On August 19, 1971, appellant, Dr. Milton Margóles, filed a two count complaint in the federal district court seeking relief for alleged slanderous utterances made by Alida Johns, an employee of The Journal Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin [hereinafter “The Journal”], naming both Alida Johns and The Journal as defendants. The district court on November 18, 1971, granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss the action and quash service of process for failure to effect proper in personam jurisdiction. Margoles v. Johns,
I
Appellant’s complaint alleged that on August 20 and September 2, 1970, Alida Johns telephoned, from her Wisconsin office with The Journal (publisher of the Milwaukee Sentinel and Milwaukee Journal), employees of an Illinois Congressman 1 at the Congressman’s office in the District of Columbia and “maliciously spoke of and concerning” the appellant with false and defamatory words. These defamatory words consisted of allegations that the doctor was guilty of “abortion charges,” that he ran a “house of ill-fame,” that he was “unfit for help by decent people,” that everyone “knew his hospital was an abortion mill,” and finally that if given a license in Illinois the doctor would still have a hand in his “abortion mill” in Wisconsin. The complaint further stated that at all times pertinent to this action Ali-da Johns was an agent and employee of The Journal and was acting for The Journal within the scope of her employment. The complaint additionally alleged that The Journal failed to correct or control Alida Johns’ actions, and asked for relief consonant with the “great pain and mental anguish” Dr. Margóles suffered, i. e., a total of one million dollars in compensatory and punitive damages.
The defendants filed no answer, but severally filed motions to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b) for lack of jurisdiction over the person, insufficiency of process, and improper venue.
In the Memorandum filed with the Order granting defendants’ motions the
*1214
district judge properly inferred from the plaintiff’s uncontested allegations of publication that the injury to the plaintiff’s reputation, if any, occurred in the District of Columbia. That alone, however, was not recognized as affording personal jurisdiction, for “[t]he statute
3
clearly separates the act from the tortious injury and affords personal jurisdiction over non-residents only when both act and injury occur in the District.”
II
1. Legislation and Legislative History
When the District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 4 generally became effective on February 1, 1971, the local courts were afforded a long-arm statute of “moderate reach.” See 4 C. Wright and A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1068 (1969). Section 132(a) of the Act added a chapter 4 to title 13 of the District of Columbia Code, 5 providing 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—
(1) transacting any business in the District of Columbia;
# * * * * *
(3) causing tortious injury in the District of Columbia by an act or omission in the District of Columbia;
(4) causing tortious injury in the District of Columbia by an act or omission outside the District of Columbia if he regularly does or solicits business, engages in any other persistent course of conduct, or- derives substantial revenue from goods used or consumed, or services rendered, in the District of Columbia;
•X- * * -X- -X- -X-
(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.
13 D.C.Code § 423 (Supp. V, 1972). Appellant seeks to assert in personam jurisdiction over appellee Johns by virtue of section (a) (3) and over appellee The Journal by virtue of sections (a)(3) or (a)(4).
The legislative history concerning this portion of the Court Reform Act is, at best, meager, for it consists almost entirely of two short references in the respective House and Senate committee reports. The Senate Committee on the District of Columbia reported:
A new chapter (4) is added, incorporating a modified version of the first *1215 two articles of the Uniform Interstate and International Procedure Act. The uniform provisions codify recent case law with respect to extraterritorial jurisdiction over and service upon persons in civil litigation, and supply the reorganized trial bench of general jurisdiction with a necessary procedural adjunct. Chapter 4 more specifically grants expanded bases of jurisdiction and modes of service identical to or reciprocal with those provided under the laws of the nearby State of Maryland for the courts of that State, and substantially the same as those provided in the adjacent State of Virginia and approximately 10 other States.
S.Rep.No.405, 91st Cong., 1st Sess. 35 (1969). Similarly, the House Committee on the District of Columbia reported: 6
Section 132 on civil jurisdiction and service outside the District of Columbia is modeled on the Uniform Interstate and International Procedure Act, more specifically grants expanded bases of jurisdiction and modes of service identical to or reciprocal with those provided under the laws of the nearby State of Maryland for the courts of that State, and substantially the same as those provided in the adjacent State of Virginia and approximately ten other States.
H.R.Rep.No.907, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 61 (1970).
