                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                       For the Fifth Circuit



                            No. 99-60913



                      JOSEPH N. BAILEY, III,

                                                Plaintiff-Appellee,


                               VERSUS


          DAVID L. ZEHR; NORTHWIND AVIATION CORPORATION,

                                              Defendants-Appellants.




           Appeal from the United States District Court
             For the Northern District of Mississippi
                          (1:97-CV-383-S-D)
                            June 14, 2001
Before POLITZ, DeMOSS, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:*

      In this diversity case, Defendants-Appellants David L. Zehr

and Northwind Aviation Corporation (“Northwind”)1 (collectively

“the appellants”) appeal the district court’s judgment, after a

jury trial, awarding $160,000 to Plaintiff-Appellee Joseph N.

Bailey, III, for fraud.   For the following reasons, we vacate the

  *
   Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the Court has determined that this
opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under
the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4.
  1
   Zehr is Northwind’s president and sole shareholder.
judgment and dismiss the case for lack of personal jurisdiction.

                                I. BACKGROUND

      This suit concerns the sale of a 421 Cessna (“421") involving

Bailey, the appellants, and a man named Dale Cox.                In the late 80s,

Bailey bought a Beechcraft Bonanza (“Bonanza”), which Cox had

advertised in a trade paper.         Through that purchase, Bailey met

Zehr, whose hangar in Indiana actually housed the Bonanza.                        Upon

meeting Zehr in Indiana, Bailey was told that Cox and Zehr were in

a partnership under which Cox acted as an airplane broker and buyer

while Zehr refurbished the planes.             Bailey agreed to purchase the

Bonanza for $78,000 and under terms that allowed him to use the

plane later as a trade-in towards the purchase of another plane,

less $10.00 per hour for every hour that Bailey had flown the

Bonanza.

      Some   months   later,    Bailey       decided     to   trade   for   a    newer

Bonanza, and Cox and Zehr flew to Tupelo, Mississippi, to pick up

Bailey and to fly to Indiana to inspect the newer model.                        Bailey

purchased that newer model for $180,000 under the same terms as the

previous model.

      In January 1990, Bailey decided again to upgrade, this time to

a   Barron    airplane.    As    with        the   two   prior    purchases,       Cox

represented that the plane was in good condition.                     Again, Bailey

flew to Zehr’s hangar in Indiana to examine and purchase the

Barron.      The actual paperwork, however, was done in Minnesota,



                                         2
where Cox lived.      The purchase was for $285,000 less the trade-in

for the newer model Bonanza.

     Bailey kept the Barron for fifteen months before deciding to

trade up to the 421, with a purchase price of $485,000 less the

trade-in.    The call letters of the plane were N421 CZ, with the CZ

standing for Cox and Zehr.

     Thereafter, as a result of pressing financial obligations,

Bailey was compelled to sell the 421 and contacted Cox to do this.

After several weeks of the airplane not selling, Cox explained to

Bailey that the plane could sell better if it were with Cox in

Minnesota.        Consequently,     on   December     8,    1991,   Zehr   flew   to

Mississippi to get the airplane and to deliver it to Cox in

Minnesota.       Cox later advised Bailey that no purchaser could be

found and suggested that Bailey “trade down” by accepting a 1978

Turbo    Barron    (“Turbo   Barron”),       which   Cox    said    wholesaled    at

$160,000, plus a payment of $326,000 in exchange for the 421.                     Cox

represented that: 1) he owned the Turbo Barron; 2) the airplane had

just come in on a trade; 3) the airplane was worth $160,000; and 4)

the airplane had only 1,400 flight hours on it.                     Zehr confirmed

those representations after Bailey accepted the trade down.

     Based on Cox’s representations, Bailey agreed to trade the 421

for the Turbo Barron plus a payment of $326,000 on February 24,

1992.    Moreover, as part of this transaction, Cox was to sell the

traded    down    Turbo   Barron,    with    Bailey    to    receive    the   first

$160,000.    Any proceeds beyond that were to be split evenly.

                                         3
      When the Turbo Barron did not sell for several weeks, Bailey

called Zehr about his concerns.   Zehr advised Bailey that Cox was

working hard to sell the plane and to “hang in there.”    But as the

plane remained unsold, Bailey made repeated unsuccessful requests

for possession of the Turbo Barron, which apparently was with Cox.

Cox agreed to provide the plane but only if Bailey paid the costs

of certain overhaul that had apparently been done as agreed to by

the parties.2

      Thereafter, Bailey filed a replevin suit on January 2, 1996,

against Cox to recover the plane or its stated cash value of

$160,000.   During that suit, Bailey discovered for the first time

that: 1) the airplane had actually been owned by Northwind, not

Cox, for approximately 1.5 years at the time the plane was offered

to Bailey; 2) the Turbo Barron had been previously offered for sale

but had never sold until Bailey purchased it; 3) the Turbo Barron’s

value was around $110,000, not $160,000; 4) the airplane had 2,400,

not 1,400, hours; and 5) Cox did have a buyer, Jim Anthony, for the

421, who finalized the purchase for $460,000 on February 21, 1992.

