Lynch, J.
The defendant, Donald W. Tong, appealed to the Appeals Court from a judgment and order of the Probate and Family Court for garnishment of his Navy pension for child support. We transferred the case to this court on our own motion.
The appeal presents the questions whether the Probate Court erred in asserting personal jurisdiction over the defendant, a resident of Spain, and whether the court’s exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction to reach the defendant’s military pension was impermissible. We reverse the judgment of the Probate Court.
The facts are not disputed by the parties. The defendant and the plaintiff, Judith Morrill, formerly Judith Tong, were married in Newport, Rhode Island, on January 20, 1962. The defendant was at that time in the United States Navy; he had formerly been domiciled in New York State. The plaintiff’s former domicil was Massachusetts. From the time of their marriage until May, 1962, the couple resided in and was domiciled in Massachusetts. In May, 1962, they moved to Ohio for a brief interval, and then to the defendant’s mother’s home in New York. The couple’s first child was born in Camden, New York, on August 25, 1962. At some time in 1962 the defendant reenlisted in the Navy,
and, in November of that year, the couple obtained naval housing in Newport, Rhode Island, where their second child was born on June 27, 1964.
Between July, 1965, and June, 1970, the couple lived in California, where the defendant was stationed during that time. In June, 1970, they returned to Massachusetts for approximately one month. In July, 1970, they purchased a home in Bristol, Rhode Island, in which they lived until the time of their separation in January, 1972. In that year the plaintiff filed an action for divorce in the Rhode Island Family Court. The defendant generally appeared through counsel in the divorce proceeding. A final decree of divorce was entered by the Rhode Island court on May 30, 1973.
By the terms of the decree, the plaintiff was awarded custody of the two children of the marriage, and the defendant was granted reasonable visitation rights. The plaintiff waived alimony, and the defendant was ordered to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $220 a month for the support of the minor children, and to maintain his Navy identification card for the benefit of the children. Subsequent to the entry of the interlocutory decree, the defendant authorized the director of the Navy Family Allowance Activity, located in Cleveland, Ohio, to send the sum of $220 a month to the plaintiff at her current address. The plaintiff was to notify the director of any change in her address.
In November, 1976, the plaintiff and the children moved from Rhode Island to Dartmouth, Massachusetts. The plaintiff continued to receive monthly support payments from the Navy Family Allowance Activity at her Massachusetts address until June, 1979, when the defendant instructed the director to discontinue the payments. On January 30, 1980, the plaintiff petitioned the Probate Court for care, custody, education, and maintenance pursuant to G. L. c. 208, § 29,
and sought an order to the Department of the Navy to divert from the defendant’s pension an amount equal to the arrearages on support payments from June, 1979, and $220 a month thereafter until the children reached majority,
and such other relief as the court deemed just and proper.
The defendant specially appeared and moved to dismiss the action pursuant to Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 12 (b) (2) (1975) and the New Uniform Practices of Probate Courts of Massachusetts, VII, alleging that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over him.
The motion was denied and the defendant thereafter filed an answer to each of the paragraphs of the complaint, reciting as affirmative defenses: “1. This Court lacks personal jurisdiction over Defendant . . . who resides in Palma De Majorca, Spain. 2. Plaintiff . . . has intentionally and continuously alienated the children from their father and has intentionally and continuously deprived him of the affection and companionship of his children. Plaintiff . . . comes into this Court with unclean hands.” The defendant prayed that the complaint be dismissed and that the court “[ojrder such other relief as [it] shall deem just and proper.” The case proceeded to trial, at which
time the defendant renewed his motion to dismiss. The trial judge, who had not passed upon the pretrial motion, heard the argument of both parties and took the motion under advisement. At the same time, the judge requested the parties to file an agreed statement of facts pending his decision on the motion. The defendant also filed a motion to report the case in accordance with Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 64 (1975). On February 16, 1982, the judge denied the defendant’s motions and ordered that his military pension be garnished to pay to the plaintiff an arrearage of $7,040 and to continue monthly support payments of $220.
