Halyard Health, Inc. v. Kimberly-Clark Corporation ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 12/6/19; Modified and Certified for Pub. 1/2/20 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    HALYARD HEALTH, INC.,                                    B294567
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                         (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC659662)
    v.
    KIMBERLY-CLARK CORP.,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Ann I. Jones, Judge. Affirmed.
    Munger, Tolles & Olson, George M. Garvey, Mark R.
    Yohalem, Jordan D. Segall, and Lauren C. Barnett, for Plaintiff
    and Appellant.
    Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr.,
    Julian W. Poon, Theane Evangelis, and William F. Cole, for
    Defendant and Respondent.
    1
    When Delaware corporation Kimberly-Clark (Kimberly-
    Clark) spun off its healthcare division to create a new Delaware
    company, Halyard Health (Halyard), the two companies agreed
    Halyard would indemnify Kimberly-Clark for any liability
    resulting from many litigation matters. Among the matters was
    a recently filed class action in the Central District of California
    concerning surgical gowns sold by Kimberly-Clark. Punitive
    damages were ultimately awarded against Kimberly-Clark in
    that class action, and Halyard later filed suit in Los Angeles
    Superior Court seeking a declaratory judgment that it (Halyard)
    did not have to provide indemnity for the punitive damages
    award. The merits of whether indemnity is required is not the
    question before us. Instead, we consider a logically prior
    question, namely, whether the indemnification dispute is
    sufficiently related to California for courts of this state to exercise
    personal jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.    Halyard and Kimberly-Clark’s Dueling Complaints
    for Declaratory Relief
    Kimberly-Clark is a Delaware corporation with its principal
    place of business in Texas. Approximately 350 of its 42,000
    employees work in California, and approximately six percent of
    its global net sales in 2017 were in California. Its consumer
    brands include Kleenex, Scott, and Huggies diapers. Until
    October 2014, Kimberly-Clark also had a healthcare division that
    produced, among other things, surgical gowns.
    In October 2014, Kimberly-Clark’s healthcare division was
    spun off into Halyard, “a newly created, standalone, publicly
    2
    traded entity.”1 Halyard is a Delaware corporation with its
    principal place of business in Georgia. The terms of the spinoff
    transaction were memorialized in a “Distribution Agreement”
    negotiated and executed in Texas. The Distribution Agreement
    contains a Delaware choice of law provision and further provides
    that both parties agreed to submit to the non-exclusive
    jurisdiction of state and federal courts in Delaware.
    The Distribution Agreement requires Halyard to indemnify
    Kimberly-Clark for specified liabilities related to its former
    healthcare division. Section 6.11(a) of the Distribution
    Agreement provides, with certain exceptions we need not
    describe, that “[Halyard] shall assume and pay all Liabilities that
    may result from the Assumed Actions and all fees and costs
    relating to the defense of the Assumed Actions.” An
    accompanying schedule of “Assumed Actions” lists 27 litigation
    matters, including a complaint filed by Dr. Hrayr Hrayr
    Shahinian against Kimberly-Clark in the Central District of
    California two days before Halyard and Kimberly-Clark executed
    the Distribution Agreement.2
    1
    Halyard later changed its name to Avanos Medical, Inc.
    Following the parties’ practice, we continue to refer to the
    company as Halyard.
    2
    The list of assumed actions is not exhaustive. The
    Distribution Agreement defines “‘assumed actions’” to mean
    “those cases, claims and investigations, whether arising before or
    after [midnight on the distribution date] (in which any Kimberly-
    Clark Party or any Affiliate of a Kimberly-Clark Party, other
    than Halyard and its Subsidiaries, is a defendant or the party
    against whom the claim or investigation is directed), primarily
    related to the Halyard Business, including those listed on
    Schedule 6.11(a) as ‘assumed actions,’ but expressly excluding
    3
    Dr. Shahinian’s class action complaint asserted claims
    against Kimberly-Clark for fraudulent concealment, fraud,
    negligent misrepresentation, unfair business practices (Bus. &
    Prof. Code, § 17200), and false advertising (Bus. & Prof. Code,
    § 17500) based on the company’s misrepresentations regarding
    the protection afforded by its MicroCool Breathable High
    Performance Surgical Gowns. Halyard was subsequently added
    as a defendant based on its continued marketing of MicroCool
    gowns. The parties refer to this case as Bahamas after Bahamas
    Surgery Center, LLC, which ultimately took over as lead
    plaintiff.3
    The Bahamas court certified damages/restitution and
    injunctive relief classes of “entities and natural persons in
    California who purchased the MicroCool Gowns from February
    12, 2012 up to and including January 11, 2015 . . . .” Following a
    jury trial, the court entered a judgment for the plaintiffs,
    including punitive damages awards of $350 million against
    Kimberly-Clark and $100 million against Halyard.4 The district
    court denied various posttrial motions filed by Kimberly-Clark
    and Halyard (an appeal is now pending in the Ninth Circuit) but
    those listed on Schedule 6.11(a) as ‘excluded actions’ . . . .”
    (Emphasis added.)
    3
    Bahamas Surgery Center, LLC, et al. v. Kimberly-Clark
    Corporation and Halyard Health, Inc. (C.D.Cal. No. 2:14-cv-
    08390-DMG-PLA).
    4
    The judgment also awarded $3,889,327 in compensatory
    damages and $1,062,391.75 in prejudgment interest against
    Kimberly-Clark, and $261,445 in compensatory damages and
    $43,788.99 in prejudgment interest against Halyard.
    4
    reduced the punitive damages awards to roughly $19 million
    against Kimberly-Clark and $1 million against Halyard.
    After the Bahamas jury returned its verdict (and before the
    district court reduced the punitive damages awards), Halyard
    “notified Kimberly-Clark that [it was] reserv[ing] [its] rights to
    challenge any purported obligation to indemnify Kimberly-Clark
    for the punitive damages awarded against them.”5 Kimberly-
    Clark responded that any such reservation of rights would
    constitute an actual or anticipatory breach of Halyard’s
    obligations under the Distribution Agreement.
    Halyard then commenced this action seeking a declaratory
    judgment that it has no obligation to indemnify Kimberly-Clark
    for punitive damages awarded in the Bahamas litigation or any
    “[e]xpenses or [l]osses . . . associated with an award of punitive
    damages.” Halyard alleges it is not obligated to pay such
    indemnification because “California law and public policy
    prohibit indemnification for punitive damages” and because
    “rules of contract construction under both California and
    Delaware law require particularly clear, explicit, and
    unmistakable language before imposing on one party an
    obligation to indemnify the other for the wrongful acts of the
    indemnitee.”
    The day after Halyard filed its California declaratory relief
    action, Kimberly-Clark filed a mirror-image complaint in
    Delaware seeking a declaration that Halyard must indemnify it
    for all damages, including punitive damages; that Halyard had
    anticipatorily breached the Distribution Agreement; and that
    5
    Halyard conceded its obligation to indemnify Kimberly-
    Clark for compensatory damages.
    5
    Halyard should be estopped from asserting it is not required to
    indemnify Kimberly-Clark for all damages. Later, on May 8,
    2017, Kimberly-Clark sent Halyard a letter demanding Halyard
    advance Kimberly-Clark’s legal fees in the Bahamas litigation, in
    certain legal proceedings filed against Kimberly-Clark in other
    states, and in the dueling declaratory relief suits in California
    and Delaware. Kimberly-Clark also demanded, among other
    things, that Halyard confirm it would take no positions adverse
    to Kimberly-Clark in the assumed actions, that Halyard file no
    papers in these cases without Kimberly-Clark’s written consent,
    and that Halyard provide Kimberly-Clark “with all files and work
    product” in these cases upon request.
