Legal Aid Society of San Diego, Maria Maranion Kraus, and Ali Puente-Douglass for Real Party in Interest.
*362Consistent with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, may California exercise specific personal jurisdiction over a nonresident in a paternity action where the mother and young child live in California and conception occurred in another state? Mariana L. initiated a paternity and child support action in San Diego County against David L., a Connecticut resident.
On the particular facts presented, we answer the question in the negative and issue a writ of mandate to prevent the exercise of jurisdiction. David's knowledge that Mariana resided in California and the foreseeability of California effects (a child) from their out-of-state sexual intercourse are insufficient to establish the requisite minimum contacts. ( Walden v. Fiore (2014)
*363FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In September 2017, Mariana filed a petition in San Diego County to establish parentage and seek child support, naming David as her one-month-old daughter's father. The petition claimed the court had jurisdiction over David because Mariana and her daughter lived in California. It attached an affidavit signed by Mariana's husband at the time, who denied paternity. Mariana served the petition and summons on David by certified mail to his address in Connecticut.
David made a special appearance to contest jurisdiction, filing a motion to quash the service of summons under section 418.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In *466an attached declaration, David stated he had never lived in California or owned property, paid taxes, registered to vote, opened a bank account, or had a driver's license here. If the child was his, it was conceived outside California. His actions did not force Mariana to move to California; she already lived and intended to remain there when they met in Nebraska nine months before her daughter's birth. Although David made a few visits to California relating to his work as a concert promoter, he was "never in California except for business," and Mariana's action had nothing to do with his business activities.
Mariana opposed the motion, noting David had made both personal and work-related trips to California "numerous times." Her declaration explained that they had an on-and-off intimate relationship spanning 17 years. They met in 2001 and were intimate until 2009 in "various hotels in California as well as other states"; in 2003, Mariana got pregnant and suffered a miscarriage. Mariana knew David was married, but she thought he did not love his wife. She stopped seeing David in 2009 after learning that he and his wife had a nine-year-old daughter.
Time passed. Mariana got married but resumed communicating with David in 2013 because her marriage was struggling and David stated he had gotten divorced. They spoke by text message and phone until meeting casually in Las Vegas in 2015. In April 2016 and August 2016, David made two business trips to California during which he saw and spent the night with Mariana. She visited David in November 2016 in Omaha, Nebraska during another of David's business trips. It was there that she conceived her daughter. Although Mariana was married at the time, she had not been intimate with her husband, and he signed an affidavit of nonpaternity.
As Mariana explained in her declaration, David knew she was a California resident and would raise any child resulting from their relationship in California. Mariana lived in California throughout her pregnancy, gave birth *364in this state, and presently resides with her daughter in San Diego County. Because she does not work outside the home, it would pose financial hardship to travel to Connecticut to establish paternity and child support.
Mariana submitted a string of text messages that she exchanged with David from April to November 2016. Consistent with her declaration, the messages indicated that she met David in Palm Desert in April 2016 and in Anaheim in August 2016 during David's business trips to the state. Text messages also corroborated Mariana's visit to see David in Nebraska in November 2016. Two weeks after that visit Mariana announced she was pregnant and that David was the father. She explained she did not expect David to parent the child but would be seeking child support in California. Their last communication was in January 2017, when David told her to communicate through attorneys going forward.
David filed a motion to strike objecting to portions of Mariana's declaration. He objected on relevance grounds to: (1) Mariana's discussion of how they met in 2001 and the "on-off" nature of their 17-year relationship; (2) Mariana's 2003 miscarriage and prior sexual acts in California that did not result in pregnancy; and (3) Mariana's claim that her husband knew he was not the father and was not obligated to provide support. David reiterated in his reply brief that he lacked sufficient contacts with California, explaining his sporadic business trips were "completely unrelated to this paternity case."
*467At the hearing on David's motion, the court overruled David's objections and accepted both parties' declarations into evidence. It explained that the 2003 miscarriage was relevant to show "there was a period of time where sexual intercourse was occurring in the state of California resulting in a conception even though the child was not carried to term."
"The Court finds that it has personal jurisdiction over [David] in that there was a period of time where sexual intercourse was occurring in the state of California resulting in a conception even though the child was not carried to term, and this is *365sufficiently related and tied to the issue here that California does, and [David] does, have sufficient continuing contacts or sufficient contacts with the state of California that are relevant to the litigation at issue for this Court to exercise jurisdiction over him."
