84 A.D.2d 947 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1981
Order unanimously reversed, with costs, motion granted and complaint dismissed. Memorandum: Alpha Graphic Machinery, Inc., a Missouri corporation, appeals from an order at Special Term which denied its motion to dismiss the complaint of Cato Show Printing Co., Inc., a New York corporation, for lack of personal jurisdiction. The order appealed from also granted Cato discovery of Alpha in order to determine whether the court had jurisdiction of W. Howell Lee, a resident of Connecticut. The facts are as follows: Defendant W. Howell Lee is a resident of Cos Cob, Connecticut, who is engaged in buying, selling and locating printing machinery under the name of Howell Lee Associates. Lee made a routine telephone call to plaintiff, Cato, on September 19, 1979 to see if Cato needed any equipment which Lee could supply. The following day Richard H. Cowles, Sr., an officer and director of Cato, called Lee and began negotiations to obtain a printing press. Lee found that defendant Alpha, engaged in the business of buying and selling printing machinery with its office in Kansas City, Missouri, had the item Cato wanted. Arrangements were then made for Cato’s representative, Richard H. Cowles, Jr., to see the press in Missouri. When Lee spoke to Cowles, Sr., on September 30,1979, he was advised that the inspection arrangements had been made for October 2,1979. The inspection occurred as planned. Mr. Cowles, Sr., claims in an affidavit that the day after the inspection there was a meeting in New York City between representatives of Alpha and Cato. Unfortunately, however, there is no affidavit from Cowles, Jr., who allegedly represented Cato, and the other affidavits in the record before us of those supposedly present contain no reference to such meeting. E.P. Francke, president of Alpha, states in an affidavit that Cowles, Jr., asked him if Cato and Alpha could deal directly to save the markup for the middleman. Francke alleges that he said “no” and that he never discussed price with Cato or any other terms of a direct sale to Cato. It appears that Cato and Lee thereafter entered into an agreement for the sale of the equipment from Lee to plaintiff, which was confirmed in writing in a letter dated October 12, 1979 accompanied by an invoice for the purchase price of the same date. Lee and Cowles, Sr., both state in their affidavits that on October 4, Lee and Cato negotiated a $175,000 sales price which is consistent with Francke’s allegation that he never discussed price with Cato. Cowles, Sr., also alleges that when Lee and Cato agreed on the price, Lee instructed Cato to mail Alpha a $10,000 down payment, which Cato did by check dated October 5,1979. The balance of $165,000 was due in advance, with “delivery” to be “where is” (in Missouri). On October 16, 1979, according to Cowles, Sr., Lee left for Hawaii and within three days the deal was dead. Cowles, Sr., claiming that although Cato had obtained financing and .so advised the defendants on October 17,1979, nevertheless, on October 19,1979 when Cowles, Jr., called regarding the location of the printing press, he was told it had been sold to someone else. The president of Alpha explains this sudden turn of events only by stating that he had advised Lee that if “necessary funds” were not transferred to Alpha by a “certain date”, there would be no sale. Such funds were apparently not forthcoming. Alpha sent a check to Cato dated October 19, 1979 refunding the $10,000 down payment. We turn now to the law. Cato’s affidavits do not contain specific allegations that Alpha has the kind of “corporate presence” in New York required by the traditional “doing business” test in order to sustain personal jurisdiction over it (CPLR 301; Tauza v Susquehanna Coal Co., 220 NY 259; Bryant v Finnish Nat. Airlines, 15 NY2d 426). Cato concedes that Alpha is a foreign corporation with its principal place of business in Missouri. Its only allegations that Alpha is “doing business” in New York are those set forth in the verified complaint and repeated even more generally in an affidavit. Although Cato requests discovery to support its claim that Alpha “transacts a great deal of business in