Section (a)(3) of the District’s long-arm statute is in fact more restrictive than that of the Uniform Interstate and International Procedure Act [hereinafter “Uniform Act”], for the latter does not restrict jurisdiction to instances where the tortious injury occurs within the forum state. In all other respects the two acts are identical. At the effective date of the Court Reform Act Virginia’s long-arm statute, Va.Code Ann. § 8-81.2 (Cum.Supp.1972), was identical to that of the Uniform Act with the exception of one section not here relevant, and Maryland’s statute, Md.Code Ann. Art. 75, § 96 (Cum.Supp.1972), was identical to that of the Court Reform Act with the exception of section (a)(4), which replaced “goods used or consumed, or services rendered” with “goods, food, services or manufactured products used or consumed.” 7
If anything can be ascertained from the history it must be that Congress’ overall intent was to provide the District’s courts, to the greatest extent possible, with essentially identical long- *1216 arm jurisdiction as was then available in Maryland and Virginia. Obviously the geographical proximity of those jurisdictions and the constant flux caused by the transpontination of their residents rendered action such as that taken by Congress both wise and necessary. Little more can be discerned, and we thus must look to the background of the Uniform Act itself for guidance, at all times tempering our inclinations with the realization that Congress sought to attain uniformity in the area’s three primary jurisdictions.
2. The Predominant Long-Arm Statutes
Three formulations of the various long-arm statutes currently in force predominate: (1) Statutes which predicate jurisdiction over a non-resident upon either a “tortious act” or “tortious conduct” occurring within the state.
See, e. g.,
Ill.Rev.Stat.1971, ch. 110, § 17(1) (b). This type of statute has been subject to varying interpretations,
compare
Fayette v. Volkswagen of America, Inc.,
The Commissioners’ Note filed with the Uniform Act, 9B Uniform Laws An-not. 310 (1966), specifically points out the limitations imposed by the Uniform Act:
Section [(a)(3)] may have a narrower range of application than statutes which base jurisdiction upon the “commission of a tortious act” within the state, or upon the commission of a tort “in whole or in part” in the state. Some of these statutes have been interpreted to cover acts or omissions outside the state. .
Section [(a)(4)] authorizes the exercise of jurisdiction when the tor-tious act or omission takes place without the state but the injury occurs within the state and there is some other reasonable connection between the state and the defendant. . The rule is more restrictive than the Illinois statutes, as interpreted in Gray v. American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp., and the Michigan statute. (Citations omitted.)
Id.
at 312. The formula of the Uniform Act, drawing back as it does from the limits set by such expansive opinions as
Gray,
“was presumably devised to obviate any possible due process objections.” Beaty v. M. S. Steel Co.,
Circuit Judge Sobeloff, writing in Beaty, discussed the Uniform Act and its relationship to the “tortious act” statutes:
In Gray, the Illinois court interpreted that state’s long-arm statute to cover a non-resident defendant who had no connection with Illinois except that it had acted negligently out of state, causing injury in the state. The Illinois statute provided that in personam jurisdiction may be asserted over any person who “commits a tortious act” within the state. It was with knowledge of the Gray resolution of the ambiguity inherent in the phrase “tor-tious act” that the draftsmen of the Uniform Act . . . explicitly differentiated between in-state and out-of-state conduct. . . . This formula was presumably devised to obviate any possible due process objections.
Ill
Appellant bases jurisdiction under section (a)(3), although admittedly appellee Johns made the telephone call from the state of Wisconsin, upon an assertion that Johns should be considered as “project [ing] her presence” into the District and consequently as acting therein within the meaning of section (a)(3). We cannot accept such reasoning. Were we to develop any such “presence” doctrine we would be thwarting the plain language and normal interpretation of the District’s statute, and creating needless ámbiguities which have no place in a statute as reasonably constructed as the Uniform Act.
Certainly, at minimum two actions are necessary for the tort of slander — one individual must act in speaking the words of defamation while another must act in hearing them to the injury of a third party. This is no different from almost any tort, however, for more than one action is nearly always necessary to give rise to a cause of action. In products liability, for instance, there generally is the act of negligent fabrication on the part of the tortfeasor followed by assorted acts of sale, distribution, even installation, concluded by the ultimate act of use which precipitates the injury. Injury itself is an important element of a tort, not something to be considered separate and distinct. Those courts which have found that the injurious consequences of an act consummated elsewhere vest jurisdiction under “tortious act” or “tort in whole or in part” statutes explicitly recognize the elemental, not merely remedial, aspects of injury.
