This appeal presents a jurisdictional tangle. The seeds for the underlying litigation were sown when the late Howard Phillips (Phillips or the testator) bequeathed all the stock in a profitable Florida-based real estate development company, Dr. Phillips, Inc. (the Company), to the Howard Phillips Fund (the Fund), upon the condition that the Fund share the profits with Phillips Exeter Academy (Exeter), a private secondary school located in New Hampshire. Over time, Exeter concluded that the Company and the Fund had short-shifted it. When a disenchanted Exeter subsequently sued in New Hampshire’s federal district court, the court determined that it lacked personal jurisdiction over the named defendants and dismissed the action. Exeter appeals. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Phillips resided in Florida and executed his will there. When he died in 1979, he held a power of appointment over all the shares in the Company. His will directed that the stock be offered in turn to a series of family-sponsored charitable foundations. After one declined the gift, the Fund accepted it.
The testator was an alumnus of Exeter and a stalwart supporter of his alma mater. His will obligated the Fund, as a condition to its receipt of the Company’s stock, to vote the stock for the election of an Exeter representative to the Company’s governing board and to pay Exeter “Five (5%) percent of the net income from such stock ... but not for more than twenty (20) years after [Phillips’s] death,” along with “Five (5%) percent of the net proceeds of the stock” if and when sold within the 20-year window. Phillips’s will further provided that “any right to future income shall cease” upon a sale of the stock. Although these were the only firm conditions attached to the bequest, the testator expressed his hope that the recipient of the stock would continue to focus its charitable efforts on the causes and institutions it had favored when he was active in its direction and that it would give Exeter 5% of its own net income annually for 20 years. The Fund, as a matter of practice, apparently fulfilled the first of these velleities, continuing to devote most of its resources to familiar Florida charities (including Florida chapters of national organizations). But for aught that appears, the Fund showed no interest in channeling more money to Exeter.
*287 Soon after the Florida probate proceedings were completed, two things happened. First, the Fund, acting at Exeter’s behest, elected John Emery — an Exeter alumnus who lives and works in New York — to the Company’s board. Second, H.E. Johnson, who then served as the chief executive officer of both the Fund and the Company — the two entities were under common control, and remained so thereafter — consulted Emery about the possibility of a lump-sum commutation of the Fund’s present and future obligations to Exeter. Exe-ter turned a deaf ear to this entreaty, and the Fund proceeded to send checks annually to Exeter in New Hampshire, each equaling 5% of the dividend declared by the Company for the year in question.
Another settlement overture occurred in 1992, when Johnson’s successor, James Hinson, visited the school’s headmaster in New Hampshire. This visit — which marked the only time that an official of either defendant set foot in New Hampshire to conduct Exeter-related business— proved unavailing. The next year, Hinson again unsuccessfully proposed a settlement, this time by letter.
The Fund and the Company both altered their corporate forms in the years following the testator’s demise. In 1980, the Fund converted from a private family foundation (known as the Della Phillips Foundation) to its present incarnation as a charitable support organization (known as the Howard Phillips Fund). This maneuver enabled it to hold the Company’s stock indefinitely, without risk of escalating tax penalties. Compare 26 U.S.C. § 4943 (describing tax consequences for private foundations with “excess business holdings”), with id. § 509(a)(3) (excluding charitable support organizations from the definition of “private foundation”). In 1997, management merged the Company, until then an ordinary business corporation, into a newly established Delaware nonprofit corporation of the same name, with the result that the Fund became the sole member of the Company rather than its sole stockholder. Despite the conversion of its stock interest to a membership interest, the Fund made no contemporaneous payment to Exeter.
Exeter received its next annual check— an unusually large one, geared to the Company’s net income, rather than to its annual dividend — from the Company instead of the Fund. Shortly thereafter, Exeter filed suit, claiming that the Fund and the Company were liable in both tort and contract because (1) the transmitted payments, computed by the Fund on the basis of 5% of the Company’s annual dividends, fell well short of the Fund’s obligation to pay Exeter 5% of the Company’s annual income; (2) the restructuring that had occurred was designed to thwart the testator’s intention that the Fund sell the stock within 20 years and deliver 5% of the net sale proceeds to Exeter; and (3) in all events, when the Fund exchanged its stock ownership for a membership interest, it should have paid Exeter 5% of the Company’s value. The district court did not address the substance of these allegations but, rather, granted the Fund’s and the Company’s joint motion to dismiss the action for want of personal jurisdiction. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2). This appeal ensued.
