520 N.E.2d 1385 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1987
Appellant, Tiger Inc. ("Tiger"), appeals the judgment of the Akron Municipal Court, following a trial to the court, in favor of appellee, Contel Credit Corporation ("Contel"), in the amount of $4,341.06 plus interest, representing the unpaid balance on Contel's lease of telephone equipment to Tiger. We reverse.
On October 23, 1985, Contel filed suit against Tiger in Akron Municipal Court. In its complaint, Contel alleged that Tiger had breached its obligations under the terms of the lease and had failed to make the remaining nineteen monthly payments. In response, Tiger asserted the affirmative defense that Contel was not licensed to do business in Ohio and was thereby precluded from maintaining a cause of action in Ohio courts by virtue of R.C.
Following a trial to the court on May 20, 1986, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of Contel. In its findings of facts and conclusions of law, the trial court determined that although Contel is not licensed to do business in Ohio, it is "covered by the exemption of R.C.
"II. The trial court erred in holding, as a conclusion of law, that the plaintiff-appellee, a foreign corporation engaged in the business of leasing and financing the sale of telephone equipment within the state of Ohio, was exempted by R.C.
In its assignments of error, Tiger contends that the trial court erred in finding that Contel is covered by R.C.
R.C.
The determination of whether a corporation engages solely in interstate commerce and is thus exempt from a state's licensing requirements is largely factual, dependent upon the totality of the relevant circumstances surrounding the corporation's business operations. Golden Dawn Foods, Inc. v. Cekuta (1964),
It is recognized, however, that a foreign corporation engages in business within a state when "it has entered the state by its agents and is there engaged in carrying on and transacting through them some substantial part of its ordinary or customary business, usually continuous in the sense that it may be distinguished from merely casual, sporadic, or occasional transactions and isolated acts. * * *" 36 American Jurisprudence 2d (1968) 312, 314-315, Foreign Corporations, Section 317. Money, moreover, is not a commodity of bargain and sale to be put up and sold after being shipped. 17 Fletcher, Cylopedia of the Law of Private Corporations (1987 Rev. Ed.) 416, Foreign Corporations, Section 8419. "[T]he loaning of money by foreign corporations engaged in that business to * * * corporations in a state is not a matter of interstate commerce, and such corporation may be subjected to the laws of the state imposing conditions or restrictions upon its doing business within the limits of such state." (Footnote omitted.) Id.
The uncontroverted evidence before this court clearly indicates that the trial court erred in concluding that Contel is entitled to R.C.
Judgment accordingly.
QUILLIN and BAIRD, JJ., concur.