Court Opinion

ID: 5128203
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-11-22 08:15:47.932427+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:05.705638
License: Public Domain

In the
         Court of Appeals
 Second Appellate District of Texas
          at Fort Worth
       ___________________________
            No. 02-21-00126-CV
       ___________________________

  SOUTHWIRE COMPANY, LLC, Appellant

                      V.

ANGIE SPARKS AND LARRY SPARKS, Appellees

    On Appeal from the 236th District Court
            Tarrant County, Texas
        Trial Court No. 236-322296-20

    Before Birdwell, Bassel, and Womack, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Bassel
                           MEMORANDUM OPINION

                                   I. Introduction

      In this interlocutory appeal, Appellant Southwire Company, LLC raises one

issue challenging the trial court’s denial of its special appearance in which it claimed

that a Texas court did not have personal jurisdiction to adjudicate the claims brought

against it by Appellees Angie Sparks and Larry Sparks. We conclude that the trial

court did not err by denying the special appearance. The record contains some

evidence supporting the trial court’s implied findings that are necessary to permit the

exercise of specific jurisdiction over Southwire. Specifically, Southwire’s contacts

with Texas show that Southwire purposefully availed itself of the privilege of

conducting business in Texas. Further, the Sparkses’ claims relate to those contacts.

Thus, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Southwire’s special appearance.

                      II. Factual and procedural background

      The Sparkses’ petition claimed that they are “citizen[s] of Texas” and pleaded

that they have an address in Granbury, Texas. The Sparkses pleaded that they had

purchased a travel trailer, which they also describe as an RV, from a dealer located in

Texas; the dealer is sued under the names United Recreation & Mobile Home Center,

Inc.; United RV Center; and United RV Fort Worth (referred to collectively with

Southwire as the defendants). According to the petition, the RV was equipped with a

Surge Guard Surge Protector (model number 34750) that the Sparkses allege was

manufactured by Southwire. The Sparkses claimed that they purchased the Surge

                                           2
Guard at the same time that they purchased the RV and that Southwire “direct[ed]

customers to purchase its products from defendant United RV Center in Texas,

where the surge protector [that is the] subject of this action was purchased.” The

Sparkses claim that United RV represented to them “that if they did not purchase the

[s]urge [p]rotector together with their purchase of the [RV], it would void the

warranty on their new RV.”

      At some point after the purchase, the Sparkses attempted to use the RV’s

electric fireplace, which allegedly produced an electrical short that caused “a threat of

fire and sparks shooting out of the circuit breaker box.” Mrs. Sparks claimed that she

ran from the RV in an attempt to unplug it from its electric connection, that she fell,

and that she suffered a debilitating injury. In turn, Mr. Sparks claimed that he had

“suffer[ed]” from the defendants’ acts and had also experienced a loss of consortium

and mental anguish as a result. The absence of a ground-fault circuit interrupter and

an arc-fault circuit interrupter in the RV allegedly caused the sparking incident. The

petition also alleged that the actions of United RV and Southwire (as the Surge

Guard’s manufacturer) were a producing cause of the Sparkses’ injuries.

      The Sparkses asserted causes of action for breach of warranty and violations of

the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. They asserted a breach of the warranty of

merchantability against Southwire and alleged that “the surge protector was not

merchantable nor fit for its intended purpose because it was not fit for ordinary

purposes [as] it did not function as a surge protector and did not protect from a

                                           3
power surge.” The petition also included a claim against Southwire for breach of the

implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose. The breaches of warranty were

also alleged to constitute a violation of the DTPA because Southwire allegedly

engaged in an unconscionable action that took advantage of the Sparkses’ lack of

knowledge of the “non-working state of the surge protector to a grossly unfair

degree.”

      In their original petition, the Sparkses stated the basis for jurisdiction against

Southwire to be that it “had continuous and systematic contacts with the [S]tate of

Texas sufficient to establish general jurisdiction over said Defendant. Additionally, as

set forth above, this Defendant has a registered agent for service of process in Texas.”

      Southwire responded to the original petition by filing a special appearance that

asserted that a Texas court does not have personal jurisdiction over it under a theory

of general jurisdiction because it is “at home” in Georgia, not in Texas. The special

appearance attached a sworn declaration from a Southwire engineering manager, who

averred that Southwire was organized in Delaware and that its company-wide

decisions are made in Georgia. The declaration continued, stating that Southwire’s

products are widely distributed and that the company operates in many locations

throughout the United States.

      The declaration described Southwire’s method of distributing its products:

      Generally, Southwire’s Surge Guards are not sold to the public but are
      sold to unrelated distributors. Those unrelated distributors generally
      resell the products to dealers, who resell to the public. The dealers are

                                           4
         also unrelated to Southwire. In other words, usually, Southwire is at
         least twice removed from a retail customer. In some instances, Amazon
         sells Southwire products through internet sales. However, those sales
         are through a re-seller, not directly from Southwire.

         Further, the declaration stated that because the Sparkses had not provided “a

serial number, lot number, or other information” for the Surge Guard, Southwire

could not identify the “specific device.”        But the declaration also noted that

“Southwire [could not] locate any record of selling a Surge Guard with the model

referenced in the [p]etition to an RV dealer in Texas. Southwire’s records reflect[ed]

that it ha[d] not sold the Surge Guard with the model number referenced in the

[p]etition since 2015.” The declaration acknowledged that Southwire “does business

in Texas” and has a registered agent in the state. It also noted that “Southwire has

two manufacturing plants in Texas and a facility for distribution, but it does not

maintain a permanent general business office through which it solicits business in

Texas.”

         With respect to the incident at issue, the declaration stated a conclusion that

the Sparkses’ “alleged claims do not arise from, and are not related to, any activity

conducted by Southwire in Texas.” Specifically, no employee of Southwire was

present when the Surge Guard was sold to the Sparkses, and Southwire did not

authorize a person in Texas to make any representation about the Surge Guard in

Texas.

                                            5
      After a continuance of an initial setting, the trial court heard Southwire’s special

appearance. The day of the hearing, the Sparkses filed an amended petition that

appears to be identical to their original petition, except that it augmented the

jurisdictional allegations against Southwire by pleading that

      Defendant Southwire Company, LLC had continuous and systematic
      contacts with [t]he State of Texas sufficient to establish general
      jurisdiction over said Defendant. Additionally, as set forth above, this
      Defendant has a registered agent for service of process in Texas; is
      qualified to do business in Texas; owns a related entity located in Texas;
      does business in Texas; has two manufacturing plants in Texas; has a
      facility for distribution in Texas; maintains a website soliciting business
      from customers in Texas for sales; provides a list of registered dealers in
      Texas on its websites; and directs customers to purchase its products
      from defendant United RV Center in Texas, where the surge protector
      [that is the] subject of this action was purchased, and provides their
      address.

      At the time they filed their amended petition, the Sparkses also filed a response

to Southwire’s special appearance; the response contended that a Texas court held

both general and specific jurisdiction over Southwire. Attached to the response was a

declaration from the Sparkses’ attorney that included a paragraph stating that “Ex. A

is a true and accurate copy of the Defendant Southwire Company, LLC’s website

(Internet, http:[//]southwire.com, last visited March 26, 2021) where it actively directs

Texas consumers to purchase its RV surge protectors from its registered dealer, the

Defendant United RV in Ft. Worth, Texas.” The referenced Exhibit A had the

following screenshot from Southwire’s website:

                                            6
The declaration also noted that Southwire was authorized to do business in Texas.

       At the hearing on the special appearance, no party adduced evidence. The trial

court denied Southwire’s special appearance, and Southwire filed an interlocutory

appeal of that order. Southwire requested findings of fact and conclusions of law

from the trial court but did not file a notice of past-due findings. See Tex. R. Civ. P.

