Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca4-18-02030/USCOURTS-ca4-18-02030-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 360
Nature of Suit: Other Personal Injury
Cause of Action: 

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PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 18-2030

ANTHONY M. FIDRYCH; PATRICIA ANNE FIDRYCH,

Plaintiffs - Appellants,

v.

MARRIOTT INTERNATIONAL, INC.,

Defendant - Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at 

Charleston. Bruce H. Hendricks, District Judge. (2:17-cv-02195-BHH)

Argued: December 11, 2019 Decided: March 2, 2020

Before AGEE and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges, and TRAXLER, Senior Circuit 

Judge.

Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published opinion. Senior Judge 

Traxler wrote the opinion, in which Judge Agee and Judge Quattlebaum joined.

ARGUED: Nathan Maxwell Crystal, CRYSTAL & GIANNONI-CRYSTAL, LLC, 

Charleston, South Carolina, for Appellants. Paul K. Leary, Jr., COZEN O’CONNOR, 

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Mark C. Tanenbaum, MARK C. 

TANENBAUM, PA, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, for Appellants. Matthew Bleich, 

COZEN O’CONNOR, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellee. 

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TRAXLER, Senior Circuit Judge:

Bud Fidrych and his wife, both South Carolina residents, sued Marriott International 

in South Carolina district court after Fidrych was injured at the Boscolo Milano, a Marriottaffiliated hotel in Milan, Italy. After Marriott failed to file a timely answer to the 

complaint, the district court clerk, at the Plaintiffs’ request, made an entry of default. The 

district court subsequently entered what it described as a default judgment and set a date 

for the damages hearing. That same day, the district courtsent Marriott notice of the default 

and of the damages hearing date. Five days after receiving notice, Marriott filed a motion 

to set aside the default, in which it argued that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over 

Marriott. The district court set aside the default and subsequently granted Marriott’s 

motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. The Fidryches appeal, challenging the 

court’s decisions to set aside the default and to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. They also 

contend that the district court erred by refusing to award them attorney’s fees as a sanction 

for Marriott’s failure to timely answer the complaint. As we will explain, we affirm the 

district court’s dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction, but we vacate the district court’s 

denial of sanctions and remand that issue for reconsideration.

I.

Marriott is incorporated in Delaware, with its principal place of business in 

Maryland. Of the 6,200 hotels in the Marriott system, ninety (1.45%) are in South Carolina. 

Marriott does not own any of those ninety hotels – sixty-three are franchisees, and the 

remaining twenty-seven are licensed or managed by Marriott. Marriott has a Certificate of 

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Authority issued by the South Carolina Secretary of State, as is required of all foreign 

corporations transacting business in the state. See S.C. Code § 33-15-101(a).

Marriott’s website permits online booking and is accessible in South Carolina. 

When reserving a room online, the website requires the guests to provide their address and 

other personal information, and it allows guests to use a drop-down menu to select the 

place of their residence. The drop-down menu lists South Carolina, along with every other 

state in the country and every other country in the world. 

The Fidryches are South Carolina residents. They are members of Marriott’s 

rewards program and have frequently stayed in Marriott and Marriott-affiliated hotels 

around the world. Bud Fidrych was traveling to Milan as part of his job as a demonstration 

pilot for Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation. According to the complaint, the Gulfstream 

team of which Fidrych was a member typically stayed at Marriott hotels when travelling 

for work, in part because the employees were members of Marriott’s rewards program and 

because they received a discount by virtue of a relationship between Marriott and General 

Dynamics, Gulfstream’s parent company.

Fidrych alleges that he specifically requested a Marriott hotel in Milan because he 

always felt safe and comfortable at Marriott hotels, but he was not otherwise involved in 

booking. Instead, the complaint alleges that in accordance with the usual Gulfstream 

procedures, the reservations for the trip were handled by a member of Fidrych’s work team, 

who used a travel agency to book the rooms at the Boscolo. The Boscolo is not owned or 

managed by Marriott, but it is part of Marriott’s “Autograph Collection” of hotels. The 

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operation of the Boscolo is governed by a franchise agreement to which Marriott is not a 

party. 

Fidrych’s affidavit alleges that at some point before the trip, he reviewed the 

Boscolo on Marriott’s website. The Marriott logo “was prominently displayed on the 

website,” which gave him confidence in the Boscolo, particularly since there were no 

disclaimers stating that Marriott would not be responsible for the Boscolo’s conditions or 

services. J.A. 231. Fidrych does not allege that he was in South Carolina when he looked 

up the Boscolo, nor does he specify whether he researched the hotel before or after the 

reservations were made.

During his stay at the Boscolo, Fidrych was injured when the glass shower door 

shattered in his hand, severing a tendon in his thumb. Fidrych underwent two surgeries to 

repair the damage to his hand. The Fidryches subsequently filed suit against Marriott in 

federal district court in South Carolina.

After Marriott was served, it tendered defense of the action to the management of 

the Boscolo, in light of the Boscolo’s contractual indemnification obligations. Boscolo 

management failed to take appropriate action, and no answer was filed. At the Plaintiffs’ 

request, the district court clerk made an entry of default. The district court subsequently 

granted Fidrych’s motion for default judgment and set a date for a damages hearing. 

Although notice to Marriott was not required, the district court sent Marriott notice of the 

default and the hearing. Within a few days, Marriott filed a motion to set aside the default

in which it asserted good cause to be relieved of the default and argued that the district 

court lacked personal jurisdiction over it.

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The district court granted the motion to set aside the default under the standards set 

out in Rule 55 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In that order, the court invited the 

Plaintiffs to file a motion for sanctions against Marriott, noting that attorneys fees could be 

an appropriate sanction. After the default was set aside, Marriott filed a motion to dismiss 

for lack of personal jurisdiction and the Plaintiffs filed a motion seeking sanctions of more 

than $86,000 in attorneys’ fees and expenses. The case was subsequently transferred to a 

different district judge, who granted Marriott’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal 

jurisdiction. As to the Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions, the judge denied it, explaining that 

the requested amount was “excessive, and that Plaintiffs have not shown an adequate causal 

link between the default judgment and the total requested fees.” J.A. 252. This appeal

followed.

II.

The Plaintiffs first challenge the standard applied by the district court when 

considering Marriott’s motion to set aside the default. Rule 55 provides that the district 

court “may set aside an entry of default for good cause, and it may set aside a final default 

judgment under Rule 60(b).” Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(c). Rule 60(b) provides that a “final

judgment” may be set aside, inter alia, if the judgment is the product of “mistake, 

inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(1). When granting the 

motion to set aside the default, the district court applied the good-cause standard of Rule 

55 rather than Rule 60’s excusable-neglect standard. 

 On appeal, the Plaintiffs contend that that an entry of default is a ministerial act 

performed by the district court clerk, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(a), and that Rule 55 applies 

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only to efforts to set aside these ministerial entries of default. In this case, however, after 

the clerk’s entry of default, the district court granted Plaintiffs’ motion for a default 

judgment and set a date for the damages hearing. The Plaintiffs therefore argue that 

because this case proceeded beyond the ministerial entry of default, the court should have 

analyzed the issue under Rule 60’s excusable-neglect standard. We disagree.

Rule 55 contemplates a two-step procedure. The first step is the entry of default, 

which must be made by the clerk “[w]hen a party against whom a judgment for affirmative 

relief is sought has failed to plead or otherwise defend, and that failure is shown by affidavit 

or otherwise.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(a). The second step is the subsequent entry of a default 

judgment, which may be done by the clerk “[i]f the plaintiff’s claim is for a sum certain or 

a sum that can be made certain by computation,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(b)(1), but otherwise 

must be done by the district court, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(b)(2) (“In all other cases, the party 

must apply to the court for a default judgment. . . .”). As the Rule itself makes clear, 

however, the standard for setting aside a default does not turn on whether the clerk or the 

district court entered the order, but on whether the default judgment is final. See Fed. R.

