Tеrrance and Margaret Hirsch appeal the district court’s dismissal of their action against Blue Cross, Blue Shield of Kansas City. The district court held that Blue Cross did not have sufficient contacts with the State of California to permit an exercise of personal jurisdiction. We reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
The facts in this case are not in dispute. Defendant Blue Cross, Blue Shield of Kansas City (Blue Cross) is incorporated in Missouri and is also authorized to conduct business in Kansas. Its principal place of business is in Missouri. Southwest Freight Lines, Terrance Hirsch’s former employer, has its home office in Kansas City, Kansas.
Blue Cross is not licensed nor authorized to do business in states other than Kansas and Missouri. Blue Cross enters into prepaid health care agreements only with employers or individuals whо do business in or reside in one of a limited number of counties in Missouri or Kansas.
In January 1983, Southwest contracted with Blue Cross to provide group health care coverage for Southwest’s employees. Under the Enrollment Agreement, all of Southwest’s full-time employees were eligible to participate. The eligibility clause did not contain any geographical exclusions, nor did it restrict participation to employees as of the Agreement’s execution date. At the time Blue Cross and Southwest signed the contract, Southwest had 64 employees, forty percent of whom lived outside the Kansas and Missouri area. Although the employees were located in several states, none of them lived in California.
After the contract was signed, Sоuthwest hired Terrance Hirsch, who with his wife, lived in California. During the period covered by the Agreement, Southwest added the Hirsches and two other new Califor *1477 nia employees to the Southwest group policy. Terrance Hirsch filled out enrollment application forms in California and returned them to Southwest’s Kansas City office. In return, the Hirsches received a Blue Cross membership card, generated by Blue Cross offices in Kansas City, with his California address written on its face. Southwest deducted health care premiums from Hirsch’s payroll checks, and forwarded the payments to Blue Cross.
Starting in October 1983, the Hirsches’ daughter received medical treatment in California. The Hirsches allege that in March 1984, Blue Cross refused to pay incurred medical expenses. Thе Hirsches filed an action in California state court, claiming breach of contract and bad faith.
Blue Cross removed the action to federal court on diversity grounds, and then filed a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2) to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. The district court concluded that the case presented a “tough call,” and granted the motion. The Hirsches timely appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
Thе district court’s determination that an exercise of personal jurisdiction would violate due process is a question of law, reviewable de novo when the underlying facts are undisputed.
Haisten v. Grass Valley Medical Reimbursement Fund, Ltd.,
To establish personal jurisdiction, the plaintiff must show that the law of the forum state confers jurisdiction, and thаt its exercise would not be inconsistent with federal due process.
Haisten,
Cal.Civ.Pro.Code § 410.10 (West 1973), provides that the court “may exercise jurisdiction on any basis not inconsistent with the Constitution of this state or of the United States.” This statute confers jurisdiction that is coextensive with federal due process.
See Scott,
In order for personal jurisdiction to lie, a defendant must have “meaningful ‘contacts, tiеs, or relations’ ” with the forum.
See Burger King Corporation v. Rudzewicz,
If the non-resident defendant’s activities in the state are “continuous and systematic,” or “substantial,” the court may assert general jurisdiction over a cause of action, even if it is unrelated to the defendant’s forum activities.
Scott,
This court traditionally has applied a three-part test to determine if limited jurisdiction exists:
(1) The nonresident defendant must do some act or consummate some transaction with the forum or perform some act by which he purposefully avails himself of the privilege of conducting аctivities in the forum, thereby invoking the benefits and protections of its laws.
(2) the claim must be one which arises out of or results from the defendant’s forum-related activities.
(3) exercise of jurisdiction must be reasonable.
Haisten,
*1478 A. General Jurisdiction
To determine if a defendant’s activities qualify as “continuous and systematic” or “substantial” we examine all of the defendant’s activities that impact the state, including whether the defendant makes sales, solicits or engages in business, serves the state’s markets, designates an agent for service of process, holds a license, has employees, or is incorporated there.
See Helicopteros,
Blue Cross of Kansas City is not authorized nor liсensed to do business in California; it is not registered with the California Department of Insurance; it does not maintain an office or mailing address there; it has no agent for service of process, sales representatives, or employees in California; and it pays no California taxes. The company’s only proven contact with California was through its relationship with the Hirsches and Southwest’s other California employees. Neither party contends that these contacts with California are sufficient to permit the exercise of general jurisdiction in this case. We also conclude that they are not. Therefore, our only task is to ascertain whether limited jurisdiction exists.
B. Limited Jurisdiction
1. Purposeful Availment
The due process clause protects a defendant’s right tо receive fair warning that his actions might subject him to suit in a given jurisdiction. This safeguard allows him to structure his conduct with a degree of assurance as to what will flow from his conduct.
See Burger King,
“The unilateral activity of those who claim some relationship with a nonresident defendant cannоt satisfy the requirement of contact with the forum State ... [I]t is essential in each case that there be some act by which the defendant purposefully avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum State____”
Therefore, the purposeful availment analysis turns upon whether the defendant's contacts are attributable to “actions by the defendant
himself,”
or conversely to the “unilateral activity of another party.”
Burger King,
The purposeful availment prong is satisfied when a defendant takes deliberate actions within the forum state or creates continuing, obligations to forum residents.
