141 Misc. 148 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1931
The plaintiff sues to recover damages for the alleged wrongful seizure, in Mexico, of mining lands and personal property. The summons was served in New York city on William J. Quigley, the president of both defendants. For convenience we will designate the defendant Campania Industrial El Potosí, S. A., as “ industrial company,” the defendant Howe Sound Company, Inc., as “ Howe company,” and El Potosí Mining Company as “ mining company.” The defendant industrial company moves to vacate the service on it upon the grounds that it is a foreign corporation, not engaged in business here.
Was industrial company at the time of the service of the summons upon its president doing business within the State of New York?
No precise rule has been formulated by which to determine this question in a specific case. Each case must depend upon its own facts. “ All that is requisite is that enough be done to enable us to say that the corporation is here.” This very general test was laid down in Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co. (220 N. Y. 259, 268). The same authority states a guide somewhat more easy of application. In effect it says, a corporation is here if its representatives transact its business in this State “ not casually and occasionally-, but systematically and regularly * * * with a fair measure of permanence and continuity.” It must here exercise some part of the business for which it was incorporated, though it need not be “ the characteristic feature of the business.” The principal part of its business may be conducted in the state of its
Howe company, a Maine corporation, has its office at 730 Fifth avenue, New York city. It is a strictly holding or parent corporation, having four subsidiaries of whom industrial company and mining company are two. It owns all of the farmer’s stock and nearly all of the latter’s.
Mining company is a New Jersey corporation, owning mines and mining ore in Mexico.
Industrial company (the moving defendant) is a Mexican corporation, engaged in milling ore. (It neither owns nor produces ore except an insignificant quantity produced under a lease.) It mills ore for mining company. Each month it receives the cost of milling plus an agreed profit.
Howe company not being a Mexican corporation, could not own real estate there. It organized industrial company “ to carry out the purposes of the Howe Sound Company.” Its incorporators immediately transferred its stock to Howe company. The Howe company annually compiled and submitted to its stockholders a consolidated balance sheet which included the assets and liabilities of industrial company and other subsidiaries. Of the Howe company, William J. Quigley was president, Reeve Schley, vice-president, W. J. Walworth vice-president and secretary, Emil Richter treasurer and assistant secretary. Of industrial company, William J. Quigley was president, Reeve Schley first substitute advisor, W. J. Walworth second substitute, Emil Richter substitute commissary. These four live in or near New York, and continuously devote practically all of their time to the New York office.
We do not hold that industrial company is doing business here merely because of this relationship between it and its parent company, Howe company. (Ultramar Co. v. Minerals Separation, Ltd., 126 Misc. 208; 236 N. Y. 647.) However, considering all the circumstances of the present case, it approaches, if indeed it does not come within, the rule making a holding company liable. (Costan
Nor do we hold that the residence of industrial company’s president and other representatives in New York, alone, would subject it to our. jurisdiction, though such residence is a fact mentioned and considered in many decisions. (Riverside Mills v. Menefee, 237 U. S. 189, 195.) As there stated: “ Not the character of the residence but the character and power of the one served as an agent of the corporation, was the test of the right to acquire jurisdiction.” It is not so much a question of where the officers and representatives of the foreign corporation resided but of what they did here, of the acts they performed here for the corporation and in connection with its business.
What acts did these officers, acting not as officers of the Howe company, but as officers of industrial company, do here for it and in connection with its business? In addition to the affidavits, we have the depositions of Messrs. Quigley, Richter and Walworth taken on this motion.
Mr. Quigley, the executive officer of industrial company, has his “ headquarters ” as its president “ right here in New York City.” Again, “My headquarters are here” (in New York). Mr. Ryan, the general manager in Mexico of both industrial company and Mining company, reported to President Quigley in New York and the latter gave orders and directions from New York to Mr. Ryan. “ Q. What do you mean by operating orders, Mr. Quigley? A. Pertaining to the conduct of the operations of the Company. Q. And those were issued by you? A. Yes.” Mr. Quigley, in New York, corresponded “ as President of Industrial.” He made “ visits ” of inspection to Mexico two or three times a year, remaining not to exceed two weeks at any time. The “ policy of running the operation ” was a matter of current discussion in the New York office, and “ the plans for financing the defendant [industrial company] were formulated in New York.”
