On the footheels of
Stewart Organization, Inc. v. Ricoh Corp.,
The district court found this contractual clause insufficient to confer in personam jurisdiction under the law of the forum state, Florida. The trial court then granted a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, finding that the requirements of the Florida Long-Arm Statute, Fla.Stat. Ann. § 48.193 (West 1969 and Cumm.Ann. Supp.1989) were not satisfied. The appellant now challenges this ruling by arguing that the Erie doctrine required the district court to apply federal law to enforce the personal jurisdiction conferral clause. Although this argument is not persuasive, we reverse and remand because we find that Florida confers jurisdiction over the appel-lee.
BACKGROUND 3
Alexander Proudfoot Company World Headquarters and APCO, Inc. (“Proud-foot”) filed this action to enforce certain provisions of its employment agreement with Dennis C. Thayer (“Thayer”). Proud-foot seeks to enjoin Thayer from competing with Proudfoot, from servicing its clients, and from using confidential information belonging to Proudfoot. Proudfoot also demands that Thayer return to Proudfoot all confidential documents that Thayer retained after his employment terminated.
Proudfoot is a Delaware corporation with its principal offices in Palm Beach County, Florida. Proudfoot is engaged in the business of management consulting. Specifically, Proudfoot designs and installs management and operational skills systems which help businesses increase productivity. Proudfoot maintains that these specially developed systems are confidential information and are Proudfoot’s exclusive property.
Proudfoot first employed Thayer in 1973 to assist in the design and installation of the management systems. 4 Proudfoot trained Thayer in the various aspects of the consulting business, including the design and installation of management and operational skills systems. Thayer’s first position with Proudfoot was as a staff technician in the operations side of the business. At all relevant times, Thayer remained in operations, receiving promotions to installation manager, chief of operations, executive chief of operations, and later director.
The employment agreement at issue is dated January 15, 1987. Proudfoot mailed a copy of the agreement to Thayer’s residence in Missouri. Thayer read the agreement and then authorized his wife to sign it for him. Mrs. Thayer then returned the agreement by mail to Proudfoot’s offices in Palm Beach County, Florida, where Proud-foot’s general manager executed the contract.
The terms of the employment agreement are central to the resolution of this appeal. The agreement prohibits Thayer from accepting employment with a competitor of Proudfoot for two years after the termination of his employment. The agreement also forbids Thayer from using Proudfoot’s confidential information. The agreement further provides that upon disassociation, Thayer must return to Proudfoot in Florida *915 all documents and other information in his possession concerning Proudfoot’s business or belonging to Proudfoot. In addition, the employment agreement specifically provides that Thayer consents to personal jurisdiction within the state of Florida for any suit arising from a violation of the agreement. 5 By executing the agreement, Thayer also apparently agreed that the proper venue for any suit arising out of the agreement would be a Florida court. 6
Most of Thayer’s contacts with Proud-foot prior to the alleged breach of this employment contract were centered in Palm Beach County, Florida. Proudfoot reassigned Thayer to United States operations in April of 1985. Thayer reported, either by mail or telephone, to his Proud-foot superiors at least on a weekly basis, and sometimes more frequently. 7 During 1986 and 1987, Thayer traveled into Florida on at least nine occasions. On a majority of these trips, Thayer engaged in internal Proudfoot administrative matters at Proud-foot’s office. On approximately thirty percent of these trips, however, Thayer performed work on behalf of the Proudfoot clients he represented. These clients were not Florida companies, but out-of-state interests who had matters in Florida to which Thayer attended.
Thayer had additional, more minor contacts with Florida. Proudfoot’s procedures required him to submit travel vouchers to Proudfoot’s offices in Palm Beach County, Florida, on a biweekly basis. This submission procedure was the exclusive method for Thayer to obtain reimbursement for his business travel expenses incurred on behalf of Proudfoot. Proudfoot’s travel agency in Florida arranged and paid for all of Thayer’s airline tickets used for business travel. Proudfoot also paid the required unemployment and workers’ compensation benefits for Thayer.
