GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
The debate over the wisdom of the constitutional grant of diversity jurisdiction has much currency, as well as many argumentative antecedents. The reaches and restrictions of the grant are and have been constantly before committees, commissions, and the Congress. While reports, debates, and perhaps legislation géstate, we are forced to decide today a diversity case with many state and federal implications. We cannot wait for tomorrow’s panacea; we cannot delay our decision. This action was originally filed in 1970 in the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, Mississippi and removed, under the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1441,
to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. Plaintiff-appellant, Mrs. Nancy K. Steele, sought to obtain jurisdiction over defendant-appellee, G. D. Searle & Co., both by personal service on an employee of appellee resident in Mississippi
and by the attachment of debts owed appellee by companies doing business in Mississippi
. The district
coui’t dismissed the complaint holding that the state laws did not permit the assertion of jurisdiction over appellee on either basis, and that Mississippi
could
not, consistent with the Due Process Clause, exercise jurisdiction over appellee on the facts of this case. Plaintiff appeals only from the holding that valid jurisdiction was not obtained under the Mississippi attachment statutes, Miss. Code §§ 2729, 2733 (1942).
Finding that the law of Mississippi authorizes and the Constitution of the United States permits application of the jurisdictional device of attachment on the facts of this ease, we reverse.
I. THE RECORD AND HOLDING IN THE DISTRICT COURT
.Appellant, a resident of Kansas, alleges in her complaint that she purchased in her home state certain birth control pills manufactured by appellee and that, as a result of her use of appellee’s inadequately tested product, she suffered a serious and debilitating stroke on February 15, 1964, for which she seeks $500,000 in damages. Appellee, a drug company with an extensive distribution network, is incorporated in Delaware and has its principle place of business in Illinois. Although appellee owns no property in Mississippi, it does maintain three full time employees in that state for the purpose of soliciting orders. In answer to interrogatories submitted by appellant, appellee stated that, although it is not licensed to do business in Mississippi, its sales in that state over the three year period prior to the filing of this action amounted to more than $800,000. At the time of the filing of the complaint in state court three drug wholesale firms indebted to appellee were present and doing business in Mississippi, one having been incorporated there. Purporting to act on the basis of Miss.Code § 2729 (1942), appellant served the wholesalers with writs of attachment, the
res
or subject of the attachment being all monies owed to appellee by the attachment defendants, some $2,458,996.17.
Personal service was also made on one of the soliciting agents employed by appellee in Mississippi.
After the removal of this action appel-lee filed consolidated motions for relief under Rule 12, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, alleging,
inter alia,
that the court lacked jurisdiction of the person. This motion was originally denied. However, following a realignment of the district court docket and the assignment of this ease to another judge, appellee renewed its motions to dismiss and met with more favorable results. The district court granted the motion, finding' that (1) there was no jurisdiction under the Mississippi attachment statute and
(2) the Due Process Clause.would bar any attempt by Mississippi to exercise such jurisdiction. Specifically, the district court found that although the Mississippi attachment statute did permit the assertion of jurisdiction through attachment of a debt and appellant had complied with all of the technical requirements of state law, the court lacked jurisdiction because:
“The obvious intention of the statutes is to afford security to a claimant against an absent or absconding debt- or, a status which would presuppose that the resident was a former resident of the state who had removed himself from the process of the state courts. That is not the case here where defendant has never been a resident of the state.”
The court below also found that the Mississippi law permitting attachment for jurisdiction purposes was not meant to apply to a case such as this, in which the state’s only “intei'est” in the litigation would be jurisdictional, since appellant resorted to the Mississippi procedures “purely for the purpose of availing herself of this state’s longer statutory period of limitations for her tort claim.”
The court further held that the heavy burden of defending an action on the basis of an out of state attachment could not be imposed, consistent with fair and just procedures and the applicable decisions of the United States Supreme Court, without a “substantial state interest” in the outcome of the controversy. The district court found an insufficient interest in this case, which involves a suit between a non-resident plaintiff and a non-resident defendant on a cause of action arising out of state, and therefore dismissed appellant’s complaint.
