This challenge to the district court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant gives us occasion to revisit our jurisprudence regarding the Georgia Long-Arm Statute, O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91 (the “long-arm statute”), in light of recent pronouncements by the Georgia Supreme Court. Whereas we have previously understood the Georgia long-arm jurisdictional analysis to merge into a single, coextensive procedural due process analysis, the Georgia Supreme Court has since made clear the independent importance of the statute. In
Innovative Clinical & Consulting Servs., LLC v. First Nat’l Bank of Ames, Iowa,
I.
This action was brought by Diamond Crystal Brands, Inc. and Diamond Crystal Sales, LLC (collectively “Diamond Crystal”) against Food Movers International, Inc. (“Food Movers”) alleging nonpayment for two shipments of Splenda Brand sweetener (“Splenda”). Diamond Crystal Brands, Inc., an international seller of sugar and other sweetening products, is a Delaware corporation that maintains a facility in Savannah, Georgia. Diamond Crystal Sales, LLC is a Delaware limited liability sales company qualified to do business in Georgia and is under common ownership with Diamond Crystal Brands. Food Movers is a food distribution company that purchases bulk food products from manufacturers for immediate resale to retail and other distributor customers. It is a California corporation with its sole place of business in Benicia, California. Food Movers has no offices, distribution centers, or personnel outside the state of California, and its employees do not travel outside of California to conduct business. 1
*1255 Food Movers’s business model is to purchase products from manufacturers, with the purchases sometimes being facilitated by outside food brokers, and then to quickly resell the products, usually before even taking delivery from the manufacturer, to its customers. Its customers then arrange for and accept delivery from the manufacturer and resell the products to their own customers or to the public.
In this ease, Diamond Crystal’s sales to Food Movers were facilitated by Nasser Company, Inc. (“Nasser”), a California-based food broker that markets Diamond Crystal’s products. Nasser first solicited the sales to Food Movers, and Nasser and Diamond Crystal Brands’s California-based region sales manager, Scott Seibel, traveled to Food Movers’s office in California to negotiate the terms of the sales. All of the negotiations took place either in person at Food Movers’s office in California or through telephone conversations between Food Movers and Nasser or Seibel, all of whom were in California.
As a result of these discussions, Food Movers submitted purchase orders to Nasser in California for the purchase of Diamond Crystal products. In all, from August 2005 to January 2006, Food Movers ordered bulk Splenda from Diamond Crystal, through Nasser, in fourteen transactions totaling more than $1.9 million. Diamond Crystal alleges that Food Movers failed to pay for two of these shipments, relating to purchases made on January 13 and 18, 2006, and therefore owes Diamond Crystal $288,111.60 plus prejudgment interest.
The terms and mechanics of the purchases included the following. Food Movers submitted its purchase or deis to Nasser in California. Immediately thereafter, Food Movers resold the product to its own third-party customers. Diamond Crystal and Food Movers agreed that Diamond Crystal would tender the product F.O.B. Savannah, 2 at its plant. 3 Diamond Crystal *1256 also invoiced Food Movers from its Savannah facility. Although the purchase orders specified “[c]ustomer pickup” and the bills of lading recorded delivery as having been taken “buy buyers [sic] truck,” Food Movers offered affidavit evidence that its personnel did not actually take delivery of the product from Diamond Crystal. 4 Instead, as the product had been resold to third-party customers of Food Movers by the time of tender by Diamond Crystal, those third-party customers took delivery of the product directly from Diamond Crystal. Accordingly, Food Movers never picked up the Splenda in Georgia. It did, however, send payments (for the shipments for which it paid), drawn on its California bank, by mail or wire transfer to Diamond Crystal in Georgia.
On February 28, 2007, Diamond Crystal filed this lawsuit, seeking the $288,111.60 Food Movers failed to pay, in the Superior Court of Chatham County, Georgia. Food Movers removed the action, on the basis of diversity jurisdiction, to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia on March 22, 2007. On April 6, 2007, Food Movers moved to dismiss Diamond Crystal’s complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2) for lack of personal jurisdiction and submitted affidavit evidence in support of its challenge to the court’s jurisdiction. After full briefing, including the submission of counter-affidavits by Diamond Crystal, the district court denied the motion on August 3, 2007.
Food Movers subsequently answered the complaint, preserving its objection to personal jurisdiction and asserting counterclaims against Diamond Crystal for breach of contract, tortious and bad faith breach of contract, unfair trade practices, and deceptive trade practices in connection with Diamond Crystal and related companies’ decisions to stop selling Splenda and other products to Food Movers. 5
*1257 Food Movers later filed an amended answer and counterclaims asserting claims against Diamond Crystal for breach of contract and against Diamond Crystal and its corporate parent for “Unfair, Unlawful, Discriminatory, and Anti-Competitive Business Practices” in violation of California unfair competition and antitrust law and federal antitrust law. Food Movers admitted that it withheld payment on two of the Splenda purchase orders but denied that it owed Diamond Crystal any money due to Diamond Crystal’s alleged conduct implicated in the counterclaims.
