This is an appeal from a final judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissing this diversity action for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendant. Plaintiff Marine Midland Bank, N.A. (“Marine Midland”) sued defendant James W. Miller, a nondomiciliary of New York, to recover damages resulting from Miller’s alleged grossly negligent misrepresentations. The district court ruled that because Miller’s acts in New York were performed solely in his capacity as Chief Executive Officer of J.W. Miller & Associates (“Miller & Associates”), his actions were insufficient to permit the court to exercise jurisdiction over Miller in his individual capacity under New York’s long-arm statute, N.Y. Civ.Prac. Law & R. (“CPLR”) § 302(a) (McKinney 1972 & Supp. 1980). For the reasons below, we reverse and remand.
Background
In 1977, a group of investors, subsequently known as Atlas-Dirty Devil Mining (“ADDM”), sought to borrow approximately $6 million from Marine Midland in order to finance a planned coal mining project. ADDM submitted to Marine Midland a feasibility report prepared by Miller & Associates, a coal consulting firm incorporated under the laws of West Virginia (the “Miller Report”). The Miller Report stated that the proposed mine would yield nearly twenty-seven million tons of coal of commercially acceptable quality. Thereafter, Miller, the president of Miller & Associates and a resident of West Virginia, made at least two visits to Marine Midland’s offices in New York, where he presented and confirmed orally the findings and conclusions of the Miller Report. Marine Midland retained a second coal consulting firm, Keplinger & Associates, Inc. (“Keplinger”) to evaluate the Miller Report. Keplinger confirmed the conclusions of Miller & Associates. After receiving all of this information, Marine Midland agreed to lend ADDM *901 approximately $6 million. This amount was subsequently increased to more than $9 million.
In March 1979, Keplinger informed Marine Midland that the Miller Report and the Keplinger confirmation had overstated both the quality and the quantity of ADDM’s coal resources. In fact, almost no coal could economically be mined by ADDM. Consequently, ADDM was unable to repay the funds it borrowed from Marine Midland and it has filed a petition under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act.
In May 1980, Marine Midland filed the present suit against Miller, 1 alleging that Miller had been grossly negligent in making false statements to the bank while at its offices in New York. In addition, it alleged that Miller was responsible for the false statements contained in the Miller Report because he had participated in its preparation, because he had presented the report to the bank, and because Miller & Associates was merely a shell that was in actuality Miller’s “alter ego.”
Miller moved, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2), to dismiss the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. In opposition to Miller’s motion Marine Midland presented deposition testimony by Miller and several affidavits to support, inter alia, its contention that Miller & Associates was merely a shell for Miller personally. The affidavits described a certain fluidity of the lines of demarcation between Miller & Associates and other business entities wholly owned by Miller, with respect to contract formation and performance, services and billing, and so forth. In addition, one affidavit cited Miller’s counsel as having stated, in his position as counsel for Miller & Associates in Marine Midland’s suit against that entity (see note 1 supra), that Miller & Associates had a net worth of just $30,000 and was in effect nothing more than a telephone number and stationery.
The District Court’s Decision
The district court granted Miller’s motion to dismiss the action for lack of jurisdiction.
2
Recognizing that the law of the forum state governs the exercise of personal jurisdiction in a diversity case in federal court,
Braman v. Mary Hitchcock Hospital,
(a) Acts which are the basis of jurisdiction. As to a cause of action arising from any of the acts enumerated in this section, a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over any non-domiciliary . . . who in person or through an agent:
1. transacts any business within the state; or
2. commits a tortious act within the state, except as to a cause of action for defamation of character arising from the act; . . .
In construing these provisions, the district court distinguished between activities undertaken by a person in his individual capacity and those undertaken in his role as a corporate employee, and applied what has come to be known as the “fiduciary shield” doctrine,
see, e. g., United States v. Montreal Trust Co.,
Because we conclude that the court applied too stringent a test in its treatment of the corporate shell issue, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Discussion
It is undisputed that an individual who commits a tort while acting in his capacity as a corporate officer or employee may be held personally liable.
