MEMORANDUM OPINION
In this diversity action, plaintiff, a UK citizen domiciled in the state of Florida, is a patentee who sues a licensee and its subsidiaries, 1 with principal places of business in Mississauga, Ontario, and Huntington, Indiana, for breach of contract, patent infringement, misappropriation of trade secrets and breach of confidences. So constituted, this suit could not have been brought in this district, as it is not a permissible venue; none of the CFM entities reside in the Eastern District of Virginia, and none of the events giving rise to the claim occurred here. 2 To remedy this, plaintiff added a claim for patent infringement against one of the CFM entities’ distributors, Thulman Eastern Corporation (“Thulman”), which has its principal place of business in Annapolis Junction, Maryland, and a place of business within this district in Chantilly, Virginia.
At issue before the Court is whether to transfer the entire action to the Northern District of Indiana, or, in the alternative, to grant defendants’ motion to sever and stay the action as to codefendant Thulman, and then to transfer the main action against the CFM entities to the Northern District of Indiana. For the reasons that follow: (1) transfer of the entire action to Indiana is inappropriate because there is no jurisdiction over Thulman in that state; (2) severance and stay of the patent infringement claim against Thulman is warranted given that resolution of the claims against the CFM entities may dispose of the claim against Thul-man; and (3) transfer of the remaining claims against the CFM entities to Indiana is appropriate on the basis of an assessment of the factors pertinent to transfer under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a).
I
In April 1992, plaintiff, an inventor, and CFM Inc. entered into a contract (the “1992 *662 Agreement”) whereby plaintiff agreed to disclose his proprietary technology to CFM Inc., and to allow CFM Inc. to use that technology to manufacture gas fireplaces and gas fireplace components. Since 1992, CFM Inc. has manufactured and sold products incorporating this technology throughout the United States and Canada. Under the 1992 Agreement, CFM Inc. agreed to pay plaintiff: (1) a minimum monthly royalty of $2,500, which amount would be credited against any additional royalties due; (2) a five percent royalty on all products manufactured and sold by CFM Inc. using plaintiffs technology; (3) and a five percent improvement royalty on all products manufactured or sold by CFM Inc. using plaintiffs “improvements.” Soon after signing the 1992 Agreement, plaintiff began making a number of improvements to his technology, many of which the CFM entities have used. Among the most recent of these is an improvement that relates to molding technology and that is covered by U.S. Patent No. 5,700,409 (“the ’409 Patent”). On November 30, 1992, plaintiff and CFM Inc. entered into a second agreement (the “In-House Mold Making Agreement”), whereby plaintiff agreed to divulge to CFM Inc. additional mold manufacturing technology.
On August 1, 1996, plaintiff and CFM Inc. entered into a Deed of Assignment (the “Amendment”) that amended the 1992 Agreement by granting CFM Inc. the right to assign plaintiffs licensed technology to CFM affiliates. The Amendment provided that all new licensees would be subject to the 1992 Agreement and would pay all royalties to plaintiff. The current record does not disclose whether the two agreements and the Amendment were signed in Indiana or Canada, although it is certain that none was signed in Virginia. Shortly after signing the Amendment, CFM Inc. assigned plaintiffs technology to its various subsidiaries.
The financial significance of the business agreements between plaintiff and CFM Inc. is readily apparent. Since the 1992 Agreement, the CFM entities have allegedly sold at least $175,000,000 in gas fireplace products made using plaintiffs licensed technology. Significantly, the CFM entities manufacture many of these products at a plant in Huntington, Indiana. Also significant is the fact that the CFM entities sell their products nationwide through approximately one thousand dealers, one of which is Thulman.
Thulman is the nation’s largest distributor of fireplace products. It has sold over $1,000,-000 of fireplace products manufactured by the CFM entities, some of which were manufactured using plaintiffs licensed technology. The record does not disclose the quantity of products sold by Thulman that were manufactured using plaintiffs technology. Nor is it known whether Thulman sells more products made using plaintiffs technology than any of the other one thousand CFM entity dealers.
