This is a suit for breach of contract. Federal subject matter jurisdiction derives from the parties’ diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). The plaintiff, Roofing & Sheet Metal Services, Inc. (Roofing), appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama, granting summary judgment for the defendant, LaQuinta Motor Inns, Inc. (LaQuinta). Roofing also challenges an earlier order transferring the case to that court from the Western District of Arkansas, the forum in which it initially sued. To the extent Roofing asks us to review the transfer order, we lack appellate jurisdiction and dismiss the appeal. Because we find, on the merits, that LaQuinta has not established its right to judgment as a matter of law, we vacate the summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
*984 I.
Roofing brought this action in the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas on November 3, 1980, alleging that LaQuinta had failed to pay $23,310 of $39,700 due for materials and service under a contract to reroof LaQuinta’s motor inn in Mobile, Alabama.
Roofing is incorporated under the laws of Arkansas and has its principal place of business in Pulaski County, Arkansas. LaQuinta is incorporated under the laws of Texas and owns property in several states, including Arkansas. According to Roofing, the contract giving rise to its cause of action was negotiated and executed at the LaQuinta Motor Inn in Pulaski County, Arkansas. LaQuinta contends that its agent, Paul Jarrell, signed the contract in San Antonio, Texas. This factual dispute is of critical importance. See Part III of this opinion.
On November 24, 1980, LaQuinta moved to dismiss the action, alleging that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction, that the Western District of Arkansas was an inconvenient forum, and that the contract is unenforceable because Roofing has not qualified to do business in Alabama as required by Ala.Code §§ 10-2-254, 10-2-270 (1975), 1 or obtained a contractor’s license, as required by Ala.Code § 40-12-84 (1975). 2 In its response to the motion, Roofing alleged, concerning personal jurisdiction, that LaQuinta had a registered agent for service of process in Arkansas and that the cause of action arose from a contract executed in Arkansas. Concerning venue in Arkansas, Roofing argued that LaQuinta had not adduced “the necessary proof of substantial hardship” that would require dismissal. Roofing alleged, further, that it had complied with Alabama’s qualification and licensing requirements.
Roofing requested a hearing on the motion to dismiss, but the district court disposed of it without one. The court expressed “serious reservations concerning the dismissal of the complaint on jurisdictional *985 grounds”. It found, however, that Alabama would be a more convenient forum for trial on the merits, since the case would “requirе investigation into the work performed in Alabama and resolution of legal questions under Alabama law.” Treating LaQuinta’s motion as one to transfer to a more convenient forum, the court transferred the ease to the Southern District of Alabama and did not consider LaQuinta’s arguments concerning the Alabama licensing and qualification statutes.
LaQuinta raised these arguments again in the district court in Alabama, in a motion for summary judgment. The motion adopted by reference the affidavits and exhibits submitted with the earlier motion to dismiss. Roofing filed no response to the motion for summary judgment, and on June 30, 1981, the district court granted the motion, finding that Roofing had neither qualified to do business in Alabama as a foreign corporation nor obtained a contractor’s license. On July 20, 1981, Roofing filed a motion for an extension of time in which to file a motion for reconsideration or a new trial under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59. The сourt denied the motion, relying on Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(b), 3 and Roofing brought this appeal.
Roofing has apparently abandoned its contention that it was qualified and licensed to do business in Alabama. 4 It argues, rather, that the Alabama licensing and qualification statutes do not govern the case, because the district court was bound by the choice of law rules of Arkansas, the initial forum, and Arkansas courts would not apply the Alabama statutes. Roofing also challenges the order of the district court in Arkansas transferring the case, and we will address this challenge first.
We note at the outset that decisions of the Fifth Circuit prior to October 1, 1981 are binding precedent in this Circuit.
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
11 Cir. 1981,
II. The Transfer Order
The power of the Arkansas district court to transfer the case to Alabama derives from 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), which provides, “For the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might havе been brought”. The determination whether the circumstances warrant transfer under § 1404(a) is “peculiarly one for the exercise of judgment by those in daily proximity to these delicate problems of trial litigation”.
