MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This is a trademark infringement action against the operators of QueenBeeBeverlyHills.com, a self-described “leading online retail discount designer boutique, offering the latest trends in authentic European designer accessories.”
On August 1, 2008, the Court dismissed the case as to defendant Simone Ubaldelli, a California resident.
See Chloé v. Queen Bee of Beverly Hills, LLC,
By letter dated February 19, 2009, plaintiffs moved the Court to certify Ubaldelli’s dismissal from the case as final.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). Plaintiffs point out an apparent conflict of authority among the judges of this district over one of the issues addressed in the Court’s August 2008 decision- — whether exercising jurisdiction over a non-resident based on a single, internet-based sale of a counterfeit retail product is consistent with due process.
Compare Chloé I,
I. International Shoe and One-Off Internet Transactions
There is no dispute about the governing law, at least at a very general level. Under
International Shoe Co. v. State of Washington Office of Unemployment Compensation and Placement,
This conclusion also follows from three Supreme Court decisions that addressed the circumstances in which a non-resident defendant’s commercial dealings with a forum support personal jurisdiction. 1 The Court writes now to explain this additional basis for its decision.
*353
In
Travelers Health Association v. Virginia,
In
McGee v. International Life Insurance Co.,
The Court’s most recent discussion of when a defendant’s commercial relationship with the forum supports jurisdiction came in
Burger King,
The Court held that Florida could exercise jurisdiction over Rudzewicz for an alleged breach of the agreement. The critical question, the Court explained, was not whether “an individual’s contract with an out-of-state party
alone
can automatically establish sufficient minimum contacts in the other party’s home forum,”
id.
at 478,
[W]e have emphasized the need for a “highly realistic” approach that recognizes that a “contract” is “ordinarily but an intermediate step serving to tie up prior business negotiations with future consequences which themselves are the real object of the business transaction.” It is these factors — prior negotiations and contemplated future consequences, along with the terms of the contract and *354 the parties’ actual course of dealing— that must be evaluated in determining whether the defendant purposefully established minimum contacts within the forum.
Id.
at 479,
In the Court’s view, the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Travelers, McGee,
and
Burger King
confirm that a single internet-based sale of a counterfeit retail product is insufficient to establish personal jurisdiction over an out-of-state defendant under
International Shoe.
By hypothesis, such a sale is a one-off transaction and cannot establish a “continuing relationship!]” with the buyer.
Travelers,
*355 For these reasons, as well as those in the Court’s August 2008 decision, the Court reaffirms its holding that it may not exercise jurisdiction over Ubaldelli based on his sale of a single handbag to plaintiffs’ New York-based paralegal.
II. Decisions to the Contrary
At least two decisions by courts of this district appear to take an opposite view. First, in
Cartier,
This does not hold true for Judge Sweet’s decision in
Mattel, Inc. v. Adventure Apparel,
No. 00 CIV. 4085 (RWS),
[T]here were “certain minimum contacts with [the forum] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” In reaching this conclusion, the relevant factors have been considered, as well as Adventure’s [defendant’s] argument that Mattel’s [plaintiffs] trickery renders the exercise of personal jurisdiction by this Court violative of due process.
Id. at *4 (citations omitted).
The Court does not find this analysis persuasive, although it agrees that the kind of “trickery” alleged here is no bar to the exercise of long-arm jurisdiction.
See infra
pp. 356-57. The quoted passage does not consider the distinction, prominent in
Travelers, McGee,
and
Burger King,
between isolated business contacts with a forum and contacts that demonstrate purposeful availment of the forum’s laws and institutions. Nor does it consider the mountain of contrary authority cited in the Court’s prior opinion.
See Chloé I,
III. Three More Objections
Three additional objections merit brief discussion. First, it might be objected that the line the Court adopts here, that a single, internet-based sale of a counterfeit product does not support jurisdiction while more substantial contacts do, is hopelessly inadministrable. Wouldn’t a simpler rule — e.g., one holding that an internet seller is subject to jurisdiction anywhere he delivers a product — be preferable, if
*356
only to avoid the social cost of repeated litigation over whether “the quality and nature of the defendant’s activity” support jurisdiction?
Burger King,
The point is not without force, but it is a criticism of
International Shoe,
not its application in this particular context.
E.g.,
Robert C. Casad,
Personal Jurisdiction in Federal Question Cases,
70 Tex. L.Rev. 1589, 1593 (1992) (“The application of [the
International Shoe
] test is attended by much uncertainty. Different courts weigh the various factors differently, and often reach opposite results on very similar facts.”).
International Shoe
“is not susceptible of mechanical application,” and “the facts of each case must be weighed to determine whether the requisite ‘affiliating circumstances’ are present.”
Kulko v. Superior Court of Cal.,
It might also be objected that requiring something more than a single retail transaction creates a gap between the scope of conduct regulated by substantive law and the federal courts’ regulatory power. It is only natural that a defendant who takes advantage of the national market should be subject to regulation throughout that market.
Cf. Cartier,
Lastly, it might be objected that the Court’s holding rests on equitable considerations that are irrelevant to the
International Shoe
analysis, particularly on the view that there is something tricky or deceitful to obtaining jurisdiction over an out-of-state defendant by purchasing goods from him through a website. The Court rejects this argument. While the Court does hold that there is no connection between plaintiffs’ cause of action and defendants’ activities in New York,
Chloé I,
F.Supp.2d at 525-26, it does not believe plaintiffs engaged in any wrongful act that goes to the Court’s jurisdiction over Ubaldelli. Courts will not exercise jurisdiction obtained by fraud. Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 82 (1971);
see Burnham v. Superior Court of California, County of Marin,
The Clerk is directed to enter final judgment as to defendant Simone Ubaldelli. The Court certifies, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), that there is no just reason for delay.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A separate line of Supreme Court decisions considers the common fact pattern in which a defendant sells a product to a third party, the product finds its way into a forum, and the plaintiff attempts to assert jurisdiction over the defendant on the theory that it availed itself of the forum by placing its product into the “stream of commerce.”
See Asahi Metal Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Superior Court of Cal., Solano County,
. As the Court’s earlier opinion briefly noted, this conclusion also follows from analysis of whether maintaining suit here would offend "traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
Chloé I,
Here the balance tips against jurisdiction. First, there is obvious inconvenience to a California resident in defending an action in the Southern District of New York. True, deregulation of the domestic airline industry has led to more competitive pricing, and domestic long-distance telecommunication costs are asymptotically approaching zero. But as any traveler who has spent time on the Los Angeles-New York redeye knows, doing business on both coasts is not cost-free. The trip itself takes five to six hours (without the almost inevitable delays), and there are obvious opportunity costs to being in New York if one lives and does business in California.
As for the second, fourth, and fifth factors, there is no obvious reason why New York has a greater interest in hearing trademark actions than other federal and state courts. The Lanham Act is the law of the land, and an action under the Act may be brought in virtually any U.S. court. These factors are thus essentially neutral.
The remaining factor — plaintiffs' interest in obtaining effective relief — does not tip the balance. Because the Lanham Act is national law, the choice is not between litigation in the forum state and nowhere as it was in
McGee. See
. A similar argument was advanced by Justice Brennan but never adopted by the Court as a whole.
See Asahi,