In May of 1987, Thayer voluntarily resigned from his employment with Proud-foot. Shortly after resigning, Thayer contacted the Institute of Management Resources (“IMR”), a competitor of Proudfoot based in California, concerning possible employment. Thayer began work for IMR in June of 1987, and performed work similar to that which he had performed at Proud-foot.
Proudfoot believed that Thayer’s new employment was in violation of the non-competition covenants in Thayer’s employment agreement. Proudfoot also thought that Thayer violated his employment agreement by disclosing or using Proudfoot’s confidential information in his employment with IMR. Proudfoot demanded that Thayer return all of Proudfoot’s information he had within his possession. When Thayer refused to return this information, Proud-foot filed suit in state court. 8
*916 Thayer removed the case to federal court 9 and moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. Thayer argued that the requirements of Florida’s long-arm statute had not been satisfied. Proudfoot opposed the motion by contending that Thayer waived any jurisdictional objections he may have had by consenting to jurisdiction in Florida in the employment agreement.
After considering the argument of counsel, the district court granted the motion to dismiss. The district court both refused to enforce the conferral of personal jurisdiction clause and found that the requirements of Florida’s long-arm statute were not satisfied.
DISCUSSION
The appellant argues that the district court improperly applied state law to decide the motion to dismiss. Proudfoot maintains that
Erie R. v. Tompkins,
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the dismissal of an action for lack of personal jurisdiction under the nondeferential
de novo
standard.
See Ten Mile Industrial Park v. Western Plains Service Corp.,
II. THE APPLICATION OF THE ERIE DOCTRINE
We start our
de novo
review with the
Erie
doctrine. Almost every time a federal court sitting in diversity decides a matter,
Erie
concerns are implicated. In today's world of well-developed federal and state law, both state and federal law often provide a means to resolve a legal issue in dispute. Consistent with the principles the Supreme Court espoused in
Erie,
a federal court must determine whether to apply federal or state law to settle the disputed issue. The question of which law to apply is a “sticky” one,
see Stewart Org., Inc. v. Ricoh Corp.,
Erie
eliminated the existence of independent federal common law in diversity cases by overruling
Swift v. Tyson,
*917
After almost three decades and many decisions analyzing Erie,
10
the Supreme Court attempted to formulate a final, feasible test in
Hanna v. Plumer,
Under the
Hanna
approach, when the federal law sought to be applied is a congressional statute or Federal Rule of Civil Procedure, the district court must first decide whether the statute is “sufficiently broad to control the issue before the court.”
Hanna,
If a federal statute or Rule of Civil Procedure does
not
sufficiently cover the disputed issue,
Hanna
requires that the district court consider the applicability of federal judge-made law. This analysis requires the court to evaluate whether application of federal judge-made law would disserve the “twin aims of the
Erie
rule: discouragement of forum shopping and avoidance of inequitable administration of the laws.”
Stewart Org.,
With this background, we now conduct the
Hanna
inquiry. The first step is to precisely define the issue.
See Stewart Org.,
The first inquiry under
Hanna
is whether a federal statute or Federal Rule of Civil Procedure sufficiently covers the disputed issued. Federal courts have consistently held that no federal statute or Rule of Civil
*918
Procedure controls issues of personal jurisdiction. In
Arrowsmith v. United Press International,
After determining that no federal statute or Rule of Civil Procedure sufficiently covers the issue in dispute, the court now considers the relevant federal judge-made law. According to Hanna, if the application of federal judge-made law would encourage forum shopping and promote the inequitable administration of the laws, then the court must apply state law. Necessarily, this analysis requires the court to determine the scope of the federal judge-made law sought to be applied before deciding whether applying that law would disserve the “twin aims of Erie.”
Proudfoot urges that federal judge-made law in this case requires the enforcement of the personal jurisdiction conferral clause for two reasons. First, Proudfoot maintains that the Supreme Court’s opinion in
The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Company,
This aspect of federal common law, favoring the enforcement of conferral of personal jurisdiction clauses, differs sharply from Florida law. In Florida, conferral of personal jurisdiction clauses are not enforced unless an independent ground for personal jurisdiction exists under the Florida Long Arm Statute, Fla.Stat.Ann. § 48.193 (West 1969 and Cumm.Ann.Supp. 1989).
