Plaintiff, Jacobs/Kahan & Company, brought this diversity action against defendants, Richard and Frances Marsh, to recover payment for services rendered. Plaintiff is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Illinois. Defendants are citizens of California. The district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss for lаck of personal jurisdiction, and plaintiff appeals. We reverse.
I
On October 6, 1980, defendants contracted for plaintiff’s services in obtaining a commitment from K-Mart Corporation, which is located in Troy, Michigan, for a store lease in a proposed shopping center on property owned by defendants in Indio, California. Specifically, the agreement provided that plaintiff would receive $250,-000 from defendants upon obtaining a mutually satisfactory triple-net lease on K-Mart Corporation’s form and that plaintiff would pay all expenses incurred in obtaining the lease. The contract expired by its terms after 90 days, but was extended in writing to February 28, 1981. On February 13, 1981, plaintiff secured a letter of commitment from K-Mart and, on February 26, sent to defendants a standard K-Mart Corporation triple-net lease for a store in the proposed Indio shopping center. However, defendants refused to gо forward on the lease and did not pay plaintiff. In the *589 latter half of 1981, defendants allegedly asked plaintiff to restructure the deal with K-Mart as a ground lease rather than a triple-net lease. Plaintiff again entered into negotiations with K-Mart’s representatives and incurred substantial expense providing K-Mаrt with market data, aerial photographs, maps, market research, and architectural and engineering workups for the proposed site. In early 1982, K-Mart and defendants entered into a 27-year ground lease. Defendants refused to pay plaintiff, and this suit followed. Plaintiff claims that it performed under both the original contract and the subsequent oral agreement to restructure and seeks payment of its $250,000 fee plus costs and attorneys fees. In addition, plaintiff claims that defendants never intended to pay plaintiff and seeks $1,000,000 in punitive damages.
Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdictiоn over them, and plaintiff and defendants both submitted affidavits. Resolving all conflicts in the affidavits in favor of plaintiff,
Neiman v. Rudolf Wolff & Company,
II
A federal district court in Illinois has personal jurisdiction over a party in a diversity case only if an Illinois court would have such jurisdiction. Rule 4(e), Fed.R. Civ.Pro. The Illinois “long-arm” statute, Ill.Ann.Stat. ch. 110, § 2-209 (1983), authorizes jurisdiction over non-resident defendants “as to any cause of action arising from the doing of any” of certain enumerated acts, including “the transaction of any business” in Illinois.
2
In addition, the exercise of long-arm jurisdiction must be consistent with due process.
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
In
Nelson v. Miller,
“the equivalent of declaring that the construction and application of section [2-209] depend entirely upon decisions determining in what circumstances due process requirements would permit long-arm jurisdiction. Neither do we read Nelson to say that in applying section [2-209] we should not construe the meaning and intent of our own statute irrespective of the due process limitations generally applicable to state long-arm statutes. A statute worded in the way ours is should have a fixed meaning without regard to changing concepts of due process, except, of course, that an interpretation which renders the statute unconstitutional should be avoided, if possible.”
Although the Illinois Supreme Court did not in
Green
overrule either
Nelson
or any past decisions reached under
Nelson
by application of due process tests, it clearly mandated a new approach to Illinois long-arm jurisdiсtion that inquires separately whether jurisdiction is statutorily conferred and whether the exercise of jurisdiction is constitutional.
Deluxe Ice Cream Company v. R.C.H. Tool Corp.,
Ill
A
We have no difficulty concluding that defendants’ partial negotiation and execution of a contract while they were physically present in Illinois is “the transaction of any business” in Illinois.
See Snyder v. Smith,
Defendants argue that they cannot be found to have transаcted business in Illinois because performance of the contract was centered in California.
3
This argument fails for two reasons. First, while contract performance in Illinois has of itself been held a sufficient basis for jurisdiction,
see, e.g., Cook Associates, Inc. v. Colonial Broach & Machine Co.,
B
Defendants’ principal contention is that plaintiff’s cause of action does not “arise from” the Illinois transaction as required by section 2-209 because the written contract between the parties called for a triple-net lease, not a ground lease, and expired prior to the execution of the ground lease by defendants and K-Mart. This argument must also be rejected.
