MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Afirm, Inc. (“Afirm”) brought this diversity suit against defendant Frazee Paint and Wallcovering Company, Inc. (“Frazee”) for breach of an oral contract. Afirm is an Illinois corporation with its principal place of business in Hinsdale, Illinois. Frazee is a California corporation with its principal place of business in San Diego, California. Frazee contends that the court lacks personal jurisdiction over Frazee and has moved to dismiss the suit under 12(b)(2). For the reasons set forth below, the court grants Frazee’s motions.
*974 Facts
The parties have submitted conflicting affidavits concerning the material facts.
1
While Afirm carries the burden of producing evidence sufficient to support jurisdiction,
see, e.g., Caicos Petroleum Service Corp. v. Hunsaker,
Frazee is registered to do business in California — not Illinois. Frazee does not maintain or operate any facility in any Illinois county. Nor does Frazee own, use or possess any real property in Illinois. In the past twelve months, Frazee has not made any shipment or sale of any kind whatsoever to any entity, buyer or recipient in Illinois. However, Frazee has had unsolicited business contact and interstate telephone conversations with Afirm in the last two years.
Afirm is an employment agency. Its job is to help businesses find qualified employees and vice versa. If it is successful, the hiring corporation pays it a fee, usually a percentage of the salary of the person hired. In the last two years on several occasions, Afirm made unsolicited interstate calls to Frazee to present applicants for various positions. Frazee never called Afirm, unless Frazee was returning a call. Nor did Frazee ever meet with Afirm or interview applicants in Illinois. However, Afirm alleges that the parties agreed over the phone that if Frazee hired an employee Afirm referred to it, it would pay Afirm 25% of the employee’s first annual salary.
On June 9, 1983, candidate Martin Balow was presented by Afirm to Frazee for a “technical director” position. Per Frazee’s request, Balow’s resume was submitted. In addition, an appointment by telephone was arranged for Balow to be interviewed by Frazee in California in September 1983. But Frazee did not hire Balow then. Instead, Frazee hired Cyriac Alexander, another potential candidate, for the technical director position. Balow then accepted a technical director position with another company.
In May of 1984, Frazee placed an ad for a senior chemist in a trade publication circulated in Illinois. Afirm responded to this ad by placing another unsolicited call to Frazee. Afirm spoke to Cyriac Alexander, now the Senior Vice President of Operations, 2 and presented not Balow but a former applicant, Ray Guchurra. Mr. Alexander never followed up on Afirm’s presentation or returned Afirm’s calls.
The parties did not communicate with each other again until October 15, 1984, the day Afirm found out that Frazee ended up hiring Balow in July 1984 for the technical director position. 3 Afirm contacted Alexander and demanded a placement fee of 25% of Balow’s first year’s salary ($12,-500). Frazee refused to pay such fee. Afirm filed this lawsuit.
Afirm contends that Frazee transacted business in Illinois, thereby rendering Frazee amenable to in personam jurisdiction within Illinois pursuant to the Illinois Long Arm Statute. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, § 2-209(a)(1) (1983). In addition, Afirm argues that Frazee has been “doing business” in *975 Illinois for the last two years, thereby subjecting Frazee to personal jurisdiction under the doctrine bearing that name. We hold below that personal jurisdiction is lacking under either theory.
Discussion
In a suit based on diversity of citizenship, a federal court has personal jurisdiction only if the forum state court would have jurisdiction.
See, Maurice Sternberg v. James,
The only pertinent provisions of the Illinois long-arm statute state:
(a) Any person, whether or not a citizen or resident of this State, who in person or through an agent does any of the acts hereinafter enumerated thereby submits such person and, if an individual, his or her personal representative, to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State as to any cause of action arising from the doing business of any such acts:
(1) The transaction of any business within this State;
j¡c $ % sjs *
(c) Only causes of action arising from acts enumerated herein may be asserted against a defendant in an action in which jurisdiction over him or her is based upon this Section.
Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, § 2-209(a)(l) (1983). Sections 2-209(a)(l) and 2-209(e) essentially create two factors for the court to consider. The first subsection requires us to examine the nature and extent of Frazee’s contacts with Illinois. The second requires that there be some overlap between those contacts and the cause of action alleged in the complaint. In particular, the second subsection requires that the relevant transaction of business “give rise to the plaintiffs’ cause of action; in other words, the plaintiff’s claim must ‘lie in the wake of the commercial activities by which [the] defendant submitted to the jurisdiction of Illinois courts.’ ”
Snyder v. Smith,
The second test enables us to cull out at the outset many of the makeweight facts that Afirm asserts in support of jurisdiction. It alleges making phone calls and employee references for prospective employees other than Balow, the one Frazee hired. While these other contacts are relevant to Afirm’s “doing business” claim, which we discuss below at 11-12, they did not in any way “give rise to” Afirm’s cause of action in this case. Afirm does not and cannot contend otherwise. Thus, they are irrelevant to our analysis under the long-arm statute.
Stripped of its irrelevancies, then, Afirm’s case is based on the following disputed facts which we have construed in its favor:
(1) It called Frazee and sent Balow’s resume;
(2) Frazee agreed over the phone that if it hired Balow for the technical di *976 rector position, it would pay Afirm a fee.
(3) Balow was interviewed and rejected. Alexander was hired instead, for a reconstituted position. Balow went to work elsewhere.
(4) Some months later, Frazee hired Ba-low, but refused to pay Afirm a fee.
