Opinion
Michael J. Bresler, M.D., and other plaintiffs appeal from an order quashing service of the summons on defendant-respondent George Stavros, M.D., on the ground of lack of personal jurisdiction. We reverse the order.
Appellants alleged in their complaint that appellant physicians and defendant Dr. Congress owned all the stock in the Foster City Emergency Medical Group, Inc., a California professional corporation. In summer of 1978, appellants entered into an agreement with respondent and the other two defendants for the purchase of appellants’ interests in the corporation; the defendants executed five documents—a contract of sale, a promissory note, an assignment *367 of a lease, an indemnification agreement, and the memorial of an oral understanding between Congress ánd the purchasers—in connection with the contemplated transaction. The complaint alleges the purchasers breached their obligations under these instruments and that defendant Congress conspired with the purchasing defendants to induce appellants to accept a lower purchase price and failed to disclose his understanding with the purchasers that he would continue to retain a one-quarter interest in the clinic.
Respondent submitted a declaration that he was a resident of Arizona and had not lived in California since his military duty in the state from 1963 tol965. In 1963, he obtained a license to practice medicine in California and has “maintained that license ever since.” He asserted, however, he had not practiced medicine in California since 1965. He executed the documents for the sale of the corporate stock in Arizona and was not involved in the negotiations leading up to the transaction. He stated he had never had any communications with the appellants; however, he had spoken on the telephone with defendant Congress, “a personal friend.” Respondent declared that his “sole purpose in attempting to purchase the stock . . . was investment. I had no intention of entering into the practice of medicine in California or of taking any part in the management of the corporation. I have not worked in the clinic operated by the corporation and taken no part in managing it. I have never received a stock certificate evidencing the shares I attempted to purchase. ”
Appellants submitted the declarations of the custodian of records for the Foster City Emergency Medical Group. Her records, attached to the affidavit, indicate that respondent visited the clinic for two days in September 1978, less than a week after the execution of the contract of sale; respondent saw twelve patients on these dates.
In a supplemental declaration, respondent’s counsel stated that he had telephoned respondent to bring to his attention the evidence of his visit to the clinic. “With his memory thus refreshed, Dr. Stavros recalled that he came to the clinic on one occasion, stayed overnight in California, and returned to Arizona the following day. He told me that this one visit was the only time he has been to the clinic, worked in the clinic, or come to California in connection with the clinic.”
The party seeking to establish jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant bears the burden of demonstrating by a preponderance of the evidence that the exercise of jurisdiction is appropriate. (See
R. E. Sanders & Co.
v.
Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc.
(1980)
Through Code of Civil Procedure section 410.10, the Legislature has permitted the courts of California to exercise jurisdiction over nonresident defendants to the maximum extent constitutionally permissible.
(Sibley
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
As respondent’s activities in California are clearly not “extensive or wide-ranging” or “substantial . . ..continuous and systematic,” appellants do not claim he is subject to general jurisdiction here. (See
Cornelison
v.
Chaney, supra,
Several considerations persuade us that by his purchase with two co-investors of the entire stock of a California medical corporation, respondent, a licensed practitioner, purposely availed himself of a state-conferred “privilege” and invoked the “benefits and protections” of California law. A related basis for jurisdiction—an out-of-state party’s intentional participation in “an activity that the State treats as exceptional and subjects to special regulation”—is also applicable.
(Hanson
v.
Denckla, supra,
Exercise of jurisdiction is appropriate even where the nonresident defendant’s activities are not so closely connected to state-conferred benefits or facilitation of economic activity. In
Quattrone
v.
Superior Court
(1975)
Respondent’s performance of medical services during his brief visit to the Foster City clinic does not automatically subject him to jurisdiction, but it is a pertinent consideration in determining whether he invoked the “benefits” of forum law.
Lundgren
v.
Superior Court
(1980)
Respondent contends that the instant suit involves not securities or the practice of medicine but merely the “execution and nonperformance of contracts, activities which are not subject to special regulation.” This characterization is specious—contracts are simply the means by which economic transactions of all sorts are effected. A transfer of securities does not cease to be a securities transaction subject to government regulation because it is consummated through a written contract.
Floyd J. Harkness Co.
v.
Amezcua
(1976)
The critical requirement o.f an invocation by respondent of the “benefits and protections” of state law is met. “We next consider whether it would be fair and reasonable to subject defendant to the jurisdiction of California in light of the inconvenience to him of defending an action in this state, when balanced against the interests of plaintiff in suing locally and of the state in assuming jurisdiction.”
(Cornelisonv. Chaney, supra,
The standards we have applied to the relationships among this state, the litigation and respondent exemplify the development of the fundamental fairness principle of
International Shoe, supra,
The order quashing service of summons and complaint on respondent is reversed with directions to deny the motion.
Caldecott, P. J., and Poché, J., concurred.
