The sole issue before us is whether the defendant’s contacts with the forum adequately supported the exercise of personal jurisdiction. We affirm the district court’s dismissal, because they did not.
I. FACTS
The case was dismissed on what was called a motion for summary judgment based on lack of jurisdiction, but more properly should be considered a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2). The district court did not hear testimony or make findings of fact. Instead, each side submitted declarations, deposition testimony and other evidence, and the district court dismissed based on the evidence submitted. The affidavits are not in conflict. Because the quantum of proof necessary for the plaintiff, where the district court receives only written submissions such as these, is whether the plaintiff presented a prima facie showing of jurisdictional facts, we set out the facts on the assumption that the matters so set forth could be proved.
Data Disc, Inc. v. Systems Tech. Assoc., Inc.,
Omeluk, a seaman on the ship F/V ACO-NA, was gravely injured when a grate on the deck for storing fishing nets gave way. It *269 dropped like a trap door, so that he fell onto a ramp a deck below, and then overboard. The accident occurred in the Bering Sea, in international waters off Alaska. Omeluk sued his employer, Panpac Corporation, and also the Norwegian company which rebuilt the fishing vessel, Langsten Slip & Batbyg-geri A/S. The suit was brought in the District Court for the Western District of Washington. Only the dismissal of his claims against Langsten is before us.
Langsten is a Norwegian corporation. It runs a shipyard in Tomrefjord, Norway, where it refurbished the vessel, and installed the welds on the grate which failed. Its business is repair and rebuilding of special purpose vessels, mostly on referral from brokers and others. Langsten does not advertise or solicit business in the United States, though it occasionally advertises in Fishing News in England. It does not maintain any offices, employees, property or bank accounts in the United States. Langsten is aware that some of the vessels it works on may be used in the United States, and has worked on three United States-bound vessels in the last fifteen years, including the one at issue. Almost all of the work on the vessels is done in Norway, and they are redelivered to the owners in Norway, not the United States.
Langsten personnel make no regular trips to the United States, though they have come four times for vessel christenings and cocktail receptions. Occasionally Langsten employees will travel to the United States on a specific repair request from an owner. One such trip was made when Langsten employees travelled to Dutch Harbor, Alaska to install a roe machine on the Acona. One year Langsten personnel attended “fish expo” in Washington “for informational purposes,” but no evidence of any sales activity was offered.
When Langsten agreed to refurbish the Acona, the owner was AJVS, an Alaska firm. AJVS and a broker in Norway contacted Langsten, and delivered the vessel to Norway for the work. The contract was negotiated and signed in Norway. About a year later, AJVS sold its interest in the vessel and assigned the contract to Panpac, Omeluk’s employer. Panpac is a New Zealand corporation with an office in Washington. Panpac negotiated certain changes in the contract, including a change to the part of the net storage deck which failed. All the negotiations took place in Norway and Denmark, and the Panpac contract modification was signed in Copenhagen. The contract provided for delivery of the vessel in Norway. The contract provided that any disputes would be arbitrated in Norway according to Norwegian law.
The vessel was being prepared to fish in waters off New Zealand and Alaska. At Panpae’s direction, some electronic parts for the vessel were purchased from a Washington firm. Panpac officers thought that since the electronics on a ship are the parts that require service most often, it was important to have repair services in the Pacific for a boat that would fish off Alaska and New Zealand and be home ported in Seattle. At least 90% of the electronics installation was performed in Norway, but up to 10% was performed in Seattle. Langsten also bought the fishing nets in Washington, at Panpac’s request. Some time during the rebuilding process, Langsten became aware that Panpac intended to use Seattle as the home port for the vessel.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Threshold Issues
We review the materials presented
de novo
to determine whether plaintiff established a prima facie case for in personam jurisdiction over Langsten.
Farmers Ins. Exch.,
Jurisdiction must comport with the state long-arm statute, and with the constitutional requirement of due process.
Chan v. Society Expeditions, Inc.,
The Due Process Clause protects a defendant’s “liberty interest in not being sub-
*270
jeet to the binding judgments of a forum with which he has established no meaningful ‘contacts, ties or relations.’ ”
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
“[F]oreseeability of causing
injury
in another State ... is not a ‘sufficient benchmark’ for exercising personal jurisdiction.”