      Bailey sought leave to file an Amended Complaint to include

Zehr as a party defendant.   That was denied.3   After Cox failed to

comply with orders for inspection of the Turbo Barron, Cox’s answer

  2
   Five months after the February 24, 1992 deal, Bailey and Cox
apparently agreed to a refurbishment of the Turbo Barron. That was
done by Cox’s company, Elite Air.
  3
   The motion was denied because Bailey’s motion for a default
judgment had already progressed to an advanced state.

                                  4
was stricken.   Ultimately, a default judgment was rendered against

Cox for willful conversion and breach of fiduciary duty.            Part of

that award consisted of $160,000 as the alleged value of the Turbo

Barron.

      Because Bailey could not satisfy the judgment against Cox, he

filed suit against Zehr and Northwind.4          Dr. Joe Garofalo, who had

previously owned the Turbo Barron, testified by deposition that he

had sold the plane to Cox and Zehr and that, at the time of the

sale, he owed $110,000 on the Turbo Barron, which loan amount

Northwind assumed.   In addition, Anthony testified by deposition

that he first inspected the 421 on February 11 or 12, 1992, having

been advised that a doctor down south had to sell the plane due to

financial   difficulties.     The       jury’s    verdict   found   that   a

partnership existed between Cox and Zehr/Northwind with respect to

the sale and exchange of the 421 for the Turbo Barron and that Cox

committed fraud against Bailey while acting within the scope and

course of that partnership.         The jury’s award of damages was

$160,000.

      This appeal followed.



                            II. DISCUSSION

      Among the many alleged points of error raised on appeal, the


  4
   Bailey initially filed suit in state court and named only Zehr.
After the case was removed to federal court, the district court
granted leave to amend the complaint to include Northwind.

                                    5
appellants   primarily    question    whether        the   district     court   had

personal jurisdiction over them.          We review de novo whether the

district court had personal jurisdiction over the appellants.

Allred v. Moore & Peterson, 117 F.3d 278, 281 (5th Cir. 1997).                   “A

federal district court sitting in diversity may exercise personal

jurisdiction only to the extent permitted a state court under

applicable state law.”         Id.   The plaintiff bears the burden of

establishing personal jurisdiction.          Guidry v. U.S. Tobacco Co.,

188 F.3d 619, 625 (5th Cir. 1999).           Where, as in this case, the

district court decides a motion to dismiss for lack of personal

jurisdiction without an evidentiary hearing, the plaintiff may

satisfy   his   burden    by    presenting      a     prima     facie   case    for

jurisdiction.   Doddy v. Oxy USA, Inc., 101 F.3d 448, 460 (5th Cir.

1996). “‘[U]ncontroverted allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint

must be taken as true, and conflicts between the facts contained in

the parties’ affidavits must be resolved in the plaintiff’s favor

for purposes of determining whether a prima facie case for personal

jurisdiction exists.’”         Bullion v. Gillespie, 895 F.2d 213, 217

(5th Cir. 1990) (quoting D.J. Invs., Inc. v. Metzeler Motorcycle

Tire Agent Gregg, Inc., 754 F.2d 542, 546 (5th Cir. 1985)).

     Jurisdiction may be asserted if: 1) the state’s long-arm

statute applies, as interpreted by the state’s courts; and 2) due

process is satisfied under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United

States    Constitution.        Allred,    117       F.3d   at    281.     Because

                                      6
Mississippi’s long-arm statute is not co-extensive with federal due

process, this court must first analyze the scope of the reach of

the statute itself.           Id. at 282.       If Mississippi law does not

provide   for   the     assertion    of    personal      jurisdiction     over    the

appellants, then we need not consider the due process requirement.

Jobe v. ATR Marketing, Inc., 87 F.3d 751, 753 (5th Cir. 1996).

Conversely,     if    Mississippi    law      provides    for   the    exercise   of

personal jurisdiction over the appellants, then we consider whether

that exercise comports with due process principles.                    “First, the

nonresident defendant must have purposefully availed himself of the

benefits and protections of the forum state by establishing minimum

contacts with that forum state. . . . Second, the exercise of

personal jurisdiction over the nonresident defendant must not

offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”

Allred,   117    F.3d    at    285   (internal     citations     and    quotations

omitted).

     Mississippi’s long-arm statute provides in pertinent part:

          Any nonresident person, firm, general or limited
     partnership, or any foreign or other corporation not
     qualified under the Constitution and laws of this state
     as to doing business herein, who shall make a contract
     with a resident of this state to be performed in whole or
     in part by any party in this state, or who shall commit
     a tort in whole or in part in this state against a
     resident or nonresident of this state, or who shall do
     any business or perform any character of work or service
     in this state, shall by such act or acts be deemed to be
     doing business in Mississippi and shall thereby be
     subjected to the jurisdiction of the courts of this
     state. . . .