See McRae v. J.D./M.D., Inc.,
With this understanding of the significant difference between the relevant federal and state laws, the court can evaluate the federal judge-made law in light of the twin aims of
Erie.
The first concern, forum shopping, requires the court to ask whether applying the state rule “would have so important an effect upon the fortunes of one or both of the litigants that failure to enforce it would be likely to cause a plaintiff to choose the federal court.”
Hanna,
The court also must consider the related second aim of
Eñe,
14
the avoidance of the inequitable administration of the laws. To analyze the second aim, the court asks whether the state law is “so important to the litigation that failure to enforce it would unfairly discriminate against citizens of the forum state.”
Hanna,
Because the application of federal judge-made law here would encourage forum shopping and promote the inequitable administration of the laws, we must apply state law to decide the issue presented. We now examine the relevant issues of Florida law.
III. THE APPLICATION OF FLORIDA LAW
To assert personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, federal courts must engage in a two-part analysis.
Pesaplastic, C.A. v. Cincinnati Milacron Co.,
Under Florida law, clauses conferring personal jurisdiction are insufficient to establish
in personam
jurisdiction, absent an independent basis for jurisdiction under the long-arm statute.
See McRae v. J.D./M.D., Inc.,
After McRae, Florida courts will not exercise jurisdiction solely on the basis of a contractual provision conferring jurisdiction if the nonresident defendant’s acts do not satisfy the state long-arm statute. Accordingly, this court cannot merely rely on the contract Thayer signed that conferred personal jurisdiction and indicated venue, but instead must decide whether Florida can properly assert personal jurisdiction under the long-arm statute.
Among the several listed bases, the Florida long-arm statute allows Florida courts to assert jurisdiction over nonresident defendants who breach a contract by failing to perform acts in Florida as required by the contract. 17 Fla.Stat. § 48.193(l)(g). Proudfoot contends that this section of the long-arm statute is satisfied because Thayer breached the employment agreement by failing to turn over confidential information to Proudfoot in Florida as required by the contract. 18 We agree.
Paragraph 5 of the Employment Agreement between Proudfoot and Thayer specifically provides that Thayer, upon termination of employment, shall deliver to Proudfoot all confidential materials. Thayer, however, destroyed or threw away all documents or materials containing classified information. Thayer’s failure to return these materials to Proudfoot in Florida constitutes a breach of a contract in Florida and thus Thayer falls within the purview of the long-arm statute.
See Thompson v. King,
*921
After deciding that the long-arm statute provides a basis to assert personal jurisdiction over Thayer, the court must determine whether the due process clause allows Florida courts to establish
in personam
jurisdiction over the nonresident defendant. Normally, courts consider whether the defendant purposefully established “minimum contacts” with the forum state.
International Shoe v. Washington,
Because the nonresident defendant in the present case contractually agreed to personal jurisdiction in Florida, the usual due process analysis need not be done.
20
As the Supreme Court noted in
Burger King,
the due process analysis is unnecessary where a nonresident defendant has consented to suit in a forum.
Burger King,
CONCLUSION
The court’s concern with forum shopping and the avoidance of the inequitable administration of the laws requires that Florida law govern the application of clauses conferring personal jurisdiction. Accordingly, because jurisdiction over Thayer is proper under state law and the due process clause, the district court’s dismissal based on lack of personal jurisdiction is reversed and the case remanded.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. See Ely, The Irrepressible Myth of Erie, 87 Harv.L.Rev. 693 (1974).
. The information contained in this section is derived from the materials before the district court when it held a hearing on the motion to dismiss.
. When Thayer began to work for Proudfoot, Proudfoot was an Illinois general partnership based in Chicago. Between 1975 and 1985, Thayer was assigned overseas to two of Proud-foot’s affiliated companies, first in Brazil and later in Europe. While Thayer was abroad, Proudfoot moved its principal offices from Illinois to Florida. At this time, Thayer executed and accepted the terms of an employment agreement. This agreement included a covenant not to compete and a covenant not to disclose or use confidential information.
