Randolph Fields appeals from an order dismissing his complaint alleging breach of contract and related claims on the ground that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendants Sedgwick Associated Risks, Ltd. and G. Lloyd-Roberts. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Fields is an English barrister and an attorney admitted to practice in California. He is both an American citizen and a British subject, and, during the period prior to the filing of this action, lived part of the time in the United States and part of the time in Great Britain. Lloyd-Roberts is an underwriting member of Lloyd’s of London who is the lead underwriter of a syndicate known as Syndicate 55. Sedgwick Associated Risks is an insurance broker incorporated in London. It is a subsidiary of Sedgwick Group.
This action concerns interpretation of two professional liability insurance policies covering Fields’s law practice. Each was procured by Sedgwick, which acted as Fields’s broker, and was issued by Syndicate 55. During the period covered by the second policy, Fields presented a claim for indemnification that allegedly arose partly from his American practice. Sedgwick informed him that Lloyd-Roberts had determined that the claim was not covered under the second policy. Fields alleges that it would have been covered under the first policy, that he agreed with defendants to renew that policy, and therefore that the second policy should cover his claim.
He sued in California state court, alleging breach of contract, negligent failure to procure insurance, bad faith refusal to provide insurance benefits and violations of California insurance statutes. The defendants moved for dismissal based on inconvenient forum. Before the state court ruled on the motion, the defendants removed the case to federal court and moved for dismissal on the basis of lack of personal jurisdiction and forum non conveniens. The district court found that it lacked personal jurisdiction and granted the motion. Fields timely appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. Waiver
A defendant can waive personal jurisdiction by its actions. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(1). In this case, before removal, the defendants moved to dismiss the action in state court on the ground of inconvenient forum pursuant to Cal.Civ.Pro.Code. § 418.10 (West 1973). Section 418.10 allows a defendant simultaneously to file motions to quash on the ground of lack of personal jurisdiction and to dismiss for inconvenient forum. Section 418.10(a). Fields contends that the defendants’ failure to raise personal jurisdiction in its state court motion waived the issue. We disagree.
The motion to dismiss constituted only a limited appearance in state court. Section
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418.10(d).
See Berard Construction Co. v. Municipal Court,
II. Burden of Proof/Standard of Review
The plaintiff bears the burden of establishing that the court has personal jurisdiction.
Cubbage v. Merchent,
III. General Jurisdiction
“In a case based on diversity jurisdiction, a federal court applies the personal jurisdiction rules of the forum state provided the exercise of jurisdiction comports with due process.”
Scott v. Breeland,
There are two types of personal jurisdiction: general and specific. General personal jurisdiction, which enables a court to hear cases unrelated to the defendant’s forum activities, exists if the defendant has “substantial” or “continuous and systematic” contacts with the forum state.
Haisten,
784 at 1396;
Peterson v. Kennedy,
Fields claims that California has general jurisdiction over both defendants. He relies primarily on activities of Sedgwick Group and Lloyd’s of London. How
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ever, a parent corporation’s ties to a forum do not create personal jurisdiction over the subsidiary.
Uston v. Hilton Casinos, Inc.,
The defendants’ individual contacts with California do not rise to the level necessary to support general jurisdiction. Syndicate 55 underwrites policies of insurance and reinsurance, including professional indemnity insurance, for American risks, some originating in California. There is no indication of how much business involves California. Lloyd-Roberts is not a citizen or resident of California, and Fields alleges no connections between him and the forum aside from those of the Syndicate and those arising from the contract in dispute. Sedgwick Associated Risks has no offices, employees or state insurance license in California. The only contact alleged is that derived from the contract at issue. These contacts are neither “substantial” nor “continuous and systematic.”
See Paccar International Inc. v. Commercial Bank of Kuwait,
IV. Specific Jurisdiction
We have established a three-part test to determine whether specific personal jurisdiction comports with due process: (1) the defendant must have done some act purposely to avail himself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum; (2) the claim must arise out of the defendant’s forum-related activities; and (3) the exercise of jurisdiction must be reasonable.
Scott,
To determine reasonableness, we examine seven factors: the existence of an alternate forum, the burden on the defendant to defend the suit in the chosen forum, the most efficient judicial resolution of the controversy, the importance of the chosen forum to the plaintiff’s interest in convenient and effective relief, the extent of defendant’s purposeful interjection into the chosen forum, the extent of conflict with the sovereignty of the defendant’s state, and the forum state’s interest in the dispute.
Pacific Atlantic,
Fields concedes that the English courts provide an alternate forum. The factors that deal with convenience and efficiency all strongly favor adjudicating the dispute in England. The site where the events in question took place and most of the evidence is located is usually the most efficient forum.
Pacific Atlantic,
The factors that revolve around the nature of the dispute also favor adjudication in England. The “purposeful inteijection” in this case, the alleged decision to insure a California practice, is certainly of a nature that would support jurisdiction over the defendant in California.
See McGee v. International Life Insurance Co.,
Adjudication of the dispute in a California court would interfere with the capacity of English courts to resolve disputes involving English parties, and thus interfere with British sovereignty.
See Paccar,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because we find that Fields raised legitimate issues on appeal, we deny appellees’ request for sanctions.
See Unt v. Aerospace Corp.,