9
Perhaps it was the heterogeneity of the term “tort” that caused the drafters of the Uniform Act to shun its use in establishing the model statute. They chose instead to rely upon the elements of
act
and
injury,
and apparently in an effort to avoid constitutional problems that they perceived to be present,
see
Beaty v. M. S. Steel Co.,
supra,
The “act,” of course, is the act of the alleged tortfeasor- — here that act, uttering defamatory statements, occurred in Wisconsin. Nothing can change that fact. The additional facts that other third party acts were necessary to consummate the tort, or that the injury itself took place within the District, cannot under our reading of the Uniform Act grant jurisdiction that is otherwise lacking. Unless we wish to delve into a magical mystery tour of “projecting presences,” we must find that no jurisdiction can be afforded by virtue of section (a)(3). 10
Appellant's reliance on cases such as Parke-Bernet Galleries, Inc. v. Franklyn,
*1219 No claim has been advanced that personal jurisdiction can be exercised here because we are dealing with a “claim for relief arising from . . . transacting any business in the District of Columbia.” 13 D.C.Code § 423(a)(1) (Supp. V, 1972). The fact that other courts dealing with such claims have looked to the background and general language of the “transacting business” section in justifying the exercise of personal jurisdiction, despite the physical absence of the defendant, is not persuasive. We are dealing with a precise and intentionally restricted tort section whose language and history mandate a different result.
In Murphy v. Erwin-Wasey, Inc.,
We would be closing our eyes to the realities of modern business practices were we to hold that a corporation subjects itself to the jurisdiction of another state by sending a personal messenger into that state bearing a fraudulent misrepresentation but not when it follows the more ordinary course of employing the United States Postal Service as its messenger.
Id.
We hope that we are not “closing our eyes to the realities” of the situation, but rather opening them to the realities of the statute. The statute is in plain, easy to understand language — it speaks not of “tortious act” but of “act,” and its structure shows an intent that when an act is outside the forum state other significant contacts are necessary before jurisdiction can be exercised. Its interpretation should be so limited.
The underlying premise of the Murphy opinion seems to be that negligent and intentional acts should be treated differently when interpreting statutory jurisdictional language. The Murphy court apparently agrees that jurisdiction would not lie had the act with which the court was concerned been negligent, for that act “merely creates the condition *1220 from which damage might later arise.” Id. Evidently an intentional act, however, is a type of continuing wrong which carries its perpetrator mysteriously along and thrusts him, constructively of course, into the domain of the injurious consequences. The law regarding jurisdiction matters is confusing enough; it needs less legal fictions, not more.
We agree that whether an act is intentional or negligent can have a distinct bearing on whether the exercise of jurisdiction thereover is constitutional, for it goes directly to fairness and the degree to which an individual has purposefully availed himself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum state.
See
Hanson v. Denckla,
supra,
Rosenblatt v. American Cyanamid Co.,
IV
When considering the applicability of any long-arm statute to a particular fact situation courts invariably engage in a two prong analysis. It is necessary initially to determine whether the statute by its language would permit service of process on a non-resident defendant, and secondly whether service under the statute would nonetheless contravene the due process clause of the federal constitution.
See
Haynes v. James H. Carr, Inc.,
supra,
Our decision today is completely in accord with the currently prevailing case law in Maryland and Virginia; (1) St. Clair v. Righter,
In the instant case, the alleged tor-tious injury occurred upon the publication of the alleged libel within Virginia, but this was caused by the act of writing and mailing the letters outside Virginia. Plaintiff, therefore, *1221 must predicate jurisdiction upon paragraph (4) . . . . 13
(2) We have already noted,
see
text at pp. 1216-1217
supra,
that when dealing with out-of-state
negligent
acts or omissions which cause tortious injury within the state the Maryland and Virginia courts have uniformly rejected jurisdiction where the only contact with the state was that tortious injury. (3) Final-aly, although both the Maryland Court of Appeals and Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals have interpreted the language of their statutes as expressing a legislative purpose that personal jurisdiction be afforded over all out-of-state persons and corporations that constitutionally could be reached,
see, e. g.,
Gilliam v. Moog Industries, Inc.,
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) 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.
We recognize that the interpretation we adopt here today may work seemingly “harsh” results in selected instances which, to paraphrase Judge Friendly, are more frequently hypothesized than encountered. 15 We suppose that any interpretation of a long-arm statute which restricts its reach to less than conceivable, or conceivably constitutional, limits will be so considered. We note, however, that the parties to the lawsuit are not without access to other forums; that the vindication of fundamental human rights is not at issue; and, finally, that such an interpretation is most reasonable in view of all that we have previously discussed. It is not for us but for Congress to alter the statute as written.
V
Appellant alleges that even if personal jurisdiction fails under the strictures of section (a)(3) he is nevertheless afforded it as to The Journal by virtue of section (a)(4), because The Journal “engages in . [a] persistent course of conduct” within the District. The record discloses that The Journal maintains three permanent offices in the National Press Building *1222 here in the District, and has assigned three reporters to the District for the purpose of gathering news for its two newspapers, the Milwaukee Sentinel and Milwaukee Journal.
