OPINION
This case is before us through interlocutory appeal from the District Court of Bernalillo County. Customwood Mfg., Inc., the plaintiff-apрellee (plaintiff), a New Mexico corporation, filed a complaint for debt against Downey Construction Co., Inc., thе defendant-appellant (defendant), a Nevada corporation. Process was served on defendant in Nevada. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The motion was denied by the trial court. Defendant then filed an application for an order allowing appeal. The trial court had not made findings of fact, but a review of the complaint and affidavits revealed that there was no dispute as to facts material to the jurisdictional issue, and this Court granted an interlocutory appeal. We reverse the trial court.
The issue on appeal is whether the defendant “transacted any business” within New Mexico, and is therefore subject to jurisdiction of New Mexico courts under the New Mexico long-arm statute, NMSA 1978, Section 38-l-16(A)(l). Defendant’s contacts in New Mexico were insufficient to constitute a transaction of business within the State, under the meaning оf the long-arm statute, and therefore insufficient to support assertion of jurisdiction over defendant by New Mexico courts.
Dеfendant, a construction company, was awarded a contract to build a large house in Las Vegas, Nevada. At the time defendant bid on the contract, it was told by the architect that he and the owner had already selected plaintiff to suрply all of the doors for the house. Defendant and all of the other bidders were given an allowance for the doors to be included in the bid. Once defendant was awarded the bid it placed a purchase order with plaintiff for the doors, as it had been instructed to do. As work progressed, there were also telephone calls between plaintiff and defendant, somе of them initiated by defendant, and defendant periodically mailed payments to plaintiff for doors received. It is not contended that defendant has ever done business in New Mexico nor had any other contact within New Mexico except аs just described. No employee or agent of defendant ever traveled to New Mexico, and defendant never solicited for business or supplies in New Mexico.
After the front doors were installed in the house they began to weather poorly. Plаintiff sent an employee to Nevada to inspect the doors, and eventually sent another employee to refinish thеm. This dispute arises out of expenses that plaintiff incurred in inspecting and repairing the doors. Plaintiff contends that defendant, by its contacts with plaintiff, and specifically its mailing of a purchase order to plaintiff, transacted business within New Mexico and thеrefore is subject to New Mexico jurisdiction under NMSA 1978, Section 38-1-16(A)(1).
Plaintiff correctly asserts that a single transaction of business within this Statе can be sufficient to subject a nonresident defendant to the jurisdiction of New Mexico courts, provided that the cause of action being sued upon arises from that particular transaction of business. NMSA 1978, § 38-l-16(A)(l); Moore v. Graves,
It is this purposefulness on the part of the defendant, in establishing its contact with New Mexico, that is lacking in this case. Defendant did mail a purchase order to plaintiff in New Mexico, but only pursuant to an agreement which plaintiff had already worked out with other parties. In this resрect we find this case to be very similar to Artoe v. Mann,
Similarly, in the instant case, the purchase order mailed by defendant is more accurately characterized as a confirmation of a business deal already established, than as an initiation of a deal by defendant. Defendant stepped into a business аrrangement which plaintiff and others had already established, and did not purposefully avail itself of the “privilege of conducting activities within” New Mexico, “thus invoking the benefits and protections” of New Mexico law. Hanson v. Denckla,
We reverse the trial court’s denial of the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, and remand the cause for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