The jurisdiction of a federal district court in a case removed from the state courts is derivative. It depends largely for its validity on whether the state court had jurisdiction, both as a matter of state and federal law. This rule is applicable even though as an original matter the suit could have been brought in federal court without impediment. Lambert Run Coal Co. v. Baltimore and Ohio R. Co., 1922, 258 U.S. 377, 382, 42 S.Ct. 349, 66 L.Ed. 671. The district court in this case had only that juridiction conferred by the laws of Mississippi on the Chancery Court of Hinds County, no more and no less
. By the same token, if the Due Process Clause of the Foui’teenth Amendment prevents Mississippi from obtaining jurisdiction, a federal court is likewise without power to proceed on removal.
II. THE MISSISSIPPI LAW
At first blush the holding of the court below in interpreting the Mississippi chancery statute would appear to be at odds with the plain meaning of the words. Section 2729 is set out in its entirety in Footnote 3, supra, but a few of its aspects merit special consideration.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
The debate over the wisdom of the constitutional grant of diversity jurisdiction has much currency, as well as many argumentative antecedents. The reaches and restrictions of the grant are and have been constantly before committees, commissions, and the Congress. While reports, debates, and perhaps legislation géstate, we are forced to decide today a diversity case with many state and federal implications. We cannot wait for tomorrow’s panacea; we cannot delay our decision. This action was originally filed in 1970 in the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, Mississippi and removed, under the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1441,
to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. Plaintiff-appellant, Mrs. Nancy K. Steele, sought to obtain jurisdiction over defendant-appellee, G. D. Searle & Co., both by personal service on an employee of appellee resident in Mississippi
and by the attachment of debts owed appellee by companies doing business in Mississippi
. The district
coui’t dismissed the complaint holding that the state laws did not permit the assertion of jurisdiction over appellee on either basis, and that Mississippi
could
not, consistent with the Due Process Clause, exercise jurisdiction over appellee on the facts of this case. Plaintiff appeals only from the holding that valid jurisdiction was not obtained under the Mississippi attachment statutes, Miss. Code §§ 2729, 2733 (1942).
Finding that the law of Mississippi authorizes and the Constitution of the United States permits application of the jurisdictional device of attachment on the facts of this ease, we reverse.
I. THE RECORD AND HOLDING IN THE DISTRICT COURT
.Appellant, a resident of Kansas, alleges in her complaint that she purchased in her home state certain birth control pills manufactured by appellee and that, as a result of her use of appellee’s inadequately tested product, she suffered a serious and debilitating stroke on February 15, 1964, for which she seeks $500,000 in damages. Appellee, a drug company with an extensive distribution network, is incorporated in Delaware and has its principle place of business in Illinois. Although appellee owns no property in Mississippi, it does maintain three full time employees in that state for the purpose of soliciting orders. In answer to interrogatories submitted by appellant, appellee stated that, although it is not licensed to do business in Mississippi, its sales in that state over the three year period prior to the filing of this action amounted to more than $800,000. At the time of the filing of the complaint in state court three drug wholesale firms indebted to appellee were present and doing business in Mississippi, one having been incorporated there. Purporting to act on the basis of Miss.Code § 2729 (1942), appellant served the wholesalers with writs of attachment, the
res
or subject of the attachment being all monies owed to appellee by the attachment defendants, some $2,458,996.17.
Personal service was also made on one of the soliciting agents employed by appellee in Mississippi.
After the removal of this action appel-lee filed consolidated motions for relief under Rule 12, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, alleging,
inter alia,
that the court lacked jurisdiction of the person. This motion was originally denied. However, following a realignment of the district court docket and the assignment of this ease to another judge, appellee renewed its motions to dismiss and met with more favorable results. The district court granted the motion, finding' that (1) there was no jurisdiction under the Mississippi attachment statute and
(2) the Due Process Clause.would bar any attempt by Mississippi to exercise such jurisdiction. Specifically, the district court found that although the Mississippi attachment statute did permit the assertion of jurisdiction through attachment of a debt and appellant had complied with all of the technical requirements of state law, the court lacked jurisdiction because:
“The obvious intention of the statutes is to afford security to a claimant against an absent or absconding debt- or, a status which would presuppose that the resident was a former resident of the state who had removed himself from the process of the state courts. That is not the case here where defendant has never been a resident of the state.”
The court below also found that the Mississippi law permitting attachment for jurisdiction purposes was not meant to apply to a case such as this, in which the state’s only “intei'est” in the litigation would be jurisdictional, since appellant resorted to the Mississippi procedures “purely for the purpose of availing herself of this state’s longer statutory period of limitations for her tort claim.”