II. ANALYSIS
New Hampshire’s long-arm statute reaches to the full extent that the Constitution allows.
See Phelps v. Kingston,
The Due Process Clause prohibits a court from imposing its will on persons whose actions do not place them in a position where they reasonably can foresee that they might be called to account in that jurisdiction.
See World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
The accepted mode of analysis for questions involving personal jurisdiction concentrates on the quality and quantity of the potential defendant’s contacts with the forum.
See International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
The inquiry into specific jurisdiction lends itself to a tripartite analysis.
See Massachusetts Sch. of Law at Andover, Inc. v. American Bar Ass’n,
The district court went no further than the first tier of the test in ruling that neither defendant was subject to its jurisdiction. Concluding, on largely undisputed facts, that the causes of action that Exeter pleaded did not arise out of or relate sufficiently to the defendants’ contacts with New Hampshire, the court decided that Exeter had failed to make a prima facie showing adequate to justify an exercise of specific jurisdiction. We review this decision de novo,
see Foster-Miller, Inc. v. Babcock & Wilcox Can.,
*289 The district court made a painstakingly thoughtful analysis. Its methodology was to compile a list of the Fund’s activities in New Hampshire — transmitting checks into the state once a year, sending a few letters to Exeter, and visiting Exeter on one occasion in an effort to forge a settlement — and then to explore the interrelationship between Exeter’s claims and these contacts. The court made this exploration on a claim-by-claim basis. As to the contract claim, the court noted that the relevant contract had been created in Florida (when the Fund accepted the conditional bequest) and that, if the contract was breached, the breach also occurred in Florida (where the Fund decided what amounts would be disbursed to Exeter). Turning to the tort claim, the court could discern no causal connection between the Fund’s New Hampshire contacts and either the alleged breach of fiduciary duty or the injury resulting therefrom. Consequently, the court held that none of Exeter’s claims was sufficiently related to the Fund’s contacts with New Hampshire to warrant the exercise of personal jurisdiction.
We commend the lower court’s decision to analyze the contract and tort claims discretely. Questions of specific jurisdiction are always tied to the particular claims asserted.
See United Elec. Workers,
Against this backdrop, we turn to Exe-ter’s contentions that the district court conflated the relatedness and purposeful availment inquiries, and failed to recognize that, in gauging relatedness, a defendant’s contacts with the forum state are not necessarily limited -to moments of physical presence. In Exeter’s view, the Fund’s ongoing relationship with, and obligations to, a New Hampshire beneficiary comprise contacts that satisfy the relatedness requirement.
To be sure, there is a natural blurring of the relatedness and purposeful availment inquiries in cases (like this one) in which the alleged contacts are less tangible than physical presence; in such circumstances, an inquiring court must determine the extent to which the defendant directed an out-of-state activity at the forum state in order to ascertain whether the activity can be termed a contact at all. See, e.g., id. at 36. This determination bears at least a family resemblance to a determination of whether a defendant purposefully availed himself of the protections of the forum state. Notwithstanding this resemblance, however, the inquiries are different, see James Wm. Moore, Moore’s Federal Practice § 108.42[2][a] (3d ed.1999), and we reject Exeter’s contention that the district court confused them.
Exeter’s principal argument along this line is that the fiduciary relationship between the parties should itself have been evaluated as a New Hampshire contact related to Exeter’s claims. We agree with one premise that underlies this argument:
*290
to be constitutionally significant, forum-state contacts need not involve physical presence.
See Burger King,
Exeter’s claim that this approach ignores the teachings of
Burger King
lacks force. As Exeter points out,
Burger King
upheld the Florida courts’ exercise of jurisdiction over a Michigan franchisee of a Florida corporation in part because of the parties’ “carefully structured 20-year relationship that envisioned continuing and wide-reaching [Florida] contacts.”