On June 20, 2008, the district court granted Diamond Crystal judgment on the pleadings for its complaint and entered judgment on that order the same day. It stayed enforcement of its judgment, however, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 62(h), pending the resolution of Food Movers’s counterclaims. On July 21, 2008, the district court granted Diamond Crystal’s motion for summary judgment on Food Movers’s counterclaims and lifted the stay of its June 20, 2008, judgment. The court entered final judgment pursuant to its July 21 summary judgment order on September 10, 2008. Food Movers now appeals the district court’s denial of its motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. 6
II.
“We have consistently held that the issue of whether personal jurisdiction is present is a question of law and subject to de novo review.” Oldfield v. Pueblo De Bahia Lora, S.A., 558 F.3d 1210, 1217 (11th Cir.2009).
“A plaintiff seeking the exercise of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant bears the initial burden of alleging in the complaint sufficient facts to make out a prima facie case of jurisdiction.”
United Techs. Corp. v. Mazer,
III.
A.
“A federal court sitting in diversity undertakes a two-step inquiry in determining whether personal jurisdiction exists: the exercise of jurisdiction must (1) be appropriate under the state long-arm statute and (2) not violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
*1258
the United States Constitution.”
United Techs. Corp. v. Mazer,
As pertinent to this case, the Georgia long-arm statute provides:
A court of this state may exercise personal jurisdiction over any nonresident or his executor or administrator, as to a cause of action arising from any of the acts, omissions, ownership, use, or possession enumerated in this Code section, in the same manner as if he were a resident of the state, if in person or through an agent, he:
(1) Transacts any business within this state;
O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1). For many years, our court has followed the interpretation that “Georgia’s long arm statute confers
in personam
jurisdiction to the maximum extent allowed by the due process clause of the federal Constitution.”
Francosteel Corp. v. M/V Charm,
*1259
In 2005, however, the Georgia Supreme Court clarified the status of the state’s long-arm statute, at once broadening the statute’s reach and injecting renewed vitality into its restrictions.
Innovative Clinical & Consulting Sens., LLC v. First Nat’l Bank of Ames, Iowa,
*1260
It is beyond cavil that the exercise of personal jurisdiction in Georgia requires a court to find that at least one prong of the long-arm statute is satisfied.
See Rudo v. Stubbs,
It is clear that the
Innovative Clinical
court intended to broaden the reach of the long-arm statute by stripping away certain limitations, not expressly contained in the statute, that various courts had injected into the statute over time.
12
For example, courts had limited the application of subsection (1) to contract cases and construed it to require the nonresident defendant’s physical presence in Georgia (thereby minimizing the import of the nonresident’s intangible contacts with the state), even though neither requirement appears on the face of the statute.
Innovative Clinical,
The Georgia Supreme Court did not, however, jettison the lone and unequivocal requirement that subsection (1) plainly does impose: “under that literal construction, O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1) grants Georgia courts the unlimited authority to exercise personal jurisdiction over any nonresident who transacts any business in this State.” Id. (emphasis added). Thus, literally transacting business within Georgia remains a precondition to long-arm jurisdiction that is independent from the dictates of due process.
After emphasizing this point, the supreme court immediately recognized that even this literal construction of subsection (1) would “expand the personal jurisdiction of Georgia courts beyond that permitted by constitutional due process,” by, for example permitting jurisdiction over a defendant who literally transacts any business in Georgia but over whom, in the circumstances of a particular case, the exercise of jurisdiction would violate due process.
Id.
To address this concern, the court reasonably qualified its holding by adding the proviso that “we accordingly construe subsection (1) as reaching
only
‘to the maximum extent permitted by procedural due process.’”
Id.
(emphasis added) (quoting
Coe & Payne, Co. v. Wood-Mosaic Corp.,
Lest there be any misunderstanding, this language does not mean that subsection (1)—or any provision of the long-arm statute—is coextensive with constitutional due process. Rather, this language makes clear that due process concerns may limit the full extent of the “transacts any business” prong. But this certainly does not mean that the two inquiries are one and the same.
Indeed, the Georgia Supreme Court explained that the long-arm statute is not coextensive with due process when it stated that the statute’s various “limiting conditions may preclude a Georgia court from exercising personal jurisdiction over the nonresident to the fullest extent permitted by constitutional due process.” Id. at 354 (construing O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(3)) (emphasis added). The supreme court also noted the Georgia General Assembly’s retention of statutory limitations on jurisdiction, despite pleas from the state judiciary to expand personal jurisdiction to the outer limits of due process, and directed that courts must abide by the plain and unambiguous restrictions provided by the legislature, even if those literal limits deprive allegedly damaged Georgians of a forum in the state. 13 Id. at 355 (same).