The court further held that the heavy burden of defending an action on the basis of an out of state attachment could not be imposed, consistent with fair and just procedures and the applicable decisions of the United States Supreme Court, without a “substantial state interest” in the outcome of the controversy. The district court found an insufficient interest in this case, which involves a suit between a non-resident plaintiff and a non-resident defendant on a cause of action arising out of state, and therefore dismissed appellant’s complaint.
The jurisdiction of a federal district court in a case removed from the state courts is derivative. It depends largely for its validity on whether the state court had jurisdiction, both as a matter of state and federal law. This rule is applicable even though as an original matter the suit could have been brought in federal court without impediment. Lambert Run Coal Co. v. Baltimore and Ohio R. Co., 1922, 258 U.S. 377, 382, 42 S.Ct. 349, 66 L.Ed. 671. The district court in this case had only that juridiction conferred by the laws of Mississippi on the Chancery Court of Hinds County, no more and no less
. By the same token, if the Due Process Clause of the Foui’teenth Amendment prevents Mississippi from obtaining jurisdiction, a federal court is likewise without power to proceed on removal.
II. THE MISSISSIPPI LAW
At first blush the holding of the court below in interpreting the Mississippi chancery statute would appear to be at odds with the plain meaning of the words. Section 2729 is set out in its entirety in Footnote 3, supra, but a few of its aspects merit special consideration.
The district court stated that the clear purpose of the statute is to deal with potential defendants who have at one time resided in Mississippi but are “absent or absconding” at the time of attachment, and that the provision was not intended to reach individuals or businesses that had never “resided” in the state. The statute, however, specifically includes
non-residents
in the class subject to jurisdiction on the basis of attachment; and it appears to view them as a group distinct from once and future residents.
“The chancery court shall have jurisdiction of attachment suits against any non-resident, absent or absconding debtor,
who has lands and tenements within this state, or against any such debtor and persons in this state who have in their hands effects of, or are indebted to, such non-resident, absent or absconding debtor.”
Although it would be difficult to imagine statutory language more closely embracing the case at bar, faced only with the Mississippi Code and the facts of this case, we would hesitate to reverse the interpretation offered by the district judge, a lawyer of extensive practice in the State of Mississippi. However, not even our justified deference to the conclusions of the district court can be permitted to obscure the explicit command of Erie R.R. v. Tompkins, 1938, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 1188, that the authoritative legislative and judicial tribunals of the states are the ultimate instructors of the federal courts on matters of state law
.
We must be guided by the decision of the Mississippi Supreme Court in Alabama, Tennessee & Northern R. Co. v. Howell, 1962, 244 Miss. 157, 141 So.2d 242, which held that jurisdiction could be obtained through attachment on the basis of facts nearly identical to those presented by this appeal. In
Howell,
the plaintiff, a resident of Alabama, brought suit in Mississippi against the defendant railroad, incorporated and doing business only in Alabama, to recover for injuries suffered in a railroad crossing accident in Alabama. Howell attempted to obtain jurisdiction by means of personal service on an employee of the defendant, resident in Mississippi, and through the attachment of debts owed the defendant by another railroad doing business in Mississippi. As in this case, the litigation involved an individual, non-resident plaintiff seeking recovery in tort against a corporate non-resident defendant, owning no property and found not to be doing business in Mississippi. Like the ease before us,
Howell
involved allegedly tor-tious conduct that did not take place in Mississippi and apparently had no connection with it. The Mississippi Supreme Court held,
“In the ease at bar, we hold that an action
in rem
is maintainable against the appellant, A.T. & N.R.R. Company, if process is completed by publication, but that since appellant is not doing business in this State no personal júdgment can be rendered against it in this suit unless it enters its appearance.” 141 So.2d at 246.
Since the district court has found and appellee admits that the technical requirements of notice have been complied with,
Howell
would appear to be controlling on the question of state law.
The opinion of the district court suggests one possible basis on which to distinguish
Howell
— the appellant’s reason for choosing Mississippi as a forum.
But at no point in
Howell
does the state supreme court allude to the plaintiff’s motive in coming to Mississippi to initiate his action. This is true in spite of
the fact that the rather extraordinary situation in that ease
would have made it the natural vehicle for an examination of whether the plaintiff was engaging in prohibited forum shopping. This court cannot, consistent with
Erie,
add an interpretive gloss to the Mississippi chancery statute when that state’s highest court has so recently declined to do so.