Over forty years ago this court in Neely v. Philadelphia Inquirer Co.,
Accordingly, the order of the district court granting the appellees’ motions to dismiss and quash service of process is
Affirmed.
Notes
. It is not clear from the record before ns, but we assume that the calls were made in an effort to enlist aid in preventing Dr. Margóles from becoming licensed in Illinois.
. See 13 D.C.Code § 423(a)(3) (Supp. Y, 1972).
. See 13 D.C.Code § 423(a)(4) (Supp. V, 1972).
. Act of July 29, 1970, Pub.L. No. 91-358, 84 Stat. 473.
. Pub.L. No. 91-358, § 132(a), 84 Stat. 548, amending 13 D.C.Code (1967) (codified at 13 D.C.Code §§ 421-25 (Supp. Y, 1972)).
. Mr. George E. Monk, then president of the District of Columbia Bar Association, testified as follows in the Hearings before Subcomm. Nos. 1 and 3 of the House Comm, on the District of Columbia, 91st Cong., 1st Sess., 158-59 (October 7, 1969):
The Association invites your attention to an important provision in Title II, relating to Judicial Procedure, as S. 2601 passed the Senate. I refer to Subsection (6) of Section 202 of that Bill, which provides a new Chapter 4 to Title 13 of the D.C.Code with respect to civil jurisdiction and service outside the District of Columbia. This new Chapter 4 contains a modified version of the first two articles of the Uniform Interstate and International Procedure Act — the so-called “Uniform Dong-Arm Statute”. .
More and more states are finding it necessary to enact long-arm laws of one type or another, some of them— for example, Arkansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma and the Virgin Islands — in the form of the Uniform Act, and some of them as variations of that act. I understand that 40 or more states have passed long-arm laws of one kind or another, including both our neighboring jurisdictions, the States of Maryland and Virginia.
The provisions of S. 2601 on the subject compare very closely to the provisions of the Maryland Law, as well as to the provisions of the Virginia Law ....
. Effective July 1, 1971, Maryland amended § 96(a)(4) to provide personal jurisdiction as to a cause of action arising from “[clausing tortious injury in this State or outside of this State by an act or omission outside the State” so long as minimal contacts with the state are present. Acts of Maryland 1971, ch. 769, § 1 (emphasis added).
. In
St. Glair,
however, the court went on to find that it was not limited by the statute, but could assert jurisdiction
sua sponte
to the limits of the due process
*1217
clause.
But see
Beaty v. M. S. Steel Co.,
.
See
St. Clair v. Righter,
The
Gray
court itself noted,
. Appellant seeks to place appellee Johns constructively within the jurisdiction because of her use of the telephone. “The caller,” appellant asserts, “in a real sense exercises control over the receiving instrument located in the District of Columbia.” Brief for Appellant at 19. She can thus be said to control, we suppose, a mechanical agent in the District, and this control purportedly “project[s] [her] presence into the forum.” The act with which we are concerned is that of uttering defamatory statements. If appellee Johns were to engage in, or control, other activities within the District she might be subject to (a) (4) jurisdiction, but the fact that she “is in fact using a tangible physical instrument ... to cause and simultaneously control actual physical events [in the District], such as the ringing of bells, flashing of lights, perhaps, and, most important, the reproduction of the sounds of the caller’s voice,” hardly renders her susceptible. Brief for Appellant at 19.
. In Gilliam v. Moog Indus., Inc.,
. Initially the Illinois courts held “that the performance of jurisdictional acts, by
*1219
defendant or its agents while physically present in Illinois, is essential for submission to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state under Section 17(1) (a) [‘transaction of any business within this State’].” Saletko v. Willys Motors, Inc.,
We believe there is no substantial reason for differentiating personal injury actions from business transactions insofar as the physical presence of the defendant is concerned, and that physical presence in the State is a factor but should not be the controlling factor in determining jurisdiction. We will follow Gray in bolding- that jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant pursuant to section 17 does not depend upon the defendant or its agent having participated in a substantial transaction of business while physically present in Illinois.
But see National Products Specialist, Inc. v. Bristol Yacht Co., No. 7504-72 (Sup.Ct.D.C. March 28, 1973), holding that the “defendant or his agent must be physically present in the District of Columbia transacting any business therein” to be amenable to jurisdiction under the provisions of 13 D.C.Code § 423(a)(1) (Supp. V, 1972), and finding that result mandated not only by statutory construction but also by constitutional due process. See also Auerbach, The “Long Arm” Comes to Maryland, 26 Md.L.Rev. 13, 33-36 (1966).
. See note 9 supra.
. For Virginia and Maryland cases involving section (a)(1),
see, e. g.,
Groom v. Margulies,
.
See
Buckley v. New York Post Corp.,