297.

        III. The legal principles that apply to our jurisdictional analysis

       A.    Standard of review

       The Texas Supreme Court recently described (1) why jurisdiction is required to

bind a party to a judgment, (2) the standard of review that we follow in reviewing a

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trial court’s decision regarding whether or not to exercise personal jurisdiction, and

(3) the findings that we imply when the trial court has not filed findings:

      A court must have both subject[-]matter jurisdiction over a case and
      personal jurisdiction over the parties to issue a binding judgment.
      Personal jurisdiction involves a court’s ability to bind a particular party
      to that judgment. Whether a court may exercise power over a party is a
      question of law, which we review de novo. Resolving this question of
      law, though, may require a court to decide questions of fact. When, as
      here, the trial court does not issue findings of fact and conclusions of
      law with its judgment, we presume all factual disputes were resolved in
      favor of the trial court’s decision unless they are challenged on appeal.

Luciano v. SprayFoamPolymers.com, LLC, 625 S.W.3d 1, 7–8 (Tex. 2021) (citations

omitted).

      In the absence of findings, we “must affirm if the judgment can be upheld on

any legal theory supported by the evidence.” Michelin N. Am., Inc. v. De Santiago, 584

S.W.3d 114, 122 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2018, pet. dism’d) (op. on reh’g). “When the

appellate record includes the reporter’s and clerk’s records, these implied findings are

not conclusive and may be challenged for legal and factual sufficiency in the

appropriate appellate court.” BMC Software Belg., N.V. v. Marchand, 83 S.W.3d 789,

795 (Tex. 2002).

      B.     The shifting burdens that apply to the analysis of a challenge to
             personal jurisdiction

      A party may challenge a Texas court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over it

by filing a special appearance under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 120a. See Tex. R.

Civ. P. 120a.      The process of resolving a special appearance sets in motion a

                                            8
complicated procedural sequence in which the intermeshing of the shifting burdens of

proof on issues of personal jurisdiction may generate both legal and factual questions.

The burdens flow as follows:

      •      “[T]he plaintiff bears the initial burden to plead sufficient allegations to

             bring the nonresident defendant within the reach of Texas’s long-arm

             statute.” Kelly v. Gen. Interior Constr., Inc., 301 S.W.3d 653, 658 (Tex.

             2010).

      •      “Once the plaintiff has pleaded sufficient jurisdictional allegations, the

             defendant filing a special appearance bears the burden to negate all bases

             of personal jurisdiction alleged by the plaintiff.” Id. The defendant’s

             burden is “tied to the allegations in the plaintiff’s pleading.” Id.

      •      “If the plaintiff fails to plead facts bringing the defendant within reach of

             the long-arm statute . . . , the defendant need only prove that it does not

             live in Texas to negate jurisdiction.” Id. at 658–59. To correct the

             failure to allege jurisdictional facts, the plaintiff should amend to include

             “necessary factual allegations.” Id. at 659.

      •      “The defendant can negate jurisdiction on either a factual or legal basis.”

             Id.

                                            9
                 o “Factually, the defendant can present evidence that it has no

                    contacts with Texas, effectively disproving the plaintiff’s

                    allegations.” Id.

                 o To negate jurisdiction on a legal basis,

                          the defendant can show that even if the plaintiff’s alleged facts
                          are true, the evidence is legally insufficient to establish
                          jurisdiction; the defendant’s contacts with Texas fall short of
                          purposeful availment; for specific jurisdiction, that the claims
                          do not arise from the contacts; or that traditional notions of
                          fair play and substantial justice are offended by the exercise of
                          jurisdiction.

                    Id.

      •      Should the defendant make a factual challenge to the plaintiff’s

             jurisdictional allegations, “[t]he plaintiff can then respond with its own

             evidence that affirms its allegations, and it risks dismissal of its lawsuit if

             it cannot present the trial court with evidence establishing personal

             jurisdiction.” Id. (footnote omitted).

      C.     The basic questions that must be answered to decide whether a
             Texas court has personal jurisdiction over a defendant

      Two fundamental questions must be answered in deciding whether a Texas

court may bind a foreign defendant to its judgment: (1) does the Texas long-arm

statute authorize the exercise of jurisdiction; and (2) does the exercise of jurisdiction

comport with federal due-process guarantees. Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 8. These two

questions meld into one because the long-arm statute requires a nonresident to be

                                             10
“doing business” in Texas, and the supreme court has held that the “broad doing-

business language allows the [long-arm] statute to ‘reach as far as the federal

constitutional requirements of due process will allow.’” Moki Mac River Expeditions v.

Drugg, 221 S.W.3d 569, 575 (Tex. 2007); see also Spir Star AG v. Kimich, 310 S.W.3d 868,

872 (Tex. 2010) (“Our long-arm statute reaches ‘as far as the federal constitutional

requirements for due process will allow.’ Consequently, the statute’s requirements are

satisfied if exercising jurisdiction comports with federal due[-]process limitations.”

(citations omitted)).

       Stated most broadly, the exercise of jurisdiction meets federal due-process

standards “only if the defendant has established ‘minimum contacts’ with the forum

state such that maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play

and substantial justice.’” Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 8.

       D.     The distinction between the two types of personal jurisdiction that
              a Texas court may exercise

       Courts analyze whether the due-process standard is met from two perspectives:

general jurisdiction and specific jurisdiction. Id. General jurisdiction deals with a

defendant’s overall presence in a state and may be exercised when the defendant’s

“affiliations with the [s]tate are so ‘continuous and systematic’ as to render [it]

essentially at home in the forum [s]tate.” Id. (quoting TV Azteca v. Ruiz, 490 S.W.3d

29, 37 (Tex. 2016)).     “By contrast, specific jurisdiction ‘covers defendants less

intimately connected with a [s]tate[] but only as to a narrower class of claims.’” Id.

                                           11
(quoting Ford Motor Co. v. Mont. Eighth Jud. Dist. Ct., 141 S. Ct. 1017, 1024 (2021). The

narrower class of claims falling within specific jurisdiction requires a showing that

“the defendant purposefully avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities in the

forum state, J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd. v. Nicastro, 564 U.S. 873, 877, 131 S. Ct. 2780,

[2785] (2011) (plurality opinion), and [that] the suit ‘arise[s] out of or relate[s] to the

defendant’s contacts with the forum.’” Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 8–9 (first quoting

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Ct. of Cal., 137 S. Ct. 1773, 1780 (2017); and then

quoting Moki Mac, 221 S.W.3d at 576).

       E.     When a defendant purposefully avails itself of the privilege of
              conducting business in Texas for purposes of specific jurisdiction

       When speaking of a defendant’s purposeful availment, each word in the phrase

carries significance. The acts creating the contact must be those of the defendant

itself; the “unilateral activity” of a third party does not qualify. Id. at 9. What a

defendant must avail itself of is “the privilege of conducting activities within the

forum [s]tate, thus invoking the benefits and protections of its laws.” Id. (quoting

Hanson v. Denckla, 357 U.S. 235, 253, 78 S. Ct. 1228, 1240 (1958)). And to meet the

standard of purposefulness, the defendant must act deliberately, i.e., it has

“‘deliberately’ engaged in significant activities within a state”; it “manifestly has availed

[itself] of the privilege of conducting business there.” Id. (quoting Burger King Corp. v.

Rudzewicz, 471 U.S. 462, 475–76, 105 S. Ct. 2174, 2184 (1985)).