On occasion federal courts might justifiably have complained that the combination of
Erie
and the paucity of relevant state precedents has turned the disposition of diversity cases into a kind of judicial mind reading exercise
. That is not true here. Our
Erie
guess is truly an educated one. We are not in the quandry of the philosopher who defined his task as searching in vain for a black cat in a dark room. This court has no right to expect any more explicit direction from the State of Mississippi in deciding this case than that offered by the opinion in
Howell.
We must conclude that, faced with the facts of the case at bar, the Mississippi Supreme Court would find the provisions of the attachment statute applicable.
III. THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE
Unfortunately the relatively recent and clear authority of the Mississippi Supreme Court on the issues of state law is not matched by equal federal precision on the constitutional question involved here. The path of United States Supreme Court decisions on the limits of state court jurisdiction has been neither straight nor narrow, and it will be necessary for us to travel this winding road with great care.
The substance and tone of federal decisions on state court jurisdiction through most of this century were set by the decision of the Supreme Court in Pennoyer v. Neff, 1877, 5 Otto 714, 95 U.S. 714, 24 L.Ed. 565, a case involving a dispute over title to land in Oregon. Neff claimed the tract under a patent of the United States. Pennoyer had purchased the property at a sheriff’s sale, conducted pursuant to the execution of a state court judgment obtained against Neff by a creditor, Mitchell. The disposition of the case depended on whether the Oregon state court had validly obtained jurisdiction over Neff in the earlier action. In the process of answering that question, the Court laid down the constitutional parameters of state court jurisdiction. The foundation of its opinion was the notion of territoriality: when acting upon persons or property within its borders the state may, consistent with due process, adjudicate rights and determine obligations. However, the Constitution was thought to create a bright and unmistakable barrier to the exercise of power beyond the state border. Any attempt to exercise such extraterritorial power was thought to be prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment.
“Process from the tribunals of one State cannot run into another State, and summon parties there domiciled to leave its territory and respond to proceedings against them.” 95 U.S. at 727.
Consequently, the Court held that
in personam
jurisdiction over Neff, i. e., jurisdiction over his person, the power to adjudicate the claims against him, up to any sum, and to create an absolute bar to further litigation of liability, could not have been obtained in the initial action, since Neff had not been
physically present in Oregon
. However, the Court also noted that it
would
have been possible to obtain jurisdiction to litigate the Mitchell-Neff controversy by attaching, prior to the initial action, any property held by the defendant in Oregon.
By thus achieving jurisdiction over the defendant’s Oregon property, the state court could enter a binding judgment up to the value of that property. This is
in rem.
jurisdiction. For the eases like that discussed in
Pennoyer,
where the
res
attached has no direct relation to the matter under litigation and is only meant to provide a handle for jurisdiction and a fund for execution, the legal profession has coined one of its least enchanting phrases, such jurisdiction being referred to as
quasi in rem.
The property under consideration in
Pennoyer
was a piece of land, but a quarter of a century after that decision the Supreme Court addressed itself to the possibility of obtaining
quasi in rem
jurisdiction through the attachment of intangible assets. On the basis of facts bearing considerable resemblance to the case at bar, the Court upheld such a jurisdictional device in Harris v. Balk, 1905, 198 U.S. 215, 25 S.Ct. 625, 49 L.Ed. 1023. The Court held that a state court judgment rendered against a nonresident defendant, with jurisdiction founded on the garnishment of a debt owed that defendant by an individual temporarily within the state was entitled to full faith and credit in subsequent litigation between the defendant and the garnishee, since the state court had obtained constitutionally recognized jurisdiction. The Court located the debt with the debtor for purposes of asserting territorial authority; and, therefore, personal service on the debtor was sufficient to give the state the power to adjudicate any claim against the creditor up to the amount of the debt. This was true even though the transaction giving rise to the garnished obligation had no connection with the attaching state. The Court held that:
“Attachment is the creature of the local law ... If there be a law of the state providing for the attachment of the debt, then, if the garnishee be found in that state, and process be personally served upon him therein, we think the court thereby acquires jurisdiction over him, and can garnish the debt due from him to the debtor of the plaintiff, and condemn it, provided the garnishee could himself be sued by his creditor in that state.”
