David W. Holder appeals from a trial court order dismissing for lack of personal *267 jurisdiction a class action brought by Holder against Haarmann & Reimer Corporation (H & R) under the District’s Antitrust Act of 1980, D.C.Code §§ 28-4501 et seq. (1996 & Supp.2000). On appeal, Holder contends that H & R transacts business in the District and that, contrary to the trial judge’s finding, H & R is therefore amenable to suit in the Superior Court. Holder bases his jurisdictional theory solely on the following asserted contacts between H & R and the District: H & R conspired with other manufacturers, outside the District, to fix the price of citric acid; H & R then sold citric acid at an artificially inflated price to manufacturers outside the District; the manufacturers integrated the citric acid into various end products; the manufacturers then sold the end products directly or indirectly to retailers; the retailers subsequently sold the end products to consumers throughout the country; an unknown number of these consumers purchased, in the District, end products, some unknown quantity of which was alleged to have contained citric acid manufactured by H & R. According to Holder, these asserted contacts constitute transacting business in the District of Columbia within the meaning of our long-arm statute, D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(l) (1995 & 2001).
If Holder’s jurisdictional theory were correct, then, for purposes of our long-arm statute, H & R would be “transacting business” in the District of Columbia and, by extension, perhaps also in every jurisdiction in this country, and even the world, regardless of how minimal an amount of citric acid sold by it reached the respective jurisdiction, and in spite of the absence of any other contact between H & R and the jurisdiction. In other words, H
&
R would be deemed to be transacting business anywhere that a product containing any amount of citric acid produced by H
&
R was ultimately sold to a consumer. Such a definition of transacting business recognizes no sensible limiting principle and would require H & R to anticipate being haled into court virtually anywhere in the world on the theory that it transacts business everywhere. The logic of Holder’s argument appears to assume that, as the seller of a chattel, H & R has effectively transacted business in the District by “appointing] the chattel [its] agent for service of process; [H & R’s] amenability to suit [on a transaction of business theory] would travel with the chattel.”
Worldr-Wide Volkswagen v. Woodson,
I.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On February 8, 1999, Holder instituted the instant suit on his own behalf and as the representative of a class of similarly situated consumers in the District of Columbia. 1 The complaint alleges that H & R violated the District’s Antitrust Act by participating in a national and international criminal conspiracy with other manufacturers to fix the price of the citric acid that H & R produced. According to the plaintiff, H & R’s citric acid was then sold to manufacturers who, in turn, integrated it *268 into a variety of end products 2 which were sold to retailers and then ultimately to consumers, inter alia, in the District of Columbia.
The present suit had its origins in the criminal prosecution of H & R for conspiring to fix the price of citric acid in violation of federal antitrust laws. On January 29, 1997, pursuant to a plea agreement, H & R entered a plea of guilty in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to criminal violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 et seq. (1994 & Supp. V 1999). The unlawful conduct embraced by the plea occurred over a period that began in early 1991 and continued through mid-1995. The violation of the District’s Act alleged by Holder in this case was premised on the price-fixing conspiracy that was the subject of the federal prosecution. Specifically, Holder alleges that, during the time period in which the federal violations were occurring, he and the other potential class members “purchased in the District of Columbia beverages, foods and other consumer goods containing citric acid manufactured or distributed by [H & R],” and that he and the other potential plaintiffs “sustained damages arising from the overpayment for consumer goods containing citric acid as a result of [H & R’s] violations of the District of Columbia antitrust laws.”
On April 5, 1999, pursuant to Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(b)(2), H & R filed a motion to dismiss Holder’s complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. H & R asserted that it had not transacted business in the District of Columbia and that the company did not have the required minimum contacts with the District which would permit the Superior Court to exercise personal jurisdiction over H & R. H & R’s motion was accompanied by an affidavit by Susan I. Baer, H & R’s corporate secretary, in which she represented, inter alia, that H & R had no office in the District of Columbia and that the company had not engaged in any business within this jurisdiction. 3 On July 9,1999, following a hearing on this motion, the trial judge dismissed the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. In the judge’s view, “[t]here is a lack of sufficient contact [between H & R and] this jurisdiction to make further proceeding against Haarmann & Reimer fair, just and legal.” This timely appeal followed.
