105 Ga. 694 | Ga. | 1898
It was admitted that “the headquarters and general offices' and main and principal shops [of The L. B. Price Company] are at Kansas City, Missouri; that the goods are shipped from Kansas City to the distributing-points, and that the accounts are kept in Kansas City, Missouri.” The defendant stated that the distributing-points of the Price Company were Houston,. Texas, Birmingham, Alabama, and Atlanta, Georgia; that his-home was in the State of Iowa, and he traveled over Georgia and several other southern States, representing this company and taking orders for goods. He also stated that all the goods for which he took orders in Americus were shipped to him, upon such orders, from the Birmingham distributing-point, and he delivered them to the customers who had ordered them. There was nothing jn the evidence introduced by the city which at all conflicted with this portion of his statement, unless- it be the testimony of Leona Lee, to which we have already alluded; and the evidence of the express agent at Americus, who was introduced by the defense, tended to confirm the statement with reference to the point from which the goods were shipped to the defendant. No effort was made to prove that the accused lived in Americus, or even in Georgia. We apprehend that the term “traveling salesman” can not properly be confined simply to-those persons who travel from place to place, representing wholesale houses or manufacturers, and taking orders for goods only from persons or firms who buy to sell again. It seems to us that one who represents a manufacturer or a retail house, and goes from place to place, taking orders on his house from consumers, is as much a “traveling salesman” as a drummer who confines his dealings to merchants. A drummer who goes from town to town, taking orders from manufacturers for machinery, fuel, oil, belting or other necessary supplies, which are to be consumed in the purchaser’s business, although he may take orders
The above rulings absolutely control the present case, and it is unnecessary to consider the constitutional question made in the record.
Judgment reversed.