*387 OPINION
Accudata, Inc. sued Internet Advertising Group, Inc., a Florida corporation, for payment it alleged was due on a contract. The trial court denied IAG’s special appearance. In this interlocutory appeal, IAG contends its contacts with the State of Texas are insufficient to support personal jurisdiction. We agree. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order and render judgment dismissing the claims against IAG for want of jurisdiction.
Accudata, a Delaware corporation with its principle place of business in Allen, Texas, provides telecommunication services. In 2006, Accudata contacted IAG, an internet marketing company, by telephone and made a sales pitch to obtain IAG’s business. Accudata then sent sample tests of its systems and services to IAG. As a result of these discussions, IAG completed a credit application and entered into a written contract for Accudata to verify the validity of telephone numbers of potential customers. Under the contract, IAG transmitted queries electronically for verification by Accudata, who then routed the queries “through its connections to the Line Information Databases (LIDBs) in North America or other appropriate databases” and responded with the “appropriate approval code.” The contract automatically renewed each year unless one of the parties gave thirty days’ written notice before the expiration of any current one-year term. The contract also provided that Texas law governed the agreement.
Over the next two years, IAG transmitted hundreds of thousands of electronic record queries for validation by Accudata and sent its payments to Accudata in Texas. In 2008, IAG allegedly became delinquent on its payments. Accudata terminated the account and sued IAG in Texas for $27,772.15 in unpaid invoices.
IAG filed a special appearance, asserting it was not amenable to jurisdiction in Texas. IAG attached the affidavit of its chief executive officer, Michael Weinsoff, who averred among other things that IAG does not maintain an office, bank accounts, or employees in Texas; does not own or possess real property in Texas; does not actively advertise in Texas and has never mass-mailed solicitations to Texas residents; and does not maintain a registered agent for service of process. Further, Weinsoff stated that, to his knowledge, no IAG representative has traveled to Texas for the purpose of conducting or engaging in any business transaction or to negotiate terms of a contract with any person or entity, including Accudata.
Accudata filed a response and attached the affidavit of its president and chief executive officer, M. Gregory Smith; demand letters to IAG; the contract; an itemized account statement; selected Ac-cudata invoices; IAG discovery responses, including IAG inter-office emails regarding a case study and testimonial. Among other things, Smith averred that IAG transmitted queries for validation by Accudata; Accudata used its facilities, equipment, and database in Texas to provide its validation services; and Accudata billed IAG, and IAG transmitted payments to Texas. After considering the record and evidence, the trial court denied the special appearance. This appeal followed.
We review de novo the trial court’s decision to deny a special appearance.
BMC Software Belgium, N.V. v. Marchand,
Texas courts may assert
in per-sonam
jurisdiction over a nonresident if (1) the Texas long-arm statute authorizes the exercise of jurisdiction, and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction comports with federal and state constitutional due process guarantees.
Retamco Operating, Inc. v. Republic Drilling Co.,
Under constitutional due process analysis, personal jurisdiction is achieved when (1) the nonresident defendant has established minimum contacts with the forum state, and (2) the assertion of jurisdiction complies with “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” Id. We focus on the defendant’s activities and expectations when deciding whether it is proper to call the defendant before a Texas court. Id. at 338.
A nonresident’s contacts can give rise to either specific or general jurisdiction.
Id.
at 338. Specific jurisdiction lies when the defendant’s alleged liability arises from or is related to those contacts or activities.
Id. The
analysis focuses
on
the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation.
Id.
General jurisdiction will attach if the defendant’s contacts with the forum are continuous and systematic, whether or not the defendant alleged liability arising from those contacts.
BMC Software,
Under either a specific or general jurisdictional analysis, the relevant contacts are those through which a defendant “purposefully avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state, thus invoking the benefits and protections of its laws.”
Hanson v. Denckla,
Accudata pleaded both specific and general jurisdiction. We begin with specific jurisdiction. As purposeful contacts, Accu-data asserts IAG entered into a contract with Accudata, “pidmarily pei’formable” in Texas, and containing a Texas choice of law provision; applied for credit; made payments in Texas; and participated in a *389 case study involving Accudata and prepared a testimonial on behalf of Accudata. IAG argues these contacts are either the unilateral acts of Accudata or are merely fortuitous.
Merely contracting with a Texas resident does not satisfy the minimum contacts requirement.
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
We begin with the observation that IAG did not reach out beyond its state’s borders to solicit business with Accudata. Rather, Accudata contacted IAG in Florida to sell its services to the Florida company and then sent IAG sample tests of its systems and services. No negotiations occurred in Texas, and no IAG representative traveled to Texas, either during negotiations or after the contract was executed, to conduct any business with Accudata. The parties entered into a contract that gave either the option of terminating it by giving written notice thirty days’ prior to the expiration of the current one-year term. Moreover, the agreement did not contemplate an interdependent relationship, specifically providing that neither party had control over the other with respect to “hours, times, employment, etc.” and that neither would be deemed an employee of the other or act as an agent of the other.
Cf. Burger King,
Although there is evidence Accudata “utilized its facilities, equipment and database in Allen, Texas” to provide the validation services, the contract did not require performance in Texas. Indeed, the contract expressly allowed for Accudata to route IAG’s queries to thirteen different databases in the United States and Canada, other than the one located in Allen, Texas. So, while IAG may have transmitted hundreds of thousands of queries over the two-year period, there is nothing to suggest that it mattered to IAG where the contract was performed or which database Accudata used to perform its work; thus, we cannot view this as a purposeful contact on IAG’s part.
