Alpine Equipment v. U.S. Sewer and Drain ( 2019 )


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  • J-A27015-18
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    ALPINE EQUIPMENT FUNDING, INC.,           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION                  :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                           :
    :
    U.S. SEWER AND DRAIN CAYMAN,              :
    LTD., ALSO KNOWN AS U.S. SEWER            :
    AND DRAIN CAYMAN, LLC; U.S.               :
    SEWER AND DRAIN, INC., A                  :
    PENNSYLVANIA CORPORATION;                 :
    JEREMEY R. BOWMAN, AN                     :
    INDIVIDUAL; U.S. PIPELINING, LLC,         :
    A PENNSYLVANIA LIMITED LIABILITY          :
    COMPANY; AND LISA G. BOWMAN,              :
    AN INDIVIDUAL                             :
    :
    APPEAL OF: U.S. PIPELINING, LLC, A        :
    PENNSYLVANIA LIMITED LIABILITY            :
    COMPANY; AND LISA G. BOWMAN,              :
    AN INDIVIDUAL                             :   No. 682 EDA 2018
    Appeal from the Order Entered February 14, 2018
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County Civil Division at No(s):
    2017-05679
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., STABILE, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                              FILED MARCH 21, 2019
    U.S. Pipelining, LLC, and Lisa G. Bowman (“Appellants” collectively)
    appeal from the order denying their petition to strike a foreign judgment and
    stay execution. We affirm.
    Alpine Equipment Funding, Inc. (“Alpine”), a California corporation with
    its principal place of business in California, is a lessor of large equipment. For
    years, Alpine leased equipment to U.S. Sewer and Drain, Inc. (“USSDI”) and
    U.S. Sewer and Drain Cayman, LLC (“USSDC”), companies owned and
    J-A27015-18
    operated by Jeremy and Lisa Bowman from Pennsylvania. Prior to entering
    into a contract, Alpine required lessees to submit evidence of solvency and
    creditworthiness.    Alpine allowed its lessees to take title to the leased
    equipment, with the lessee obtaining insurance thereon.
    As part of the ongoing relationship, in 2013, Alpine entered into two
    contracts with USSDI and one with USSDC, all of which contained forum
    selection clauses providing that any litigation arising from the contracts must
    take place in California.      Jeremy Bowman, who was president of both
    companies, personally guaranteed the amounts owed under the contracts.
    Alpine’s contact for obtaining the required payments was Lisa Bowman.
    USSDI’s address was listed in its contracts as 1100 Wood Lane, Langhorne,
    PA.   USSDC’s address was a post office box in Langhorne, PA.        Electronic
    correspondence      from the   lessees to   Alpine   came   from the   domain
    “@ussewer.com.”
    In 2013, U.S. Pipelining, LLC, was formed in Pennsylvania, with Lisa
    Bowman as the sole owner and Jeremy Bowman as president. Alpine first
    became aware of the existence of U.S. Pipelining in December 2013, when
    Lisa Bowman identified U.S. Pipelining at 1100 Wood Lane, Langhorne, PA, as
    the title owner of a truck that Alpine had leased to USSDI. The equipment
    was also insured by U.S. Pipelining rather than by USSDI.        When Alpine
    contacted the Bowmans to inquire about the discrepancy, Alpine was informed
    that it was “just a name change.” Emails to Alpine began to come from the
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    domain “@uspiplining.com” rather than “@ussewer.com.”              USSDI also
    changed its website to one owned by U.S. Pipelining. From November 2014
    until January 2016, when Alpine stopped receiving any payments on the
    USSDI and USSDC contracts, the payments to Alpine were made by U.S.
    Pipelining.
    In 2016, Alpine brought suit in California against USSDI, USSDC, and
    Jeremy Bowman to recover under the contracts. Alpine discovered that USSDI
    and USSDC no longer had assets, that U.S. Pipelining was a separate legal
    entity from USSDI and USSDC, and that Jeremy Bowman, the guarantor of
    the contracts, was merely an employee, not an owner, of U.S. Pipelining.
    Accordingly, Alpine filed an amended complaint adding Appellants as
    defendants. The amended complaint averred that the defendants were alter
    egos of each other, with commingled assets and no separate identities. The
    amended complaint contained eleven counts, including claims of breach of
    contract, fraudulent transfer, tortious interference with contracts, conversion,
    and unjust enrichment against all defendants, including Appellants. None of
    the defendants appeared to defend the California action, resulting in the entry
    of a default judgment against all of them in March 2017.
