In the summer of 1980 plaintiffs Patrick Diskin and Thomas Diskin, Sr. sent their sons, the infant plaintiffs, to Camp Navajo, a riding camp in Moretown, Vermont, owned and operated by defendants Herbert and Joan Starck. The complaint alleges that camp employees sexually assaulted and abused the infant plaintiffs during their stay, causing them severe physical and emotional harm, and breaching defendants’ implied or express agreement with the parents to care for the children. All plaintiffs are domiciliaries and citizens of New York, and defendants are domiciliaries and citizens of Vermont. Pursuant to Rule 12(b), P.R. Civ.P., defendants have moved to dismiss the complaint for want of personal jurisdiction. Alternatively, they seek to change venue to the District of Vermont under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). For the reasons that follow, the court holds that personal jurisdiction has not been obtained over the defendants in New York.
Because this is a diversity action, personal jurisdiction must be obtained in accordance with the law of the forum state. See
Arrowsmith v. United Press International,
CPLR § 302(a)(3) confers personal jurisdiction over a non-domiciliary who
“commits a tortious act without the state causing injury to persons or property within the state ... if he
(i) regularly does or solicits business or engages in any other persistent course of conduct, or derives any substantial revenues from goods used or consumed or services rendered in the state; or
(ii) expects or should reasonably expect the act to have consequences in the state and derives substantial revenues from interstate or international commerce . . . .”
Although this section requires the occurrence of tortious conduct outside the state, its essential predicate is that the injury giving rise to the plaintiffs’ claim occur within the state. See
Kramer v. Hotel Los Montros, S. A.,
In the present case, however, both the alleged tortious conduct and the infants’ injuries occurred in Vermont. Plaintiffs cannot sustain jurisdiction under § 302(a)(3) merely by showing that as domiciliaries of this state, they suffered further damage (either economic or physical), on account of the earlier injuries sustained outside the state. See
Kramer v. Hotel Los Montros, supra,
The next long-arm provision that possibly applies in this case, CPLR § 302(a)(1), confers jurisdiction over a non-domiciliary who “transacts business within the state or contracts anywhere to provide goods and services in the state.” Plaintiffs must show, however, that their cause of action arises from “purposeful activities” of the defendants within the state.
Longines-Wittnauer Co. v. Barnes & Reinecke, Inc.,
The courts in New York consistently have held that injuries sustained while participating outside the state in recreational activities advertised and contracted for within the state, bear too remote a relationship to the advertising and contractual activity claimed to be the transaction of business in the state to warrant a conclusion that the injuries arose from the in-state activity. See
Noble v. Singapore Resort Motel of Miami Beach,
The final jurisdictional provision on which plaintiffs might rely, § 301, provides that “[a] court may exercise such jurisdiction over persons, property or status as might have been exercised heretofore.” Under this provision, as recently construed by the New York Court of Appeals,
“the authority of the New York courts [to exercise jurisdiction over a foreign corporation] is based solely upon the fact that the defendant is engaged in such a continuous and systematic course of doing business here as to warrant a finding of its presence in this jurisdiction .... The test, though not precise ..., is a simple and pragmatic one . . . : is the aggregate of the corporation’s activities in the state such that it may be said to be present in the state not occasionally or casually, but with a fair measure of permanence and continuity ... and is the quality and nature of the corporation’s contacts with the state sufficient to make it reasonable and just according to traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice that it be required to defend the action here .... ” Laufer v. Ostrow,55 N.Y.2d 305 , 309-310,449 N.Y.S.2d 456 , 458,434 N.E.2d 692 , 694 (1982) (internal citations and quotations omitted).
The lower New York courts have applied this test to individuals as well as corporations, see
e.g., Abkco Industries, Inc. v. Lennon,
When measured against the above standard, defendants’ activities in New York appear too limited to sustain jurisdiction. The sum of their contacts with this state is that once a year they purchased a $100 advertisement for their camp in a newspaper assertedly printed, published and distributed in New York. Aside from that, they have not visited New York to solicit or contract with prospective customers, they have not transported campers directly from the state to Vermont and they have maintained no office, bank account or property in the state. Moreover, there has been no showing that defendants have derived substantial revenue from the activities assertedly conducted in New York.
Even if substantial revenues had been generated through defendants’ advertising efforts, it has remained New York law that mere solicitation of business in the state by an out-of-state entity does not constitute doing business for jurisdictional purposes.
Miller v. Surf Properties, Inc.,
From the foregoing, it is clear that jurisdiction over defendants cannot be sustained under any jurisdictional provision on which reliance might be placed. Accordingly, the action is dismissed for want of jurisdiction. If, however, plaintiffs indicate a desire to have the action transferred to the District of Vermont, a change in venue to which defendants have indicated they will consent, an order to that effect will be entered instead of dismissal.
SO ORDERED.
