154 Mo. App. 139 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
By its petition in this case, plaintiff, averring that it' is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois and engaged in business at Mattoon, in that state, and that defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, sets out that defendant entered into a contract with it, under and by the terms of which plaintiff contracted and agreed to furnish and erect for defendant two high-speed automatic engines and two electric generators, all to be 'delivered and erected for the agreed and stipulated price of $3975; that under the terms of the contract and at the special instance and request of defendant, plaintiff, as original contractor with defendant, furnished, delivered and erected the engines and the electric generators in and upon a certain building situated upon lots in the city of St. Louis, averred to be the property of defendant. It is further averred that the reasonable market value of the machinery is $3975 and that it was furnished and erected under one general bid or proposition in writing made by plaintiff to defendant and accepted by defendant in writing; that defendant has paid on account of that sum $900' and no more, leaving a balance due of $3075 unpaid and long since due. The terms of payment under the contract are set out and the necessary facts to entitle plaintiff to a mechanic’s or materialman’s lien are averred. It is further set out in the petition that other parties named as defendant claim some interest in the property upon which the building is situate, but it is not necessary
■The answer upon which the case went to trial was a general denial and the affirmative defense that plaintiff at the time of making the contract sued on was a foreign corporation, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Illinois, resident and doing business in this state now and at the date of making the contract; that it was not licensed or authorized to do business in this state, as required- by what are now' sections 3037, 3039, 3040, Revised Statutes 1909, at the time of making the contract sued on, nor had it filed or had on file in the office of the Secretary of State a copy of its charter or certificate of incorporation, nor had it since that date, in accordance with the provisions of- the statutes made a sworn statement of the proportion of its capital stock represented by property located and business transacted in- this state, nor had it paid the incorporation fees required by the above sections, nor had it received from the Secretary of State a license as a foreign corporation, to do business in this state; wherefore defendant -avers that the alleged contract set out in plaintiff’s petition was and is void and of no effect and is not enforcible.
The reply was a general denial.
. The cause was first tried before the Hon. Robert M. Foster and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, returned under a peremptory instruction by the court. That verdict was set aside for error in that instruction, in that it directed' the jury.to find a specified sum in'favor of plaintiff. The case was then tried before the court and a jury, the Hon. George H. Williams presiding. Evidence was introduced on the part of plain
The second instruction was to the effect that there is no evidence before the jury in violation by plaintiff of the laws of Missouri relating to foreign corporations and that upon that issue as presented by the defendant’s answer their verdict must be in favor of plaintiff.
Defendant duly objected and excepted to the giving of these instructions and on its part asked several instructions. One of them asked, was to the effect that under the law and the evidence, plaintiff could not recover. Another was to the effect that if the jury found that plaintiff had not complied with the law of this state in obtaining the certificate or license from the Secretary of this State authorizing it to do business in this state and is not now licensed as a foreign corporation to do business in Missouri, then their verdict should be for the defendant, unless the jury further believe and find from the evidence “that the
Another instruction asked was that the jury, in determining whether or not plaintiff was a resident of this state or did business through a resident agent in this state,' and that the agent was not a drummer or traveling salesman, the jury would take into consider-’ ation all the facts and circumstances in evidence sur-' rounding the making of contracts by the Parker-Kohn Engineering Company in the state of Missouri on behalf of plaintiff, “together with the general course of business, and the method of its transaction, pursued by said Parker-Kohn Engineering Company, acting on behalf of plaintiff in the making of the contracts
These being refused, defendant duly saved exception.
Of its own motion the court instructed the jury as to the number necessary to concur in a verdict.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the full amount sued for and interest. Judgment followed and a motion for new1 trial was duly filed, the giving of the instructions for plaintiff and the refusal of those asked by defendant being specifically set out, among other grounds. This motion was overruled, plaintiff excepting and afterwards duly perfecting appeal to this court.
The learned trial judge, at the conclusion of the testimony in the case, and before acting on the instructions, so clearly outlined the issues and the points involved, as well as the salient points of the evidence in the case, that we can do no better than incorporate here what he then said, as indicating the view he took of the questions presented by the case. It is as follows:
The court, addressing himself to counsel for defendant, said: “My understanding of your position is that while it might be true that the Chuse Engine & Manufacturing Company is an Illinois corporation; while it might be true that it manufactures all of its output there, and has no storehouse and no consignment of its goods to any representative in Missouri; while its contract with its agent here must be approved before it becomes effective in Missouri — must be approved in Illinois and therefore might be considered as an Illinois contract, although the contract has to be sent back to the agent who makes the contract for delivery to the other parties to said contract — yet that the Parker-Kohn Engineering Company, being a resident of Missouri, and even though they had a contract
“The evidence is overwhelming to the effect that the Chuse Engine & Manufacturing- Company manufactured this machinery and put it on its cars in Mattoon, sent it to St. Louis; that it was installed in the Vromania Apartments; that they are receiving the benefits of this sale, and there is no defense whatever, except that they.won’t pay because the contract is illegal. Now, that is a hard position to take. That is to say, it is a hard contract not to enforce. It would be a hardship, in other words, upon the Chuse Engine & Manufacturing Company if the contract were illegal. And inasmuch as the statute provides for a penalty, the contract must be strictly construed; that is to say, to say whether or not it is within the purview of the statute.
“If there is some reason to exclude this contract and this sale from the operation of the statute, in all good conscience it should be done. If on the other hand, the facts are such as to lead to no other conclusion but that this contract is illegal, then this court has nothing to do but to declare it illegal. . . .
“My first impression of this case was that inasmuch as this was an Illinois (contract), inasmuch as
“I think also that it is a question that, if it can be resolved by the court as a matter of law, ought not to be submitted to the jury, the question of fact as to whether or not they were doing business within or without the state.”.
As we understand the decision of our Supreme Court in the recent case of International Textbook Co. v; Gillespie, — Mo. —, 129 S. W. 922, following International Textbook Co. v. Pigg, 217 U. S. 91, and the effect of its decision in United States Shoe Machinery Co. v. Ramlouse, not yet officially reported but in which the motion for rehearing was overruled by the Supreme Court December 23, 1910, — Mo. —, — S. W. —, our Supreme Court holding that plaintiff was transacting business within this state within the purview of sections 3037, 3039 and 3010, Revised Statutes 1900, nevertheless holds that as the business in which the defendants in'those cases were engaged, pertained to interstate commerce, those sections are not applicable to it. The proposal in evidence in this case at bar, made by plaintiff to defendant, was submitted to plaintiff by the Parker-'Kohn Engineering Company at St. Louis. But by its very terms this proposal stipulated that the contract proposed, if entered into, was not to be of any force, effect or validity until accepted by plaintiff at its home office in the State of Illinois; It was accepted by plaintiff at its home office in lili- ’ nois. The minds of the contracting parties must, there
The motion for a rehearing, filed herein, is overruled j our former opinion is withdrawn, this being substituted and judgment of the circuit court in this case is affirmed as of date December 30, 1910.