This appeal could do double duty as a law school examination question. It follows a district court’s dismissal of the third action brought by plaintiff-appellant Scott Martel in what has been a consistently unsuccessful effort to stay in court long enough to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in an automobile accident. Because the district court lacked personal jurisdiction over the sole defendant, a foreign executor sued as such, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Leaving to one side the seepage from the geographical morass in which this case is mired, the prefatory facts are straightforward. On April 18, 1985, an accident occurred on a Vermont highway. Martel, a Vermont resident, sustained injuries when an automobile in which he was riding collided with a vehicle driven by Wilhelmina S. Parker. Parker, a citizen of Maryland who was in the process of moving into a new home in Vermont, perished two days later as an aftermath of the crash. She died testate, owning property located exclusively in Maryland and Vermont. Pursuant to her will, probate courts in both jurisdictions appointed George F. Stafford, a Massachusetts resident, as executor. Letters of administration were issued to Stafford in Maryland on May 22, 1985 and letters testamentary were issued to him in Vermont on August 19, 1985.
Martel seemed to be in no particular hurry to assert his rights. It was not until April 18, 1988 that he brought identical suits against Stafford in a Vermont state court and in Vermont’s federal district court. In due course, each court dismissed Martel’s complaint as time-barred on the ground that the applicable statute of limitations pretermitted the action. See Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. 12, § 557(a) (1973) (providing that actions against an executor for acts of the decedent are barred if not commenced within two years of the issuance of letters testamentary).
Undeterred, appellant went in search of a longer statute of limitations. 1 On November 22, 1988, he filed a diversity action in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Over two years later, Stafford moved for summary judgment on a bouillabaisse of grounds, including statute of limitations, res judicata, absence of personal jurisdiction, and forum non conveniens. The district court granted the motion on the basis of res judicata, but offered no elaboration. This appeal ensued. 2
II. ANALYSIS
While the district court invoked the doctrine of res judicata, we are free to affirm the judgment below on any independently sufficient ground made manifest by the record.
3
See Garside v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
A. Personal Jurisdiction over an Executor.
Plaintiff sued only one defendant— Stafford — and sued him solely in his capacity as executor of Parker’s estate. 4 With exceptions not pertinent here, the Civil Rules provide that the law of the forum state determines a representative party’s capacity to sue or be sued in a federal district court. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(b); see also 6A Charles A. Wright et al, Federal Practice & Procedure § 1565, at 473 (2d ed.1990). Thus, Massachusetts law governs the determination of whether the district court could lawfully exercise personal jurisdiction over Stafford qua executor.
The traditional Massachusetts rule has been that an executor or administrator appointed in another state — we shall use the generic term “foreign executor” — is not subject to suit in Massachusetts unless a statute dictates to the contrary.
See, e.g., Saporita v. Litner,
The traditional rule — like most traditional rules — is not without exceptions. See Sapo-rita, 371 Mass, at 615 (noting that “the rule has not been rigidly applied” and surveying certain common law exceptions). Saporita illustrates the point. There, a Massachusetts resident sued a foreign executor to recover payment for services rendered to the testator. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) approved a state court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over the executor, primarily because the testator had a wealth of contacts with Massachusetts. See id. at 618. Although Saporita and this case share a certain factual resemblance — in both instances, a foreign state appointed the executor according to the terms of the decedent’s will, the foreign executor resided in Massachusetts and was thus subject to in-hand service of process there, and the decedent owned no real estate in Massachusetts — the two cases are more noteworthy for their dissimilarity than for their similitude.
In Saporita, the plaintiff lived and worked in Massachusetts. See id. at 612-13. The contract upon which she sued had been made and performed there. See id. Moreover, the testator’s links with Massachusetts were pervasive; he resided and practiced medicine there, considered Boston to be his home, and spent approximately seventy-five percent of each week in the Commonwealth. See id. at 611-12. In the last analysis, it was the testator’s contacts with Massachusetts that prompted the SJC to relax the traditional rule and find personal jurisdiction over the foreign executor. The court reasoned that, given contacts “sufficient ... to allow the court to exercise personal jurisdiction over [the testator],” substituting an executor who, although appointed in a foreign jurisdiction, had himself lived and worked in Massachusetts and who had been served in hand there, would “not alter the court’s jurisdiction.” Id. at 618.
*1247 The case before us is at a considerable remove. Despite ample time for pretrial discovery, the record discloses no relationship between the decedent and the forum state. 5 From aught that appears, Parker had not a single tie to Massachusetts. And, moreover, the cause of action arose out of state. Had Parker survived and Martel attempted to sue in the Commonwealth, there is not the slightest reason to believe that a Massachusetts court could have obtained jurisdiction over her person. Here, then, unlike in Saporita, allowing the suit to go forward based on the foreign executor’s presence in Massachusetts would significantly alter the jurisdictional calculus.