    Halyard amended its complaint to address the demands
    made by Kimberly-Clark in the May 8th letter. That is, in
    addition to seeking a declaration that it is not required to
    indemnify Kimberly-Clark for punitive damages, Halyard’s
    operative complaint also seeks a declaration that it is not
    required to comply with any of the other demands presented in
    the May 8th letter.
    B.     Kimberly-Clark Contests Personal Jurisdiction in
    California
    Halyard moved to stay or dismiss the declaratory relief
    action Kimberly-Clark filed in Delaware regarding the
    Distribution Agreement (the mirror-image of this case). The
    Delaware Court of Chancery granted the request for a stay of the
    Delaware declaratory relief action. The Delaware judge
    expressed “significant doubts that Kimberly-Clark will be able to
    prevail on a personal jurisdiction defense in the California
    indemnity action,” but concluded “whether or not my doubts are
    6
    justified, fundamental principles of comity suggest that the
    California court and not this court should make the
    determination whether it has personal jurisdiction over
    Kimberly-Clark in the first instance. [¶] If it turns out that my
    doubts were incorrect and the California court declines to
    exercise personal jurisdiction, no significant harm will be done
    because this case, which I am staying . . . can be reactivated after
    the California court rules on that issue . . . .”
    Soon after the Delaware Court of Chancery imposed its
    stay, the trial court in this case heard argument on a motion
    Kimberly-Clark filed to quash service of summons for lack of
    personal jurisdiction. Halyard conceded California courts do not
    have general jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark, but the parties
    disagreed over whether there is a proper basis for specific
    jurisdiction.
    The trial court (with a substitute judge presiding in place of
    the originally assigned judge) prepared a tentative order denying
    Kimberly-Clark’s motion to quash. The court’s tentative
    reasoned there was personal jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark
    because, in the tentative’s words, Halyard’s declaratory judgment
    action “is related to [Kimberly-Clark’s] in-state activity (i.e., its
    sale of surgical gowns). Such in-state activity is the basis for
    Bahamas and the ensuing punitive damages award, for which
    [Kimberly-Clark] has sought indemnification pursuant to the
    Distribution Agreement. [Halyard], in turn, now seeks a
    declaration of the parties’ rights and duties under the
    Distribution Agreement, which specifically lists Bahamas in the
    attached schedule of ‘Assumed Actions.’” The trial court,
    however, did not immediately adopt its tentative order as its final
    ruling. Instead, it permitted the parties to submit supplemental
    7
    briefing on whether specific jurisdiction is reasonable and
    whether narrowing the case to address indemnification only in
    the Bahamas litigation would violate the rule against claim-
    splitting.
    When the parties returned for further argument after
    supplemental briefing, the trial court (with the originally
    assigned judge again presiding) viewed the matter differently.
    The trial court granted Kimberly-Clark’s motion to quash
    because it believed “there is no connection between the forum and
    the specific claim at issue, and thus, it is irrelevant that
    [Kimberly-Clark] sold ‘millions’ of surgical gowns in California
    and earned ‘millions’ in sales revenues.” The trial court found it
    unimportant that Halyard “partly seeks a declaration of its
    obligation to indemnify [Kimberly-Clark] for punitive damages
    awarded in Bahamas.” This was so, the trial court reasoned,
    “because Bahamas (a class action by California plaintiffs[ ] for
    torts arising from the sale of [Kimberly-Clark’s] surgical gowns in
    California) is distinct from the present indemnity action.”
    II. DISCUSSION
    The United States Supreme Court recently set the ground
    rules for our resolution of the key issue presented in this appeal:
    “In order for a state court to exercise specific jurisdiction, ‘the
    suit’ must ‘aris[e] out of or relat[e] to the defendant’s contacts
    with the forum’”; in other words, there must be “a connection
    between the forum and the specific claims at issue.” (Bristol-
    Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court (2017) ___ U.S. ___, ___ [
    137 S.Ct. 1773
    , 1780-1781] (Bristol-Myers).) That is easier said than
    applied because personal jurisdiction does not turn on
    “‘mechanical’ tests” (Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz (1985) 471
    
    8 U.S. 462
    , 478 (Burger King)) and there is room for reasonable
    disagreement about what it means for one thing to arise out of or
    relate to another.
    Ultimately, we are convinced Kimberly-Clark has the
    better view of the limits of due process as most recently described
    by the high court. Halyard identifies two respects in which, it
    says, Kimberly-Clark purposefully availed itself of California as a
    forum: first, by selling surgical gowns in this state, and second,
    by executing the Distribution Agreement, which Halyard
    characterizes as a “California-directed contract.” These theories
    of purposeful availment define the universe of relevant contacts
    with California, which are insufficient to confer jurisdiction here.
    As to the former, Kimberly-Clark’s gown sales are not sufficiently
    connected to the gist of this declaratory relief action, namely, the
    meaning and enforceability of the Distribution Agreement. The
    connection is too attenuated because we cannot presume, when
    undertaking our jurisdictional analysis, that California
    substantive law (e.g., the asserted rule against indemnification of
    punitive damages) will apply when resolving the merits of the
    dispute. (Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc. (1984) 
    465 U.S. 770
    ,
    778 (Keeton).) Second, listing the California action in the
    Distribution Agreement as one among a number of others to be
    indemnified does not suffice to make the agreement “California-
    directed” in any meaningful sense.
    A.    General Legal Framework
    California’s long-arm statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 410.10)
    authorizes California courts to exercise jurisdiction on any basis
    not inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States or the
    Constitution of California. “The Due Process Clause of the
    9
    Fourteenth Amendment constrains a State’s authority to bind a
    nonresident defendant to a judgment of its courts. [Citation.]
    Although a nonresident’s physical presence within the territorial
    jurisdiction of the court is not required, the nonresident generally
    must have ‘certain minimum contacts . . . such that the
    maintenance of the suit does not offend “traditional notions of
    fair play and substantial justice.”’ International Shoe Co. v.
    Washington[ (1945)] 
    326 U.S. 310
    , 316 [(International Shoe)]
    (quoting Milliken v. Meyer[ (1940)] 
    311 U.S. 457
    , 463[ ]).”
    (Walden v. Fiore (2014) 
    571 U.S. 277
    , 283.)
    Personal jurisdiction may be had on either a general (all-
    purpose) or specific (case-linked) basis. (Bristol-Myers, supra, ___
    U.S. at p. ___ [137 S.Ct. at pp. 1779-1780].) A nonresident
    defendant is subject to the general jurisdiction of the forum if the
    defendant is “‘essentially at home in the forum State,’” which, for
    corporations, is commonly the place of incorporation or where the
    corporation maintains its principal place of business. (Daimler
    AG v. Bauman (2014) 
    571 U.S. 117
    , 137-139.) It is obvious
    California courts do not have general jurisdiction over Kimberly-
    Clark under this standard and Halyard does not contend
    otherwise.
    “Specific jurisdiction is very different. In order for a state
    court to exercise specific jurisdiction, ‘the suit’ must ‘aris[e] out of
    or relat[e] to the defendant’s contacts with the forum.’
    [Citations.] In other words, there must be ‘an affiliation between
    the forum and the underlying controversy, principally, [an]
    activity or an occurrence that takes place in the forum State and
    is therefore subject to the State’s regulation.’ [Citation.] For this
    reason, ‘specific jurisdiction is confined to adjudication of issues
    deriving from, or connected with, the very controversy that
    10
    establishes jurisdiction.’ [Citation.]” (Bristol-Myers, supra, ___
    U.S. at p. ___ [137 S.Ct. at p. 1780].)
