MEMORANDUM
All dеfendants, with the exception of Gourmet Resources International, Inc. (“Gourmet”), 1 have filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2). For the following reasons, defendants’ motion is granted and the complaint is dismissed as to these defendants.
I. FACTS
This is a diversity action brought by Simkins Corporation (“Simkins”) against six defendants. Of the five defendants who have filed this motion to dismiss, one is a corporation, one is a partnership and three are individual members of Gourmet’s Board of Directors sued for actions taken in their corporate cаpacities.
Plaintiff alleges a complex interrelationship among and between the six named defendants. For the purposes of this motion, the salient relationships are as follows. Gourmet sells imported chocolates under the trade-name “Michel Guerard.” Simkins supplied boxes and box wraps to Gourmet for use in packaging their gourmet-quality sweets. Paramount Capital Corporation (“Paramount”) is a shareholder of Gourmet. Greenberg, Irwin and Weisinger (“Greenberg”) is a New York partnership engaged in the practice of law. Greenberg provides legal representation for Gourmet. Plaintiff asserts that Green-berg is also a shareholder of Gourmet. Gordon Ewart is alleged to be either a controlling shareholder of Paramount or a shareholder who controls Paramount. Martin Stern is alleged to be both a shareholder and a director of Gourmet. Albert J. Pechenik is the President of Gourmet.
Although the thrust of plaintiff’s action appears to be a failure to pay for goods sold and delivered to Gourmet, only the first two counts of the complaint are contractual in nature. Counts three through five of the complaint allege that Paramount, Greenberg, Ewart and Stern, as shareholders and/or directors of Gourmet, have breached their duty to Gourmet and its creditors by causing Gourmet, while it was insolvent, to satisfy the corporation’s indebtedness to them in preference to the indebtedness owed to the corporation’s creditors. The final count of the complaint states that Pechenik fraudulently misrepre *1339 sented to Simkins, through its President, Morton Simkins, that Gourmet would use the proceeds from a public offering of its stock to repay Simkins for credit Simkins had extended in reliance on such a promise.
Defendants filed their motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2). Paramount, Green-berg, Ewart and Stern asserted that they had no contact with Pennsylvania. Pechenik argued that he had no personal contact with the Commonwealth other than in his corporate capacity through his affiliation with Gourmet. Plaintiff responded by stating that this court has personal jurisdiction over the movant-defendants by virtue of the Pennsylvania long-arm statute. 2 42 Pa. Cons.Stat.Ann. § 5322(a)(4) (Purdon’s 1981). Specifically, plaintiff asserts that each defendant has cаused its tortious injury in Pennsylvania by his actions outside the Commonwealth.
In order to aid Simkins in discharging its burden of demonstrating sufficient contacts with the forum state, this court afforded the parties an evidentiary hearing on the issue of jurisdiction.
See Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee v. L’Union Atlantique S.A. D’Assurances,
II. DISCUSSION
Pursuant to Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, this court may exercise personal jurisdiction over the nonresident defendants to the extent thе laws of Pennsylvania allow. The Pennsylvania long-arm jurisdiction statute, 42 Pa.Cons. Stat.Ann. § 5322(b) (Purdon’s 1981), provides for jurisdiction over non-residents “to the fullest extent allowed under the Constitution of the United States.” The Pennsylvania courts have recognized that this provision makes the reach of the long-arm statute co-extensive with the scope of personal jurisdiction permitted by the due process clause of the United States Constitution.
Koenig v. International Brotherhood of Boilermakes,
In determining whether due process considerations permit the exercise of in personam jurisdiction, this court will follow the two-step inquiry which has been consistently applied by the Third Circuit.
See, e.g., Dollar Savings Bank v. First Security Bank of Utah, N.A.,
Because there is insufficient evidence to sustain an ultimate finding that general jurisdiction exists as to any movant-defendant, our inquiry in this case is simplified. The plaintiff has failed to allege or produce any evidence that either the corporate defendants, or the individual defendants acting in their corporate capacities, have had the “extensive and pervasive” forum-related activities required under the more stringent standards of general jurisdiction.
