We revisit today a shopworn fracas involving the appellant, Transamerican Steamship Corporation (Trasteo), and appel-lee Interpole, Inc. When the litigation first appeared in our venue, we rebuffed Trastco’s efforts to set aside a default judgment which had been entered against it in Interpole’s favor, but remanded the cause for the sole purpose of determining whether the district court, at the time it entered the default judgment, had acquired jurisdiction over Trastco’s corporate persona.
General Contracting & Trading Co. v. Interpole, Inc.,
I. BACKGROUND
We eschew exegetic treatment of the historical antecedents of this litigation, referring those who may hunger for greater detail to our earlier opinion,
Interpole I,
In May 1985, GCT sued Interpole in New Hampshire’s federal district court seeking damages associated with the delayed delivery of its order (Suit No. 1). Interpole filed a third-party complaint for indemnity against Trasteo. Trasteo failed to respond, a failure that led, eventually, to the entry of a default. When Trasteo finally bestirred itself and tried to set aside the default, the district court refused to grant the requested relief. Trasteo then brought a separate suit against Interpole in the same federal district court, charging fraud and misrepresentation in connection with the same overall transaction (Suit No. 2).
To truncate the tale of the two suits, we note that, after Interpole had confessed to a judgment favoring GCT in Suit No. 1, the district court consolidated the two cases for a hearing on damages. Before this hearing was held, however, Interpole and Trasteo settled Suit No. 2 for $30,000. The assessment-of-damages proceeding was, therefore, limited to the third-party complaint in *22 Suit No. 1. The court fixed Interpole’s damages at $43,276 and denied Trastco’s motion to set off the $30,000 settlement in Suit No. 2 against the $43,276 default judgment in Suit No. 1.
In the previous appeal, we affirmed the entry of default, the assessment of damages, and the lower court’s refusal to offset the two judgments.
Interpole I,
II. DISCUSSION
The district court asserted personal jurisdiction over Trasteo on the ground that Interpole’s cause of action against it fell within the purview of New Hampshire’s long arm statute and that exercising jurisdiction did not offend due process. We bypass this analysis, not because we have substantial reason to question its soundness, but because of our conclusion that Trasteo submitted itself to the court’s personal jurisdiction by instituting Suit No. 2, thus making a conventional long arm analysis irrelevant.
2
See Knowlton v. Allied Van Lines, Inc.,
It is settled beyond peradventure that the requirement of personal jurisdiction is intended to protect a defendant’s liberty interests.
Insurance Corp. of Ireland v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee,
In terms of submission to a court’s jurisdiction, it is possible to attempt fine distinctions between “waiver” and “consent.” It can be argued, for example, that the distinction turns on whether the manifesting conduct took place within, or outside of, the confines of the suit in question. In that formulation, “waiver” customarily occurs by virtue of the manner in which the objec
*23
tor manages its role
qua
litigant.
See, e.g., Insurance Corp. of Ireland,
We view such distinctions as artificial and unnecessary, at least for the purpose at hand. Whatever label one might place on Trastco’s conduct, it seems pellucidly clear that, by bringing Suit No. 2, Trasteo submitted itself to the district court’s jurisdiction in Suit No. 1. Trasteo elected to avail itself of the benefits of the New Hampshire courts as a plaintiff, starting a suit against Interpole. 4 By so doing, we think it is inevitable that Trasteo surrendered any jurisdictional objections to claims that Interpole wished to assert against it in consequence of the same transaction or arising out of the same nucleus of operative facts. Indeed, given the common transactional core, Interpole’s third-party complaint in Suit No. 1 stands in the same relation to Trastco’s complaint in Suit No. 2 as would a counterclaim. And, the Supreme Court has long recognized the inequity that would result if a plaintiff could raise jurisdictional objections to counterclaims filed by a defendant:
The plaintiff having, by his voluntary act in demanding justice from the defendant, submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court, there is nothing arbitrary or unreasonable in treating him as being there for all purposes for which justice to the defendant requires his presence. It is the price which the state may exact as the condition of opening its courts to the plaintiff.
Adam v. Saenger,
In the same vein, a ruling that Trasteo did not submit to the court’s jurisdiction in Suit No. 1 when it instituted Suit No. 2 would produce an unjust asymmetry, allowing a party (here, Trasteo) to enjoy the full benefits of access to a state’s courts
qua
plaintiff, while nonetheless retaining immunity from the courts’ authority
qua
defendant in respect to claims asserted by the very party it was suing (here, Interpole). This asymmetry would be starker still, because Trasteo, on its view of the jurisdictional universe, would be permitted to sue Interpole in a New Hampshire court on a claim arising out of the Oman shipment but Interpole would be precluded from bringing a claim against Trasteo in the same court based on the same transaction.