                                          7
Miss. Code Ann. § 13-3-57 (2000 Supp.).      Bailey asserted, and the

district court based personal jurisdiction under the tort prong of

the   Mississippi   statute.   Under   the     tort   prong,    personal

jurisdiction is proper if any element of the tort (or any part of

any element) takes place in Mississippi.     Allred, 117 F.3d at 282.

      Here, Bailey alleged fraud.5   The elements of fraud include:

1) a representation; 2) its falsity; 3) its materiality; 4) the

speaker's knowledge of its falsity or ignorance of its truth; 5)

his intent that it should be acted upon by the person and in the

manner reasonably contemplated; 6) the hearer's ignorance of its

falsity; 7) his reliance on its truth; 8) his right to rely

thereon; and 9) his consequent and proximate injury.           Levens v.

Campbell, 733 So. 2d 753, 761-62 (Miss. 1999).           In its order

denying Zehr’s motion to dismiss, the district court concluded that

Bailey relinquished control of the 421 to Zehr in Mississippi and,

thereby, suffered his injury in that state.6    Because injury itself


  5
   Bailey also asserted a claim for negligent misrepresentation,
but that claim did not go to the jury.
  6
    In addition to Zehr’s motion to dismiss, the district court
denied on the same grounds Northwind’s subsequent motion to
dismiss, which was filed after Bailey was allowed to amend his
complaint to include Northwind as a defendant.              Bailey’s
relinquishment of the airplane to Zehr also served as the basis for
asserting personal jurisdiction over Northwind. Both denials of
the motions to dismiss are on appeal.
   The district court actually confronted several motions pertaining
to the personal jurisdiction issue and entered several orders.
Besides the two motions to dismiss, it also denied Zehr’s motion
for reconsideration of his motion to dismiss. And at the end of
the appellants’ case, the district court orally denied Northwind’s

                                 8
is sufficient to place a nonresident defendant within the ambits of

Mississippi’s long-arm statute, see Allred, 117 F.3d at 282, the

district court found jurisdiction.

     Zehr and Northwind, however, contend that the relinquishment

could not have formed the basis of a tort sufficient to establish

personal jurisdiction because it was not an element, i.e., injury,

of any tort.   Specifically, they appear to argue that there was no

evidence of a fraud being perpetrated at the time Zehr came to pick

up the 421 on December 8, 1991.   That is, Cox’s misrepresentations

occurred in February 1992, nearly two months after Zehr came to

pick up the airplane.   Because the fraud had yet to be perpetrated,

Zehr’s act of picking up the airplane in December could not have

been the injury element of a fraud claim.

     Bailey generally responds that the retrieval of the 421 was an

essential, pivotal element of his fraud claim, but for which the

fraud could not have occurred and which constituted the beginning

point of the fraud claim and the injury to Bailey.

     We disagree. In all likelihood, initially having the airplane

in Minnesota rather than Mississippi may have aided in the overall

success of any fraud committed by Cox, but it was not a necessary

predicate nor an element of any alleged tort.    For example, if at

the time Cox made his misrepresentations in February Bailey still




apparent attempt at judgment as a matter of law based on lack of
personal jurisdiction.

                                  9
had the     airplane   in   Mississippi,   the   fraud   could    still   have

occurred as Bailey could then have transported the airplane to

Minnesota after acquiescing to Cox’s misrepresentations.                  The

earlier retrieval of the 421 was not required to initiate any fraud

in February.    More importantly, this example illustrates why the

December pick-up was not the injury element of any tort.               Injury

commonly denotes the invasion of any legally protected interest of

another.     See Allred, 117 F.3d at 282.        If Bailey still had the

airplane in Mississippi in February, when Cox committed his fraud,

then Bailey’s apparent injury would have been his being induced to

send the 421 over to Cox to sell the plane and to trade down to the

Turbo Barron.    But when Bailey allowed Zehr to transport the plane

in December, Bailey had not been induced as a part of any fraud to

do anything.    There was no evidence at that time that a fraud had

been committed or that any legally protected interest had been

invaded.     Indeed, Bailey’s counsel surmised that Zehr and Cox

devised the fraud after Zehr had taken control over the 421 in

December.    Thus, the retrieval of the 421 in December was not the

injury element of any fraud committed in February.               Instead, the

injury of any fraud committed in February was the result of that

fraud, i.e., Bailey’s being induced to leave the plane in Minnesota

to sell to Cox and to trade down to the Turbo Barron.            Accordingly,

the district court’s basis for denying the appellants’ motions to

dismiss was in error, and the present case should have been



                                    10
dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction.7



                             III. CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment of the

district   court    and   dismiss   the   case   for   lack   of   personal

jurisdiction.      Each party is to bear their respective costs on

appeal.




  7
   In light of our ruling, we need not address the appellants’
other points of error.

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