See Reliance Steel Products, supra,
Where it is alleged that a tort has occurred out of state and the harm resulting from that tort is alleged to have occurred within the state, the task of determining whether a plaintiff’s cause of action arose out of a defendant’s forum-related activities is often perplexing. The difficulty of this task is particularly hаrd, where, as here, the nature of the transaction is commercial in nature yet the claims arising out of the transaction are characterized by the plaintiff as tortious. Simkins argues that its claims fall within the purview of the “tort out/harm in” provision of the Pennsylvania long-arm jurisdiction statute.
See
Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 5322(a)(4) (Purdon’s 1981). The Pennsylvania legislature has mandated that tortious activity, even though its only connection with the forum is the in-state harm which gives rise to the cause of action, is sufficiently forum-related to subject a non-resident to personal jurisdiction. This “tort out/harm in” theory of jurisdiction does not fit neatly within the Third Circuit’s two-prong constitutional inquiry. Whereas the test set forth in
Schwilm, supra,
focuses on actual contact by the defendant with the forum, section 5322(a)(4) of the long-arm statute provides for jurisdiction by creating either a fictional contact with, or a fictional presence with
*1341
in the forum.
4
In order to avoid this inherent conflict between the case law and the statute, the courts have focused on the ultimate question of whether the exercise of jurisdiction in such cases comports with the principles of due process.
See, e.g., Koenig, supra,
Assuming arguendo that Simkin’s claims against the defendants fall within the scope of tortious activity as defined by section 5322(a)(4),
5
this court must determine whether Simkins has established, by a preponderance of the evidence, that defendants have the requisite minimum contacts with this forum. In undertaking this task, I am mindful of the Supreme Court’s admonition that the essential foundation of in personam jurisdiction is the “relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation.”
Helicopteros Nacionales de Columbia S.A. v. Hall,
— U.S.-,
A. Paramount
Plaintiff alleges that Paramount is a shareholder of Gourmet. Further, it asserts that Paramount, through the actions of its shareholder, Gordon Ewart, caused the insolvent Gourmet to satisfy its unsecured indebtedness to Paramount in preference to satisfying its obligations to Simkins. Simkins argues that Paramount’s liability is predicated on a breach of its fiduciary duty owed to creditors of Gourmet under a theory enunciated in Ceco Corp. v. Bar-Jay Assoc., Inc., 68 Pa.D. & C.2d 674, *1342 679-81 (Dauphin 1974). Plaintiff relies upon this allegedly tortious conduct to bring the defendant within section 5322(a)(4) of the Pennsylvania long-arm statute.
First, Simkins has failed to allege facts sufficient to sustain a tort cause of action in Pennsylvania. There is no evidence that Paramount is either an officer or director of Gourmet; such a fact is a prerequisite to liability under
Ceco.
68 Pa.D. & C.2d at 679-81. Moreover, there is unrefuted evidence that Paramount lacks sufficient minimum contаcts with this forum “such that maintenance of this suit would not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
B. Greenberg
Plaintiff alleges that various members of the Greenberg entity are shareholders of Gourmet and, also, that Greenberg provided Gourmet with legal representation. Simkins asserts that Greenberg caused the insolvent Gourmet to pay Greenberg for legal services rendered in preference to satisfying its contractual liability to Simkins. The plaintiff again purports to state a tortious cause of action against this defendant under the theory set forth in Ceco. Further, Simkins asks this court to find personal jurisdiction over this defendant on the “tort out/harm in” provision of the long-arm statute.
Simkins has failed to allege that Greenberg, as a legal entity, is the beneficial owner of stock in Gourmet. Whether individual members of that firm who are alleged to be shareholders of Gourmet may be liable to Simkins is irrelevant since they are not parties to this suit. Furthermore, plaintiff has failed to allege that Greenberg is either an officer or director of Gourmet. Since this is a prerequisite to liability under the theory set forth in
Ceco,
Simkins has failed to allege a tort cause of action cognizable under the provisions of section 5322(a)(4). Notwithstanding the issue of whether the alleged acts of Greenberg fall within the provisions of the long-arm statute, this court would violate due process by asserting jurisdiction over it. The Green-berg partnership has presented unrefuted evidence that it has no contact with the forum apart from that resulting from this lawsuit.
See
Affidavit of Irwin at li 4. Any transaction between Gourmet and Greenberg is collateral to the relationship between Simkins and Gourmet. There is not a cognizable activity within the forum such that Grеenberg “should reasonably anticipate being haled into court [in Pennsylvania].”
