OPINION
Wе determine today that Louisiana courts will insist upon a nexus between business transacted in the state and an asserted claim as a prerequisite to the exercise of in personam jurisdiction under that state’s long-arni statute.
I
Bristow Helicopters, Limited, is a corporation organized under the laws of the United Kingdom. P.T. Masayu Helicopters is an Indonesian corporation. Bristow Helicopters, Inc., is a Delaware corporation. The parties agreed below that Masayu is the subsidiary of Bristow Limited under the laws of the United Kingdom; that Bristow Limited indirectly owned 100% of the non-voting shares of outstanding stock in Bristow Inc. through another subsidiary of Bristow Limited, Helicopter Rentals, Ltd., a Bermuda corporation; and that for jurisdictional purposes, Bristow Limited can be considered to have “trаnsacted business” in Louisiana for the sole purpose of Louisiana’s long-arm statute through the business activity of Bristow Inc., which is licensed to do business in Louisiana.
On Mаrch 16,1980, Thomas W. Farnham, III, the husband and father of the appellants, was killed when a helicopter owned and operated by Masayu crashed in Kalimantan, Indonesia. The Farnhams’ jurisdictional argument rests on the theory that Masayu was the agent of Bristow Limited and that Bristow Limited had done business in Louisiana; they do not cоntend that Masayu has itself transacted business in Louisiana. Masayu and Bristow Limited moved for dismissal of the case against them for want of personal jurisdiction. The mоtion was granted on the ground that because no nexus existed between the alleged tort and Bristow Limited’s activities in Louisiana, the Louisiana long-arm statute did nоt reach them.
Some weeks after the district court dismissed Masayu and Bristow Limited, the deposition of William Blume, the pilot of the ill-fated helicopter, was taken by telephone. Blume testified that in 1974 a Bristow recruiter came to Louisiana State University at New Orleans to look for prospective pilots. There the recruiter met Blume, who went to England and signed on with a Bristow company, presumably Bristow Limited. He was assigned to fly in southeast Asia. He left Masayu in 1977 to work for аn electronics firm in Malaysia, but returned to Masayu in 1980 and was flying for that company when the fatal crash occurred.
Bristow Inc. moved for summary judgment, and that motion was granted. The Farnhams appeal this judgment and dismissal of Masayu and Bristow Limited.
II
The fourteenth amendment to the Constitution sets the limits of a state’s power to еxercise personal jurisdiction over foreign defendants. A foreign defendant must have minimal contacts with the forum state “such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
*537 Under the Louisiana long-arm statute, R.S. 13:3201, “[a] court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident, who acts directly or by an agеnt, as to a cause of action arising from any one of the following activities performed by the nonresident: (1) Transacting any business in this state____” R.S. 13:3202 provides that “[w]hen personal jurisdiction over a nonresident is based solely upon R.S. 13:3201, only a cause of action arising from acts or omissions enumerated therein may be asserted against him.”
Our question is how the Louisiana courts would today interpret their long-arm statute. In
Pedelahore v. Astropark, Inc.,
A panel of this court cannot “overturn” the decision of another panel. In diversity cases, however, we are to follow subsequent state court decisions that are clearly contrary to a previous decision of this court.
See Broussard v. Southern Pac. Transp. Co.,
The Farnhams point to other Lоuisiana decisions, but we find them to be inapposite. In
Home Gas & Fuel Co. v. Mississippi Tank Co.,
We must affirm the district court’s conclusion that the Louisiana long-arm statute is not available to plaintiffs whose claims do not arise out оf any activity or business within Louisiana. It follows that Bristow Limited’s business activity in *538 Louisiana will not support the Farnhams’ use of the long-arm statute because that business and this heliсopter crash were not related. In so concluding, we reject the suggestion that the recruiting in Louisiana of pilot Blume by Bristow Limited for his first period of emрloyment had any significant relationship to the claim arising from the later crash in Indonesia during his second, and completely separate, period оf employment. This cause of action did not “arise from” the 1974 recruiting activities.
III
The Farnhams argue that because Masayu, which itself had no contacts аt all with Louisiana, is a subsidiary of Bristow Limited, it can be reached under the Louisiana long-arm statute. Because Bristow Limited is itself not subject to jurisdiction, it follows, a fortiori, that Masayu is not subject to jurisdiction.
IV
Having concluded that the district court properly dismissed Bristow Limited and Masayu as defendants, we turn to the Farnhams’ contention that summary judgment should not have been grantеd in favor of Bristow Inc. Although the Farnhams did not do so below, they argue here that the granting of the summary judgment motion was premature. The Farnhams argue that Bristow Inc. shоuld not have been dismissed before they completed discovery concerning the precise relationships among Bristow Inc., Bristow Limited, and Masayu. The district court’s order indicates that the Farnhams did not oppose the motion for summary judgment, and we can find no record of opposition. Even here the аrgument is made only as part of another argument rather than as a distinct point of error. Finally, notice of appeal was not directed to the judgment below but was confined to “the interlocutory order dated May 3, 1984____”
See C.A. May Marine Supply Co. v. Brunswick Corp.,
AFFIRMED.