The defendant submits that the Probate Court judge erred in concluding (1) that the defendant waived his defense of lack of personal jurisdiction, (2) that the defendant’s military pension was subject to the court’s exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction, and (3) that the defendant had sufficient contacts with the Commonwealth to support the assertion of personal jurisdiction over him. The plaintiff argues that the judge’s conclusions were proper in this case, and further claims that, under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 12 (g) and 12 (h) (1) (1975), the defendant has waived the defense of lack of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction by not specifically pleading that defense in his pretrial motion or answer to the complaint.
1.
Waiver of the defense of lack of jurisdiction.
We turn first to the plaintiff’s claim that the defense of lack of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction has been waived. The defendant’s motion to dismiss, renewed before a second judge, and his answer to the complaint asserted the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction. A timely motion to dismiss an action pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (2), 365 Mass. 754 (1974), can embrace the defense of lack of jurisdiction over the interest of the defendant in property which may be located here. See J.W. Smith & H.B. Zobel, Rules Practice §§ 12.4 n.27, 12.9 (1974); 5 C.A. Wright & A.R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1351 (1969) (commenting on Fed. R. Civ. P. 12 [b] [2]);
Fish
v.
Bamby Bakers, Inc.,
76 F.R.D. 511, 513 (N.D.N.Y. 1977). Here the motion to dismiss and answer did not set forth any particular assertions
respecting that portion of the complaint which sought to have the defendant’s military pension garnished, but maintained that the defendant’s contacts with Massachusetts were insufficient to support the assertion of jurisdiction over him.
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Lynch, J.
The defendant, Donald W. Tong, appealed to the Appeals Court from a judgment and order of the Probate and Family Court for garnishment of his Navy pension for child support. We transferred the case to this court on our own motion.
The appeal presents the questions whether the Probate Court erred in asserting personal jurisdiction over the defendant, a resident of Spain, and whether the court’s exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction to reach the defendant’s military pension was impermissible. We reverse the judgment of the Probate Court.
The facts are not disputed by the parties. The defendant and the plaintiff, Judith Morrill, formerly Judith Tong, were married in Newport, Rhode Island, on January 20, 1962. The defendant was at that time in the United States Navy; he had formerly been domiciled in New York State. The plaintiff’s former domicil was Massachusetts. From the time of their marriage until May, 1962, the couple resided in and was domiciled in Massachusetts. In May, 1962, they moved to Ohio for a brief interval, and then to the defendant’s mother’s home in New York. The couple’s first child was born in Camden, New York, on August 25, 1962. At some time in 1962 the defendant reenlisted in the Navy,
and, in November of that year, the couple obtained naval housing in Newport, Rhode Island, where their second child was born on June 27, 1964.
Between July, 1965, and June, 1970, the couple lived in California, where the defendant was stationed during that time. In June, 1970, they returned to Massachusetts for approximately one month. In July, 1970, they purchased a home in Bristol, Rhode Island, in which they lived until the time of their separation in January, 1972. In that year the plaintiff filed an action for divorce in the Rhode Island Family Court. The defendant generally appeared through counsel in the divorce proceeding. A final decree of divorce was entered by the Rhode Island court on May 30, 1973.
By the terms of the decree, the plaintiff was awarded custody of the two children of the marriage, and the defendant was granted reasonable visitation rights. The plaintiff waived alimony, and the defendant was ordered to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $220 a month for the support of the minor children, and to maintain his Navy identification card for the benefit of the children. Subsequent to the entry of the interlocutory decree, the defendant authorized the director of the Navy Family Allowance Activity, located in Cleveland, Ohio, to send the sum of $220 a month to the plaintiff at her current address. The plaintiff was to notify the director of any change in her address.
In November, 1976, the plaintiff and the children moved from Rhode Island to Dartmouth, Massachusetts. The plaintiff continued to receive monthly support payments from the Navy Family Allowance Activity at her Massachusetts address until June, 1979, when the defendant instructed the director to discontinue the payments. On January 30, 1980, the plaintiff petitioned the Probate Court for care, custody, education, and maintenance pursuant to G. L. c. 208, § 29,
and sought an order to the Department of the Navy to divert from the defendant’s pension an amount equal to the arrearages on support payments from June, 1979, and $220 a month thereafter until the children reached majority,
and such other relief as the court deemed just and proper.
