The question is whether, in a contract between a manufacturer and its sales agent, a provision is valid to the effect that “no action at law, equity or chancery shall be instituted or maintained by the Corporation in any Court of any State of the United States or in any circuit or district court of the courts of the United States against the Company other than in the courts of the Common Pleas of the State of Pennsylvania.” This stipulation occurs in an ordinary commercial contract between a corporation incorporated and domiciled in this Commonwealth and another corporation incorporated under the laws of Pennsylvania.
It becomes necessary to review some of the cases. Nute v. Hamilton Mutual Ins. Co.
It was held in Home Ins. Co. v. Morse,
It was held in Benson v. Eastern Building & Loan Association,
In many of these cases the opinion of this court by Chief Justice Shaw in Nute v. Hamilton Mutual Ins. Co.
So far as we are aware, the current of authority (with the exceptions presently to be noted) is unbroken in support of the principle laid down in Nute v. Hamilton Mutual Ins. Co.
In Mittenthal v. Mascagni,
In this connection Palmer v. Lavers,
The Daley and Mittenthal cases, as to the points adjudicated, while not extending the doctrine of the Nute case, do not overrule it and are not inconsistent with it. All three of these cases may be treated as stating the law applicable to the several states of facts presented to the court. The Nute case lays down the general principle. The other two cases stand as sound upon their several states of facts. To extend them to the present case involves overruling the Nute case. That case, as has been pointed out, states a general principle which has been adopted and prevails in all federal courts by reason of the binding decisions of the United States Supreme Court in Home Ins. Co. v. Morse,
The plaintiff’s demurrers to the defendant’s answer in abatement and to the part of the answer in bar setting up the same matter must be sustained. The case is to stand for disposition upon the issues raised by the answer to the merits.
So ordered.