Civ. P. 55(c) (“The court may set aside an entry of default for good cause, and it may set 

aside a final default judgment under Rule 60(b). . . .”) (emphasis added).

In this case, the district court issued an order directing that “judgment by default be 

entered against” Marriott. J.A. 2. That same order, however, recognized that the Plaintiffs 

were not seeking a sum certain and stated that “a hearing shall be scheduled to determine 

the amount of damages.” J.A. 2-3. Because no damages were awarded, the district court’s 

order was not a final judgment of default. See Calderon v. Geico Gen. Ins., 754 F.3d 201, 

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207 (4th Cir. 2014) (explaining that “a judgment for the plaintiff that determines liability 

for, but does not fix the amount of, damages” is not a final judgment) (internal quotation 

marks omitted); Ins. Servs. of Beaufort, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 966 F.2d 847, 853 

(4th Cir. 1992) (“[A] default judgment may not be entered without a full hearing unless the 

damages are liquidated or otherwise uncontested.”). Thus, despite the fact that the district 

court captioned its order as a “default judgment,” the order operated as nothing more than 

an entry of default, albeit one made by the court rather than the clerk. See Chudasama v. 

Mazda Motor Corp., 123 F.3d 1353, 1364 n.27 (11th Cir. 1997) (“When the amount of 

damages is in dispute, . . . only the court may enter judgment, and then only after 

determining the amount of damages. There can be no ‘judgment’ without a determination 

of relief. Thus, the document entitled ‘default judgment’ in this case is more properly 

termed simply a ‘default.’”) (citation omitted). Because no final judgment of default had 

been entered in this case, Rule 60 was inapplicable, and the district court properly applied 

Rule 55’s good-cause standard when considering Marriott’s motion to set aside the default.

The Plaintiffs argue that Marriott cannot show excusable neglect as required by Rule 

60(b), but they do not contend that the district court erred in finding that Rule 55’s goodcause standard was satisfied or that the court otherwise erred in applying the standards 

governing setting aside a default under Rule 55.

1

 As we have explained, the district court 

 1 See Payne ex rel. Estate of Calzada v. Brake, 439 F.3d 198, 204–05 (4th Cir. 

2006) (“When deciding whether to set aside an entry of default, a district court should 

consider whether the moving party has a meritorious defense, whether it acts with 

reasonable promptness, the personal responsibility of the defaulting party, the prejudice to 

(Continued)

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correctly proceeded under Rule 55 rather than Rule 60, and we therefore affirm the district 

court’s decision to set aside Marriott’s default. 

III.

We turn now to the question of personal jurisdiction. Broadly speaking, “[t]he 

validity of an order of a federal court depends upon that court’s having jurisdiction over 

both the subject matter and the parties.” Ins. Corp. of Ireland v. Compagnie des Bauxites 

de Guinee, 456 U.S. 694, 701 (1982). Subject-matter jurisdiction -- an Article III 

requirement -- “functions as a restriction on federal power” and cannot be conferred on the 

court by the actions of the parties. Id. at 702. The requirement that the court have personal 

jurisdiction, however, springs not from Article III of the Constitution, but from the Due 

Process Clause. See id. Because the personal jurisdiction requirement “recognizes and 

protects an individual liberty interest,” id., the requirement may be waived by a defendant’s

“express or implied consent to the personal jurisdiction of the court,” id. at 703.

Absent consent, the exercise of personal jurisdiction must comport with the 

requirements of the Due Process Clause: valid service of process, “as well as . . . ‘minimum 

contacts’ with the forum so that the exercise of jurisdiction ‘does not offend traditional 

notions of fair play and substantial justice.’” Hawkins v. i-TV Digitalis Tavkozlesi zrt., 935 

F.3d 211, 228 (4th Cir. 2019) (quoting Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 316

(1945)). The nature and quantity of forum-state contacts required depends on whether the 

 

the party, whether there is a history of dilatory action, and the availability of sanctions less 

drastic.”).

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case involves the exercise of “specific” or “general” jurisdiction. General jurisdiction 

permits the court to hear any and all claims against the defendant, regardless of where the 

claims arose or the plaintiff’s citizenship. General jurisdiction may be exercised when the 

defendant has contacts with the forum jurisdiction that are “so constant and pervasive as to 

render it essentially at home in the forum State.” Daimler AG v. Bauman, 571 U.S. 117, 

122 (2014) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). If the defendant does not 

have sufficient contacts to be at home in the forum, the court may exercise specific 

jurisdiction if the defendant has continuous and systematic contacts with the forum state 

and the claims at issue arise from those contacts with the forum state. See id. at 126-27. 

The plaintiffs contend that both specific and general jurisdiction are present in this case.

A.

We first consider the Plaintiffs’ claim that Marriott has sufficient contacts with 

South Carolina to subject it to general jurisdiction in the state. Our analysis is guided by 

two relatively recent decisions from the Supreme Court – Daimler (cited above) and 

Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v. Brown, 564 U.S. 915 (2011).

In Goodyear, the plaintiffs were North Carolina residents whose sons died in a bus 

accident in France. Believing that the accident was caused by a defect in the bus tires, the 

plaintiffs filed suit in North Carolina state court against Goodyear USA and three of its 

subsidiaries. Goodyear USA was an Ohio corporation, and the subsidiary-defendants were 

foreign entities organized under the laws of and operating in Luxembourg, Turkey, and 

France. None of the subsidiary defendants had any contacts with the state of North 

Carolina. They did not design, manufacture, or advertise their products in the State; they 

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had no employees in the State; and they were not registered to do business in North 

Carolina. The subsidiary defendants did not sell or ship tires to North Carolina customers, 

but other Goodyear USA affiliates had distributed a small number of Goodyear tires in the 

state. The North Carolina Court of Appeals rejected the subsidiary-defendants’ challenge 

to the assertion of general jurisdiction over them, concluding that the subsidiarydefendants’ act of placing their products into the stream of commerce was sufficient to 

support jurisdiction.

The Supreme Court disagreed. While the “[f]low of a manufacturer’s products into 

the forum . . . may bolster an affiliation germane to specific jurisdiction,” 564 U.S. at 927, 

“the sales of [the subsidiary-defendants’] tires sporadically made in North Carolina through 

intermediaries” was not enough to support the exercise of general jurisdiction, id. at 929. 

“Under the sprawling view of general jurisdiction urged by respondents and embraced by 

the North Carolina Court of Appeals, any substantial manufacturer or seller of goods would 

be amenable to suit, on any claim for relief, wherever its products are distributed.” Id.

Instead, “general jurisdiction over foreign (sister-state or foreign-country) corporations” is 

limited to cases where “their affiliations with the State are so continuous and systematic as 

to render them essentially at home in the forum State.” Id. at 919 (emphasis added, internal 

quotation marks omitted). “For an individual, the paradigm forum for the exercise of 

general jurisdiction is the individual’s domicile; for a corporation, it is an equivalent place, 

one in which the corporation is fairly regarded as at home.” Id. at 924. As the Court 

recognized, the paradigm forums where corporations are fairly regarded as at home are the 

forums where it is incorporated and where it has its principal place of business. See id.

