Opinion
Plаintiff James Farris appeals from the judgment entered in favor of defendant and respondent Capt. J. B. Fronapfel Company, granting respondent’s motion to quash service of summons.
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Farris purchased a 55-foot yacht known as the Kajun Lady from a Delaware corporation, Kajun Lady, Inc., in Florida. Farris is a resident of El Cajon, California, and he contacted defendаnt James Crutchfield dba Crutchfield Yacht and Shipbrokers in California and met with Crutchfield, a California resident, in San Diego, California. Crutchfield was acting as the west coast broker for the yacht. Broward Marine, Inc. (Broward), a Florida corporation, was acting as the east coast broker in Florida. On September 1, 1982, Farris trаveled to Florida, viewed the vessel which was berthed on the premises of Broward marine, and was told by Broward that an objective marine survey of the vessel could be obtained from Capt. J. B. Fronapfel Company (Fronapfel). On September 18, 1982, Fronapfel performed a survey of the vessel and issued a report which stated essentially that the vessel was in good condition and had an estimated value of $250,000. The survey document listed Farris as the client, included his California address and recommended certain steps be taken to prepare the boat for the passage to California and for use in California. Farris rеlied on Fronapfel’s survey and purchased the vessel in Florida, paid for the vessel in Florida, hired a captain and made other arrangements to return the vessel to California. Fronapfel was contacted by Broward and requested to perform the services and at Fronapfel’s request payment fоr the vessel was made directly by Broward. When the vessel arrived in San Diego, California, in May 1983, it had suffered damage in a storm in the waters off California and Mexico. The vessel was inspected by Farris’s insurance carrier and it was discovered that major structural damage and other defects were present in the vessel and the defects had existed at the time of the survey by Fronapfel. The cost to repair the preexisting damage exceeded the value of the vessel. Farris sued Crutchfield, Kajun Lady, Inc., Capt. J. B. Fronapfel Company and Broward Marine, Inc., in the Superior Court of the State of California in and for the County of San Diego. The complaint states one cause of action, for deceit, and alleges that Fronapfel falsely and fraudulently represented to Farris that he had properly inspected the vessel and that the vessel was in excellent condition and had a market value of $250,000. The complaint alleges that the representations were false in that the vessel had major damage and defects and that the damage and defects rendered the vessel valueless. The complaint further alleges that when Fronapfel made the representations he knew they were false and made them with the intent to dеfraud and deceive Farris and with the intent to induce Farris to purchase the vessel. Farris alleges that he has been damaged in that he was induced to spend time and energy in traveling to Florida and Jamaica, that he was induced to employ a captain to sail the vessel to San Diego and has paid monеy for the purchase, insuring and repairing of the vessel and that he has lost the use and enjoyment *986 of the vessel and the loss of profits through the inability to resell the vessel at a profit. The complaint seeks compensatory damages and punitive damages for oppression, fraud and malice in the sum of $500,000.
Fronapfel moved to quash service of summons on the ground the court lacked jurisdiction. Fronapfel filed a declaration showing that he is the sole proprietor of the company and for 32 years has been a resident of the State of Florida. The company’s only place of business is in Ft. Lauderdale, Floridа. The company has not been a corporation since 1969 and it has no business office in the State of California nor in any state other than Florida. Fronapfel has his driver’s license in Florida, files his tax returns from Florida, has used the Ft. Lauderdale address consistently for the past 28 years. All of his automobiles are registеred in Florida. He owns property in Florida, pays Florida taxes. His children have never attended any California schools. He has never had an agent for service of process in California and has never purchased any advertisements in any media calculated to reach the State of California and to the best of his knowledge, no such advertisements have reached California. He has no bank accounts, business or personal, in the State of California nor any interest in any property, real or personal, in the State of California. He has traveled to California on business in 1978 and 1979 for the survey of a yаcht, San Su Cher III, and in 1983 for the survey of the yacht No Problem, in both instances traveling to California at the request of a business acquaintance made in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, a Mr. Meyers for whom he has also conducted 12 surveys in Florida. He does not know Crutchfield, Crutchfield Yacht and Shipbrokers or James Farris and therefore requested that payment for his services be rendered directly from Broward Marine, Inc., and Broward agreed to pay him directly and did so. He has never met, talked to, corresponded with nor seen Farris. He knew at the time of the survey of the Kajun Lady that it was for a potential buyer named Farris but he delivered his survey to Broward Marine, Inc., a Florida corporation.
