*422 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Liberty USA Corporation (“Plaintiff’) brings this action against Buyer’s Choice Insurance Agency LLC (“Buyer’s Choice”) and Terry S. Jacobs (“Jacobs”) seeking to recover $183,333.00 it claims to be due and owing on a Promissory Note. Defendants, after removing this case from the Supreme Court of the State of New York, New York County, now move to dismiss for lack of subject matter and personal jurisdiction pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and (2), or in the alternative, to transfer venue to state court in Ohio pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED.
I. BACKGROUND
On May 27, 1998, GRE-USA Corporation (“GRE”), a Delaware corporation with a principal place of business in New York, New York and the predecessor in interest to Plaintiff, entered into an agreement with Buyer’s Choice, a Cincinnati, Ohio-based limited liability company, to sell to Buyer’s Choice all of its assets in two insurance agencies, located respectively in Ohio and Indiana, for $425,000.00. (Compl. ¶¶ 3, 6; Affidavit of August T. Janszen in Support of Motion to Dismiss [“Janszen Aff.”], Ex. A (Asset Purchase Agreement) ¶¶ 1-4; Affidavit of Carol G. Morokoff [“Morokoff Aff.”] ¶ 9). 1 Under the GRE-Buyer’s Choice Asset Purchase Agreement, Buyer’s Choice agreed to pay the $450,000 as follows: (a) $150,000.00 at the closing of the sale, followed by (b) three equal annual installments of $91,667.00 due on the first through third anniversary dates of the closing. (Janszen Aff., Ex. A ¶¶ 4(a)-(b), 11(b)). The obligation to make these three installment payments was in turn to be evidenced by a Promissory Note that was to be personally guaranteed by Defendant Jacobs, himself an Ohio resident. (Id. ¶ 4(b); Compl. ¶ 2).
On the same day the Asset Purchase Agreement was executed, Buyer’s Choice executed a Promissory Note in favor of GRE for $275,000.00, payable in three annual installments of $91,667.00 due on the first, second, and third anniversaries of the Note’s execution date, and Jacobs executed a Guaranty Agreement under which he personally guaranteed payment of all sums due under the Promissory Note. 2 (Compl. ¶¶ 5, 14, Ex. A (Promissory Note) at 1). The Promissory Note also provided that, in the event Buyer’s Choice failed to make an installment payment within ten days after it was due, GRE could, at its option, declare the entire unpaid Note amount to be due and payable immediately. (Compl., Ex. A at 1).
The Asset Purchase Agreement and the Promissory Note contain conflicting forum selection clauses. The Asset Purchase Agreement provides that “the forum for any and all claims, disputes, or actions arising from this Agreement shall be the *423 Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio.” (Janszen Aff., Ex. A ¶ 22). Meanwhile, the Promissory Note specifies that “any legal action or proceeding arising out of or relating to this Note shall be brought in the courts of the State of New York or of the United States of America for the Southern District of New York, in each case located in the County of New York.” (Compl., Ex. A at 1).
The asset sale closed on May 27, 1998, and Buyer’s Choice sent the first installment payment due under the Promissory Note to GRE’s offices in New York City in May of 1999. (Compl. ¶ 8; Morokoff Aff. ¶ 6). Thereafter, however, Buyer’s Choice failed to make the second installment payment by May 27, 2000, and when Plaintiff, who, through various corporate mergers and acquisitions, had succeeded GRE as holder of the Promissory Note, demanded payment, Buyer’s Choice refused. (Compl. ¶¶ 9-10, Morokoff Aff. ¶ 9). Thus, pursuant to the Promissory Note, GRE demanded payment of the full unpaid balance of $183,333.00, which Buyer’s Choice also refused to make, and then GRE demanded payment of the balance from Defendant Jacobs pursuant to the Guaranty Agreement, but was similarly refused. (CompLIH! 11,16).
Thereafter, on July 18, 2003, Plaintiff commenced the present action against Buyer’s Choice and Jacobs in New York State Supreme Court, New York County, seeking to hold both Defendants jointly and severally liable for the $183,333.00 unpaid balance under the Promissory Note plus any interest accruing on such amount since Buyer’s Choice’s default on May 28, 2000. (Compl. at 2). On September 12, 2003, Defendants filed a notice of removal of the action to this Court, to which Plaintiff did not object. Defendants now move to dismiss for lack of subject matter and personal jurisdiction, or in the alternative, to transfer venue to the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio.
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Procedural Posture of Defendants’ Motion
Defendants move for dismissal or transfer of venue pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), claiming lack of subject matter jurisdiction. However, the Second Circuit has “long recognized that parties have no power by private contract to oust a federal court of jurisdiction otherwise obtaining.”
See New Moon Shipping Co., Ltd. v. MAN B & W Diesel AG,
Although the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the caselaw fail to specify a procedural device for a motion to dismiss based upon a forum selection clause,
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“[w]hat is clear is that the district court has the power to decline jurisdiction as a means of enforcing a valid forum selection clause in a contract, and ... that, the weight of authority leans in favor of enforcing valid forum selection clauses.”
Carematrix of Massachusetts, Inc. v. Robert Kaplan, et al.,
No. 04 Civ. 4703,
The validity of forum selection clauses in diversity cases is governed by federal law.
See Jones v. Weibrecht,
B. Forum Selection Clause
According to Ohio law, “[d]ocuments that are incorporated by reference into a contract are to be read as though they are restated in the contract.”
