OPINION OF THE COURT
In what became widely known as the Texas Cadet Murder— the brutal murder of a beautiful coed by two dysfunctionally possessive 18-year-old military cadets, David Graham and Diane Zamora — the defining images were presented through 16 prom and “vanity” photographs of the slain 16 year old, Adrienne Jones. Many of the photographs appearing in the print and television media throughout the Nation originated from the Star-Telegram defendants who, shortly after the story broke, forwarded them to plaintiff Sipa Press, Inc. (Sipa) for media distribution.
Sipa is a New York corporation
Star-Telegram and Sipa began their business relationship in 1993 when the former wanted to syndicate photos of the FBI siege of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. Star-Telegram offered Sipa the opportunity to market to the media a large group of these photos under an oral contract which
Sipa alleges that its obligation was to obtain the highest possible royalty payments for the photographs, and to comply with any restrictions on uses or sales that Star-Telegram might impose, such as date, geographical territory, and limits on the type of media to whom the pictures could be sold. In addition, Sipa ensured that Star-Telegram would be credited upon publication. For its part, Sipa alleges that it required Star-Telegram to secure all necessary rights to the pictures, and to defend, indemnify and hold Sipa harmless for its marketing and distribution of the images. Sipa states that from 1993 to date, it has received thousands of photographs from Star-Telegram, for a gross revenue stream of at least $60,000.
In September 1996, Star-Telegram delivered the 16 pictures of the murdered coed, Adrienne Jones (AJ photos), to Sipa. From that time through April 1998, Sipa duly syndicated the photos, selling to virtually all of the major print and television media, including defendant St. Martin’s Press, Incorporated (St. Martin’s), which published a book about the murder and trial of the cadets. .
However, on April 6, 1998, this came to an end when a lawsuit was commenced in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Texas Hot Looks v Sipa Press (docket No. 3-98CV0852-D) (Texas action). The Federal complaint alleges that Texas Hot Lоoks, Inc. (Hot Looks) owns the AJ photos and that Sipa and the other defendants violated its copyright. In addition to Sipa, the other defendants named in the Texas litigation were Star-Telegram, ABC Media LLC, doing business as ABC Media Enterprises, LLC, ABC Media Inc., Penguin Books USA Inc., St. Martin’s, Time, Inc., Newsweek, Inc., American Journal Inc., National Broadcasting Company, Inc., Paramount Pictures Corporation, E! Entertainment Television, Inc., ABC, Inc., CBS Corporation, Texas Monthly, Inc., Advanced Magazine Publishers, Inc., and Cable News Network, Inc. The majority of these defendants, Sipa alleges, are its clients to whom it distributed the photographs.
Because of that lawsuit, on October 8, 1998 Sipa brought this action in New York. As to Star-Telegram, Sipa is seeking
St. Martin’s Press served its answer herein on or about November 20, 1998. Star-Telegram, instead of answering, has moved to dismiss the action for lack of personal jurisdiction, pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (8) or, in the alternative, pursuant to CPLR 327 (a), to dismiss the action on the ground of forum non conveniens. In the alternative, Star-Telegram requests a stay pending resolution of the Texas action, pursuant to CPLR 327 (a).
Jurisdiction Under CPLR 302 (a)
When faced with a challenge to the court’s ability to hear a cause, the ultimate burden is upon the party asserting jurisdiction. (Roldan v Dexter Folder Co.,
“§ 302. Personal jurisdiction by acts of non-domiciliaries
“(a) Acts which are the basis of jurisdiction. As to a cause of action arising from any of the acts enumerated in this section, a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over any non-domiciliary, or his executor or administrator, who in person or through an agent:
“1. transacts any business within the state or contracts anywhere to supply goods or services in the state; or
“2. commits a tortious act within the state, except as to a cause of action for defamation of character arising from the act; or
“3. commits a tortious act without thе state causing injury to person or property within the state, except as to a cause of action for defamation of character arising from the act, if he
*555 “(i) regularly does or solicits business, or engages in any other persistent course of conduct, or derives substantial revenue from goods used or consumed or services rendered, in the state, or
“(ii) expects or should reasonably expeсt the act to have consequences in the state and derives substantial revenue from interstate or international commerce”. (CPLR 302 [a].)
I. Long-Arm Jurisdiction — The Contract
Sipa alleges that by actively soliciting it over the telephone to market the photos in New York and entering into a contract with it to market the photos, and by subsequently transmitting the AJ photos from Texas to it in New York, Star-Telegram’s actions come within the contemplatiоn of the “contracts anywhere to supply goods * * * in the state” language in subdivision (a) (1).
In support of this contention, Sipa relies on a number of State and Federal court cases, beginning with the Court of Appeals decision in Parke-Bernet Galleries v Franklyn (
Sipa also points to Lipton v The Nature Co. (
II. In-State Long-Arm Jurisdiction For Torts
In support of jurisdiction under subdivision (a) (2), Sipa again relies on Lipton and several other Federal copyright decisions, because <£[c]opyright infringement is a commercial tort that is ‘deemed to take place at the point of consumer purchase.’ ” (Lipton v The Nature Co., supra,
While Sipa’s claim is one step removed from the actual infringment, predicated as it is upon Star-Telegram’s copyright tort, it makes strict legal sense. The copyright tort was nothing more than the open and notorious use of another’s work without permission. By sending Sipa the photographs and telephonically inducing Sipa to actually put the infringement into effect here, Star-Telegram could be found by a jury to have committed fraud upon Sipa in New York. Accordingly, long-arm jurisdiction lies under CPLR 302 (a) (2).
