This proceeding arises on the petition of Koninklijke Lnchtvaart Maatsehappij, hereinafter referred to as KLM, a foreign corporation, for a writ of prohibition to restrain the superior court from taking further proceedings in five actions for damages for wrongful death brought against petitioner, following the denial of its motion by special appearance to quash service of summons.
The decedent in each of the actions was either a passenger or a member of the crew of a private airplane owned by the Superior Oil Company which crashed in taking off from an airfield in London, England, causing the death of the person of whom the plaintiffs claim to be the surviving heirs. It is alleged in each complaint that KLM negligently performed its contract with the Superior Oil Company to maintain, repair and inspect the aircraft at London, England, the proximate result of which was that the airplane crashed.
The only question to be determined is whether jurisdiction may be maintained over a foreign corporation engaged solely in interstate or foreign commerce in the State of California when the subject matter of the action is wholly unrelated to any of the business conducted by such corporation in this state.
KLM is a corporation organized under the laws of the Kingdom of The Netherlands and it has never qualified to do business in California. It operates an intercontinental commercial airline with routes between the continent of Europe and New York and between the Netherlands West Indies and Miami, Florida. It purchases from California manufacturers airplanes in excess of $1,000,000 a year, the contracts for which are executed in The Netherlands. It has maintained a technical office in Los Angeles since 1938, where approximately 24 persons are employed for the purpose of administering its contracts for the purchase of airplanes and airplane parts. It maintains a checking account at a local bank from which it pays its employees. It owns four automobiles which are maintained for the use of technical workers in connection with their duties of visiting various aircraft plants. When flight personnel arrive from Amsterdam for the purpose of accepting delivery of an airplane manufactured by a local airplane factory the office makes arrangements for the accommodations of such personnel. The office is listed in the directory of the building and the rent is paid locally on a month-to-month basis. In addition to the technical office KLM maintains a ticket office in Los Angeles where it employs three or *497 four employees whose duties are to sell tickets on the various intercontinental airlines of KLM. No intrastate tickets are sold and no intrastate passengers are carried. Service of process was made upon the corporation’s technical representative for administration and finance, who is in charge of the technical office, and upon his assistant who is in charge of personnel in the same office.
In support of its contention that the subject matter of the action must have some connection with the business conducted by the foreign corporation in the state in order' to confer jurisdiction of the defendant, petitioner cites
Miner
v.
United Air Lines Transport Corp.,
In each of the first two cited cases service was made upon the foreign corporation’s statutory agent appointed pursuant to section 405 of the Civil Code.
*
In the Miner case the court cited
Missouri Pac. R. Co.
v.
Clarendon Boat Oar Co.,
In the Winfield case the plaintiff was a merchant seaman who was injured on defendant’s ship while on the high seas. Defendant maintained freight terminals, a ticket office, paid members of the crew from a commercial bank account maintained in this state and performed various other acts in connection with its business in the State of California. Plaintiff’s contract of employment was made here and the voyage would terminate in California. The court found that the tort arose in connection with defendant’s domestic activities and that “as far as any state jurisdiction was concerned, California was the only state with respect to which both parties dealt.”
Fry
v.
Denver & R. G. R. Co.,
decided in 1915, followed the holdings in
Old Wayne Mutual Life Assn.
v.
McDonough,
The judicial trend is toward putting corporations upon the same footing as natural persons in regard to the jurisdiction of suits by or against them.
(Barrow S.S. Co.
v.
Kane,
Lipe
v.
Carolina C. & O. R. Co.,
In
West Publishing Co.
v.
Superior Court,
Petitioner’s activities within this state are sufficient to render it amenable to suit. If a corporation is here “not occasionally or casually, but with a fair measure of permanence and continuity, then, whether its business is interstate or local, it is within the jurisdiction of our courts.”
(West Publishing Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra; Tauza
v.
Susquehanna Coal Co.,
Petition denied. Alternative writ discharged.
Moore, P. J., and McComb, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 10, 1952. Edmonds, J., and Traynor, J., voted for a hearing.
Notes
This section was repealed by Stats. 1947, eh. 1038, and is now contained in the Corporation Code, §§ 6201-6203, 6400, 6401, 6403.
