Opinion
The sole issue in this appeal is whether the trial court properly dismissed the complaint of the named plaintiff, Daniel J. Golodner, alleging custodial interference by the nonresident defendant, Frauke Sawaha, for lack of personal jurisdiction on the ground that she was in Connecticut involuntarily and, thus, was immune from service of process. 1 We conclude that, because the defendant was in Connecticut pursuant to a court order and was defending against a separate *822 child custody action when she was served, she was immune from process. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment of dismissal.
The following undisputed facts and procedural history are relevant to our disposition of the plaintiffs appeal. The plaintiff and the defendant, a German citizen, began a relationship in 2001 while the plaintiff was living in the United States and the defendant was living in Germany. The couple, who never were married, are the parents of a child, Alisha K. Golodner (Alisha), bom in Germany on January 31, 2003. At various times in 2003 and 2004, the plaintiff and the defendant lived together at the plaintiffs residence in New London. In May, 2004, the defendant left the plaintiffs residence with Alisha and moved into a shelter operated by the named defendant, the Women’s Center of Southeastern Connecticut, Inc., an organization that assists abused women.
Thereafter, the plaintiff commenced an action seeking custody of Alisha, which the defendant opposed. In connection with that action, on June 3, 2004, the plaintiff obtained an ex parte order of custody from the Superior Court in the judicial district of New London, prohibiting the defendant from returning to Germany with Alisha. On June 4, 2004, before the defendant had been served with that order, she and Alisha returned to Germany. On September 13, 2004, the plaintiff brought an action in Germany against the defendant seeking the return of Alisha pursuant to the Hague Convention on the Civil Law Aspects of International Child Abduction, October 25, 1980, T.I.A.S. No. 11,670, 1343 U.N.T.S. 89. On November 1, 2004, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a stipulation, which was approved by the New London trial court, regarding the claims of both parties as to custody and providing, inter alia, that, “[pjursuant to Connecticut law, there exists a rebuttable presumption that the parties, even though *823 unmarried, share joint legal custody of the minor child, with no designation as to primary residence.”
On November 26, 2004, citing the stipulation, a German trial court ordered the repatriation of Alisha to the New London Superior Court. Specifically, the court ordered the defendant “to book only a direct flight from Hamburg or Frankfurt . . . [and] to immediately inform the police . . . and the border guard office . . . about the flight departure date, the departure airport and the flight number. . . . The travel documents— child [identification] . . . and passport for Alisha, passport of the defendant, escrowed at the police station . . . are to be handed out to the defendant . . . for the purpose of traveling to the [United States].” The defendant appealed from that order, but the German Appellate Court affirmed the order in February, 2005, thereby requiring the defendant to return Alisha to Connecticut.
The defendant then filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs custody action in the New London Superior Court.
2
In May, 2005, while the defendant was attending a court hearing in connection with that motion, a marshal served her with a summons and the complaint in the present action seeking, inter alia, money damages for the defendant’s alleged custodial interference. The defendant thereafter moved to dismiss the present action for lack of personal jurisdiction on the ground that nonresidents are immune from service of process if they are in Connecticut involuntarily. According to the defendant, her presence was involuntary because she had been ordered by the German trial court to come to Connecticut to return Alisha and to defend against the plaintiffs custody action. The plaintiff objected to
*824
the motion, claiming that the defendant’s presence was not involuntary because the German trial court had ordered only Alisha’s return, not the defendant’s return. Additionally, the plaintiff contended that the defendant was not immune from service both because she had sought affirmative relief from Connecticut courts as to custody and visitation of Alisha and in light of her egregious behavior in fleeing the jurisdiction. The trial court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss, stating in its order that “[a] nonresident, here to serve as a witness, is immune from legal process.
Chittenden
v. Carter,
On appeal, the plaintiff renews the arguments that he had made to the trial court in opposition to the motion to dismiss. Although the plaintiff recognizes the legal doctrine that immunizes from process a nonresident who is involuntarily in Connecticut, he contends that, because the defendant was not here involuntarily, but rather chose to accompany Alisha on her flight to Connecticut, the trial court improperly dismissed the action for lack of personal jurisdiction. Additionally, according to the plaintiff, because the defendant sought affirmative relief from a Connecticut court in connection with the underlying custody action and engaged in egregious conduct in wrongfully abducting Alisha, the trial court should not have extended to the defendant the doctrine’s protection.
