This is an appeal from an order of the district court dismissing the complaint of Telco Leasing, Inc. on the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction over the person of defendant Marshall County Hospital. Since the relevant facts of this case are discussed in the district court’s memorandum opinion and order of January 27, 1978 which is attached as an appendix, we need not recite them here.
On the basis of the record and the briefs and after hearing oral argument, we affirm. Looking to “the relationship among the defendant, the forum, and the litigation,” which is “the central concern of the inquiry into personal jurisdiction,”
1
rather than to “mechanical or quantitative evaluations of the defendant’s activities in the forum [which] could not resolve the ques
On this basis we adopt as our own the attached memorandum opinion and order of the district court and direct the Clerk to enter an appropriate order.
APPENDIX
Telco Leasing, Inc.,
Plaintiff,
v.
Marshall County Hospital,
Defendant.
No. 77 C 3685.
United States District Court, N. D. Illinois, E. D.
Jan. 27, 1978.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
McGARR, District Judge.
This is an action by Telco Leasing, Inc. against Marshall County Hospital for breach of a lease agreement. Jurisdiction is predicated on diversity, 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Defendant has moved to dismiss the complaint or, in the alternative, to transfer the action to a more convenient forum, on the grounds inter alia that the defendant is not subject to the personal jurisdiction of this court.
Service on the defendant, a hospital located in Mississippi, was effected by service upon the administrator’s secretary in her office in the hospital. According to Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, service of summons on one not an inhabitant of or found within the state in which the federal district court is sitting is to be made under the circumstances and in the manner prescribed by statute or rule of that state, if there be such statute or rule. The applicable statute in Illinois is the “long-arm statute,” Ill.Rev.Stat. Ch. 110, §§ 16 and 17. Section 17(l)(a) provides that one who engages in the transaction of any business within Illinois thereby submits to the jurisdiction of Illinois courts as to any cause of action arising therefrom.
It is well established that the legislative intent of the Illinois long-arm statute is to exert jurisdiction over nonresidents to the full extent permitted under the due process clause.
Nelson v. Miller,
Whether or not there are sufficient minimum contacts to comport with due process cannot be determined by any set formula or rule of thumb, but must rest on a consideration of what is fair and reasonable in the circumstances of each particular case. Hutter Northern Trust v. Door County Chamber of Commerce, supra.
In summary, then, the question presented by this motion is whether or not, in a situation in which a non-resident defendant is brought into contact through a non-resident third party with a non-resident agent of an Illinois corporation, which contact is in the form of the non-resident agent’s sending to the non-resident defendant copies of form leases which recite that the contract is accepted in Illinois by the plaintiff corporation, and the non-resident defendant executes the form leases outside of Illinois and, pursuant to the leases, causes rental payments to be mailed to plaintiff’s Illinois offices over a period of two years, the nonresident defendant can be said to have “transacted business” in Illinois and to have had “minimum contacts” with the State of Illinois, such that assertion of jurisdiction over him by a federal court sitting in Illinois comports with the Illinois long-arm statute and the requirements of due process.
We hold that it cannot.
Other courts addressing similar situations have reached the same conclusion. See
Geldermann & Co., Inc. v. Dussault,
A citizen of a foreign jurisdiction does not submit to in personam jurisdiction of the forum state when a seller based in the forum state, through its agent in the foreign jurisdiction, initiates a contractual relationship between his principal in the forum state and the customer in the foreign state. The fact that the seller accepts the contract in the forum state does not alter this result.312 F.Supp. at 188 .
Still, other courts have upheld jurisdiction in contract cases. See
Cook Associates, Inc. v. Colonial Broach & Machine Co.,
That the defendant’s initiation of the transaction was a crucial factor in
Cook
has recently been affirmed by both the Illinois court and the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. See
Artoe v. Mann,
But holding that initiation of the transaction by the defendant need not be the only crucial factor, and finding jurisdiction in the absence of such initiation when instead the transaction involved “substantial on-going activity in Illinois,” is U. S. Railway Equipment Co. v. Port Huron & Detroit Railroad Co., supra. In that case, performance of the lease agreement involved the plaintiff making repairs of leased machinery in Illinois throughout the term of the lease. There was no such factor here. The case also differed from the one at bar in that the defendant had made several visits to the plaintiff’s place of business in the forum state to inspect the goods. We are not persuaded that the mere making of payments by mail to a Chicago office rises to this level of Illinois activity.
We are not unaware of two cases decided in this district and involving Telco leases. See Telco Leasing, Inc. v. Interstate Computer Systems for Medicine, Inc., 75 C 1421 (January 26, 1976); Telco Leasing, Inc. v. The Memorial Clinic, 77 C 2899 (December 1, 1977). However, it is not the terms of the lease that are controlling, but all the facts and circumstances of the transaction, for it is from the total picture that we determine whether or not the exertion of jurisdiction would comport with the notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Having found that defendant in the instant case cannot be said to have had “minimum contacts” with the State of Illinois, we now order that defendant’s motion to dismiss be granted.
