236 A.D. 299 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1932
The defendant Hercules Cement Corporation furnished materials to the defendant Valerio Construction Company in connection with a road construction contract with the State of New York. A notice of lien was filed and afterwards discharged by an order of the Supreme Court which required that an undertaking be given and filed with the Comptroller of the State of New York, conditioned for the payment of any judgment which might
It is unquestioned that the cement corporation was not doing business within the State under the provisions of the Tax and Corporation Laws. No harm could come to any Henor herein or other party in interest by omitting to state the location of the New York sales office, as there was no person there upon whom service of process could be made or with whom negotiations for settlement could be had, yet, if this office is a principal place of business of the corporation within New York State, the omission may not be dis
“ The term 1 office of a corporation ’ means its principal office within the State, or principal place of business within the State if it has no principal office therein. The term ‘ business of a corporation,’ when used with reference either to a stock corporation or to a non-stock corporation, means the operations for the conduct of which it is incorporated.” (Gen. Corp. Law, § 3, subds. 14, 15.) The statute distinguishes between “ principal office ” and “ principal place of business ” within the State. “ Principal office ” applies to an office where the executive officers function and where the corporate records are kept. “ Operations for the conduct ” of the business for which the corporation was formed are those which have to do with its general business. The direction and management of salesmen covering a limited area is not the general business of the corporation, and the office from which the salesmen are directed is not a principal place of business. There being no principal place of business within the State, the recital of the principal
The judgment should be reversed on the law and facts, with costs, in so far as it is determined that the notice of lien of the Hercules Cement Corporation was invalid and denied judgment of foreclosure of the lien against Valerio Construction Company and dismissed the complaint against the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company of Hartford, Conn.; judgment against Valerio Construction Company for the foreclosure of the lien and against the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company of Hartford, Conn., upon its bond and undertaking given at the time the lien was discharged for the sum of $3,893.10, with interest from September 30, 1928, with costs, should be granted. Judgment foreclosing the lien as against the State of New York shall state the determination that there is no unpaid balance on the contract in the hands of any State official applicable to the satisfaction of the judgment. The court disapproves findings of fact in the decision numbered fifteen and twenty-eight, and makes new findings, that the Hercules Cement Corporation had no principal place of business in the State of New York within the meaning of section 12 of the Lien Law, and never transacted business within such State except as an incident to its interstate business. That the notice of lien filed by the Hercules Cement Corporation is valid.
All concur; McNamee, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed, etc., as directed in opinion. ‘