Blanchard Valley Farmers Coop., Inc. v. Carl Niese & Sons Farms, Inc.,
Furthermore, the Ohio Revised Code 5 provides that
(A) As between the obligor and his immediate obligee or any transferee the terms of an instrument may be *425 modified or affected by any other written agreement executed as a part of the same transaction, except that a holder in due course is not affected by any limitation of his rights arising out of the separate written agreement if he had no notice of the limitation when he took the instrument.
O.R.C. § 1308.18 (2005). The Ohio Supreme Court has interpreted this provision as stating that “the terms of a promissory note or other negotiable instrument, as between the immediate parties to the instrument, may be modified or affected by another writing executed as part of the same transaction. This follows from the general contract principle in Ohio law that writings executed as part of the same transaction should be read together.”
Kemmler,
New York law sets forth substantively the same contract principles. In New York, it is the general rule that written contracts executed simultaneously and for the same purpose must be read and interpreted together.
Nau v. Vulcan Rail & Constr. Co.,
*426 Both the Promissory Note and the Asset Purchase Agreement were executed on the same day. Both Parties to the Promissory Agreement were also Parties to the Asset Purchase Agreement. In addition, the purpose of the two agreements was the same — the sale of certain assets held by the Sellers to the Buyer. In addition, the Promissory Note is explicitly incorporated into the Asset Purchase Agreement, and is specifically cited as part of the consideration for the contract. Furthermore, the Asset Purchase Agreement provided that the Promissory Note and the Guarantee executed by Terry Jacobs were to be delivered at Closing by the Buyer. Thus, the Promissory Note was incorporated in the Asset Purchase Agreement, was executed contemporaneously with that Agreement, by the same parties, for the same purpose, and both documents shall be construed as one contract. The Promissory Note’s forum selection clause also was superceded by the forum selection clause in the Asset Purchase Agreement. Further, failure to make payments under the Promissory Note is necessarily a breach of the Asset Purchase Agreement, which provided that the purchase price would consist of the installment payments to be made pursuant to the Promissory Note. Therefore, the forum selection clause in the Asset Purchase Agreement, which states that Ohio law will govern the Agreement and that “all claims, disputes, or actions arising from this Agreement” shall be in a state court in Ohio, applies to this case. The forum, as contracted between the Parties, lies in the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio.
C. Transfer or Dismiss
Defendants seek a dismissal and/or transfer venue to the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio. However, this Court lacks the statutory authority to transfer this case to a state court.
Section 1404(a), by its very terms, speaks to federal courts; it addresses itself only to that federal forum in which a lawsuit has been initiated; its function is to vest such a federal forum with the power to transfer a transitory cause of action to a more convenient federal court. It does not speak to state courts, and it says nothing concerning the power of some court other than the forum where the lawsuit is initiated to enjoin the litigant from further prosecuting a transitory cause of action in some other jurisdiction.
Pope v. Atlantic Coast Line R.R.
Co.,
Accordingly, the Court, having found that the forum selection clause in the Asset Purchase Agreement trumps that con *427 tained in the Promissory Note, GRANTS Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED without prejudice.
The Clerk of the Court is DIRECTED to close this case and remove it from the docket.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Because Defendants' motion to dismiss requires the Court to resolve issues surrounding its exercise of subject matter and personal jurisdiction, the Court is not confined to the Complaint but instead "may refer to evidence outside the pleadings,” such as affidavits.
Makarova v. United States,
. Neither Plaintiff nor Defendants have submitted an executed copy of the Guaranty Agreement to the Court.
. "[N]o consensus [has] developed as to the proper procedural mechanism to request dismissal of a suit based upon a valid forum selection clause. Little consistency exists today between circuits.”
New Moon,
. Because the Court is not presented with the issue of the validity of the forum selection clause, but rather, with which clause controls, Plaintiff's reliance on the four-part standard in
Ferrostaal, Inc. v. M/V Eagle,
. Title 13 of the Ohio Revised Code governs commercial transactions and codifies the Uniform Commercial Code.
. However, if the forum selection clause in the Asset Purchase Agreement did not specify Ohio law, Ohio law would govern this case. In all cases where the court's jurisdiction is based on 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (diversity jurisdiction), the Court must apply New York’s choice of law rules to determine which jurisdiction’s laws apply to the claims asserted in the Complaint.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co.,
It is not entirely clear from the face of the Asset Purchase Agreement and the Promissory Note where the documents were executed. But it seems that the Promissory Note, at least, notarized by a Notary Public in the State of Ohio, was executed in Ohio. Furthermore, the Asset Purchase Agreement lists GRE, the predecessor in interest of Plaintiff, as the owner and operator of two insurance agencies in Ohio, and Defendant Buyer as a company with its principal place of business in Ohio. The Asset Purchase Agreement itself was to sell, transfer, assign, convey and deliver to Defendant Buyer assets related to the two agencies located in Ohio. Therefore, according to New York choice of law rules, the Court would be required to apply Ohio law in this case.
. Because the Court dismisses this case based on the forum selection clause in the Asset Purchase Agreement, the Court does not address Defendants’ argument that the case should be dismissed due to lack of personal jurisdiction. However, the Court notes that Defendants consented to jurisdiction in this Court. Defendant Buyer signed the Promissory Note, which contained the forum selection clause selecting the State of New York or the Southern District of New York. Individual Defendant Jacobs also consented to jurisdiction when he signed the Guaranty Agreement which incorporates and refers to the Promissory Note containing the forum selection clause. In that Guaranty Agreement, Jacobs agreed to "[waive] all defenses of any kind to which he might otherwise be entitled with respect to such guaranty.” Neither Defendant has argued that the forum selection clause in the Promissory Note was invalid as a basis for their personal jurisdiction defense.