World-Wide Volkswagen, supra,
C. Ewart, Stern and Pechenik
Ewart, Stern and Pechenik are sued in their individual capacities based on their actions taken as officers or directors of Gourmet. Plaintiff states that both Ewart and Stern, as directors of Gourmet, breached their fiduciary duty to creditors of Gour *1343 met by causing the allegedly insolvent defendant to advance funds for monies owed them in preference to monies owed creditors such as Simkins. Further, Simkins argues that Pechenik, as an officer of Gourmet, made fraudulent misrepresentations to Morton Simkins over the telephone while Simkins was in Pennsylvania and Pechenik was in New York. See Affidavit of Simkins at 115; Affidavit of Pechenik at K 2.
Assuming that this court would recognize the fiduciary duty imposed on corporate officers or dirеctors in Ceco, 6 plaintiff has stated a valid tort cause of action against Stern and Pechenik. See 68 Pa.D. & C.2d at 681; Moore, supra, slip op. at 2. However, as to defendant Ewart, plaintiff has failed to allege an essential element of the Ceco tort. Although Ewart is a member of Gourmet’s Board of Directors, there is no commercial loan transaction which took place between Ewart and Gourmet. It is only alleged that Gourmet received a loan from Paramount and repaid these funds to Paramount and not to Ewart. Simkins has not alleged that Ewart is the “alter ego” of Paramount nor has it produced any evidence that they should be considered a single entity for the purposes of this motion. Therefore, although the alleged actions of Stern and Pechenik fall within the scope of the long-arm statute, those of defendant Ewart do not.
I now turn to the ultimate question of whether the exercise of personal jurisdiction is “fundamentally fair” under minimum contacts analysis. In this case, the court must address the special issue which arises when officers or directors of a corporation are sued in their individual capacities for actions taken during the exercise of their corporate duties. The question which arises in this 12(b)(2) motion is not whether the individual corporate officer or director may be held legally accountable for tortious conduct occurring during the course of his employ but rather whether the individual must himself have sufficient minimum forum contacts to independently satisfy constitutional requirements.
See Donsco, Inc. v. Casper Corp.,
Plaintiff has urged the case of
Techno Corp. v. Dahl Assoc., Inc.,
At least two district courts within this circuit have recently sustained the exercise of in personam jurisdiction over individual defendants based on allegedly tortious actions taken while they were exercising their corporate authority. Unlike
Techno,
however, these cases do not rely on a defendant’s ability to foresee in-forum harm resulting from his out-of-state actions to sustain jurisdiction. Rather, they rely on the theory that acts alleged in a complaint
*1344
which may be sufficient to create substantive liability on the part of the individual officer or director also inferentially provide a basis for the assertion of personal jurisdiction.
In re Arthur Treacher’s Franchisee Litigation,
The defendants have cited two cases which have reasoned contrary to both
Techno
and
Donner. Simpson v. Lifespring, Inc.,
Were the law otherwise, officers of corporations operating in several states would be faced with a Hobson’s choice. They must either disassociate themselves from the corporation or defend the propriety of their conduct in a distant forum.
In
Simpson v. Lifespring, supra,
the court similarly expressed its displeasure with reasoning of both
Donner
and
Techno.
It also concluded that to allow personal jurisdiction based on an officer or director’s corporate activities would in effect
*1345
render corporate officers or directors subject to suit in any state in which their corporation does business and would violate the concept of fundamental fairness which undergirds constitutional due process.
Because I find that both the reasoning and the result of
PSC
and
Simpson
best comport with the principles of due process as enunciated by the Supreme Court and the Third Circuit in recent personal jurisdiction cases, I embrace their position that a corporate officer or director’s actions taken in his corporate capacity are, by themselves, insufficient to bring him personally within the jurisdiction of this court. I conclude that the
Techno
court relied too heavily on the traditional foreseeability analysis which is now reserved almost exclusively for рroducts liability or so-called “stream of commerce” cases.
See, e.g., PSC, supra,
Furthermore, I do not accept the
Donner
court’s conclusion that a court can infer personal jurisdiction from the substantive allegations contained in a complaint.