Plaintiff alleges that since December 1, 1997, the CFM entities have refused to pay plaintiff the minimum $2,500 monthly royalty. Moreover, plaintiff claims, the CFM entities have never paid either the five percent royalty for use of plaintiffs technology or the five percent improvement royalty. As a result, on January 8, 1998, plaintiff sent the CFM entities notice that they were in breach of the 1992 Agreement. Approximately two months later, plaintiff formally terminated the 1992 Agreement, pursuant to Paragraph 17 of that agreement, which provides that if a breach by CFM Inc. is not cured within fourteen days after receipt of written notice, plaintiff may terminate the Agreement. Paragraph 7 of the 1992 Agreement also provides that CFM Inc. must cease using plaintiff’s licensed technology upon termination of the Agreement.
On March 25, 1998, plaintiff filed this action alleging three counts against the CFM entities, and one count against Thulman. The first count, solely against the CFM entities, alleges breach of contract on the grounds that the CFM entities have refused to pay (i) the minimum monthly royalty of $2,500 since December 1, 1997, (ii) the five percent Royalty for use of plaintiffs technology since May 1, 1993, and (iii) the five percent improvement royalty since May 1, 1993. The second count alleges infringement of the ’409 patent by both the CFM entities and Thulman, and claims that the CFM entities’ infringement is willful, wan *663 ton, and deliberate. The third count alleges misappropriation of trade secrets and breach of confidences solely by the CFM entities.
The CFM entities now move to transfer the entire action to Indiana, or in the alternative to sever and stay the action as to Thul-man, and then to transfer the remaining, main action between plaintiff and the CFM entities to the Northern District of Indiana. 3 Plaintiff contends that the entire action cannot be transferred to Indiana because there is no personal jurisdiction over Thulman in that state. Defendants disagree, but argue in the alternative that if Thulman cannot be sued in Indiana, then the patent infringement claim against Thulman should be severed and stayed in this district, thereby allowing the remaining claims against the CFM entities to be transferred to Indiana pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) for the convenience of the witnesses and the parties and in the interest of justice. In response, plaintiff argues that severance is inappropriate and that, in any event, an assessment of the relevant § 1404(a) factors weighs against transfer of the claims against the CFM entities.
II
A motion to transfer will only be granted if the case “might have been brought” in the transferee district.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). In other words, transfer is possible only if venue and personal jurisdiction are proper in the transferee forum. And, importantly, these requirements cannot be waived.
See Hoffman v. Blaski,
Personal jurisdiction comes in two varieties' — specific and general. Specific jurisdiction exists when the claim in issue arises from the defendant’s contacts with the forum state,
5
whereas general jurisdiction depends on a defendant’s contacts with the forum state unrelated to the claim in issue, but those contacts must be “continuous and systematic.” Hel
icopteros,
The threshold for satisfying the requirements for general jurisdiction is substantially greater than that for specific jurisdiction.
See
16 James Wm. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice § 108.40 (3d ed.1997) (citing
Helicopteros,
Measured by this standard, Thulman’s incidental contacts fall short of the threshold for satisfying general jurisdiction. Those contacts, stemming from the relationship with the Majestic Products Company plant in Huntington, Indiana, include (1) traveling to the plant for the purpose of negotiating terms, receiving technical training, attending quarterly meetings, and inspecting and buying products, and (2) maintaining an agent in Indiana who distributes promotional material and negotiates terms. While these contacts would be more than sufficient in the specific jurisdiction context, the settled case law confirms they do not confer general jurisdiction. In this circuit, for example, maintaining a sales force and holding district meetings in the forum at least three times a year are “not the type of ‘continuous corporate operation’ that affects the determination of whether general jurisdiction exists.”
Nichols v. G.D. Searle & Co.,
Ill
Given that the action as a whole cannot be transferred to the Northern District of Indiana, the question then presented is whether plaintiffs claim against Thulman may be severed from the claims against the CFM entities so that the latter claims may be transferred to Indiana. 7
Analysis properly begins with recognition of the principle that when venue or personal jurisdiction in a transferee district is not proper for a defendant who is only indirectly connected to the main claims, the transferor court may sever the claims as to that defendant and transfer the remaining claims to the more convenient forum pursuant to § 1404(a).
