ORDER AND REASONS
Before the Court is defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendants. The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing in this matter on February 22, 2002. Having reviewed all of the evidence and the applicable law, IT IS ORDERED that the defendants’ motion be and hereby is GRANTED. Accordingly, this action (01-1213) is DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE, each party to bear its own costs.
I. BACKGROUND
This legal malpractiсe action arises out of the legal services rendered by the defendants, a Georgia patent attorney, Carl Davis, and his law firm, Kennedy, Davis & Hodge, LLP, for the plaintiff, We’re Talkin’ Mardi Gras (“WTMG”), a Louisiana limited liability company. According to the plaintiff, in September 1999 Davis was hired to obtain for WTMG the rights to various intellectual property related to a lighted bead necklace invention as well as to advise WTMG on legal issues related to the commercialization of the invention. According to the plaintiff, this representation included preparation and filing of a U.S. patent application, prosecution before the U.S. Patent Office, and communications with other Louisiana-based companies and individuals on behalf of the plaintiff. Plaintiff further claims that from September 1, 1999 through March 2001, Davis continuously advised the plaintiff on various aspects of the WTMG business. According to plaintiff, this included the structuring of a marketing agreement with other New Orleans-based businesses, licensing aspects of the invention, assignments of the invention, indemnification agreements with plaintiffs clients, insurance issues involving the invention, and confidential disclosure agreements.
During the course of this relationship David Day and Jeffrey Relf, two of the three WTMG partners, sought to buy out their third partner’s, Leslie Jackson, interest in the invention. 1 Jackson had a falling out with the two partners, departed WTMG, and subsequently began to compete with WTMG by marketing the lighted bead invention. WTMG claims that the defendants are liable for legal malpractice in having failed to advise WTMG that to ensure its exclusive control of the invention it had to obtain the exclusive rights to the invention via a written assignment from the inventors.
Defendants seek dismissal of this action under Fed.R.Civ.P. Rules 12(b)(2), 12(b)(4), and 12(b)(5) for lack of in person-am jurisdiction and insufficiency of process. In essence, defendants contend that his contacts with Louisiana are not sufficient to assert jurisdiction.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Burden of Proof
Where the alleged facts are disputed and the Court’s jurisdiction is placed at issue, the party who seeks to invoke the jurisdiction of the district court bears the burden of establishing it.
Fetch v. Trans
*637
portes Lar-Mex,
In the present case, this Court heard oral argument on defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction on December 12, 2001. Finding that questions of fact existed as to the nature and extent of the contacts between the defendant and Louisiana, the Court ordered an evidentiary hearing. Thus, at this proceeding, the plaintiff now bears the burden of establishing jurisdiction based on a preponderance of the evidence.
B. Personal Jurisdiction
For a Federal Court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant two requirements must be met. First, the nonresident defendant must be amendable to service of process under a state’s long-arm statute.
Jones v. Petty-Ray Geophysical, Geosource, Inc.,
The Due Process Clause protects an individual’s liberty interest in not being subject to the binding judgments of a forum with which the individual has established no meaningful “contacts, ties, or relations.”
Dickson Marine Inc. v. Panalpina,
The court’s jurisdiction may be either specific or general. When an action “arises out of’ a defendant’s contacts with the forum, a “relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation” is the essential foundation of in personam jurisdiction.
Shaffer v. Heitner,
*638
In determining either specific or general jurisdiction, the existence of a contraсtual relationship, although relevant, does not automatically establish sufficient minimum contacts.
Burger King,
In the Trinity case, Trinity Industries, a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Texas, hired an Illinois patent lawyer for representation in patent and trademark matters. Trinity filed а legal malpractice claim against the lawyer in Texas. While noting that “the bare existence of an attorney-client relationship is not sufficient” to confer jurisdiction, the court found that there was more - specifically, that the Defendant had purposefully availed itself of the benefits and laws of Texas in that the representation extended for a period of eight years and the representation regularly required mail and telephonic communications with Texas as well as the attorney’s physical presence in meetings in Texas. More importantly, the attorney had appeared pro hoc vice for Trinity in the Texas courts. Finally, the attorney billed Trinity in Texas and received payment from Trinity in Texas. The Trinity court cоncluded that in personam jurisdiction over the defendant existed in that case.
In
Wien Air Alaska v. Brandt,
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In the First Circuit case of
Sawtelle v. Farrell,
In
Kaempe v. Myers,
Finally, the Fifth Circuit opinion in
Holt Oil & Gas Corp. v. Harvey,
At the evidentiary hearing in the present case, the following evidence was introduced:
1. David Day, Jeffrey Relf, and Leslie Jackson were members of the WTMG LLC. The responsibility of managing the business was divided among the three. Day was responsible for legal matters, Relf was responsible for financial matters, and Jackson was responsible for the day to day affairs. Day and Relf resided in Houston, Texas. Leslie Jackson resided in New Orleans, Louisiana.
