The district court, therefore, did not err in dismissing this action for lack of personal jurisdiction. The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
[4]
Because Picot has not established the second prong of our purposeful
direction test, we need not address the third prong.
See Schwarzenegger