    On August 29, 2017, Alpine initiated the instant action in Pennsylvania
    by filing a praecipe to register the California judgment.    Appellants filed a
    petition to strike the judgment, contending that the California court lacked
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    personal jurisdiction over them.1 The trial court, after issuing a rule to show
    cause, ultimately denied the petition. Appellants simultaneously filed a timely
    notice of appeal and a concise statement of matters complained of on appeal.
    Appellants present one question for our review: “Whether the foreign default
    judgment obtained by [Alpine] is entitled to full faith and credit with respect
    to Appellants[.]”     Appellants’ brief at 3.
    We review a trial court’s denial of a petition to strike a judgment for an
    abuse of discretion or error of law. Reco Equip., Inc. v. John T. Subrick
    Contracting, Inc., 
    780 A.2d 684
    , 686 (Pa.Super. 2001). “A petition to strike
    is not a chance to review the merits of the allegations of a complaint. Rather,
    a petition to strike is aimed at defects that affect the validity of the judgment
    and that entitle the petitioner, as a matter of law, to relief.” Green Acres
    Rehab. & Nursing Ctr. v. Sullivan, 
    113 A.3d 1261
    , 1267 (Pa.Super. 2015)
    (cleaned up).
    Under the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, an
    authenticated copy of a judgment from another state filed in a court of
    common pleas is treated the same as a judgment entered in a Pennsylvania
    court. 42 Pa.C.S. § 4306(b).
    [J]udgments entered in sister states are entitled to full faith and
    credit in Pennsylvania so long as there was jurisdiction by the
    court which originally awarded the judgment, and the defendant
    had an opportunity to appear and defend.           The courts in
    ____________________________________________
    1The petition does not challenge the jurisdiction of the California court over
    USSDI, USSDC, and Jeremy Bowman.
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    Pennsylvania will refuse to give full faith and credit to a foreign
    judgment if it was obtained in derogation of a basic, due process
    right of the defendant. However, when the court of another state
    has purported to act on the merits of a case, its jurisdiction to do
    so and the regularity of its proceedings are presumptively valid.
    The party challenging the validity of the judgment, therefore,
    bears the burden of showing any irregularity in the proceedings.
    Standard Chartered Bank v. Ahmad Hamad Al Gosaibi & Bros. Co., 
    99 A.3d 936
    , 942 (Pa.Super. 2014) (cleaned up).
    In determining whether the court that originally entered the judgment
    had personal jurisdiction over the defendants, we look to the law of that state
    to the extent that it is consistent with the decisions of the United States
    Supreme Court.      Frontier Leasing Corp. v. Shah, 
    931 A.2d 676
    , 680
    (Pa.Super. 2007); Tandy Computer Leasing, a Div. of Tandy Elecs., Inc.
    v. DeMarco, 
    564 A.2d 1299
    , 1304 (Pa.Super. 1989).
    California’s long-arm statute permits its courts to “exercise jurisdiction
    on any basis not inconsistent with the Constitution of this state or of the United
    States.”   Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 410.10.      The Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution allows a state to
    exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant if the defendant had “certain
    minimum contacts with [the forum state] such that the maintenance of the
    suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
    International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 
    326 U.S. 310
    , 316 (1945) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
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    The two bases for exercising personal jurisdiction over an out-of-state
    defendant are general jurisdiction and specific jurisdiction. Gilmore Bank v.
    AsiaTrust New Zealand Ltd., 
    223 Cal. App. 4th 1558
    , 1568 (Cal.Ct.App.
    2014).
    [A] nonresident defendant may . . . be subject to California’s
    specific jurisdiction if a three-prong test is met. First, the
    defendant must have purposefully availed itself of the state’s
    benefits. Second, the controversy must be related to or arise out
    of the defendant’s contacts with the state. Third, considering the
    defendant’s contacts with the state and other factors, California’s
    exercise of jurisdiction over the defendant must comport with fair
    play and substantial justice.
    . . . Plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing that the first two
    requirements for specific jurisdiction have been met. If [the]
    plaintiffs do so, the burden shifts to [the defendant] to show that
    California’s exercise of jurisdiction would be unreasonable.
    
    Id. (citations and
    emphasis omitted).
