Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
This appeal involves personal jurisdiction under the District of Columbia long-arm statute, D.C.Code § 13-423 (2001). John Helmer, a United States citizen, sued his former girlfriend Elena Doletskaya, a Russian citizen, for fraud and breach of contract when she refused to repay him for real and personal property acquired while they lived together in Moscow. The district court dismissed the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction.
Helmer v. Doletskaya,
I.
The facts, based on the pleadings and affidavits construed in the light most favorable to Helmer, are as follows. John Helmer is a citizen of the United States and a resident of the District of Columbia *204 by virtue of his ownership of a home in the District of Columbia, his payment of D.C. taxes, and his possession of a D.C. driver’s license. However, he has lived and worked in Moscow as an independent business journalist since 1990. Elena Dolet-skaya is a citizen of the Russian Federation and a resident of Moscow. In 1993, Helmer and Doletskaya commenced a romantic relationship and lived together in a rented apartment in Moscow. They also began negotiations with a Russian seller to purchase an apartment in Moscow. That summer, the couple visited Helmer’s home in the District of Columbia. While there Doletskaya agreed to arrange for the purchase of the Moscow apartment in Hel-mer’s name, as Helmer did not speak or read Russian. Doletskaya also agreed to repay Helmer for financially supporting her until her career was established. Such financial support included her use of Hel-mer’s credit cards, on the condition that the monthly billing statements would be sent to Helmer’s home address in the District of Columbia.
On November 19, 1993, after the couple returned to Moscow, Doletskaya arranged for the purchase of the Moscow apartment and registered it in her own name. Hel-mer paid cash for the apartment and received a receipt acknowledging the sale. The couple moved into the Moscow apartment in 1994. In 1996, their romantic relationship ended, and Helmer loaned Do-letskaya $11,000 to purchase and renovate a dacha, or country house, in the outskirts of Moscow. Helmer continued to live in the Moscow apartment and to permit Do-letskaya to use his credit cards until 2000, when Doletskaya established her financial independence as editor-in-chief of Vogue Russia. In 2000, after Doletskaya had moved into the dacha, Helmer discovered that the Moscow apartment was registered in Doletskaya’s name. When Doletskaya refused to transfer the apartment to him, Helmer sued her in a Moscow court to recover title to the apartment; his complaint was dismissed on the merits. Dolet-skaya also refused to repay Helmer $68,000 for his financial support, including $57,000 in credit card charges and $11,000 for the dacha.
On March 15, 2002, Helmer sued Dolet-skaya in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia for fraud and breach of contract. Count One of the complaint alleged that Doletskaya fraudulently induced Helmer to entrust her with the purchase of the apartment and to lend her financial support by concealing material facts about her personal background. Count Two alleged that Doletskaya breached her agreement to register the Moscow apartment in Helmer’s name and her agreement to repay Helmer for his financial support. Doletskaya moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of service and personal jurisdiction, improper venue, forum non conveniens, and failure to state a claim for fraud. The district court granted the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, finding that the contracts made during the couple’s 1993 visit to the District of Columbia did not constitute “minimum contacts” with the District of Columbia, and that the fraud did not cause injury in the District of Columbia, as Helmer was not living there at the time.
Helmer,
II.
On appeal, Helmer contends that the district court erred in dismissing the complaint because Doletskaya had sufficient contacts with the District of Columbia to satisfy the requirements of the D.C. long-arm statute and due process. Our standard of review depends on “[t]he posture in which the motion [to dismiss was] presented to trial court.”
Herbert v. Nat’l
*205
Acad. of Sciences,
In a diversity case, the federal district court’s personal jurisdiction over the defendant is coextensive with that of a District of Columbia court.
See Crane v. Carr,
A.
The district court ruled that even though the contract for repayment of the credit card charges was formed in the District of Columbia, it had no substantial connection with the District of Columbia because both the charges and the payments were made outside the District of Columbia.