David seeks writ relief from the trial court's decision denying his motion to quash. In May 2018, we issued an alternative writ and stayed proceedings in the trial court.
DISCUSSION
David argues California lacks personal jurisdiction over him and therefore cannot adjudicate Mariana's paternity and child support claims. The trial court relied heavily on Mariana's 2003 conception and miscarriage to find "sufficient contacts with the state on a related issue" to establish personal jurisdiction. But as we explain, we conclude personal jurisdiction is lacking under Walden, supra,
A
"In a proceeding to establish or enforce a support order or determine parentage of a child," section 5700.201 identifies seven statutory bases for personal jurisdiction over a nonresident. One of those bases applies when a child is conceived in this state ( § 5700.201, subd. (a)(6) ), but the parties agree that Mariana's daughter was not conceived in California. In addition to the seven statutory options, section 5700.201 includes a catchall provision, recognizing "any other basis consistent with the constitutions of this state and the United States for the exercise of personal jurisdiction." ( § 5700.201, subd. (a)(8).)
The Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause "constrains a State's authority to bind a nonresident defendant to a judgment of its court." ( Walden , supra ,
"Personal jurisdiction may be either general or specific." ( Vons , supra ,
Contrary to Mariana's claim, David's sporadic business contacts to promote concerts over the years in California do not establish general jurisdiction. David's contacts were not so continuous and systematic as to render him "essentially at home" in California. ( Daimler , supra ,
A nonresident defendant lacking sufficient contacts for general jurisdiction "still may be subject to the specific jurisdiction of the forum." ( Vons , supra ,
There are three requirements for a court to exercise specific jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant. First, the defendant must have purposefully availed himself or herself of forum benefits or purposefully directed activities at forum residents. Second, the controversy must relate to or arise out of the defendant's forum-related activities. Third, the exercise of jurisdiction must comport with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. ( Snowney v. Harrah's Entertainment , Inc. (2005)
*367Only if the *469plaintiff makes the initial showing on the first two requirements does the burden shift to the defendant to show that exercising jurisdiction would be unreasonable. ( Snowney , at p. 1062,
"When there is conflicting evidence, the trial court's factual determinations are not disturbed on appeal if supported by substantial evidence." ( Vons , supra ,
The crux of Mariana's argument is that jurisdiction is proper because "David knew that Mariana is a resident of California and if she were to conceive a child, she will raise the child in California." This reasoning is based on the "effects" test often applied in intentional tort cases, deriving principally from Calder v. Jones (1984)
B
Kulko addressed specific jurisdiction in the family law context. A California resident sued her ex-husband, a New York resident, for increased child support. ( Kulko , supra ,
The United States Supreme Court reversed. The ex-husband had not, by permitting their daughter to move to California to live with her mother, "purposefully availed" himself of California benefits and protections. ( Kulko , supra ,
*368A few months after Kulko , Bartlett v. Superior Court (1978)
Later California cases have read Kulko more narrowly as holding merely that the effects test would not apply to the facts of that particular case . ( Kulko , supra , 436 U.S. at pp. 96,
The conclusion that Kulko necessarily forecloses application of the effects test to domestic relations cases is the sole basis offered for Bartlett 's holding that a Florida man did not subject himself to California jurisdiction by causing a California resident to become pregnant. ( Bartlett , supra ,
C
In Calder , supra ,
In the years after Calder , courts " 'struggled somewhat with Calder 's import, recognizing that the case cannot stand for the broad proposition that a foreign act with foreseeable effects in the forum state always gives rise to specific jurisdiction.' " ( Pavlovich v. Superior Court (2002)
In 2002, surveying federal appeals court decisions, the California Supreme Court joined the prevailing view that "the Calder effects test requires intentional conduct expressly aimed at or targeting the forum state in addition to the defendant's knowledge that his intentional conduct would cause harm in the forum." ( Pavlovich , supra , 29 Cal.4th at pp. 271-273,
Applying the express aiming or intentional targeting requirement, the Pavlovich court concluded California could not exercise personal jurisdiction over an out-of-state resident lacking California contacts based on source code he posted on a passive website "accessible to any person with Internet access." ( Pavlovich , supra ,