It appears that industrial company had a first and second “ advisor ” living in Mexico and a “ first substitute advisor,” Mr. Schley, and a second “ substitute advisor,” Mr. Walworth, at the New York office. It also had a “ commissary ” living in Mexico, and a “ substitute commissary,” Mr. Richter, in the New York office. All are listed as “ officers ” in the moving affidavit.
Mr. Richter, as assistant commissary “ a supervisory or advisory function in connection with the funds of the defendant Industrial.” (He was treasurer of Howe company.) Under his supervision, a duplicate journal, ledger, cash book, check and bank book were
Mr. Walworth was known as second substitute advisor. (Mr. Quigley thought this meant substitute director.) He signed and countersigned checks in- New York and had charge of the files. Industrial company had stationery in Mexico bearing the inscription in Spanish “ Office in New York, 730 Fifth Avenue.” It had stationery in New York bearing the words “ New York office, 730 Fifth Avenue.” While deeds, leases, etc., were kept in Mexico, “ the leases were submitted to New York and then returned to Mexico and kept on file there.” In other words, they were passed on in New York. He corresponded with Mexico in connection with insurance matters, etc. All his duties were performed . in New York. According to Mr. Quigley, Mr. Walworth was a member of the “advisory board” which could recommend to the board of directors.
Industrial company had a small bank account in Mexico. It was replenished from New York. A duplicate of the account was kept in New York but the bank account was kept in a New York .bank. It was a substantial apcount. Checks thereon were drawn in Mexico but they were apparently for current operating expense, payroll, etc. Checks were drawn in New York. These covered more than office expense, president’s salary, insurance, etc. In 1926, 1927 and 1928 very substantial checks were drawn to other subsidiaries, apparently covering indebtedness of industrial company. Later surplus funds of the subsidiaries were invested in
We have detailed at great length the acts done and duties performed in New York by the moving defendant’s officers' and representatives. It is from these acts that we determine whether it is here. We hold that the defendant industrial company was engaged in business in the State of New York. It was controlled, directed and managed by its president and certain other officers from their office and headquarters in New York. In effect, the executive office of said defendant was in New York and its executive officers there performed their duties as such. They did this not casually and occasionally, but systematically and regularly, permanently and continually, from its incorporation, to the present time. We think it was “ doing business within the State in such manner and to such extent as to warrant the inference that it is present here.” (Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 220 N. Y. 259; Washington-Virginia Ry. Co. v. Real Estate, etc., Co., 238 U. S. 185; International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 id. 579; Grant v. Cananea, etc., 189 N. Y. 241; Pomeroy v. Hocking Valley Ry. Co., 218 id. 530; Rothenberg v. Western Pacific R. R. Co., 206 App. Div. 52; Stockton v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 124 Misc. 213; Henriques v. Gauthiod, etc., Co., 205 App. Div. 8; St. Louis S. W. Ry. v. Alexander, 227 U. S. 218; Mingus v. Florence, etc., Co., 302 Penn. St. 529.)
As each case must depend upon its own facts in determining
In St. Louis Ry. v. Alexander (supra) the defendant railroad had only a claim agent in New York. In Washington-Virginia Ry. v. Real Estate, etc. (supra) the defendant had no tracks and did not operate in Pennsylvania. It paid rent for desk room in Pennsylvania for its president, treasurer and bookkeeper. Its directors had not formally authorized the maintenance of an office in Pennsylvania. In Mingus v. Florence, etc. (supra) the defendant, a Delaware corporation, operated a mine in Utah, but had its
In Grant v. Cananea (supra) the facts are similar to the present case. There was a holding company and two subsidiaries; one Greene owned a majority of the stock of all three corporations and was the president of each. The holding company had an office in New York, from which President Greene apparently conducted the business of all three companies. The court held that service upon Greene, as president of the subsidiary foreign corporation, was valid and gave our court jurisdiction of said corporation. In discussing the facts, we think the court unfortunately failed to distinguish between Greene’s acts as president of the holding company and his acts as president of the subsidiary. It said: “ The business of the [subsidiary] is managed, controlled and its business conducted by the [holding company] through its president and officers at its office in Broad street in the city of New York.” In effect, it said that the common president, from his New York office, managed the subsidiary through the holding company. It is a fair inference that he managed the subsidiary as its president. Thus construed, we have a case of a subsidiary incorporated and operating in Mexico, but managed and controlled by its president in New York. The decision was so treated in Compania Mex., etc., v. Compania Met., etc. (223 App. Div. 346, 349; affd., 250 N. Y. 203), where, speaking of the Grant case, the court said: “ Greene was the president of both corporations and as president of the Mexican corporation conducted its affairs from an office in New York.”
