Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Krogmann, J.), entered May 17, 2013 in Washington County, which denied a motion by defendant Hetronic Deutschland to dismiss the complaint against it.
Defendant Hetronic Deutschland (hereinafter defendant) is a limited liability company registered in Germany that specializes in the manufacture of radio remote controls. During the relevant time period, Hetronic USA, Inc. (hereinafter H-USA) was the exclusive distributor for defendant in the United States.
In deciding whether an action may be maintained in New York against a nondomiciliary defendant, the court must first determine whether jurisdiction exists under New York’s long-arm statute (see CPLR 302) based upon the defendant’s contacts with this state; and, if it does, the court then determines “whether the exercise of jurisdiction comports with due process” (LaMarca v Pak-Mor Mfg. Co.,
The record reflects that defendant maintained an exclusive agreement with H-USA to distribute its products to various locations in the United States, including New York. Significantly, unchallenged evidence submitted by plaintiffs demonstrated that H-USA affected distribution to certain states in this country through a network of regional distributors, one of which was designated to serve the New York market. Moreover, the website for defendant and other Hetronic companies, along with the interrelationship of the entities involved, demonstrates defendant’s awareness of this network. In view of such purposeful distribution arrangement, we agree with Supreme Court’s conclusion that defendant sought to indirectly market its product in New York and, thus, should have reasonably expected a manufacturing defect to have consequences in this state (see generally Kernan v Kurz-Hastings, Inc.,
Based on the record before us, we likewise find that the exercise of jurisdiction over defendant is compatible with federal
Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. According to Max HeckI, who served on the' Board of Directors of both defendant and H-USA, those entities were “sister companies” which, at some point after the radio remote control at issue was sold, became wholly owned subsidiaries of defendant Hetronic International, Inc. and, later, of defendant Hetronic Holding, LLC.
. Defendant was formerly known as defendant Hetronic Steuersysteme and, at some point, affected a change in name only. Hetronic Steuersysteme is also named as an appellant on the notice of appeal.