Id.
at 474,
B. General Jurisdiction
Langsten did not subject itself to the general jurisdiction of courts in the State of Washington. If its activities within Washington had been “substantial,” or “continuous and systematic,” then its relationship to the forum would have supported jurisdiction regardless of whether the cause of action was related to its activities in Washington.
Heli-copteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
C. Specific Jurisdiction
Even without general jurisdiction over the defendant, the court in Washington would have jurisdiction specific to the case at bar, if the controversy were sufficiently related to or arose out of Langsten’s contacts with the forum state.
Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A.,
(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) [t]he claim must be one which arises out of or results from the defendant’s forum-related activities[; and] (3) [e]xercise of jurisdiction must be reasonable.
Data Disc, Inc.,
1. Purposeful Availment.
Langsten did not purposefully avail itself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum, so specific jurisdiction fails under the first of the three
Data Disc
criteria.
Data Disc, Inc.,
About all that could be said in favor of Washington jurisdiction is that Langsten became aware, after Panpac bought AJVS’s interest in the Acona, that the Acona would wind up using Seattle as its home port, and at Panpac’s request, Langsten bought the Acona’s electronics and nets in Washington. The Washington connection was the unilateral act of Panpac, not part of Langsten’s marketing.
We said in
Hedrick v. Daiko Shoji Co.,
At least a majority and perhaps all the justices agreed in
Asahi
that jurisdiction cannot be founded on the mere presence of a product in the forum, where the product has not been marketed there, and its presence there is not part of the regular and anticipated flow of the of products from the manufacturer. Langsten did not purposefully avail itself of the Washington market. In
Asahi
the Court took note that the defendant did not maintain an office, agents, employees, or property in California; did not advertise or solicit business in the forum; did not create, control or employ the system which brought its product to the forum; and did not design the product in anticipation of sales in the forum.
Asahi Metal Indus. Co.,
All that Langsten did which arguably had a purposeful relationship to Washington was buy the electronics and nets there, and attend the christening ceremony and cocktail party for the rebuilt vessel. But as the Supreme Court has stated, “purchases and related trips, standing alone, are not a sufficient basis” for in personam jurisdiction.
Helicópteros Nacionales de Colombia,
Omeluk argues that this case is like
Mesalic v. Fiberfloat Corp.,
2. Arising Out Of.
Our circuit’s second criterion, that the claim arises out of or results'from the forum-related activities, is also not satisfied in this ease.
We have said that a claim arises out of the forum-related activities if it would not have happened but for the forum-related activities.
Shute v. Carnival Cruise Lines,
In this ease, we do not need to decide whether the “but for” test in
Shute
retains any vitality, because even if it does, the test has not been met. Neither the in-state purchases of electronic equipment and nets, nor attendance at the christening of the vessel, had anything to do with the welds on the grating giving way. Mr. Omeluk would have suffered the same injury even if none of the Washington contacts had taken place. His claim was therefore not one which arose out of or resulted from Langsten’s forum-related activities.
Cf., Loral Terracom v. Valley Nat’l Bank,
The reasons we gave for finding specific jurisdiction in Gates Learjet show why it is absent in the case at bar. Discussing whether the claim arose from the forum-related contacts in Gates, we noted that the Philippines company purposefully interjected itself into Arizona, it solicited the distributorship at issue in Arizona, made several visits to Arizona in the course of negotiating the agreement, accepted delivery of the airplanes in Arizona, and agreed to choice of law and forum selection provisions specifying Arizona. Each of these criteria points the other way in the case at bar.
The contract for retrofitting of the F/V ACONA provided for arbitration in Norway and application of Norwegian law for disputes arising out of the contract. Langsten did not solicit business in Washington, and had only limited and infrequent contacts with the state, which were themselves caused by the unilateral acts of Panpac, not purposeful choices of Langsten. Langsten purposely did not avail itself of the benefits of doing business in Washington. Customers from Washington or elsewhere had to find Lang-sten in Norway, bring their vessels to Norway for the work, pick them up in Norway, contract in Norway and Denmark, and agree to arbitrate in Norway. Langsten did not even make its existence known to Washington customers by advertising there. Lang-sten might reasonably foresee dispute resolution in Norway, but not in Washington.
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the dismissal for lack of in personam jurisdiction over Langsten. We intimate no view regarding whether jurisdiction would lie in Alaska, or some other forum other than the State of Washington. We direct the district court to make the attorneys’ fees determination provided for by Wash.Rev.Code § 4.28.185(5) (1988).
AFFIRMED.