Burger King,
In this case, the parties characterize Blue Cross’s California connection in diametrically opposite ways. The Hirsches contend that Bluе Cross deliberately and knowingly accepted the Hirsches application for health care coverage and regularly collected premiums from them, thus purposefully availing itself of the privileges of conducting activities in California.
See McGee v. International Life Insurance Co.,
We conclude that Blue Cross’s depiction of itself as a helpless bystander, unable to control the selection of insureds, is misleading. Blue Cross freely negotiated the Enrollment Agreement with Southwest, to cover all оf its employees, knowing that Southwest employed people nationwide. The contract provisions confirm Blue Cross’s awareness that covered individuals would be located outside its licensed business area.
1
It is true that Blue Cross might not have foreseen at the time it signed the Enrollment Agreement that its contract with Southwest would have effects in California. However, when Southwest hired Terrance Hirsch, he filled out a membership application, which became part of the Southwest-Blue Cross contract.
2
He sent the application from California, using a California address, and received a Blue Cross card at his residence in the forum state. Therefore, at that time, Blue Cross not only could foresee that its actions would have an effect in California, but also that the effect “was contemplated and bargained for.”
Haisten,
Blue Cross, through its
own actions
in agreeing to provide coverage to Southwest
*1480
and its California employee, Terrance Hirsch, created a continuing obligation to them, and a substantial connection with California.
See Burger King,
Although Blue Cross makes much of its physical absence from California, and the fact that contract negotiations between it and Southwest occurred outside of California, this is not determinative. It is clear that Blue Cross’s foreign acts were purposefully directed at a California resident.
Haisten,
We conclude that Blue Cross, by voluntarily and knowingly obligating itself to provide health care coverage to Southwest’s California employees, in exchange for premiums partly derived from premiums paid by California residents, purposefully availed itself of the benefits and protections of that forum.
4
Compare McGee,
2. Arising Out of Forum-Related Activities
The Hirsches claims against Blue Cross arise out of Blue Cross’s alleged breach of the contract to provide health care coverage to them. Because this contract constitutes Blue Cross’s contacts with California, the Hirsches satisfy this element of the limited jurisdiction test.
See McGee,
355
*1481
U.S. at 223,
3. Reasonableness
Thе test for ascertaining the reasonableness of subjecting the defendant to jurisdiction is not mechanical.
Insurance Company of North America v. Marina Salina Cruz,
In
Haisten
and
Burger King,
the courts noted that a strong showing of reasonableness may lessen the required showing of minimum contacts. Moreover, once purposeful direction is documented, there exists a presumption of reasonableness, which the defendant may rebut only by presenting compelling reasons why jurisdiction would be unreasonable.
See Burger King,
Because Blue Cross purposefully directed its activities toward California, it bears the burden of presenting compelling reasons why jurisdiction would be unfair in this instance. It has not done so. As in
Haisten,
we conclude that Blue Cross’s purposeful direction of its activities toward California residents argues against finding that it did not deliberately or “purposefully interject” itself into California affairs.
Haisten,
In this case, the Hirsches have alleged that Blue Cross refused to pay claims, and is guilty of a tortious breach of an insurance contract. California’s interest is exceptionally strong. California has a manifest interest in providing its residents with effective redress against insurers who refuse to pay claims.
McGee,
In addition, the Hirsches’ interests clearly favor selecting the California forum. Witnesses who would testify to the need for, and legitimacy of the medical treatment received would be located in California. The costs of litigating outside of California would be significant. As courts have observed, plaintiffs would be severely disadvantaged if forced to “follow the insurance company to a distant State in order to hold it legally accountable ... thus in effect making the company judgment proof.”
McGee,
Although it would be somewhat burdensome for Blue Cross to litigate in California, since its employees and evidence are located elsewhere, modem transportation reduces this burden.
Marina Salina Cruz,
Blue Cross argues that the interests of California must give way to thоse of Kansas and Missouri, since those two States *1482 regulate Blue Cross’s insurance practices and premiums. It also theorizes that application of California’s insurance laws that protect insureds liberally and provide punitive damages would upset insurance actuarial schemes in Kansas.
It is true that Kansas and Missouri have an interest in this litigation. As courts previously have observed, however, choice-of-law rules, rather than jurisdictional tests are designed to accommodate these concerns.
Burger King,
We hold that Blue Cross purposely availed itself of the benefits and protections of California, and it has failed to overcome the presumption that it is reasonable to subject it to jurisdiction in that forum.
The district court’s decision is REVERSED.
Notes
. The Certificate of Coverage, which constitutes part of the contract, states in relevant part: If you disagree with our decision regarding the payment of your claim, you may call us or write us, or you may contact your state insurance department.
******
We may change the terms and conditions of the Contract:
(1) to conform with the statutes of the state in which the contract is issued or issued for delivery;
******
Laws of the state in which the contract was issued or issued for delivery may conflict with some of its provisions. If so, then those provisions are automatically changed to conform to at least the minimum requirements of such laws.
. The Enrollment Agreement states:
The Certificate, Benefit Schedule, Enrollment Agreement, Membership Applications, and any amendments constitute the entire contract between the Employer and the Companies (emphasis added).
. We recognize that the signing of a contract, alone, may not constitute a sufficient "contact" for due process purpоses. Negotiations that precede the contract, combined with the future course of dealing between the parties, may determine whether minimum contacts exist.
See Burger King,
. Blue Cross relies extensively on a California case,
P.W. Collections, Inc.
v.
Thiebaut,