The defendant specially appeared and moved to dismiss the action pursuant to Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 12 (b) (2) (1975) and the New Uniform Practices of Probate Courts of Massachusetts, VII, alleging that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over him.
The motion was denied and the defendant thereafter filed an answer to each of the paragraphs of the complaint, reciting as affirmative defenses: “1. This Court lacks personal jurisdiction over Defendant . . . who resides in Palma De Majorca, Spain. 2. Plaintiff . . . has intentionally and continuously alienated the children from their father and has intentionally and continuously deprived him of the affection and companionship of his children. Plaintiff . . . comes into this Court with unclean hands.” The defendant prayed that the complaint be dismissed and that the court “[ojrder such other relief as [it] shall deem just and proper.” The case proceeded to trial, at which
time the defendant renewed his motion to dismiss. The trial judge, who had not passed upon the pretrial motion, heard the argument of both parties and took the motion under advisement. At the same time, the judge requested the parties to file an agreed statement of facts pending his decision on the motion. The defendant also filed a motion to report the case in accordance with Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 64 (1975). On February 16, 1982, the judge denied the defendant’s motions and ordered that his military pension be garnished to pay to the plaintiff an arrearage of $7,040 and to continue monthly support payments of $220.
The defendant submits that the Probate Court judge erred in concluding (1) that the defendant waived his defense of lack of personal jurisdiction, (2) that the defendant’s military pension was subject to the court’s exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction, and (3) that the defendant had sufficient contacts with the Commonwealth to support the assertion of personal jurisdiction over him. The plaintiff argues that the judge’s conclusions were proper in this case, and further claims that, under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 12 (g) and 12 (h) (1) (1975), the defendant has waived the defense of lack of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction by not specifically pleading that defense in his pretrial motion or answer to the complaint.
1.
Waiver of the defense of lack of jurisdiction.
We turn first to the plaintiff’s claim that the defense of lack of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction has been waived. The defendant’s motion to dismiss, renewed before a second judge, and his answer to the complaint asserted the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction. A timely motion to dismiss an action pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (2), 365 Mass. 754 (1974), can embrace the defense of lack of jurisdiction over the interest of the defendant in property which may be located here. See J.W. Smith & H.B. Zobel, Rules Practice §§ 12.4 n.27, 12.9 (1974); 5 C.A. Wright & A.R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1351 (1969) (commenting on Fed. R. Civ. P. 12 [b] [2]);
Fish
v.
Bamby Bakers, Inc.,
76 F.R.D. 511, 513 (N.D.N.Y. 1977). Here the motion to dismiss and answer did not set forth any particular assertions
respecting that portion of the complaint which sought to have the defendant’s military pension garnished, but maintained that the defendant’s contacts with Massachusetts were insufficient to support the assertion of jurisdiction over him. During oral argument before the trial judge, however, defense counsel supplied the court with a memorandum of applicable law and argued that the court lacked in personam and quasi-in-rem jurisdiction to order the pension garnished.
In these circumstances, the omission of specific reference to quasi-in-rem jurisdiction in the written pleadings did not operate as a waiver of that defense. The court was sufficiently informed of the bases of the defendant’s challenges to its jurisdiction when the motion to dismiss was taken under advisement.
The judge viewed the defendant’s submission of an answer to the merits of the complaint, filed after the denial of his original motion to dismiss the action for lack of jurisdiction, as a waiver of that defense. Under our current rules of practice, “[n]o defense or objection is waived by being joined with one or more other defenses or objections in a responsive pleading or motion.” Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b), 365 Mass. 754 (1974). See
Ross
v.
Ross,
371 Mass. 439, 443 n.2 (1976). Further, a defendant who has unsuccessfully challenged the court’s jurisdiction over him may proceed to the merits without waiving his right to appellate review of the question of jurisdiction. See J.W. Smith & H.B. Zobel,
supra
§ 12.9;
Walling
v.
Beers,
120 Mass. 548, 550 (1876). See also
Cheshire Nat’l Bank
v.