    “When determining whether specific jurisdiction exists,
    courts consider the ‘“relationship among the defendant, the
    forum, and the litigation.”’ [Citations.] A court may exercise
    specific jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant only if: (1) ‘the
    defendant has purposefully availed himself or herself of forum
    benefits’ [citation]; (2) ‘the “controversy is related to or ‘arises out
    of’ [the] defendant’s contacts with the forum”’ [citations]; and (3)
    ‘“the assertion of personal jurisdiction would comport with ‘fair
    play and substantial justice’”’ [citations].” (Pavlovich v. Superior
    Court (2002) 
    29 Cal.4th 262
    , 269; see also Gilmore Bank v.
    AsiaTrust New Zealand Ltd. (2014) 
    223 Cal.App.4th 1558
    , 1568;
    Greenwell v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co. (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 783
    ,
    792.)
    B.     This Litigation Does Not Arise Out of or Relate to
    Kimberly-Clark’s Medical Gown Sales and Marketing
    in California
    Kimberly-Clark does not dispute it sold millions of surgical
    gowns in California. The issue is whether this conduct, which
    was sufficient to support personal jurisdiction in a case alleging
    fraud in the manner by which Kimberly-Clark marketed the
    gowns in California (Bahamas), is sufficient to support personal
    jurisdiction in a case concerning whether Halyard may be
    required to indemnify Kimberly-Clark for punitive damages.
    Halyard contends there is a “clear relationship” between
    Kimberly-Clark’s California gown sales and Halyard’s action to
    prevent Kimberly-Clark from evading payment of a punitive
    damages judgment resulting from those sales. Halyard’s
    11
    characterization of this action, however, implicitly if not explicitly
    presumes that enforceability of the Distribution Agreement’s
    indemnification provision will be governed by California law.6
    Even if this presumption were well-founded—and we do not hold
    that it is—it has no place in our jurisdictional analysis.
    In Keeton, supra, 
    465 U.S. 770
    , the United States Supreme
    Court considered whether the defendant publisher could be sued
    for defamation in New Hampshire (despite the fact that “the
    bulk” of the plaintiff’s alleged injuries were sustained outside
    New Hampshire) when New Hampshire was the only state in
    which the action was not time-barred and the plaintiff would be
    able to recover for damages caused in all other states. (Id. at p.
    773.) Addressing the purported unfairness of permitting New
    Hampshire personal jurisdiction in these circumstances, the
    Court explained that “[t]he question of the applicability of New
    Hampshire’s statute of limitations to claims for out-of-state
    damages presents itself in the course of litigation only after
    jurisdiction over [the defendant] is established, and we do not
    think that such choice-of-law concerns should complicate or
    distort the jurisdictional inquiry.” (Id. at p. 778.) These choice of
    6
    Halyard, for instance, writes in its opening brief that
    “Kimberly-Clark established minimum contacts with California
    when it expressly crafted the Distribution Agreement to shift
    liability that it knew would be imposed in California should
    Kimberly-Clark be found liable for its allegedly tortious
    California conduct.” The same brief also maintains “Kimberly-
    Clark availed itself of forum benefits again when it demanded
    that Halyard pay the punitive damages in [the Bahamas]
    judgment, in contravention of California public policy.”
    12
    law concerns, in the high court’s view, have “nothing to do with”
    the jurisdictional analysis. (Ibid.)
    Halyard’s presumption that California substantive law will
    apply in resolving this declaratory relief action is not identical to
    the position of the publisher in Keeton, but the impermissible
    complicating effect is similar. In Keeton, choice of law concerns
    were a distraction from the “proper[ ] focus[ ] on ‘the relationship
    among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation’” and were
    therefore put aside for purposes of analyzing personal
    jurisdiction. (Keeton, supra, 465 U.S. at p. 775.) Here, it is more
    difficult to disentangle the choice of law issue from the
    jurisdictional analysis because Halyard suggests California’s
    public policy regarding indemnification of punitive damages is
    what establishes the relationship between the defendant, the
    forum, and the litigation.
    To wit, Halyard asserts the indemnification dispute is
    related to the forum because denying indemnity impermissibly
    undercuts a judgment rendered in the forum for Kimberly-Clark’s
    activity in the forum. Keeton instructs, however, that this is not
    the right framing for analyzing personal jurisdiction. Whether
    enforceability is governed by California law has nothing to do
    with whether enforceability may be determined by a California
    court. The required relationship among Kimberly-Clark,
    California, and this litigation cannot be based on what Halyard’s
    argument assumes, i.e., that California substantive law applies.7
    7
    We do not make choice of law assumptions, but we note
    Halyard’s assumption is not one that leaps off the pages of the
    Distribution Agreement. The parties agreed there that the
    agreement “shall be governed by and construed and enforced in
    accordance with the substantive laws of the State of Delaware
    13
    Halyard nonetheless offers two alternative theories as to
    how this litigation arises out of or relates to Kimberly-Clark’s
    conduct in California that do not depend on a choice of law
    assumption. Halyard argues (1) the indemnification dispute
    arises out of Kimberly-Clark’s participation in California court
    proceedings in Bahamas, and (2) if Kimberly-Clark had never
    sold gowns in California, there would be no California judgment
    to indemnify.
    The first of these theories can be dismissed out of hand.
    Kimberly-Clark did not “purposefully avail[ ] itself” of the
    benefits of California law by defending a lawsuit here. (Burger
    King, supra, 471 U.S. at p. 475 [“[the] ‘purposeful availment’
    requirement ensures that a defendant will not be haled into a
    jurisdiction solely as a result of . . . the ‘unilateral activity of
    another party or a third person’”].)
    The second theory rests on the observation that the
    indemnification dispute is an integral part of a causal chain that
    includes the Bahamas judgment and the gown sales that
    prompted it—in Halyard’s words, that “[b]ut for the punitive
    damages awarded in Bahamas, this action would not exist.” The
    suggestion that this “but for” causal link provides the nexus
    required for personal jurisdiction, however, represents a
    “mechanical” approach at odds with our obligation to consider
    “the quality and nature of [forum contacts] in relation to the fair
    and orderly administration of the laws which it was the purpose
    of the due process clause to insure.” (International Shoe, supra,
    and the federal laws of the United States of America applicable
    therein, as though all acts and omissions related hereto occurred
    in Delaware.”
    14
    326 U.S. at p. 319; see also Jayone Foods, Inc. v. Aekyung
    Industrial Co. Ltd. (2019) 
    31 Cal.App.5th 543
    , 561 [“The
    California Supreme Court has made clear . . . that neither a
    ‘proximate cause’ test nor a ‘but for’ test is the proper standard
    for evaluating whether a cause of action is sufficiently related to
    a defendant’s forum contacts to warrant the exercise of
    jurisdiction”].)
    This case is not primarily about Kimberly-Clark’s
    representations to California consumers. (See, e.g., Asahi Metal
    Industry Co., Ltd. v. Superior Court of California (1987) 
    480 U.S. 102
    , 114-115 [personal jurisdiction lacking in part because
    California had only a slight interest in a dispute that was
    “primarily about indemnification rather than safety standards”].)
    It is about how two non-California corporate entities intended to
    (or were legally permitted to) allocate risk associated with
    various pending and contemplated lawsuits as they parted ways.
    That a judgment was entered in California in favor of certain
    third parties (the Bahamas plaintiffs), and that this judgment
    conceivably could have played some role (along with litigation in
    other jurisdictions in which assumed actions were pending) in
    prompting Kimberly-Clark to seek a declaration regarding its
    indemnification obligations, does not establish the requisite
    connection between this forum and the specific claims at issue in
    this suit. (Bristol-Myers, supra, ___ U.S. at p. ___ [137 S.Ct. at p.