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In Daimler, residents of Argentina filed an action in California district court against 

Daimler AG, a German corporation that manufactures Mercedes-Benz automobiles. The 

plaintiffs alleged that “during Argentina’s 1976–1983 ‘Dirty War,’ Daimler’s Argentinian 

subsidiary . . . . collaborated with state security forces to kidnap, detain, torture, and kill” 

employees of the subsidiary, and they sought damages for human-rights violations. 571 

U.S. at 121. The plaintiffs contended that California could exercise personal jurisdiction 

over Daimler by virtue of the California contacts of a different Daimler subsidiary, 

Mercedes–Benz USA, LLC (MBUSA), which had extensive contacts with California. See 

id. The Court assumed for the purposes of its decision that MBUSA’s contacts with 

California were sufficient to render MBUSA at home in California and thus subject to 

general jurisdiction, and it also assumed that MBUSA’s California contacts could be 

attributed to Daimler. See id. at 134, 136. But even with those assumptions, the Court 

found the contacts insufficient to make Daimler at home in California.

The Court emphasized that “only a limited set of affiliations with a forum will render 

a defendant amenable to all-purpose jurisdiction there. ‘For an individual, the paradigm 

forum for the exercise of general jurisdiction is the individual’s domicile; for a corporation, 

it is an equivalent place, one in which the corporation is fairly regarded as at home.’” Id.

at 137 (quoting Goodyear, 564 U.S. at 924). Echoing Goodyear, the Court held that a

corporation may be fairly regarded as at home in the forum where it is incorporated and 

the forum where it has its principal place of business. See id. at 137. As the Court 

explained, “[t]hose affiliations have the virtue of being unique -- that is, each ordinarily 

indicates only one place -- as well as easily ascertainable. These bases afford plaintiffs 

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recourse to at least one clear and certain forum in which a corporate defendant may be sued 

on any and all claims.” Id. (citation omitted). Moreover, Daimler made it clear that only 

in the “exceptional case” could the contacts with another forum be “so substantial and of 

such a nature as to render the corporation at home in that State.” Id. at 139 n.19. “It is one 

thing to hold a corporation answerable for operations in the forum State, quite another to 

expose it to suit on claims having no connection whatever to the forum State.” Id. (citation 

omitted).

The Daimler Court rejected the plaintiffs’ assertion that general jurisdiction could 

be exercised “in every State in which a corporation engages in a substantial, continuous, 

and systematic course of business,” describing the assertion as “unacceptably grasping.” 

Id. at 138 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court explained that the existence of 

continuous and systematic contacts with the forum, though required for the exercise of 

specific jurisdiction, was not sufficient to support the exercise of general jurisdiction. 

“[T]he inquiry under Goodyear is not whether a foreign corporation’s in-forum contacts 

can be said to be in some sense continuous and systematic, it is whether that corporation’s 

affiliations with the State are so continuous and systematic as to render it essentially at 

home in the forum State.” Id. at 138-39 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). 

The Court found the connections to California to be insufficient to support the exercise of 

general jurisdiction:

Here, neither Daimler nor MBUSA is incorporated in California, nor does 

either entity have its principal place of business there. If Daimler’s 

California activities sufficed to allow adjudication of this Argentina-rooted 

case in California, the same global reach would presumably be available in 

every other State in which MBUSA’s sales are sizable. Such exorbitant 

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exercises of all-purpose jurisdiction would scarcely permit out-of-state 

defendants to structure their primary conduct with some minimum assurance 

as to where that conduct will and will not render them liable to suit.

Id. at 139 (internal quotation marks omitted).

Given the principles set out in Goodyear and Daimler, we have no difficulty 

concluding that Marriott’s contacts with South Carolina are insufficient to make it “at 

home” in South Carolina, as is required for the exercise of general jurisdiction.

As previously discussed, Marriott’s contacts with South Carolina are limited. 

Marriott has a Certificate of Authority to conduct business in the state. Of the 6,200 hotels 

in the Marriott system, only ninety (1.45%) are in South Carolina. Marriott, however, does 

not own any of those hotels; sixty-three are franchisees and the remaining twenty-seven

are licensed or managed by Marriott. Marriott’s interactive website is accessible in South 

Carolina, and it includes South Carolina in the drop-down menu used by customers when 

selecting their place of residence. 

While these contacts certainly qualify as systematic and continuous, they are not

substantial enough to “render [Marriott] essentially at home in the forum State.” Daimler, 

571 U.S. at 139. Marriott’s South Carolina operations are very limited in scope and 

represent a small fraction of the company’s overall operations. See id. at 139 n.20 (“[T]he 

general jurisdiction inquiry does not focus solely on the magnitude of the defendant’s instate contacts. . . . General jurisdiction instead calls for an appraisal of a corporation’s 

activities in their entirety, nationwide and worldwide.”). Because there is nothing that 

would distinguish Marriott’s relationship with South Carolina from its relationship with 

any of the other states where it does business but where it is not incorporated or 

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headquartered, this is not the exceptional case for general jurisdiction contemplated by the 

Daimler Court. Indeed, accepting the Plaintiffs’ jurisdictional arguments in this case 

would mean that Marriott would be subject to general jurisdiction in every state where its 

hotels are located. The Plaintiffs’ argument is thus precisely the “unacceptably grasping” 

argument rejected by the Daimler Court. Id. at 138. As the Court explained, “[a] 

corporation that operates in many places can scarcely be deemed at home in all of them.” 

Id. at 139 n.20.

Accordingly, because Marriott’s contacts with South Carolina are not sufficient to 

render it “at home” in South Carolina, the requirements for the exercise of contact-based 

general jurisdiction are not satisfied in this case.

B.

Even if Marriott’s contacts with South Carolina are insufficient to support the 

exercise of general jurisdiction, the Plaintiffs contend that Marriott consented to general 

jurisdiction in South Carolina when it obtained a Certificate of Authority to conduct 

business in the state. See Ins. Corp. of Ireland, 456 U.S. at 703 (explaining that the 

requirement of personal jurisdiction may be waived by a defendant’s “express or implied 

consent to the personal jurisdiction of the court”).

South Carolina requires all foreign corporations to obtain a certificate of authority 

before conducting business in the state. See S.C. Code § 33-15-101(a) (“A foreign 

corporation may not transact business in this State until it obtains a certificate of authority 

from the Secretary of State.”). Marriott complied with that requirement and operates under 

a properly issued certificate of authority. Under South Carolina law, “[a] foreign 

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corporation with a valid certificate of authority has the same but no greater rights and has 

the same but no greater privileges as, and . . . is subject to the same duties, restrictions, 

penalties, and liabilities now or later imposed on, a domestic corporation of like character.” 

S.C. Code § 33-15-105(b). Because a South Carolina corporation is subject to general 

jurisdiction in South Carolina, see Daimler, 571 U.S. at 137, the Plaintiffs contend that 

under § 105(b), foreign corporations who chose to obtain a certificate of authority in South 

Carolina have consented to general jurisdiction in South Carolina. We disagree. 

The Plaintiffs’ argument is based on Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Co. of 

Philadelphia v. Gold Issue Mining & Milling Co., 243 U.S. 93 (1917), and Robert Mitchell 

Furniture Co. v. Selden Breck Construction Co., 257 U.S. 213 (1921), both decided well 

before the development of the minimum-contacts-focused approach expressed by the Court 

in International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.S. 310 (1945).

In Pennsylvania Fire, the Supreme Court held that a foreign-corporation defendant 

consented to general jurisdiction in Missouri by complying with a state law requiring it to 

obtain a business license and execute a power of attorney agreeing that service on its 

representative was the equivalent of personal service. The Court explained that because 

the Supreme Court of Missouri had held that the statute created consent to general 

jurisdiction, the defendant accepted that condition by complying with the statute. See 243 

U.S. at 95-96.

However, the Court in Robert Mitchell Furniture held that a foreign corporation did 

not consent to general jurisdiction by complying with a state statute requiring appointment 

of an agent for service of process. The Court explained that “[u]nless the state law either 

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expressly or by local construction gives to the appointment a larger scope, we should not 

construe it to extend to suits in respect of business transacted by the foreign corporation 

elsewhere, at least if begun, as this was, when the long previous appointment of the agent 

is the only ground for imputing to the defendant an even technical presence.” 257 U.S. at 

216.