D
Were Pavlovich still the applicable test, we might be inclined to deny the petition on the basis that David expressly aimed his conduct at California, knowing his intentional conduct might produce an effect (a child) in this forum. Unlike the defendant in Pavlovich , David expressly aimed his conduct at a California resident rather than simply knowing the effects of his conduct might be felt here. Nevertheless, we believe the Supreme Court's 2014 decision in Walden , supra ,
*472In Walden , professional gamblers from Nevada and California sued a Georgia police officer in Nevada federal court for actions taken by that officer in Georgia. The officer had seized a suitcase of cash carried by the gamblers while they were in transit from Puerto Rico to Las Vegas. ( Walden , supra , 571 U.S. at pp. 279-280,
The United States Supreme Court reversed in a unanimous decision, concluding that due process did not permit the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the Georgia officer. According to Walden , the Ninth Circuit erred by basing personal jurisdiction over the officer on his knowledge of the travelers' strong forum connections and the foreseeability of harm in Nevada. ( Walden , supra ,
"This approach *371to the 'minimum contacts' analysis impermissibly allows a plaintiff's contacts with the defendant and forum to drive the jurisdictional analysis. [The officer's] actions in Georgia did not create sufficient contacts with Nevada simply because he allegedly directed his conduct at plaintiffs whom he knew had Nevada connections. Such reasoning improperly attributes a plaintiff's forum connections to the defendant and makes those connections 'decisive' in the jurisdictional analysis. [Citation.] It also obscures the reality that none of the petitioner's challenged conduct had anything to do with Nevada itself." (Ibid. )
Although injury was felt in Nevada, "mere injury to a forum resident is not a sufficient connection to the forum." ( Walden , supra ,
Walden reasoned that jurisdiction was proper in Calder because of "the various contacts the defendants had created with California (and not just with the plaintiff) by writing the allegedly libelous story." ( Walden , supra ,
*473Walden emphasized two core principles underlying the "defendant-focused" jurisdictional inquiry. First, a nonresident defendant's forum-connection "must arise out of contacts that the 'defendant himself ' creates with the forum State," not "contacts between the plaintiff (or third parties) and the forum State." ( Walden , supra ,
As Walden makes clear, "a defendant's relationship with a plaintiff or third party, standing alone, is an insufficient basis for jurisdiction." ( Walden , supra ,
Shortly after Walden was decided, Division Three of the Fourth Appellate District considered whether it had jurisdiction under the effects test over an Illinois resident who posted defamatory statements on his personal Facebook page about someone he knew lived in California. ( Burdick v. Superior Court (2015)
As the Burdick court explained, " Walden teaches that the correct jurisdictional analysis focuses on (1) the defendant's contacts with the forum, not with the plaintiff, and (2) whether those contacts create the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation necessary to satisfy due process." ( Burdick , supra , 233 Cal.App.4th at pp. 23-24,
*474Although the California Supreme Court has not addressed the impact of Walden on the Pavlovich effects test, California's test mirrors the Ninth Circuit's, which has changed post- Walden . ( *373Pavlovich , supra , 29 Cal.4th at pp. 272-273,
E
In this case, the only "suit-related conduct" tying David to California is his on-and-off relationship with Mariana, a California resident. His business trips to California as a concert promoter or personal visit to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library are too disconnected to the paternity action standing alone to be jurisdictionally relevant. ( Judd v. Superior Court (1976)
Nor do we find David's past contacts with Mariana in California jurisdictionally relevant. Mariana declared that she and David had sexual relations between 2001 and 2009 in "various hotels in California as well as other states." Contrary to the trial court's finding, there is no nonspeculative evidence to suggest her 2003 pregnancy resulted from "interactions in the state of California." In fact, there is no nonspeculative basis in the record to gauge how much of their 2001 through 2009 relationship centered in California. Even if there were, decade-old contacts are too remote in time to establish specific jurisdiction in this paternity action. We consider "the contacts at the time of the proceeding and not on whether past minimum contacts might suffice." ( Muckle v. Superior Court (2002)
