OPINION OF THE COURT
In this appeal, we are asked to determine whether Supreme Court properly exercised personal jurisdiction over defendants, an individual and corporation, both residents of California, who retained a New York attorney to represent the corporation in an action brought in an Oregon federal court. Because we conclude that defendants’ retention and subsequent communications with plaintiff in New York established a continuing attorney-client relationship in this state and thereby constitute the transaction of business under CPLR 302 (a) (1), we hold that the exercise of jurisdiction was proper.
I.
In February 2001, defendant Suzanne Bell-Doucet, a California resident and president of defendant Only New Age Music, Inc. (ONAM), a California corporation, placed a telephone call to plaintiff, attorney Gabriel Fischbarg, a member of the New York bar, at his New York office. During the ensuing conversation, the parties discussed plaintiffs potential representation of ONAM in a lawsuit alleging breach of contract, fraud and copyright infringement claims against Allegro Corp., a nonparty Oregon corporation. On February 23, Ms. Bell-Doucet sent a letter to plaintiffs New York office to confirm that he “offered to take this case on [a one-third] contingency” and that she would pay him a $2,000 deposit “against expenses.” Enclosed with the February 23 letter were “contracts, copyrighted material, [an] outline of events, and copies of correspondence” for plaintiff s review. According to plaintiff, after receiving these materials, he entered into a retainer agreement with defendants by telephone from his New York office.
In addition, defendants repeatedly communicated with plaintiff in New York. According to plaintiff, over the course of approximately nine months (May 2001 through January 2002) during his representation of ONAM in the Oregon action, he spoke with defendants by telephone at least twice per week regarding their case. 1 Plaintiffs time records also show that on at least 31 occasions defendants sent e-mails regarding the Oregon case to plaintiff, that on three occasions they faxed materials to him, and that defendants sent plaintiff documents, by either mail or e-mail, 2 seven times. 3
On January 15, 2002, a dispute regarding the terms of plaintiffs retainer agreement arose. That same day, defendants accepted plaintiffs e-mailed resignation as their attorney. 4 While the Oregon action was still pending, plaintiff moved the Oregon court for an order awarding him $57,906.05 for services rendered prior to his resignation. The court denied plaintiffs motion, concluding that it lacked personal and subject matter jurisdiction over the fee dispute. But the Oregon court held that a series of e-mails between plaintiff and defendant Bell-Doucet prior to his resignation established his contractual right to “a fair legal fee” at the conclusion of the Oregon action.
Supreme Court denied the motion. It held that it could properly exercise personal jurisdiction over defendants pursuant to CPLR 302 (a) (1) because their “activities in retaining plaintiff, . . . a New York attorney[,] situated in New York, to represent them in the Oregon Action w[ere] purposeful and a sufficient nexus exists between that retention . . . and the instant claim regarding allegedly unpaid legal fees” (
The majority reasoned that by seeking out plaintiffs representation in New York and “[b]y working with plaintiff on a consistent basis . . . defendants ‘transacted business’ in New York sufficient to subject themselves to this State’s jurisdiction” (
Thereafter, the Appellate Division granted defendants leave to appeal to this Court and certified to us the question whether its “order . . . which affirmed the order of the Supreme Court [was] properly made?” We answer that question in the affirmative.
II.
Defendants argue that they have transacted no business in New York because they have not purposefully availed themselves of the privileges and protections of our state’s laws. According to them, their retention of plaintiff and their communications—by telephone, facsimile and e-mail—with him are, as a matter of law, insufficient predicates for long-arm jurisdiction.
CPLR 302 (a) (1) jurisdiction is proper “even though the defendant never enters New York, so long as the defendant’s activities here were purposeful and there is a substantial relationship between the transaction and the claim asserted”
(Deutsche Bank Sec., Inc. v Montana Bd. of Invs.,
Not all purposeful activity, however, constitutes a “transaction of business” within the meaning of CPLR 302 (a) (1). Thus, we have held that “merely telephoning] a single order” to New York requesting a shipment of goods to another state
(see Parke-Bernet Galleries v Franklyn,
The quality of defendants’ contacts here establishes a transaction of business in New York. Defendants sought out plaintiff
The fact that the defendant in
Reiner
was physically present in New York, whereas defendants here were not, is immaterial.
