Two United States citizens, Frances A. and Richard P. Cehon, lost their lives at Taipei International Airport on July 31, 1975, while on holiday in Taiwan. The Ce-hons, parents of two young children, were Connecticut domiciliaries, temporarily residing in Guam. They had purchased tickets in Taiwan for an intra-island flight. The couple departed from Hualien, a city on Taiwan, aboard a British-made Viscount, owned and operated by a Taiwan company, Far Eastern Air Transport Corporation (F.E.A.T.). At the terminus of the journey
Asserting negligence in the operation, maintenance, and control of the aircraft, the Cehons’ executors commenced identical actions against F.E.A.T. in five U. S. district courts: the District of Guam, the District of Hawaii, the Central District of California, the Southern District of New York, and the District of Columbia. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407 (1976), the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, on June 30, 1977, ordered all five actions consolidated for pretrial proceedings in the District of Columbia. In re Air Crash Disaster at Taipei International Airport on July 31, 1975,
Following the transfer and consolidation, F.E.A.T. moved to dismiss, under Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(2), for lack of personal jurisdiction. At plaintiffs’ request, the district court deferred decision on the motion to dismiss pending discovery limited to the jurisdiction issue. Donahue v. F.E.A.T., Misc. No. 77-0147 (D.D.C. Nov. 1, 1977). One year later, in a memorandum opinion filed November 16, 1978, the court granted the motion to dismiss in its entirety. It concluded that F.E.A.T. lacked contacts with any of the five forums sufficiently “substantial and continuous” to make it fair to subject the airline to suit on claims unrelated to the demonstrated United States contacts. The next year, in response to plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration, the district court adhered to its initial ruling regarding Guam, Hawaii, New York, and the District of Columbia. However, based on an augmented presentation of California connections, it determined that the litigation should proceed there. Donahue v. F.E. A.T., Misc. No. 77-0147 (D.D.C. Dec. 18, 1979).
After district court certification pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (1976), this court authorized an interlocutory appeal from the ruling that F.E.A.T. was answerable in California for the Taipei crash.
Plaintiffs and, to a more limited extent, the district court have confounded specific jurisdiction to adjudicate claims linked to activities occurring or having an impact in the forum state, and general, “all purpose” adjudicatory authority to hear and decide claims totally unconnected with the forum. See Stabilisierungsfonds Fur Wein v. Kaiser Stuhl Wine Distributors,
1. F.E.A.T.’S APPEAL: THE CALIFORNIA CONNECTIONS
In its initial November 1978 ruling, the district court pointed to three F.E.A.T.California connections: (1) F.E.A.T. purchased spare airplane parts from United States companies in several states and paid for them from a San Francisco Citibank
The augmented presentation that led the district court to reach an opposite conclusion in December 1979 related to F.E.A.T.’s anticipated Califomia-Taiwan cargo service. The Civil Aeronautics Board had granted permission for thrice-weekly cargo flights from Taiwan to Los Angeles and San Francisco via Hawaii and Guam; F.E.A.T. sent approximately 44 employees to California for six weeks of training in the operation and maintenance of the Boeing aircraft; F.E.A.T. retained a freight forwarding agent in California to arrange for transshipment of airplane parts for repair purposes;
The planned cargo service did not get off the ground. After this litigation commenced, F.E.A.T. halted the proposed operation on advice of counsel. Counsel’s advice was rendered in view of F.E.A.T.’s potential exposure to jurisdiction in the United States in the wrongful death actions plaintiffs had instituted. It is undisputed that the cargo service was not inaugurated and that F.E.A.T. has derived no revenue from the projected venture. Nonetheless, the district court reasoned that the activity had gone far enough to qualify California as a permissible forum for adjudication of the claims in suit. The court noted F.E.A.T.’s characterization of the cargo venture contacts “as tentative or preliminary business activities,” but stated that “they clearly constitute the initial phase of a major business enterprise.” J.A. 318. The magnitude of the F.E.A.T.-California connections relating to the planned cargo enterprise, the
Plaintiffs have invoked federal court subject matter competence on the basis of the parties’ diversity of citizenship. No claim arising under federal law figures in the litigation. Personal jurisdiction over F.E.A.T. in these circumstances turns on state law. See Arrowsmith v. United Press International,
Our inquiry is guided by recent Supreme Court decisions elaborating upon Chief Justice Stone’s benchmark opinion in International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
International Shoe held that states may authorize their courts to exercise personal jurisdiction over nonresidents if the out-of-state defendant has “certain minimum contacts with [the state] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’”
The case at hand falls in neither of the “specific jurisdiction” categories just described, since F.E.A.T.’s activity in California did not give rise to the Taipei incident for which recovery is sought. On the facts presented — an intra-island flight on a domestic Taiwan airline, tickets purchased in Taiwan — no United States forum could exercise “specific jurisdiction.” International Shoe, however, included further entries in its illustrative catalogue. Chief Justice Stone referred to “continuous corporate operations within a state ... so substantial
The textbook case of general jurisdiction appropriately exercised over a foreign corporation that has not consented to suit in the forum is Perkins v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co.,
Plaintiffs concede that this case is readily distinguished from Perkins. There, the mining company’s president and general manager “carried on in Ohio a continuous and systematic supervision of the necessarily limited wartime activities of the company.”
We rule that, on the facts before us, F.E.A.T.’s links with California must be evaluated on the basis of the situation existing at the time litigation commenced. At that time no “major business enterprise” had been inaugurated, no substantial operations were ongoing, no revenue was derived from business generated in California or, indeed, any place in the United States. Prospective activity, plans, and forecasts do not suffice to supply the solid hold a state should have before it exercises general jurisdiction over an outsider.
