Bоrg-Warner Acceptance Corporation (“Borg-Warner”), a Delaware corporation, appeals the dismissal of its suit to domesticate and collect a Missouri state court judgment against Lovett & Tharpe, Inc., a Georgia corporation. The district court dismissed the action on the ground that the Missouri court lacked in personam jurisdiction over the defendant, which rendered the Missouri default judgment void and unenforceable. We affirm.
I. FACTS AND COURSE OF PROCEEDINGS
In 1980, Lovett & Tharpe, a Georgia corporation having its principal place of business in Dublin, Georgia, cоntracted with Coon Manufacturing and Distributing (“Coon”), a Missouri proprietorship, for Coon to manufacture certain merchandise to be purchased by Lovett & Tharpe. The contract between Coon and Lovett & Tharpe was negotiated and entered into in Georgia. Representing Coon in the negotiations was its employee based in the Atlanta area; representing Lovett & Tharpe in the negotiations were home office personnel of Lovett & Tharpe based in Dublin, Georgia. No officer or other representative of Lovett & Tharpe visited Missouri to negotiate the cоntract or to inspect Coon’s manufacturing plant.
Borg-Warner agreed to loan Coon money with which Coon could finance its manufacturing of the merchandise to be purchased by Lovett & Tharpe, provided that Lovett & Tharpe would execute and accept Borg-Warner’s trade acceptance. 1 Lovett & Tharpe did execute and accept the trade acceptance, and Borg-Warner advanced the money to Coon. The agreement between Borg-Warner and Lovett & Tharpe was negotiated between the Atlanta, Georgiа, office of Borg-Warner and the Dublin, Georgia, office of Lovett & Tharpe.
Coon manufactured the merchandise in Missouri and transported it from Missouri to Lovett & Tharpe in Georgia. Lovett & Tharpe subsequently returned some of the goods to Coon in Missouri and, in connection with the return, one or more of Lovett & Tharpe’s employees entered the state of Missouri. Borg-Warner sent the trade acceptance through normal banking channels for payment from Lovett & Tharpe’s account at Farmer & Merchants Bank in Dublin, Georgia.' Lovett & Tharpe refused to make payment or to permit payment on the trade acceptancе and caused the trade acceptance to be returned unpaid.
After Lovett & Tharpe refused to make payment, Borg-Warner brought suit against Lovett & Tharpe in the Circuit Court of Jackson, Missouri. Lovett & Tharpe did not appear or defend. The Missouri court found that it had personal jurisdiction over Lovett & Tharpe and therefore entered a default judgment against Lovett & Tharpe for the full amount of the trade acceptance.
The present diversity action began when Borg-Warner brought suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia seeking to domesticate the Missouri judgment. Borg-Warner moved for summary judgment and Lovett & Tharpe opposed that motion on the ground that the Missouri court had lacked
in personam
jurisdiction, rendering the default judgment void and unenforceable. The district court concluded that the Missouri judgment acted as res judicata as to any
*1057
dispute regarding personal jurisdiction and granted Borg-Warner’s motion for summary judgment.
Borg-Warner Acceptance Corp. v. Lovett & Tharpe, Inc.,
On remand, Borg-Warner again moved for summary judgment in the district court. After a hearing, the district court denied the motion for summary judgment and dismissed the case on the ground that the Missouri court had lacked personal jurisdiction over Lovett & Tharpe. Borg-Warner appeals the order dismissing its complaint.
II. DISCUSSION
Under the Missouri long-arm statute, the jurisdiction of the Missouri courts over nonresident defendants has been extended to the extent permissible under the due process clause.
See, e.g., Newport v. Wiesman,
A state may constitutionally exercise personal “general jurisdiction” over a foreign corporation if there are continuous and systematic general business contacts between the state and the foreign corporation, even if the cause of action does not relate to the foreign corporation’s activities in the forum state.
Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
Since Missouri could not exercise “general jurisdiction” over Lovett & Tharpe, we must examine whether its courts could exercise “specific jurisdiction,” i.e., whether the controversy arose out of Lovett & Tharpe’s contacts with Missouri.
See Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
If the controversy in the instant case were considered to arise solely out of the transaction between Borg-Warner and Lovett & Tharpe, the Missouri court could not have constitutionally asserted jurisdiction over Lovett & Tharpe. The trade acceptance form itself shows no connection with Missouri — the city of the drawer, Borg-Warner, is listed as Overland Park, Kansas. The agreement between Borg-Warner and Lovett & Tharpe was negotiated between the Atlanta, Georgia, office of Borg-Warner and the Dublin, Georgia, office of *1058 Lovett & Tharpe. The trade acceptance contract was found by the district court to have been made in Georgia.
However, we need not decide whether this controversy arises solely out of transaction between Borg-Warner and Lovett & Tharpe, because, even if the cause of action arose out of a larger transaction involving Borg-Warner, Lovett & Tharpe and Coon, Lovett & Tharpe had contacts with the state of Missouri which are insufficient for the constitutional exercise of jurisdiction by the Missouri court.
Borg-Warner asserts that thеre are three contacts between the transaction and Mis- „ souri such that the minimum contacts test v of International Shoe and its progeny is met: the merchandise which was the subject of the contract between Lovett & Tharpe and Coon was manufactured in Missouri; Lovett & Tharpe employees entered Missouri to return the goods; and Borg-Warner placed the trade acceptance with a Missouri bank for payment. As discussed above, Lovett & Tharpe has carried on no activity in Missouri other than the instant transaction. Because we conclude that the contacts Lovett & Tharpe did have with Missоuri were insufficient to permit the constitutional exercise of personal jurisdiction over Lovett & Tharpe, we affirm.
In order for a court to exercise jurisdiction over a defendant, “it is essential in each case that there be some act by which the defendant purposefully avails itself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum State, thus invoking the benefits and protections of its laws.”
Hanson v. Denckla,
As this сourt has recognized previously, in resolving constitutional problems of personal jurisdiction, “as elsewhere, important constitutional questions prove themselves immune to solution by checklist, and each case must be decided on its own facts.”
Product Promotions, Inc. v. Cousteau,
The fact that Borg-Warner placed the trade acceptance with a Missouri bank is not a relevant factor. In
Hanson v. Denckla,
the Supreme Court stated, “the unilateral activity of those who claim some relationship with a nonresident defendant cannot satisfy the requirement of contact with the forum State.”
The fact that employees of Lovett
&
Tharpe entered Missouri to return the manufactured goods to Coon is jurisdictionally significant.
See Southwire Co. v. Trans-World Metals & Co.,
The case in this circuit with facts most closely analogous to those of the instant case is
Owen of Georgia, Inc. v.
*1059
Blitman,
Cases in other circuit courts of appeals are to the same effect. In
Scullin Steel Co. v. National Railway Utilization Corp.,
The Seventh Circuit has also had occasion to rule on the case of a one-time nonresident purchaser of goods from a company in the forum state.
Lakeside Bridge & Steel Co. v. Mountain State Construction Co.,
Blitman, which is binding precedent in this circuit, and Scullin and Lakeside, in other circuits, are similar to the instant case except for the limited post-execution contact in the instant case.
Two circuit courts of appeal have dealt with the case of one-time nonresident purchasers of goods whose employees visited the state of the seller. For example, relying strongly on
Owen of Georgia, Inc. v. Blitman,
the new Fifth Circuit found unconstitutional the attempted exercise of
in personam
jurisdiction by a court in Texas over an Alaskan purchaser of goods made by a Texas corporation.
Hydrokinetics, Inc. v. Alaska Mechanical, Inc.,
Lovett & Tharpe had less contact with the state of Missouri than the purchaser in
Hydrokinetics.
The contract between Coon and Lovett & Tharpe was negotiated and entered into in Georgia. Representing Coon in the negotiations was its employee based in the Atlanta area; represеnting Lovett & Tharpe in the negotiations were home office personnel of Lovett & Tharpe based in Dublin, Georgia. No officer or other representative of Lovett & Tharpe visited Missouri to negotiate the contract or to inspect Coon’s manufacturing plant. The communications between Georgia and Missouri were not extensive. Moreover, while both Lovett & Tharpe and the purchaser in
Hydrokinetics
made post-contract execution contact with the forum state, Lovett & Tharpe’s contact was more limited. Lovett & Tharpe merely returned the goods, whereas the Alaskan purchaser visited the forum state seeking to resolve “problems related to the design, construction, and capabilities” of the goods.