    1781]; see also id. at p. ___ [137 S.Ct. at p. 1783] [“‘[A]
    defendant’s relationship with a . . . third party, standing alone, is
    an insufficient basis for jurisdiction’”].)
    Halyard resists this conclusion, citing several out-of-state
    insurance cases in support of its view that indemnification
    disputes necessarily arise out of forum contacts on which the
    15
    insured’s liability to third parties is premised. But these cases
    are unreliable guides because they do not identify a relationship
    between forum contacts and the specific claims at issue, which is
    what the high court’s most recent personal jurisdiction cases
    require.
    In St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Co. v. International
    Playtex, Inc. (Kan. 1989) 
    777 P.2d 1259
     (St. Paul Surplus), for
    instance, an insurer sought a declaratory judgment that it was
    not obligated to indemnify its insured for punitive damages
    awarded in a product liability action. (Id. at p. 1261.) The
    product liability case was adjudicated in Kansas, but the insured,
    Playtex, contended Kansas lacked personal jurisdiction in the
    declaratory judgment action. (Id. at p. 1262.) The Kansas
    Supreme Court acknowledged “no activity took place in Kansas
    with regard to the formation of the insurance contracts” but
    emphasized “the parties anticipated that claims under the
    policies might arise in Kansas” because “a number of provisions
    [were] designed to comply with various insurance laws and
    regulations” of Kansas and other states. (Id. at p. 1265.) The
    Kansas court further emphasized “Playtex purposefully
    advertised and sold its tampons in Kansas.” (Id. at p. 1266.)
    The reasoning in St. Paul Surplus does not address the
    relationship between the indemnification dispute and Playtex’s
    distribution of tampons in Kansas. Rather, it suggests that
    notwithstanding the attenuated relationship, Playtex’s other
    Kansas-directed activities justified personal jurisdiction.
    Similarly, in Capitol Specialty Insurance Corp. v. Splash
    Dogs, Inc. (S.D.Ohio 2011) 
    801 F.Supp.2d 657
     (Capitol Specialty),
    a federal district court in Ohio determined a declaratory
    judgment action brought by an insurer against its insured arose
    16
    from the insured’s forum activities that supported specific
    jurisdiction in an underlying lawsuit. (Id. at pp. 666-667, 670.)
    Applying a proximate cause test, the court reasoned “if an
    insured either transacts business in a state other than the one in
    which he or she resides, or tortiously injures someone in such a
    state, it is reasonably foreseeable that insurance coverage issues
    may arise from that conduct.” (Id. at p. 666.) Insofar as the
    specific claims at issue in such insurance coverage disputes may
    have little or nothing to do with the forum conduct that prompted
    them, however, this mode of reasoning is not consistent with the
    rule articulated in Bristol-Myers.
    In Employers Mutual Casualty Co. v. Bartile Roofs, Inc.
    (10th Cir. 2010) 
    618 F.3d 1153
     (Employers Mutual), an insurer
    sought a declaratory judgment that it was not obligated to defend
    and indemnify its insured, a Utah corporation, in connection with
    the insured’s work on a resort in Wyoming. (Id. at pp. 1156-
    1157.) The Tenth Circuit held the insured was subject to
    personal jurisdiction in Wyoming under either a “but for” or
    “proximate cause” approach. As to the latter, the Employers
    Mutual court reasoned “[the insured’s] allegedly negligent work
    [was] relevant to the merits of the declaratory judgment action.”
    (Id. at p. 1161.) This is no more accurate, however, than
    suggesting the permeability of MicroCool gowns is somehow
    relevant to the merits of this indemnity dispute. The allegedly
    negligent work prompted the declaratory judgment action, but it
    did not give rise to the indemnification rights at issue in the
    declaratory judgment action.
    Finally, Halyard tries to pull too much out of the partially-
    overruled Vons Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc. (1996) 
    14 Cal.4th 434
     (Vons), a case in which Jack-in-the-Box’s California-
    17
    based parent company sued Vons in California for supplying its
    restaurants with contaminated beef. (Vons, 
    supra,
     14 Cal.4th at
    p. 440.) Vons filed a cross-complaint against non-California Jack-
    in-the-Box franchisees, among others, alleging they did not
    properly cook the beef and seeking damages and indemnification.
    (Id. at pp. 440-444.) The non-California franchisees contested
    personal jurisdiction in California, and our Supreme Court ruled
    the franchisees “purposefully availed themselves of benefits in
    the forum by reaching out to forum residents to create an ongoing
    franchise relationship” (id. at p. 449) and this relationship “in the
    forum drew these defendants and Vons into a relationship as
    alleged joint tortfeasors, with some joint liability and rights of
    indemnification” (id. at p. 456). The Vons court further held “the
    franchise relationship, with its uniform standards for cooking
    food, training employees, and buying equipment, itself was a
    source of injury to Vons,” such that Vons’s cross-claims “arose out
    of the contractual relationship between [the franchisees and
    franchisor], a relationship that had a substantial connection to
    California.” (Id. at p. 457.)
    Halyard contends that “if an indemnification relationship
    forms a substantial relationship between the parties’ conduct
    [outside of California] and their contract [with California
    residents], the relationship necessarily runs in both directions.”
    But that is not the right view of the role of the indemnification
    relationship discussed in Vons. The indemnification relationship
    did not “form” a substantial connection between the franchisees’
    preparation of contaminated beef and their franchise agreements.
    Rather, the indemnification relationship was itself a product of
    the franchisees’ franchise agreements such that Vons’s claims
    based on the indemnification relationship arose out of the contract
    18
    activity that created it. Here, by contrast, Kimberly-Clark’s sales
    of surgical gowns in California did not create the indemnification
    relationship between it and Halyard. A separate act—the two
    non-California companies’ execution of the Distribution
    Agreement in Texas—created that relationship.
    The bottom line is that Kimberly-Clark’s gown sales in
    California are insufficiently connected to the specific claim in this
    lawsuit, namely whether the Distribution Agreement’s indemnity
    obligation is enforceable. Personal jurisdiction therefore may not
    be had insofar as Halyard relies on the gown sales as the relevant
    purposeful availment.
    C.      The Distribution Agreement Is Not a “California-
    Directed” Contract Conferring Personal Jurisdiction
    A defendant need not ever “physically enter the forum
    [s]tate” to be subject to personal jurisdiction. (Burger King,
    supra, 471 U.S. at p. 476.) “So long as a commercial actor’s
    efforts are ‘purposefully directed’ toward residents of another
    State, [the Supreme Court] ha[s] consistently rejected the notion
    that an absence of physical contacts can defeat personal
    jurisdiction there. [Citations.]” (Ibid.)
    In Burger King, the Supreme Court ruled the business
    endeavors of a Michigan resident who purchased a Burger King
    franchise were purposefully directed toward Florida, even though
    the franchise owner had never been to Florida, because “he
    entered into a carefully structured 20-year relationship that
    envisioned continuing and wide-reaching contacts with” Burger
    King Corporation, the franchisor headquartered in Florida. (Id.
    at pp. 479-482.) The Court also emphasized that the franchise
    agreement at issue in that case included a Florida choice of law
    19
    provision. (Id. at pp. 481-482.) Distinguishing Keeton and other
    cases holding that a choice of law analysis or determination is not
    relevant to personal jurisdiction, the Court explained that
    contracting parties’ choice (right or wrong) of the substantive law
    that would apply was relevant and “reinforced [the defendant’s]
    deliberate affiliation with the forum State and the reasonable
    foreseeability of possible litigation there.” (Id. at p. 482.)
