Appellant William A. Hahn, a Massachusetts resident, brought an action for declaratory and injunctive relief and damages for breach of contract against defendants-appellees Vermont Law School (VLS), a Vermont corporation, and Thomas Ross, a Vermont citizen and associate professor of law at VLS. The district court dismissed the complaint on a Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2) motion, ruling that Hahn had failed to establish in personam jurisdiction over either defendant pursuant to the Massachusetts long-arm statute, Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. eh. 223A § 3 (West Supp.1981). We reverse as to VLS and affirm as to Ross.
VLS is a private law school which incorporated in Vermont in 1972, obtained accreditation in 1975, and graduated its first class in 1976. Its only place of business is in South Royalton, Vermont; it has never maintained any campus, office, bank account, mailing address, or telephone listing in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, nor is it licensed to do business there. Hahn, who received his undergraduate degree from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, first learned of VLS from an article in the Boston Globe in 1977. At his request the school sent application information to him in Massachusetts. Hahn mailed an application to VLS and on March 22, 1978, the school mailed him an offer of admission. Soon thereafter Hahn mailed his acceptance and a $100 deposit to VLS. He attended VLS during the academic years 1978-79, 1979-80, and 1980-81, and graduated in June of 1981. He currently practices law in Massachusetts.
In the fall of 1980, during Hahn’s third year, he took a course entitled “Secured Transactions.” Ross taught this course and in January of 1981 gave Hahn an “F” on his examination. Hahn unsuccessfully followed various administrative channels at the school in an attempt to have the grade changed. He then filed this suit in which he alleges, inter alia, that his contract with VLS was breached when VLS hired Ross and allowed him to teach without supervision, when Ross used arbitrary grading procedures, and when the VLS administration failed to review and investigate his complaint. 1
The law of the forum, in this case Massachusetts, applies in determining the amenability to suit of a nonresident in a diversity action.
Willis v. American Permac, Inc.,
The district court held that the Massachusetts long-arm statute did not authorize jurisdiction. The court determined that VLS had transacted business in Massachusetts by sending recruiters into the Commonwealth since 1980 to inform prelaw advisers and undergraduate students about the school. It properly cited
Ross v. Ross,
The key question is whether VLS engaged in any activity relating to Hahn’s decisions to apply and to attend the school that constituted the transaction of business. The district court seemed to ignore this question, which concerns VLS’ activity during the early months of 1978, and focused instead on recruiting activity two years later which had no bearing on the contract allegedly breached. Although recruiting activity would seem to satisfy the “transacting any business” requirement, this would not preclude other VLS activity from also satisfying the requirement.
In
Nova Biomedical,
In
Carlson Corp. v. University of Vermont,
The district court noted that this cause of action for breach of contract stemmed from activities — Hahn’s receipt of a failing grade and his efforts to resolve the matter through administrative channels — occurring in Vermont. Although the Massachusetts courts have not defined the scope of the “arising from” requirement of the long-arm statute, we have no doubt that it has been satisfied when the cause of action is for an alleged breach of contract and the business transacted was instrumental in the formation of the contract. Any determination of whether VLS has breached the contract will depend upon the terms of the contract, and such terms may include statements contained in the application information and acceptance letter VLS mailed to Hahn.
See Lyons v. Salve Regina College,
Having determined that the assertion of jurisdiction in this case is authorized by the Massachusetts long-arm statute, we proceed to the question of whether the assertion of jurisdiction would comport with the requirements of due process. The well-known case of
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
It is a close question whether VLS, by sending application information and an acceptance letter to Hahn in Massachusetts, has in practical terms invoked the benefits and protections of that state’s laws or “should reasonably anticipate being haled into court [there],”
World-Wide Volks
*52
wagen Corp. v. Woodson,
As for the defendant Ross, the district court found that he had not performed any recruiting activities on behalf of VLS in Massachusetts. He taught the “Secured Transactions” course solely on the VLS campus. Thus, he had not transacted any business as required by the Massachusetts long-arm statute. In addition, jurisdiction over him cannot be predicated on jurisdiction over VLS.
See Selman v. Harvard Medical School,
Our finding on the issue of jurisdiction over VLS does not, of course, intimate any view on the merits of the case.
Reversed in part, affirmed in part, and remanded.
Notes
. For an example of a contract action concerning academic grading, see
Lyons
v.
Regina College,
. It appears that VLS mailed grade reports and tuition bills to Hahn in Massachusetts throughout his three years at the school. If so, this would merely reinforce our finding that VLS was transacting business in Massachusetts.
Cf. Good Hope Industries,