Helmer,
Helmer also contends that the contract for repayment of the credit card charges had a substantial connection with the District of Columbia because, as alleged in his complaint and his timely declarations, the credit cards were issued to Helmer in the District of Columbia, and the monthly billing statements were sent to Helmer’s ad
*206
dress in the District of Columbia for the purpose of arranging for Helmer’s payment of Doletskaya’s charges. According to the complaint, Doletskaya declared that, as a condition of her use of Helmer’s credit cards, the monthly billing statements would be sent to Helmer’s address in the District of Columbia. Even though the credit card charges were paid from Hel-mer’s bank account located outside the District of Columbia, Doletskaya knew that her continued use of the credit cards depended on the receipt of the statements in the District of Columbia and the arrangement here for payment of the charges. Thus, Doletskaya accepted the credit cards knowing that repeated contacts with the District of Columbia would result from her continued use of the credit cards and Helmer’s arrangements for payments of her charges in performance of the contract. Because the contract was formed in the District of Columbia, the corpus of the contract involved credit cards issued to a District of Columbia resident and registered with a District of Columbia address, and the parties contemplated future repeated contacts with the District of Columbia as a condition of performance, we hold that the contract had a substantial connection with the District of Columbia and that Doletskaya “purposefully avail[ed] [herself] of the ... benefits and protections of [D.C.] laws,”
Burger King,
The contract to repay Helmer $11,000 for the dacha, however, is a different matter. According to the complaint, Helmer agreed to pay for the dacha in 1996, when both parties were living in Russia. Helmer does not allege that the payments for the dacha were made in the District of Columbia; nor does he allege any other connection between the contract and the District of Columbia, other than his residence here. The Supreme Court has held that a contract with a resident of a forum does not by itself establish minimum contacts with the forum.
Burger King,
B.
Whether the district court has personal jurisdiction over the contract claim for repayment for the Moscow apartment is more problematic, as no relevant authority establishes whether the formation of a contract in the District of Columbia with a D.C. resident is alone sufficient to constitute minimum contacts with the District of Columbia. The district court found that the negotiation, performance, and breach of the contract all occurred outside the District of Columbia.
Helmer,
Helmer contends that the contract had a substantial connection with the District of Columbia because it was formed in the District of Columbia and he is a resident of the District of Columbia. However, the cases on which he relies involve more than
*207
just the formation of a contract in the District of Columbia. In four of the cases, the contract was partially performed in the District of Columbia,
see Schwartz v. CDI Japan, Ltd.,
Helmer’s attempt to distinguish
Freiman v. Lazur,
Nor are we persuaded that Helmer’s maintenance of a residence in the District of Columbia gives the contract to purchase the Moscow apartment a substantial connection with the District of Columbia, as Helmer actually lived and worked in Russia when the contract was negotiated, performed, and breached. The cases Helmer cites, such as
Dorothy K. Winston & Co.,
*208 C.
Finally, we find no merit to Hel-mer’s contention that the district court erred in dismissing his fraud claim. The District of Columbia long-arm statute provides that a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant if the claim arises from the defendant’s “causing tor-tious injury in the District of Columbia by an act or omission in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(3). This provision is “a precise and intentionally restricted tort section which stops short of the outer limits of due process,” and requires that both act and injury occur in the District of Columbia.
Moncrief v. Lexington Herald-Leader Co.,
Helmer contends that “economic harm is suffered at the claimant’s home, meaning domicile,” and that the district court was required to accept his allegation that he was domiciled in the District of Columbia. Appellant’s Br. at 16. But Helmer misreads the district court’s opinion as ruling that economic injury occurs at the plaintiffs domicile. Noting that Helmer did not “expressly allege emotional losses as a result of Doletskaya’s alleged fraud,” the district court stated only that “because Helmer was not actually living in the District [of Columbia] in 2000 when he discovered Doletskaya’s alleged fraud, he could not have sustained any
emotional
damage at his home in the District [of Columbia].”
Helmer,
Although District of Columbia law does not establish where economic injury occurs, the case law of other circuits is instructive. For example, in
Mareno v. Rowe,
*208 An injury ... does not occur within the state simply because the plaintiff is a resident. “[T]he situs of the injury is the location of the original event which caused the injury, not the location where the resultant damages are subsequently felt by the plaintiff.” Thus, despite the fact that [the plaintiff] may suffer the economic consequences of his firing in New York, the location of the original event which caused the injury is New Jersey.
*209
Here, the original events that caused the alleged injury to Helmer were the ones identified by the district court as occurring outside the District of Columbia: Dolet-skaya’s use of the credit cards and Hel-mer’s payment of her charges on them, and the purchase and registration of the Moscow apartment in Doletskaya’s name.
Helmer,
Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of the complaint except with respect to Hel-mer’s contract claim for repayment of
*210
credit card charges. Although we do not address the issue of pendent personal jurisdiction because it was not briefed on appeal, on remand the district court may-have discretion to exercise such jurisdiction over the dismissed claims,
see Oetiker v. Jurid Werke, G.m.b.H.,
So ordered.
Notes
.
See FMC Corp. v. Varonos,
.
See Neal v. Janssen,