II.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Throughout this litigation, the focus of Holder’s argument has been that the Superior Court has authority to exercise personal jurisdiction over H & R because, and only because, the corporation has transacted business in the District of Columbia. See D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(l). 4 In fact, *269 when Holder’s attorney was asked during oral argument before this court, whether he was relying on any subsection of the District’s long-arm statute other than D.C.Code § 13 — 423(a)(1), counsel answered unequivocally in the negative. Holder has thus conceded, for purposes of this appeal, that H & R’s alleged transaction of business in the District constitutes the only basis for the exercise by the Superior Court of personal jurisdiction over H & R. In other words, Holder’s concession means that if the company did not transact business in the District, the trial court’s judgment must be affirmed, and our inquiry is confined accordingly. We take the case as presented to us, and we limit our analysis to the question whether the Superior Court had personal jurisdiction over H & R pursuant to D.C.Code § 13 — 123(a)(1).
A. Applicable legal principles.
As an initial matter, we note that Holder, as the plaintiff, has the burden of establishing that the trial court had personal jurisdiction over H & R, the sole remaining defendant in the litigation.
E.g., Parsons v. Mains,
These legal principles may be summarized as follows: First, “[a] court may assert personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant where service of process is authorized by statute and where the service of process so authorized is consistent with due process.”
Mouzavires v. Baxter,
[t]he Due Process Clause protects an individual's liberty interest in not being subject to the binding judgments of a forum with which he has established no meaningful “contacts, ties, or relations.” [Int’l Shoe, supra,]326 U.S. at 319 [,66 S.Ct. 154 ]. By requiring that individuals have “fair warning that a particular activity may subject [them] to the jurisdiction of a foreign sovereign,” Shaffer v. Heitner,433 U.S. 186 , 218,97 S.Ct. 2569 ,53 L.Ed.2d 683 (1977) (Stevens, J., concurring in judgment), the Due Process Clause “gives a degree of predictability to the legal system that allows potential defendants to structure their primary conduct with some minimum assurance as to where that conduct will and will not render them liable to suit,” World-Wide Volkswagen [, supra,444 U.S. at 297 ,100 S.Ct. 559 ].
(Footnote omitted; alteration in quotation in original.)
Second, these minimum contacts must derive from the defendant’s having “transact[ed] any business in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(1).
5
When we decided in
Mouzavires, supra,
that section 13-423(a)(l) reached to the limits permitted by the Constitution, we held that “the sweep of the ‘transacting any business’ provision [of the District’s long-arm statute] covers
any transaction of business in the District of Columbia
that can be reached jurisdictionally without offending the Due Process Clause.”
Third, the minimum contacts analysis does not constitute a “mechanical test[ ]” in which we apply “talismanic jurisdictional formulas” to determine whether the Superior Court may properly exercise personal jurisdiction over any given defendant.
Id.
at 478, 485,
B. Relevant jurisdictional facts.
The relevant jurisdictional facts are set forth in the affidavit of Ms. Baer, and Holder has not disputed them. H & R is a Delaware corporation, and its headquarters are located in New Jersey. During the time period in question, “H & R manufactured citric acid in the United States at plants in Indiana and Ohio — not in D.C.” 6 “[C]itric acid made by H & R was sold to [H & R’s] customers around the country, none of which [customers] were [sic] located in D.C.” Holder admits that no citric acid produced by H & R was ever sold directly to, or purchased by, the plaintiff or “any other member of the alleged class.” Rather, H & R sold citric acid to other manufacturers who, somewhere along the chain of manufacture and distribution, incorporated the citric acid into end products which were allegedly sold in the District. As Holder’s counsel put it in his brief, H & R’s citric acid reached the District, if at all, “through a chain of manufacturers, distributors, and retailers selling and distributing consumer products containing citric acid.” 7 Thus, H & R neither manufactured nor sold citric acid in the District of Columbia.
Nor did H & R engage in any other relevant business-related conduct within the District during the time period in question. According to Ms. Baer’s affidavit, “at least since 1991, H & R has not owned, leased, or held any interest in any real property in the District of Columbia; H & R has not had an office in the District of Columbia; and H & R has not paid taxes in the District of Columbia.” Further, “at least since 1991, H & R has not been party to any litigation [other than the instant case] in the District of Columbia.” Holder has not alleged that H & R engaged in any activity related to the price-fixing conspiracy in the District; rather, *272 he acknowledges that he “does not know where this conspiracy actually took placet,] but he doubts [that] it was in the District.”
