delivered the opinion of the court:
On February 19, 1980, the plaintiff, Darrell Reeves (Reeves), filed a suit in the circuit court of Cook County for personal injuries he sustained when the crane unit he was working on tipped and fell off of a trestle. The injury took place on March 27, 1979, in Cincinnati, Ohio, while Reeves was an employee of Mize Construction, Inc. (Mize). Reeves filed suit against numerous parties, including the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company (B&O) and Iowa Mold Tooling Company (IMTCO) on the basis of products liability. B&O filed a third-party complaint against Mize on December 19, 1986, premised upon strict liability, express indemnity and contribution. Mize, after filing a special and limited appearance, moved to quash and dismiss the third-party complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. The trial court granted Mize’s motion on May 26,1987. B&O appeals that ruling. 1
In 1971, Mize was incorporated in the State of Indiana. On September 9, 1978, B&O and Mize entered into a contract (the contract was not in any way connected to Illinois, i.e., the negotiation, performance, and execution did not occur in Illinois) under which Mize was to remove B&O tracks in Ohio. On March 27, 1979, Reeves, a Mize employee, was injured while in Ohio on the B&O/Mize job. B&O claimed that Mize’s relevant contacts with Illinois were sufficient to constitute doing business in Illinois. Mize’s business contacts with Illinois were established as involving substantially the following percentages of business during the years set forth below:
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Since 1982, Mize has done no work in Illinois and has derived no income from Illinois jobs. In fact, since 1983, Mize has been out of business. A successor corporation, Pine Construction, Inc., was formed. Pine is not in the construction business and had no contacts with Illinois. Mize never had, and, of course, does not now have, an office in Illinois or a registered agent, nor did it have or does it now own any real estate in Illinois.
The issue raised by B&O on appeal concerns whether Mize was “doing business” in Illinois during the claimed relevant period of time which B&O contends was when its cause of action arose or, in any event, when the underlying action was filed in Cook County. If so, B&O asserts that the Illinois courts then had personal jurisdiction over Mize. Consequently, B&O contends that the trial court erred when it granted Mize’s motion to quash and dismiss B&O’s claim against Mize for lack of personal jurisdiction because, B&O claims, Mize was clearly “doing business” in Illinois during these relevant time periods.
The burden of asserting personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant rests on the party who asserts that jurisdiction exists. (R. W. Sawant & Co. v. Allied Programs Corp. (1986),
An examination of B&O’s third-party complaint reveals absolutely no allegations of facts upon which Illinois courts could base jurisdiction. This failure to include factual allegations of Mize’s acts in Illinois is, in and of itself, fatal to B&O’s claim. (See Heller Financial,
Nevertheless, while this failure to allege sufficient jurisdictional facts would normally be fatal to B&O’s assertions, we will also examine B&O’s other contentions concerning the asserted jurisdictional basis for its claim against Mize, because, inasmuch as Mize never raised such an argument itself, the interests of justice require such an examination. (See Parks v. McWhorter (1985),
“Doing business” for jurisdictional purposes means that the nonresident defendant, in this case, the corporation, is conducting business in Illinois of such a character and to such an extent as to warrant the inference that the corporation has purposefully availed itself of the jurisdiction and laws of Illinois. (Cook Associates, Inc.,
The parties here dispute the time period which must be examined to determine whether Mize was “doing business” in Illinois. B&O argues that the relevant time period is either when the underlying injury of the initial plaintiff occurred (March 27, 1979) or when the plaintiff’s underlying suit was filed (February 19, 1980), relying on Pennsylvania and California case law to support its assertion. B&O also contends that it is irrelevant that Mize dissolved in 1983 because Illinois law specifically allows claims against dissolved corporations up to five years after dissolution. (See 111. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 32, par. 12.80.) Mize, on the other hand, argues that the determinative time under Illinois law is . when B&O filed its third-party claim against it, i.e., when Mize was joined as a party to the suit (December 19, 1986) which was the time that service of process on Mize would have been attempted.
We find that the cases cited by the parties are not dispositive of the issue presented here. B&O relies on a Pennsylvania case, Mobay Chemical Corp. v. Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. (1981),
We must, therefore, look to the underlying rationale set forth by the Illinois courts in the application of the “doing business” standard to determine what time period is relevant. Since the theory of jurisdiction in the “doing business” concept is based upon a permanent and continuing relationship with Illinois, this necessarily suggests that the court must look to a continuous period of time, and not a specific fixed point in time. Moreover, since the basis for the assertion of jurisdiction under the “doing business” standard is not connected to and does not arise out of the cause of action (as contrasted with the “transaction of business” standard in the long arm statute), the time the claim arose or occurred would not be the proper determinative point in time either. Indeed, it would seem that the due process mandates of the United States Supreme Court decisions, which require minimum contacts with the forum State before jurisdiction may be exercised over a nonresident defendant, would prohibit using the time that the claim arose as being determinative under the “doing business” standard since these decisions also require that present contacts be examined for purposes of jurisdiction. (See Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz (1985),
We, therefore, find that the relevant time period to be examined here was from approximately September 1978, when B&O and Mize entered into their contract, which is the basis of the indemnity claim, until approximately December 1986, with the critical focus of the inquiry being specifically in December 1986, when Illinois would have attempted to assert jurisdiction over the nonresident corporation, Mize.
The facts here, as stated earlier, show that the approximate percentages of gross revenue that Mize derived from Illinois work were 5% to 10% in 1979, 5% to 10% in 1980, 5% to 6% in 1981, 0% to 2% in 1982 and 0% in the years 1983-86. Furthermore, as earlier noted, Mize did not have an office, a registered agent, or own real estate in Illinois, and Mize has been dissolved since 1983. Thus, from 1983 to 1986, Mize, in fact, did not do any business in Illinois and derived no income from any Illinois jobs. Since the focus of our analysis is upon late 1986, when Mize became a party to this suit and was served with process, and, since, at that time, Mize had been out of business and had had no contacts with Illinois for approximately three years, we find that Mize was not “doing business” in Illinois during the relevant time period. Hence, although Mize did have contacts with Illinois, they were not continuous, systematic, or permanent in nature, which was necessary for Illinois to assert jurisdiction over defendant Mize.
Finally, we find no merit in B&O’s claim that the Illinois statute which allows suits against dissolved corporations up to five years after dissolution can be applied here. (See 111. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 32, par. 12.80.) That statute applies only to corporations organized in Illinois which are subsequently dissolved under Illinois law. (See 111. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 32, pars. 1.80, 12.80.) We are not persuaded by B&O’s contentions that somehow this statute, by analogy, can be applied to a dissolved foreign corporation, since an Illinois corporation dissolved under the statute would have had, by its very nature of having been organized under the laws of Illinois, a continuous, systematic, and permanent relationship with Illinois.
Accordingly, for all of the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County quashing service and dismissing the third-party complaint against Mize should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
CAMPBELL, P.J., and BUCKLEY, J., concur.
Notes
MTCO, which was initially a party to this appeal, has dismissed its appeal as a result of a settlement with plaintiff.