*1262 The Innovative Clinical court further explained the importance of giving independent meaning to the provisions of the long-arm statute when discussing subsections (2) and (3). First, it made clear that subsection (3) of the long-arm statute contains independent limits on the exercise of jurisdiction. Id. at 355. Second, it reaffirmed Gust v. Flint, which rejected cases that had “held that subsection (2) was constrained only by, and thus was coextensive with, the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.” Id. at 354. It did so because reading subsection (2) to the limits of due process rendered subsection (3) superfluous, thereby eviscerating legislative intent. Id. at 354. Likewise, reading subsection (1) to be coextensive with due process would render subsection (3) superfluous. It would defy common sense to suggest that the Innovative Clinical court intended to turn the “transacts any business within Georgia” prong into the new stepping stone around subsection (3).
Georgia courts have yet to fully explain the scope of the “[transacts any business within this state” language. O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1). The unavoidable conclusion, as explained by the Georgia Supreme Court and also supported by traditional canons of statutory construction, is that this literal language, intentionally included by the Georgia General Assembly, must have some independent meaning. To equate any prong of the long-arm statute with the federal due process inquiry would render the language of the statute meaningless.
See Chatman v. Findley,
Were the two truly meant to be coextensive, the General Assembly simply would have adopted statutory language expressly incorporating constitutional due process as the sole limitation on jurisdiction, as several other states have done. 14 Moreover, *1263 equating the two inquiries would transform the ordinary search for the legislative meaning of the Georgia Assembly into a search for what the Supreme Court of the United States would allow under the evolving due process standard.
Ultimately, unless and until the Georgia courts provide further authoritative guidance, courts in this circuit construing the statute literally will have to delineate the precise contours of the “[transacts any business within this state” requirement of O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1) according to the facts of each case. 15
In sum, we adopt the guidance of the Georgia Supreme Court. We can no longer construe the Georgia long-arm statute as coextensive with constitutional due process. Instead, in assessing the propriety of the exercise of personal jurisdiction, courts must apply the specific limitations and requirements of O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91 literally and must engage in a statutory examination that is independent of, and distinct from, the constitutional analysis to ensure that both, separate prongs of the jurisdictional inquiry are satisfied.
B.
We now turn to the district court’s personal jurisdiction analysis in this case. We conclude that, although it is unclear whether the district court properly and independently applied the long-arm statute pursuant to the standard we set forth today, our own analysis persuades us to affirm the district court’s conclusion. 16
In its August 3, 2007, order denying the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, the district court properly cited O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1) as the controlling provision of the long-arm statute. The district court cited
Innovative Clinical
and the traditional three-part test for whether a nonresident transacted business within Georgia.
Diamond Crystal Brands, Inc. v. Food Movers Int'l Inc.,
No. CV407-42,
Although we cannot say that the district court’s approach was entirely unreasonable—after all, it relied on language from a decision of the Georgia Court of Ap peals—we have already explained why we believe that this view of the personal jurisdiction test is fundamentally incompatible, as a matter of Georgia law, with the controlling pronouncement of the standard by the Georgia Supreme Court in Innovative Clinical. See supra part III & n.ll. Nevertheless, we conclude that a remand is unnecessary: the breadth of the Georgia long-arm statute and the facts that the district court did properly consider support a finding of jurisdiction under O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1).
IV.
As discussed in part III,
supra,
Georgia’s long-arm statute permits jurisdiction where a plaintiffs cause of action “arises out of’ a nonresident defendant’s “transaction] of any business within [Georgia].” O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1). In light of
Innovative Clinical & Consulting Serve., LLC v. First Nat’l Bank of Ames, Iowa, we
must interpret this statute literally and give full effect to the breadth of its language.
Interpreted literally, “transacts any business” requires that the “ ‘nonresident defendant has purposefully done some act or consummated some transaction in [Georgia]....’”
Aero Toy Store, LLC v. Grieves,
In both transactions at issue, Food Movers sent purchase orders to Nasser, Diamond Crystal’s California agent. 19 Each purchase order explicitly required (1) that it be “ship[ed] to: Diamond Crystal, 3000 Tremont Road ..., Savannah, GA,” (2) specified the price and quantity of Splenda, and (3) required delivery by “[cjustomer picku[p].” One of the purchase orders even more explicitly required “p/u in Savannah, Ga on 12/28/05.” Thus, although Food Movers routed the purchase orders through Nasser and never physically brought the orders to Georgia, Food Movers sent the orders to a specific Georgia manufacturing facility and required delivery of the product in Georgia. After Innovative Clinical, Food Movers’s routing of the purchase orders through a California intermediary—much like routing them through the postal service—does not prevent us from considering the purchase orders in the “transacts any business” equation. 20
Significantly, Food Movers admits that Diamond Crystal tendered the two shipments at its Savannah plant and that the shipments were picked up. Food Movers claims that this is irrelevant because it was Food Movers’s third-party customers who for their own account actually picked up the Splenda. We reject this argument.
First, we have held that “designating] certain parties within the State of Georgia for receipt of the goods purchased under the contract” helps support a finding that a nonresident transacted business in Georgia.