The defendant maintains that she was here involuntarily because she had been ordered to return Alisha to Connecticut pursuant to the German trial court order. The defendant further maintains that, because she was in Connecticut defending against a separate custody *825 action, she was protected from process in this action, and adds that, to penalize her for protecting her legal rights against the plaintiffs claims, as he suggests, would in effect limit immunity to nonresident defendants who chose not to defend themselves and thereby eviscerate the reasons for granting immunity from process in the first instance. Finally, the defendant contends that the plaintiffs one-sided claims invoking equitable considerations do not inform the jurisdictional matter before the court. We agree with the defendant that she was here involuntarily and, accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
We begin with a brief discussion of pertinent legal principles relating to the issue of personal jurisdiction. “Because a lack of personal jurisdiction may be waived by the defendant, the rules of practice require the defendant to challenge that jurisdiction by a motion to dismiss.”
3
Standard Tallow Corp.
v.
Jowdy,
Finally, a motion to dismiss admits all facts well pleaded and invokes any record that accompanies the motion, including supporting affidavits that contain undisputed facts.
Barde
v.
Board of Trustees,
Following oral argument on the defendant’s motion to dismiss, the trial court, in summary fashion, determined that the defendant was immune from legal process, citing only to
Chittenden
v.
Carter,
supra,
Chittenden's
genesis can be traced to the case of
Bishop
v.
Vose,
Subsequently, in
Chittenden
v.
Carter,
supra,
Lastly, in
Ryan
v.
Ebecke,
Perhaps of greater significance to the present case is the
Ryan
court’s discussion of
Wilson Sewing Machine Co.
v.
Wilson,
In light of this legal landscape, we now turn to the facts in the present case. It is undisputed that the defendant was in Connecticut for several reasons, none of them voluntary as that term has been defined by ornease law. The first was as a defendant in the custody action, a status that by itself entitled her to immunity from service of process.
Ryan
v.
Ebecke,
supra, 102
*831
Conn. 20. Additionally, although the defendant had not yet been called as a witness in the custody action, it cannot reasonably be maintained that she was not present as a witness as well. As the court in
Wilson
recognized, defendants are important witnesses in their own cases and should not be deterred from presenting themselves in a foreign state to testify on their own behalf.
Wilson Sewing Machine Co.
v. Wilson, supra,
Finally, there is the issue of the German trial court order. The plaintiff contends that the defendant came voluntarily to Connecticut and submitted to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state as that term has been used in the aforementioned cases. Specifically, he asserts that the German court order did not require her to accompany Alisha back to Connecticut and that the order pertained only to the child. We disagree with the plaintiffs interpretation. Although the German court order did not state expressly that the defendant was ordered to return to Connecticut, she was the defendant in the German court, the orders regarding the flight arrangements were directed to her, the orders gave explicit instructions to the authorities to give the defendant her passport “at the departure airport for the purpose of traveling to the [United States]” and, because Alisha was two years old at the time, she could not be expected to travel without the defendant, the plaintiffs contention notwithstanding. 6 Therefore, the *832 trial court properly concluded that the defendant was immune from service of process and properly dismissed the action for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendant.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
In the present action for custodial interference, Alisha K. Golodner, through her father, Daniel J. Golodner, and Daniel Golodner, individually, brought suit against Sawaha and the Women’s Center of Southeastern Connecticut, Inc. (Women’s Center), the shelter for abused women where Sawaha and Alisha Golodner resided before leaving the country. Alisha Golodner’s portion of the complaint was withdrawn before trial, and Daniel Golodner withdrew his claim against the Women’s Center while this appeal was pending. We therefore refer to Daniel Golodner as the plaintiff and to Sawaha as the defendant.
The trial court had dismissed the plaintiffs first custody action in February, 2005, but the plaintiff thereafter commenced another custody action in April, 2005, and it was this second action that the defendant was seeking to dismiss when she was served in the present case.
Generally speaking, when a defendant files a motion to dismiss challenging the court’s jurisdiction, a two part inquiry is required. The trial court first must decide whether the applicable state statute authorizes the assertion of jurisdiction over the defendant. If the statutory requirement is met, the court’s second obligation is to decide whether the exercise of jurisdiction over the defendant would violate constitutional principles of due process.
Knipple
v.
Viking Communications, Ltd.,
In her motion to dismiss the present action, the defendant contended that the facts critical to her motion were undisputed, but sought an evidentiary hearing if the trial court concluded otherwise.
We note that there is language in
Bishop
v.
Vose,
supra,
Indeed, we note that, in rejecting the defendant’s claim that repatriation would pose a severe danger to Alisha by the plaintiff, the German Appellate *832 Court remarked that, although the defendant, as the abductor, might refuse to return with Alisha, she could not use the danger that she herself would have created by allowing Alisha to travel without her abductor’s chaperonage as an excuse to avoid repatriation.
