163 Misc. 749 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1937
This is a motion made by the defendant Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to vacate the service of the summons herein. This defendant, hereinafter referred to as “ Indiana ” for convenience, is an Indiana corporation. It was organized under the laws of that State in 1889 and is engaged in refining, manufacturing, distributing and selling petroleum products. While it is duly qualified to transact business in various mid-western States, it is neither licensed nor qualified to do business as a foreign corporation in the State of New York. Indiana does not maintain any New York office, but employs an eastern sales representative, one Preston J. Beale, who resides in New York city, and maintains his office at 122 East Forty-second street. Indiana’s name does not appear on the door of this office or on the bulletin board, nor is it listed in the telephone directory. The territory in which Beale acts as Indiana’s sales representative covers all the section lying east of the Appalachian Mountains. It appears that Beale solicits orders for Indiana’s products, most of which are for shipments to other States. Some shipments of certain by-products are made in New York but the contracts, approvals and payments are all made at Indiana’s Chicago office. Beale’s office in New York does not handle any of this business but is used apparently as his headquarters. (He is not authorized to collect and never collects any money for the defendant in New York. He sends no bills from New York, keeps no books of account or records here nor does he transmit any money to the defendant from New York. His stationery bears his own name and merely contains a notation that he is the eastern representative of the defendant Indiana.) He is paid a fixed salary of $400 a month for his services and his office expenses are paid by Indiana. Two bank accounts are maintained by defendant in New York, but neither one is maintained as a necessary adjunct to doing business in this State. Beale has no authority to draw on these accounts.
Service was allegedly effected upon Indiana by serving copies of the summons and complaint upon Seubert as president of Indiana in this State on January 26, 1937. That service is attacked by Indiana upon the ground that it is a foreign corporation not doing business in the State of New York. In answer to this contention the plaintiffs assert, (a) that the moving defendant “ is here through the presence and activities within the State of its own high officers and other representatives engaged in carrying on in New York both types of its primary activities, to wit: Its business as a great holding company and head and parent of a large corporate organization and its commercial business as a manufacturer and seller of petroleum products; ” (b) that aside from this the moving defendant is transacting a substantial portion of its business in the State of New York.
Under the first contention it is claimed that Indiana “ is here because it comes here itself through its own representatives to manage and control these subsidiaries.” Indiana’s activities in Pan Am. are those of a controlling stockholder. Let us assume that Indiana is an individual residing outside the State and owning a controlling stock interest in Pan Am. By reason of that control the individual could elect as directors such persons as he saw fit. Those directors would naturally be inclined to do the stockholders' bidding. They might even be residents of this State, which is not so with
Plaintiff contends that the exercise of executive functions within a State confers jurisdiction over the corporation, but that is not the situation here. Pan Am. and Indiana were separate and distinct corporations. The business done at the meetings attended by these directors was the business of Pan Am. Pan Am. paid the expenses of these directors and paid them a salary for the work they did. It may be true that indirectly Indiana profited as the result of the activities of these directors, but so far as their work as executives was concerned, it was the work of Pan Am. done by them as directors. The cases cited by plaintiff on this point
Plaintiff’s second contention, namely, that Indiana is transacting a substantial portion of its business in New York, is not sustained by the evidence presented. In support of this contention plaintiffs urge that Indiana maintains a permanent office here and that as the result of the activities of Beale, its eastern sales
There is nothing presented on this motion to show that Beale was acting in any other capacity than that of sales representative at the time the alleged service on Indiana took place. The case of St. Louis S. W. Ry. v. Alexander (227 U. S. 218), relied on by plaintiff, is not in point, for there two foreign affiliated companies maintained a single office in New York with agents who were authorized on behalf of both corporations, not only to solicit business but to negotiate settlements with respect to claims. Beale did not have the right to settle claims although he was permitted to attempt to placate customers.