Gold Kist, Inc. v. Baskim-Robbins Ice Cream Co.,
Second, under Georgia’s enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code (“U.C.C.”), Food Movers took title to the Splenda upon Diamond Crystal’s tender, regardless of who actually hired the common carrier. “Unless otherwise explicitly agreed title passes to the buyer at the time and place at which the seller completes his performance with reference to the physical delivery of the goods....” O.C.G.A. § 11-2-401(2).
21
The parties observed an F.O.B. Savannah delivery
22
term by customer pickup; as a result, when Diamond Crystal tendered the goods at its Georgia plant and issued a bill of lading listing Food Movers as the consignee, Food Movers took legal title to the Splenda.
See Wells Dairy, Inc. v. Food Movers Int’l, Inc.,
Finally, the course of dealing between the parties makes clear that Food Movers was to pay for the Splenda by transferring funds to Georgia. In each of the twelve transactions in which Food Movers did pay for the Splenda, it sent payments to Diamond Crystal in Georgia. The implied promise to send payments to Georgia is relevant to whether Food Movers transacted any business there.
In total, we find that Food Movers transacted business within Georgia. Food Movers sent purchase orders to Diamond Crystal in Georgia, Food Movers requested delivery by “customer pickup” at Diamond Crystal’s plant in Savannah, Food Movers directed third parties to accept delivery of the goods in Savannah, Food *1267 Movers took legal title to the goods in Georgia, and Food Movers promised to pay money into Georgia on the two transactions in question. Thus, personal jurisdiction is appropriate under O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1).
V.
Having found that Georgia’s long-arm statute permits jurisdiction, we reach the jurisdictional analysis under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Food Movers casts itself as a passive buyer of goods whose sole contacts with Georgia involved indirectly sending purchase orders and directly sending payments. Appellant’s Br. at 13-14. Food Movers contends that such a limited connection with the forum cannot satisfy the due process requirement of minimum contacts. We conclude that the Due Process Clause permits jurisdiction. Food Movers established sufficient minimum contacts when it purposefully carried on a substantial and ongoing relationship with a Georgia manufacturer, specified delivery by “customer pickup” in Savannah, took and transferred legal title to product in Savannah, and sent payments to Savannah on twelve of the fourteen transactions.
The Due Process Clause protects an individual’s liberty interest in not being subject to binding judgments imposed by foreign sovereigns.
Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
It is undisputed that if Food Movers is subject to jurisdiction at all, it is subject to specific jurisdiction. In specific jurisdiction cases, the “fair warning requirement is satisfied if the defendant has purposefully directed his activities at residents of the forum ... and the litigation results from alleged injuries that arise out of or relate to those activities.”
Burger King,
A.
We conclude that Diamond Crystal’s cause of action grew out of Food Movers’s purposeful contact with Georgia such that Food Movers reasonably should have anticipated defending suit there. At the outset, we underscore that the minimum contacts analysis is “ ‘immune to so
*1268
lution by checklist.’ ”
Sloss Indus. Corp. v. Eurisol,
Rather, when inspecting a contractual relationship for minimum contacts, we follow a “highly realistic approach” that focuses on the substance of the transaction: prior negotiations, contemplated future consequences, the terms of the contract, and the actual course of dealing.
Id.
at 479,
This case involves a forum seller’s effort to sue a nonresident buyer in the seller’s home forum for breach of contract. In this context, we have rejected jurisdiction when the buyer’s
sole
contact with the forum is contracting with a resident seller who performs there.
See Borg-Wamer Acceptance Corp. v. Lovett & Tharpe, Inc.,
But nonresident purchasers can still be subject to jurisdiction in the seller’s forum. Jurisdiction is often found where further contacts or plus factors connect the defendant to the jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Sloss Indus.,
A crucial, but often overlooked issue, is why these factors are important to the minimum contact analysis. The “plus” factors and further contacts are not talismans. Rather, as the Supreme Court suggested in
Burger King,
the plus factors indicate that the defendant “deliberately] affiliat[ed]” with the forum,
This case is close. In some ways, Food Movers had little to do with Georgia: Food Movers never communicated directly with Diamond Crystal in Georgia, Diamond Crystal’s California agent initiated the overall relationship, and Food Movers never took an active role in the manufacturing process. Nevertheless, we conclude that Food Movers purposefully established minimum contacts with Georgia. As we explain, each individual transaction involved meaningful contact with Georgia and, by purposefully engaging in fourteen such transactions in just six months, Food Movers established a substantial and ongoing relationship with a Georgia manufacturer.
The terms of the contracts and the course of performance reveal that the transactions involved contact with Georgia. A contract calling for payment and delivery in a forum requires “contact” with the forum.
S & Davis Int’l, Inc. v. Yemen,
Here, Food Movers submitted purchase orders to Diamond Crystal’s California agent with instructions that the orders be “ship[ed] to: Diamond Crystal, 3000 Tremont Road ..., Savannah, GA.” Additionally, each purchase order specified that delivery would be by “[c]ustomer picku[p]” and, in most cases, further specified “please have ready to pick up in Savannah, GA” or “pick up in Savannah, GA.” And in each transaction, Food Movers redelivered the product to its third-party customers by allowing its customers to take delivery in Savannah. Food Movers admits that it sent money to Georgia on twelve of the fourteen transactions—that is, every time it paid. Thus, each transaction involved payment, delivery, and Food Movers’s redelivery of the product in Savannah.