The moving defendant suggests that the Pomeroy and Grant Cases (supra) have been overruled or discredited. So far as they are authority for the proposition that a foreign corporation ip here, if it is here supervised, directed and controlled by its executive officials, we do not think they have been questioned. The Pomeroy case was cited with approval in Feinberg v. Board, etc., Co. (218 App. Div. 777); Henriques v. Gauthiod, etc., Co. (205 id. 14); Holzer v. Dodge Bros. (233 N. Y. 216, 221), and its authority “ conceded ” in Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co. (220 N. Y. 259, 268). In Dollar Co. v. Canadian Co. (220 N. Y. 270, 274) our Court of Appeals said: “ This question * * * was not there [in the Pomeroy case] fairly presented.” What question? The Dollar Company case
In the Compania Mex. case the defendant had no officer, director or employee conducting any of its corporate business here. It was controlled only by stock ownership. The parent company merely exercised its stock control. Nothing was done in New York by any officer or agent of the defendant. “ The decisive factor in this case,” says the court (p. 210), “ is that the business here was not transacted by officers, agents or employees of the defendants, chosen and controlled by them. It was transacted by the officers, employees or receivers of other corporations transacting the business of the corporations they represented rather than the business' of the defendant corporations At no time was there present in this State any representative of the defendants who regularly conducted their business.” In the present case quite the contrary is true.
Certain dicta in the Grant case (following the decision of Pope v. Terre, etc., Co., 87 N. Y. 137) to the effect that jurisdiction of a foreign corporation may be obtained by service upon an officer, in this State, temporarily, and not on corporate business, is properly criticised in Bagdon v. Philadelphia, etc. (217 N. Y. 432, 438). Such service does not confer jurisdiction but such criticism does not go to the question as to whether the corporation is doing business here. That fact was conceded in the Bagdon case. Furthermore, the Grant case did not follow its own dicta, but recognized and followed the Federal rule which has since been fully adopted in New York. (Dollar Co. v. Canadian Co., supra.)
Of the cases cited by the defendant we have already referred to Compania Mex. v. Compania Met. (250 N. Y. 203). Ultramar
Holding as we do that the moving defendant industrial company was here doing business in New York, there can be no question of the regularity of the service of process. It was served upon its president in New York where he performed his duties as such president. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 229.)
This motion was made on the ground that defendant industrial company was a foreign corporation not engaged in business in New York. It is also argued that, if it was, the service of process herein upon its president does not give this court jurisdiction because each of the alleged causes of action is wholly unconnected with any corporate action by it within the State. To this argument there are, we think, two answers. First, under the New York statutes (Gen. Corp. Law, § 224,. as amd. by Laws of 1929, chap. 650; Civ. Prac. Act, § 229) and the construction thereof by the New York courts, which is controlling, service upon the defendant’s president here “ officially representing the corporation in its business,” gives this court jurisdiction, even though the cause of action was not connected with the corporate business transacted in this State. “ But when a foreign corporation is engaged in business in New York and is here represented by an officer, he is its agent to accept service though the cause of action has no relation to the business here transacted.” (Bagdon v. Philadelphia Co., 217 N. Y. 432, 438; Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 220 id. 259, 268, 269; Barrow Co. v. Kane, 170 U. S. 100, 109; Johnston v. Atlantic, etc., Co., 128 Misc. 82; Mass., etc., Co. v. Concrete, etc., Co., 37 F. [2d] 695; 30 A. L. R. 258.) Where the plaintiff is a resident, the question of jurisdiction is not even discretionary with the court. (Jacobsen v. U. S., etc., Corp., 128 Misc. 138, 140; Douglas v. N. Y., N. H. & H. Ry. Co., 279 U. S. 377.)
In Louisville, etc., v. Chatters (279 U. S. 320, 328), cited by defendant, the decision is based upon a Louisiana statute which provided that process might be served upon a designated agent in an action “ growing out of or connected with the business done by said
The motion is denied.