5
*24
There is no warrant in either law or logic for accepting such an incongruous result. We, therefore, hold that the appellant, by initiating its own suit, submitted to the district court’s jurisdiction in the prior action.
See Lyman Steel Corp. v. Ferrostaal Metals Corp.,
There is no conceivable unfairness here. The choice to sue in New Hampshire, or to abstain, was Trastco’s. Upholding the forum court’s assumption of jurisdiction over Trasteo in Suit No. 1 seems a small price to exact for allowing Trasteo purposefully to avail itself of the benefits of a New Hampshire forum as a plaintiff in Suit No. 2.
See, e.g., Threlkeld v. Tucker,
Trasteo argues, nevertheless, that it did not waive its jurisdictional objection in Suit No. 1 by filing Suit No. 2 because the latter was itself essentially a counterclaim. It contends, accurately, that courts should not ordinarily treat counterclaims — at least compulsory counterclaims — as waivers of jurisdictional objections.
See Media Duylication Services, Ltd. v. HDG Software, Inc.,
First, Trasteo did not file a counterclaim in Suit No. 1; rather, it brought a separate action against Interpole. We reject the contention that being a plaintiff in an independent, later-filed suit is, or should be treated as, the functional equivalent of being a counterclaimant.
6
We intimated as much when we stated that the district court’s consolidation of the two suits for purposes of calculating damages did not merge the two actions or alter their individual character.
See Interyole I,
*25-29 After all, square pegs do not normally fit in round holes.
The second reason why the appellant’s asseveration collapses is that the cases holding that service of a counterclaim will not undercut a preserved jurisdictional defense are premised on an assumption not present in this case: that the counterclaim is put forward as a conditional position and will not be independently pressed if the primary action is dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction. See 4 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1397 (2d ed. 1987) (“[T]his practice of allowing a defendant in effect to plead alternatively his counterclaim and his threshold defenses conserves judicial resources, for if one of the defenses proves successful, the parties need not litigate a claim that defendant presumably has no interest in asserting independently.”); cf. Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(2) (permitting parties to plead “alternately or hypothetically”). The case sub judice perches at precisely the opposite end of the spectrum: Trasteo filed its claim against Interpole separately, not alternatively; and its $30,000 recovery in Suit No. 2 is neither contingent upon the outcome of the jurisdictional squabble in Suit No. 1 nor subject to vacation if its jurisdictional defense to Suit No. 1 is sustained. Trasteo, moreover, filed Suit No. 2 after its motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction in Suit No. 1 had been denied, a circumstance which makes clear that Trasteo viewed Suit No. 2 as a jurisdic-tionally independent piece of litigation.
To say more would be to paint the lily., Trastco’s reasons for blunting the easily predictable consequences of its separate suit are unpersuasive. Having sown the wind, it cannot avoid reaping the whirlwind.
III. CONCLUSION
The requirement that a court possess in personam jurisdiction is a shield to protect the interests of an affected defendant— and, like most shields, can be discarded by the bearer. So here. Trasteo, as a plaintiff, purposefully availed itself of the benefits and protections of the forum by instituting what we have termed “Suit No. 2.” In so doing, Trasteo voluntarily submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the New Hamp-
shire courts for purposes of the third-party complaint in Suit No. 1 — a complaint arising out of the same transaction as Suit No. 2 and brought by the very party Trasteo had sued. Hence, the federal district court did not act unlawfully in thereafter exercising personal jurisdiction over Trasteo in Suit No. 1.
We need go no further. The judgment below was not void. The appellant’s motion for relief under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(4) was, therefore, correctly denied.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(4) provides in pertinent part that, on motion, a district court "may relieve a party ... from a final judgment ... [if] the judgment is void.” As we observed in
Inter-pole
/,
. In our earlier opinion, we specifically withheld a determination "as to the effect, if any, of Trastco’s commencement of Suit No. 2 on the jurisdictional calculus.”
Interpole I,
. Another view might hold that a distinction between "waiver" and "consent" turns on whether the manifesting conduct took place prior or subsequent to the suit’s institution. Such a view recognizes that consent ordinarily consists of
ex ante
conduct while waiver ordinarily occurs in the form of actions taken
ex post.
But, these concepts can overlap.
See, e.g., Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts,
. In the context of personal jurisdiction, it is settled that the concept of a “state’s courts” includes those federal courts located within the state.
See, e.g., Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
.Indeed, Trastco’s maneuver, if sanctioned, would spawn an aggravated version of the imbalance against which Justice Brennan recently warned in voting to uphold an assertion of transient jurisdiction.
See Burnham v. Superior Court,
— U.S. -,
. Unlike Interpole, which could have asserted its claim in Suit No. 1 as a counterclaim in Suit No. 2, Trasteo could not have brought Suit No. 2 as a counterclaim in Suit No. 1 because, through its own neglect, it had previously defaulted in Suit No. 1.
