Cathy Ann Glater brought this diversity action in the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire against Eli Lilly & Co. (Lilly) in January 1981. She sought damages for personal injuries allegedly caused by exposure in útero to diethylstilbestrol (DES), a drug manufactured and distributed by Lilly. By order dated October 13, 1982, the district court granted Lilly’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction; Glater appealed.
In a previous published opinion we addressed two preliminary questions,
1
leaving open the ultimate issue of whether dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction was proper.
Glater v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
The facts may be briefly summarized. At the time of Glater’s exposure in útero to DES, Glater’s mother lived in Massachusetts. Glater was born in Massachusetts and lived there until 1975, when she moved to New Hampshire. She was employed at the New Hampshire office of an insurance company, and was transferred to a Massachusetts office in 1980. In August 1980 Glater returned to live in Massachusetts, but continued thereafter to maintain certain contacts with New Hampshire. She was a Massachusetts resident in January 1981, when she commenced this action. Lilly is an Indiana corporation which has marketed DES nationwide since 1947. LO *215 ly engages in limited advertising of its pharmaceutical products in professional trade journals which circulate in New Hampshire, and employs eight sales representatives whose duties consist in part of providing information concerning Lilly products to certain New Hampshire physicians, pharmacies and hospitals. Three of the sales representatives live in New Hampshire. Neither the sales representatives nor Lilly directly sells products in New Hampshire; rather, sales are made to individual wholesale distributors, some of whom are located in New Hampshire. Apparently, Lilly has appointed no agent to receive service of process in New Hampshire.
Lilly concedes in its answer to Glater’s complaint that it does business in New Hampshire. This appears to bring Lilly within the terms of New Hampshire’s long-arm statute for foreign corporations, which has been construed to extend to the constitutional limits of due process.
2
The issue before us, therefore, is whether the exercise of personal jurisdiction in these circumstances would be consistent with the due process standard articulated in
International Shoe Co. v. State of Washington,
As a threshold requirement for subjecting a defendant foreign corporation to personal jurisdiction under a state statute, there must exist “certain minimum contacts [between the defendant and the forum state] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’
Milliken v. Meyer,
the quality and nature of the activity in relation to the fair and orderly administration of the laws which it was the purpose of the due process clause to insure. That clause does not contemplate that a state may make binding a judgment in personam against an individual or corporate defendant with which the state has no contacts, ties, or relations.
Id.
at 319,
Where a defendant has certain judicially cognizable ties to the forum state, “a variety of factors relating to the particular cause of action may be relevant” to the issue of jurisdiction.
Rush,
We are guided in our inquiry by the Supreme Court’s recent discussion of specific jurisdiction in
Keeton,
where it was held that the defendant’s regular circulation of magazines in New Hampshire was “sufficient to support jurisdiction when the cause of action arises out of the very activity being conducted, in part, in New Hampshire,” even though the same contacts “may not be so substantial as to support jurisdiction over a cause of action unrelated to those activities.” — U.S. at-,
General jurisdiction may be found in the absence of a relationship between a nonresident defendant’s contacts with the forum and the cause of action where the defendant engages in the “continuous and systematic” pursuit of general business activities in the forum state.
Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
Lilly’s New Hampshire contacts, which are of primary importance under a general jurisdiction analysis, are indistinguishable from those of the defendant in
Seymour v. Parke, Davis & Co.,
Id. at 586-87. Nothing in Keeton casts any doubt on Seymour’s continuing validity-
Although in
Seymour
we also emphasized the plaintiff’s lack of contacts with the forum state,
id.
at 587, we see no material distinction from Glater’s situation in the present case. In the absence of a demonstrable state interest in hearing the product liability claims of former residents, or a substantial showing based on considerations of fairness and convenience,
6
we think our holding in
Seymour
is controlling here. We need not speculate on what significance, if any, would arise if Glater had been a resident of New Hampshire instead of Massachusetts at the time she brought suit;
7
we note only that her actual status as a
former
New Hampshire resident does not appreciably affect our analysis. Glater’s “lack of ‘contacts’ will not defeat otherwise proper jurisdiction,” but her vestigial contacts with New Hampshire are not “so manifold as to permit jurisdiction when it would not exist in their absence.”
Colder v. Jones,
— U.S.-,-,
We conclude that Lilly’s activities in New Hampshire are not sufficient to support the exercise of general jurisdiction, and that the district court’s dismissal on due process grounds was proper.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We determined that Lilly did not waive its right to raise the issue of personal jurisdiction, even though it did not raise this issue in its answer, because it was not on notice at that time that Glater was not a New Hampshire resident. We also held that the pendency of a DES class action in the same district court involving Glater as a class plaintiff and Lilly as a named defendant did not automatically preclude dismissal in this case.
Glater v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
. The New Hampshire long-arm statute in effect in 1981 provided for service of process on foreign corporations "authorized to transact, or transacting business” in New Hampshire. N.H. Rev.Stat.Ann. § 300:11. This statute was construed to extend to the limits of due process in
Roy v. North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.,
. In
International Shoe,
the Court emphasized not only the systematic and continuous nature of the defendant’s contacts with the forum state but also the fact that the defendant’s commercial activities within the state formed the basis for the tax obligation on which suit was brought.
. Were we to view Lilly’s sales of DES in New Hampshire as sufficiently related to Glater’s injuries to present the issue of specific jurisdiction, we would be obliged to hold that any plaintiff in Glater's position — a nonresident injured out of state by a drug sold and consumed out of state — could bring suit in New Hampshire for DES injuries. The exercise of what would amount to retributive jurisdiction in such circumstances comports with neither logic nor fairness.
. In
Helicópteros,
the Court declined to address the question whether the defendant’s purchases of equipment and services might be sufficient to confer specific jurisdiction, — U.S. at- n. 12,
. As we noted in our earlier opinion, the statute of limitations was not addressed below and is not before us on appeal.
Glater, 712
F.2d at 740 n. 3. Even if New Hampshire were the only forum in which the statute of limitations had not yet run, the timeliness of the suit would present a choice-of-law question which should not "complicate or distort the jurisdictional inquiry.”
Keeton,
— U.S. at -,
. As we noted in our earlier opinion, the pending DES class action, in which Glater is a class plaintiff and Lilly a named defendant, is distinguishable on the ground that Glater was a New Hampshire resident when she moved to join the class action.
Glater,