198 U.S. at 222, 25 S.Ct. at 626.
Appellee attempts to distinguish
Harris
on the ground that the plaintiff in the challenged original action under scrutiny in that case, the person in the position analogous to that of appellant here, was himself a resident of the state whose law authorized the attachment. It is appellee’s contention that this connection of the plaintiff with the forum state was
the
crucial factor tipping the finding in
Harris.
With that proposition we must disagree. While there is language in
Pennoyer
that might have led to a conclusion that the validity of all
in rem
jurisdiction is dependent on the plaintiff’s residence in the attaching or
garnishing state
, this broad judicial hint was never developed into a controlling principle. A reading of the opinions in both
Pennoyer
and
Harris
leads inexorably to the conclusion that the Court was concerned not with subtle questions of the forum state’s “interest” in the litigation, but with matters of territorial power and the situs of an intangible asset. Indeed the question urged upon us as essential to the disposition of this case was never expressly or impliedly relied on by the Court in Harris,
The Supreme Court explicitly disavowed any such restriction on the
Pennoyer
line of cases in Ownbey v. Morgan, 1921, 256 U.S. 94, 109, 41 S.Ct. 433, 437, 65 L.Ed. 837, stating:
“In Pennoyer v. Neff, it was shown that the process of foreign attachment has its fundamental basis in the exclusive jurisdiction and sovereignty of each state over persons and property within its borders; and although emphasis was there laid upon the authority and duty of a state to protect its own citizens in their claims against nonresident owners of property situate within the state, it is clear that, by virtue of the “privileges and immunities” clause of section 2 of article 4 of the Constitution, each state is at liberty, if not under a duty, to accord the same privilege of protection to creditors who are citizens of other states that it accords to its own citizens.”
Were this 1905, or even 1945, the appellee’s constitutional objections to the Mississippi chancery procedure would have been fully answered at this point. Over the last thirty years, however, a veritable army of courts and commentators have besieged the citadel of territorial jurisdiction. The old territorial standards have been castigated as at once too restrictive and too permissive, preventing states from obtaining jurisdiction in cases in which they had substantial “interest,” while permitting the exercise of authority by states that were virtual strangers to both the parties and the claim.
The inflexible rules of the
Pennoyer
era have been loosened, primarily in order to permit the expansion of the scope of state jurisdiction. In its historic opinion in International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 1945, 326 U.S. 310, 66 S.Ct. 154, 90 L.Ed. 95, the Supreme Court rejected decades of precedent basing
in personam
jurisdiction over corporations on the fiction of corporate “presence,”
and called for a standard that looks less toward territorial power and more toward the convenience of the parties.
“Historically the jurisdiction of courts to render judgment in personam is grounded on their de facto power over the defendant’s person. Hence his
presence within the territorial jurisdiction of a court was prerequisite to its rendition of a judgment personally-binding him. Pennoyer v. Neff. But now . . . due process requires only that he have certain minimum contacts with [the forum state] such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
326 U.S. at 316, 66 S.Ct. at 158.
International Shoe
laid the foundation for the massive structure of long-arm statutes that have transformed the jurisdictional landscape.
Now appellee urges us to apply this flexible standard developed to increase the scope of jurisdiction
in personam
to the present
in rem
proceeding. Appellee contends that a resort to the doctrine of
International Shoe
will defeat Mississippi’s attempt to assert jurisdiction here over a non-resident defendant on behalf of a non-resident plaintiff on a cause of action arising outside the state, since Mississippi lacks the “minimum contacts” with the litigation necessary to justify an assertion of power over the defendant. In short, appellee urges us to assimilate
in rem
and
in personam
actions for the purpose of judging the constitutionality of a state exercise of jurisdiction.
Appellee cannot, of course, be subjected to suit in Mississippi if it would violate justice and fair play, regardless of the name given the particular type of jurisdiction. However, it is one thing to say that the standard of substantial justice propounded in
International Shoe
remains applicable regardless of the legal technicalities involved in a given case; it is quite another matter to contend that those technicalities have no bearing on the underlying constitutional issue. The crucial question before us is the extent to which we are free to say that the application of these hoary rules of
in rem
jurisdiction is violative of substantial justice. For despite earlier hints to the contrary
, the Supreme Court clearly indicated in its opinion in Hanson v. Denckla, 1958, 357 U.S. 235, 78 S.Ct. 1228, 2 L.Ed.2d 1283, that much still remains of both the old notions of territoriality and the ancient distinction between
in rem
and
in personam
actions when judgments are being made on the constitutional validity of state process.