The parties dispute whether Balow filled the same position he was initially interviewed for. Afirm asserts simply that he was, though we wonder how it is competent to allege that fact. In contrast, Frazee’s affidavits describe in detail how Ba-low’s position is much different from the one he originally sought. Indeed, they say that that position was changed in order to woo Alexander, well before Balow applied the second time. Even though Frazee’s version strikes us as more credible, we must resolve this conflict in Afirm’s favor. Even doing so, we think jurisdiction over Frazee is lacking.
First, we have strong doubts whether Frazee’s contacts with Illinois were sufficient to amount to “the transaction of business within” Illinois. At best, we have an unsolicited phone call from an Illinois plaintiff, in which an agreement was reached that called for payment to the Illinois plaintiff for some minimal services rendered within Illinois. Recent cases have held that mere telephone calls alone cannot establish jurisdiction over a foreign defendant.
See, e.g., Connolly v. Samuelson,
Afirm relies heavily on the
Cook v. Colonial
case cited above.
Cook v. Colonial
also involved a “headhunter” plaintiff. The defendant company called the plaintiff
*977
asking it to refer prospective employees. Plaintiff did so, and defendant ultimately hired the employee. Although the company’s only contact with the Illinois plaintiff was via the one phone call it made, the Court held that it had transacted business within Illinois.
Cook v. Colonial
is arguably distinguishable because the defendant there initiated the transaction, while the plaintiff here did so. While some courts make much of who called whom first,
see Ciacos Petroleum,
We need not examine
Cook v. Colonial
any further for signs of life. For whether or not
Cook v. Colonial
lives, we think that a case involving the same employment agency, and decided by the Illinois Supreme Court,
Cook Associates, Inc. v. Lexington United Corp.,
In that case one of Cook’s managers referred a prospective employee to defendant Lexington, a Missouri corporation. Lexington had initiated the transaction by calling Cook for an employee. Lexington interviewed the applicant in Chicago, but that applicant rejected the job because the salary was too low. Communication between the two stopped for several months. Lexington then contacted Cook’s manager, who at the time was in business in Massachusetts for herself. Lexington was seeking an employee for a similar position, but at a higher salary. The manager submitted the name of the previous applicant, among others. Lexington eventually hired the applicant and paid Cook’s former manager a fee. Cook found out about this, also demanded a fee, and then sued when Lexington refused to pay. After first reaffirming Green’s decision to sever § 2-209 *978 from the Due Process Clause, the Supreme Court of Illinois held, among other things, that the initial reference and interview did not lead to the applicant’s hiring, and therefore the cause of action did not arise from the Illinois contact. Because the applicant had rejected the first position and was hired for a different one, and the record did not show that the initial interview had any influence on the ultimate hiring, the Court held that the ultimate hiring was too remote from the initial reference to conclude that the cause of action arose from that initial business transaction.
The same conclusion follows for this case. Like the Cook v. Lexington case, here the initial reference resulted in no job for the applicant. Frazee rejected Balow and hired Alexander. Balow went to work elsewhere and several months passed. Even though Balow was eventually hired, like the situation in Cook v. Lexington the record here does not suggest that the initial reference was at all related to the ultimate hiring of Balow. In fact, the uncontradicted evidence in the record reveals that the hiring was completely unrelated to the reference. 7 Under these facts, the ultimate hiring was far too remote from, if connected at all to, the asserted Illinois contact (which was tenuous itself) to fairly conclude that the cause of action “lies in the wake” of that transaction. We therefore hold that Afirm has failed to satisfy the long-arm statute.
It is easy to conclude next that Afirm fails to satisfy the alternative “doing business” test as well. A remnant of the times preceding the modern “minimum contacts” era, the “doing business” doctrine examines a defendant’s contacts with a forum state to determine whether he or she is fictionally “present” for jurisdictional purposes.
See generally Maunder v. DeHavilland Aircraft of Canada, Ltd.,
D. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that Afirm has not satisfied the requirements of the long-arm statute or the doing business doctrine. Thus, we grant Frazee’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. It is so ordered.
Notes
. Afirm’s motion to strike the affidavit of Cyriac Alexander is denied. We will consider it for what it is worth.
. Frazee's uncontradicted affidavits establish that the technical director position which Balow had applied for had been upgraded before Alexander was hired to fill it. Alexander assumed some hiring duties in this position. See n. 7 below.
. There is a dispute between the parties regarding the position Balow filled. Frazee claims that Balow was hired for a completely different job from the first one. In addition, Frazee has alleged facts indicating that Balow was hired as a result of Mr. Alexander's contacts and efforts — not Afirm’s prior efforts. We discuss this in greater detail below.
. Until 1981, the Illinois Supreme Court had fused interpretation of the long-arm statute with construction of the Due Process Clause.
See Nelson v. Miller,
. Of course, these cases would still have value as precedent for interpreting the Due Process Clause. It should be noted that not everyone agrees that the long-arm statute is now narrower than the Due Process Clause. In
Ronco, supra,
Judge Marshall states that the
Green
case perhaps only severed the two lines of analysis
without
narrowing the scope of the statute. In other words, it might be that the Supreme Court merely held that the meaning of the statute should remain fixed, not be narrowed; thus, if the contours of the Due Process Clause have not changed since 1981, the long-arm statute would still coincide with that clause for jurisdictional purposes.
See
. There is no question that in the earlier case, Cook v. Colonial, the cause of action "lay in the wake” of the transaction in issue.
. Frazee’s affidavits detail the following facts, which Afirm has not contested. Thus, we take them as true.
See Caicos Petroleum,