Taking all of the transactions together, these purposeful contacts put Food Movers on notice that it could be haled into a Georgia court.
Burger King
requires a realistic examination of the entire course of dealing. In just six months, Food Movers purchased more than $1.9 million dollars worth of Splenda in fourteen transactions, each of which involved purposeful and meaningful contact by Food Movers with Georgia. Fourteen of these transactions in six months amounts to a substantial relationship in which Food Movers deliberately associated with Georgia.
See Burger King,
Food Movers contends that our precedent forecloses this result. Specifically, it reads
Borg-Wamer Acceptance Corp. v. Lovett & Tharpe, Inc.,
Borg-Wamer,
for its part, involved an isolated purchase of goods produced in a forum.
Sloss
involved a nonresident defendant who placed ten purchase orders for goods produced in and shipped from Alabama.
Sloss does not decide this case in Food Movers’s favor for two reasons. First, as in Sloss, we think that Banton is distinguishable. Second, like the defendant in Sloss, Food Movers’s purposeful contact with the forum went beyond that of a completely passive purchaser.
First,
Banton
is distinguishable. Other than merely accepting the order from the Alabama plaintiff, the transaction in
Ban-ton
involved literally no contact with the proposed Alabama forum.
See
Second, although Diamond Crystal initially approached Food Movers in California about the possibility of selling sweetener to it, Food Movers was far from a passive purchaser. Diamond Crystal’s solicitation resulted only in an unenforceable general agreement about price and delivery terms.
Diamond Crystal Brands Inc. v. Food Movers Int’l, Inc.,
No. 407-42,
Moreover, the delivery terms and course of delivery underscore the connection between Food Movers and Georgia. The parties agreed that the Splenda would be delivered F.O.B. Savannah, Georgia, but cannot agree on who proposed the term. Accepting, arguendo, Food Movers’s version of the facts, Diamond Crystal required the F.O.B. Savannah term because of the “volume of sweetener” involved. Under Georgia’s enactment of the U.C.C., the term required Diamond Crystal to, at its plant, “ship the goods in the manner provided in this article ... and bear the expense and risk of putting them into the possession of the carrier.” O.C.G.A. § 11-2-319(l)(a).
Significantly, Food Movers never argued that Diamond Crystal required delivery by customer pickup. 33 Food Movers’s contention that Diamond Crystal required delivery “at the plant” is not to the contrary. Regardless of who paid for shipping, who bore the risk of loss, and when title shifted, the Splenda would be delivered at the plant. Food Movers thus could have paid to have the Splenda shipped outside of Georgia. Instead, Food Movers specified delivery by customer pickup for its own benefit and purposes.
Taking delivery by customer pickup distinguishes this case from ordinary F.O.B. forum cases. Although we have never explicitly reached this holding, we have cited cases that have rejected the argument that an F.O.B. forum delivery term provided sufficient minimum contacts.
E.g. BorgWarner,
Food Movers argues that we should ignore this contact because it never took physical delivery of the product in Georgia; its third-party customers did on and for their own account. It is well established, however, that physical contacts with a forum are not required.
Burger King,
Alternatively, Food Movers contends that we should disregard its redeliveries because they did not “arise out of or relate to” the transactions at issue. This circuit has not adopted a rigid approach to determining when contacts “arise out of or relate to” a cause of action.
See Oldfield v. Pueblo De Bahia Lora, S.A.,
Even if Food Movers’s customers had never picked up the Splenda, Diamond Crystal still would have had a claim for breach of contract. Strictly speaking, therefore, the customer pickup of the Splenda was not a “but-for” cause of Diamond Crystal’s claim. Nevertheless, in a breach of contract action, the course of performance is clearly relevant to the “relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation.”
Helicopteros,
In sum, we conclude that Food Movers purposefully established sufficient minimum contacts with Georgia. Food Movers
*1274
established a substantial and ongoing relationship with a Georgia manufacturer by-engaging in fourteen transactions in six months, each of which involved contacts with Georgia. Food Movers spurred that relationship by sending unsolicited purchase orders to the Georgia manufacturer via the manufacturer’s California agent. Each purchase order specified that delivery would be by customer pickup, and Food Movers did in fact allow its third party customers to take delivery of the Splenda in Georgia. Because Food Movers never paid for two of the shipments its customers picked up, it caused foreseeable injury to the plaintiff in the forum.
See Burger King,
B.
In addition to minimum contacts, the exercise of jurisdiction must also comport with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Burger King,
In fact, Food Movers does not even attempt to explain why litigating in Georgia would be especially onerous, much less how any such inconvenience achieves a “constitutional magnitude.”
Id.
at 484,
VI.