Page 1 of the survey lists Farris as “the client” and lists his home address as El Cajon, California. The survey on page 4 recommends that “[ujpon arrival in California the ground tackle should be upgraded as required for Pacific Coast usage.” Also on page 4 the survey states “[t]he Coast Guard is advising that any yacht contemplating an international passage” and “[i]t is recommended that an inflatable life raft be carried aboard for the passage to California.”
II
The law defining the limits of state court jurisdiction over nonresident defendants begins with
Internat. Shoe Co.
v.
Washington
(1945) 326 U.S.
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310 [
Where the defendant’s activities in the forum state are not so pervasive as to justify the exercise of general jurisdiction, then jurisdiction depends upon the quality and nature of the defendant’s activities in the forum in relation to the particular cause of action.
(Cornelison
v.
Chaney, supra,
In reviewing the order granting the motion to quash service of the summons, the facts must be viewed most favorably to the defendant.
(Bel
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mont Industries, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1973)
In those cases where jurisdiction is sought on the basis of defеndant’s occasional activities, it is essential that there be some act by which the defendant purposely avails himself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state, thus invoking the benefits and protections of its laws.
(Hanson
v.
Denckla
(1958)
Even in the case of a manufacturer of a product, the United States Supreme Court has held that foreseeability that a manufacturer’s product would enter or cause injury in the forum state is not itself a sufficient basis for the assertion of jurisdiction over the manufacturer.
(World-Wide Volkswagen Corp.
v.
Woodson
(1980)
The California Supreme Court distinguished
World-Wide Volkswagen
in a case where a Virginia manufacturer sold to a Californiа user a machine intended for use in California.
(Secrest Machine Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
The only possible basis of jurisdiction over Capt. Fronapfel would be on the theory that he did an act in Florida which caused an effect in California. “Even though an act is done elsewhere, if it has effеcts within a state the state may have jurisdiction, unless the nature of the effects and the
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defendant’s relationship to the state make its exercise unreasonable. [See]
McGee
v.
International Life Ins. Co.
(1958)
In
Floyd J. Harkness Co.
v.
Amezcua
(1976)
The mere fact that a plaintiff is a California resident does not mean that a tortious act committed against him by a defendant outsidе the state
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had an “effect” in California. (See
Thomas J. Palmer, Inc.
v.
Turkiye Is Bankasi A.S.
(1980)
Here we have a Florida resident contracting with a Florida broker to perform a marine survey for the benefit of a California resident with knowledge the vessel would be taken to California. The California resident purchased the vessel in Florida and paid the seller in Florida and took title to the vessel in Florida. The Florida surveyor is alleged to have committed an intentional fraud in Florida. There is no special California regulation governing Fronapfel’s activity. No acts were performed by Fronapfel in California. The only “effect” of the fraud alleged to have been committed by Fronapfel would be Farris’s loss of money on the transaction. While it might be argued that there was an effect in California in the sense that the loss of the ability to use and resell the vessel would take place in California, the same could be said of every purchase that takes place out of California with knowledge by the seller that the goods may be used in California.
The effects in California of Fronapfel’s alleged intentional misrepresentation in Florida are too remote in time and causal connection to fairly and justly require Capt. Fronapfel to come to California to defend himself as a result of this Florida transaction.
The judgment is affirmed.
Wiener, Acting P. J., and Work, J., concurred.