III.
ANALYSIS
Holder argues that the Superior Court may exercise personal jurisdiction over H & R because H & R “carried on [a] purposeful and deliberate series of business transactions, from manufacturer to processor to retailer to consumer” that ultimately led to transactions in the District between District residents. According to Holder, “[t]hat itself satisfies the provision of the [l]ong-[a]rm statute for jurisdiction over persons transacting business in the District,” and, because that provision is coextensive with the Due Process Clause, it also meets the applicable constitutional requirements. 8 We disagree.
As an initial matter, our review of the record has convinced us that Holder has not carried the initial burden of demonstrating that H
&
R has “transacted] any business in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(l);
see also, e.g., Shoppers Food Warehouse, supra,
Based on these principles, we have held that the Superior Court may properly exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant under section 13-423(a)(1) if that defendant — itself—has directly shipped goods into the District and has sold them here to District retailers.
Cohane v. Arpeja-California, Inc.,
This case is closer to
Bueno
and
Sol Salins
than it is to
Cohane
and
Shoppers Food Warehouse.
Like the defendant in
Bueno, supra,
Holder argues that we should consider H & R’s intentional criminal violation of the Sherman Act in our “transacting business” calculus. He asserts that H & R’s criminal conduct caused injury to him and to others similarly situated because residents of the District had to pay artificially and unlawfully inflated prices for consumer goods containing citric acid. But in the absence of any significant connection between H & R and the District, extraterritorial participation in a criminal conspiracy, however culpable, cannot fairly be characterized as “transacting any busi *275 ness in the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(1). 10 Indeed, on this record, H & R’s participation in criminal conduct, for which sanctions have already been imposed by a United States District Court in California, is essentially irrelevant to the question whether the Superior Court of the District of Columbia may exercise personal jurisdiction over H & R pursuant to section 13 — 423(a)(1). Compare supra note 8.
Finally, our long-arm statute’s “transacting business” prong does not confer personal jurisdiction over H & R on the Superior Court because H & R could not reasonably have foreseen that its production and delivery scheme would subject it to being haled into court in the District. “[T]he Due Process 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.’ ”
World-Wide Volkswagen, supra,
The constitutional standard, then, is not satisfied through “the mere likelihood that a product will find its way into the forum State,” without any other relevant contacts between the defendant and the forum.
Id.
at 297,
Holder asks us to hold, on the authority of
Keeton
and like cases, that the Superior Court may exercise jurisdiction over H
&
R. But Holder’s reliance on
Keeton
is misplaced. The result in
Keeton
was premised on the obvious reality that, with many thousands of sales in New Hampshire, the business contacts between the defendant
*276
and the forum were sufficiently consistent and deliberate to satisfy due process requirements.
H & R’s relationship to the forum in this case is far more similar to the circumstances in
World-Wide Volkswagen,
*277 IV.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The action was originally brought not only against H & R, but also against a second manufacturer of citric acid, F. Hoffman-La-Roche Ltd. The trial court subsequently approved a class-wide settlement between the plaintiff and Hoffman-LaRoche, and on June 26, 2000, the suit against that defendant was dismissed. As a result, Holder and his class and H & R are the only remaining parties to the litigation.
. Citric acid is a "colorless translucent crystalline acid ... principally derived by fermentation of carbohydrates from lemon, lime and pineapple juices used in preparing citrates and in flavorings and metal polishes.” The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 349 (3d ed.1992). It is a common "ingredient in beverages, foods, and other consumer goods, used to add tartness, to increase shelf-life, and as a substitute for phosphates.”
. Holder opposed H & R's motion, but he did not file a counter-affidavit. Instead, he relied on the allegations contained in his unverified complaint and in his written opposition to the motion.
. The District's long-arm statute provides, in pertinent part:
(a) A District of Columbia court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a person, who acts directly or by an agent, as to a claim for relief arising from the person’s *269 (1) transacting any business in the District of Columbia[J
(b) When jurisdiction over a person is based solely upon this section, only a claim for relief arising from acts enumerated in this section may be asserted against him.