Section 2-209 requires only that the cause of action “lie in the wake” of the transaction of business.
Snyder,
at 416;
Deluxe Ice Cream,
Here the relationship between the cause of action and the transaction of business in Illinois is stronger than in either Amoco Cadiz or Deluxe Ice Cream. Plaintiff has alleged that it contracted with defendants to procure a triple-net lease; that it procured the lease; that defendants refused to go forward and orally requested plaintiff to restructure the deal as a ground lease; and that plaintiff successfully secured a ground lease. Now plaintiff is suing to be рaid for its services, and we do not think it can seriously be argued that their claim does not “lie in the wake” of the original agreement. 5
*592 C
Defendants make no argument in their brief that Illinois cannot constitutionally assert long-arm jurisdiction over them, stating instead that we need not reach the issue and thereby apparently conceding it. At oral argument, however, counsel stated that defendants rest their case against jurisdiction primarily on
Lakeside Bridge and Steel Co. v. Mountain State Construction Co., Inc.,
Due process requires only that the non-resident defendant have “certain minimum contacts” with the forum state,
International Shoe,
In
Lakeside,
on which defendants rely, a Wisconsin corporation sued a West Virginia corporation in Wisconsin to recover payment under a contract for the sale of goods shipрed to Virginia. This court held that the defendant did not by ordering goods with the knowledge that they would likely be manufactured in and shipped from Wisconsin “purposefully avail itself of the privilege of conducting activities” within Wisconsin because plaintiff was not required to perform in Wisconsin and retained absolute cоntrol under the contract over where its activities where its activities would be conducted. The present case is readily distinguishable because defendants did purposefully avail themselves of the privilege of conducting activities in Illinois by voluntarily travelling to Illinois to transact business.
See Snyder,
at 416-17;
Deluxe Ice Cream,
We hold that jurisdiction over defendants is conferred by section 2-209 and is consistent with due process requirements. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court granting the motion to dismiss is reversed and the case remanded to the district court for further proceedings. Circuit Rule 18 shall apply.
Reversed And Remanded.
Notes
. The record is silent as to whether the contractual relationship in issue was initiated by plaintiff, defendants, or a third party.
. Section 2-209 provides in relevant part:
(a) Any person, whether or not a citizen or resident of this State, who in person or through an agent doеs any of the acts hereinafter enumerated, thereby submits such person, and, if an individual, his or her personal representative, to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State as to any cause of action arising from the doing of any such acts:
(1) The transaction of any business within this State; ...
(c) Only causes of action arising from acts enumerated herеin may be asserted against a defendant in an action in which jurisdiction over him or her is based upon this Section.
Until July 1, 1982 this section was codified as Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110 § 17.
. The district court accepted this argument and therefore never reached the "arising under” or due process issues. It is apparent, however, thаt the district court was misled by defendants’ repeated, but erroneous, assertions that the subject matter of the parties’ contractual relationship was the property in Indio, California. In fact, the contract underlying this suit is for professional services by an Illinois corporation to obtain a lease commitment from a Michigan corporation, and the location of defendants’ property is entirely incidental to the dispute.
. Defendants also argue that because the negotiations in Illinois were not extensive and because they made only a single trip to Illinois, their contacts were insufficient to constitute the transaction of business in Illinois. It is well settled, however, that a single act can be sufficient.
Snyder,
at 416;
Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. v. Gulf States Energy Corp.,
. Defendants are mistaken in relying on
Cook Associates, Inc. v. Lexington United Corp.,
. Counsel also stated at argument that he knew of several recent cases supporting defendants' position and would provide them to the court. He has not done so.
. Jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant may not, of course, be premised on his physical presence where that рresence was obtained by plaintiff's trickery or “luring'' designed solely to create a jurisdictional predicate.
See Veeninga v. Alt,
There is no suggestion of “luring" in this case. Plaintiff's affidavit (by Niemira) states that defendants asked to come to Chicago to look over plaintiff's operation and meet its principals. Defendants do not deny this, and even if they did we would be bound to accept plaintiff’s version as true. Defendants make much of their claim that the Chicago meeting was just a convenient "stopover" on their way to a family gathering in Michigan. But even if their ultimate destination was Michigan, this would not change the fact that they voluntarily came into Illinois or that they did so for business purposes.