See, e. g., Miller v. Giant Swedish Metal Corp.,
The teaching of the courts of this Circuit and of New York is that there is a dichotomy between the principles governing the personal liability of corporate agents for torts committed in their corporate roles and the principles governing the amenability of such agents to personal jurisdiction solely on the basis of those acts.
See, e. g., Lehigh Valley Industries v. Birenbaum,
As an equitable principle, the fiduciary shield doctrine is not applied mechanically; the determination of the appropriateness of its application requires an analysis of the particular facts of the ease. In each instance, fairness is the ultimate test. Its applicability depends generally on the employee’s faithful pursuit of the corporation’s interests rather than his own interests. Thus, when a corporate employee acts in his own personal interest rather than in the best interest of his corporation, he is not protected by the fiduciary shield since it is equitable that his self-interested actions be considered his own and be treated as a predicate for the exercise of jurisdiction over him personally. Accordingly, in
United States v. Montreal Trust Co., supra,
In evaluating the fairness of subjecting an individual to personal jurisdiction for acts done in his role as a corporate employee, it is appropriate to focus not only on the fealty of the employee to the corporation in the performance of those acts, but also on the nature of the corporation and the individual’s relationship to it. If the corporation is a mere shell for its owner, the employee-owner’s actions may be viewed as having been taken simply in his own interest. In such circumstances it will not advance notions of fairness to allow the owner of the corporation to invoke the protections of the fiduciary shield. As Judge Weinstein observed, obiter, in Bulova Watch Co. v. K. Hattori & Co., supra,
As the term “fiduciary shield” suggests, this is an equitable doctrine. It should be followed not [] mechanically but with a sound exercise of discretion. If, for example, the [corporation] lacked sufficient assets to respond or if it were a shell utilized by an individual defendant for his own benefit, the balance of fairness might be tipped and jurisdiction over the individual might lie.
In deciding whether the corporation is a real or a shell entity, the appropriate standard should not be the very stringent test, normally applied in other contexts, for piercing the corporate veil. That test requires a showing not only that the corporation is a shell, but that it was used to commit a fraud.
Walkovszky v. Carlton,
*904 In the present case, in assessing Marine Midland’s assertion that Miller & Associates was a mere shell for Miller, and that Miller’s actions, while ostensibly taken in his corporate role, were in fact his own, the district court erred in applying the strict test used by New York in determining whether or not to pierce the corporate veil for purposes of liability. In deciding the limited question of whether it had jurisdiction the court should have looked only to the question whether Miller & Associates was a shell for Miller; it should not have required a showing that the shell was used to commit a fraud.
Given this less onerous standard, Miller’s motion should not have been granted on the basis of the record as it stood before the district court. In deciding a pretrial motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction a district court has considerable procedural leeway. It may determine the motion on the basis of affidavits alone; or it may permit discovery in aid of the motion; or it may conduct an evidentiary hearing on the merits of the motion.
Visual Sciences, Inc. v. Integrated Communications Inc.,
In the present case, Marine Midland presented deposition testimony and affidavits concerning the ownership, capitalization, and use by Miller of Miller & Associates, and it quoted Miller’s attorney as having stated that Miller & Associates was no more than a telephone number and stationery. Marine Midland thus made a prima facie showing that Miller & Associates was a shell corporation for Miller. The motion to dismiss should not have been granted without an evidentiary hearing.
Conclusion
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. In a separate action commenced in August 1979, Marine Midland sued Keplinger and Miller & Associates in the Southern District of New York. Keplinger moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction or, in the alternative, to have either the entire action transferred to the Southern District of Texas or the action against himself severed and transferred to that district. The district court denied these motions. Marine
Midland Bank v. Keplinger & Associates, Inc.,
. The district court rejected Miller’s additional contention that the complaint failed to state a cause of action in tort.
. The fiduciary shield doctrine is not a constitutional principle, but is rather a doctrine based on judicial inference as to the intended scope of the long arm statute.
See United States v. Montreal Trust Co.,
supra,