In sum, we conform this circuit’s interpretation of Georgia’s long-arm statute to state law as announced by the Georgia Supreme Court. We find that although the district court did not clearly apply the newly-elucidated standard, the exercise of jurisdiction comports with the independent dictates of both the Georgia long-arm statute and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Accordingly, the judgement of the district court is AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Diamond Crystal alleged in its complaint that Food Movers "maintains an ongoing business presence in Georgia through a regional distribution center in Georgia.” Food Movers specifically denied this assertion in an affidavit, filed with its motion to dismiss, from its president, Anthony LaMonica. Diamond Crystal attempted to bolster its allegation with an affidavit, filed with its opposition to Food *1255 Movers's motion to dismiss, from Scott Seibel, a region sales manager for Diamond Crystal Brands, in which Seibel testified that "Thomas LaMonica, Food Movers International’s general manager, gave me a map of the United States that was broken down into geographic regions.... Mr. LaMonica told me that the distribution centers shown on the map were distribution centers with which he had done business in the past.” The map attached to the Seibel affidavit indicated one such distribution center in Atlanta, Georgia. With its reply in support of its motion to dismiss, Food Movers submitted the affidavit of its vice president of sales, Thomas LaMonica, which stated that Food Movers does not have a distribution center in Georgia, has never done business with any distribution center in Georgia, and has no distributor agreements in Georgia. Regardless of whether the district court properly received this latter evidence for consideration, Diamond Crystal's allegation and evidence do not establish that Food Movers itself maintained a distribution center in Georgia, but only that it may have done business in the past with a distributor in Georgia. Nor does this evidence indicate the volume of business Food Movers may have done with a Georgia distribution center or when it conducted such business. Moreover, Diamond Crystal has not shown how any such prior relationship between Food Movers and a distribution center in Atlanta has anything to do with the transactions at issue in this case.
. Georgia's enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code provides,
Unless otherwise agreed the term F.O.B. (which means "free on board”) at a named place, even though used only in connection with the stated price, is a delivery term under which:
(a) When the term is F.O.B. the place of shipment, the seller must at that place ship the goods in the manner provided in this article (Code Section 11-2-504) and bear the expense and risk of putting them into the possession of the carrier; or
(b) When the term is F.O.B. the place of destination, the seller must at his own expense and risk transport the goods to that place and there tender delivery of *1256 them in the manner provided in this article (Code Section 11-2-503) ..
O.C.G.A. § 11-2-319(1). In other words, the use of the term "F.O.B. Savannah” in this case means that Diamond Crystal had the obligation to tender the product at its plant in Savannah and bore the risk of loss for the product until it was tendered.
. The parties sharply contest how the F.O.B. Savannah term came into being. Diamond Crystal asserts that it initially offered the product F.O.B. Visalia, California and claims that Food Movers requested that the terms be changed to F.O.B. Savannah (presumably to avoid the time and expense of shipping product ultimately destined for later distribution in the Southeast across the country twice). In contrast, Food Movers maintains that Seibel, the Diamond Crystal representative, insisted that delivery would be required at the Savannah plant due to the volume of product involved and that Diamond Crystal never offered an F.O.B. California option.
. Food Movers maintains that these references are to its third-party customers, who were the "customer[s]” and "buyers” responsible for hiring carriers and picking up the product from Diamond Crystal for their own purposes.
. We reject, with minimal discussion, Diamond Crystal’s argument that Food Movers waived its defense of lack of personal jurisdiction by asserting its counterclaims. Food Movers filed its answer, which preserved its personal jurisdiction defense, and counterclaims only after the district court denied the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
See Fulghum Indus., Inc. v. Walterboro Forest Prods., Inc.,
. Food Movers filed its notice of appeal, which also purported to include all subsequent orders of the district court through the entry of final judgment directed in the court’s July 21, 2008, summary judgment order, on August 20, 2008. We treat the notice of appeal as if it were filed on September 10, 2008—the date the district court actually entered final judgment—by operation of Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(2). As the parties have only briefed and argued the issue of personal jurisdiction, that is the only issue we address.
.
See also, e.g., McGow v. McCurry,
.
See, e.g., Vermeulen v. Renault, U.S.A. Inc.,
. Indeed, the Georgia Supreme Court specifically noted our court’s “erroneous” interpretation of the state’s long-arm statute:
Although the Federal courts persist in reiterating the language from First United Bank of Mississippi [v. First National Bank of Atlanta,255 Ga. 505 ,340 S.E.2d 597 (Ga.1986)], that Georgia's long-arm statute confers in personam jurisdiction to the maximum extent allowed by the due process clause of the U.S. Constitution, e.g., Francosteel Corp. v. M/V Charm,19 F.3d 624 (IV) (11th Cir.1994), the First United holding was superseded by Gust [v. Flint,257 Ga. 129 ,356 S.E.2d 513 (Ga.1987)]. The Eleventh Circuit's interpretation of OCGA § 9-10-91 is not binding on this Court and it is not necessary for this Court to correct erroneous Federal interpretations of our State’s statutes for the precedential value of our opinions to remain the controlling authority on the proper interpretation of those statutes.