Following Pennsylvania Fire and Robert Mitchell Furniture, some circuits have 

concluded that a foreign corporation obtaining a business license or appointing an agent 

for service of process in a state has consented to general jurisdiction in the state if state law 

so provides. See, e.g., Waite v. AII Acquisition Corp., 901 F.3d 1307, 1319 (11th Cir. 2018)

(explaining that under Pennsylvania Fire and Robert Mitchell Furniture, “whether 

appointing an agent for service of process subjects a foreign defendant to general personal 

jurisdiction in the forum depends upon the state statutory language and state court decisions 

interpreting it”); King v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 632 F.3d 570, 576 (9th Cir. 2011) 

(Pennsylvania Fire and Robert Mitchell Furniture “stand for the proposition that federal 

courts must, subject to federal constitutional restraints, look to state statutes and case law 

in order to determine whether a foreign corporation is subject to personal jurisdiction in a 

given case because the corporation has appointed an agent for service of process”).

In Ratliff v. Cooper Labs., Inc., 444 F.2d 745 (4th Cir. 1971), however, this court

rejected a claim that a foreign corporation’s compliance with an earlier version of South 

Carolina’s domestication statute subjected it to general jurisdiction in South Carolina:

We think the application to do business and the appointment of an agent for 

service to fulfill a state law requirement is of no special weight in the present 

context. Applying for the privilege of doing business is one thing, but the 

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actual exercise of that privilege is quite another. See International Shoe Co. 

v. Washington, supra, 326 U.S. at 319, 66 S. Ct. 154. The principles of due 

process require a firmer foundation than mere compliance with state 

domestication statutes.

Id. at 748.

Ratliff did not cite Pennsylvania Fire or otherwise acknowledge the line of cases 

holding that obtaining a business license or appointing an agent for service of process

amounts to consent to general jurisdiction. Nonetheless, given the court’s treatment of the 

business license as simply one of the defendant’s contacts with the state and its reliance on 

International Shoe when concluding that due process required more than mere compliance 

with a state’s domestication statute, Ratliff seems to have implicitly concluded that the 

Pennsylvania Fire line of cases had been superseded by International Shoe’s minimumcontacts approach to personal jurisdiction. See Siemer v. Learjet Acquisition Corp., 966 

F.2d 179, 181-82 (5th Cir. 1992) (relying on Ratliff to reject claim that foreign 

corporation’s certification to do business in forum state automatically conferred general 

jurisdiction); id. at 183 (“To assert, as plaintiffs do, that mere service on a corporate agent 

automatically confers general jurisdiction displays a fundamental misconception of 

corporate jurisdictional principles. This concept is directly contrary to the historical 

rationale of International Shoe and subsequent Supreme Court decisions.”).

Moreover, we find it difficult to reconcile the Pennsylvania Fire approach with the 

modern view of general jurisdiction expressed in the Supreme Court’s recent cases. See

BNSF Ry. Co. v. Tyrrell, 137 S. Ct. 1549, 1557 (2017) (questioning the persuasiveness of 

cases “decided before this Court’s transformative decision on personal jurisdiction in 

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International Shoe”); Daimler, 571 U.S. at 138 n.18 (suggesting that certain personaljurisdiction cases “decided in the era dominated by [the] territorial thinking [of Pennoyer 

v. Neff, 95 U.S. 714 (1877)] should not attract heavy reliance today”); see also Brown v. 

Lockheed Martin Corp., 814 F.3d 619, 638 (2d Cir. 2016) (“Pennsylvania Fire is now 

simply too much at odds with the approach to general jurisdiction adopted in Daimler to 

govern as categorically as [the plaintiff] suggests . . . .”). Given the number of states that 

subject foreign corporations to domestication requirements, foreign corporations would 

likely be subject to general jurisdiction in every state where they operate -- a result directly 

at odds with the views expressed by the Court in Daimler. See Daimler, 571 U.S. at 138

(rejecting as “unacceptably grasping” the claim that general jurisdiction exists “in every 

State in which a corporation engages in a substantial, continuous, and systematic course of 

business”) (internal quotation marks omitted); id. at 139 n.20 (“A corporation that operates 

in many places can scarcely be deemed at home in all of them. Otherwise, ‘at home’ would 

be synonymous with ‘doing business’ tests framed before specific jurisdiction evolved in 

the United States.”).

However, even if we assume that International Shoe and Daimler had no effect on 

the consent-to-general-jurisdiction rule set out in Pennsylvania Fire and Robert Mitchell 

Furniture, we conclude that under the rules set out in those cases, Marriott did not consent 

to general jurisdiction by complying with South Carolina’s domestication statute.

Under the rules set out in Pennsylvania Fire and Robert Mitchell Furniture, 

obtaining the necessary certification to conduct business in a given state amounts to consent 

to general jurisdiction in that state only if that condition is explicit in the statute or the state 

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courts have interpreted the statute as imposing that condition. S.C. Code § 33-15-105 states 

that a foreign corporation doing business in South Carolina under a certificate of authority 

“is subject to the same duties, restrictions, penalties, and liabilities” as a domestic 

corporation. Because domestic corporations are subject to general jurisdiction in South 

Carolina, the Plaintiffs contend that under § 33-15-105, foreign corporations operating 

under a certificate of authority are likewise subject to general jurisdiction in South 

Carolina. We do not agree with the Plaintiffs’ reading of South Carolina law.

S.C. Code § 33-15-101 establishes the requirement that foreign corporations

transacting business in the state obtain a certificate of authority, see id. § 33-15-101(a), and 

provides a list of activities that do not amount to transacting business, see id. § 33-15-

101(b). The South Carolina Reporters’ comments accompanying that statute instruct that 

“[a] corporation can be qualified to do business in South Carolina and have appointed an 

agent for service of process but still not be conducting sufficient activities to be subject to 

suit here.” S.C. Code § 33-15-101, S.C. Reporters’ Comments § 2 (emphasis added). The 

position taken in the statutory commentary thus is directly contrary to the Plaintiffs’ 

assertion that under South Carolina law, a foreign corporation consents to general 

jurisdiction by obtaining a certificate of authority to transact business. 

The Plaintiffs’ position has also been rejected by the Court of Appeals of South 

Carolina. In Builder Mart of America, Inc. v. First Union Corp., 563 S.E.2d 352 (S.C. Ct. 

App. 2002), overruled in part on other grounds by Farmer v. Monsanto Corp., 579 S.E.2d 

325 (S.C. 2003), the court held that a North Carolina bank that did not conduct business in 

South Carolina was not subject to personal jurisdiction in South Carolina simply because 

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it had registered with the South Carolina Board of Financial Institutions and appointed an 

agent for service of process. See id. at 355. In reaching that conclusion, the court relied 

on the statutory commentary to § 33-15-101 quoted above and on this court’s decision in 

Ratliff. See id.