                                             12
         Contacts that are fortuitous and attenuated do not satisfy the purposeful-

availment standard. Id. A defendant’s act of purposeful availment must provide it

with “clear notice that it is subject to suit” in the forum state. Id. (quoting World-Wide

Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 444 U.S. 286, 297, 100 S. Ct. 559, 567 (1980)). When a

defendant has such clear notice, it “can act to alleviate the risk of burdensome

litigation by procuring insurance[;] passing the expected costs on to customers[;] or, if

the risks are too great, severing its connection with the [s]tate.” Id. (citing World-Wide

Volkswagen, 444 U.S. at 297, 100 S. Ct. at 567).

         A long-debated issue in determining questions of specific personal jurisdiction

is whether introducing a product into the stream of commerce constitutes purposeful

availment. See LG Elecs., Inc. v. Lovers Tradition II, LP, No. 05-19-01304-CV, 2020 WL

4281965, at *10–11 (Tex. App.—Dallas July 27, 2020, pet. dism’d) (mem. op.).

Simply because a product is swept into another state by the stream is not enough. See

Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 10. Adopting a plurality opinion from the United States

Supreme Court, Texas permits the exercise of jurisdiction over the entity placing the

product in the stream of commerce when that entity has engaged in “additional

conduct” that evinces “‘an intent or purpose to serve the market in the forum [s]tate,’

whether directly or indirectly.” Id. (first citing TV Azteca, 490 S.W.3d at 46; and then

quoting Asahi Metal Indus. Co. v. Superior Ct. of Cal., 480 U.S. 102, 112, 107 S. Ct. 1026,

1032 (1987) (plurality opinion)). This test is sometimes termed “stream of commerce

plus.”     LG Elecs., 2020 WL 4281965, at *10–11 (utilizing the term “stream of

                                            13
commerce plus”).1 “Evidence of such additional conduct [that meets the stream-of-

commerce-plus test] may include advertising in the forum state[;] soliciting business

through salespersons[;] or creating, controlling, or employing the distribution system

that brought the product into the forum state.” Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 10 (citations

omitted).

       The Texas Supreme Court has described the parameters of when a sales-and-

distribution network constitutes sufficient additional conduct: the “operation of a

sales[-]and[-]distribution network” or “direct[ing] marketing efforts to [the forum

state] in the hope of soliciting sales” may render a nonresident subject to the state’s

jurisdiction in disputes “arising from that business.” Id. at 11. The rationale for this

rule is that when a manufacturer seeks to serve a market indirectly through the use of

affiliate or independent distributors, “it is not unreasonable to subject it to suit in one

of those [s]tates if its allegedly defective merchandise has there been the source of

injury to its owner or to others.” Spir Star, 310 S.W.3d at 871 (quoting World-Wide

Volkswagen, 444 U.S. at 297, 100 S. Ct. at 567); see also Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 10.

       There are, however, limits to the extent that a defendant’s sales-and-

distribution efforts may be used to establish purposeful availment:

       •      The principle is applicable only to specific jurisdiction. Spir Star, 310

              S.W.3d at 874.
       1
        Southwire repeatedly refers to a “targeting the market theory.” We interpret
this term as Southwire’s shorthand for the stream-of-commerce-plus theory that we
discuss below.

                                            14
      •      There must be a substantial connection between the contact and the

             operative facts of the litigation. Id. at 874–75 (stating that “when a

             nonresident’s only contacts with Texas involve indirect sales through a

             distributor or subsidiary, specific jurisdiction is limited to claims arising

             out of those sales”).

      •      There must be a substantial connection to the product sold. Id. at 875

             (stating that the fact “[t]hat similar products were sold in Texas would

             not create a substantial connection as to products that were not”).

      •      There may be reasons unrelated to serving the Texas market for having a

             Texas distributor.      Id. (stating that “[a] Texas distributorship may

             increase the manufacturer’s bottom line because it is more efficient or

             has greater access to economies of scale[] and not because it is intended

             to serve Texas consumers”).

      A few months ago, the Texas Supreme Court applied the outlined principles to

hold that a manufacturer of spray-foam insulation, which was used by Texas residents

to insulate their home, had purposefully availed itself of the Texas market for

purposes of personal jurisdiction. See Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 9–14. The supreme

court focused on two facts to support its holding. First, the manufacturer had a

Texas distribution facility, which handled logistics for its products. Id. at 10–11.

Even though a third party actually shipped the products, a distribution facility from

                                           15
which the company shipped its products at its own direction showed that the

existence of that facility was neither “adventitious . . . nor thrust upon” the company;

instead, the company’s “use of a warehouse to maintain a stock of merchandise in

Texas was deliberate.” Id. at 11.

         Further, the company had an independent contractor sales representative in

Texas.     Id.   Luciano noted the supreme court’s prior holding in Spir Star that

emphasized that a defendant may be targeting the Texas market even if it is using an

independent distributor to accomplish the sales:

         In Spir Star, we said that “[w]hen an out-of-state manufacturer . . .
         specifically targets Texas as a market for its products, that manufacturer
         is subject to a product[-]liability suit in Texas based on a product sold
         here, even if the sales are conducted through a Texas distributor or
         affiliate.” 310 S.W.3d at 874. There, the manufacturer utilized an
         independent distributor who “agreed to serve as the sales agent” in
         Texas, thus satisfying Asahi’s “additional conduct” standard. Id. at 875
         (citing Asahi, 480 U.S. at 112, 107 S. Ct. [at 1032]). While the
         manufacturer in Spir Star did not receive any of the intermediary’s profits
         and relinquished title before the products reached Texas, the
         manufacturer “reap[ed] substantial economic gain through its sales.” Id.

Id. at 11–12. Luciano focused on whether the manufacturer was using the agent to

avail itself of the Texas market by making sales in that market through the agent and

not on how the company structured its relationship with the agent. Id. at 12. The fact

that the representative was an independent contractor did not, in the supreme court’s

view, impact the question that the company was using the representative to effect

sales to Texas residents. Id. The relevant fact for the purposeful-availment analysis

was that the representative functioned to find customers in Texas. Id.

                                             16
       The supreme court summarized its holding and reasoning on the purposeful-

availment question as follows:

       Viewing [the insulation manufacturer’s] purposeful conduct with respect
       to Texas in totality, we cannot say that [the manufacturer’s] contacts
       with Texas resulted from the “mere fortuity” that the [homeowners]
       reside in Texas. Placing its product into the stream of commerce in
       conjunction with its “additional conduct” of soliciting business and
       distributing its product in Texas is sufficient to hold that [the
       manufacturer] purposefully availed itself of the Texas market.

Id. at 13–14 (citation omitted).

       F.     When a claim arises out of or relates to a defendant’s Texas
              contacts for purposes of specific jurisdiction

       As noted, specific jurisdiction has two prongs. The second is “relatedness.” Id.

at 14 (citing Bristol-Myers, 137 S. Ct. at 1780). Specifically, “[d]espite a nonresident

defendant’s flood of purposeful contacts with the forum state, the exercise of specific

jurisdiction is prohibited if ‘the suit’ does not ‘aris[e] out of or relat[e] to the

defendant’s contacts with the forum.’” Id. “This so-called relatedness inquiry defines

the appropriate ‘nexus between the nonresident defendant, the litigation, and the

forum.’” Id. (quoting Moki Mac, 221 S.W.3d at 579).

       Luciano explained the changing face of the relatedness inquiry that resulted

from the 2021 United States Supreme Court opinion in Ford Motor Co. Id. (citing Ford

Motor Co., 141 S. Ct. at 1022). In Ford Motor Co., the United States Supreme Court

answered the question of whether relatedness required a causal relationship between

the contacts and the injury or whether the fact that the injury related to the contact

                                          17
was sufficient. 141 S. Ct. at 1022. Ford Motor Co. held that a causal connection was

not required. Id. A close relationship is sufficient. Id. Luciano gave a detailed

discussion of Ford Motor Co.’s holding and how that holding impacted the plaintiffs’

claims in the case before it. Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 15–18.