We next proceed to the court’s implementation of the approach. As we have indicated, the relevant interactions between the parties and the proposed forum must be assayed in light of the nature of the plaintiffs claim.
See United Elec. Workers,
Hanson
suggests that we must determine the focal point of each of the plaintiffs claims and assess the interactions between the defendant and the forum state through that prism. Here, however, regardless of whether this dispute is viewed as a breach of contract case or a breach of fiduciary duty case, the same two landmarks predominate: the meaning of the testator’s will and the Fund’s fulfillment of the obligations that it undertook coincident to its acceptance of the bequest. Most of the relevant interactions (e.g., the execution of the will, the acceptance of the
*291
bequest, and the payment decisions) occurred in Florida. The rest (e.g., the restructuring of the Company and the conversion of the Fund’s ownership interest to a membership interest) occurred in Delaware. From this vantage point, Exeter’s claim to jurisdiction in New Hampshire appears untenable.
See Bond Leather Co. v. Q.T. Shoe Mfg. Co.,
Exeter has another string to its jurisdictional bow. Notwithstanding that the formation of the relationship had nothing to do with New Hampshire, it asseverates that the
consequences
of the relationship involved contacts with New Hampshire sufficient to subject the Fund to the jurisdiction of the New Hampshire courts.
See Burger King,
As to Exeter’s tort claim, we think that this reasoning is specious. A breach of fiduciary duty occurs where the fiduciary acts disloyally.
See Young v. Colgate-Palmolive Co.,
Exeter’s contractual claim requires a different analysis. Although the injury resulting from a breach of fiduciary duty might be said to be complete when the fiduciary disregards his duty,
see Young,
In the last analysis, we agree with the district court that, as to both claims, Exe-ter has failed to make a prima facie showing of relatedness. We hasten to add, however, that even if the New Hampshire payments sufficed to show relatedness in respect to Exeter’s breach-of-contract claim — the only close question among those discussed thus far — the lack of purposeful availment nevertheless would defeat jurisdiction. We explain briefly.
*292
The purposeful availment test requires us to consider whether the Fund’s contacts with New Hampshire “represent a purposeful availment of the privilege of conducting activities in [New Hampshire], thereby invoking the benefits and protections of [its] laws and making the defendant[s’] involuntary presence before the state’s courts foreseeable.”
United Elec. Workers,
Even if a defendant’s contacts with the forum are deemed voluntary, the purposeful availment prong of the jurisdictional test investigates whether the defendant benefitted from those contacts in a way that made jurisdiction foreseeable.
See Ticketmaster-N.Y.,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Neither the Fund nor the Company has contacts with New Hampshire that are sufficiently related to the claims asserted in this case to permit the exercise of in personam jurisdiction. Moreover, such contacts as do exist and arguably relate to the plaintiffs claims fail to evince purposeful availment of the benefits and protections of New Hampshire law. For these reasons, an exercise of jurisdiction in New Hampshire would offend due process. 4
Affirmed.
Notes
. We caution, however, that the relative strength or weakness of the plaintiffs showing on the first two elements bears upon the third element (the overall fairness of an exercise of jurisdiction).
See Ticketmaster-N.Y.,
. Jurisdictionally speaking, each defendant must stand or fall based on its own contacts with the forum. Here, the Company's contacts with New Hampshire are more attenuated than the Fund's. Thus, we focus first on the Fund. Because we conclude that the district court lacked jurisdiction over it, see text infra, a fortiori it lacked jurisdiction over the Company.
. Exeter again attempts to analogize this case to
Burger King,
arguing that the Fund’s forum-state contacts were "continuous and wide-reaching.” But
Burger King
and this case are not fair congeners. The defendant in
Burger King
not only sent regular payments to the plaintiff in the forum state but also assumed the plaintiff’s identity and submitted to a host of regulations that the plaintiff imposed as part of a relationship that the defendant initiated.
See
. We intimate no view on the merits of Exeter's claims. We do emphasize, however, that the district court’s order of dismissal operates without prejudice to Exeter’s right to refile its suit in a forum in which the named defendants are amenable to personal jurisdiction.