Although neither Builder Mart nor the statutory commentary speak in terms of 

consent to general jurisdiction, they nonetheless make clear that a certificate of authority 

does not automatically subject a foreign corporation to jurisdiction in South Carolina courts 

and that jurisdiction instead depends on sufficient South Carolina contacts by the foreign 

corporation. That is sufficient to close the door to the Plaintiffs’ consent argument.2

 Even 

under the rules set out in Pennsylvania Fire, obtaining a certificate of authority operates as 

consent to general jurisdiction only if state law so provides. As indicated by Builder Mart 

and the statutory commentary, South Carolina law does not make consent to general 

jurisdiction a consequence of obtaining a certificate of authority to transact business. The 

district court therefore properly concluded that Marriott did not consent to the exercise of 

general jurisdiction by obtaining the certificate of authority.3

 2 But to the extent there is any doubt, § 33-15-105(d) also provides that “[b]y 

obtaining a certificate of authority, the foreign corporation agrees to be subject to the 

jurisdiction of the Department of Revenue and the courts of this State to determine its South 

Carolina tax liability.” S.C. Code § 33-15-105(d). This explicit statutory requirement that 

foreign corporations consent to jurisdiction in relation to certain tax issues would seem to 

exclude consent to general jurisdiction. To read otherwise would render § 33-15-105(d) 

superfluous.

3 In support of their consent argument, the Plaintiffs point to the official 

commentary to § 33-15-107, which states that a “foreign corporation that obtains a 

certificate of authority in a state thereby agrees that it is amenable to suit in the state.” S.C. 

(Continued)

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21

C.

We turn now to the Plaintiffs’ claim that South Carolina may properly exercise 

specific jurisdiction in this case. The Due Process clause permits the exercise of specific 

personal jurisdiction over a defendant if “the defendant [has] purposefully established 

minimum contacts in the forum State such that it should reasonably anticipate being haled 

into court there.” Perdue Foods LLC v. BRF S.A., 814 F.3d 185, 189 (4th Cir. 2016) 

(internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). These requirements are met, and specific

jurisdiction may be exercised, if “the defendant has purposefully directed his activities at 

residents of the forum, and the litigation results from alleged injuries that arise out of or 

relate to those activities.” Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 471 U.S. 462, 472 (1985)

(citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see Perdue Foods, 814 F.3d at 189 (When 

determining whether specific jurisdiction exists, “we consider (1) the extent to which the 

defendant purposefully availed itself of the privilege of conducting activities in the State; 

(2) whether the plaintiffs’ claims arise out of those activities directed at the State; and (3) 

 

Code. Ann. § 33-15-107, Official Comment. In the Plaintiffs’ view, a foreign corporation 

that agrees it is “amenable to suit in South Carolina” has also agreed to submit to general 

jurisdiction in the state. We disagree. In light of the statutory commentary to § 33-15-101 

quoted above, which makes it clear that a certificate of authority does not automatically 

confer jurisdiction, the Plaintiffs’ conflation of “amenable to suit” to “general jurisdiction” 

is clearly incorrect. We believe the phrase “amenable to suit in the state” in this context is 

best understood as amenable to service of process in the state. That understanding of the 

phrase maintains consistency with the § 101 commentary, and it makes the most sense 

contextually, given that § 33-15-107, on which the Plaintiffs rely, involves a foreign 

corporation’s obligation to maintain a registered agent in South Carolina. See S.C. Code § 

33-15-107. The commentary to § 107 thus does not affect our conclusion that under South 

Carolina law, a foreign corporation does not consent to general jurisdiction by obtaining a 

certificate of authority to transact business in the state.

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22

whether the exercise of personal jurisdiction would be constitutionally reasonable.”)

(internal quotation marks omitted).

1.

Taking things in reverse order, we begin with the requirement that the litigation 

must arise out of Marriott’s contacts with South Carolina. 

“In order for a state court to exercise specific jurisdiction, the suit must arise out of 

or relate to the defendant’s contacts with the forum.” Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior 

Court of California, 137 S. Ct. 1773, 1780 (2017) (internal quotation marks and alterations 

omitted).

In other words, there must be an affiliation between the forum and the 

underlying controversy, principally, an activity or an occurrence that takes 

place in the forum State and is therefore subject to the State’s regulation. For 

this reason, specific jurisdiction is confined to adjudication of issues deriving 

from, or connected with, the very controversy that establishes jurisdiction. 

Id. (citation, internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). “When there is no such 

connection, specific jurisdiction is lacking regardless of the extent of a defendant’s 

unconnected activities in the State.” Id. at 1781. 

Marriott’s business activity in South Carolina is not insignificant, as it franchises, 

licenses, or manages ninety hotels in the state. Those activities, however, have nothing to 

do with the claims asserted by the Plaintiffs in this action. That is, the claims asserted after 

Bud Fidrych’s injury in a Marriott-affiliated hotel in Milan do not in any sense “arise out 

of or relate to” Marriott’s connections to the hotels located in South Carolina. Because 

the Plaintiffs’ claims do not arise from them, Marriott’s hotel-related connections to South 

Carolina are not relevant to our specific-jurisdiction inquiry. See id. at 1781.

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The only other action by Marriott that is arguably relevant is its operation of its 

website. As previously mentioned, Marriott operates a website that is accessible in South 

Carolina and includes South Carolina on a drop-down menu used to select a customer’s 

place of residence. Fidrych asserts in his affidavit that he used the website to review the 

Boscolo and that what he saw made him comfortable with the Boscolo, particularly given 

the absence of any disclaimers of responsibility by Marriott for issues involving the 

Boscolo. Although Fidrych did not make his own reservation, his complaint alleges that 

the travel agent used by the Gulfstream team did use Marriott’s website to make the team’s 

reservations at the Boscolo.

Whether the use of the website to make the reservations means that Fidrych’s 

personal injury claims arise from or relate to Marriott’s operation of the website is a 

difficult question.4

 Under similar factual circumstances, the Eleventh Circuit has rejected 

that argument. See Oldfield v. Pueblo De Bahia Lora, S.A., 558 F.3d 1210 (11th Cir. 2009). 

The plaintiff in Oldfield was a Florida resident who learned about a resort in Costa Rica 

through the resort’s website and used the website to make a reservation. While staying at 

the resort, the plaintiff chartered an independently owned boat for a fishing trip and was 

 4 We note that the Supreme Court recently granted certiorari to address 

whether the arising-out-of requirement is satisfied in cases where the defendant’s forum 

contacts did not cause the plaintiff’s claims. See Ford Motor Co. v. Montana Eighth 

District Court, S. Ct. Docket No. 19-368, Question Presented (“Whether the ‘arise out of 

or relate to’ requirement is met when none of the defendant's forum contacts caused the 

plaintiff’s claims, such that the plaintiff’s claims would be the same even if the defendant 

had no forum contacts.”), consolidated with Ford Motor Co. v. Bandemer, S. Ct. Docket 

No. 19-369.

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injured through the negligence of the boat captain. The plaintiff filed suit against the resort 

in federal district court in Florida, alleging that the resort was legally responsible for the 

captain’s negligence. The Eleventh Circuit concluded that the district court lacked personal 

jurisdiction over the resort because the plaintiff’s injuries did not arise out of his use of the 

website. See id. at 1223-24 (“A finding that such a tenuous relationship between [the 

resort’s] relevant contacts and the negligence of the captain who was not employed or 

controlled by [the resort] somehow satisfied the relatedness requirement would not only 

contravene the fairness principles that permeate the jurisdictional due process analysis, but 

would also interpret the requirement so broadly as to render it virtually meaningless.”).

We need not definitively resolve the issue in this case, however. As we explain 

below, even if we assume that Fidrych’s claims arose from or were sufficiently related to 

the use of Marriott’s website, Marriott’s operation of a website accessible in South Carolina 

is insufficient to satisfy the minimum-contacts requirement of the personal-jurisdiction

inquiry.

2.

For the exercise of specific jurisdiction to be permissible, “the defendant [must 

have] purposefully directed his activities at residents of the forum.” Burger King, 471 U.S.

at 472 (internal quotation marks omitted). “This purposeful availment requirement ensures 

that a defendant will not be haled into a jurisdiction solely as a result of random, fortuitous, 

or attenuated contacts, or of the unilateral activity of another party or a third person.” Id.

at 475 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). 