Time, Inc. v. Manning,
5 Cir. 1966,
Congress has not given us jurisdiction to review decisions of district courts outside this Circuit. Specifically, as 28 U.S.C. § 1294 provides, “Appeals from reviewable decisions of district and territorial courts shall be taken to the courts of appeals as follows: (1) From a district court of the United States to the court of appeals for the circuit embracing the district”. 28 U.S.C. § 1294(1).
5
No relevant statute confers broader territorial jurisdiction than § 1294(1).
6
Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit has held that it lacks appellate jurisdiction to review the decision of a district court in another circuit.
In re Corrugated Container Anti-Trust Litigation,
5 Cir. 1980,
The
Corrugated Container
case did not involve an order transferring a case under § 1404(a); it involved a contempt order by a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, acting as a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407(b) in the context of multidistrict litigation. We see no principled basis for distinguishing that case, however, and both the Fourth and Seventh Circuits have rejected, on jurisdic-. tional grounds, challenges to transfer orders by district courts in other circuits.
Linnell v. Sloan,
4 Cir. 1980,
The appellant argues .that the present appeal is its only opportunity for review of the transfer order, which is not a final order within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and therefore was not immediately appealable to the Eighth Circuit. We disagree. Although the transfer order was, as we see it, probably not appealable to the Eighth Circuit,
see Garner v. Wolfinbarger,
5 Cir. 1970,
The All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, empowers the courts of appeals to issue extraordinary writs, such as mandamus and prohibition, in aid of their jurisdiction. There is substantial disagreement among the circuits, and some apparent confusion within the respective circuits, concerning the appropriate role of mandamus as a remedy for abuses of discretion by district courts in deciding motions under § 1404(a).
See generally
15 C. Wright, A. Miller, & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3855, at 307-19 (1976). Commentators have generally not favored the use of mandamus for this purpose.
See id.
at 303; Note, Appealability of § 1404(a) Orders: Mandamus Misapplied, 67 Yale L.J. 122 (1957);
see also A. Olinick & Sons v. Dempster Brothers, 2
Cir. 1966,
The courts of appeals have been particularly hospitable to petitions for mandamus challenging transfer orders entered, as the one in this case was, without a hearing.
*988
See Fine v. McGuire,
D.C.Cir.1970,
The decisions of the Eighth Circuit give us no reason to believe it would be less than fully responsive to these concerns. That court, it is true, has articulated a strict standard for mandamus relief from decisions of § 1404(a) motions, stating that the writ will issue only to correct “manifest judicial arbitrariness”.
Toro Co.
v.
Alsop,
8 Cir. 1977,
Accordingly, the Eighth Circuit has in fact granted a writ of prohibition to prevent a transfer from the circuit on the ground that the transfer was a “clear abuse of discretion”.
United States v. Lord,
8 Cir. 1976,
*989
Apart from mandamus in the Eighth Circuit, the appellant could have secured appellate review by moving the district court in Alabama to retransfer the case to the Western District of Arkansas. Although, of course, a district court cannot perform an appellate function by directly reviewing the decisions of another district court, there is nothing to prevent the district court in Alabama from independently considering a motion to retransfer. This Court would naturally have jurisdiction to review the disposition of such a motion. Several circuits have suggested that a motion to retransfer in the transferee court is an appropriate means of preserving for appeal any objection to a transfer between circuits.
In re Nine Mile, Ltd.,
8 Cir. 1982,
We do not say that the Eighth Circuit would have granted an extraоrdinary writ, that the district court in Alabama would have granted a motion to retransfer, or that we would have reversed a decision refusing to retransfer the case. To say this, we would have to decide the merits of the appellant’s challenge to the transfer order, and this we have neither the jurisdiction nor the information to do. We can say, however, that the appellant did not want for opportunities to air its arguments before an appellate court, despite our lack of appellate jurisdiction. Because we lack appellate jurisdiction, we.dismiss the appeal to the extent that it challenges the order transferring the case to the Southern District of Alabama.
