This breach of contract case was tried in SD Florida. It was brought by a Florida plaintiff against a Costa Rican defendant and arose out of a contract to be performed by plaintiff for defendant in Costa Rica. The district court,
Sea Lift, Inc., the plaintiff, is a Florida corporation engaged in the marine salvage business. Defendant Refinadora Costarricense de Petróleo, S.A. (RECOPE) is a state-owned Costa Rican company that refines petroleum. RECOPE does not maintain an office or generally conduct business in Florida.
RECOPE owns the “booster barge” HC-24. It was using the HC-24 in a dredging operation to expand the harbor and build a new port facility at Port Moin, Costa Rica. The HC-24 took on water during a storm at Port Moin and subsequently capsized. The barge was insured through Instituto Nacional Seguros, which co-insured a portion of the coverage with Lloyd’s of London. RECOPE reported the capsize to Instituto Nacional, which in turn reported to Lloyd’s.
Representatives of London Salvage, a New York affiliate of Lloyd’s, went to Florida to solicit Sea Lift’s services in the salvage of the HC-24. The district court found that these representatives were acting for RECOPE. Officials of Sea Lift then travelled to Costa Rica to look at the barge and to determine a reasonable price for its salvage. Sea Lift telexed the proposed price from Florida to Costa Rica.
1
The contract is a standard form “No Cure-No Pay” salvage agreement approved and published by Lloyd’s. This standard agreement is, as the district court found, “the most widely used salvage contract in the world.” The standard form was modified to include a fixed price of $265,000 for the salvage; the standard clause would have provided for arbitration to determine Sea Lift’s compensation. There was also an added provision by which the parties agreed to form a separate contract after the salvage operation to restore the barge to operating condition for the sum of $105,-000. The modification and the addition were the only substantive changes made on the standard form. The standard form provides that the agreement is to be governed by English law.
Shortly after the contract was executed Sea Lift dispatched two vessels to Costa Rica to undertake the salvage. The operation did not go smoothly, however, and when it was complete RECOPE refused Sea Lift’s demands for payment. Sea Lift brought suit against RECOPE and other parties in federal district court in Florida. The other defendants were dismissed and, after a bench trial, judgment was entered for Sea Lift.
On this appeal RECOPE contends that the district court was without in personam jurisdiction, that venue was improper and that Sea Lift’s representations about when work would begin were erroneously discounted by the district court. Because we conclude that the exercise of in personam jurisdiction over RECOPE exceeded the limits of due process, 2 we do not reach RECOPE’s other contentions.
To determine whether the exercise of in personam jurisdiction is consistent with due process
3
we must determine whether RECOPE had “certain minimum contacts with [the forum state] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
Borg-Wamer Acceptance Corp. v. Lovett & Tharpe, Inc.,
The district court considered the following to be relevant contacts between RE-COPE and Florida: the solicitation of Sea Lift by RECOPE agents present in Florida for that specific purpose, the sending of the standard form contract to Sea Lift in Florida to be signed and executed, and RECOPE’s failure “to perform an act required by the contract to be performed in Florida,” i.e., failure to pay Sea Lift in U.S. dollars. We agree that this case arises out of and relates to these contacts, but we cannot conclude that they show that RE-COPE has invoked the benefits and protections of Florida law.
The mere “foot-fall” of the defendant’s agents “on the State’s soil” does not in the relevant sense invoke the benefits and protections of the laws of the forum.
Wisconsin Elec. Mfr. Co. v. Pennant Prods., Inc.,
A meeting in the forum state may constitute “purposeful availment” if it involves “significant negotiations of important terms.”
Neiman v. Rudolf Wolff & Co.,
A direct solicitation
6
by a foreign defendant of the business of a forum resident has been held to be “purposeful availment” in cases where either a continuing relationship,
see Southwest Offset, Inc. v. Hudco Pub. Co.,
By its own terms the contract is to be governed by the law not of Florida, but of England. In a case involving parties of presumably equal bargaining power, the choice of English law to govern the agreement is in itself an indication that RECOPE did not avail itself of the benefits and protections of Florida law.
See Hydrokinetics,
That the contract price was stated in U.S. dollars is of little significance. The district court relied on the Florida law presumption that, absent an express provision to the contrary, a debt is payable at the creditor’s place of business. Even if we follow Florida law in this respect, however, we do not get appreciably nearer to purposeful availment. The actual mailing of payments to the forum state has been held not to weigh heavily in this determination.
Hydrokinetics,
In sum, RECOPE’s activities do not show that it purposefully availed itself of the benefits and protections of Florida law. RECOPE therefore was not properly within the personal jurisdiction of the district court.
REVERSED.
Notes
. RECOPE’s account of the negotiations differs. According to RECOPE the contract was negotiated in Costa Rica, subject to approval by the companies’ respective boards. The district court found only that a price "was eventually agreed upon.” Given the posture of the case we follow Sea Lift’s account of the facts where there is a divergence except where that account is contradicted by findings of the district court.
.
Alien corporations enjoy this protection of the due process clause.
See Afram Export Corp. v. Metallurgiki Halyps, S.A.,
. This constitutional issue is of course subject to plenary review, and “each case must be decided on its own facts,”
Southwest Offset, Inc. v. Hudco Pub. Co.,
. Sea Lift does not allege that no forum other than Florida is available to it. Such an allegation would in any case go to the question of “fair play and substantial justice”, and thus would not become relevant to the due process analysis until the "minimum contacts” threshold had been surmounted.
See Burger King v. Rudzewicz,
— U.S. -,
. The record and briefs do not indicate where and when the sole additional term, which related to refurbishing the barge, was negotiated.
. Scattershot solicitations of business in the forum state are likely to fall within the ambit of
McGee
v.
International Life. See Vencedor Mfg. Co. v. Gougler Indus.,
. Sea Lift does not assert that the collateral agreement to refurbish would have required it to perform in Florida.
