Petitioner Fisher Governor Company, an Iowa corporation, seeks a writ of mandate to compel the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco to enter its order quashing service of summons in three actions brought by plaintiffs, the real parties in interest in this proceeding. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 416.3.) The actions were brought to recover damages for the wrongful deaths of Lowell Prestwich and Donald B. Satchel and for personal injuries suffered by Clifford Turner. The complaints allege that the injuries and deaths occurred in Kimberly, Idaho, when a gas meter and pressure reducing station exploded owing to defective equipment manufactured by Fisher. Plaintiffs joined various other corporations as defendants. Fisher was served by making personal service in California on George R. Friederich and Company, a manufacturers’ agent who sells Fisher’s products. (See Corp. Code, § 6500.) Fisher appeared spe *224 cially in each action and moved to quash the service of summons on the ground that it was not doing business in this state. Its motions were denied.
Code of Civil Procedure, section 411, subdivision 2, authorizes service of process on foreign corporations that are “doing business in this State.” “That term is a descriptive one that the courts have equated with such minimum contacts with the state ‘that the maintenance of the suit does not offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” ’
(International Shoe Co.
v.
Washington,
Although Fisher’s principal offices and manufacturing plants are in Iowa and it has no employees or property in California and has not appointed an agent to receive service of process here, plaintiffs contend that Fisher’s sales activities in this state are sufficient to subject it to the jurisdiction of our courts even if the causes of action are not related to those activities. Fisher’s products are sold in California through independent manufacturers’ agents who also sell similar products of other manufacturers. These agents receive commissions on sales made of Fisher’s products and provide Fisher’s catalogues to interested persons on request. Fisher is listed in telephone books at the agents’ addresses and numbers.
In Cosper v. Smith & Wesson Arms Co., supra, ante, p. 77, we held that essentially similar sales activities in this state were sufficient to sustain jurisdiction when the cause of action arose out of the sale in this state of a defective gun manufactured by Smith and Wesson that exploded injuring a California resident here. In the present case, the; causes of action arose in Idaho, the defective equipment was not sold in this state, neither of the decedents was a California resident, and none of the plaintiffs are California residents. The causes of action are not related to any business done by Fisher here.
*225
Although a foreign corporation may have sufficient contacts with a state to justify an assumption of jurisdiction over it to enforce causes of action having no relation to its activities in that state
(Perkins
v.
Benguet Mining Co.,
The interest of the state in providing a forum for its residents
(McGee
v.
International Life Ins. Co.,
*226
G.M.B.H.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
None of these considerations supports an assumption of jurisdiction in plaintiffs’ actions. The causes of action did not arise out of and are not related to Fisher’s activities in this state, and none of the relevant events occurred here. (Cf.
Jeter
v.
Austin Trailer Equipment Co.,
Let the peremptory writ of mandate issue as prayed.
Gibson, C. J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., Mc Comb, J., Peters, J., and White J. concurred.