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[W]here the defendant deliberately has engaged in significant activities 

within a State, or has created continuing obligations between himself and 

residents of the forum, he manifestly has availed himself of the privilege of 

conducting business there, and because his activities are shielded by the 

benefits and protections of the forum’s laws it is presumptively not 

unreasonable to require him to submit to the burdens of litigation in that 

forum as well.

Id. at 475-76 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted); see ESAB Grp., Inc. v. 

Centricut, Inc., 126 F.3d 617, 625 (4th Cir. 1997) (“With respect to specific jurisdiction, 

the touchstone remains that an out-of-state person have engaged in some activity 

purposefully directed toward the forum state. The contacts related to the cause of action 

must create a substantial connection with the forum state . . . .”) (internal quotation marks 

and alteration omitted).

In this case, none of the wrongs Marriott is alleged to have committed took place in 

South Carolina. The Plaintiffs contend the website booking created a contract between 

Marriott and Bud Fidrych and that Marriott breached an implied warranty of safety and 

fitness for intended purpose by providing a defective shower door. They allege that 

Marriott was negligent by failing to regularly inspect its properties and discover the 

defective shower door. They also assert three claims based on Italian law: that Marriott 

breached a contractual duty to maintain a safe hotel; that Marriott is liable because the 

defective shower door was in the exclusive control of the Boscolo, which operated as 

Marriott’s agent; and that Marriott is responsible for the general negligence of its agent. 

Thus, none of Marriott’s actions or omissions that form the basis of the Plaintiffs’ claims 

took place in South Carolina or were otherwise directed at South Carolina residents. 

Accordingly, one of the most frequent bases for the exercise of specific jurisdiction -- an 

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26

activity by the defendant in the forum state -- is absent in this case. See Bristol-Myers 

Squibb, 137 S. Ct. at 1781.

Moreover, as discussed above, Marriott’s qualification to do business in South 

Carolina and its involvement in ninety hotels in the state have nothing to do with the claims 

asserted in this case and thus are not relevant to our inquiry. See Walden v. Fiore, 571 U.S. 

277, 284 (2014) (“For a State to exercise jurisdiction consistent with due process, the 

defendant’s suit-related conduct must create a substantial connection with the forum 

State.”) (emphasis added). Accordingly, we are again left with Marriott’s operation of its 

website as the only arguable jurisdictional hook connecting this case to South Carolina. 

The question, then, is whether Marriott’s operation of the website amounts to activity 

purposefully directed at South Carolina residents. 

While Marriott obviously uses its website to engage in commercial transactions, the 

website does not target South Carolina residents for commercial transactions any more than 

it targets any other state. Instead of targeting any particular state, the website makes itself 

available to any one who seeks it out, regardless of where they live. In our view, the mere 

fact that the website is accessible in a given state does not mean that Marriott is targeting 

its activities at that state. See ESAB, 126 F.3d at 625 (rejecting claim of specific jurisdiction 

where defendant did not direct its activities at South Carolina but instead “focused its 

activities more generally on customers located throughout the United States and Canada 

without focusing on and targeting South Carolina”).

As the Plaintiffs point out, however, the website is interactive, not passive. The 

interactivity of a website is a jurisdictionally relevant fact. See ALS Scan, Inc. v. Digital 

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Serv. Consultants, Inc., 293 F.3d 707, 713-14 (4th Cir. 2002). In ALS Scan, we considered 

the jurisdictional implications of internet-based communications and activity. Formulating 

principles for determining “when it can be deemed that an out-of-state citizen, through 

electronic contacts, has conceptually ‘entered’ the State via the Internet for jurisdictional 

purposes,” id. at 713, we adopted the approach set out in Zippo Manufacturing Co. v. Zippo 

Dot Com, Inc., 952 F. Supp. 1119 (W.D. Pa. 1997). In Zippo, the court concluded that

the likelihood that personal jurisdiction can be constitutionally exercised is 

directly proportionate to the nature and quality of commercial activity that 

an entity conducts over the Internet. This sliding scale is consistent with well 

developed personal jurisdiction principles. At one end of the spectrum are 

situations where a defendant clearly does business over the Internet. If the 

defendant enters into contracts with residents of a foreign jurisdiction that 

involve the knowing and repeated transmission of computer files over the 

Internet, personal jurisdiction is proper. At the opposite end are situations 

where a defendant has simply posted information on an Internet Web site 

which is accessible to users in foreign jurisdictions. A passive Web site that 

does little more than make information available to those who are interested 

in it is not grounds for the exercise [of] personal jurisdiction. The middle 

ground is occupied by interactive Web sites where a user can exchange 

information with the host computer. In these cases, the exercise of 

jurisdiction is determined by examining the level of interactivity and 

commercial nature of the exchange of information that occurs on the Web 

site.

Id. at 1124 (citations omitted).

5

 5 The internet we know today is very different from the internet of 1997, when 

Zippo was decided. According to Zippo, in 1997 the internet was used “by over 30 million 

individuals, corporations, organizations, and educational institutions worldwide.” Zippo 

Mfg. Co. v. Zippo Dot Com, Inc., 952 F. Supp. 1119, 1123 (W.D. Pa. 1997). In 2000, the 

numbers of internet users worldwide had jumped to 361 million. And by 2011, the internet 

had almost 2 billion users. See Zoe Niesel, #personaljurisdiction: A New Age of Internet 

Contacts, 94 Ind. L.J. 103, 127 n.197 (Winter 2019). When Zippo was decided, desktop 

computers provided the primary manner of accessing the internet; now, with the advent of 

smart phones, people carry the internet with them everywhere. See id. at 127 (noting that 

(Continued)

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Although Marriott clearly does business over the internet, it is not using its website 

to enter into long-term contracts “that involve the knowing and repeated transmission of 

computer files over the Internet.” Id. We therefore conclude that Marriott’s interactive 

website best fits in Zippo’s “middle ground,” where additional analysis is required to 

answer the jurisdictional question.

In our view, the level of interactivity of a website like Marriott’s is not enough, on 

its own, to make the website a sufficient basis to support the exercise of specific 

jurisdiction. The interactivity of the website is relatively limited -- it permits customers to 

input their travel dates to view available hotels and to book rooms online, which requires 

them to provide personal and financial information. The website is not used to create a 

continuing, back-and-forth relationship between Marriott and the website user; it is used to 

facilitate the making of a one-off hotel reservation. The website is thus in many ways the 

digital equivalent of a toll-free telephone number, providing a simple, cost-free way for 

customers to contact the company.

 

more people now access the internet through a mobile device than through desktop 

computers). Moreover, on today’s internet, “[i]t is an extraordinarily rare website” that is 

not interactive at some level. Kindig It Design, Inc. v. Creative Controls, Inc., 157 F. Supp. 

3d 1167, 1174 (D. Utah 2016). Given the pace of technological advancement since Zippo

and the changes in the way the internet is used, a re-evaluation of the utility of the Zippo 

approach may be prudent. Until then, the Zippo approach remains binding. See United 

States v. Bush, 944 F.3d 189, 195 (4th Cir. 2019) (“[T]he panels of this Court are 

generally bound by our precedent, and this panel is not entitled to reject or alter an 

earlier panel’s ruling, in the absence of a controlling en banc ruling or Supreme 

Court decision.”).

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Moreover, if we attach too much significance on the mere fact of interactivity, we 

risk losing sight of the key issue in a specific jurisdiction case -- whether “the defendant 

has purposefully directed [its] activities at residents of the forum.” Burger King, 471 U.S. 

at 472 (emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted). The ALS Scan court, of course, 

recognized purposeful availment as the touchstone of the minimum-contacts analysis and

made it the first prong of its re-formulated Zippo analysis:

[A]dopting and adapting the Zippo model, we conclude that a State may, 

consistent with due process, exercise judicial power over a person outside of 

the State when that person (1) directs electronic activity into the State, (2) 

with the manifested intent of engaging in business or other interactions 

within the State, and (3) that activity creates, in a person within the State, a 

potential cause of action cognizable in the State’s courts.

