146 Tenn. 579 | Tenn. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The original hill in this cause was filed on September 20, 1920, by complainant, a Tennessee corporation engaged in
Subpoena to answer was issued to the sheriff of Shelby county as follows:
“Summons Kelley-Clarke Company (serve on Carver & Griffith, agént)
Upon this summons the sheriff made the following return :
“Executed on Kelley-Clarke Company by reading this writ to C. N. Carver and D. L. Griffith, agents, and leaving copy of bill with D. L. Griffith.”
Defendant filed a plea in abatement to the bill, in which it was averred that defendant was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Washington, with its office and place of business in the city of Seattle, and that it had no corporate existence under the laws of Tennessee; that it had no agent in Shelby county; that neither C. N. Carver nor D. L. Griffith was its agent; that it had no office or agency in Tennessee, and that it was not doing business in said State in any way or manner; that the sale of goods alleged in the bill was made in the State of Washington, and not made in the State of Tennessee; and that all matters alleged in the bill pertaining to said contract of sale occurred outside of the State of Tennessee.
“For many years Carver & Griffith have represented the defendant in Memphis, Tenn., and, while not authorized generally to make contracts on behalf of Kelley-Clarke Company, the system of business pursued is as follows: The defendant will keep Carver & Griffith posted from time to time on the market price at which it will sell goods the defendant has to sell, and when an offer is made to Carver & Griffith by a jobber, it is understood and known that Carver & Griffith will transmit by wire that offer to Kelley-Clarke Company, and if Kelley-Clarke Company are willing to accept the offer the transaction is consummated by Carver & Griffith notifying the prospective buyer of the particular commodity that his offer is accepted. Frequently, on behalf of Kelley-Clarke Company, the said Carver & Griffith will obtain jobber’s offers and transmit same to Kelley-Clarke Company, with the name of the offerer, and if that offer is accepted the offerer is so notified and the transaction consummated.
“Kelley-Clarke Company send out from time to time what they term a statistical circular or letter, and this is addressed by Kelley-Clarke Company To our brokers,’ and invariably such a circular is sent to Carver & Griffith, addressed as a broker.”
A subpoena to answer this amended bill was issued and directed to the sheriff, commanding him to summons C. N. Carver and D. L. Griffith to answer the same.
The clerk and master certified that he sent, by registered mail, a copy of the original, amended, and supplemental bills and process, with returns on same, to defendant at Seattle, Wash., and that die made a minute entry of same on the docket of the court.
George H. King made an affidavit, before a notary public at Seattle, that at the request of complainant he had lodged with the highest officer of defendant to be found a copy of a notice which he attached to his affidavit, and a copy of the process issued and returned by the sheriff, This notice, addressed to defendant, advised it of the bringing of suit against it by complainant in the chancery court of Shelby county, Tenn., and stated that certified copies of the original and amended and supplemental bills were handed to it, and copies of process issued and returns thereon. The notice stated that these documents were furnished by virtue of chapter 226, Acts of 1887; in fact, it is not questioned by defendant that chapter 226, Acts of 1887, was strictly complied with.
Defendant filed a plea in abatement to this amended bill, challenging the jurisdiction of the court upon the ground that it was a foreign corporation created under the laws of the State of Washington; that its domicile or place of business was in Seattle, in that State, and that it had neither an agent nor property in Tennessee at the
The written contract of sale was attached to and made a part of the plea in abatement. The plea was subsequently amended by agreement of counsel by adding a paragraph to same, in which it was averred that the claimed service under the amended and supplemental bill, by again serving process upon Carver & Griffith, and by sending certified copies of the pleadings and process through the mail to defendant by the clerk and master, and the delivery of like copies and notice of suit to defendant at Seattle by George H. King, was not due process of law, and did not bring defendant within the jurisdiction of the court.
To this plea in abatement complainant demurred. Its demurrer was sustained by the chancellor, who permitted the defendant to appeal to this court.
By its only assignment of error defendant insists that the chancellor erred in holding that it had been served with due process of law, and was therefore legally before the court.