      Ford Motor Co. involved two plaintiffs who filed product-liability suits against

the motor company to recover for injuries sustained while driving Ford automobiles

in the forum states. 141 S. Ct. at 1022–23. Ford argued that the states where the

injuries occurred did not have jurisdiction over the company because “a state court

would have jurisdiction only if the company’s conduct in the state ‘gave rise to’ the

plaintiff’s claims, a causal link that exists only if the company designs, manufactures,

or sells the particular vehicle involved in an accident in the forum state.” Luciano, 625

S.W.3d at 15 (quoting Ford Motor Co., 141 S. Ct. at 1023, 1026).

      The United States Supreme Court rejected this argument for reasons that

Luciano explained as follows:

      The Supreme Court [held] that “when a company like Ford serves a
      market for a product in a [s]tate and that product causes injury in the
      [s]tate to one of its residents, the [s]tate’s courts may entertain the
      resulting suit.” [Ford Motor Co., 141 S. Ct. at 1022]. A “causation-only
      approach finds no support in [the] Court’s requirement of a ‘connection’
      between a plaintiff’s suit and a defendant’s activities.” Id. at 1026 (citing
      Bristol-Myers, 137 S. Ct. at 1776). Instead, due process demands that a
      suit “arise out of or relate to” the defendant’s contacts with the forum. Id.
      (quoting Bristol-Myers, 137 S. Ct. at 1780). The first half of that standard,
      the Court said, “asks about causation.” Id. The latter half “contemplates
      that some relationships will support jurisdiction without a causal
      showing.” Id. “That does not mean anything goes,” the Court warned,

                                           18
      because “‘relate to’ incorporates real limits” to adequately protect
      nonresident defendants. Id.

             The Court equated Ford Motor Co. to World-Wide Volkswagen—
      what it described as the “paradigm case” for specific jurisdiction. Id. at
      1027–28. In World-Wide Volkswagen, the Ford Court observed, both
      Audi—the        manufacturer—and        Volkswagen—the           nationwide
      importer—were subject to specific jurisdiction in Oklahoma because
      their business “deliberately extended into [that state].” Id. at 1027. The
      forum state could thus hold the companies accountable for injuries
      “even though the vehicle had been designed and made overseas and sold
      in New York.” Id.

Id.

      Luciano described Ford Motor Co.’s basis for concluding that the relationship

between the car company’s contacts with the forum state and the plaintiffs’ claims—

even though not a causal one—were sufficiently related to permit the exercise of

personal jurisdiction:

      Addressing how Ford’s Montana- and Minnesota-based conduct “relates
      to” the respective claims, the Court first noted that the suits were
      brought by residents of the forum states. [Ford Motor Co., 141 S. Ct. at
      1028]. Each suit arose from an accident in the forum state. Id. Each
      suit alleged that a defective Ford vehicle caused the resultant harm. Id.
      And “Ford had advertised, sold, and serviced those two car models in
      both [s]tates for many years.” Id. Put succinctly, “Ford had
      systematically served a market in Montana and Minnesota for the very
      vehicles that the plaintiffs allege malfunctioned and injured them in
      those [s]tates[, s]o there is a strong ‘relationship among the defendant,
      the forum, and the litigation.’” Id. (quoting Helicopteros Nacionales de
      Colom., S.A. v. Hall, 466 U.S. 408, 414, 104 S. Ct. 1868, [1872] (1984)).
      While the plaintiffs did not establish, or even allege, that Ford’s in-state
      activities resulted in their purchasing the cars, the Court said that
      jurisdiction should not “ride on the exact reasons for an individual
      plaintiff’s purchase, or on his ability to present persuasive evidence
      about them” because the reach of Ford’s Minnesota and Montana
      contacts underscored the aptness of finding jurisdiction. Id. at 1029.

                                          19
       Allowing the forum states’ courts to exercise jurisdiction in the two cases
       was neither undue nor unfair. See id. at 1029–30.

Id. at 16.

       Applying the holding of Ford Motor Co., Luciano concluded that the contacts of

the insulation manufacturer that had challenged the jurisdiction of Texas courts were

sufficiently related to the homeowners’ claims to establish specific jurisdiction. Id. at

16–17. Three factors established the necessary relationship:

       •     The injury was sustained in the Texas residents’ home. Id. at 16. The

             fact that the injury occurred in the forum state was not a prerequisite to

             jurisdiction but one that was relevant to the relatedness prong. Id. at 17.

       •     The homeowners alleged that the insulation manufacturer sold the

             insulation in Texas, and the manufacturer did not contend that the sale

             was an isolated occurrence. Id. The fact that the manufacturer served a

             market for the type of insulation at issue and that the insulation

             malfunctioned and injured the homeowners in Texas showed that “there

             is a strong ‘relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the

             litigation’—the ‘essential foundation’ of specific jurisdiction.” Id.

       •     Luciano also rejected the holding of the court of appeals that the

             homeowners could not establish the necessary relationship unless they

             proved that the insulation was shipped from the manufacturer’s Texas

             distributor. Id. Such a strict causal connection is not required; “[i]t is

                                           20
             sufficient that [the manufacturer] intended to serve a Texas market for

             the insulation that the [homeowners] allege injured them in this lawsuit.”

             Id.

                                    IV. Analysis

      A.     Where our analysis falls in the shifting burdens of proof involved in
             a jurisdictional analysis and what information filed by the parties
             we will consider in our analysis

      First, we must locate ourselves in the shifting pleading-and-proof burdens that

we have described above. As noted, the Sparkses initially pleaded that a Texas court

had general jurisdiction over Southwire, and Southwire’s special appearance was

directed to that allegation. However, at the eleventh hour, the Sparkses amended

their petition to expand their allegations of jurisdictional facts to include the

following:

      Additionally, as set forth above, [Southwire] has a registered agent for
      service of process in Texas; is qualified to do business in Texas; owns a
      related entity located in Texas; does business in Texas; has two
      manufacturing plants in Texas; has a facility for distribution in Texas;
      maintains a website soliciting business from customers in Texas for
      sales; provides a list of registered dealers in Texas on its websites; and
      directs customers to purchase its products from defendant United RV
      Center in Texas, where the surge protector [that is the] subject of this
      action was purchased, and provides their address.

      Also, though the Sparkses did not allege what state they were in when the

incident that allegedly caused Mrs. Sparks’s injury occurred, the amended petition

alleged that Southwire manufactured the surge protector, identified it by model

                                          21
number, and stated that it “was sold to the [Sparkses] through [Southwire’s] dealer”—

United RV.

       The petition also stated that the Sparkses had purchased the surge protector

when they had purchased the RV and that United RV had represented to them that

the surge protector had to be purchased at the same time that they purchased the RV

in order to have warranty coverage on the RV. The surge protector was allegedly

installed in the RV and was allegedly used by them as an interface between the RV

and the drop line of the RV park. The petition also alleged that the surge protector

“was not merchantable nor fit for its intended purpose because it was not fit for

ordinary purposes—it did not function as a surge protector and did not protect from

a power surge.” Based on the breach of the warranty of merchantability, the Sparkses

alleged that Southwire had violated provisions of and committed an unconscionable

act under the DTPA.

       The pleading containing these allegations was filed the morning of the special-

appearance hearing, but Southwire did not move for a continuance of the hearing, did

not move to strike the amended petition, and does not claim on appeal that we cannot

consider the allegations because of the petition’s late filing. Instead, in its brief,

Southwire challenges the adequacy of the allegations contained in the amended

petition.