    Turning to the first prong of the assessment of specific jurisdiction,
    California courts recognize more than one test for purposeful availment;
    however, all are based upon the rationale “that it is fair to subject defendants
    to specific jurisdiction, because their forum activities should put them on
    notice that they will be subject to litigation in the forum.” 
    Id. at 1573
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Which test applies “does not hinge mechanically
    on whether the plaintiff’s claim sounds in tort or contract[,]” but is determined
    on a case-by-case basis upon consideration of which is “the most appropriate
    test for purposeful availment based on the particular facts presented.” 
    Id. at 1571.
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    One test is the “effects test,” which “requires intentional conduct
    expressly aimed at or targeting the forum state in addition to the defendant’s
    knowledge that his intentional conduct would cause harm in the forum.” 
    Id. at 1569
    (emphasis and internal quotation marks omitted). The effects test
    considers whether the defendant’s conduct was targeted at the forum, not
    necessarily the particular plaintiff who sued in that forum. 
    Id. at 1570.
    Another is the “forum benefits test,” which premises exercise of
    jurisdiction over a defendant who “purposefully has availed himself or herself
    of the benefits of the forum.”      
    Id. at 1571.
      For example, the California
    Supreme Court found purposeful availment, and thus specific jurisdiction, was
    shown in a tort action through the forum benefits test where out-of-state
    defendants reached out to a California-based franchiser to create an ongoing
    business relationship. Vons Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc., 
    14 Cal. 4th 434
    , 449 (Cal. 1996).
    Regarding the second prong, the California courts recognize that “[a]
    claim need not arise directly from the defendant’s forum contacts in order to
    be sufficiently related to the contact to warrant the exercise of specific
    jurisdiction.” 
    Id. at 452.
    “Rather, as long as the claim bears a substantial
    connection to the nonresident’s forum contacts, the exercise of specific
    jurisdiction is appropriate.” 
    Id. Finally, in
    determining whether the exercise of jurisdiction comports
    with fair play and substantial justice, the court “may evaluate the burden on
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    the defendant of appearing in the forum, the forum state’s interest in
    adjudicating the claim, the plaintiff’s interest in convenient and effective relief
    within the forum, judicial economy, and the shared interest of the several
    States in furthering fundamental substantive social policies.”        
    Id. at 448
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    In the instant case, the trial court, citing the effects test, determined
    that Appellants purposefully availed themselves of California’s benefits, that
    the California lawsuit was related to Appellants’ contacts with California, and
    that California’s exercise of jurisdiction over Appellants comported with fair
    play and substantial justice. The trial court first noted that U.S. Pipelining,
    through its owner and manager Lisa Bowman, intentionally reached out to
    California by substituting itself into a USSDI contract with Alpine, making
    payments to Alpine in California, and causing Alpine to suffer a loss in
    California.   Trial Court Opinion, 4/26/18, at 5-6.     The lawsuit alleged that
    Appellants interfered with contracts Alpine had with the other defendants and
    fraudulently concealed assets to which Alpine was entitled under the
    contracts; hence, the California lawsuit arose out of Appellants’ contacts with
    California. 
    Id. at 6-7.
    In evaluating the fairness of subjecting Appellants to
    suit in California, the trial court noted that the burden upon them of appearing
    in that state weighed in favor of their position, but the rest favored California’s
    adjudication of the dispute. 
    Id. at 7-8.
    Specifically, California had an interest
    in seeing its resident Alpine achieve “convenient and effective relief,” and
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    judicial economy was served by having the claims resolved in a single action
    as to all five defendants. 
    Id. at 8.
    Appellants contend that this Court should reverse the trial court’s denial
    of their petition to strike for the following reasons.
    (1)   The trial court misstated the legal standard for deciding
    whether to strike or vacate a foreign judgment, incorrectly
    referring to its own standard as abuse of discretion and
    improperly introducing the “effects test” into the analysis.
    (2)   The trial court abused its discretion by ignoring the evidence
    put forth by [Appellants] attacking the basis of jurisdiction
    and undermining the foundation of Alpine’s alter ego
    allegations that it added to the [a]mended [c]omplaint.
    (3)   The trial court also abused its discretion by finding for Alpine
    despite a record showing insufficient contacts between
    [Appellants] and California to justify that state’s exercise of
    personal jurisdiction. The evidence is especially scant and
    attenuated with respect to [Lisa] Bowman.