2. Plaintiff WTMG through its representative in Texas, David Day, contacted Carl Davis by telephone at his office in Atlanta, Georgia to solicit his legal services. Plaintiff retained Davis to patent its invention of a lighted bead necklace.
3. Davis never traveled to Louisiana to render lеgal services to WTMG or meet with plaintiffs representatives. All communication between Davis and the plaintiff and its representatives was carried out through letters, telephone calls, e-mails, and facsimiles. In fact, all of Davis’s work was performed while he was in Atlanta.
4. Day was the primary contact for all of the legal matters involving WTMG.
5. All of Davis’s billing statements, exсept for two, were sent to Day in Houston, Texas. All payments to Davis from WTMG were made from Houston, Texas.
6. Day would frequently, though not always, forward communications received from Davis to the other members of the company, including Jackson in Louisiana.
*640 7. On one occasion, Day wrote Davis a letter informing that WTMG had obtained an agreement from Jackson to assign her rights to the invention to WTMG. Davis responded in a letter to Day memorializing his understanding that Day had obtained an assignment from Jackson.
8. When the rift between Jackson and the other members of WTMG developed, Davis assisted in arranging meetings between the parties so that the parties might resolve their problem. This involved making a few telephone calls to Jackson’s attorney in Louisiana in an attempt to encourage the parties to meet and confer.
9. The defendant’s law firm operates a website which contains a section titled “Ask Us.” In this section, a visitor may request information by providing their name and other contact information. The web site is not used to accept instructions from clients, nor to establish an attоrney-client relationship. Davis and no one at his law firm to his knowledge ever received any business from Louisiana through the web site.
10. Neither Davis nor his law firm derive any significant revenue from Louisiana.
11. In addition to WTMG, the defendant’s law firm had only three other clients in Louisiana. The total number of hours spent in legal representation of these other Louisiana clients over a three year period was approximately 137.5 hours.
12. On one occasion a partner of the defendant’s law firm traveled to Louisiana to review records held at the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality. On one other occasion a partner of the defendant’s law firm while on vacation in New Orleans, visited with a person who later bеcame a client.
Plaintiff makes much of the fact that, from the moment that he was retained by WTMG, Davis anticipated that in the course of his representation he would have to make calls to the individual members of WTMG, including calls to Louisiana where Jackson was located. Furthermore, plaintiff emphasizes the fact that Davis knew that even though he would be сommunicating principally with Day in Houston, that Day in turn would relay all communications to the other WTMG members, including Jackson in New Orleans. In this way, plaintiff suggests that Davis had significant and intentional contacts with Louisiana both through his direct and indirect communications to Jackson in Louisiana.
Plaintiffs position does not stand scrutiny. First of all, many of the “contacts” which plaintiff points to, such as communications between Day in Houston and Jackson in New Orleans, are not contacts attributable to the defendant at all but merely the result of the unilateral activity of the plaintiff. As such they do not constitute the purposeful availment by the defendant of the protections and benefits of the laws of the State of Louisiana.
See Hanson v. Denckla,
Considering the facts and circumstances revealed at the evidentiary hearing, the plaintiff fails to establish that the legal malpractice claim arises out of any purposeful contact between the defendants and State of Louisiana. Thus, the Court finds that specific jurisdiction over the defendants is lacking in this case.
Unlike the specific jurisdiction analysis, which focuses on the cause of aсtion, the defendant and the forum, a general jurisdiction inquiry is dispute blind. The sole focus is on whether there are “continuous and systematic” contacts between the defendant and the forum.
Helicopteros,
In this case the facts do not indicate that the defendant had continuous and systematic contacts with the State of Louisiana. The defendant’s law firm during the course of the representation was comprised of about five to seven lawyers all practicing in the area of intellеctual property. Neither Davis nor his law firm derive any significant revenue from Louisiana. In addition to WTMG, the defendant’s law firm had only three other clients in Louisiana. The total number of hours spent in legal representation of these other Louisiana clients over a three year period was approximately 137.5 hours. On one occasion a partner of the defendant’s law firm traveled to Louisiana to review records held at the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality. On one other occasion a partner of the defendant’s law firm while on vacation in New Orleans, visited with a person who later became a client.
In light of these facts, the Court can not say that the contacts between the defendant and the State of Louisiana were continuous and systematic.
See generally, First Trust National Association v. Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons,
IT IS ORDERED that the defendant’s motion be and hereby is GRANTED. Accordingly, this action (01-1213) is DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE, each party to bear its own costs.
Notes
. David Day is a resident of Houston, Texas; Jeffrey Relf is a resident of Harris County, Texas, and Leslie Jackson is a resident of New Orleans, Louisiana.