       Southwire argues that the amended petition was so bereft of jurisdictional

allegations that to negate jurisdiction, Southwire had to show only that it was not a

                                         22
Texas corporate citizen because it is not “at home” in Texas. Specifically, Southwire

argues that “[a]bsent adequate jurisdictional pleadings, [Southwire] negated

jurisdiction by establishing [that] it was not organized in Texas and [that] its principal

place of business is not in Texas. . . . [The Sparkses] were then required to present

evidence of the jurisdictional facts supporting specific jurisdiction.”        Southwire

makes this argument by relying on the step in the jurisdictional analysis that “[i]f the

plaintiff fails to plead facts bringing the defendant within reach of the long-arm

statute . . . , the defendant need only prove that it does not live in Texas to negate

jurisdiction.” See Kelly, 301 S.W.3d at 658–59.

      The allegations in the Sparkses’ amended petition are not so bereft of

jurisdictional allegations as Southwire claims, and those allegations are adequate to

allege specific jurisdiction.     The amended petition’s jurisdictional allegations

substantially mimic the facts of Luciano: Southwire distributes its products in Texas

and has a dealer in Texas, and the Sparkses—Texas residents—purchased the surge

protector from that dealer.

      The San Antonio Court of Appeals dealt with a petition that contained a similar

presentation of the facts and concluded that it adequately alleged personal jurisdiction.

See Ji-Haw Indus. Co. v. Broquet, No. 04-07-00622-CV, 2008 WL 441822, at *1–4 (Tex.

App.—San Antonio Feb. 20, 2008, no pet.). Ji-Haw’s description of the allegations

and its holding are as follows:

                                           23
      In her First Amended Petition, Broquet specifically named each
      defendant and stated that all defendants would be referred to collectively
      as “Defendants.” She alleged that a fire [had] started in her home as a
      result of a defect in an XBOX game system (“the game console itself
      and/or the power line cord, and/or these components in combination”)
      that was “designed, manufactured and marketed by Defendants.” In a
      separate section of the petition entitled “Defendants Ji-Haw,” Broquet
      alleged [that] Ji-Haw was “legally responsible for the incident made the
      basis of this suit.” She asserted [that] Ji-Haw was guilty of negligence
      and [that] its negligence was a proximate cause of the incident underlying
      the suit. Broquet further alleged [that] Ji-Haw was strictly liable and that
      its conduct was a producing cause of the fire and injuries. In asserting
      strict liability, she referenced the theories set forth against other
      defendants earlier in the petition. Finally, she alleged that “[a]ll or a
      substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to this claim
      occurred in Duval County, Texas,” and [that] she is a resident of Texas.
      These allegations, when considered together and liberally construed,
      assert that Ji-Haw committed a tort in Texas, which is all that is required
      under the long-arm statute. See Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda,
      133 S.W.3d 217, 226 (Tex. 2004) (holding that in determining plea to
      jurisdiction[,] pleadings are liberally construed in favor of pleader in
      assessing whether he has [pleaded] sufficient facts to demonstrate trial
      court’s jurisdiction); id. at 240 (Brister, J., dissenting) (categorizing
      substance of special appearance as plea to jurisdiction); see also Tex. Civ.
      Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 17.042(2). By describing the incident, alleging it
      was a result of the XBOX, including component parts manufactured by the
      “Defendants,” alleging the incident forming the basis of the suit occurred in Texas,
      and [alleging] that she is a Texas resident, Broquet did, contrary to Ji-Haw’s
      assertion, allege sufficient facts to bring Ji-Haw within the long-arm statute.

Id. at *2 (emphasis added).

      As noted, Southwire argues that the amended petition’s jurisdictional

allegations are inadequate under the Texas Supreme Court’s holding in Kelly, 301

S.W.3d at 657. One court attempted to use Kelly to argue that Ji-Haw’s holding on

when a petition contains sufficient jurisdictional allegations is no longer persuasive.

See Carey v. State, No. 04-09-00809-CV, 2010 WL 2838631, at *5 (Tex. App.—San

                                              24
Antonio July 21, 2010, pet. denied) (mem. op.). That effort failed because unlike the

allegations in Ji-Haw, Kelly involved a pleading stating that no acts had occurred in

Texas. Id. Here, like in Ji-Haw, the Sparkses’ amended petition alleges numerous acts

that allegedly occurred in Texas.

      To support its contention that the Sparkses’ petition was so bereft of

jurisdictional allegations that a denial of at-home status was sufficient to carry its

burden to negate jurisdiction, Southwire also relies on Vinmar Overseas Singapore PTE

Ltd. v. PTT International Trading PTE Ltd., 538 S.W.3d 126, 133 (Tex. App.—Houston

[14th Dist.] 2017, pet. denied). The plaintiff in Vinmar alleged tortious acts in the

form of misappropriation of trade secrets and tortious interference but did not allege

that those acts were committed in Texas. Id. Vinmar rejected an argument that

jurisdiction could be predicated on where the “effect” of the tort might be felt. Id. at

135. Vinmar is inapposite to the issues in this appeal because it provides no guidance

on the question of whether a petition alleges sufficient facts to establish purposeful

availment.2

      2
        The parties dedicate lengthy portions of their briefs to arguing whether
Southwire has waived the arguments that it makes to this court because Southwire did
not make the arguments to the trial court. Though we do not agree with Southwire’s
arguments, we do not view Southwire as having waived the arguments because
Southwire has more fully developed them on appeal. See Comm’n for Lawyer Discipline v.
Cantu, 587 S.W.3d 779, 784 (Tex. 2019) (“We do not consider issues that were not
raised in the courts below, but parties are free to construct new arguments in support of
issues properly before the Court.” (quoting Greene v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 446 S.W.3d
761, 764 n.4 (Tex. 2014))).

                                           25
      We also reject Southwire’s arguments that focus not on what the Sparkses

alleged but on what they did not allege. Southwire places great emphasis on the fact

that the Sparkses did not plead or provide evidence that the incident allegedly caused

by defects in the surge protector and the RV’s wiring occurred in Texas. We are

unpersuaded that the core fact in the jurisdictional analysis in this case is that the RV’s

electrical system malfunctioned while the RV was in Texas. The allegations are that

Southwire purposely availed itself of doing business in Texas and manufactured a

product sold to a Texas resident in Texas by one of its dealers and that said product

caused an injury to a Texas resident. 3 The device was incorporated into another

product that was mobile and that was intended to be used by its owner as tantamount

to a residence while traveling. As the Sparkses allege,

       51. The Dealer sold the Dwelling to the Sparks[es], who purchased the
       Dwelling.

      3
        Southwire argues that there is no allegation that the Sparkses are Texas
residents because their petition describes them as citizens of Texas. Southwire argues
that “citizenship for federal diversity jurisdiction purposes is not the same as residency
for purposes of state court personal jurisdiction.” Southwire cites a Dallas Court of
Appeals opinion holding that citizenship for diversity purposes and residency for
jurisdictional purposes are different concepts, and an admission that a party is a state
citizen for purposes of diversity citizenship is not an admission that a party is a state
resident. See Favour Leasing, LLC v. Mulligan, No. 05-13-01000-CV, 2014 WL 4090130,
at *8 (Tex. App.—Dallas Aug. 19, 2014, no pet.) (mem. op. on reh’g). The Sparkses’
petition describes them as being “citizen[s] of Texas” and also lists their address as
being in Texas. Certainly, the language of the Sparkses’ petition is imprecise, but fairly
viewed, we consider the allegations as an attempt to allege residency rather than
citizenship. Nothing in the petition suggests that the Sparkses were referring to the
principles of federal-diversity jurisdiction when using the loose term “citizen.”