See Command-Aire Corp. v. Ontario Mech. Sales & Serv., Inc.,
IAG did transmit payments to Texas, but contracting with a Texas company and requiring payments in Texas do not alone necessarily establish sufficient minimum contacts to demonstrate specific jurisdiction.
See U-Anchor Adver., Inc. v. Burt,
As for IAG’s credit application and agreement to participate in a case study and to provide a testimonial, we cannot assign the significance to these that Accu-data suggests. This Court considered credit as a factor in a specific jurisdictional analysis in
North Coast Commercial Roofing Sys., Inc. v. RMAX, Inc.,
Here, as stated previously, Accudata solicited the business relationship with IAG. Moreover, the account was not an open account for the distribution of Accudata’s products or services. Indeed, the terms of the credit application required that all bills were to be paid “in full” on the fifteenth day following the invoice date, and if not paid within twenty-one days, were considered past due and subject to a two percent service charge. Consequently, it is difficult to construe this as credit in the traditional sense. As for the case study and testimonial, the evidence indicates these were solicited by Accudata and that Accu-data provided the “sample” testimonial.
That leaves us with the contractual choice of law provision. A choice of law provision warrants some weight in considering whether a defendant has purposefully invoked the benefits and protection of a state’s law for jurisdictional purposes; however, such a provision standing alone is not sufficient to confer jurisdiction.
Burger King,
Giving the choice of law provision its due weight, and considering the totality of the facts of the case and the quality (or lack thereof) and nature of the remaining alleged contacts, particularly as they relate to negotiations, contemplated future consequences, contract terms, and actual course of dealing, we conclude the evidence fails to show that IAG had sufficient minimum contacts to support the exercise of specific jurisdiction.
See U-Anchor Adver.,
Having concluded specific jurisdiction does not lie, we next address whether general jurisdiction has attached. A general jurisdiction inquiry is different from a specific jurisdiction inquiry and involves a “more demanding minimum contacts analysis” with a “substantially higher” threshold.
PHC-Minden, L.P. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.,
The evidence established that IAG was a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Florida and had never had an an office anywhere else; it had no officers, directors, or employees residing in Texas; it was not licensed or regulated by Texas authorities; it had never actively advertised in Texas and had never mass-mailed solicitations to Texas residents; it did not maintain an agent for service of process; it did not own or possess real property in Texas; it had never manufactured, packaged, sold, or distributed products in Texas; it did not maintain a bank account in Texas and had never filed suit in Texas; it had not traveled to Texas for the purpose of conducting or engaging in any business transaction or to negotiate the terms or conditions of or entering into a contract or agreement with any person or entity; and it had never agreed to the exercise of personal jurisdiction by a court in Texas.
For general jurisdiction, Accudata relied on evidence provided in discovery that IAG had thirteen Texas customers and eleven vendors in Texas. Accudata alleged that IAG’s contacts with it, coupled with these other business relationships, supported general jurisdiction. IAG presented evidence regarding the other business relationships. David Davisson, chief financial officer of IAG, testified by affidavit that IAG has contractual relationships with 355 customers of which thirteen, or 3 percent, reside in Texas, and 514 vendors of which eleven, or two percent, reside in Texas. Davisson also testified that less than one percent of IAG’s revenues was derived from Texas residents in 2008. Specifically, of IAG’s thirteen Texas customers, seven produced no revenue and four produced less than $1000.
The question we must decide is whether this evidence shows a “fairly substantial” level of continuous and systematic contacts for general jurisdiction.
See PHC-Minden,
In
Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
In
Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A., v. Hall,
Helicol never has been authorized to do business in Texas and never has had an agent for the service of process within the State. It never has performed helicopter operations in Texas or sold any product that reached Texas, never solicited business in Texas, never signed any contract in Texas, never had any employee based there, and never recruited an employee in Texas. In addition, Hel-icol never has owned real or personal property in Texas and never has maintained an office or establishment there. Helicol has maintained no records in Texas and has no shareholders in that State.
Id.
at 411,
Considering the evidence of IAG’s contacts under the analysis of
Perkins
and
Helicópteros Nacionales,
we conclude it does not support the exercise of general jurisdiction. Given that purchases from Texas vendors do not establish general jurisdiction,
see Am. Type Culture Collection,
In its brief, Accudata asks this Court to remand to allow more discovery on the general jurisdiction issue. The parties engaged in jurisdictional discovery prior to the trial court determining the special appearance question, and Accudata had the opportunity to obtain any relevant information. Accudata did not complain to the trial court that it needed more time to obtain discovery nor did it ask for more time. Consequently, we decline Accuda-ta’s belated request to remand to the trial court so that additional discovery can be done.
Because the record does not demonstrate that IAG had sufficient minimum contacts to support the exercise of general or specific jurisdiction over IAG, we conclude the trial court erred hi denying the special appearance. We need not decide any argument regarding whether the exercise of jurisdiction over IAG comports with the traditional notions of fair play and *393 substantial justice. We sustain the sole issue.
We reverse the trial court’s order and render judgment dismissing the claims against IAG.
