MEMORANDUM
This products liability suit arises from a helicopter crash over the Ohio River on January 16, 1981. The owner of the helicopter, Rockwell International Corporation (“Rockwell”), sues both the manufacturer, Costrozioni Aeronautiche Giovanni Agusta, S.p.A. (“Agusta”) and the maker of an allegedly defective component part, SNFA. Both defendants are foreign corporations. Agusta has voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of this court, but SNFA moves to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. For the reasons outlined below, SNFA’s motion to dismiss shall be denied.
FACTS
SNFA, a French corporation with no apparent place of business in the United States, designs and manufactures ball bearing assemblies. These assemblies, along with accessories and replacement parts are sold by SNFA to its Italian subsidiary, Somecat, S.p.A. Someeat is SNFA’s exclusive distributor in Italy, who, in turn, sells the ball bearings and replacement parts to Agusta which is also an Italian corporation. 1 Agusta incorporates custom made SNFA bearings into its A-109 helicopter. Agusta then sells the helicopters to its United States distributor, Atlantic Aviation Corporation in Wilmington, Delaware. The chain of distribution is completed when Atlantic sells to the ultimate consumer. Replace *330 ment parts for the ball bearing assemblies go through the same chain of distribution. 2
Rockwell, a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Pennsylvania, 3 purchased an A-109 helicopter from ... .Atlantic in October of 1977. Almost a year later, Rockwell bought seven replacement tail rotor drive shaft bearings from Atlantic. These bearings were designed, tested and manufactured by SNFA and had gone through the chain of distribution previously outlined. They were installed in the helicopter on April 2, 1979. On January 16, 1981, the bearings and the rotor drive shaft failed while the helicopter was flying over the Ohio River. The pilot was unable to maintain directional control and the helicopter crashed. Rockwell sues defendants under theories of negligence and the breach of express and implied warranties.
The ball bearings manufactured by SNFA are custom designed for the Agusta A-109 helicopter. They cannot be used in any other helicopter model. Agusta buys all bearings for the A-109 from SNFA. During the design and testing of the ball bearings, SNFA worked closely with Agusta engineers and was aware that the A-109 helicopter was targeted for the executive corporate transport market in the United States and Europe. SNFA has advertised its bearings in the World Aviation Directory, a publication widely circulated throughout Europe, Canada and the United States. In addition, it has an exclusive agreement with Air Supply Company, a division of Garrett Corporation, located in California. This agreement allows Air Supply to promote and sell SNFA’s precision bearings throughout the continental United States. SNFA has also sold turbine engine bearings directly to General Electric Corporation and Garrett Corporation. The engines into which these bearings are incorporated are marketed throughout the United States.
DISCUSSION
In deciding SNFA’s motion to dismiss for want of personal jurisdiction, I must accept as true all of plaintiff’s well-plead allegations of fact, viewing all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. See
Hollinger v. Wanger Min. Equipment Co.,
Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permits a federal district court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident to the extent allowed by the law of the state where the court sits.
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. T.S.I. Ltd., 545
F.Supp. 329, 332 (D.N.J.1982). Pennsylvania’s long arm statute, Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. tit. 42 § 5322 (Purdon 1981) permits the exercise of personal jurisdiction “to the fullest extent allowed under the Constitution of the United States and may be based on the most minimum contact” with Pennsylvania allowed under the Constitution. Pa. Cons.Stat. tit. 42 § 5322(b). Where the state long-arm statute is written so broadly, the Third Circuit has failed to first examine the precise statutory language, instead focusing directly upon the constitutional due process requirements.
Carty v. Beech Aircraft Corp.,
Plaintiff’s cause of action arises out of a specific forum-related act. The thrust of the inquiry is upon whether there are sufficient contacts with the forum state arising from
that
“transaction” so as to justify the assertion of personal jurisdiction over the defendant.
See Reliance Steel Products Co. v. Watson, Ess, Marshall & Enggas,
The second requirement is that the non-resident defendant purposely availed itself of the privilege of acting within the forum, thus invoking the benefits and protections of the forum’s laws.
See Hanson v. Denkla,
Defendant argues that it has not purposefully availed itself of the privileges of conducting business within Pennsylvania. It maintains that it has confined its sales to the European market and that it is solely Agusta, which has purposefully availed itself of the United States and Pennsylvania market. This contention misses the mark. While SNFA’s involvement in the sale and distribution of the ball bearing may be once or twice removed from Agusta’s final sale to Rockwell, SNFA’s purposeful availment, critical in the minimum contacts analysis, actually took place at an earlier point. That occurred when SNFA decided to enter and exploit the international “executive corporate transport market,” and toward that end, began to work closely with Agusta’s engineers to develop the ball bearings for the A-109 with the knowledge that the *332 A-109 was to be marketed throughout the continental United States. Moreover, because the ball bearings are custom-made, SNFA intended its products to be an inseparable part of the marketing plan of Agusta.
In
World-Wide Volkswagen,
the Supreme Court drew a distinction between a local or regionalized dealer and a manufacturer or major distributor. Except for a rare sale, the local dealer generally confines the market he serves to a limited area. However, the marketing territory and the sale of a product by a manufacturer or distributor is not intended to be so confined. The sale of its product to a distant state is not simply an isolated occurrence, but instead, arises from the corporation’s affirmative efforts to serve,
directly or indirectly,
the largest possible market for its product.