                                            26
            52. The Sparks[es] purchased the Dwelling with the clear and
      express purpose of using the Dwelling for residential living. That was
      how the product was used.

             53. The Dealer had knowledge that its travel trailers were being
      purchased for the particular purpose of using the travel trailers as mobile
      residences.

To hold that a Texas court did not have jurisdiction when the Sparkses used the RV

for its intended purpose and traveled in it, possibly outside the state, would mean that

Texas residents who purchase a product in Texas designed to be used as a mobile

residence would be left without the protections of the Texas courts should they be

injured while using that product for its intended purpose. Holding that such a

fortuitous fact frees a defendant from the reach of Texas courts disregards the true

bases for jurisdiction—that when a Texas resident is injured by a product that he was

sold by a defendant that directed its efforts at a Texas market, the Texas resident

should have recourse in Texas courts.

      Further, Southwire attacks the Sparkses’ warranty allegations under the guise

that it is attacking their jurisdictional allegations. Southwire’s challenges include that

the Sparkses never pleaded how the warranty arose, whether the warranty was express

or implied, or how the warranty was dishonored, nor did they offer a warranty into

evidence. Though not germane to the resolution of these arguments in the context of

a special appearance, we note that the Sparkses pleaded that their claim against

Southwire was based on the implied warranty of merchantability.               That said,

Southwire’s arguments are a merits-based attack on the Sparkses’ cause of action.

                                           27
That attack should be considered later. See Wilmington Tr., Nat’l Ass’n v. Hsin-Chi-Su,

573 S.W.3d 845, 859 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2018, no pet.) (“[W]e do not

consider the merits of a party’s claims when analyzing personal jurisdiction.”). At this

point, our concern is only whether the allegations meet the tests for specific

jurisdiction.

       We conclude that the Sparkses pleaded a basis for specific jurisdiction.

Southwire’s denial that it was a Texas resident was not sufficient in and of itself to

satisfy its burden to negate that a Texas court has personal jurisdiction over it.

       Further, because of the posture of this case, we go beyond the pleadings’

allegations and also review other materials submitted by the parties as evidence that

we can consider in our jurisdictional analysis. In the disjointed approach used in this

case, Southwire filed its declaration before the Sparkses amended their petition.

Then, the Sparkses amended their petition, basing their jurisdictional allegations on

certain facts that Southwire had included in its declaration, and filed their own

evidence in the form of the screenshot from Southwire’s website that listed United

RV Sales—the dealer from which the Sparkses allegedly purchased the RV—as

Southwire’s dealer.4 Southwire combines its arguments as challenges to both the

       The defendants’ names contained in the Sparkses’ petition and the name listed
       4

on the website do not match. But the Sparkses alleged that the company listed on
Southwire’s website was where they had purchased the Surge Guard. Southwire does
not argue that the company listed on its website and the company where the Sparkses
purchased the Surge Guard are different entities.

                                            28
Sparkses’ allegations in their pleadings and the proof before the trial court. The

Sparkses do the same.

      Here, neither party suggests that we cannot consider the evidence and

attachments to Southwire’s special appearance and the Sparkses’ response. Further,

Rule 120a provides that we should consider that material. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 120a(3)

(“The court shall determine the special appearance on the basis of the pleadings, any

stipulations made by and between the parties, such affidavits and attachments as may

be filed by the parties, the results of discovery processes, and any oral testimony.”); see

also Steward Health Care Sys. LLC v. Saidara, No. 05-19-00274-CV, 2021 WL 3707995,

at *17 (Tex. App.—Dallas Aug. 20, 2021, no pet.) (Schenck, J., concurring) (stating

that Rule 120a and supreme court precedent provide that the trial court “clearly

contemplates consideration of . . . things other than just the pleadings, namely,

evidence”). Thus, the mix of information that we use to analyze the trial court’s

denial of the special appearance includes the pleadings and the attachments to

Southwire’s special appearance and the Sparkses’ response.

       B.    We will analyze the findings we imply to support the trial court’s
             denial of Southwire’s special appearance to determine whether
             there is any evidence to support the findings.

      We have no guidance from the trial court regarding how it analyzed the mix of

allegations and evidence because it filed no findings; thus, we imply the findings

necessary to support the trial court’s denial of the special appearance. See Luciano, 625

S.W.3d at 8. These implied findings are tested by evidentiary sufficiency standards.

                                            29
See BMC Software, 83 S.W.3d at 795. Southwire’s issue asserts that there is not legally

sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s order. Thus, we will review that issue

under legal-sufficiency standards, i.e., whether there is more than a scintilla of

evidence to support the denial of the special appearance. See id.5

      5
         At least one court reviewing findings made in a special appearance suggests
that when no live testimony is taken at a special-appearance hearing, a trial court’s
findings should receive no “special deference” and should apparently be reviewed
de novo rather than under traditional sufficiency standards. See Villagomez v. Rockwood
Specialties, Inc., 210 S.W.3d 720, 726–27 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2006,
pet. denied). Though the cited opinion raised these concerns, it ultimately held that
“[n]otwithstanding these concerns, we conduct the due-process personal-jurisdiction
review by crediting evidence that supports the trial court’s findings of fact if
reasonable jurors could[] and by disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable
jurors could not.” Id. at 727 (citing City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 827 (Tex.
2005)). Our court has addressed the nature of the review given both filed and implied
findings made when a trial court did not hear live testimony as part of its
determination of a special appearance; we decided to adhere to traditional sufficiency
standards to review these findings. See OZO Capital, Inc. v. Syphers, No. 02-17-00131-
CV, 2018 WL 1531444, at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Mar. 29, 2018, no pet.) (mem.
op.) (concluding that it was unnecessary to address question regarding whether
implied findings entered after a non-evidentiary hearing on a special appearance that
turned on credibility determinations should be reviewed de novo); Norstrud v. Cicur,
No. 02-14-00364-CV, 2015 WL 4878716, at *4, *8–9 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug.
13, 2015, no pet.) (mem. op.) (declining to follow the holding of our sister court in
Villagomez that lesser deference is required by this court to findings of fact adopted
verbatim “[b]ecause the Texas Supreme Court has not adopted differing standards of
review for findings of fact adopted verbatim from a prevailing party’s proposed
findings of fact versus findings of fact not adopted verbatim or modified by the trial
court”); Moncrief Oil Int’l, Inc. v. OAO Gazprom, 332 S.W.3d 1, 7–8 (Tex. App.—Fort
Worth 2010) (noting that when no evidentiary hearing was held on special appearance,
appellate court is in “the same position as the trial court and implying all facts
supported by the evidence in favor of the trial court’s ruling seems inappropriate,” but
nevertheless deferring “to all implied findings of fact that support the trial court’s
grant of Appellees’ special appearances so long as legally and factually sufficient
evidence—i.e., factual statements set forth in the affidavits, exhibits, and deposition

                                           30
       C.     There is some evidence to support the trial court’s implied
              findings that underlie a conclusion that Southwire purposefully
              availed itself of the privilege of doing business in Texas.

       First, we must address the question of what standard to use as a template to

assess the evidence. Southwire argues that because the Sparkses alleged a breach-of-

warranty claim, as opposed to a products-liability claim, a stream-of-commerce-plus

test is somehow inapt. Southwire does not tell us what the alternative test should be.

No matter, we agree with the Dallas Court of Appeals that, for the time being, the

Texas Supreme Court does not distinguish between contract- and tort-based claims in

its jurisdictional analysis. See LG Elecs., Inc., 2020 WL 4281965, at *14. Nor shall we.

