In this appeal, Solé Resort, S.A. de C.Y. (“Solé”) challenges an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Jed S. Rakoff, Judge) dismissing for lack of personal jurisdiction a petition to vacate an arbitration award against Solé. Both Solé and Appellee Allure Resorts Management, L.L.C. (“Allure”) are non-U.S. corporations. The dispute involves a property located in Mexico, and the arbitration took place in Miami, Florida. Solé argues that New York courts have jurisdiction over its petition pursuant to New York Civil Practice Law and Rules section 302(a) because the contract giving rise to the arbitrated dispute involved sufficient activity in New York to justify jurisdiction, see N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 302(a)(1), and because Allure committed a tortious act whose effect was felt in New York, see id. § 302(a)(3). Allure, on the other hand, contends that section 302(a)(1) permits a court to look only to the actions of the arbitrators when determining whether jurisdiction is proper in a petition to vacate an arbitration award and that, in any case, the New York contacts related to the underlying contract are insufficient. Allure also denies that it committed a tor-tious act. For the reasons that follow, we think the jurisdictional inquiry properly includes an examination of the parties’ activities related to the contract underlying the arbitrated dispute, we express no opinion as to the sufficiency of the New York contacts in the instant case, and we remand the case to the district court to perform this analysis in the first instance.
BACKGROUND
Solé, a company organized under the laws of Mexico, and Allure, a limited liability company organized under the law of the Turks & Caicos with its principal offices in the Dominican Republic, entered into an agreement whereby Allure would manage a hotel owned by Solé and located in Tulum, Mexico. The agreement provided that it would be governed by Delaware law and that any disputes would be resolved by arbitration in Miami. Allure failed to generate the business for Solé’s hotel that the parties had anticipated when they entered into the agreement, and the relationship between Solé and Allure soured. After ten months of disappointing performance by Allure, Solé terminated the contract.
Accepting, as we must for purposes of this appeal, Solé’s account of the facts as true, see
CutCo Indus., Inc. v. Naughton,
*102
Alleging that Solé had breached their agreement, Allure commenced an arbitration proceeding against Solé. As provided for in the contract, the arbitration took place in Miami, Florida. The arbitrators found in favor of Allure and awarded $2,157,653.08 in lost future profits. Solé then brought this action in the Southern District of New York to vacate the award on the ground that the arbitrators “manifestly disregarded the applicable law in awarding damages and the amount of its award is arbitrary and capricious!”
Allure moved to dismiss the petition for lack of personal jurisdiction, and the district court granted the motion.
Solé Resorts, S.A., de C.V. v. Allure Resorts Mgmt., LLC,
DISCUSSION
We review dismissals for lack of personal jurisdiction
de novo. Grand River Enters. Six Nations, Ltd. v. Pryor,
Solé does not contend that Allure’s contacts with New York are so “continuous and systematic,”
Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
As to a cause of action arising from [the actions listed in this section], a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over any non-domiciliary ... 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 ... 3. commits a tortious act without the state causing injury to person or property within the state ... if he ... (ii) expects or should reasonably expect the act to have consequences in the state and derives substantial revenue from interstate or international commerce.
Id. § 302(a).
I. N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 302(a)(1)
To establish personal jurisdiction under section 302(a)(1), two requirements must be met: (1) The defendant must have transacted business within the state; and (2) the claim asserted must arise from that business activity.
McGowan v. Smith,
New York courts have held that a claim “aris[es] from” a particular transaction when there is “some articulable nexus between the business transacted and the cause of action sued upon,”
McGowan,
In cases where claims have been dismissed on jurisdictional grounds for lack of a sufficient nexus between the parties’ New York contacts and the claim asserted, the event giving rise to the plaintiffs injury had, at best, a tangential relationship to any contacts the defendant had with New York. In fact, in those cases, the injuries sustained and the resulting disputes bore such an attenuated connection to the New York activity upon which the plaintiffs attempted to premise jurisdiction that the disputes could not be characterized as having “arisen from” the New York activity.