    Halyard contends Kimberly-Clark’s execution of what
    Halyard says is a “California-directed” Distribution Agreement
    supports personal jurisdiction in this state. There is no
    similarity, however, between Kimberly-Clark and the out-of-state
    franchise owner in Burger King. Unlike the Burger King
    Corporation that was incorporated in the forum state (Florida),
    neither Kimberly-Clark nor Halyard are California corporations.
    The Distribution Agreement was negotiated and executed
    entirely in Texas, not California in any part. Kimberly-Clark did
    request that Bahamas be included among the 27 expressly
    assumed actions in the Distribution Agreement, but nothing
    suggests Kimberly-Clark was then aware (two days after the
    complaint was filed) that the Bahamas case was more likely than
    any other to prompt Halyard to dispute its indemnification
    obligations. And the parties’ choice of law selection here (again
    quite the opposite of Burger King) reflects a deliberate affiliation
    with Delaware—Kimberly-Clark and Halyard’s state of
    incorporation—not California.
    Halyard nevertheless cites several unpublished district
    court cases for the proposition that “courts have repeatedly held
    that a defendant purposefully avails itself of the forum by
    contracting for coverage in that forum.” (National Casualty Co. v.
    National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (C.D.Ill., Mar. 6,
    20
    2017, No. 16-CV-2145) 
    2017 WL 6945571
    , Massachusetts Bay
    Insurance Co. v. Portland Water Dist. (D.N.H., May 10, 2000, No.
    CIV. 99-487-M) 
    2000 WL 1499493
    , and United Services Auto
    Assn. v. Cregor (N.D.Ill. 1985) 
    617 F.Supp. 1053
    . But see, e.g.,
    Hiscox Insurance Co., Inc. v. Bordenave (S.D.N.Y. June 26, 2019,
    No. 18 Civ. 10222) 
    2019 WL 2616338
    , *8 [New York long-arm
    statute did not provide personal jurisdiction over non-New York
    defendants in declaratory judgment action based on insurance
    contract even though insurance claim arose from litigation in
    New York]; National Indemnity Co. v. Pierce Waste Oil Services,
    Inc. (E.D.Mo. 1990) 
    740 F.Supp. 721
    , 724 [Missouri long-arm
    statute did not provide personal jurisdiction over non-Missouri
    defendant in declaratory judgment action based on insurance
    contract even though insurance claim arose from litigation in
    Missouri]). The non-binding cases Halyard cites, which concern
    insurance relationships different from the indemnity agreement
    at issue here, do not persuade us the Distribution Agreement is
    California-directed in any meaningful sense.
    Rather, considering the “prior negotiations and
    contemplated future consequences, along with the terms of the
    contract and the parties’ actual course of dealing” (Burger King,
    supra, 471 U.S. at p. 479), the pertinent aspect of the
    Distribution Agreement is best described as indemnity-directed,
    not California-directed. That is, Kimberly-Clark wanted
    assurance that liability arising from the acts of its former
    healthcare division would be compensated wherever it might
    arise (other than as specified in the list of excluded actions) and
    there was no particular focus on California over any other
    litigation forum. The parties’ agreement to define the universe of
    required indemnity so broadly does not create jurisdiction to
    21
    determine the meaning and enforceability of the Distribution
    Agreement everywhere around the world that liability might be
    had and indemnity required. To the contrary, the
    constitutionally required minimum contacts between the forum
    and the litigation must be present, and—as to this specific
    dispute—such contacts with California are lacking.
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s order is affirmed. Kimberly-Clark shall
    recover its costs on appeal.
    BAKER, J.
    I concur:
    KIM, J.
    22
    Halyard Health, Inc. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp. – B294567
    RUBIN, P.J. – Dissenting:
    Does a cause of action for declaratory relief regarding
    contractual indemnification solely arise from or relate to the
    contract itself, or does it also arise from or relate to the
    underlying injury-producing conduct for which indemnification is
    sought? The answer, I believe, is “Yes.” The majority disagrees.
    Hence, my dissent.
    FACTUAL SUMMARY
    The relevant facts and procedure are not seriously in
    dispute, and are fully described by the majority. Briefly,
    Kimberly-Clark manufactured and sold a great many products,
    among them medical gowns. It advertised its High Performance
    Gowns as satisfying an industry standard known as “AAMI Level
    4,” providing protection from the transfer of bodily fluids,
    bacteria and infection between patient and health care
    professional. Class plaintiffs in the underlying action alleged
    that this representation was untrue; the medical gowns failed the
    AAMI Level 4 test, many times catastrophically. Kimberly-Clark
    knew this, and nonetheless continued to market the gowns, for
    years, as meeting AAMI Level 4 standards.
    The underlying action, known as the Bahamas case, was a
    California federal class action brought by purchasers of the
    gowns, alleging fraud.
    Around the time the Bahamas case was filed, Kimberly-
    Clark had spun off its health care business to Halyard, resulting
    in Kimberly-Clark and Halyard both being named defendants in
    the Bahamas case, although Kimberly-Clark’s liability was based
    1
    on years of selling the gowns and Halyard’s was based on only
    weeks of sales.
    As between Kimberly-Clark and Halyard, the contract
    spinning off the health care business (known as the “Distribution
    Agreement”) provided that Halyard would defend and indemnify
    Kimberly-Clark in connection with a list of pending litigation,
    including expressly the Bahamas case.
    The Bahamas case ended with a verdict in favor of the
    plaintiff class on its cause of action for fraudulent concealment.
    Concluding Kimberly-Clark and Halyard had acted with malice,
    oppression or fraud, punitive damages were awarded. Although
    the punitive damage awards were later reduced, the jury initially
    awarded $350 million against Kimberly-Clark and $100 million
    against Halyard. The jury also awarded compensatory damages.
    Faced with Kimberly-Clark’s request that Halyard
    indemnify it for $350 million in punitive damages, and Halyard’s
    belief that indemnification for punitive damages is against
    California public policy, Halyard brought the current action
    against Kimberly-Clark for declaratory relief. Believing that
    punitive damages can be indemnified in Delaware, Kimberly-
    Clark brought a competing declaratory relief action in Delaware.
    The ultimate resolution of the liability for the punitive
    damage award against Kimberly-Clark will likely turn on issues
    of choice of law. Halyard prefers the law of California, as the
    state in which the punitive damages were awarded, while
    Kimberly-Clark prefers Delaware, as the state identified in the
    choice of law provision in the Distribution Agreement. That issue
    is not before us, although it apparently motivates the parties’
    litigation strategies. The sole issue on this appeal is whether
    2
    California has personal jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark in
    Halyard’s declaratory relief action.8
    It is undisputed that Kimberly-Clark and Halyard are not
    California entities; it is also undisputed that there is no basis for
    California to exert general jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark. The
    issue on appeal is whether California has specific jurisdiction
    over Kimberly-Clark in this declaratory relief action, due to
    Kimberly-Clark’s sale of the defective medical gowns in
    California.
    8
    The declaratory relief complaint, as originally filed, sought
    only declaratory relief that Halyard need not indemnify
    Kimberly-Clark for the punitive damage award in the Bahamas
    case. After it was filed, Kimberly-Clark made “additional
    demands against Halyard with respect to the California punitive
    damages award and various other pending lawsuits.” Halyard
    believed these demands were inconsistent with the Distribution
    Agreement and the parties’ obligations to each other, so amended
    its declaratory relief complaint to seek declaratory relief with
    respect to these demands as well. Because some of Kimberly-
    Clark’s demands challenged by Halyard related to litigation
    outside of California, Kimberly-Clark argues that the amended
    complaint complicates the personal jurisdiction analysis, as the
    declaratory relief action was now multi-jurisdictional. As I will
    discuss, I believe that California courts do have personal
    jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark with respect to Halyard’s
    complaint for declaratory relief regarding indemnity for the
    Bahamas punitive damages. Whether California courts also have
    specific jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark with respect to
    Halyard’s remaining claims for declaratory relief is beyond the
    scope of this appeal; Kimberly-Clark did not move to quash
    service on a case-by-case basis.
