Bases for jurisdiction over nonresident. (a) In a proceeding to establish or enforce a support order or to determine parentage of a child, a tribunal of the commonwealth may exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident individual or the individual's guardian or conservator if:
- (1) the individual is personally served with a notice within the commonwealth;
- (2) the individual submits to the jurisdiction of the commonwealth by consent in a record, by entering a general appearance or by filing a responsive document having the effect of waiving any contest to personal jurisdiction;
- (3) the individual resided with the child in the commonwealth;
- (4) the individual resided in the commonwealth and provided prenatal expenses or support for the child;
- (5) the child resides in the commonwealth as a result of the acts or directives of the individual;
- (6) the individual engaged in sexual intercourse in the commonwealth and the child may have been conceived by that act of intercourse;
- (7) the individual asserted parentage of a child under chapter 46 or chapter 209C; or
- (8) there is any other basis consistent with the constitutions of the commonwealth and the United States for the exercise of personal jurisdiction.
- (b) The bases of personal jurisdiction set forth in subsection (a) or in any other law of the commonwealth may not be used to acquire personal jurisdiction for a tribunal of the commonwealth to modify a child support order of another state unless the requirements of Section 6–611 are met or, in the case of a foreign support order, unless the requirements of Section 6–615 are met.