. The specific contractual language reads as follows:
10. The company's remedies. Employee acknowledges that any violation of this agreement may subject employee to liability for damages, and also to court enforcement on the specific terms of its provisions. Employee further acknowledges that it may be difficult for the company to ascertain the exact amount of damages for violation of these provisions but that the company’s damages would be continuing in nature, and that the company will suffer irreparable harm and injury by reason of any such violations. Consequently, employee consents to court enforcement of the specific language of this agreement, and further consents to be personally subject to the jurisdiction of the federal or state courts located in the state of Florida in any suit against employee by the company for violation of this agreement.
. The specific contractual language provides as follows:
15. Governing Law: Notwithstanding principles of conflicts of laws of any jurisdiction to the contrary, all terms and provisions of this agreement are to be construed and governed by the laws of the state of Florida without regard to the laws of any other jurisdiction wherein employee resides or performs any duties hereunder or wherein any violation of this agreement occurs. Any suit, action or other legal proceeding arising out of or relating to this agreement will be brought exclusively in the federal and state courts located in the state of Florida.
. Proudfoot’s company procedures required these frequent communications.
. Thayer stated at his deposition that he could not return this information because the information consisted largely of documents that Thayer destroyed or threw away.
. At oral argument, the appellant noted that the petition for removal was jurisdictionally defective. Specifically, the appellee did not describe the citizenship of each of the limited partners of Proudfoot. The allegation of citizenship of the limited partners is critical in a diversity case because partnerships are deemed citizens of all states in which the limited partners are citizens.
See, e.g., Elston Investment, Ltd. v. David Altman Leasing Corp.,
.
See, e.g., Guaranty Trust Co. v. York,
.
Hanna
also outlined an additional inquiry where the applicability of a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure is in question. Federal rules must be measured against the statutory requirement of the Rules Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2072 (1982). The court must determine whether the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure "abridges, enlarges, or modifies any substantive right.” This analysis actually determines the scope of the Enabling Act.
Hanna,
. This lack of controlling federal law or Rule distinguishes the present case from Stewart Org. Stewart Org.'s forum selection clause concerned venue, so the Supreme Court found 28 U.S.C. § 1404 as sufficiently broad to cover the issue. The "forum selection clause” in the present case involves personal jurisdiction. The conferral of personal jurisdiction clause is not sufficiently covered by § 1404 nor, as the discussion in the text indicates, by any other federal statute or Rule. The court, consequently, must proceed with the remainder of the Hanna inquiry.
. Other courts have defined forum shopping as "the unfairness of giving one set of plaintiffs (those who can sue in federal court) some particular advantage unavailable to non-diverse plaintiffs who must proceed in state court.”
In re Air Crash Disaster Near New Orleans, La.,
. After
Walker v. Armco Steel Corp.,
.The Fifth Circuit has defined the second turn of
Erie
as "the federal courts’ own interests in equitable self-administration."
In re Air Crash Disaster,
. The contract contained the following clause:
It is agreed that this agreement, wherever executed, shall be construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Florida and venue shall be in Palm Beach County, Florida.
. The full text of the statute provides as follows:
1. Any person, whether or not a citizen of resident of this state, who personally or through an agent does any of the acts enumerated in this subsection thereby submit himself, and, if he is a natural person, his personal representative to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state for any cause of action arising from the doing of any of the following acts:
(g.) Breaching a contract in this state by failing to perform acts required by the contract to be performed in this state.
. Proudfoot also presents other arguments under this subsection of the long-arm statute. Similarly, Proudfoot contends Thayer is subject to jurisdiction under the "doing business” section of the statute. Because we find that Thayer’s nondelivery satisfies the long-arm statute, the court need not address Proudfoot's other arguments.
.Thayer suggests that the present case is controlled by
Vaughn v. AAA Employment, Inc.,
. In the absence of the contractual waiver, Proudfoot suggests that Florida courts could still properly assert jurisdiction over Thayer. The employment agreement that he breached was executed in Florida. His employment under the contract required fairly regular travel to Florida. Finally, his breach of the employment contract affected the employer in Florida. Proudfoot contends that these factors indicate Thayer could have reasonably anticipated being haled into court in Florida.
See Burger King,