       Thus, with respect to specific jurisdiction, the first implied findings made by

the trial court must be those associated with whether Southwire purposefully availed

itself of the Texas market by doing business in Texas under the stream-of-commerce-

plus test. Specifically, we examine whether Southwire placed its product in the stream

of commerce and engaged in “additional conduct [that] may include advertising in the

forum state[;] soliciting business through salespersons[;] or creating, controlling, or

employing the distribution system that brought the product into the forum state.” See

Luciano, 625 S.W.3d at 10 (citations omitted).

excerpts filed with the trial court—exists supporting them”), aff’d in part & rev’d in part,
414 S.W.3d 142 (Tex. 2013). We will also adhere to traditional sufficiency review.

                                            31
      Here, the Surge Guard, which Southwire admitted that it had manufactured,

ended up in Texas. Though Southwire asserted that it had manufactured the Surge

Guard in Honduras, it acknowledged that it had manufactured it all the same.

      Southwire itself offered evidence that it has two manufacturing facilities and a

distribution facility in Texas. We do not know what specific products are distributed

by this facility, but there is nothing in the record to indicate that the distribution

facility was completely divorced from distribution of the type of surge protector that

is at issue or that the purpose of the distribution facility was for a purpose unrelated

to distributing products to the Texas market. See Spir Star, 310 S.W.3d at 875. As

noted, the supreme court in Luciano placed great emphasis on the fact that the

defendant challenging jurisdiction distributed its product in Texas, even though its

distribution facility was run by a third party. 625 S.W.3d at 10–11. Thus, the

existence of the distribution center is some evidence that Southwire purposefully

availed itself of the Texas market.

      Luciano also emphasized that the manufacturer challenging jurisdiction used a

Texas agent to market its product. Id. at 11–12. As a general principle, Luciano noted

that “direct[ing] marketing efforts to [the forum state] in the hope of soliciting sales”

may render a nonresident subject to the state’s jurisdiction in disputes “arising from

that business[.]” Id. at 10. Here, Southwire tried to distance itself from any effort to

use a Texas agent to sell its products and offered evidence that

                                           32
      [g]enerally, Southwire’s Surge Guards are not sold to the public but are
      sold to unrelated distributors. Those unrelated distributors generally
      resell the products to dealers, who resell to the public. The dealers are
      also unrelated to Southwire. In other words, usually, Southwire is at
      least twice removed from a retail customer.

As noted by the Sparkses, the quote is hedged by the use of the word “generally” in

two places—an indication that the evidence does not cover the entire universe of

Southwire’s marketing efforts.

      Also, as Luciano noted, it is not the nature of the manufacturer–dealer

relationship but the intent to target a state’s market that is the focus of the

purposeful-availment analysis. Id. at 12. There is evidence that Southwire targeted the

Texas market. The Sparkses countered Southwire’s attempt to distance itself from the

sales process by producing the screenshot from a page of Southwire’s website that has

the title “Where to Buy?” and directed the viewer to “Find a Dealer Near You.” With

search criteria entered for Fort Worth, the website produced a listing for the dealer

from whom the Sparkses purchased the RV and the Southwire surge protector.

Though the page that the Sparkses attached to their response is unclear, it appears

that Southwire has a number of other dealers in Texas. So the trial court considered

evidence from which it could infer that the dealership “distancing” urged by

Southwire was pretextual.     First, distancing itself from the distributor does not

insulate a seller so long as it is acting to target the Texas market. Id. at 11–12.

Second, the Sparkses offered evidence that undermined Southwire’s claim of a hands-

off approach to the marketing of its product in Texas; its website identified the entity

                                          33
that sold the surge protector to them as a dealer for Southwire’s products and showed

that it apparently had other dealers in Texas. Utilizing a Texas dealer is a factor

establishing purposeful availment, and the Sparkses’ evidence constitutes more than a

scintilla of evidence that Southwire had such a dealer.6

       To counter the Sparkses’ evidence, Southwire shrugs off the website by citing a

case from our court holding that national advertising is not specifically targeted at

Texas residents. Southwire’s argument is that

       [w]hen a defendant advertises nationally, Texas residents are not
       specifically targeted. Michel v. Rocket Eng’g Corp., 45 S.W.3d 658, 680
       (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2001, no pet.). There is nothing on the web
       page to indicate that the website is not available to everyone on the
       planet with an Internet connection. Indeed, Appellees’ evidence reflects
       that anyone can type in their location to find a dealer registered to do
       business near them.

This argument begs the question. The relevance of the website is not that it is an

untargeted advertisement that anyone can access. It is that Southwire is identifying a

dealer in Texas for its products. See, e.g., Sentry Select Ins. Co. v. Terex Corp., No. H-14-

2396, 2015 WL 13121260, at *2 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 3, 2015) (order) (“Here, Terex Pegson

has an official dealer not only within the United States[] but within Texas specifically.

Terex Pegson’s ‘website directs customers to Powerscreen Texas, its “official” Texas

dealer.’” (citation omitted)). As the Amarillo Court of Appeals has held, “[T]here

needs to be more than the existence of a website (whether interactive or not) to

       Southwire takes issue with the Sparkses’ use of the term “registered dealer”
       6

when describing United RV Sales. We interpret the term as the Sparkses’ attempting
to convey that United RV is listed “or registered” on Southwire’s website.

                                             34
support an inference that the forum was targeted by the website owner or that the

latter directed its marketing efforts at the forum.” See Retire Happy, L.L.C. v. Tanner,

No. 07-16-00134-CV, 2017 WL 393984, at *5 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Jan. 27, 2017, no

pet.) (mem. op.). Here, there is that something more: It is the dealer relationship that

shows Southwire is directing its sales efforts to Texas.7

      Southwire also tries to diminish the impact of the web page because the

Sparkses do not allege that their purchase was related to Southwire’s directions on its

web page. Southwire argues,

      [The Sparkses’] own pleading establishes that [they] did not purchase a
      [S]urge [G]uard because of something on a web page. Instead, [the
      Sparkses] allege that they bought a [S]urge [G]uard because, “[t]he
      Dealer represented to [them] that if they did not purchase the [s]urge
      [p]rotector together with their purchase of the RV, it would void the
      warranty on their new RV.” Thus, based on [the Sparkses’] admission,
      the sale was unrelated to [Southwire’s] web presence or any contact
      between [it] and Texas. [Southwire’s] web presence is too attenuated for
      specific jurisdiction to attach here. [Record reference omitted.]

The court of appeals in Luciano relied on a similar rationale by holding that there could

be no purposeful availment because the plaintiffs did not choose an installer of the

spray-foam insulation based on a preexisting relationship they knew that the

insulation manufacturer had with its installer. 625 S.W.3d at 12–13. The supreme

      7
        Southwire cites our opinion in Anderson v. Safeway Tom Thumb, No. 02-18-
00113-CV, 2019 WL 2223582 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 23, 2019, pet. denied)
(per curiam) (mem. op.), in support of its argument that listing a dealer did not
establish that a claim was related to the purposeful contact. Anderson is
distinguishable. The product at issue in Anderson was a chair that was sold to a
grocery-store chain, not a product sold to a Texas consumer from a dealer identified
on the manufacturer’s website. See id. at *8.

                                           35
court rejected this analysis because it “shifted the focus from the defendant’s

relationship with the forum state to the plaintiff’s intent. But evidence of the plaintiff’s

mental state is immaterial to the defendant’s purposeful availment.”             Id. at 12.

Southwire’s argument attempts to make the same unwarranted shift from its acts of

purposeful availment to the Sparkses’ intent.