See, e.g., Leesona Corp. v. Cotwool Mfg. Corp.,
The instant facts fit well under this principle: (1) plaintiffs claim against Thulman is peripheral to his various claims against the CFM entities; (2) adjudication of the claims against the CFM entities may well dispose of the claim against Thulman; 9 and (3) transfer of the plaintiffs claims against the CFM entities is appropriate under § 1401(a). 10
Plaintiff argues, unpersuasively, that
Magnavox Co. v. APF Electronics, Inc.,
In summary, severance of plaintiffs claim against Thulman is warranted because that claim is peripheral or secondary to plaintiffs claims against the CFM entities, and because that claim is likely to be resolved by the disposition of the claims against the CFM entities. From this, it follows that in the interests of justice the severed claim against Thulman should be stayed pending disposition of the transferred claims.
See Landis v. North American Co.,
IY
The remaining question at bar is whether plaintiffs main claims against the CFM entities should be transferred to Indiana pursuant to § 1404(a). 13 The principles governing § 1404(a) are well settled; they are conveniently summarized in Annotation, Questions as to convenience and justice of transfer under forum non conveniens 'provision of Judicial Code (28 U.S.C. § im(a)), 1 A.L.R.Fed. 15 (1969). 14 These principles, applied here, compel the conclusion that transfer of the CFM action to Indiana is appropriate. 15
The principal factors to be considered in a transfer analysis include plaintiffs choice of venue, witness convenience and access, party convenience, and the interest of justice.
See generally Baylor Heating,
Thus, well settled § 1404(a) principles as applied to the facts of this case compel the transfer of the claims as to CFM entities.
An appropriate Order will issue.
Notes
. The licensee, CFM Inc., and its subsidiaries, which include CFM Majestic Inc., The CFM Majestic Products Co., The Majestic Company, and CFM-USA, Inc., are referred to collectively as "CFM entities.”
. See 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a) (Venue in a diversity case is proper in the district "where ... any defendant resides, if all defendants reside in the same State,” or in the "district in which a substantial part of the events ... giving rise to the claim occurred.... ”).
. Originally, defendants moved only to sever and stay as to Thulman, and then to transfer the action as to the CFM entities. Following oral argument, however, defendants expanded their motion to include a transfer of the entire action to the Northern District of Indiana, arguing, in support thereof, that Thulman, as well as the CFM entities, could be sued in that district.
. As the
Hoffman
opinion makes clear, to hold otherwise would impermissibly confer on a defendant a unilateral power to defeat a plaintiff’s venue choice by seeking transfer to a forum where the action could not originally have been filed.
See Hoffman,
.See Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia,
S.A.
v. Hall,
. See Rule 4.4(A), Ind. St. Tr. R. P.
. There is no dispute that there is both general and specific jurisdiction over the CFM entities in Indiana.
.
See also Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Country Chrysler, Inc.,
. Thulman, by counsel, has stipulated and agreed in this action to be bound by the results of the disposition of the claims against the CFM entities in Indiana. Thus, for example, if the CFM entities are found to be infringers of plaintiff's patent in the Indiana litigation, Thulman will be bound by that determination here.
. See infra IV.
. For example, severance was allowed in
Mobil Oil,
.
See also Mobil Oil,
. The moving party bears the burden of showing that transfer to another forum is proper.
See Kraft v. Hoskins,
. These principles have also been applied in a number of decisions of this Court.
See, e.g., Verosol B.V. v. Hunter Douglas, Inc.,
.The parties do not dispute that there is personal jurisdiction over the CFM entities in the Northern District of Indiana and that venue is proper there.
. In showing witness inconvenience, the burden is on the moving party to identify the witnesses expected to testify at trial and the nature of their intended testimony so that a court may assess the materiality of the evidence and the nature of the inconvenience.
See Baylor Heating,
. Plaintiff's claims of inconvenience do not outweigh these considerations. Even if cases generally proceed to trial faster in this Court than in Indiana, as plaintiff argues, this consideration is not given great weight, where, as here, the other factors counsel heavily in favor of transfer.
See Mobil Oil,
