This appeal requires us to decide whether the courts of the State of New York would find jurisdiction over non-resident defendants under its longarm statute, N.Y. CPLR section 302(a), or on a theory of defendants’ “presence” under CPLR section 301. The district court held that they would not, and dismissed the complaint. Plaintiffs appeal from that order; for the reasons set forth below, we reverse, and remand the action to the district court.
Background
The appeal before us arises from an alleged breach of a franchise agreement entered into by the parties on August 29, 1970. The plaintiffs are New York corporations: Hoffritz for Cutlery, Inc., which operates a chain of cutlery and gift stores and owns the Hoffritz name, and Edwin Jay, Inc., which is the exclusive wholesale supplier of Hoffritz brand merchandise. The stock in both these corporations is held by the same shareholder; plaintiffs are hereinafter referred to as “Hoffritz.” The defendants are Amajac, Ltd. (“Amajac”), a Georgia corporation, and Jack E. Ayers, president and sole shareholder of Amajac, a Georgia resident and domiciliary.
In its complaint, Hoffritz alleged three breaches of the franchise agreement, all connected with Amajac’s Atlanta store lease: (1) that Ayers was named as lessee, rather than Amajac; (2) that the lease was not made assignable to Hoffritz; and (3) that Hoffritz was not provided a copy of the lease. Hoffritz sought an injunction requiring the return of all materials bearing the Hoffritz name, and liquidated and consequential damages for breach of contract. By order dated July 18, 1984, the district court herein, without holding an evidentiary hearing, granted defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2), for lack of personal jurisdiction. The district judge applied New York law, and concluded that neither of the jurisdictional bases alleged by plaintiffs would suffice to sustain jurisdiction in a New York court.
The following facts are either uncontested or appear from the plaintiffs’ papers in opposition to defendants’ motion to dismiss; because the dismissal took place without a
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hearing, this Court will accept them as true for purposes of this appeal.
See Beacon Enterprises, Inc. v. Menzies,
During the life of the agreement, Ayers corresponded extensively with Hoffritz concerning the business relations between them. He also visited New York some fifty-four times; during each of these visits, he met with Hoffritz representatives to discuss his franchised business. At these meetings, virtually the entire range of the business was discussed, including promotions, signs, traffic flow, display matters, prices, types of items carried or sought to be carried, breakage on shipments, outstanding balances and interest due, returns, and so on.
The district court held that these facts were insufficient to sustain jurisdiction over either Amajac or Ayers in a New York court. On appeal, plaintiffs urge that jurisdiction may properly be found under CPLR § 301, because Ayers individually is “doing business’ in New York with sufficient continuity and permanence to justify his being haled before a New York court. Additionally, they claim that jurisdiction is proper under the New York longarm statute, CPLR § 302(a)(1). We turn now to these contentions.
Discussion
There are several oft-encountered benchmarks in the law of personal jurisdiction. First, personal jurisdiction over a defendant in a diversity action is determined by reference to the law of the jurisdiction in which the court sits,
United States v. First National City Bank,
Section 301 provides that “[a] court may exercise such jurisdiction over persons, property, or status as might have
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been exercised heretofore.” In the case of a foreign corporation, section 301 keeps alive the case law existing prior to its enactment, which provided that a corporation is “doing business” and is therefore “present” in New York and subject to personal jurisdiction with respect to any cause of action, related or unrelated to the New York contacts, if it does business in New York “not occasionally or casually, but with a fair measure of permanence and continuity.”
Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co.,
We note that Hoffritz’s argument in the district court was that both Amajac, and Ayers individually, were doing business in New York. On appeal, however, Hoffritz argues only that Ayers, individually, was doing business in New York. In this connection, we are unaware of any decision of the New York State Court of Appeals addressing the question whether an individual, as opposed to a corporation, may properly be the subject of “doing business” jurisdiction. The Appellate Division cases on the issue are divided.
Compare In re Nilsa B. v. Clyde H.,
That a defendant is not “doing business” in New York, however, does not require us to hold that it is not subject to suit in New York. If the defendant has “transacted business” in New York, it is suable on any cause of action that arises out of the transaction. CPLR § 302(a)(1). The showing necessary for a finding that defendant “transacted business” and is suable on a cause of action arising from that transaction is considerably less than that needed to establish defendant’s “doing business,” which renders the defendant subject to suit on even an unrelated cause of action.
Beacon Enterprises, Inc.,
The district judge, however, while finding that the defendants had transacted business in New York, held that the claim sought to be asserted by Hoffritz did not arise out of the transaction, as required by CPLR section 302. Accordingly, he dismissed the complaint.