We need not speculate whether a different approach would be warranted had F.E. A.T. carried out its plan to establish the cargo operation. We add; however, that even if the venture had blossomed prior to the filing of the wrongful death actions, we would entertain a doubt whether the existence of freight operations unrelated to F.E. A.T.’s wholly intra-Taiwan passenger service would do to “make it reasonable” to require F.E.A.T. to defend this particular litigation in California. International Shoe,
Finally, we note the the Supreme Court’s reminder in World-Wide Volkswagen that the due process check on state assertions of personal jurisdiction, commanded under International Shoe’s minimum contacts analysis, serves two purposes: (1) it ensures fairness to the defendant (“the defendant’s conduct and connection with the forum State [must be] such that he should reasonably anticipate being haled into court there”); and (2) it prevents states from encroaching upon each other’s sovereignty. See
II. THE APPEAL OF THE CEHONS’ EXECUTORS: GUAM, HAWAII, NEW YORK, AND DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CONNECTIONS
F.E.A.T.’s links with California were more substantial than its connections with the other forums in which plaintiffs instituted wrongful death actions. Therefore, the issues raised by the appeal of the Ce-hons’ Executors do not warrant elaborate discussion.
As to Guam, the Cehons’ temporary place of residence and an indicated stopover in F.E.A.T.’s unrealized cargo service venture; Hawaii, another indicated cargo service stopover and a place where F.E.A.T. might have set up an office staffed by a few people; and the District of Columbia, where the Civil Aeronautics Board is located,
With respect to New York, plaintiffs assert that the “doing business” test of New York C.P.L.R. § 301 (McKinney 1972) is met on the basis of F.E.A.T.’s large borrowings from the First National City Bank. Apart from the question of the extent to which the loans were arranged by Citibank’s Taiwan office, we find no support for the argument that New York has authorized its courts to proceed against a foreign country corporation on a claim arising in a foreign land when the sole tie to New York is a series of bank loans. Cf. Fosen v. United Technologies Corp.,
III. CONCLUSION
We fully understand why the plaintiffs here seek a United States forum for adjudication of the wrongful death claims they wish to assert. The Taiwan legal system is unfamiliar to them and, even if they establish serious fault on the part of F.E.A.T., they cannot reasonably anticipate United States style damages abroad.
For the reasons stated above we rule that the motion to dismiss should be granted in its entirety. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court to the extent that it grants F.E.A.T.’s motion to dismiss the actions instituted in federal courts in Guam, Hawaii, New York, and the District of Columbia; we reverse the judgment to the extent that it denies the motion to dismiss the action instituted in the District Court for the Central District of California, and we instruct the district court, on remand, to grant the motion to dismiss that action.
Notes
. F.E.A.T. v. Donahue, No. 80-8004 (D.C.Cir. Apr. 28, 1980). 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) vests discretion in the court of appeals to permit an appeal from an interlocutory order when the district court certifies “that [the] order involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal . . . may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.”
. International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
. Plaintiffs note that F.E.A.T. also purchased two helicopters with Citibank financing.
The Citibank branch in question is an “Edge Act Bank,” established under federal legislation originally enacted in 1919, 12 U.S.C. §§ 611-632 (1976 & Supp. III 1979), to promote sale abroad of United States products. Such banks deal almost exclusively in international business. They may engage in domestic transactions only to the extent that such transactions are incidental to their international business. Id. § 616 (1976).
. The district court observed that post-accident contacts “could not serve to give the defendant notice that it might be subject to a forum’s jurisdiction.” J.A. (Joint Appendix) 172. Cf. World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
.Plaintiffs and the district court described the freight forwarder as F.E.A.T.’s “import-export shipping agent.” The record, however, indicates only an arrangement to transship airplane parts for repair. J.A. 227.
. See generally von Mehren & Trautman, Jurisdiction to Adjudicate: A Suggested Analysis, 79 Harv.L.Rev. 1121 (1966).
. See id. at 1141-44, 1177. In some cases, the reality of a defendant’s multistate or multinational operation requires recognition of an overlap in the generally serviceable “specific” and “general” jurisdiction categories. See Bulova Watch Co. v. K. Hattori & Co.,
. That method of evaluation, however, is pressed by the plaintiffs and appears to have been adopted by the district court.
. Dealings with the federal government, standing alone, do not provide a basis for District of Columbia exercise of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident on the invitation of a private party. See Environmental Research International, Inc. v. Lockwood Greene Engineers, Inc.,
. See von Mehren & Trautman, supra note 6, 79 Harv.L.Rev. at 1124 n.6; cf. Stabilisierungsfonds Fur Wein v. Kaiser Stuhl Wine Distributors,
. In the case on which plaintiffs rely, McCrory Corp. v. Cloth World, Inc.,
. Even if suit were maintained in the United States, plaintiffs would encounter a formidable choice of law obstacle in avoiding application of Taiwan rules governing liability and amount recoverable. See Tramontana v. S.A. Empresa De Viacao Aerea Rio Grandense,
. Buchanan v. Rucker, 9 East 192, 194, 103 Eng.Rep. 546, 547 (K.B. 1808) (Ellenborough, C. J.) (“Can the island of Tobago pass a law to bind the rights of the whole world? Would the world submit to such an assumed jurisdiction?”).
. Apart from the constitutional restraint, it might disserve economic interests of state and nation to condition an alien’s purchasing of goods or services or borrowing money from United States enterprises upon submission to jurisdiction on claims unrelated to the purchases or loans. The exorbitant, caveat emptor rule plaintiffs’ argument suggests appears unfair, internationally undesirable, and out of touch with concerns larger than the instant litigation.
