J.D.F. v. Crawford CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 2023
DocketB321170
StatusUnpublished

This text of J.D.F. v. Crawford CA2/8 (J.D.F. v. Crawford CA2/8) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.D.F. v. Crawford CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/29/23 J.D.F. v. Crawford CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

J.D.F., B321170

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 21STCP03057 v.

DENNIS CYRIL CRAWFORD,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Gregory Keosian, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of Salar Atrizadeh, Salar Atrizadeh; Jeff Lewis Law, Jeffrey Lewis and Sean C. Rotstan for Plaintiff and Appellant. Mazur & Mazur and Janice R. Mazur for Defendant and Respondent. ********** Plaintiff and appellant J.D.F. contends the trial court erred in granting defendant’s Code of Civil Procedure1 section 418.10 motion to quash. Plaintiff argues the evidence established personal jurisdiction over defendant and respondent Dennis Cyril Crawford (also known as Yuan Xun). In the alternative, plaintiff contends the trial court abused its discretion in denying plaintiff jurisdictional discovery. We disagree. Not only did plaintiff fail to serve defendant with the summons in this action, but plaintiff’s evidence was insufficient to meet his burden of showing personal jurisdiction over defendant if he had been served. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying jurisdictional discovery where plaintiff failed to adequately raise the issue below. We therefore affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND We limit our recitation of the facts to those relevant to the issues on appeal. 1. The Parties Plaintiff is a United States citizen of Chinese descent who frequently travels internationally for work and for personal purposes. He claims to live in Los Angeles with his parents, but the record does not bear this out. To support his claim of Los Angeles residency, plaintiff cites to four documents: his verified complaint and his and each of his parents’ declarations in support of his opposition to defendant’s motion to quash. His verified complaint alleges that he was, at all times relevant, “an individual residing in Los Angeles.” But his declaration belies this claim. Plaintiff declares he “view[s]

1 All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 [him]self” as a California resident because his parents moved to California in 2018. His parents live in Newport Coast—a community in Orange County, not Los Angeles County. His credit card statements are sent to his parents’ address in California, which he calls his only “permanent mailing address” in the world. He states his parents have bank accounts, pay taxes, and are registered to vote in California, but makes no corresponding claims as to himself. In their declarations, his parents echo that, aside from his parents’ address where they moved in 2018, plaintiff “has had no other permanent residences . . . for the past four years since he traveled to Beijing, China in 2017 to pursue employment opportunities” and his parents’ home “is where Plaintiff would reside if/when he returns to the United States.” Not only does plaintiff’s evidence fail to establish he has ever lived in California, it fails to establish he has ever even been here. The only indication that he has been to California is that his declaration purports to have been executed in Los Angeles. But his parents’ declarations make clear that he was not in the United States on the day it was signed. Moreover, his credit card statements from the preceding month show he was in Hong Kong. They include charges at a restaurant and an optician in Hong Kong, among other charges in Hong Kong dollars. As to defendant, he is the founder and operator of an entity called Sino American Reunion (SAR). The record establishes he has never been to California. He denies living in China but does not say where he lives—except to say generally that he now lives in “Asia.”

3 2. SAR SAR is a separate entity from defendant, whose form plaintiff does not identify. SAR’s purpose is to provide assistance to persons of Chinese descent born outside of China who desire to move to China. SAR operates through its own website and other means of online communication. Defendant operates SAR’s website and is an active participant in its various online and social media communities. SAR has a five-member steering committee and one of its members goes to college in California. SAR’s website states that its material is “largely aimed at second-generation American citizens of Chinese heritage.” SAR’s website states that a large number of East Asian immigrants and Chinese Americans live in California. Plaintiff offers the following statistics to substantiate this: California is the state with the largest “Asian population,” at 6.7 million, followed by New York (1.9 million), Texas (1.6 million), New Jersey (1 million) and Washington (0.9 million). Together, these states are home to 55 percent of the “Asians” in the United States. Plaintiff’s statistics do not provide a breakdown of the “Asian” population in these states by national origin. SAR’s intended audience is not limited to Americans, however. A SAR-operated “Discord server in the Reddit subcommunity ‘r/chineseamerican’ ” offers content “for CHINESE DIASPORA users: Chinese Americans, Chinese Canadians, Chinese British, Chinese Australians, Hong Kong HK Americans/Canadians/etc., Taiwanese Americans/Canadians/etc., basically people of Chinese ancestry living outside the Greater China Area.” Discord is a company “based in California.” Plaintiff presents no evidence that any of the other websites or services

4 plaintiff alleges defendant and SAR used is based in California. SAR’s domain is hosted by a Colorado company, another Colorado company provides a related service, SAR’s server is provided by a New York company, and defendant used another web hosting company based in Oregon. 3. Allegations of the Operative Complaint Plaintiff met defendant online and met him in person in Beijing, China, in late 2017. According to the complaint, at the time of their meeting, defendant sought to exploit plaintiff’s education and professional background to advance defendant’s efforts to promote SAR. Though plaintiff’s role with SAR is unclear, his allegations indicate he had some involvement at some point, because in 2018 he told defendant “he no longer wanted to participate in SAR.” This prompted defendant to begin a campaign of stalking and harassment against plaintiff, including public and private communications to third parties that plaintiff claims were defamatory or otherwise tortious. Much, but not all, of defendant’s alleged conduct involved private communications between defendant and plaintiff alone. As to communications with third parties, at one point defendant discussed the prospect of an in-person meeting in Hong Kong between plaintiff’s “business contacts” and defendant. Plaintiff asserts these “business contacts” were “based in California” at the time, and defendant knew this because, when scheduling a call with them months earlier, he acknowledged the time difference between his location and California. Defendant falsely presented plaintiff as being affiliated with SAR, using his “personal profile and professional credentials to recruit new members for [SAR] to his commercial benefit,” and

5 posted online without plaintiff’s permission a personal essay plaintiff had written and other personal information about plaintiff. In 2021, plaintiff demanded defendant to stop publicizing his personal information and using his essay. Defendant refused.

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Bluebook (online)
J.D.F. v. Crawford CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jdf-v-crawford-ca28-calctapp-2023.