III. The Choice of Law Issue
We turn now to that part of the appeal over which we have jurisdiction, the challenge to the final order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama granting summаry judgment for LaQuinta. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 1294(1). The appellant argues that the district court erred in applying the Alabama qualification and licensing statutes, Ala.Code §§ 10-2-254, 40-12-84 (1975), because Arkansas choice of law principles govern the case, and an Arkansas court would not have applied those statutes. Considering the case in its present posture, we agree. Although further proceedings in the district court may establish the applicability of these provisions, it was error to rely on them in granting summary judgment.
LaQuinta argues that we should not consider Roofing’s choice of law theory, because Roofing did not present that theory to the district court. “As a general principle of appellate review, we will not consider a legal issue or theory that was not presented to the trial court.”
Bliss v. Equitable Life Assurance Society,
5 Cir. 1980,
Any wrong result resting on the erroneous application of legal principles is a miscarriage of justice in some degree.
11
In this case, additional factors favor the appellant. The record reflects some confusiоn about the appellant’s ability to retain local counsel in Alabama after the transfer. This may have played some part in the appellant’s failure to raise the issue below. Moreover, Roofing’s choice of law theory is not strictly a new legal issue or an “afterthought”.
See West India Industries, Inc. v. Tradex,
5 Cir. 1981,
Consideration of legal arguments not raised in the district court is especially appropriate on appeal from summary judgment. The rule against consideration of new issues derives primarily from “the needs of judicial economy and the desirability of having all parties present their claims in the court of first instance”.
Id.
(citing
Hormel v. Helvering,
1941,
A. Applicability of Arkansas Choice of Law Rules
A federal court in a diversity case must generally apply the state law that would be applied by the courts of the. state in which it sits.
Klaxon Co.
v.
Stentor Electrical Manufacturing Co.,
1941,
The rule of Van Dusen, as the quoted language suggests, is not necessarily applicable to every case transferred under § 1404(a). 14 And it is possible that further proceedings in the district court will produce evidence of facts making it inapplicable here. Specifically, Van Dusen does not govern cases in which the transferor court lacked personal jurisdiction of the defendant; the record in this case presents a po *992 tentially disputed question of fact concerning whether the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas had personal jurisdiction of LaQuinta. 15
In
Ellis v. Great Southwestern Corp.,
5 Cir. 1981,
In
Ellis,
the transfer order at issue was based on the lack of personal jurisdiction; in the present case, the transferor court acted on the grounds of convenience and justice, without reaching the question of personal jurisdiction. If personal jurisdiction was lacking, however, the district court’s choice to rely on different grounds could not render the reasoning of
Ellis
inapplicable. A forum lacking personal jurisdiction will often be inconvenient as well, and the very abuses
Ellis
sought to prevent wоuld occur if a plaintiff were able to “capture” the law of an impermissible forum by virtue of the court’s choice to transfer the case for one available reason rather than another. As the Third Circuit has suggested, application of a state’s choice of law rules to a party over whom its courts cannot obtain personal jurisdiction might present problems of a constitutional dimension.
Reyno v. Piper Aircraft Co.,
3 Cir. 1980,
Accordingly, if LaQuinta, in further proceedings, establishes that the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas lacked personal jurisdiction over it, Arkansas choice of law rules will not govern the case. For present purposes, however, LaQuinta has not made the
*993
necessary showing.
18
Roofing’s complaint alleged that the contract at issue was executed in Arkansas, and this is probably sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction over the defendant in a federal court in Arkansas in any action arising from the contract, Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(e); Arkansas Stats. Ann. § 27-2502(C) (1979).
19
LaQuinta has submitted no affidavit or other document refuting this allegation, and in reviewing a grant of summary judgment for the defendant, we take as true the allegations of the complaint to the extent that no affidavit contradicts them.
20
See Adickes
v.