Jaynes,
224 Mass. 14, 19-20 (1916); 93 A.L.R. § 1302 (1934). In the instant case, the
judge based his finding of waiver on the defendant’s second “affirmative defense,” coupled with the prayer for such other relief as the court might deem just and proper. The judge concluded that the defendant had, in effect, “waived any plea to the jurisdiction and [had] appeared generally and thereby submitted to the power and jurisdiction of this Court.”
We do not agree.
The judge relied, as does the plaintiff on appeal, upon decisions rendered by this court prior to our adoption of the rules of civil procedure. 365 Mass. 730 (1974).
In the instant case, the defendant’s “affirmative defense,” while alleging alienation of the children and deprivation of their companionship, concluded with the words: “Plaintiff . . . comes into this Court with unclean hands.” This language cannot be viewed as a voluntary submission to the judgment of the court of one of the principal issues in the suit. Contrast
Buckley
v.
John,
314 Mass. 719 (1943). We read the “affirmative defense” as a whole as resisting the invocation of the court’s power by this plaintiff. See
Fisher
v.
Fisher,
349 Mass. 675, 677 (1965). See also
MacCormac
v.
Flynn,
313 Mass. 547, 549 (1943).
In ruling that the defendant submitted to the jurisdiction of the court, the judge also relied upon our pre-rules decision in
Leffler
v.
Todd,
316 Mass. 227 (1944). It is not necessary for us to analyze carefully that decision for what may well be distinguishing facts. We are not inclined to hold that, because the concluding words of the answer mirrored the concluding words of the complaint by a prayer for such other relief as the court might deem proper, the defendant waived his assertion that the court lacked jurisdiction over him.
2.
Exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction.
We next consider the judge’s ruling that quasi-in-rem jurisdiction provided a basis for ordering that the defendant’s military pension be garnished. We need not reach the question whether the judge’s ruling in reliance on our decision in
Blitzer
v.
Blitzer,
361 Mass. 780 (1972), satisfies the requirements of the later United States Supreme Court decisions in
Shaffer
v.
Heitner,
433 U.S. 186 (1977), or in
Rush
v.
Savchuk,
444 U.S. 320 (1980),
as we conclude that the property on which
exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction was predicated was not subject to the exercise of jurisdiction on such basis. The divorce decree ordered the defendant to pay the sum of $220 a month to the plaintiff toward the support of the minor children, and to maintain his Navy I.D. card, so called, for their benefit. The defendant elected to authorize that payments be deducted from his military pension and forwarded from the Navy’s Family Allowance Activity headquarters in Cleveland, Ohio, to the plaintiff at an address she could specify. From 1973 until the plaintiff moved with the children to Massachusetts in 1976, the payments were sent to the State of Rhode Island. Presumably the benefits attendant on the defendant’s maintenance of his Navy I.D. card were available to the children during that period in the State of Rhode Island. Thus, while the source of the payments remained at all times in Ohio, and the source of the card’s benefits remained there or with the defendant (a fact not determinable by the record), the payments and benefits which the judge found to be present in Massachusetts from 1976 to 1979 would have been present to precisely the same extent in Rhode Island from 1973 to 1976. The location of the res on this theory would depend, not upon the actions of the defendant or the presence of his debtor, but upon the transience of the plaintiff.
The res had no existence in Massachusetts until her arrival, and would cease to exist here upon her relocation outside our borders. Thus it was
error for the judge to base an exercise of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction on the interest of the defendant in his military pension and Navy I.D. card. See generally 4 C.A. Wright & A.R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure §§ 1070-1072 (1969 & Supp. 1983).
3.
Assertion of jurisdiction over the defendant.
Finally, we address the question of the Probate Court’s assertion of personal jurisdiction over the defendant. Authority for the assertion of such jurisdiction does not exist in G. L. c. 208, § 29, and must be found in the provisions of our long arm statute. General Laws c. 223A, § 3, “asserts jurisdiction over the person to the constitutional limit only when some basis for jurisdiction enumerated in the statute has been established. Although presented with jurisdictional facts sufficient to survive due process scrutiny, a judge would be required to decline to exercise jurisdiction if the plaintiff was unable to satisfy at least one of the statutory prerequisites.”
Good Hope Indus., Inc.
v.
Ryder Scott Co.,
378 Mass. 1, 6 (1979). See
Carlson Corp.
v.