We agree with the district judge that defendants transacted business in New York; indeed, defendants do not dispute this. We disagree, however, with the district court’s conclusion that the cause of action did not arise out of the transaction of business in the state. In so ruling, the district court characterized the New York contacts of defendants as “the preliminary contractual discussions in New York ... the sending to New York of purchase orders and volume reports, and the occasional meetings in New York to discuss business prospects.” Memorandum Endorsement at 1. The correspondence between the parties that appears in the record strongly suggests, however, that the meetings in New York were far from “occasional,” instead taking place at frequent intervals over approximately a ten-year period. At these meetings, virtually every aspect of the franchised business was discussed, including promotions, signs, traffic flow, display matters, variety of items carried, breakage in shipments, and outstanding balances due. In our view, this contact with New York cannot fairly be considered to be merely “occasional meetings to discuss business prospects.”
That we view the contacts as more extensive than dipbthe trial judge, however, still leaves unresolved the question whether the cause of action asserted here, for breach of the franchise agreement, arises out of the business that was transacted in New York. We hold that it does. While it is true, as the district court noted, that plaintiffs’ cause of action stems from allegedly improper conduct concerning defendants’ lease for a store in Georgia, it must not be overlooked that the action arises directly from alleged breaches of the franchise agreement, and not of the lease. Moreover, the district court’s interpretation of CPLR section 302(a)(1) would lead to a finding of no jurisdiction over defendants merely on the basis that the acts alleged in the complaint did not take place in New York. Thus, the trial judge gave overwhelming weight to the fact that the lease entered into by defendants allegedly in breach of the franchise agreement was for property in Georgia, and was apparently negotiated there. We find this view to be too narrow as respects New York longarm jurisdiction.
First, New York does not require that the acts constituting the alleged breach of contract take place in New York. Indeed, such a requirement would lead to the unusual result that a New York court would have jurisdiction of only certain claims arising from the breach of an otherwise indivisible contract, a position we are reluctant to ascribe to the New York courts in the absence of a pronouncement from them to that effect. Rather, having established that defendants transacted business in New York, plaintiffs need show only that the cause of action is sufficiently related to the business transacted that it would not be unfair to deem it to arise out of the transacted business, and to subject the defendants to suit in New York.
See Liquid Carriers,
Defendants place great weight on the fact that the contract was not executed by them in New York,
2
and that the final negotiations for the contract were not conducted in New York. Just as it is unnecessary for the acts constituting the breach of contract to take place in New York in order for a New York court to sustain personal jurisdiction, it is unnecessary that final negotiations or indeed execution of the contract take place in New York.
E.g., Hi Fashion Wigs, Inc. v. Peter Hammond Advertising, Inc.,
In our view, this case presents a perhaps somewhat less clear basis for jurisdiction under the CPLR than would exist if the defendants, in addition to their existing New York contacts, were physically present in New York when they executed the contract. We nevertheless consider the assertion of jurisdiction over Ayers and Amajac to be firmly grounded in the interpretation of section 302(a)(1) by the courts of New York. Viewing the totality of the circumstances surrounding defendants’ activities in New York in connection with the matter giving rise to the lawsuit, we conclude that there is a substantial nexus between these activities, including the preliminary contract negotiations in New York and the frequent later visits to New York, and the alleged breach of the franchise agreement.
See Liquid Carriers,
In the case before us, defendants visited New York numerous times for the purpose of conducting franchise-related activities, and the New York Court of Appeals’ concern, expressed in
McKee,
that “every corporation whose officers or sales personnel happen to pass the time of day with a New York customer in New York [would run] the risk of being subjected to the personal jurisdiction of [the New York] courts,”
Nor is this case of the sort presented in
Beacon Enterprises, Inc. v. Menzies,
In
Fontanetta v. American Board of Internal Medicine,
Nor do we consider such a holding to be contrary to the teaching of the Supreme Court in
Hanson v. Denckla,
Conclusion
For the above-stated reasons, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with the foregoing.
Notes
. Hoffritz, in attempting to demonstrate that Ayers maintained an office in New York, proffered a memo from its files, which reads in its entirety: "Mr. Ayres [sic] called from NY (claims his NY Off)." This single sentence, author unknown, is insufficient by itself to make out a prima facie case for section 301 jurisdiction — whatever its probative value on the question of Ayers’ alleged office, no showing has been made with respect to any of the other factors relevant to Ayers' "doing business” in New York.
. Hoffritz, on the other hand, would have us weigh in its favor the fact that the last formal act of execution, namely Hoffritz’s signing of the franchise agreement, occurred in New York. This fact, however, is of little, if any, jurisdictional significance. "[T]he execution [of the contract] in New York was performed by [Hoffritz] and not [defendants]; therefore, it cannot be said that
defendant
transacted business in New York [by virtue of the contract’s execution].”
Galgay v. Bulletin Co.,