Accordingly, we focus on David's California contacts that are reasonably connected to Mariana's paternity and child support action. After a seven-year hiatus, David and Mariana resumed an intimate relationship in 2016. David *374made a handful of work-related trips to California that year; on two of these trips, he saw Mariana. In April 2016, David traveled to Palm Desert, where he met Mariana at a concert venue. He went to Arizona afterwards and returned two days later, spending the next two nights with her at a Los Angeles hotel. Four months later, in August 2016, they spent two nights together at an Anaheim hotel. This amounted at most to three interactions in California during two business trips four months apart. Two months after these California visits, Mariana saw David in Nebraska and conceived a child. *475To be sure, Mariana was a California resident and David knew that fact. David exchanged phone calls and text messages with Mariana in California until shortly after she became pregnant. Since her birth, Mariana's daughter has lived with her mother in California. But to find specific jurisdiction, Walden instructs that Mariana and her daughter "cannot be the only link[s] between the defendant and the forum." ( Walden , supra ,
"The proper question is not where the plaintiff experienced a particular injury or effect but whether the defendant's conduct connects him to the forum in a meaningful way." ( Walden , supra ,
*375In reaching our result, we do not mechanically apply Walden 's directive to distinguish *476a defendant's contacts "with the forum State itself" from his contacts "with persons who reside there." ( Walden , supra ,
All three of David's interactions with Mariana in California coincided with two scheduled business trips to this state. There were other business and personal trips to this state during which he did not see Mariana. The pregnancy resulted from a later meeting in Nebraska. On these facts, David's "relationship with this state is tenuous at best, and in fact would be almost nonexistent [as related to this paternity action] had [Mariana] not chosen to reside here." ( Modlin v. Superior Court (1986)
We caution that jurisdiction remains a fact-specific rather than "mechanical" inquiry, turning on the "quality and nature" of a defendant's activities. ( International Shoe , supra ,
Although we reach a similar jurisdictional result as Bartlett , supra ,
DISPOSITION
Let a writ of mandate issue directing the respondent court to vacate its order denying David's motion to quash the service of summons in Mariana's paternity and child support action and to enter a new and different order granting the motion and quashing the service of summons. The stay issued on *377May 24, 2018 will be vacated when the opinion is final as to this court. In the interests of justice, each party shall bear its own costs.
WE CONCUR:
HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
HALLER, J.
Notes
We refer to the parties by their first name and last initial to protect the privacy interests of the child. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90(b)(1), (b)(10) & (b)(11).)
The court did not explain how it determined that the 2003 pregnancy involved conception in California; Mariana's declaration simply stated the parties had an intimate relationship in California "as well as other states" between 2001 and 2009.
Further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise indicated. We explore section 5700.201 in the discussion section.
California's long-arm statute likewise permits courts to exercise personal jurisdiction to the fullest extent permissible under the federal or state constitutions. (Code Civ. Proc., § 410.10 ; Vons Companies , Inc. v. Seabest Foods , Inc. (1996)
In line with Lontos , supra ,
Bartlett also concluded that specific jurisdiction could not rest on the defendant's three trips to California with the Navy "for a business reason unrelated to his personal association with [the child's mother]." (Bartlett , supra , 86 Cal.App.3d at pp. 75-76,
At least one commentator has questioned Walden's seemingly "revisionist" recharacterization of Calder . (Erbsen, Personal Jurisdiction Based on the Local Effects of Intentional Misconduct (2015)
California courts have traditionally required only a " 'substantial nexus or connection between the defendant's forum activities and the plaintiff's claim.' " (Snowney , supra ,
Recently, the United States Supreme Court questioned California's " 'sliding scale approach' " as "difficult to square with our precedents." (Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court of California , San Francisco County (2017) --- U.S. ----,
As David conceded below, Mariana could have acquired specific jurisdiction through personal service of the summons in this state. (Burnham v. Superior Court (1990)
Given our result, we need not address David's arguments that: (1) the 2003 pregnancy and other Mariana-related contacts were too remote to the 2017 paternity action to affect the jurisdictional inquiry; (2) as a matter of statutory interpretation the place of conception during a prior pregnancy is jurisdictionally irrelevant under section 5700.201, subdivision (c)(8) ; and (3) jurisdiction was unreasonable because Mariana was married, meaning another man was presumed to be the child's father (§ 7611, subd. (a) ).