    3
    DISCUSSION
    1.     General Rules of Personal Jurisdiction
    California’s long-arm statute provides California courts
    may exercise jurisdiction as far as the limits of the due process
    clause. (Code Civ. Proc., § 410.10; Asahi Metal Industry Co. v.
    Superior Court of California (1987) 
    480 U.S. 102
    , 106.)
    In general, “for a state court to exercise specific
    jurisdiction, ‘the suit’ must ‘aris[e] out of or relat[e] to the
    defendant’s contacts with the forum.’ [Citations.] In other words,
    there must be ‘an affiliation between the forum and the
    underlying controversy, principally, [an] activity or an occurrence
    that takes place in the forum State and is therefore subject to the
    State’s regulation.’ [Citation.] For this reason, ‘specific
    jurisdiction is confined to adjudication of issues deriving from, or
    connected with, the very controversy that establishes
    jurisdiction.’ [Citation.]” (Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior
    Court (2017) ___ U.S. ___ [
    137 S.Ct. 1773
    , 1780] (Bristol-Myers).)
    The exercise of jurisdiction comports with the requirements
    of due process “ ‘ “if the defendant has such minimum contacts
    with the state that the assertion of jurisdiction does not violate
    ‘ “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” ’ ”
    [Citation.]’ [Citation.] ‘[T]he minimum contacts test asks
    “whether the ‘quality and nature’ of the defendant’s activity is
    such that it is ‘reasonable’ and ‘fair’ to require him to conduct his
    defense in that State.” [Citation.] The test “is not susceptible of
    mechanical application; rather, the facts of each case must be
    weighed to determine whether the requisite ‘affiliating
    circumstances’ are present.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Jayone
    Foods, Inc. v. Aekyung Industrial Co. Ltd. (2019) 
    31 Cal.App.5th 543
    , 552-553 (Jayone).)
    4
    Foreseeability is relevant to the analysis; the defendant’s
    conduct and connection with the forum State must be such that
    the defendant “should reasonably anticipate being haled into
    court there.” (World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson (1980)
    
    444 U.S. 286
    , 297.)
    2.     The Three-Prong Test
    The majority has set out the well-settled, three-prong, test
    for specific jurisdiction. “ ‘When determining whether specific
    jurisdiction exists, courts consider the “ ‘relationship among the
    defendant, the forum, and the litigation.’ ” [Citation.] A court
    may exercise specific jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant
    only if: (1) “the defendant has purposefully availed himself or
    herself of forum benefits” [citation]; (2) “the ‘controversy is
    related to or “arises out of” [the] defendant’s contacts with the
    forum’ ” [citation]; and (3) “ ‘the assertion of personal jurisdiction
    would comport with “fair play and substantial justice” ’ ”
    [citation].’ [Citation.]” (Jayone, supra, 31 Cal.App.5th at p. 553.)
    When there is no conflict in the evidence, as is the case here, the
    question is one of the law and the reviewing court engages in an
    independent review of the record. (Ibid.)
    I now turn to an analysis of each of the three prongs.
    A.     Prefatory Statement – Observations of the Delaware
    Court
    In response to Halyard filing this declaratory relief action,
    Kimberly-Clark responded with a counter declaratory relief
    lawsuit in Delaware. Halyard successfully stayed the Delaware
    action on the basis that the California action had been first filed.
    In opposing Halyard’s motion to stay, Kimberly-Clark
    argued that the California courts were not capable of doing
    prompt and complete justice in this matter because California
    5
    lacked personal jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark. The Delaware
    court rejected the argument, stating in words that resonate, “As
    an initial matter, although I am not deciding that issue . . . , the
    argument seems to strain credibility to my eyes as a Delaware
    judge. [¶] The California federal court clearly was willing to
    exercise personal jurisdiction over Kimberly-Clark in the
    Bahamas action. The jury award in that action was based on
    Kimberly-Clark’s sales of nearly 3 million surgical gowns
    . . . resulting in nearly $18 million of revenue. The underlying
    disputes here arise over the indemnification obligations triggered
    by the Bahamas action. Then it dips into the other actions,
    which are related as well. When Kimberly-Clark and Halyard
    entered into the distribution agreement, it was certainly
    foreseeable that Halyard would have to indemnify Kimberly-
    Clark for events occurring in California, as Kimberly-Clark
    purposely availed itself of that state’s jurisdiction. [¶] For these
    reasons, . . . I have significant doubts that Kimberly-Clark will be
    able to prevail on a personal jurisdiction defense in the California
    indemnity action.”
    While the Delaware court stated it was not deciding the
    issue, the court’s analysis addressed all three elements of the
    three-prong test, and reached what I believe to be the clear,
    logical result, as I shall next discuss.
    B.     Prong One – Purposeful Availment
    It is not disputed that prong one is established. Prong one
    requires that the defendant purposefully avail itself of forum
    benefits. Here, Kimberly-Clark purposefully availed itself of
    forum benefits by selling millions of dollars of apparently
    defective medical gowns in California.
    6
    C.    Prong Two – Arising Out of or Relating To
    My parting of ways with the majority is founded on my
    view that the current litigation – seeking declaratory relief
    regarding indemnification for the punitive damages in the
    Bahamas case – arises out of, or is related to, the sale of the
    defective medical gowns. Halyard takes the position that the
    relation is clear; Kimberly-Clark argues that the sale of medical
    gowns is irrelevant to this action, which arises only from the
    Distribution Agreement between Kimberly-Clark and Halyard. I
    believe Halyard has the better argument. This is supported by
    both the interpretation of broad language of the test and the
    limited case authority the parties have supplied.
    1.     “Arising Out of or Relating To”
    The second prong does not require that the current
    litigation arise out of the defendant’s contacts with the forum
    state; instead, the test is in the disjunctive, and jurisdiction may
    be found also if the litigation is sufficiently related to the
    contacts. (Jayone, supra, 31 Cal.App.5th at pp. 559-560.) The
    most recent United States Supreme Court case on specific
    jurisdiction is Bristol-Myers which restated the “arise out of or
    relate to” test from two of its earlier jurisdiction opinions, Burger
    King Corp. v. Rudzewicz (1985) 
    471 U.S. 462
    , 472–473; and Helicopteros
    Nacionales de Colombia v. Hall (1984) 
    466 U.S. 408
    , 414. “In order for a
    state court to exercise specific jurisdiction, ‘the suit’ must ‘aris[e] out
    of or relat[e] to the defendant’s contacts with the forum.’ ” (Bristol-
    Myers, supra, 137 S.Ct at p. 1780.)
    Nothing in Bristol-Myers suggests the high court has narrowed
    or otherwise changed the “arise out of or relate to” standard. Rather,
    Bristol-Myers’s express holding is that the California Supreme Court’s
    application of a “sliding scale” approach to specific jurisdiction
    7
    (Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 783
    )
    was inconsistent with prior United States Supreme Court precedent.
    The high court found that the sliding scale standard resembled “a
    loose and spurious form of general jurisdiction.” (Bristol-Myers, supra,
    137 S.Ct at p. 1776). We have nothing of the sort here.
    Applying the Bristol-Myers arise out of/relate to test, I focus
    on “relate to,” which in my view, is significantly broader than
    “arising out of.” In one sense, it is difficult to imagine a more
    “related to” action than an indemnification claim between the two
    defendants in the very action that gave rise to the
    indemnification claim.