“Founded on physical power . the
in rem
jurisdiction of a state court is limited by the extent of its power and by the coordinate authority of sister States. The basis of the jurisdiction is the presence of the subject property within the territorial jurisdiction of the forum State.”
357 U.S. at 246, 78 S.Ct. at 1236.
While emphasizing that the assignment of a location to intangibles can raise difficult problems
, the Court rec
ognized that intangible assets are subject to the
in rem
and
quasi in rem
jurisdictions of the state courts. 357 U.S. at 247, 78 S.Ct. 1228.
Although the Supreme Court has not had occasion since
Harris
to reconsider the specific question of
quasi in rem
jurisdiction based on the attachment of a debt, the continued vitality of that decision was examined and accepted by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, en banc, in Minichiello v. Rosenberg, 2 Cir. 1968, 410 F.2d 106.
Minichiello
was a constitutional challenge to the state judiciary’s interpretation of a New York statute as authorizing
quasi in rem
jurisdiction in automobile accident cases through the “attachment of the defendants’ interest in liability insurance policies issued by companies doing business in New York, CPLR §§ 5201, 6202.” 410 F.2d at 107. Addressing itself to the very question raised here, the constitutionality under the Due Process Clause of the exercise of such attachment jurisdiction, the. Second Circuit dismissed the argument, contending:
“Appellants complain we did not adequately focus on the burden to a nonresident of having to defend a personal-injury action in another state, conceivably far from his domicile and the place of the accident, simply because his liability insurer has chosen to do business there.
“We find this argument unpersuasive so long as Harris v. Balk . stands.” 410 F.2d at 117-18.
In light of both
Harris
and
Hanson
this court cannot say that the presence of a potential defendant’s debtor within a state is either irrelevant or insignificant in determining the fairness of subjecting the defendant to the process and tribunals of that state. Indeed, the presence of a
res,
tangible or otherwise, within the jurisdiction represents a crucial point of contact. It goes far toward providing the essential “minimum” necessary for the constitutional assumption of jurisdiction.
We are not unmindful of the fact that chancery proceedings like the one considered here appear as harsh reminders of an earlier era. Even granting the availability of the doctrine of forum non conveniens as an assuaging tool in these
instances, were we faced today with a case like the Harris v. Balk of old, in which a defendant’s debtor wanders across a border line and thereby subjects the defendant to the process of a strange and distant state, the tendency to call a halt would be strong. However, we are not here presented with the Case of the Peripatetic Debtor. Appellee can hardly claim to be a stranger to Mississippi or its laws. It has regularly dealt with companies incorporated or licensed to do business in Mississippi. In the course of these transactions Searle both expected and received the protection of Mississippi law. The prospect of having to defend a suit in that state, albeit on a foreign cause of action, cannot fairly be seen as a rude and unbelievable shock to a company that maintains employees and ships several hundred thousand dollars worth of merchandise into Mississippi, each year
. In the horse and buggy days distance was a meaningful menace. Today we approach the speed of light, and corporations avail themselves of all the modern aspects of living. In our mobile society corporations cannot feel alien where their commercial interests magnetize them.
This court does not sit to comment on the wisest or most intellectually coherent system of state court jurisdiction. The contours and implications of corporate peregrinations are not to be drawn by federal courts. Within constitutional limits the states must be permitted to use their own transits in surveying jurisdiction. We sit only to measure state action against the constitutional parameters and to prohibit those assertions of jurisdiction that exceed the farthest reach of constitutional authority. On the facts of this case, we cannot say that Mississippi has gone too far in calling appellee to account in its courts. Intangible property is present in the state, appellee is not a stranger to the jurisdiction forced into litigation through the wanderings of a stray debtor, and the applicable state law clearly provides both actual notice and opportunity to be heard
Under these circumstances the exercise of state court jurisdiction, and hence federal jurisdiction on removal, is not violative of either the principles of fairness
or territoriality
mandated by the Fourteenth Amendment. •
CONCLUSION
Finding that appellant’s cause of action has cleared both the státe and federal hurdles set up in the district court, we reverse.
Reversed and remanded.