As a general proposition, a corporation cannot he sued in any State other than that of its origin, unless it is doing business in such other State, and no State has the power
In Saxony Mills v. Wagner & Co., 94 Miss., 233, 47 South., 899, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.), 834, 136 Am. St. Rep., 575, 19 Ann. Cas., 199, it was held that a traveling agent of a foreign corporation having no office or place of business in the State, but who resides there, is not within the provisions of the statute that, if the defendant in any suit be a corporation, process may be served on the. president, the cashier, secretary, treasurer, clerk, or agent of the corporation or upon any one of its directors.
It was also held in that case that a corporation cannot be said to be doing business within the State from the mere fact that it sells goods there through the efforts of traveling salesmen, so as to bring it within the jurisdiction of the State courts.
In Green v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 205. U. S., 530, 27 Sup. Ct., 595, 51 L. Ed., 916, it was held that a railroad company was not doing business in a State other than that of its origin, so as to be suable therein or subject to service of process therein, because it employed an agent in
In Case v. Smith L. & Co. (C. C.), 152 Fed., 730, it was held that the maintenance by a corporation of an office in another State, in charge of a sales agent who takes orders for goods and transmits them to the home office for acceptance and to be filled was not doing business in such State.
It was also held in Carpenter v. Willard Case Lumber Co. (C. C.), 158 Fed., 697, that a corporation by filling orders for goods, taken in another State by a local company to whom a commission is paid, is not thereby doing business in the State.
In Swarts v. Christie Grain & Stock Co. (C. C.), 166 Fed., 338, it was held that a corporation was not doing business in another State by accepting bucket shop business, turned over to it by a person in the bucket shop busi
Service of process against a foreign corporation upon a sales agent is not a service upon the corporation, where the agent is without apparent authority to represent it otherwise. Hefner v. American Tube & Stamping Co. (D. C.), 163 Fed., 866.
In People's Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco Co., 246 U. S., 79, 38 Sup. Ct., 233, 62 L. Ed., 587, Ann. Cas., 1918C, 537, the court said:
“The question as to what constitutes the doing of business in such wise as to make the corporation subject to service of process has been frequently discussed in the opinions of this court, and we shall enter upon no amplification of what has been said. Each case depends upon its own facts. The general rule deducible from all our decisions is that the business must be of such nature and character as to warrant the inference that the corporation has subjected itself to the local jurisdiction, and is by its duly authorized officers or agents present within the State or district where service is attempted. ... As to the continued practice of advertising its wares in Louisiana-, and sending its soliciting agents into that State, as above detailed, the agents having no authority beyond solicitation, we think the previous decisions of this court have settled the law to be that such practices did not amount to that doing of business which subjects the corporation to the local jurisdiction for the purpose of service of process upon it.”
To the same effect is the rule announced in Tyler Co. v. Ludlow-Saylor Wire Co., 236 U. S., 723, 35 Sup. Ct., 458, 59 L. Ed., 808.
Chapter 226, Acts of 1887, has been held by this court
In Railroad v. Richardson 121 Tenn., 458, 117 S. W., 498, this court used the following language: “Nor do we think the second proposition, when applied to the facts of the case, sound. That these foreign corporations were, in a sense, ‘doing business-’ in this State through their traveling soliciting agents, is true; and service upon the latter in all cases falling within sections 1 and 2 of the Act of 1887, which we are considering, would probably bring them into our courts. But the vice in the proposition is found in that the facts alleged in the pleas, and shown in the evidence, put the case outside the provisions of the statute, as we have already undertaken to establish. I-lence, it is that, as The cause of action’ did not arise from ‘any transaction with persons’ or ‘concerning any property situated in this State through any agency whatever acting’ for this corporation ‘within the State,’ service on these agents did not give the circuit court jurisdiction of the cause.”
According to the allegations of the amended bill. Carver and Griffith were mere brokers, and had no authority to make contracts on behalf of defendant. Their authority did not extent beyond that of soliciting orders for defendant, which, when received, were transmitted to defendant in Seattle for its acceptance. This did not constitute a doing of business by defendant in this State, according to the authorities above cited.
The chancellor, therefore, committed error in sustaining the complainant’s demurrer to defendant’s plea in abatement, and his decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.