Also looking to Lipton {supra), Sipa alleges that, alternatively to subdivision (a) (2), jurisdiction under CPLR 302 (a) (3) “is triggered when a non-domiciliary fraudulently represents to a New York domiciliary thаt it is authorized to reproduce, distribute or sell infringing copies in New York.” This is so because Star-Telegram regularly solicits business in New York or derives substantial revenue from services performed in New York on its behalf {see, subd [a] [3] [i]), and Star-Telegram should reasonably have expected its infringement to have consequences in New York and it derives substantial revenue from interstate commerce {see, subd [a] [3] [ii]).
To support these asserted facts, Sipa shows that, after Star-Telegram was purchased by Knight Ridder from the Wait Disney Company in 1997 as part of a $1.65 billion acquisition, Knight Bidder’s 1997 Annual Report stated the percentage of advertising revenue generated by Star-Telegram as 5%, approximately $43 million of which came from New York or interstate commerce in general. Since the advertising agencies which attracted that business are located in New York, thosе agencies’ services meet the requirement of subdivision (a) (3) (i). And, because Star-Telegram expected Sipa to make sales to the New York media, and Star-Telegram derives substantial revenue from interstate commerce, subdivision (a) (3) (ii) is also satisfied.
Star-Telegram replies that “the center of gravity of the case is in Texas” and “[t]here is no apparent reason, other than tactical advantage, that plaintiff did not cross-claim against these defendants in the Texas action.” Labeling Sipa’s actions as “artful manipulation of law and fact”, Star-Telegram asks the court to “recognize the transparency of plaintiff’s efforts” and either dismiss this case for lack of jurisdiction “or, in the alternative, stay these proceedings on the ground of forum non conveniens pending the final outcome of the Texas proceeding.” (Emphasis in original.) While never stating as much, Star-Telegram implies that Sipa has engaged in fraudulent joinder so as to avoid Federal court diversity jurisdiction. However, to show that naming a nondiverse defendant (St. Martin’s Press) is a fraudulent joinder to defeat Federal jurisdiction, a defendant must show by clear and convincing evidence, either that there has been outright fraud in a plaintiff's pleadings, or that there is no possibility, based upon the pleadings, that plаintiff can state a cause of action against the nondiverse defendant in State court. (Cf, Pampillonia v RJR Nabisco,
Star-Telegram also argues that CPLR 302 (a) (2) and (3) are simply irrelevant inasmuch as “the оnly tort arguably presented in plaintiffs complaint is that of fraud in the performance of a contract. It is well settled in New York, however, that if a fraud claim is simply a reiteration of the contract claim, then the fraud claim must be dismissed.” In this vein, Star-Telegram criticizes Sipa’s reliance on copyright cases, which are statutory torts with special venue provisions of their own. (See, 28 USC § 1400 [a] [venue lies where defendant or “his аgent resides or may be found”]; Cordon Holding B.V. v Northwest Publ. Corp., supra,
Star-Telegram appears to want it both ways, however. If, as Star-Telegram alleges, “the center of gravity of the case is in Texas”, that must be because Star-Telegram correctly recognizes the copyright infringement as the central wrong, the consequences of which are indeed felt in New York. Moreover, an allegation of fraud (in the inducement) may be based on an act or conduct by a defendant that is intended to deceive the plaintiff. Thus, the “[c]oncealment of facts one has an obligation to disclose with the intent to fraud has the same legal effect as an affirmative misrepresentation.” (Banco Nacional Ultramarino v Chan,
Nor is Lipton (supra) inapplicable inasmuch as the cоurt there carefully noted that the nondomiciliary licensor, even though not in a licensing relationship with the seller of the infringing works, was “certainly responsible for and benefitting from the sale” in New York. (Lipton v The Nature Co.,
In conclusion, while there are no cases with precisely the same fact situation as here, certainly, if Texas Hot Looks had brought its action in New York, Star-Telegram would be amenable to suit here. Defendant can state no distinction which bars a lawsuit, arising from the same set of facts, brought here by its own New York agent.
Due Process
There remains the question of whether, despite a jurisdictional basis under the New York statute, holding Star-Telegram here is permissible under the Due Process Clause, as the Supreme Court has interpreted it in International Shoe Co. v Washington (
As those cases teach, a foreign defendant hailed into court in New York must have sufficient minimum contacts with
Accordingly, whether analyzed from the point of view of the specific sales contract to supply the AJ photos to Sipa here in New York (CPLR 302 [a] [1]), or the copyright infringement itself (with its collateral consequences to Sipa), which tort is deemed to happen where Star-Telegram’s agent (Sipa) sold them (CPLR 302 [a] [2]), or the alleged representations on the tеlephone from Texas that Sipa could syndicate the photos freely (CPLR 302 [a] [3] [i] or [ii]), Star-Telegram is subject to long-arm jurisdiction in New York.
Forum Non Conveniens
Star-Telegram urges this court to dismiss or stay this action until completion of the Texas Hot Looks action, alleging
Notes
(Complaint 1; but see, Seitz v Sipa Press,