Kress,
1970,
B. Arkansas Choice of Law
The'' appellant argues that Arkansas courts considering multistate contract problems apply the “validation rule” first proposed by Professor Lorenzen in 1921. Lorenzen, Validity and Effect of Contracts in the Conflict of Laws, Part 2, 30 Yale L.J. 655, 673 (1921). Under this rule, an Arkansas court would apply the law of a state (among those having significant connections with the contract) that would uphold the contract, at least if enforcement of the contract does not “run counter to some definitely existing policy” of the forum, see Note, Conflict of Laws and the Validity of Contracts, 20 Iowa L.Rev. 607, 616 (1935). According to the appellant, Texas, Arkansas, and Alabama all have contacts with this case; they are, respectively, the residence of the defendant, the residence of the plaintiff and the state where the contract was made, and the state where the contract was to be performed. Since the law of neither Texas nor Arkansas renders a contract unenforceable for failure to qualify to do business in Alabama, the appellant argues, an Arkansas court must apply the law of one of those states to uphold the contract. We disagree.
Several Arkansas cases do indeed suggest a preference for validation.
E.g., Hutchingson v. Republic Finance Co.,
1963,
Ruling out choice of law theories is easier than ruling them in. As a federal district court sitting in Arkansas has observed, “there has been no consistency in Arkansas with respect to choice of law in determining validity and enforcement of contracts”.
Credit Bureau Management Co. v. Huie,
E.D.Ark.1966,
Several recent Arkansas cases have applied versions of this test.
See Tri-State Equipment Co.
v.
Tedder,
1981,
The weight to be assigned the various contacts presents an additional problem. The Arkansas Supreme Court has given great weight to the law of the state where the contract was negotiated.
E.g., Yarbrough
v.
Prentice Lee Tractor Co.,
1972,
We cannot say what result these guidelines will produce in this case, in further proceedings upon remand. Nor do we suggest that the facts as they develop will necessarily require the district court to decide whether Arkansas follows the
Restatement (Second)
in all its particulars. We can say, however, that on the record before us, LaQuinta has not discharged its burden of showing that the contract in this case was not “essentially ... an Arkansas contract, governed by Arkansas law”,
Standard Leasing,
Conclusion
We lack appellate jurisdiction to review the order of the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, transferring this case to the Southern District of Alabama. Considering the merits of the appellant’s challenge to the final judgment of the transferee court, however, we conclude that LaQuinta has not, for purposes of summary judgment, discharged its burden of alleging facts that would justify avoidance of Arkansas choice of law rules. Assuming, as we therefore must, that Arkansas choice of law rules govern the case, LaQuinta has not alleged facts sufficient to justify application of Alabama substantive law. Although we express no opinion whether further proceedings will prove the Alabama licensing and qualification requirements applicable, it was error to rest summary judgment on them. 25
The appeal is therefore DISMISSED IN PART, the judgment of the district court is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Ala.Code § 10 2 254 (1975) provides, in pertinent part:
All contracts or agreements made or entered into in this state by foreign corporations which have not qualified to do business in this state shall be held void at the action of such foreign corporation . . .; but nothing in this section shall abrogate the equitable rule that he who seeks equity must do equity; .... In all actions against such foreign corporation, . . . the foreign corporation . .. shall be held to be estopped from setting up the fact that the contract or agreement was so made in violation of law. Ala.Code § 10 -2-270(1) (1975) provides:
The term “foreign corporation,” as used in this division, shall mean:
(1) Any bank or other corporation now or hereafter organized or existing under the laws of any state of the United States other than the state of Alabama....
In support of its motion, LaQuinta submitted a certified statement by the Secretary of State of Alabama, that “an examination of the corporation records on file in this office discloses no record of a corporation by the name Roofing and Sheet Metal Services, Inc. or Roofing and Sheet Metal Services, Incorporated”.