See WorldWide Volkswagen,
The distinction between a dealer or distributor seeking to serve a limited market, and a manufacturer seeking to serve a larger market, was recognized by the Superior Court of Pennsylvania in
Goff v. Armbrecht Motor Truck Sales, Inc.,
It does not seem desirable to subject the California dealer who has sold tires to a Pennsylvania tourist to jurisdiction in Pennsylvania. However, it does seem that jurisdiction should be upheld over a California tire manufacturer who cannot be thought of as doing business within the state. While it is foreseeable by both defendants that their wares will be used in Pennsylvania, one is set up to do business locally whereas the other depends upon foreign consumption. Thus, it would seem unreasonable to force the local dealer to be prepared to defend suits on a nation-wide scale, while the national manufacturer which depends upon a national market can be so prepared.
In
DeJames v. Magnificance Carriers, Inc.,
The stream-of-commerce theory developed as a means of sustaining jurisdiction in products liability cases in which the product had traveled through an extensive chain of distribution before reaching the ultimate consumer. Under this theory, a manufacturer may be held amenable to process in a forum in which its products are sold, even if the products were sold indirectly through importers or distributors with independent sales and marketing schemes. Courts have found the assumption of jurisdiction in these cases to be consistent with the due process requirements identified above: by increasing the distribution of its products through indirect sales within the forum, a manufacturer benefits legally from the protection provided by the laws of the forum state for its products, as well as economically from indirect sales to forum residents.
It is more appropriate to characterize SNFA as a manufacturer, competing in an *333 international market rather than as a local French dealer. The DeJames court did not accept plaintiff’s argument that Hitachi was a manufacturer, and consequently, it declined to apply the stream of commerce theory to that case. However, the distinctions which the DeJames court drew, firmly place SNFA within the line of stream of commerce situations. First, although Hitachi did not utilize the owners of the ship it “manufactured” as distributors of its product, SNFA and its subsidiary, clearly did so. They had to distribute the product through Agusta’s distribution system; the bearing was uniquely designed for incorporation into Agusta’s helicopter. Second, unlike Hitachi, SNFA took full advantage of an indirect marketing scheme. Finally, while Hitachi received no economic benefit, either directly or indirectly from the forum state, the same cannot be said of SNFA. By virtue of the sale of the bearing in question, defendant derived, at a minimum, an indirect pecuniary benefit from Pennsylvania.
In
Oswalt v. Scripto, Inc.,
SNFA argues that although it may have been foreseeable that its bearings would find their way into any given state, under
World-Wide Volkswagen,
foreseeability alone is insufficient to establish minimum contacts.
The final prong of the analysis focuses upon whether the exercise of jurisdiction was reasonable and fundamentally fair. SNFA designed and manufactured a component that was incorporated into a product which was intended to be, and was, in fact, sold in both Europe and the United States. Where that component allegedly fails and causes injury in the very market in which the product was expected to be sold, it is not unreasonable or unfair to require the defendant to be subject to suit in that forum.
Moreover, a manufacturer or major distributor should not be allowed to profit from the sale of its product in a state, while simultaneously insulating itself from liability by establishing an indirect and multi-faceted chain of distribution.
See Poyner v. Erma Werke GMBH,
As the Third Circuit aptly stated in DeJames:
Underlying the assumption of jurisdiction in these cases is the belief that the fairness requirements of due process do not extend so far as to permit a manufacturer to insulate itself from the reach of the forum state’s long-arm rule by using an intermediary or by professing ignorance of the ultimate destination of its products.
Accordingly, I find that this court may properly exercise in personam jurisdiction over defendant SNFA, and defendant’s motion to dismiss is denied.
Notes
. Agusta presently has an office within the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
. Through Somecat, SNFA has supplied Augusta with approximately 2,200 bearings for use as both original and replacement equipment in the A-109 helicopter.
. Subject matter jurisdiction is based upon diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (1976). Since Rockwell is suing for over a million dollars, the amount in controversy requirement is satisfied.
. The bearings were shipped “FOB Pittsburgh” by Atlantic to Rockwell’s facility in Pittsburgh. They were billed to Rockwell and paid for in Pittsburgh. For tax purposes, the sale was a Pennsylvania transaction.
. As the Supreme Court emphasized in
WorldWide Volkswagen,
the kind of foreseeability that is crucial is not the mere likelihood that a product would come into the forum State. If that were the type of foreseeability involved then “(e)very seller of chattels would in effect appoint the chattel his agent for service of process. His amenability to suit would travel with the chattel.
. In no way is this observation based upon the “mobile” character of the helicopter. The argument that the inherent mobility of the automobile made it foreseeable that the product would turn up in any state, was precisely the impetus for
World-Wide Volkswagen’s
qualification of the “foreseeability” factor of the minimum contacts test. Regardless of the type of end-product into which SNFA’s part was incorporated, the fact that SNFA chose to sell the custom-designed bearing to a company such as Agusta, which utilized a multi-national distribution system, makes the sale and incident in Pennsylvania more than fortuitous.
Compare DeJames v. Magnificance Carriers, Inc.,