University of Vt.,
380 Mass. 102, 105 (1980);
Burtner
v.
Burnham,
13 Mass. App. Ct. 158, 161-162 (1982);
Nova Biomedical Corp.
v.
Moller,
629 F.2d 190, 192-193 (1st Cir. 1980);
A.J. Cunningham Packing Corp.
v.
Florence Beef Co.,
529 F. Supp. 515, 518 (D. Mass. 1982). When the assertion is challenged under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (2), it is the plaintiff’s burden to establish sufficient facts on which to base jurisdiction.
Good Hope Indus., Inc.
v.
Ryder Scott Co., supra
at 3. Whether jurisdiction will be found is a determination sensitive to the particular facts of each case.
Id.
at 2, and cases cited. Here, the judge based the exercise of jurisdiction on G. L. c. 223A, § 3 (a) and (c).
In
Ross
v.
Ross,
371 Mass. 439 (1976), we said that the reference in c. 223A, §3
(a),
to “transacting any business” is not limited to commercial activity, and includes “any purposeful acts by an individual, whether personal, private, or commercial” (citations omitted).
Id.
at 441. There the nonresident defendant had executed a separation agreement several months before a decree nisi of divorce was entered in a Massachusetts Probate Court. Six years later the defendant successfully petitioned the Probate Court to modify the decree, seeking alimony and an increase in child support. In reversing the dismissal of the plaintiff’s subsequent action to enforce the terms of the separation agreement, we held that the defendant’s invocation of the power of a court of the Commonwealth, and the parties’ intention that their agreement should be construed and governed in accordance with Massachusetts law, satisfied the requirement of
International Shoe Co.
v.
Washington,
326 U.S. 310, 316 (1945), that the defendant have “certain minimum contacts with [the State] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’”
Id.
at 441. We further held that the defendant’s seeking modification of the original support order and counsel fees was a purposeful act which invoked “the benefits and protections of [our] laws.
Hanson
v.
Denckla,
[357 U.S. 235,] 253 [(1958)].”
Id.
at 441-442. See “Automatic”
Sprinkler Corp. of America
v.
Seneca Foods Corp.,
361 Mass. 441, 443-444 (1972).
In the instant case, the judge based his assertion of jurisdiction on the monthly support payments sent to Massachusetts for three years, the maintenance of the defendant’s Navy I.D. card for the children’s benefit, the defendant’s letters, gifts, and cards to the children and telephone conversations with them, a letter from the defendant to the plaintiff’s lawyer, and the fact that Massachusetts was the first marital home of the parties. We do not think that these circumstances, singly or in combination, meet the require
ments of
International Shoe Co.
v.
Washington, supra,
and
Hanson
v.
Denckla, supra,
so as to justify an assertion of jurisdiction under G. L. c. 223A, § 3 (a). The support payments and benefits from the I.D. card were sent into Massachusetts, as they were sent into Rhode Island, as a result of the defendant’s obligation under the court decree of that State. Indeed, it was the plaintiff who could and did affect a rerouting of the payments from State to State. See
Kulko
v.
Superior Court,
436 U.S. 84, 93-94 (1978).
World-Wide Volkswagen Corp.
v.
Woodson,
444 U.S. 286, 298 (1980), quoting from
Hanson
v.
Denckla, supra
at 253. See also
Davis
v.
Davis,
452 F. Supp. 44, 46-47 (E.D. Pa. 1978) (judge predicted, after review of cases under long arm statute [later amended to apply to individuals to full constitutional limits], “that the Pennsylvania appellate courts will not determine that ‘doing business’ includes making payments under a separation agreement, particularly under circumstances where . . . the agreement was executed by the nonresident in [a sister State] and the parties agreed that [the law of the sister State] would be applied to the agreement”). Similarly, the defendant’s communications with the children shown in the record (several letters and evidence of gifts, cards, and two telephone conversations) were personal contacts essentially unconnected with the children’s residence. We are not in agreement with the judge that by such communications, the defendant “sought to put himself in spirit into the children’s home in Massachusetts,” thereby availing himself of the benefits and protections of our laws.
Cf.
Kulko
v.
Superior Court, supra
at 94.