    In determining the meaning of “related to,” courts have
    generally chosen one of three different standards: proximate
    cause, but-for causation, or substantial connection. (Emplrs.
    Mut. Cas. Co. v. Bartile Roofs, Inc. (10th Cir. 2010) 
    618 F.3d 1153
    , 1160-1161.) California uses the substantial connection
    test. “ ‘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. Rather, as long as
    the claim bears a substantial connection to the nonresident’s
    forum contacts, the exercise of specific jurisdiction is appropriate.’
    [Citation.]” (Jayone, supra, 31 Cal.App.5th at p. 560.) “ ‘ “ ‘Only
    when the operative facts of the controversy are not related to the
    defendant’s contact with the state can it be said that the cause of
    action does not arise from that [contact.]’ ” [Citation.]’
    [Citations.]” (Ibid.)
    This broad construction of “relating to” is in line with the
    interpretation given the phrase in other contexts. A series of
    cases cited by our colleagues from the Fourth District makes the
    8
    point: “The Legislature’s use of the phrase ‘relating to’ compels
    our conclusion. (See Altria Group, Inc. v. Good (2008) 
    555 U.S. 70
    , 85, 
    129 S.Ct. 538
    , 
    172 L.Ed.2d 398
     [meaning of the key
    phrase ‘relating to’ is broad]; Morales v. Trans World Airlines,
    Inc. (1992) 
    504 U.S. 374
    , 383–384, 
    112 S.Ct. 2031
    , 
    119 L.Ed.2d 157
     [the ‘ordinary meaning of [“relating to”] is a broad one—“to
    stand in some relation; to have bearing or concern; to pertain;
    refer; to bring into association with or connection with,” Black’s
    Law Dictionary 1158 (5th ed. 1979)’]; Bono v. David (2007)
    
    147 Cal.App.4th 1055
    , 1067, 
    54 Cal.Rptr.3d 837
     [interpreting
    arbitration clause language ‘ “any claim arising from or related to
    this agreement” ’ as broad].)” (San Diego Unified School Dist. v.
    Yee (2018) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 723
    , 733.)
    Under this test, I have no difficulty concluding that the
    complaint – seeking a resolution of the dispute over which party
    is responsible for the punitive damages awarded against
    Kimberly-Clark in the Bahamas action – is related to the
    California conduct for which punitive damages were awarded
    against Kimberly-Clark in the first place. This case is not simply
    a forward-looking hypothetical dispute regarding whether the
    Distribution Agreement provides for indemnification of punitive
    damages; it is a tangible controversy regarding whether there is
    indemnification, born out of a California federal court’s award of
    punitive damages for fraudulent conduct which took place in
    California.
    To look at this case from the obverse, the second prong is
    not established only when the operative facts of the controversy
    are not related to the defendant’s forum conduct. Here, the
    operative facts of the controversy are (1) Kimberly-Clark got hit
    with a $350 million punitive damage award (later reduced) in the
    9
    Bahamas action; and (2) there was a contract by which Halyard
    agreed to indemnify Kimberly-Clark for damages in the Bahamas
    action. Even if Kimberly-Clark is correct that the second fact –
    the contract – is, on its own, unrelated to the company’s
    California conduct, the first fact – the punitive damage award in
    the Bahamas action – is. The relation is not merely tangential or
    but-for; the massive punitive damage award is inextricably
    intertwined with the advertising and sale of defective medical
    gowns in California which prompted it, and which the
    indemnification agreement contemplated.
    2.    Case Law is in Accord
    Neither party has cited to any California authority that
    applied the related to test to an indemnification claim. Bristol-
    Myers itself was not an indemnification case. Although
    significant case law in other jurisdictions holds that an
    indemnification action is related to the underlying judgment to be
    indemnified, the majority finds these cases “unreliable guides.” I
    disagree.
    In St. Paul Surplus Lines Inc. v. International Playtex, Inc.
    (Kan. 1989) 
    777 P.2d 1259
     (St. Paul), the defendant tampon
    manufacturer, Playtex, was sued in products liability in federal
    court in Kansas, resulting in a $10 million punitive damage
    award. When it sought to recover the punitive damages from its
    excess insurers, the insurers brought a declaratory relief action
    in Kansas state court seeking (and obtaining) a ruling that
    Kansas public policy prohibited indemnification for punitive
    damages. Playtex appealed, arguing that the Kansas court had
    no personal jurisdiction over it in the declaratory relief action,
    despite the fact that its sale of tampons in Kansas justified
    personal jurisdiction in the underlying products liability action.
    10
    (Id. at pp. 1263-1264.) In an argument identical to that made by
    Kimberly-Clark in this case, Playtex argued that “the current
    claim does not arise out of the use of its products sold in this
    state, but rather out of an insurance contract between
    nonresident corporations which have no connection to the State of
    Kansas.” (Id. at p. 1264.) The Kansas Supreme Court rejected
    the argument, explaining, “It was not error for the trial court to
    find that the declaratory judgment action was sufficiently
    connected to the sale of Playtex products in Kansas to warrant
    personal jurisdiction over Playtex. The declaratory judgment
    action requires us to determine whether coverage for punitive
    damages exists to protect Playtex in the underlying . . . damage
    action. The question of coverage arises from the actions taken by
    Playtex in selling its product in Kansas, which subsequently
    caused the death of a Kansas resident. The plaintiff insurers’
    claim for an insurance coverage determination lies in the wake of
    the commercial activities of Playtex in Kansas.” (Ibid.)
    The majority dismisses the St. Paul case by stating that it
    “does not address the relationship between the indemnification
    dispute and Playtex’s distribution of tampons in Kansas,” and
    instead suggesting St. Paul found jurisdiction based on Playtex’s
    “other Kansas-directed activities.” (Maj. Opn., p. 16.) As I have
    quoted, the St. Paul court did address the relationship, and found
    it sufficient. To the extent the St. Paul court mentioned any of
    Playtex’s other Kansas-directed activities, the court simply noted
    that there was language in the insurance policies specifically
    directed toward complying with Kansas law, which suggested
    that “the parties anticipated that claims under the policies might
    arise in the State of Kansas.” (St. Paul, supra, 777 P.2d at
    p. 1265.) Foreseeability of being haled into a forum’s court is
    11
    relevant to the personal jurisdiction inquiry. (World-Wide
    Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 
    supra,
     444 U.S. at p. 297.)
    St. Paul is in no way an outlier. In Employers Mutual
    Casualty Co. v. Bartile Roofs, Inc., supra, 
    618 F.3d 1153
    , the
    Tenth Circuit reached the same result, using the stricter
    probable cause test. In that case, a construction project in
    Wyoming went wrong, and lead to litigation. A Utah roofing
    subcontractor, who had worked on the project in Wyoming, was
    brought into the litigation, and tendered the dispute to its (Iowa)
    insurer. The insurer defended under a reservation of rights, and
    brought a declaratory relief action in federal court in Wyoming,
    arguing that it had no obligation to defend or indemnify its
    insured roofing subcontractor. The subcontractor challenged
    personal jurisdiction in Wyoming, on the basis that the dispute
    arose from the (non-Wyoming) insurance contract, rather than
    the Wyoming construction project. (Id. at pp. 1156-1158.) In
    determining the proper test to use for the second prong of specific
    jurisdiction, the Tenth Circuit declined to use substantial
    connection, and instead concluded that under either proximate
    cause or but-for causation, the element was satisfied. (Id. at
    p. 1161.) As to proximate cause, the court explained that the
    defendants’ allegedly negligent work on the Wyoming roof “is
    relevant to the merits of the declaratory judgment action. In the
    declaratory judgment action, [the insurer] seeks to avoid having
    to defend or indemnify [the roofer] for injuries arising out of the
    allegedly negligent work on the luxury hotel in Wyoming.” (Ibid.)