Like the defendant in
Parke-Bernet,
defendants here have also engaged in sustained and substantial transaction of business in New York. They contacted plaintiff here to retain him and thereby projected themselves into our state’s legal services market
(see Parke-Bernet,
Contrary to defendants’ argument, this is not a case in which plaintiff is attempting to establish long-arm jurisdiction on the basis of his unilateral conduct in New York. We have previously held that an agent may not rely upon his or her own New York contacts on behalf of a principal to establish long-arm jurisdiction
(see e.g. Glassman v Hyder,
Haar v Armendaris Corp.
(
Unlike the plaintiff in
Haar,
plaintiff here has set forth facts establishing that defendants did engage in activities in New York. His affidavit and time records show that defendants solicited plaintiff here by telephone and mail and regularly communicated with him in New York during the course of an attorney-client relationship
(compare e.g. Etra,
III.
The courts below also properly concluded that the present action arises out of defendants’ transaction of business in New York. There is a substantial relationship between plaintiffs action for fees accrued during his representation of defendant ONAM in the Oregon action, defendants’ solicitation of plaintiff in New York to represent ONAM in that action and defendants’ communications with plaintiff in this state with respect to the Oregon matter (see Johnson v Ward, 4 NY3d 516, 519 [2005]). These are not “merely coincidental” occurrences that have a tangential relationship to the present case (see id. at 520). They form the basis of this action and, indeed, plaintiffs claims for legal fees are directly dependent upon them.
Furthermore, our decision accords with due process. As we have explained, the United States Supreme Court’s due process precedents provide that: “So long as a party avails itself of the benefits of the forum, has sufficient minimum contacts with it, and should reasonably expect to defend its actions there, due process is not offended if that party is subjected to jurisdiction
IV
In conclusion, when defendants projected themselves into New York via telephone to solicit plaintiffs legal services, they necessarily contemplated establishing a continuing attorney-client relationship with him. Having established such a relationship and repeatedly projecting themselves into New York—via telephone, mail, e-mail and facsimile—to advance their legal position in the Oregon action through communications with plaintiff here, defendants purposefully availed themselves of the benefits and protections of New York’s laws governing lawyers. This lawsuit arises out of defendants’ contacts here. Requiring them to defend the present suit properly comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the affirmative.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Graffeo, Read, Pigott and Jones concur; Judge Smith taking no part.
Order affirmed, etc.
Notes
. Before this Court, defendants have disputed the frequency of their telephonic conversations with plaintiff. But the record reflects no such discrepancy. Instead, in an affidavit, defendant Bell-Doucet admitted to engaging in some unspecified “limited number” of phone calls with plaintiff. Plaintiff does admit, however, that the time records he submitted do not catalog each and every telephone call between the parties. Those records only reflect eight such calls.
. Plaintiff has annotated his time records to indicate when he received mail or e-mail from defendants. Seven of his entries, however, do not make clear which of these media defendants used to communicate with him.
. These calculations do not take into account communications that occurred following the fee dispute that forms the basis of this action.
. Prior to his resignation, defendants made two payments to plaintiff, totaling $2,000. The record is silent regarding where these payments were tendered.
. Defendants claim that plaintiffs complaint is subject to dismissal because it failed to allege a basis for personal jurisdiction. Defendants are wrong (see Vincent C. Alexander, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C302:5 [“Nowhere in the CPLR’s rules of pleading is there any requirement of an allegation of the court’s jurisdiction”]). Rather, “[i]f the defendant moves to dismiss due to the absence of a basis of personal jurisdiction, the plaintiff must come forward with sufficient evidence, through affidavits and relevant documents, to prove the existence of jurisdiction” (id.). This is precisely what occurred here.
. Defendants fail to account for the significance of this continuing relationship. This is evidenced by their reliance upon trial court decisions rejecting CPLR 302 (a) (1) jurisdiction where a New York real estate agent “traveled to Florida” and executed an agreement in that state to market properties in Florida, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia with a Florida corporation
(see Kimco Exch. Place Corp. v Thomas Benz, Inc.,
. Defendants maintain that they derived no benefit from our state’s laws through their establishment of an attorney-client relationship with plaintiff. That is false (see e.g. 22 NYCRR 1210.1 [setting forth New York’s “Client Bill of Rights,” which provides, among other things, that clients, such as defendants, are “entitled to be charged a reasonable fee”]).
. Defendants’ reliance upon our decision in
Ferrante Equip. Co. v Lasker-Goldman Corp.
(