E.g., Johnson,
Here, by contrast, we think that New York contacts underlying a contract that provides for arbitration have the requisite relationship under section 302(a)(1) to a claim challenging the results of that arbitration. Arbitration is entirely a creature of contract. The rules governing arbitration, its location, the law the arbitrators will apply, indeed, even which disputes are subject to arbitration, are determined entirely by an agreement between the parties. Any arbitration proceeding is thus an extension of the parties’ contract with one another, a mechanism through which they attempt to ensure compliance with the terms of that contract. Without the contract, the arbitration, and its resultant judgment, a subsequent challenge to that judgment never could exist. There is therefore a substantial relationship between a challenge to the arbitrators’ decision and the contract that provided for the arbitration. Accordingly, we think that any transaction of business in New York in connection with a contract as to which there is an arbitration provision bears an “articulable nexus” to a challenge to the arbitrators’ disposition of a dispute pursuant to that arbitration provision.
McGowan,
While the question has not been directly addressed in the context presented by this appeal, there is case law supporting our position. Several courts have rejected jurisdiction over a party because its New York contacts underlying a contract giving rise to an arbitrated dispute were insufficient to support jurisdiction. By implication, these cases assume that such contacts are germane to the question of post-arbitration personal jurisdiction under New York’s long-arm statute.
See BHP Trading (UK) Ltd. v. Deep Sea Int’l Shipping
*105
Co.,
No. 90-cv-2231,
Allure’s contention to the contrary is unpersuasive. It points out that Solé’s claim is limited to allegations that the arbitrators disregarded the law in awarding judgment to Allure. As a result, Allure argues that the claim is about the actions of the arbitrators, not about the facts underlying the dispute that led to the' arbitration, and the district court correctly limited its inquiry to those actions. In support of this position, Allure relies on
Crow Construction Co. v. Jeffrey M. Brown Assocs., Inc.,
No. 01-CV-3839,
II. N.Y. C.P.L.R. §' 302(a)(3)
Alternatively, Solé argues that section 302(a)(3) of New York’s long-arm statute confers jurisdiction over its claim. This provision rests the exercise of jurisdiction on five elements: (1) The defendant committed a tortious act outside the state; (2) the cause of action arose from that act; (3) the act caused injury to a person or property within the state; (4) the defendant expected or should reasonably have expected the act to have consequences in the state; (5) the defendant derives substantial revenue from interstate or international commerce.
LaMarca v. Pak-Mor Mfg. Co.,
For the same reasons that the district court’s restricted view of relevant facts with respect to section 302(a)(1) was error, confining its analysis of jurisdiction pursuant to section 302(a)(3) to the facts as determined by the arbitrators was error as well. Like Allure’s breach of contract claim, Solé’s fraudulent inducement claim arose out of events surrounding the formation and performance of the contract with Allure and formed a part of the arbitration proceedings. And while Solé does not challenge the arbitrators’ determination of the merits of either of these claims in its petition, all of the facts underlying that contract are substantially related to Solé’s claim that the arbitrators’ judgment is infirm. Thus, just as the district court should have looked to all of Allure’s contacts with New York underlying the management agreement with Solé when considering jurisdiction under section 302(a)(1), it should have looked beyond the arbitrators’ decision to that same set of facts when considering jurisdiction under section 302(a)(3).
Accordingly, we also vacate the district court’s ' decision with respect to section 302(a)(3). On remand, the district court should consider whether Allure’s actions in sending the business plan to Sandretto support an exercise of jurisdiction pursuant to section 302(a)(3), and, if so, whether such an exercise of jurisdiction would satisfy federal due process requirements.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s order dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction is vacated and the case is remanded.
Notes
. The district court determined that, because the arbitration award in dispute is the judgment of a domestic arbitration panel, the case is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA”) rather than the New York Convention.
Solé Resorts, S.A., de C.V.,
. This is consistent with the approach taken by at least one New York court.
See Salamon v. Friedman,
. Although a motion to transfer venue necessarily involves an inquiry into whether the action "might have been brought” in the proposed district, 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), and that inquiry includes a determination whether the proposed district court would have personal jurisdiction over the defendants, Allure relies upon those portions of Crow discussing convenience to the parties. Moreover, the portions of Crow regarding personal jurisdiction consider whether the Eastern District of Pennsylvania could exercise jurisdiction over the parties and are thus not relevant to the meaning of New York's long-arm statute.
