This is а consolidated appeal from two orders, one in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, and the other in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York, vacating service and dismissing the complaint against defendant-appellee, Peerless Chemicals (P.R.) Inc., a Puerto Rican corporation. The action, first brought in the Southern District, is founded upon personal injuries suffеred by plaintiffs, Baltimore longshoremen, aboard the S.S. Frances in Baltimore Harbor, and alleged to have resulted from the escape of chlorine gas from certain supposedly empty chlorine cylinders owned and shipped by Peerless Chemicals (P.R.) Inc., hereinafter referred to as Peerless (P.R.). Jurisdiction rests upon diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Judge MacMahon vacated service upon Dennis J. Carey, Jr., president of Peerless (P.R.), effected at the Long Island City offices of the parent corporation, Peerless Oil and Chemical Corp., hereinafter referred to as Peerless. He also dismissed the complaint against Peerless (P.R.), finding that it was doing no business within the state of New York and that any possible inferences to the contrary indicate at best that business-, is being conducted in the Eastern District, where the offices of the parent are-located. Plaintiffs then filed their complaint in the Eastern District. JudgeDooling held, after considering a lengthy deposition of Peerless (P.R.) through its president Dennis Carey, that the corporation was doing no business in New York, and that the court was therefore-without jurisdiction.
We are thus confronted with the question whether Peerless (P.R.) was “doing business” in New York, more specifically in Long Island City, such that a federal court sitting in New York may,assert jurisdiction over it in the particular circumstances of the case before us.
Whether the standard of “doing business” for federal diversity cases; is that of the state in which the federal' court sits, or is a distinct federal standard, was resolved by this Court in am alternative holding in Jaftex Corp v. Randolph Mills,
I.
The Supreme Court’s approach to 'the question of personal jurisdictiоn over • a foreign corporation is revealed not only .'in International Shoe but also in such :more recent cases as Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
The court must apply these factors to the particular circumstances of the case before it, see MacInnes v. Fontainebleau Hotel Corp.,
II.
With these principles of law in mind, we turn to the faсts of this particular case. These facts have already been set out with meticulous care in the opinion of Judge Dooling, and need not, therefore, be repeated here in detail. His findings are clearly supported by the record. In determining whether Peerless (P.R.) had business contacts with New York of such a nature and extent as to warrant the conclusion that it was “present” or “doing business” here, Judge Dooling evaluated the relationship between the Puerto Rican corporation and its New York parent, Peerless, as well as between that corporation and its president, who resides in New York.
Judge Dooling found, and we agree, that
“Peerless (P.R.) is in no sense a department or agency of Peerless New York. Its business is distinct in composition and location and it has its own operating personnel. * * * Equally, it does not appear that Peerless New York was the agent or implement of Peerless (P. R.) The parties were free to choose their forms of doing business with each other and there is no indication that they violated the integrity of the forms they chose or rendered them unreal by any course of conduct shown in the evidence.”
Although Peerless (P.R.) wаs in effect wholly owned by Peerless of New York, the evidence is quite clear that the relationship of the New York corporation to the Puerto Rican corporation was primarily that of seller to purchaser, and not. that of puppeteer to puppet. Peerless. (P.R.) pui-chased property and erected its plant in Ponce, Puerto Rico, for the purpose of marketing and distributing chemicals and petroleum products. The New York corporation had been doing a similar business since 1945. Peerless made no loans to Peerless (P.R.), guaranteed none of its obligations, and underwrote none of its liabilities. Peerless is one of several suppliers of chemicals to Peerless (P.R.), supplying it with 10%. of its purchases by tonnage and 30'% in dollar value, and charging the same price charged all other purchasers. Orders are sent by Peerless (P.R.) from Puerto Rico to all suppliers and invoices are paid by checks drawn on its Puerto Rican bank. Marketing of its products is solely by local solicitation in Puerto Rico. Peerless (P.R.) pays no taxes to the State of New York, has no employees here, nо telephone listing here, and is not authorized to do business here. 2
In this case, we do not have a foreign corporation which “buys merchandise, in a systematic and continuing fashion, through an exclusive purchasing agent with an established and permanent place of business in New York,”
3
Sterling Novelty Corp. v. Frank & Hirsch Distributing Co.,
The appellants refer us to cases in which the parent corporation has been held subject to the jurisdiction of another state because of the activities there •of its subsidiary, see, e. g., State of Maryland for use of Mitchell v. Capital Airlines, Inc.,
III.
Appellants also contend that the activities in New York of president Dennis Carey rendered Peerless (P.R.) amenable to the jurisdiction of the District Court. We find this contention without merit. The facts as amply set out by Judge Dooling reveal, in effect, that Carey, a resident of New York and president of both Peerless New York and Peerless (P.R.), remained here the greater part of the year but was in constant liaison with the Puerto Rican corporation. He decided, at the Long Island City''offices of Peerless Nеw York, questions of corporate concern, investigated into market and price conditions, sometimes signed checks drawn on the Puerto Rican bank account of Peerless (P.R.), and on a few occasions was the object of solicitation by certain manufacturers of chemicals. But he solicited no sales in New York and signed no contracts here in behalf of Peerless (P.R.). In short, the far greater proportion of Carey’s activities in New York as president of the Puerto Rican corporation was related to mira-corporate affairs, rather than to business dealings with residents of New York, which seems to be one of the elements fundamental to the invocation of the “doing business” standard. See Hurley v. Wells-Newton Nat. Corp.,
IV.
Thus, the nature and extent of the Puerto Rican corporation’s business activities in New York — through its president and through, its parent corporation — are insufficient to warrant subjecting it to the jurisdiction of courts sitting in this state. Despite this, there are cases, as we have already indicated, where jurisdiction may properly be exercised if the cause of action relates in some significant manner to the forum state or the business activities, however minimal, conducted in it, see International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
*701 We therefore affirm the orders of Judge MaeMahon in the Southern District and Judge Dooling in the Eastern District vacating service upon Dennis Carey as president of Peerless (P.R.) and dismissing the complaint.
Notes
. These considerations have been formulated in a somewhat different manner in the lucid concurring opinion of Judge Woodbury in W. H. Elliott & Sons Co. v. Nuodex Products Co.,
. It is difficult to overlook the striking similarity between the facts of this case and the facts in A. G. Bliss Co. v. United Carr Fastener Co.,
. It has long been settled that purchases alone, though carried on regularly, are not enough to confer jurisdiction upon the courts of the state in which the purchases are made. Rosenberg Bros. Co. v. Curtis Brown Co.,
. The most recent authoritative case cited to us by the appellants is the Supreme Court’s decision in Perkins v. Bеnguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
. We cannot help but note, in pаssing, the-increasing flexibility in the criteria set-down in recent opinions for determining the jurisdictional question with which we-are dealing. This has been mirrored — for much the same reasons, compare McGee v. International Life Ins. Co.,