Innovative Clinical & Consulting Sews., LLC v. First Nat’l Bank of Ames, Iowa,
. The Georgia long-arm statute enumerates five separate bases for the exercise of personal jurisdiction, encompassing various types of "acts, omissions, ownership, use, or possession” that can subject a defendant to the statute's reach. O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91. We understand the basic rule of
Innovative Clinical
to apply to all subsections of the statute,
see Innovative Clinical,
. The full three-part test set forth in Aero Toy Store is as follows:
Jurisdiction exists on the basis of transacting business in this state if (1) the nonresident defendant has purposefully done some act or consummated some transaction in this state, (2) if the cause of action arises from or is connected with such act or transaction, and (3) if the exercise of jurisdiction by the courts of this state does not offend traditional fairness and substantial justice.
Aero Toy Store, LLC v. Grieves,
.
Innovative Clinical,
. Because the Georgia Supreme Court’s frank statement on this point is both thorough and emphatic, we are moved to include it at length:
For over 17 years the justices of this Court and the judges of the Court of Appeals have urged the Legislature to amend Georgia’s long-arm statute so as to provide the maximum protection for Georgia residents damaged by the out-of-state acts or omissions committed by nonresident tortfeasors. See Gust, supra,257 Ga. at 130 ,356 S.E.2d 513 (Gregory, J., concurring); Phears v. Doyne, 220 Ga.App. 550, 552,470 S.E.2d 236 (1996) (Beasley, C.J., concurring specially). Despite the eloquence of these pleas, the Legislature has chosen to retain the statutory limitations on in personam jurisdiction set forth in OCGA § 9-10-91(3). In our system of checks and balances, it is as inappropriate for the judicial branch to encroach upon the powers of the legislative or executive branches as it would be for either of those branches to encroach upon the powers of the judicial branch. Thus, ... the fact that Georgians damaged by nonresidents are deprived of a forum in this State to the fullest extent permitted by due pro *1262 cess is not the result of court decisions interpreting OCGA § 9-10-91(3) but the result of the plain and unambiguous language of OCGA § 9-10-91. The courts cannot reject the plain language of a statute unless it will lead to unreasonable consequences or absurd results not contemplated by the Legislature. See generally Haugen v. Henry County,277 Ga. 743 (2),594 S.E.2d 324 (2004); Hollowell v. Jove,247 Ga. 678 , 681,279 S.E.2d 430 (1981). Accordingly, under these circumstances, the courts may not interpret OCGA § 9-10-91 to provide what the Legislature chose to omit.
Innovative Clinical,
. See, e.g., Ala. R. Civ. P. 4.2(b) (“An appropriate basis exists for service of process ... when the person or entity has such contacts with this state that the prosecution of the action ... is not inconsistent with the constitution of this state or the Constitution of the United States.”); Ariz. R. Civ. P. 4.2(a) ("A court of this state may exercise personal jurisdiction over parties, whether found within or outside the state, to the maximum extent permitted by the Constitution of this state and the Constitution of the United States.”); La. Rev.Stat. Ann. § 13:3201(B) ("In addition to the provisions of Subsection A, a court of this state may exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident on any basis consistent with the constitution of this state and of the Constitution of the United States.”); Or. R. Civ. P. 4(L) (providing personal jurisdiction, “[n]ot *1263 withstanding a failure to satisfy the requirement of sections B through K of this rule, in any action where prosecution of the action against a defendant in this state is not inconsistent with the Constitution of this state or the Constitution of the United States”).
. We do, however, caution the federal courts of this circuit to resist any temptation to define "[firansacts any business” solely or primarily in terms of the "foreseeability” of an impact on the Georgia forum, a concept frequently featured in the due process "minimum contacts” analysis. To do so would once again improperly conflate the long-arm and due process inquiries. Unlike the due process analysis, O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1), on its face, includes no element of "foreseeability.” Although we do not go so far as to say that the “foreseeability” of an impact on the forum can never be a relevant consideration, there may be many instances in which such notions of "foreseeability” have absolutely no bearing on whether particular conduct can fairly and plausibly constitute the transaction of business in the state. Accordingly, engrafting a "foreseeability” component, which the Georgia General Assembly has not seen fit to include, onto the subsection (1) long-arm requirement would amount to just the sort of extension of the long-arm statute beyond its literal terms that the Georgia Supreme Court rejected in
Innovative Clinical. See Innovative Clinical,
.
See Cuddeback v. Fla. Bd. of Educ.,
. For example, the court explained that the first two prongs of the three-part
Aero Toy Store
test go to "whether the defendant has sufficient minimum contacts with the forum.”
Diamond Crystal,
Additionally, the court’s recitation of facts— replete with references to "contacts” and "purposeful activity directed at the forum state,” id. at *3—is virtually indistinguishable from a constitutional due process discussion. Thus, although the district court found that "Food Movers' conduct and knowledge shows that it purposefully conducted business within the forum state,” id. at *4, which at first blush sounds like a finding of "transacting any business” within Georgia, it is unclear whether the district court was sufficiently mindful of the independent requirements imposed by the Georgia long-arm statute.