       Southwire next asserts, apparently as part of its challenge to the contention that

it purposefully availed itself of doing business in Texas, that it “never sold a surge

guard like the one described in the [Sparkses’] [p]etition to any dealer in Texas.”

Again, the declaration of Southwire’s employee is not quite as categorical as its brief

portrays it to be. The declaration states,

       While [the Sparkses have] not provided a serial number, lot number, or
       other information about the alleged Surge Guard at issue to enable
       Southwire to identify the specific device, Southwire cannot locate any
       record of selling a Surge Guard with the model referenced in the
       [p]etition to an RV dealer in Texas.[8]

Thus, the declaration hedges from making a categorical statement that it never sold a

surge protector of the type in question to a Texas RV dealer, leaving unanswered

questions such as whether the records it searched cover its facility for distribution or

an intermediary. And the flip side of the record is that the Sparkses’ presented

       8
        The declaration also states that “Southwire’s records reflect that it has not sold
the Surge Guard with the model number referenced in the [p]etition since 2015.”
How Southwire contends that this fact should impact our analysis is unclear. The
Sparkses claim that the injury-causing event occurred in late 2016. If Southwire is
arguing that the period of time between production of the Surge Guard and the
injury-causing event has some unexplained impact on the purposeful-availment
analysis, it is not clear that the time gap it relies on even exists.

                                             36
evidence that they purchased a surge protector from an entity identified as a

Southwire dealer and that Southwire acknowledged that it manufactured that model

of surge protector. Again, Southwire, in essence, argues that the trial court was bound

to accept its view that it did not avail itself of doing business in Texas because it

claims that it has never sold a surge protector of the type at issue to a Texas RV

dealer, even though there is evidence prompting the opposite inference because the

Sparkses purchased a Southwire Surge Guard in Texas from an entity that Southwire

stated was a place where one could buy its products. Again, this is some evidence that

Southwire purposely availed itself of the Texas market for its products.

      We do not have a record as well developed as the one in Luciano. But the

question is whether there is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the trial

court’s implied findings that underlie a conclusion that Southwire purposefully availed

itself of the privilege of doing business in Texas. We conclude that the trial court’s

implied findings—that Southwire targeted the Texas market and thus purposefully

availed itself of doing business in Texas—are supported by more than a scintilla of

evidence.

      D.     There is some evidence to support the trial court’s implied
             findings that underlie a conclusion that an adequate relationship
             exists between Southwire’s contacts with Texas and the Sparkses’
             claims.

      Having given an affirmative answer to the question of whether Southwire

purposefully availed itself of the Texas market for its products, the next question is

                                          37
whether the Sparkses’ claims are sufficiently related to those contacts to permit the

exercise of specific jurisdiction. We conclude that they are.

      We are again guided by Luciano. And Luciano followed the lead of Ford Motor

Co. in holding that there need not be a causal relationship between the claim and the

contact; an adequate noncausal connection is sufficient. Id. at 14. Luciano applied the

Ford Motor Co. analysis to a company that appears similar in size to Southwire. That is,

Luciano applied the Ford Motor Co. analysis even though the insulation manufacturer

challenging jurisdiction was not a multinational corporation like Ford and even

though its marketing efforts in the state were not decades-long in duration like Ford’s

were in the forum states where it was sued. Id. at 16–17.

      Luciano focused on the following:         (1) the injury occurred in the Texas

residents’ home; (2) the homeowners alleged that the defendant sold its product in

Texas and that the defendant did not claim that the sale was an isolated occurrence;

and (3) even though the homeowners could not prove that the product was

distributed by the defendant’s Texas distributor, that did not matter because “[i]t [was]

sufficient that [the manufacturer had] intended to serve a Texas market for the

insulation that the [homeowners] allege[d] injured them in this lawsuit.” Id. at 17.

      As noted, the Sparkses are coy by not disclosing the state where the RV was

located when the electrical incident occurred.         But they claim to be Texas

residents/citizens. They purchased the RV in Texas to be used for residential living.

Southwire does not claim that Surge Guards are not sold for use in RVs as the

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Sparkses allege. In essence, Texas residents are claiming that they purchased the

product for use in their home, though that home was on wheels. Though not as

strong perhaps as if the injury had occurred in Texas, there was a direct impact on

Texas residents that resulted from the sale of a Southwire product in Texas.

      Further, to paraphrase Luciano, “the [Sparkses] allege—and [Southwire] does

not deny—that [Southwire] sold [Surge Guards] in Texas[, and Southwire] does not

contend that the sale of [Surge Guards] . . . was an ‘isolated occurrence’ in Texas.” See

id. Certainly, Southwire bobs and weaves on this issue by claiming that it “generally”

uses unrelated distributors and “cannot locate any record” of selling the specific

model of Surge Guard that the Sparkses claim that United RV sold to them. But the

fact remains that Southwire acknowledges that it manufactured the type of Surge

Guard that the Sparkses identified in their petition, and the Sparkses claim that they

purchased the Surge Guard from a company that Southwire identifies as a dealer on

its website’s listing of where to buy its products. That same website listing appears to

show a number of Southwire dealers in Texas. Thus, the trial court was left to

reconcile what appeared to be conflicting portrayals of how Southwire distributes its

products in Texas. There is more than a scintilla of evidence that—contrary to

Southwire’s carefully phrased declaration—Southwire intended to serve the Texas

market for the Surge Guard at issue, and this establishes a relationship between

Southwire’s Texas contacts and the Sparkses’ claims.

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      Also, Southwire acknowledges that it has a distribution facility in Texas for its

products. As noted, the Luciano plaintiffs’ inability to establish that the barrel of foam

insulation that they received came from the defendant’s distribution center did not

sever the necessary relationship between the claim and the contacts; the fact that the

defendant intended to serve the Texas market for the allegedly injury-causing product

was a sufficient relationship. Id. Though we have no evidence regarding what

products are distributed from Southwire’s Texas distribution facility, Southwire offers

no proof that this distribution facility does not distribute the type of Surge Guard at

issue. It offers no proof that the particular Surge Guard that the Sparkses purchased

made its way to the Texas market in some way unrelated to the distribution facility or

by some other isolated occurrence. Again, this is some evidence of a relationship

between Southwire’s contacts and the Sparkses’ claims.

      We conclude that there is more than a scintilla of evidence to support implied

findings that, in turn, support a conclusion that there is a sufficient relationship

between the Sparkses’ claims and Southwire’s contacts with Texas to establish the

necessary relationship between the two for purposes of the exercise of specific

jurisdiction over Southwire.9

      9
        Southwire does not assert that the exercise of jurisdiction over it would violate
traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. See Spir Star, 310 S.W.3d at
878–79 (listing considerations of fair play and substantial justice as follows: (1) “the
burden on the defendant”; (2) “the interests of the forum state in adjudicating the
dispute”; (3) “the plaintiff’s interest in obtaining convenient and effective relief”;
(4) the interstate or international judicial system’s interest in obtaining the most

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                                    V. Conclusion

      We have detailed our analysis regarding why we conclude that Southwire

purposefully availed itself of the Texas market to sell its products and why the

Sparkses’ claims are sufficiently related to those contacts to support an exercise of

specific jurisdiction over Southwire. We therefore overrule Southwire’s sole issue,

and we affirm the trial court’s order denying Southwire’s special appearance.

                                                      /s/ Dabney Bassel

                                                      Dabney Bassel
                                                      Justice

Delivered: November 18, 2021

efficient resolution of controversies; and (5) the shared interest of the several nations
or states in furthering fundamental substantive social policies). Thus, we do not
address that issue. Further, our resolution of this appeal on the basis of specific
jurisdiction obviates the need to discuss the issue of general jurisdiction.

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