delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plаintiff in error, a corporation organized under the laws of' Missouri, brings here for review (§ 237, Judicial Code) a judgment of the Suprеme Court of Arkansas which affirms a judgment of the Circuit Court of Shelby County imposing a fine of $1,000 on plaintiff in error for doing business in Arkansas withоut obtaining permission. The laws of the State require every corporation incorporated in any other Statе, doing business in Arkansas, to file in the office of the Secretary of State certain evidence of its organization and a financial statement, to designate its general office and place of business in Arkansas, and to name an аgent there and authorize process to be served upon him. It is provided that any corporation which shall do businеss in Arkansas without having complied with these requirements shall be subject to a fine of not less than $1,000. §§ 1825-1832, Crawford & Moses Digest, Laws of Arkansas.
Plaintiff in error contends that, as applied in this case, the state enactments are repugnant to the commerce clause of the federal Constitution.
*150 The material facts are these: May 3, 1921, plaintiff in error made a bid: to the Wilmot Road District for thе construction of a steel,'bridge near Wilmot, in Ashley County, Arkansas. Its offer was accepted, and on that day, a contract covering the work was signed in Arkansas by the representatives of the parties. The contract was not to bеcome effective until a bond was given by the contractor to secure its faithful' performance. The bond was executed in Missouri two days later. June 14, 1921, plaintiff in error sublet all, the work except the erection of the steel superstructure to the Yancy Construction Company, a partnership whose members were residents of Ka¡nsás.' August 17, 1921, plaintiff in error secured permission, as required by the laws of Arkansas, to do business hi that State. Before such permission was obtained, the.greater part of the work sublet had been completed; plaintiff1 in error had made certain shipments of steel, сonsisting of reinforcing rods, steel piers, tubes and angles, from Kansas City, Missouri, to itself at Wilmot, Arkansas, for use in the construction of the bridge; and these materials had been delivered to the subcontractor and used in the performance of thе work done by it. The steel for the superstructure was fabricated by plaintiff in error in its plant in Kansas City, some before and sоme after the permission was obtained. -
The Supreme Court of Arkansas held that the things done by plaintiff in error before August 17, . 1921, constituted intrastate business in Arkansas. But the plaintiff in error contends that all was interstate commerce. We accept the decision of the Supreme Court of Arkansas as. to what constitutes the doing of business in that State within the meaning of its own laws.
Georgia
v.
Chattanooga,
But in the- case now before the сourt, the construction of the bridge necessarily involved some work and business in Arkansas,., which were separate and-distinсt from any interstate commerce that might be involved in the performance,of the. contract; "‘From the beginning, transаctions local- to Arkansas were contemplated. In fact, plaintiff in error obtained permission to do business in Arkansas in order to be authorized to- erect the steel superstructure — the part of the work it had not sublet. But before obtaining such permission, it made the bid and signed the contract in Arkansas; it shipped from Kansas City to itself at Wilmot the materials for the performance of the work’'it had sublet, and, after the interstate transit had ended, delivered them to the subcontractor who used them in the work. We need not
*152
consider whether, under the circumstances shown, the making of the bid, the signing of the сontract and execution of the bond would be within the protection of the commerce clatise, if these acts stood alone. But it is certain that, when all are taken together, the things done by plaintiff in error in Arkansas before оbtaining the permission constitute or include intrastate business. The delivery of the materials to the subcontractor was essential to the building of the bridge, and that was an intrastate and not . an interstate transaction. The fact that the materials had moved from Missouri into Arkansas did not make, the delivery of them to the subcontractor interstate commerce. So far as concerns the question here involved, the situation is the equivalent of what it would have been if the materials hаd been shipped info the State and held for sale in a warehouse, and had been furnished to the subcontractor by a dealer. We think it plain, that the plaintiff in error did business of a local and intrastate character in Arkansas before it obtained permission.
General Railway Signal Co.
v.
Virginia,
Judgment affirmed..