We have said enough. Because the Saporita exception confers personal jurisdiction over a foreign executor only when the testator manifests sufficient contacts with Massachusetts to support the exercise of jurisdiction, not merely when the foreign executor is within the physical reach of a process server, Parker’s behavioral patterns assume decretory significance. Because she forged no links of any kind with Massachusetts in her lifetime, her executor’s Massachusetts residency cannot tilt the jurisdictional balance. And putting Stafford’s residency aside, appellant has identified no .other state-law basis for grounding personal jurisdiction. For our part, we can envision none. 6 Therefore, we must apply the traditional rule. Under it, Stafford, like the stereotypical foreign executor, is a nonentity, ergo, not amenable to suit beyond the boundaries of the state(s) of his appointment. Giving force to the Massachusetts eases and the policies behind them, we conclude that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction over Stafford qua foreign executor.
We add a small eschatocol. Absent some persuasive indication that a Massachusetts court would abandon its longstanding rule to find jurisdiction on these specific facts—an extremely dubious prospect given that the lawsuit’s center of gravity obviously lies
elsewhere
7
—we
are not at liberty to manufacture a basis for ignoring the rule. We have repeatedly warned that a plaintiff who, like Martel, selects a federal forum in preference to an available state forum may not expect the federal court to steer state law into unprecedented configurations.
See, e.g., Catrone v. Thoroughbred Racing
Ass’ns
of N.A., Inc.,
B. Consent (Waiver).
Appellant argues that Stafford consented to the jurisdiction of a Massachusetts court, or, alternatively, waived his jurisdictional defense, 8 by means of statements contained in a *1248 brief filed in the United States District Court for the District of Vermont. There, the defendant, in response to plaintiffs threat to bring an action in Maryland’s federal district court, speculated that, because of Stafford’s Massachusetts residency, the proper fallback forum would be Massachusetts, not Maryland.
Appellant’s basic premise is sound: a party may consent to a court’s
in personam
jurisdiction before the commencement of an action.
See, e.g., National Equipment Rental, Ltd. v. Szukhent,
Furthermore, unlike, say, factual allegations in trial court pleadings, statements contained in briefs submitted by a party’s attorney in one ease cannot routinely be used in another case as evidentiary admissions of the party.
See Hardy v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
*1249 Having read the entire record with care, we find that it reveals no word, act, or omission that may properly be construed as consent to the jurisdiction of a Massachusetts court or as a waiver of any available defenses in that regard. To the contrary, defendant raised the jurisdictional objection in his answer and by motion, and in his briefs below and on appeal. Throughout, he made his point abundantly clear. It is a winning point, properly preserved, never abandoned, and sufficient to carry the day.
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. 11 As Massachusetts has never recognized personal jurisdiction over a foreign executor on facts akin to those presented here, the action may not proceed.
Affirmed. Costs to appellees.
Notes
. Appellant also appealed the superior court’s entry of judgment, but to no avail.
See Martel v. Stafford,
. During the pendency of the proceedings, Stafford died and Marilyn S. Elias, the executrix of Stafford’s estate, became a party-defendant in this action. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 25(a)(1); Fed. R.App.P. 43(a). Because Elias’s arrival on the scene has no bearing on the disposition of this appeal, we refer to Stafford as if he were still alive and still the sole defendant.
.This option has particular utility in the summary judgment context, as a district court’s entry of summary judgment entails plenary appellate review.
See, e.g., Rivera-Muriente v. Agosto-Alicea,
. At one point in the proceedings, plaintiff sought to amend his complaint to name Stafford, individually, as a defendant. The court below denied the motion. On appeal, plaintiff does not assign error to this ruling.
.It is apodictic that a plaintiff bears the burden of proving facts necessary to establish jurisdiction.
See Donatelli v. National Hockey League,
. The other exceptions to the traditional rule, see Saporita, 371 Mass, at 615-17, are plainly inap-posite, as are two state statutes authorizing jurisdiction over foreign executors upon a showing of sufficient decedent contacts with Massachusetts. See Mass.Gen.L. ch. 90, § 3A (1990); Mass. Gen.L. ch. 199A, § 9 (1990).
. We think it unlikely that the SJC would fashion a new exception to an old and honored jurisdictional rule where, as here, the plaintiff is a nonresident, the decedent had no contacts with Massachusetts, the cause of action arose in another place, and no discernible state interest would be served by an assertion of jurisdiction.
. Because the alleged conduct occurred beyond the confines of the present suit, the argument
*1248
may be more aptly phrased as involving "consent” rather than "waiver.” We do not probe the point, however, for the distinction is immaterial in this situation.
See General Contracting & Trading Co. v. Interpole, Inc.,
. The exact words Stafford's counsel used were: "venue might ... be proper in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.” Defendant's Response to Plaintiffs’s Reply Memorandum, at 9 (July 26, 1988).
. We think it is well to note that appellant has not claimed that the venue-related allusion caused any detrimental reliance. At any rate, such a claim would be bootless. Maryland generally views "the question as to which period of limitations applies” as "a matter of procedural, not substantive, law.”
Turner v. Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A.,
. Since the jurisdictional issue is determinative, we take no view of the intriguing choice-of-law questions that lurk in the record or any of the other defenses Stafford advances.
