This is an action brought in the Superior Court in Hampden County by which the plaintiff seeks to recover the value of surveying and related services allegedly rendered by it to the defendant. The complaint is on an account annexed which is in substantial conformity with Form 4 of the Appendix of Forms referred to in Mass. R.Civ.P. 84,
The parties appear to be in agreement that the only basis on which the Superior Court could have asserted personal jurisdiction over the defendant is to be found in the provisions of G. L. c. 223A, § 3
(a)
(the long arm statute), as amended by St. 1969, c. 623, which provides that “[a] court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person, who acts directly or by an agent, as to a cause of action in law or equity arising from the person’s
(a)
transacting any business in this commonwealth____” In “Automatic”
Sprinkler Corp. of America
v.
Seneca Foods Corp.
A study of the Federal cases shows them to hold, almost without exception, that a plaintiff confronted with a Rule 12 (b) (2) motion has the burden of establishing the facts upon which the question of personal jurisdiction over a defendant is to be determined. See, e.g.,
O’Hare Intl. Bank
v.
Hampton,
With that basic principle in mind we may now proceed to an examination of the undisputed factual assertions of the defendant’s affidavit and to the matters disclosed in the exhibits attached thereto. The defendant is a resident of Connecticut and a land developer who “had dealt with plaintiff, a surveying and engineering firm, prior to the time of the events in suit____In late 1968 or early 1969, I purchased land in Ellington, Connecticut with the intention of developing it. In or about January, 1969, while I was on another development site in Enfield, Connecticut, Albert E. Nichols
3
approached me and inquired about property I owned in Ellington and whether I would require a survey to precede its development.... While at the Enfield site, Mr. Nichols and I discussed the Ellington project, made... arrangements for his firm to perform certain surveying work and agreed upon a price schedule. We did not at that... or ... any other time, draft or sign a written contract or any other agreement specifying the
Copies of six invoices from the plaintiff to the defendant which are attached to the motion (two of which bear a letterhead indicating that the plaintiff has an office in Holyoke) give us fair indications of the different types of services performed by the plaintiff in Connecticut and in Holyoke during the period from February 3,1969, through October 22, 1970. Speaking generally, the services performed in Connecticut appear to have included the survey and other field work necessary to the preparation of profiles and plot, lot, drainage and topographical plans, the securing of necessary copies of deeds, an on-site conference with a water supply expert, and attendance at various planning and zoning board meetings. The services performed in Holyoke appear to have included engineering computations and the drafting and reproduction of various plans, blue prints and sepias. The invoices disclose four separate mailings and one delivery by the plaintiff from Holyoke to Connecticut. It is possible to infer one pickup in Holyoke, but nothing to indicate whether the pickup was made by a representative of the defendant. It appears that the defendant has made one payment to the plaintiff
Based on the foregoing, only two things emerge which might be regarded as contacts which the defendant had with Massachusetts which could have caused any “impact upon [its] commerce.” “Automatic”
Sprinkler Corp. of America
v.
Seneca Foods Corp.
The only other contact which the defendant had with Massachusetts consisted of the “rare occasions” when he sent an employee to Holyoke to pick up plans required by the Connecticut project “when the... plaintiff did not have a messenger available.” All plans were obviously in
We hold that on this record the defendant was not “transacting any business” in Massachusetts within the meaning of G. L. c. 223A, § 3 (o).
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We ignore all the argumentative and conclusional assertions of the affidavit.
As to the Federal practice prior to 1936, see
McNutt
v.
General Motors Acceptance Corp.
298 U. S.
178, 188-189
(1936). As to the Massachusetts practice prior to July 1, 1974, see
Remington Arms Co., Inc.
v.
Lechmere Tire & Sales Co.
The defendant’s brief refers to Nichols as the president of the plaintiff.
Contrary to the assertion in the plaintiff’s brief, there is nothing in the record to suggest that the defendant ever mailed anything to the plaintiff. We do not know who initiated such telephone conversations as may have occurred between the parties, or whether any instructions which the defendant may have given during any such conversations related to the work in Connecticut or to the work in Holyoke.
We know nothing of the prior dealings between the parties or of the location of any place of business which the plaintiff may have had at the time of those dealings or of the present dealings.