    (4)   Finally, the trial court abused its discretion in finding that,
    assuming minimum contacts exist, California’s exercise of
    jurisdiction over [Appellants] comports with fair play and
    substantial justice. Given the burden on [Appellants], the
    strong Pennsylvania interest in adjudicating disputes
    alleging alter ego liability against its citizens and
    corporations (and the correspondingly weak California
    interest in same), and the recourse available to Alpine if
    [Appellants’] requested relief is granted, the relevant factors
    in this analysis weigh strongly in [Appellants’] favor.
    Appellants’ brief at 8-9. We find merit in none of these arguments.
    Appellants’ claim of error regarding the standards applied by the trial
    court warrants no relief. Appellants suggest that the trial court erroneously
    applied an abuse-of-discretion standard in deciding whether to strike the
    California judgment, and that the effects test of purposeful availment applies
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    only to intentional torts. 
    Id. at 17-18.
    First, as is clear from the discussion
    above, the trial court applied the appropriate three-prong test to determine
    whether California could fairly exercise specific personal jurisdiction over
    Appellants. Its reference to the appellate standard of review for this Court’s
    benefit in its Rule 1925(a) opinion does not evidence any error. Second, as
    we have already noted, which purposeful availment test applies in any given
    case does not turn upon whether the claim sounds in tort or in contract. See
    Gilmore Bank, supra at 1571. Furthermore, many of the counts against
    Appellants in Alpine’s amended complaint do indeed sound in tort. As such,
    Appellants’ first argument is wholly devoid of merit.
    Appellants next maintain that the trial court ignored Appellants’
    evidence in support of their denial of contacts with California and instead
    rubber-stamped the California court’s exercise of jurisdiction based upon an
    alter ego theory. Appellants’ brief at 19-22. Appellants, citing to a deposition
    of Alpine’s vice president James Hilbert that is not included in the certified
    record, argued to the trial court that the alter ego allegations alleged in the
    amended complaint were not based upon Mr. Hilbert’s personal knowledge
    and thus could not support jurisdiction over Appellants. Appellants’ brief at
    20-22 (citing, inter alia, Brief in Support of Praecipe for Disposition, 12/14/17,
    at 4-7). This argument is no more availing than Appellants’ first argument.
    An examination of the trial court’s reasoning discussed above reveals
    that it was not upon an alter ego theory that it determined that jurisdiction
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    was properly exercised over Appellants. Rather, it was based upon Appellants’
    conduct, directed at Alpine in California, which caused Alpine to suffer harm
    in California.   We find that the record supports the allegations that U.S.
    Pipelining converted or fraudulently concealed property belonging to Alpine,
    that Lisa Bowman misrepresented the significance of the changes from USSDI
    to U.S. Pipelining in emails and payments, and that Lisa Bowman used U.S.
    Pipelining to attempt to thwart Alpine’s ability to recover for that harm.
    Furthermore, Appellants’ lack-of-personal-knowledge contentions relate
    to Mr. Hilbert’s reliance upon information from Alpine’s attorney to establish
    allegations such as that Lisa Bowman was the owner of U.S. Pipelining; that
    Jeremy Bowman, the guarantor of the leases to USSDI and USSDC, “didn’t
    own anything anymore;” and that USSDI and U.S. Pipelining commingled
    assets.   Those facts are supported by the record without reference to the
    amended complaint or Mr. Hilbert’s affidavit.    For example, Lisa Bowman’s
    affidavit indicates that she is the sole member of U.S. Pipelining, that U.S.
    Pipelining used equipment leased by Alpine to USSDI and USSDC, and that
    U.S. Pipelining made payments to Alpine for equipment that belonged to the
    other entities. Affidavit of Lisa Bowman, 12/13/17, at 1-2. Further, Alpine
    produced the email of Lisa Bowman listing U.S. Pipelining as the owner of
    equipment Alpine had leased to USSDI.         Response to Petition to Strike,
    10/4/17, at Exhibit E.      Additionally, Mr. Hilbert’s recollection of being
    personally misled by the Bowmans about the use of “U.S. Pipelining” in
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    documents and emails being a mere name change rather than the substitution
    of a wholly-distinct legal entity are uncontestedly based upon his personal
    knowledge. As such, Appellants’ second argument warrants no relief from this
    Court.