Hydrokinetics,
Although the decisions of the new Fifth Circuit are not binding precedent on us, the Hydrokinetics case provides persuasive precedent that the Missouri court lacked personal jurisdiction over Lovett & Tharpe.
The First Circuit also addressed this question in
Whittaker Corp. v. United Aircraft Corp.,
Lovett & Tharpe’s contact with Missouri was very similar to the contact the purchasers in Whittaker had with Massachusetts. The primary contact in both cases was an isolated purchase; there had been no prior dealing between Coon and Lovett & Tharpe or the parties in Whittaker. Neither Lovett & Tharpe nor the two purchasers in Whittaker supervised or took part in the production of the items purchased. Lovett & Tharpe’s visit to Missouri, like the Whittaker buyers’ trips to Massachusetts, was not designed to negotiate the contract, oversee production, or enforce the contract. Moreover, the Whittaker court suggested that contact with the forum state which occurs after rejection of the goods, as in the instant case, should be discounted. Id. at 1082 n. 3. Thus, the Whittaker decision suggests that the Missouri court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction in this case was unconstitutional.
There is very little difference between the instant case and the сases decided by the First, Fifth, Seventh and Eighth Circuits. The primary contact involved in all *1062 the cases is the production of the goods in the forum state. 4 There was no requirement imposed by Lovett & Tharpe that Coon manufacture the goods in Missouri. The only difference between the instant case and the Scullin Steel and Lakeside Bridge cases is that Lovett & Tharpe employees did have isolated contact with Missouri — i.e., they returned noncomplying goods to Coon. However, as the First Circuit in Whittaker and the Fifth Circuit in Hydrokinetics decided, we find that this isolated post-contract visit to the forum state is insufficient for the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the defendant. As in Whittaker, this visit did not involve supervision of production of the goods or participation in the production of the goods.
Nor did it involve enforcement of the contract.
Compare Southwire Co. v. Trans-World Metals & Co.,
*1063 III. CONCLUSION
The binding precedent in this circuit indicates that a purchaser in an isolated transaction may not be subject to personal jurisdiction in a seller’s state merely because the manufacturer performed its duties under the contract there.
Owen of Georgia, Inc. v. Blitman,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A trade acceptance is generally defined as:
A draft or bill of exchange drawn by the seller on the purchaser of goods sold, and accepted by such purchaser, and its purpose is to make the book account liquid, and permit the seller to raise money on it before it is due under the terms of the sale, and its principal function is to take the place of selling goods on an open account, and when properly drawn, it is negotiable.
Black’s Law Dictionary 1338 (5th ed. 1979). In this case the trade acceptance acted as "a letter of credit ... with [Lovett & Tharpe] as drawee ... and Borg-Warner as drawer.” Appellant’s Brief at 5.
. For cases involving the question of exercising personal jurisdiction over a nonresident seller,
see Austin v. North American Forest,
. In the same case, the First Circuit ruled that personal jurisdiction could properly be exercised over another nonresident purchaser who was not as "passive” as the two defendants discussed in the text.
. Use of interstate communications and the mails and execution of a contract in the forum state were ancillary factors in the cases decided ■by the First, Fifth, Seventh, and Eighth Circuits. The record indicates that some of these minor factors may not be present in this case — the contract between Coon and Lovett & Tharpe was negotiated and entered into in Geоrgia between a salesman representing Coon in the Atlanta area and the Dublin, Georgia office of Lovett & Tharpe. Though these are minor factors to begin with, their absence in the instant case further supports our determination that there are not "minimum contacts" between Lovett & Tharpe and Missouri in this case.
. Borg-Warner relies on two Missouri cases,
State ex rel. Metal Service Center of Georgia, Inc.
v.
Gaertner,
Foster v. Gaertner is likewise distinguishable. The discussion of jurisdiction in the case of Foster v. Gaertner is three sentences long:
Finally, buyer asserts the trial court lacked jurisdiction over buyer because the contract was not made in Missouri. However, there is credible and sufficient evidence the contract was made in Missouri and buyer transacted business in Missouri. The trial court therefore had jurisdiction over buyer.
Foster,