. Ala.Code § 40-12-84 (1975) provides, in pertinent part:
Any persоn, firm or corporation accepting orders or contracts for doing any work on or in any building or structure requiring the use
of paint, stone, brick, mortar, wood, cement, structural iron or steel, sheet iron, galvanized iron, metallic piping, tin, lead, electric wiring, or other steel or any other building material . .. shall be deemed a contractor. Every contractor shall procure from the probate judge of the county in which he has his principal office a license to carry on the business of a contractor; provided, that if such contractor has no such office in this state, then he shall procure such license from the probate judge of the county where the contract is to be performed. Every such contractor shall pay a license tax to be ascertained on the basis of the gross amount of all orders or contracts acceptеd, exclusive of orders or contract pertaining to state or county road and bridge projects....
LaQuinta submitted a notarized statement by the Privilege License Supervisor of the Motor Fuels and Miscellaneous Tax Division of the Alabama Department of Revenue, that “Roofing and Sheet Metal Services, Inc. or Roofing and Sheet Metal Services has not been licensed in Mobile County under § 40-12-84/Construc-tion Companies or Contractors for the license years of 1977-78, 1978-79, and 1979-80”. Although § 40-12-84 does not by its terms render any contract unenforceable, LaQuinta argues that a contract to do unlicensed work is void as against public policy.
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(b) provides, to the extent pertinent here, that the district court “may not extend the time for taking any action under Rules 50(b), 52(b), 59(b), (d), and (e), and 60(b), except to the extent and under the conditions stated in them”. Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(b), (d), and (e), require that a motion for a new trial,' a sua sponte ordеr of a new trial, or a. motion to alter or amend a judgment must be filed within 10 days of the entry of judgment.
. With its response to LaQuinta’s motion to dismiss, Roofing submitted a copy of a building license and permit issued by the City of Mobile for the reroofing work on the LaQuinta Motor Inn. The document was in the name of LaQuinta, however, and does not seem to satisfy the statutory requirements quoted in notes 1 and 2.
. It bears emphasis that, as the language of § 1294(1) establishes, the provision applies to all “reviewable” decisions of the district courts, not only those that are immediately appealable. The distinction between reviewable and appeal-able decisions is axiomatic. See 9 J. Moore, B. Ward, & J. Lucas, Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 110.01, at 47 (2d ed. 1982).
. Although the parties have not raised the question of appellate jurisdiction, we must consider it on our own motion.
See Brown Shoe Co. v. United States,
1962,
. Although “transferee сourt” most often denotes the trial court to which a case is transferred, it is clear from the context of the quoted language and from the posture of the case before the District of Columbia Circuit that the court intended the term to embrace the court of appeals of the transferee circuit as well.
. It is possible that the" Second Circuit would consider a retreat from this position in an appropriate case.
See D'Ippolito v. American Oil Co.,
2 Cir. 1968,
.
See, e.g., Starnes v. McGuire,
D.C.Cir.1974,
. One potential hurdle to the use of mandamus in cases like this warrants our attention. When the files in a case are physically transferred to the transferee district, the transferor court loses all jurisdiction of the case.
See In re Southwest Mobile Homes,
5 Cir. 1963,
. It is not clear precisely how severe a potential miscarriage of justice must be to justify consideration of arguments not raised in the district court. When the Former Fifth Circuit has found the necessary miscarriage of justice lacking, however, it has frequently either expressed the view that the argument raised is weak on its merits or noted that the appellant would have another opportunity to make the argument to the district court.
See, e.g., McCrary v. Poythress,
5 Cir. 1981,
. The Overmyer case involved a claim and a counterclaim. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendant on the plaintiffs claim and plenary judgment for the defendant on its counterclaim. On appeal, the plaintiff asserted a theory it had not raised in the district court. The Court of Appeals rejected the theory, on its merits, as a ground for recovery on the plaintiffs own claim. To the extent the plаintiffs theory might have served as a defense to the counterclaim, the Court declined to consider it on the ground that it had not been presented to the district court at trial.