    With their remaining issues, Appellants challenge the substance of the
    trial court’s application of the law regarding personal jurisdiction. Appellants
    contend that they lacked sufficient contacts with California to support
    jurisdiction there, and that, even if the contacts were sufficient, California’s
    exercise of jurisdiction does not comport with fair play and substantial justice.
    Appellants’ brief at 24-36. Appellants point to the fact that they were not
    parties to the contracts with Alpine, and claim that the minor contacts relied
    upon by the trial court are in contrast with cases in which jurisdiction was
    upheld—cases that “typically involve extensive and sustained contacts far
    beyond what the record shows in this case.”        
    Id. at 25.
      Appellants also
    suggest that Pennsylvania has a greater interest than California in
    adjudicating the claims at issue, citing the difference in the states’ laws
    regarding piercing the corporate veil, and noting that Alpine obtained
    convenient relief for its claims by obtaining a judgment against the other
    defendants in California. 
    Id. at 34-35.
    We disagree with Appellants’ contentions, and find the Gilmore Bank
    decision apt in explaining why.     In that case, Cindy Dalrymple owned a
    company that she sold to Jay Cho with financing from Gilmore Bank. The
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    company failed within six months of the sale, and Cho and Gilmore Bank (“the
    plaintiffs”) initiated arbitration proceedings against Dalrymple.    While the
    arbitration was pending, and it was becoming clear that Dalrymple would be
    held liable, Dalrymple formed a trust, appointed her niece as trustee, and
    transferred her considerable assets to it and other similar entities.       The
    plaintiffs obtained an award of over $3 million, which was reduced to
    judgment.     The plaintiffs then brought an action in California against
    Dalrymple, her niece, and her attorney alleging that the defendants
    fraudulently concealed and transferred Dalrymple’s assets. The plaintiffs later
    amended the complaint to add a New Zealand trust company (AsiaTrust) and
    its parent company (Asiaciti) as defendants. Gilmore Bank, supra at 1563-
    64.
    AsiaTrust challenged the California court’s personal jurisdiction over it.
    It claimed that it had offices and did business only in New Zealand, and never
    travelled to California in connection with the trust at issue. Rather, AsiaTrust
    contended that Lauren Cherie Willis, who was a lawyer and the general
    manager of Asiaciti, was “introduced by email” to Dalrymple’s niece regarding
    having AsiaTrust take title to an annuity that would be issued by an insurance
    company in Switzerland. 
    Id. at 1564.
    AsiaTrust agreed to be trustee, and
    Willis drafted a deed of settlement.     The draft and executed deeds were
    exchanged by email.     Thereafter, the New Zealand trust received regular
    payments from the Swiss annuity and AsiaTrust wired them to Dalrymple’s
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    California trust.     Willis claimed that she never travelled to California in
    connection with negotiating or administering the trust.
    In opposing the New Zealand defendants’ attempt to avoid the
    jurisdiction of the California court, the plaintiffs produced evidence that
    Dalrymple’s attorney had worked with AsiaTrust in the past, and emailed
    AsiaTrust to set up a trust in New Zealand “to be settled by the trustee of a
    California” trust. 
    Id. at 1565.
    Willis contacted Dalrymple’s niece and provided
    her with information about the advantages of New Zealand trusts.              Willis
    emailed Dalrymple’s lawyer and niece drafts of trust deeds. Once the trust
    was established, Asiaciti billed Dalrymple’s niece for fees by mailing an invoice
    to the niece’s California address, and the niece paid Asiaciti from the California
    trust.    Dalrymple’s lawyer instructed Willis to meet with the Swiss annuity
    company, which issued a certificate listing AsiaTrust as the owner and
    beneficiary of the annuity. Subsequently, AsiaTrust paid out the Swiss annuity
    through distributions from the New Zealand trust by wire to the California
    bank account of the California trust. Dalrymple’s niece then distributed the
    funds to Dalrymple. 
    Id. at 1566-67.
    The trial court held that AsiaTrust was not subject to specific personal
    jurisdiction, the plaintiffs appealed, and the California appellate court
    reversed. It first held that the fact that AsiaTrust’s contacts with California
    were not specifically directed at the plaintiffs was of no moment in applying
    the effects test of purposeful availment.       After reviewing different purposeful
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    availment tests, it concluded that AsiaTrust’s contacts with California satisfied
    several of them.    In so deciding, the court highlighted the following facts:
    AsiaTrust had a contractual relationship with the California defendants and the
    plaintiffs’ fraudulent conveyance claim sounded in quasi-contract; it created
    continuing obligations with California residents; it purposefully directed
    activities towards California residents and derived benefits from those
    California activities; it marketed its New Zealand trust products to a California
    resident; it negotiated with California residents and sent contracts to California
    to be executed by a California resident in California; it regularly disbursed
    funds to a California bank account; and it “received compensation for
    accepting, investing, managing, disbursing, and shielding the assets of
    [Dalrymple], a California judgment debtor, in a scheme that contemplates an
    ongoing contractual relationship for [Dalrymple’s] lifetime.” 