Neither do we view the defendant’s letter to the plaintiff’s Massachusetts attorney, in which he stated an intent “to go
to court if necessary to defend my rights as a father” and said he was “contemplating asking for custody of my children and readjustment of the support requirement if custody isn’t possible,” as an intentional activity invoking the benefits and protection of Massachusetts law. It is true that a single act within the forum may, in a proper circumstance, be sufficient to warrant the assertion of jurisdiction over a defendant. See, e.g.,
Van Wagenbergv. Van Wagenberg,
241 Md. 154, cert. denied, 385 U.S. 833 (1966), cited in
Ross
v.
Ross, supra
at 442 (execution by defendant of separation agreement in New York, which obligated him to pay extraordinary medical expenses of child, was a transaction of business within that State). See also
McGee
v.
International Life Ins. Co.,
355 U.S. 220 (1957), cited in
Carlson Corp.
v.
University of Vt., supra
at 106. Here, the defendant’s letter, in response to a letter from the plaintiff’s attorney concerning the defendant’s termination of payments, could not be said to be a purposeful act warranting the exercise of jurisdiction under § 3
(a)
of our long arm statute.
The defendant’s two brief stays in Massachusetts, consisting of four months in 1962 and one month in 1970, do not bring him within the reach of G. L. c. 223A, § 3 (a).
Contrast
Kennedy
v.
Kennedy,
10 Mass. App. Ct. 113, 119 (1980) (where parties were born and married in Massachusetts, purchased a home here within two weeks of defendant’s departure, and where defendant was a legal and voting resident through the following year, in which separate support order was sought by plaintiff and granted, defendant was subject to the jurisdiction of the Probate Court under G. L. c. 223A, § 2 [domicil]; acquisition of the home and settling of his family also supported jurisdiction under § 3 [a]). Compare
Bjordahl
v.
Bjordahl,
308 N.W.2d 817 (Minn. 1981) (court had jurisdiction, by virtue of continuing jurisdiction of Minnesota divorce decree, over defendant who had not resided or transacted business in State for
twenty-two years). We conclude that there is no basis for the assertion of jurisdiction over the defendant under G. L. c. 223A, § 3 (a). Were we to hold otherwise, we doubt that assertion of jurisdiction over the defendant would survive due process scrutiny. Cf.
Kulko
v.
Superior Court, supra.
The judge’s ruling that the communications of the defendant to his children were materially false representations of his professed devotion on which the children relied to their detriment, see
Burtner
v.
Burnham,
13 Mass. App. Ct. 158 (1982), and amounted to an injury triggering the assertion of jurisdiction under G. L. c. 223A, § 3 (c), cannot be upheld. This claim was not made in the complaint and evidence to support it is not to be found in the record before us.
Having concluded that our long arm statute does not afford a basis for asserting jurisdiction over the defendant, we need not inquire into the constitutional constraints on the exercise of jurisdiction under the statute. See
Good Hope Indus., Inc.
v.
Ryder Scott Co., supra.
We acknowledge, however, the reliance of both parties on the recent United States Supreme Court decision in
Kulko
v.
Superior Court,
436 U.S. 84 (1978). In that case, the California Supreme
Court upheld the assertion of jurisdiction over a New York defendant based on his causing an effect within the State by an act or omission outside the state, i.e., consenting to one of his children’s living in California.
The court held that exercise of jurisdiction was “reasonable” as the defendant had availed himself of the benefits and protections of the California laws by sending his child there to live during the school year. The court also found that the defendant reaped a financial benefit from the child’s presence in California for nine months of a year. The Supreme Court, deciding the appeal on the basis of “whether the Constitution itself would permit the assertion of jurisdiction,”
id.
at 90 n.4, reversed, holding that as the defendant “did not purposefully derive benefit from any activities relating to the State of California, it is apparent that the California Supreme Court’s reliance on [defendant’s] having caused an ‘effect’ in California was misplaced.”
Id.
at 96. While we do not today reach an analysis of the due process considerations which would be required by a determination that jurisdiction is authorized by our long arm statute, we note again that the similarities between the circumstances in
Kulko
and in the present case would suggest the same result here as there.
The judgment of the Probate Court is reversed. The case is remanded for an order dismissing the action.
So ordered.