. We note, in passing, that
Erie v. Tompkins,
1938,
. The Supreme Court expressly withheld judgment on the applicability of
Van Dusen
to cases in which the plaintiff rather than the defendant seeks transfer or the state courts of the transferor forum would have dismissed the action on the ground of
forum non conveniens.
. LaQuinta moved that court to dismiss the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction, but the court did not reach the issue. LaQuinta’s brief on appeal alleges that the contract at issue was not executed in Arkansas, which might be sufficient to deprive the federal court in Arkansas of personal jurisdiction. LaQuinta has not submitted any evidence on this point, however.
.
Stokes
involved a transfer under 28 U.S.C. § 1406(a), which governs actions brought in an improper venue, rather than § 1404(a), which governs actions brought in an inconvenient venue. Nevertheless, the conclusion that
Van Dusen
did not govern in that case rested on the nature of the transfer, which was based on the transferor court’s lack of personal jurisdiction. In the Sixth Circuit, a transfer on this ground can be effected only under § 1406(a).
See
. An enlightening discussion of constitutional limitations on the application of state law in particular cases appears in Reese, Legislative Jurisdiction, 78 Colum.L.Rev. 1587 (1978).
. Because we hold that Van Dusen governs the case in its present posture, our discussion of the principles governing cases in which the transferor court lacks personal jurisdiction is not necessary to our decision of the case. The apparent existence of a real dispute over whether the court in Arkansas had personal jurisdiction prompts us to provide guidance to the district court, with an eye toward avoiding unnecessary multiple appeals.
. It is, of course, conceivable that LaQuinta’s contacts with Arkansas are not sufficient to satisfy federal constitutional standards for the exercise of personal jurisdiction. LaQuinta has submitted no evidence on this point, however, and for present purрoses we must assume constitutional standards are satisfied.
. When personal jurisdiction becomes an issue by virtue of a defendant’s motion to dismiss, the plaintiff bears the burden of establishing, by
prima facie
evidence, that personal jurisdiction exists.
Product Promotions, Inc. v. Cousteau,
5 Cir. 1974,
By focusing on the appellant’s allegation that the contract was signed in Arkansas, we do not mean to suggest that the transferor court necessarily lacked personal jurisdiction if it was signed elsewhere. Other bases for personal jurisdiction, not evident from the record as it now stands, may exist as well.
. The cited cases involved claims that the contracts in question were usurious under Arkansas law. Some commentators believe that usury laws present a unique problem in choice of law and are not governed by the same principles that apply to contracts generally.
See
R. Leflar, American Conflicts Law § 152, at 312 (3d ed. 1977). The Arkansas cases, however, do not articulate this distinction, and they rely on precedents and scholarly authority concerning contracts outside the setting of usury laws.
See
. We use the phrase “most significant relationship” rather than “most significant contacts” to establish that the quality, and not just the number, of contacts must be considered.
. Although Alabama is the forum in which this case was considered, Van Dusen requires that the federal court in that state treat the relevant policies of Arkansas as those of the forum. Othеrwise, Van Dusen’s goal of uniformity in diversity cases would be defeated.
. Professor Leflar has suggested that courts generally do not respect the policies underlying qualification statutes of sister states but tend to enforce contracts that would not be enforceable in the state in which the plaintiff has failed to qualify. R. Leflar, American Conflicts Law § 258, at 517 (3d ed. 1977);
accord, Restatement (Second)
§ 312. The Arkansas Supreme Court seems to be particularly inhospitable to defenses under qualification statutes in cases involving contracts with multistate contacts. In a recent case, it refused to apply Arkansas’s own qualification requirement to a contract that was signed in Mississippi, on the ground that state qualification statutes may not affect transactions in interstate commerce.
Hough v. Continental Leasing Corp.,
1982,
. The appellant has raised an additional argument, which we do not consider in this opinion. According to the appellant, application of the Alabama qualification statute in this case is an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce. Our disposition of the case on other grounds makes it unnecessary to consider the constitutional argument.