    Id. at 1572.
    The appellate court further held that, because the plaintiffs’ suit was
    brought to reach Dalrymple’s assets, and half of Dalrymple’s assets were in
    the possession or control of AsiaTrust, there was a substantial nexus between
    the plaintiffs’ claim and AsiaTrust’s California contacts. 
    Id. at 1573
    . Finally,
    the court concluded that subjecting AsiaTrust to jurisdiction in California in
    this case was fair and reasonable. It noted that suit in California was no more
    burdensome on AsiaTrust than requiring the plaintiffs to litigate in New
    Zealand, that California has a strong interest in enforcing its judgments, and
    that California and New Zealand “share an interest in enforcing judgments,
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    strengthening respect for judicial systems, and promoting cooperation among
    sovereign nations.”   
    Id. at 1575-76.
        Therefore, the Gilmore Bank court
    concluded that “[u]nder the particular circumstances of this case and taking
    into account modern telecommunications and transportation, . . . California’s
    exercise of personal jurisdiction is both fair and reasonable.” 
    Id. at 1576.
    There are many similarities between the facts of Gilmore Bank and
    those of the instant case; even some differences make the case for jurisdiction
    more compelling than in Gilmore Bank. While the third party in that case
    had no contact with the plaintiffs from whom it was shielding money, here
    U.S. Pipelining, through Lisa Bowman, directly interacted with Alpine
    regarding the subject matter of the California lawsuit. Lisa Bowman was a
    member of companies which reached out to Alpine in California, and
    contracted with Alpine subject to a California forum selection clause, thereby
    establishing an ongoing relationship with a California resident. U.S. Pipelining,
    through Lisa Bowman, received the benefits of Alpine’s California performance
    of its contracts with USSDI and USSDC; made regular payments to Alpine in
    California; intentionally deceived a California resident about the significance
    of the change from USSDI and USSDC to U.S. Pipelining; and shielded the
    assets of California judgment debtors USSDI, USSDC, and Jeremy Bowman.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the purposeful availment prong has been
    satisfied because Appellants’ contacts with California should have put them on
    notice that they were subject to litigation there. Accord Vons Companies,
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    J-A27015-18 supra
    449–50 (quoting Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 
    471 U.S. 462
    ,
    473 (1985) (“‘[P]arties who ‘reach out beyond one state and create continuing
    relationships and obligations with citizens of another state’ are subject to
    regulation and sanctions in the other [s]tate for the consequences of their
    activities.’”).
    Nor are we convinced that the trial court erred in its analysis of the third
    prong2 of the specific jurisdiction test regarding comportment with fair play
    and substantial justice. The burden on Alpine to litigate in Pennsylvania would
    be as great as Appellants’ burden              to litigate in California.   Moreover, the
    overall burden upon Appellants is far less than the burden on AsiaTrust in
    Gilmore Bank, who was required to travel from New Zealand company to
    litigate in California. While Pennsylvania certainly has an interest in litigation
    against the assets of its residents and corporation, California has a
    corresponding interest in adjudicating a dispute involving money owed to its
    resident. California was a convenient forum for the litigation, as Alpine is a
    California company and Appellants’ co-defendants unquestionably were
    subject to the jurisdiction of the California court. In short, Appellants have
    not met their burden of presenting “a compelling case that California’s
    ____________________________________________
    2Appellants do not present an argument that the second prong of the test has
    not been satisfied, as it is clear that the California litigation bore a substantial
    nexus to Appellants’ contacts with California.
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    exercise of specific jurisdiction [was] unfair and unreasonable.”     Gilmore
    Bank, supra at 1576.
    Appellants’ final issues thus entitle them to no relief because California
    law supports the exercise of specific personal jurisdiction under the facts of
    this case. Accordingly, the trial court properly denied Appellants’ petition to
    strike the California judgment.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/21/19
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