This is аn action on an irrevocable letter of credit issued by the defendant, Associated Banking Corp. (ABC), a Philippine corporation, in favor of H. Ray Baker, Inc. (Baker) an Ohio corporation doing business in California, the proceeds of which were assigned to Interquip Corp. (Interquip), another Ohio corporation doing business in California. The district court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction over ABC. We affirm.
The facts are not disputed. Interquip negotiated with Dura-Tire and Rubber Industries, Inc. (Dura-Tire), a Philippine corporation, for the sale of equipment to DuraTire in the Philippines. All of these negotiations were conducted in San Francisco. Dura-Tire caused ABC to issue the irrevocable letter of credit for payment of the equipment. All negotiations between Dura-Tire and ABC were conducted in the Philippines.
The letter of credit originally cаlled for a single shipment and payment in five installments, to be advised through Manufacturer’s Hanover Trust Co. of New York. The letter was amended to permit partial shipments. The goods were shipped and the first installment paid by Manufacturer’s Hanover Trust Co. Baker then assigned the proceeds of the letter of credit to Inter-quip and notified ABC of the assignment. Interquip presented the letter of credit for payment at a California bank. The letter was dishonored, purportedly because the equipment did not cоnform to contract terms.
ABC maintains correspondent banking relationships with six California banks; that is, ABC has non-interest bearing accounts with those banks for the purpose of processing letters of credit and facilitating the transfer of funds between California and the Philippines. ABC is not licensed to do business in California. It maintains no offices or employees or agents in California. Its sole contact with California is the maintenance of its accounts in the six California banks. Transactions regarding these accоunts are handled by wire, telephone or mail. No agent or employee of ABC has ever visited California in connection with these accounts.
In a diversity action such as this, the court must perform a two-step jurisdictional analysis: does the state in which the court sits have a long-arm statute which confers jurisdiction, and if so, is that exercise оf jurisdiction consistent with due process? Rule 4(e), F.R.Civ.Pro.; Forsythe
v. Overmyer,
Under a line of cases beginning with
International Shoe
v.
Washington,
The jurisdictional inquiry focuses on “the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation.”
Shaffer v. Heitner (1977)
If the defendant’s forum-related activity is “substantial” or “continuous and systematic,” the relationship between the defendаnt and the state is sufficient to support jurisdiction even if the cause of action is unrelated to the defendant’s forum activities.
Data Disc, Inc. v. Systems Technology Associates, Inc.,
(9th Cir. 1977)
If the defendant’s contacts with the forum are insufficient to support general jurisdiction, jurisdiction may still lie if the nature and quality of those activities, сonsidered in relation to the cause of action, make the assertion of jurisdiction fair and reasonable in the particular case.
Shaffer v. Heitner, supra,
‘(1) The nonresident defendant must do some act or consummate some transaction with the forum or perform some act by which he purposefully avails himself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum, thereby invoking the benefits and protections of its laws. (2) The claim must be one which arises out of or results from the defendant’s forum-rélated activities. (3) Exercise of jurisdiction must be reasonable.’
(Data Disc, Inc. v. Systems Technology Associates, Inc. supra,
Applying these principles to the facts of this case, it is clear that, as ABC’s contacts with California were neither substantial nor systematic, general jurisdiction over ABC is lacking.
Since the relationship between ABC and California is not strong enough to confer jurisdiction over ABC for all causes of action, we turn to the question whether the relationship among the dеfendant, the forum, and the litigation permits the assertion of limited jurisdiction in this case. The presence of assets in California is a relevant contact, though not one that is sufficient by itself to confer jurisdiction.
Shaffer v. Heitner,
supra,
A letter of credit is an undertaking by the issuing bank, usually in the buyer’s country, that it will pay a draft drawn on it by the seller upon presentation of specified documents, such as a bill of lading. 2 This permits the seller to substitute the credit of a bank with an established *553 international reputation for that of a foreign buyer whose credit worthiness may not be known in the seller’s cоuntry. The bank’s obligation under the letter of credit is independent of the underlying sales contract. If the presented documents comply with the terms of the letter of credit, thе bank is obligated to pay regardless of whether the goods themselves conform to the contractual terms. The issuing bank instructs its correspondent in the seller’s country to “advise” the credit; that is, to notify the beneficiary of the existence and terms of the credit. The advising bank assumes no duty of payment unless it “confirms” the credit at the issuing bank’s request, thereby becoming independently liable to the beneficiary. This letter of credit also designated the advising bank as the paying bank and authorized Manufacturers to reimburse аny bank that negotiated the draft for the seller from ABC’s account with Manufacturers.
The existence of correspondent relationships with the six California banks did not put thosе banks on any special footing with regard to this letter of credit. While Baker could have negotiated the letter of credit through any bank of its choice, any negotiating bank would have forwarded the draft to the paying bank in New York for reimbursement. A California correspondent would not have been authorized to accept the draft and pay it from ABC’s account with that bank. From all that appears, this case is not analogous to products liability cases in which jurisdiction has been predicated on the fact that the defendant launched its defective product into the stream of commerce and therefore could foresee that it might be resold or transрorted into the forum state, there to injure the plaintiff. (E. g.,
Jetco Elecontric Industries, Inc. v. Gardiner
(5th Cir. 1973)
Although we recognize that evaluation of relevant contacts in this case must take into account the commercial realities of transactions involving international letters of credit, we think on this record that plaintiffs have failed to show that ABC could reasonably have expected the issuance or negotiation of this letter to have effects in California that would make it fair to require it to defend this suit there.
AFFIRMED.