ALS Scan, 293 F.3d at 714 (emphasis added). Marriott obviously intends to engage in 

commercial transactions through the website. Nonetheless, the website is not directed at 

the residents of any particular forum. See id. at 715 (finding no jurisdiction in Maryland 

in part because the defendant “did not direct its electronic activity specifically at any target 

in Maryland”).

The Plaintiffs focus much of their attention on the fact that the website includes 

South Carolina as an option in the drop-down menu used by customers to select their state 

of residence when making reservations. South Carolina’s inclusion in a list of every other 

state in the country (and every other country in the world) shows that Marriott was willing 

to accept reservations from South Carolina residents, but it does not show that Marriott was 

targeting South Carolina residents through its website. To the contrary, the list of options 

confirms that the website was accessible to all but targeted at no one in particular. See

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30

NexLearn, LLC v. Allen Interactions, Inc., 859 F.3d 1371, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (“Allen’s 

inclusion of Kansas in its dropdown of all states on its website is not enough to subject 

Allen to jurisdiction in Kansas. Allen’s address selector may indicate its amenability to 

selling ZebraZapps to Kansas residents, but it does not establish minimum contacts arising 

out of or related to the infringement claim.”). The fact that Marriott’s website uses dropdown menus that include South Carolina simply does nothing to strengthen the 

jurisdictionally relevant connections between Marriott and South Carolina. 

Accordingly, even though Marriott’s website is interactive, Marriott does not use it 

to target South Carolina residents in particular. See Carefirst of Maryland, Inc. v. Carefirst

Pregnancy Centers, Inc., 334 F.3d 390, 401 (4th Cir. 2003) (“[W]hen CPC set up its 

generally accessible, semi-interactive Internet website, it did not thereby direct electronic 

activity into Maryland with the manifest intent of engaging in business or other interactions 

within that state in particular.”); see also Advanced Tactical Ordnance Sys., LLC v. Real 

Action Paintball, Inc., 751 F.3d 796, 802–03 (7th Cir. 2014) (“[T]he operation of an 

interactive website does not show that the defendant has formed a contact with the forum 

state.”). The general availability of the website to South Carolina residents thus does not 

create the substantial connection to South Carolina necessary to support the exercise of 

jurisdiction. See Walden, 571 U.S. at 284 (“For a State to exercise jurisdiction consistent 

with due process, the defendant’s suit-related conduct must create a substantial connection

with the forum State.”) (emphasis added). 

We recognize, of course, that there are other South Carolina connections in this case. 

For example, the Fidryches are South Carolina residents, and the effects of Bud’s injury 

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31

are felt in South Carolina. As the Supreme Court has made clear, however, the connection 

between the defendant and the forum “must arise out of contacts that the defendant himself

creates with the forum State.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). “Put simply, 

however significant the plaintiff’s contacts with the forum may be, those contacts cannot 

be decisive in determining whether the defendant’s due process rights are violated.” Id. at 

285 (emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted); see ESAB, 126 F.3d at 626 

(“Although the place that the plaintiff feels the alleged injury is plainly relevant to the 

inquiry, it must ultimately be accompanied by the defendant’s own contacts with the state 

if jurisdiction over the defendant is to be upheld.”).

We therefore conclude that Marriott’s case-related contacts with South Carolina are 

too tenuous and too insubstantial to constitutionally permit the exercise of specific 

jurisdiction over Marriott.6

 See Walden, 571 U.S. at 284. Because neither general nor 

specific jurisdiction may be exercised in this case, the district court properly granted 

Marriott’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.

IV.

Finally, we turn to the Plaintiffs’ claim that the district court erred by denying their 

motion for sanctions.

A.

 6 If we were to conclude otherwise, then every hotel operator would be subject 

to personal jurisdiction in the state of residence of every guest who used the hotel’s website 

to make the reservation. A private guide offering walking tours of Paris would likewise be 

subject to personal jurisdiction in every state where his customers live if they used his 

website to book the tour.

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32

“Federal courts possess certain inherent powers, not conferred by rule or statute, to 

manage their own affairs so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.

That authority includes the ability to fashion an appropriate sanction for conduct which 

abuses the judicial process.” Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Haeger, 137 S. Ct. 1178, 

1186 (2017) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see Life Techs. Corp. v. 

Govindaraj, 931 F.3d 259, 267 (4th Cir. 2019) (explaining that district courts “have

the inherent power to order sanctions to preserve the integrity of the judicial process and 

to punish bad-faith conduct intended to delay or disrupt the course of litigation or to impede 

enforcement of a court order”) (internal quotation marks omitted). One of the sanctions 

available to a district court is an award of attorney’s fees “instructing a party that has acted 

in bad faith to reimburse legal fees and costs incurred by the other side.” Goodyear, 137 

S. Ct. at 1186.

In its order setting aside Marriott’s default, the district judge originally assigned to 

the case (Judge Duffy) noted the possibility of awarding sanctions to compensate the 

plaintiffs for the costs they incurred as a result of Marriott’s failure to answer. See J.A. 55 

(“[T]he Fourth Circuit has looked approvingly on an award of attorney’s fees and costs to 

the party opposing the motion to set aside the entry of default. . . . The Fidryches are 

invited to suggest appropriate alternative sanctions to default judgment, and the Court’s 

example of attorney’s fees is illustrative only.”). The plaintiffs subsequently filed a motion 

seeking more than $86,000 in attorney’s fees and costs.

After the motion was filed, the case was transferred to a different district judge 

(Judge Hendricks), who denied the Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions in the same order that 

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33

granted Marriott’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. When denying 

sanctions, Judge Hendricks concluded that the requested amount was “excessive, and that 

Plaintiffs have not shown an adequate causal link between the default judgment and the 

total requested fees, whether incurred or paid.” J.A. 252.

B.

Before considering the Plaintiffs’ challenges to the district court’s decision, we 

pause to address one of Marriott’s arguments. Marriott contends that regardless of the 

district court’s analysis, the denial of the Plaintiffs’ motion must be affirmed because any 

sanctions award would be void for lack of personal jurisdiction. See Ins. Corp. of Ireland, 

456 U.S. at 701 (“The validity of an order of a federal court depends upon that court’s 

having jurisdiction over both the subject matter and the parties.”); Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. 

v. AMH Roman Two NC, LLC, 859 F.3d 295, 299 (4th Cir. 2017) (“An order is void only 

if the court lacked personal or subject matter jurisdiction or acted contrary to due process 

of law.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). We disagree. Even if a judgment on the 

merits of the Plaintiffs’ claims against Marriott would be void for lack of personal 

jurisdiction, that does not mean that the district court lacks jurisdiction to impose sanctions 

on Marriott. See Willy v. Coastal Corp., 503 U.S. 131 (1992); Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx 

Corp., 496 U.S. 384 (1990).

In Cooter & Gell, the district court imposed Rule 11 sanctions on a plaintiff after 

the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the complaint. Before the Supreme Court, the plaintiff 

argued that the voluntary dismissal deprived the district court of jurisdiction over the action 

and thus rendered the court powerless to impose sanctions. The Supreme Court disagreed, 

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34

explaining that “a federal court may consider collateral issues after an action is no longer 

pending.” 496 U.S. at 395. The Court’s previous cases had already established that 

proceedings seeking attorney’s fees and costs or seeking sanctions for criminal contempt 

were independent of the original proceeding, and that fees could be awarded and contempt 

sanctions imposed “even years after the entry of a judgment on the merits.” Id. (internal 

quotation marks omitted). The Court held that the same analysis applied to proceedings 

seeking sanctions under Rule 11:

Like the imposition of costs, attorney’s fees, and contempt sanctions, the 

imposition of a Rule 11 sanction is not a judgment on the merits of an action. 

