273 A.D. 218 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1948
The defendants are copartners doing business under the firm name of Desmond-Stephan Mfg. Co. They are residents of Urbana, Ohio, where they also operate a plant for the manufacture of grinding wheel dressers and cutters, machinists ’ and utility vises, and similar products. This is the only plant or factory maintained by the defendants, from which their products are shipped.
Pursuant to section 229-b of the Civil Practice Act, the summons and complaint in this action for breach of contract were served on each of three persons (L. Best Co., Surpless, Dunn & Co., Inc., and Kern & Collins, Inc., hereinafter called Best, Surpless, and Kern, respectively) alleged to be in charge of the defendants’ business conducted in this jurisdiction, and also by registered mail with notice directed to the defendants themselves in accordance with the statute.
The statutory requirement for doing business in this State is not satisfied unless a substantial part of the business is conducted within the State and the person in charge thereof invested with general powers of judgment and discretion (Yeckes-Eichenbaum, Inc., v. McCarthy, 290 N. Y. 437, 444).
In the light of this test it would appear that Best was not a person upon whom process might be served for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction over the defendants.
We consider that the question in this case is whether the defendants were doing business in this State within the purview of the statute (Civ. Prac. Act, § 229-b) through the activities of Surpless and Kern as persons in charge of such business so as to be amenable to the service of process in this action.
The defendants have no employees as distinguished from corporate agents in the State of New York. The executive office of the company is located at their plant in Ohio, where the books of account and other records of the firm are kept. The defendants do not maintain any bank account in this State. All orders are subject to approval and acceptance or rejection by the defendants at the factory outside the State.
It appears that Surpless and Kern were manufacturers’ representatives whose facilities were engaged by the defendants in the promotion and sale of their products. The defendants employed Surpless to act as their domestic selling agent in the State of New York and throughout most of the United States and Canada. They were similarly represented by Kern
The defendants’ contract with Surpless assigned a specified territory to that agent and provided for an annual salary of $2,400, plus 10% on all sales in excess of $24,000 per year. There was an additional $50 per month to be paid to Surpless “ for the warehousing, handling, invoicing, etc., of New York and Chicago’s stocks, and for the billing and handling of collections on shipments that it may be necessary to invoice through you ”. The contract provided for all shipments to be invoiced direct from the factory to customers, except that certain shipments to specified locations in New England and metropolitan New York were to be invoiced through Surpless. When the defendants’ merchandise was invoiced through the agent, it was provided that settlement was to be made by check of the agent remitted to the defendants monthly with a statement showing charges and collections. The agent was to carry a consigned stock of certain products manufactured by the defendants, out of which sales were to be invoiced by the agent at jobber’s prices. Copies of invoices on all shipments charged direct by the defendants were to be sent to the agent covering sales in the latter’s territory. Instructions as to prices were to be given by the defendants, and only orders accepted by them were to be deemed sales. The agent was not to solicit trade for a similar product. While it is true that in regard to the carrying of stock by Surpless and its shipment from this point the business as actually conducted was not entirely in accord with the provisions of the Surpless contract, in most respects the agent performed services and was compensated pursuant to the contractual arrangements between the parties. The name of the defendants’ company was not carried on the office door of Surpless, but did appear on the building directory. The defendants also maintained a telephone listing and distributed catalogues showing the same address as this agent for their New York sales office.
The defendants engaged the services of Kern to succeed the plaintiffs as their “ export office ” in New York and representative for foreign sales. The respective contracts pursuant to which the defendants employed the plaintiffs and Kern after them as their agent for the foreign market manifest a degree]
In short, we think that enough has been shown to indicate that the defendants carried on a major portion of their selling activities through the offices of their domestic and foreign sales representatives in this jurisdiction. While the manufacturing phase was confined to Ohio and all orders were subject to approval at that point, the selling end constituting a substantial part of the defendants’ business was conducted in this State. Certainly it was held out to the public that the defendants maintained a “ sales office ” and an “ export office ” in the city of New York. It is true that their representatives handling domestic and foreign sales were independent contractors to some extent and maintained their own offices and business facilities. Nevertheless, on the record in this case there would seem to be no gainsaying the fact that they were agents invested with general powers involving judgment and discretion in connection with the defendants’ business and the advancement of the defendants’ interests.
In cases of this sort it is the cumulative significance of all the» activities conducted in this jurisdiction rather than the isolated effect of any single activity that is determinative on the question of. doing business in the State. We conclude that the defendants were engaged in business in this State to an extent sufficient to subject them to the jurisdiction of our courts and that the service of process on Surpless and Kern as their agents was properly made under section 229-b of the Civil Practice Act (International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310; International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. 579; Yeckes-Eichenbaum, Inc., v. McCarthy, 290 N. Y. 437, supra; Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 220 N. Y. 259).
This conclusion has been reached without overlooking the case of Bank of America v. Whitney Bank (261 U. S. 171), where the question was whether a national bank having its banking house and usual place of business in New Orleans, Louisiana, was doing business in such manner as to warrant the inference that it was present in New York for jurisdictional purposes. It appears that various transactions were conducted in this jurisdiction by local correspondents on behalf of the foreign bank. The Supreme Court held that the local business was being done by the correspondent banks and not by the foreign banking institution itself. There was no claim that the correspondent banks were exercising judgment or disere
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with $20 costs and disbursements, with leave to the defendants to answer within ten days after service of order with notice of entry on payment of said costs.
Glennon, J. P., Dore, Cohn and Van Voobhis, JJ., concur.
Order unanimously affirmed, with $20 costs and disbursements, with leave to the defendants to answer within ten days after service of the order, with notice of entry thereof, on payment of said costs. [See post, p. 877.]