'd.C.Code § 13-423.
Because we dispose of this case under section 13 — 423(a)(1), we express no opinion regarding whether the Superior Court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over H & R would satisfy section 13-423(b).
. Otherwise — that is, if sufficiently close contacts
of any kind
between the nonresident defendant and the District of Columbia were sufficient to allow the Superior Court to exercise personal jurisdiction over that defendant under the "transacting business” prong of section 13-423(a)(l) — then the other prongs of the long-arm statute would be superfluous.
See
D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(2)-(7). Any interpretation of section 13-423(a)(l) which would apply it to contexts other than the transaction of business in the District therefore cannot be correct. Indeed, we have noted that the other provisions of the long-arm statute may not authorize the exercise of jurisdiction to the full extent permitted by the Due Process Clause.
See Mouzavires, supra,
If we consider the outer limits of jurisdiction permitted by the Due Process Clause as the circumference of a circle or the outer edge of a pie, and the six "enumerated acts” in § 96(a)(l)-(6) [Maryland's long-arm statute] as six slices of the pie, it appears that some slices go all the way to the outer limit of the circle, while others stop short of the outer limit.
(Alteration in Mouzavires.)
. H & R sold its citric acid business in 1998 (after the time period relevant to this case) and no longer produces or sells the product.
. On the current state of the record, it is not even certain that any citric acid manufactured by H & R ever reached the District; the record merely contains Holder’s allegations, unsupported by affidavit or other evidence, that consumer products sold in the District included some citric acid produced by H & R.
. In his brief on appeal, Holder further argues that the Superior Court has personal jurisdiction over H & R because "H & R engaged in intentional criminal acts[,
i.e.,
the price-fixing conspiracy to which it entered a plea of guilty,] the effect of which reached into the District of Columbia by damaging whoever purchased food and beverage products containing citric acid in the District,1' so that the "ultimate victims of [H
&
R's] criminal acts were the District consumers at the end of the distribution chain.” (Footnote omitted.) Adopting this argument, however, would require us to base personal jurisdiction over H & R on a separate prong of the District's long-arm statute, namely on the provision which authorizes the Superior Court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant who has "causfed] tortious injury in the District of Columbia by an act or omission outside the District of Columbia.” D.C.Code § 13 — 423(a)(4). At oral argument, counsel for plaintiff expressly disavowed reliance on this statutory provision, and he asked us to find personal jurisdiction over H & R solely under the "transacting business” prong, D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(1). See
supra
pp. ---. In light of the position taken by his attorney, we have no occasion to consider arguments supportive of personal jurisdiction over H & R under D.C.Code § 13-423(a)(4). Consequently, the reliance in Holder’s brief on authorities such as,
e.g., Calder v. Jones,
In support of the argument noted at the outset of this footnote, Holder also cites cases such as,
e.g., Janmark, Inc.
v.
Reidy,
. In his reply brief, Holder relies extensively on
Stabilisierungsfonds fur Wein v. Kaiser Stuhl Wine Distributors Pty. Ltd.,
. The District's long-arm statute, unlike the statutes of certain jurisdictions involved in cases upon which Holder relies, does not contain a provision under which the in-state commission of a tort is defined as "doing business" in the forum.
See, e.g., Keeton, supra,
. We also note that New Hampshire, the forum at issue in
Keeton,
had a long-arm statute under which the in-state commission of a tort was defined as "doing business” in the forum.
. The only specific location disclosed in the record at which H & R sold its citric acid is "the Northern District of California.” However, the affidavit of H & R’s corporate secretary specifically states that "none of [H & R’s citric acid customers was] located in D.C.”
. Holder also argues that the Superior Court should be permitted to exercise personal jurisdiction over H & R because, according to Holder, the District's Antitrust Act was intended to reach a defendant's activity outside the District so long as that activity had a significant effect within the District. Assuming,
arguendo,
that this was the legislative intent, we believe that it would put the cart before the horse to conclude that the entire constitutionally-mandated minimum contacts analysis may simply be jettisoned whenever a legislature enacts a statute which is intended to have extraterritorial application. On the contrary, we emphasize that the personal jurisdiction analysis must precede, and proceed independently of, the question whether a substantive District of Columbia statute has been violated.
See Keeton, supra,