    Lastly, in Capitol Specialty Ins. Corp. v. Splash Dogs, LLC
    (S.D. Ohio 2011) 
    801 F.Supp.2d 657
    , the defendant in a federal
    action in Ohio sought insurance coverage, and the insurer
    brought a declaratory relief action, also in federal court in Ohio,
    12
    seeking a declaration that it had no indemnification obligation.
    The defendant challenged personal jurisdiction, arguing that the
    declaratory relief action did not arise from any of the business it
    had transacted in Ohio which led to the underlying action. The
    court disagreed, even under the strict proximate cause standard,
    explaining, “[T]here is a proximate, and not just a ‘but-for,’ causal
    connection between the actions that give rise to an underlying
    lawsuit and insurance coverage questions pertaining to that case.
    The Court noted, in addition, that if an insured either transacts
    business in a state other than the one in which he or she resides,
    or tortiously injures someone in such a state, it is reasonably
    foreseeable that insurance coverage issues may arise from that
    conduct.” (Id. at p. 666; see also United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v.
    Cregor (N.D. Ill. 1985) 
    617 F.Supp. 1053
    , 1055 [declaratory relief
    coverage action arises from the policy which insured the allegedly
    covered acts, and therefore arises out of the covered acts
    themselves].)9
    9
    The majority cites to two cases which reach different
    results under state laws that have a narrower reach than the
    California long-arm statute. National Indem. Co. v. Pierce Waste
    Oil Service, Inc. (E.D. Mo. 1990) 
    740 F.Supp. 721
    , 722-723 found
    no personal jurisdiction over a declaratory relief coverage action
    under the Missouri long-arm statute, which extends jurisdiction
    only to actions that “arise[] from” forum contacts, and does not
    contain “relating to” language. Significantly, the court also found
    the coverage action in that case was forward-looking, as there
    had not yet been a finding of liability in the underlying action.
    The court noted, “Absent a finding of liability against the . . .
    defendants, plaintiffs cannot be called upon to indemnify
    defendants under the insurance policy. Thus, the only issues
    with respect to liability that this lawsuit seeks to resolve or can
    resolve are question of potential liability. Questions of potential
    13
    A series of unpublished federal cases are also in accord,
    finding personal jurisdiction over declaratory relief coverage
    actions based on the defendant insured’s underlying conduct in
    the forum, without focusing solely on the state of the insurance
    contract. (National Casualty Company v. National Association of
    Intercollegiate Athletics (C.D. Ill. 2017) 
    2017 WL 6945571
    , *3, [“If
    the parties anticipated that Defendant could be sued in Illinois,
    the parties would have anticipated that Plaintiff’s duty to defend
    could be triggered by an Illinois lawsuit. If the parties
    anticipated that Plaintiff’s duty to defend could be triggered in
    Illinois, then they must have anticipated that they could be haled
    into an Illinois court in order to determine their rights and
    obligations under the insurance policy.”]; Evanston Insurance Co.
    v. Honso USA, Inc. (N.D. Cal. 2011) 
    2011 WL 1362071
    , *5
    [personal jurisdiction exists in California over the coverage action
    because of the insured’s participation in the California
    underlying action and his California conduct challenged in it];
    Massachusetts Bay Ins. Co. v. Portland Water Dist. (D.N.H. 2000)
    
    2000 WL 1499493
    , *4 [personal jurisdiction exists in New
    Hampshire over the declaratory relief coverage action because of
    the defendant’s tortious conduct in New Hampshire and having
    obtained an insurance policy intended to cover it]; but see
    Northland Insurance Co. v. Berkebile Oil Co. (W.D. Va. 2003)
    
    2003 WL 22995127
    , **4-5 [no personal jurisdiction over the
    liability can only be answered by reference to the parties’
    contract.” (Id. at p. 724, fn. 4.) Hiscox Ins. Co. v. Bordenave
    (S.D.N.Y. 2019) 
    2019 WL 2616338
    , **7-8 similarly found that an
    indemnity action did not “arise from” the insured’s underlying
    New York conduct, when the New York long-arm statute did not
    include a “relating to” standard.
    14
    coverage action, because the coverage action arises only from the
    insurance contract, not the underlying tortious activity].)
    Given the broad “substantial connection” test used for the
    second prong in California, it is clear to me that a declaratory
    relief coverage action both arises out of, and relates to, more than
    the contract itself, but also to the underlying tortious activity.
    Each is essential. As a jury found that Kimberly-Clark
    committed tortious activity in California, for which it seeks
    indemnification from Halyard, I would conclude the second prong
    is established.
    D.    Prong Three – Fair Play and Substantial Justice
    The final prong asks that the court consider whether the
    exercise of personal jurisdiction is reasonable, that is, that it
    comports with fair play and substantial justice. “[T]he
    determination of the reasonableness of the exercise of jurisdiction
    in each case will depend on an evaluation of several factors. A
    court must consider the burden on the defendant, the interests of
    the forum State, and the plaintiff’s interest in obtaining relief. It
    must also weigh in its determination ‘the interstate judicial
    system’s interest in obtaining the most efficient resolution of
    controversies; and the shared interest of the several States in
    furthering fundamental substantive social policies.’ [Citation.]”
    (Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court of California, supra,
    480 U.S. at p. 113.) Where a defendant who purposefully has
    directed activities at forum residents seeks to defeat jurisdiction,
    it must present a compelling case that the presence of some other
    considerations would render jurisdiction unreasonable. (Jayone,
    surpa, 31 Cal.App.5th at p. 564.)
    Kimberly-Clark has not met this burden. While Kimberly-
    Clark argues that the costs of litigating the coverage dispute in
    15
    California is great, it is difficult to perceive how this is so when
    the issue presented by this declaratory relief action is not
    particularly fact-dependent, but is largely an issue of law as to
    whether indemnification for punitive damages is legally
    permissible. It certainly is less burdensome than the underlying
    action in which Kimberly-Clark unsuccessfully defended itself
    from costly class action products liability claims. The interest of
    the forum state, California, is strong, in that California has a
    public policy interest in determining whether punitive damage
    awards imposed for reprehensible tortious conduct in California
    can be passed off onto other entities. (See St. Paul, supra,
    777 P.2d at p. 1266 [“Where an award of punitive damages is
    made in Kansas, pursuant to the laws of Kansas, Kansas public
    policy should control the determination of who will pay those
    damages.”].)
    Nor is there any aspect of the interstate judicial system’s
    interest in obtaining the most efficient resolution of controversies
    that weighs against personal jurisdiction in this case. There is no
    reason that a California court should not determine the effect of a
    California punitive damage award. Whether the California court
    decides the indemnification action should be adjudicated under
    California, Delaware or Texas law, or some other, is of no
    moment to whether there is personal jurisdiction over Kimberly-
    Clark.
    I would reverse the trial court’s order granting
    Kimberly-Clark’s motion to quash.
    RUBIN, P. J.
    16
    Filed 1/2/20
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    HALYARD HEALTH, INC.,                     B294567
    Plaintiff and Appellant,          (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC659662)
    v.
    ORDER MODIFYING
    KIMBERLY-CLARK                             OPINION AND CERTIFYING
    CORPORATION,                               OPINION FOR PUBLICATION
    Defendant and Respondent.
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed on December 6, 2019, be
    modified as follows:
    In the case caption, Kimberly-Clark Corp. is changed to
    read Kimberly-Clark Corporation.
    So modified, and good cause appearing, it is ordered that
    the opinion be published in the official reports.
    There is no change in judgment.
    ____________________________________________________________
    BAKER, J.               RUBIN, P. J.                  KIM, J.