. In conducting this mixed law and fact inquiry, we find instructive the literal definition of the words in the statute. "Transact” means "to prosecute negotiations,” to "carry on business,” "to carry out,” or "to carry on.”
Webster’s Third New Int'l Dictionary
2425 (1993). "Any” means "to any extent” or "in any degree.”
Id.
at 97. “Business” means “activity directed toward some end,”
*1265
or "a usually commercial or mercantile activity customarily engaged in as a means of livelihood,” or "transactions, dealings, or intercourse of any nature.”
Id.
at 302. Hewing closely to the plain meaning of the statute serves the twin goals of giving effect to legislative intent and not engrafting requirements that do not appear on the face of the "plain and unambiguous statutory language,”
Innovative Clinical,
. Ultimately, we conclude that Food Movers transacted business in Georgia on the basis of the two transactions at issue in the breach of contract complaint; therefore, we do not rely on Food Movers’s completed transactions for the purposes of the long-arm analysis.
. We do not decide, however, that O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1) encompasses every transaction where a citizen from one state contracts with a Georgia manufacturer. We hold only that, in light of the Georgia Supreme Court’s clarification that a party’s intangible actions can amount to the transaction of business, Food Mtovers’s sending purchase orders to a specific Georgia manufacturer and requiring delivery by customer pickup cannot be ignored in the long-arm inquiry.
. Food Movers never claimed that it merely assigned its right to the Splenda under the contract with Diamond Crystal. Rather, Food Movers has always maintained that it resold the Splenda. The bills of lading bear this out; each lists Food Movers as the "Consignee,” which means the entity "to whom or to whose order the bill promises delivery.” O.C.G.A. 11-7-102(b). That Food Movers resold the Splenda rather than assigned its rights to it is significant because a present assignment of a contractual right immediately vests title in the assignee.
Gamble v. Mathias,
. Whether the F.O.B. Savannah term, in light of any other pertinent factors, constitutes sufficient "transaction ofl any business” in Georgia by Food Movers to support the exercise of personal jurisdiction under Georgia's long-arm statute does not depend on who proposed the term.
. Innovative Clinical likely overruled O.N. Jonas because O.N. Jonas did not give sufficient breadth to the "transacts any business” language of the long-arm statute. Regardless, that Food Movers took title to the goods is but one fact that supports the conclusion that it transacted business in Georgia.
.
E.g., Sloss Indus. Corp. v. Eurisol,
.
E.g., Sloss Indus.,
.
Sloss Indus.,
.
E.g.,
Sw.
Offset,
.
E.g., Air Prods. & Controls, Inc. v. Safetech Int'l, Inc.,
.
E.g., Biltmoor Moving & Storage Co. v. Shell Oil Co.,
.
E.g., Sloss Indus.,
. See Aff. of Anthony LaMonica, ¶¶ 15-16, Mar. 30, 2007 ("Nasser Company and Diamond Crystal Brands, Inc. sent their representatives to Food Movers' offices.... After that meeting at Food Movers' office, Nasser Company took several orders from Food Movers ...."); Aff. of Thomas Samuel LaMonica, ¶ 17, Mar. 5, 2008 ("I subsequently negotiated with Mr. Seibel and we agreed upon contract for Splenda sales at a case price of $31.40 with a minium quantity of 11,000 cases per month.”); Id. at ¶ 19 (“Once our credit application was accepted by Diamond Crystal Brands, Inc .... we submitted our first purchase order to the broker, Nasser....”); Id. at ¶ 27 ("All of the purchase order submitted to Nasser were processed without further discussion ....”); see also Appellant’s Reply Br. at 4 ("Following the telephone contacts by Nasser and Seibel in California and the meetings at Food Movers’ offices in California, for several months between August 2005 and January 2006 Food Movers submitted purchase orders to Nasser in California for bulk quantities of Splenda.”) (emphasis added). It does appear that after the initial five purchase orders, Diamond Crystal approached Food Movers to renegotiate the minimum quantities per month and price terms. Aff. of Thomas Samuel LaMonica, ¶ 23, Mar. 5, 2008.
. Nor does Food Movers's routing of the purchase orders through Diamond Crystal’s California agent negate Food Movers's reaching out to Georgia. In
Burger King,
the Supreme Court rejected the argument that because the Michigan defendant primarily interacted with the Florida plaintiff's Michigan office, the defendant had no reason to anticipate suit in Florida.
. Food Movers does argue in its reply brief that Diamond Crystal "required delivery or customer pickup at its manufacturing plant in Georgia." Appellant’s Reply Br. at 5. But Food Movers's affidavit evidence supports only that Diamond Crystal required delivery "at the plant.” Aff. of Thomas Samuel LaMonica, ¶¶ 10-11, May 24, 2007 ("Because of the volume of sweeteners [involved] Mr. Seibel advised me that delivery would be required at the plant.”).