See
Applying this principle to the facts of this case, I find that Simkins has failed to sustain its burden of proof. Plaintiff has failed to allege that defendants Ewart, Stern and Pechenik committed any tort in their
individual
capacity.
See
Complaint at ¶¶ 18-31, 41-49.
See also Stop-A-Flat, supra,
On the other hand, Ewart has presented an unrefuted affidavit that he has had no contact with the forum in either his individual or his corporate capacity. Even Paramount, the corporation in which he is a shareholder, has no connection with this forum.
See
Affidavit of Ewart at MI 2, 3, 5 & 6.
See also Time Share, supra,
While this court retains jurisdiction over Gourmet, I find that none of the movantdefendants could reasonably anticipate being haled into court in Pennsylvania. Accordingly, I find that this court may not constitutionally exercise in personam jurisdiction over Paramount, Greenberg, Ewart, Stern and Pechenik. Therefore, the defendants’ motion is granted.
Notes
. Gourmet has voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of this court by appearance. See Defendants’ Memorandum in Support of Its Motion to Dismiss at 1 n. 1.
. In its complaint, Simkins also asserted personal jurisdiction over the individual defendants by virtue of 42 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. 5301. See Complaint at ¶ 10. Each of the movant-defendants has filed an affidavit which presents unrefuted evidence that he was not a domiciliary of Pennsylvania at the time the complaint was filed, that he did not consent to be sued in Pennsylvania, and that he was not served with process within this jurisdiction. Therefore, plaintiff may not rely upon this provision of the Pennsylvania long-arm statute for the assertion of personal jurisdiction over the individual defendants.
. Plaintiff alleges that its efforts to obtain favorable jurisdictional facts during the discovery period was stymied by the defendants' failure to comply with its discovery requests. To this end, plaintiff filed a Motion to Compel the Production of Documents one day after the close of the limited discovery period. This motion is also before the court. In responding to plaintiffs motion, this court first notes that the parties used the opportunity to conduct discovery into the issue of personal jurisdiction not to enhance the quality of their respective briefs, but rather, to exchange unnecessary rhetoric. This court will deny plaintiff’s motion for the following reasons: (1) the motion was filed after the close of discovery; (2) plaintiff failed to comply timely with Rule 24(f) of the Local Rules of Civil Procedure; and (3) plaintiff has failed to refute defendants’ evidence that plaintiff caused its own delay in the discovery process. See Letter from Windt to Swift dated October 15, 1984, attached to Plaintiff's Supplemental Memorandum Against Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Therefore, this court finds that any alleged noncompliance with plaintiff's discovery requests is irrelevant to its determination of the 12(b)(2) petition.
. The plaintiff in this case has made this distinction even greater by converting what is in essence a single contract claim into a multiple-count tort and contract action. Plaintiffs efforts seem to be directed at gaining a foothold in the assets of the allegedly insolvent debtor-defendant, Gourmet. The contact with the forum in this case is even more attenuated than the paradigmatic "tort out/harm in” case involving a defective product shipped into the forum and causing injury to a forum citizen.
. Since this court concludes that it does not have personal jurisdiction over the movant-defendants on other grounds, it need not address the issue of whether the tort cause оf action asserted against defendants Paramount, Green-berg, Ewart and Stern is recognized under Pennsylvania jurisprudence or any other state’s substantive law which might be found applicable. See Ceco Corp. v. Bar-Jay Assoc., Inc., 68 Pa.D. & C.2d 674, 679-81 (Dauphin 1974) (recognizing that corporate officers or directors owe a fiduciary duty to creditors such as Simkins); Moore v. Industrial Valley Bank & Trust Co., slip op. at 2-3 (E.D.Pa. December 16, 1981) (Ditter, J.) (federal court citing Ceco, supra, recognizes the existence of such a cause of action in Pennsylvania).
. See note 6 supra.
. In
Techno,
plaintiff produced evidence demonstrating that (1) the individual defendants were directly aware that they were dealing with a Pеnnsylvania corporation and (2) the defendants and plaintiff were involved in a five-year buyer/seller relationship which involved significant forum contact by the individual defendants.
. Even if I were to consider the actions of Pechenik in his corporate capacity, the mere placing of phone calls into the forum state has not generally been held sufficient to constitute "purposeful availment."
See, e.g., Compagnie des Bauxites, supra,