Rather, it requires the determination of a collateral issue: whether the 

attorney has abused the judicial process, and, if so, what sanction would be 

appropriate. Such a determination may be made after the principal suit has 

been terminated.

Id. at 396.

Building on its decision in Cooter & Gell, the Supreme Court in Willy upheld Rule 

11 sanctions imposed by the district court even though it was later determined that the court 

lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the case. See 503 U.S.at 138. The Court explained 

that the lower court’s “interest in having rules of procedure obeyed . . . does not disappear” 

even if it is later determined that the court lacked jurisdiction. Id. at 139. “[T]here is no 

constitutional infirmity under Article III in requiring those practicing before the courts to 

conduct themselves in compliance with the applicable procedural rules [or allowing] the 

courts to impose Rule 11 sanctions in the event of their failure to do so.” Id.; see Barlow 

v. Colgate Palmolive Co., 772 F.3d 1001, 1009 (4th Cir. 2014) (en banc) (applying Cooter 

& Gell to conclude that “district courts have jurisdiction to decide Rule 11 sanctions 

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35

motions on the merits, even when they are filed after the underlying action is remanded to 

state court”).

As these cases establish, a court’s power to resolve collateral issues extends beyond 

its power to resolve the underlying case. Because sanction proceedings are collateral to 

the merits of the underlying case, an otherwise proper sanction award may be imposed even 

if the court lacks jurisdiction to enter a judgment on the merits against the sanctioned party. 

Accordingly, we reject Marriott’s suggestion that we must affirm the district court’s denial 

of sanctions on the alternative ground that the absence of personal jurisdiction over 

Marriott precludes an award of sanctions.

C.

We turn now to the Plaintiffs’ challenges to the district court’s denial of sanctions.

We review the district court’s decision on a request for sanctions for abuse of discretion. 

See Cooter & Gell, 496 U.S. at 405; Barlow, 772 F.3d at 1007. 

The Plaintiffs contend the district court abused its discretion by denying sanctions. 

They argue that case law from this Court recognizes an award of attorney’s fees as a less 

drastic alternative to default judgment, see Colleton Prep. Acad., Inc. v. Hoover Univ., Inc., 

616 F.3d 413, 418 (4th Cir. 2010); Augusta Fiberglass Coatings, Inc. v. Fodor Contracting 

Corp., 843 F.2d 808, 811 (4th Cir. 1988), and that the district court failed to properly 

consider those cases or Judge Duffy’s invitation to the Plaintiffs’ to file a motion seeking 

a fee award. They also argue that by finding the amount requested to be excessive, the 

district court implicitly concluded that some portion of their requested fees was reasonable, 

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and that she abused her discretion by not awarding fees in an amount that she found 

reasonable.

As indicated above, the district court’s analysis of the sanctions question was quite 

abbreviated, and the court disposed of the substance of the issue in a single sentence. See

J.A. 252. We need more explanation to conduct meaningful appellate review of the court’s 

disposition of the motion.

Although the district court found the Plaintiffs’ request excessive, it did not explain 

what it found to be excessive. We therefore do not know whether the court believed it was 

the hourly rates that were excessive or the total number of hours billed. Moreover, as the 

Plaintiffs argue, the district court’s conclusion that the requested fees were excessive seems 

to reflect an implicit conclusion that some lesser award would not be excessive. The district 

court, however, did not explain why it declined to award fees in a lesser, non-excessive 

amount, or why it did not at least require the Plaintiffs to submit an amended motion that 

better supported the requested award.

There may be many cases where a short explanation of the district court’s view of 

the issue will be sufficient. See, e.g., Miltier v. Beorn, 896 F.2d 848, 855 (4th Cir. 1990)

(“When the motion for sanctions is foolish, or when the reasons for denying a colorable 

motion are apparent from the record, the judge need not belabor the obvious.”) (internal 

quotation marks omitted), overruled in part on other grounds by Farmer v. Brennan, 511 

U.S. 825 (1994). In this case, however, there are too many issues raised by the Plaintiffs’ 

request for sanctions for this court to assume it understands the basis for the district court’s 

ruling. 

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For example, because the district court denied the requested sanctions as excessive 

rather than unwarranted, it would appear that the district court implicitly concluded that 

Marriott engaged in conduct that was sanctionable.7

 Sanctions may be awarded only in the 

face of misconduct of some sort. See, e.g., Goodyear, 137 S. Ct. at 1186 (Courts have 

inherent authority “to fashion an appropriate sanction for conduct which abuses the judicial 

process”) (emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted). While this Court has noted 

the general propriety of a fee award when a default judgment is set aside, the Supreme 

Court has explained that a defendant who believes personal jurisdiction is lacking is “free 

to ignore the judicial proceedings, risk a default judgment, and then challenge that 

judgment on jurisdictional grounds in a collateral proceeding.” Ins. Corp. of Ireland, 456 

U.S. at 706. Under the circumstances of this case, then, it is not entirely clear to us that 

Marriott committed any sanctionable misconduct simply by failing to timely answer the 

complaint. See Taggart v. Lorenzen, 139 S. Ct. 1795, 1801 (2019) (“[W]e have said that 

civil contempt should not be resorted to where there is a fair ground of doubt as to the 

wrongfulness of the defendant’s conduct.”) (internal quotation marks and alteration 

omitted).8

 7 Although Judge Duffy invited the Plaintiffs’ to seek an award of attorney’s 

fees, he did not explicitly address the question of misconduct.

8 This opinion should not be understood as implicitly determining that 

misconduct has or has not occurred; we leave that question, and any other related questions 

that may arise, for resolution by the district court on remand.

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Because we cannot determine the district court’s basis for denying the Plaintiffs’ 

motion for sanctions, we vacate that part of the district court’s order and remand for 

reconsideration of the sanctions request. While the district court need not explain its 

analysis in great detail, it must provide an explanation sufficient to reveal the basis for its 

rulings so that we, in turn, have a sufficient basis for our review of the court’s ultimate 

decision. See Miltier, 896 F.2d at 855 (“[I]n cases where the circumstances and the record 

do not clearly reflect the reasons for the district court’s disposition of a Rule 11 motion, 

we have remanded with instructions that the district court make findings of fact concerning 

the frivolousness of the non-movant’s action.”); cf. United States v. Engle, 592 F.3d 495, 

504 (4th Cir. 2010) (“Because the district court’s explanation of its decision to vary 

significantly from the Guidelines’ sentencing recommendation is insufficient to permit 

meaningful appellate review, we must vacate the sentence and remand for . . . further 

proceedings.”).

V.

To summarize, we conclude that Marriott is not subject to general jurisdiction in 

South Carolina because its contacts with the state are not sufficient to render it “at home” 

in South Carolina, and that Marriott did not consent to general jurisdiction by obtaining a 

certificate of authority to transact business in South Carolina. We also conclude that 

Marriott is not subject to specific jurisdiction in South Carolina because Marriott’s caserelated contacts with South Carolina are not substantial enough to satisfy the requirements 

of due process. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of the action for lack of 

personal jurisdiction. As to the denial of the Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions, we find the 

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district court’s explanation of its discretionary ruling insufficient to permit meaningful 

appellate review. We therefore vacate the district court’s denial of sanctions and remand 

that issue for reconsideration by the district court and to give the district court an 

opportunity to better explain the reasoning behind its decision.

AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART,

AND REMANDED

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