16 F.2d 504 | S.D.N.Y. | 1926
The defendant has appeared specially and moved to set aside the service of the summons and complaint on two grounds. It seems necessary, however, to discuss the first ground only, which is: “That the defendant is a foreign corporation, and is not doing business in the state of New York, and that therefor said attempted service was in violation of the Constitution of the United States, particularly section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
The following facts appear from the moving papers and affidavits: The defendant, the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company,
The corporate stock of the company is transferred by J. P. Morgan & Co. of New York City, which acts as transfer agent of the company. It does carry bank accounts in several banks in the city of New York, from which it pays mortgage interest, coupons, and dividends, which checks are drawn by the treasurer at his office in Cleveland, Ohio.
The defendant has not qualified to do business in the state of New York by the filing of the certificate provided under the corporation laws of the state.
The courts have often stated that no precise rules can be formulated by which to determine whether a foreign corporation is doing business.in a state; that it is a question that must largely be decided by the particular facts in each case. Solicitation of freight and passenger traffic by a railroad corporation, which has no tracks within the jurisdiction, does not constitute doing business there. Green v. Chicago, etc., Ry. Co., 205 U. S. 530, 27 S. Ct. 595, 51 L. Ed. 916; McGuire v. Great Northern Railroad Co. (C. C.) 155 F. 230, and the maintaining of an office in such a state to accomplish matters which in themselves do not constitute doing business in the state, does not render the foreign corporation subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of that state. Case v. Smith, Lineaweaver & Co. (C. C.) 152 F. 730. In Toledo Railways, etc., Co. v. Hill, 244 U. S. 49 at page 53, 37 S. Ct. 591, 593 (61 L. Ed. 982) where the court was discussing whether a provision made by a foreign corporation for the payment of its bonds and coupons at an office in another state and payment of coupons accordingly constituted such a doing of business in that state as to render the corporation liable to be sued there, Mr. Chief Justice White, in the opinion of the Court, stated:
“ * * The mere provision for a place of payment in the city of New York of the bonds and the coupons annexed to them at their maturity, and their payment at such place, was in no true sense the carrying on by the corporation in New York of the business which it was chartered to carry on, however much it may have been an agreement by the corporation to pay in New York an obligation resulting from the carrying on by it of its business in the state of Ohio.” In Pomeroy v. Hocking Valley Ry. Co., 218 N. Y. 530, 113 N. E. 504, the court stated that the habitual payment of dividends and the transfer of stock in the state of a foreign corporation was of some importance in determining whether the corporation was doing business in the state, although such facts may not be sufficient in itself to constitute such doing of business. See, also, Smith v. Western Pacific Railroad Co., 138 App. Div. 244, 122 N. Y. S. 888.
It seems to me that, having funds on deposit in the state of New York available solely for the payment of interest or dividends, and which funds are drawn upon by cheeks signed by the treasurer at his office in Cleveland, is merely incidental to the payment of the interest and dividends in New York, and which was stated in Toledo Railroad Co. v. Hill, supra, not to constitute doing business.
In Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Stojanowski (C. C. A..) 191 F. 720, it was held that this defendant was “doing business” in New York, but at that time the defendant maintained an office in New York, where it held meetings of the board of directors, and
Taking all these facts into consideration as is necessary in determining whether the defendant is doing business within a state, it seems to me there “was in no true sense the carrying on by the corporation in New York of the business which it was chartered to carry on,” and, further, that jurisdiction could not be obtained in this court on the ground that the defendant was doing business in the state of New York; if it was not doing business within the state, the service' was void. Riverside Mills v. Menefee, 237 U. S. 189, 35 S. Ct. 579, 59 L. Ed. 910.
Accordingly, the attempted service is vacated and set aside.