271 Mo. 475 | Mo. | 1917
This is an original proceeding by certiorari to bring up to this court the record of the Springfield Court of Appeals in the case of Mergenthaler Linotype Co. v. Hays, 181 S. W. 1183. Two opinions have been written in the case by the learned Springfield Court of. Appeals. [182 Mo. App. 113.] In the opinion last rendered but first above cited, references are made to the first opinion for many of the- facts and for much of the law.
It is urged by relator as his ground for quashal, that the opinion of the Court of Appeals is in conflict with, the ease of United Shoe Machinery Co. v. Ramlose, 210 Mo. 631, and of other cases of similar import. The point upon which the case turns is what constitutes the transaction by a foreign corporation of business in this State within the purview of sections 3037, 3039 and 3040, Revised Statutes 1909.
The facts in the Ramlose case which we held constituted the transaction of business in this State are thus stated in the reported case:
“Said company, accordingly, about December 18, 1900, and from time to time thereafter, leased certain machines to the defendant, including those he had formerly owned or claimed he owned. The leases contained various conditions, among which were: (1) That the machines should be used by him only in his factory in St. Louis; (2) that he should obtain from the lessor, at prices to be fixed by it, all parts necessary to keep the machines in repair, and also any additional machinery*479 needed; (3) that he should pay all taxes levied on the machines; (4) that he should use the machines to their full capacity; (5) that he should pay the lessor a royalty of one cent a pair for all shoes manufactured, with a rebate allowance of fifty per cent if the royalty was paid by the 15th of the succeeding month; (6) that the lessor should have the right to attach indicators to the machines to register the number of shoes manufactured, and that the lessee should keep accurate accounts of the number of shoes manufactured; (7) that if he ceased to use exclusively the machines leased to him by the company, it should have a right to take possession thereof; (8) that the lease should: run seventeen years, but that the lessor should have the right to terminate it for any breach thereof or for any failure of the lessee to observe any one or more of the conditions of such lease or of any of the leases; (9) that a notice in writing sent through the mails should be sufficient to terminate such leases; (10) that the lessee acknowledged the validity of the lessor’s patents; (11) that no act of the lessor should waive any of the terms of the lease, unless by instrument of writing signed by its president, vice-president or treasurer; (12) that the term ‘lessor’ should include the company, its successors and assigns.”
The facts in the instant case as shown by the proof •below which the learned Springfield Court of Appeals excerpts and briefs for us run thus:
“We will briefly set forth the evidence as shown by this record. The plaintiff had in its employ a traveling salesman or solicitor whose duties required him to visit prospective customers in this State and induce them to enter into either contracts of purchase or contracts of lease. This salesman was working on a salary paid by the plaintiff and traveled in Missouri at the time this contract was made. In May, 1910, he induced the defendant Hays to enter into the contract of lease in question. It was signed by defendants (Hays and Davis) in Missouri, but was not to become a binding contract until accepted by the proper officers of the plaintiff in the State of New York. It was forwarded to New York and*480 by the plaintiff accepted, and under its terms a linotype machine was delivered, to the defendants in the city of New York. The rent, under the terms of the -lease, was payable to the plaintiff in the State of New York. The evidence shows that during the first four months of the year 1910 the plaintiff entered in to'eleven separate and distinct contracts in this State a ad leased twenty-seven separate linotype machines to customers in Missouri, and these machines were all installed during the first four months of the year 1910. It further shows that between December, 1895, and January, 1910, the plaintiff leased about three hundred machines in this State, all of which were installed under substantially the same kind of a contract as the one sued on in this case. The evidence shows that the contract of lease in suit-provides that the plaintiff would furnish a machinist to erect the machine, at the instance of the lessees. Also that in many cases the plaintiff had sent its machinists into this State to erect and install its machines, and that these machinists were in the employ of the plaintiff and were paid a salary by plaintiff. There is evidence that plaintiff also had in its employ operators of linotype machines who were to.instruct the lessees how to operate the machine. It is shown that on May 12, 1910, the date of the contract of lease in suit, plaintiff had in force in this State ’forty-five other contracts similar to this one, and had forty-five other machines installed in Missouri, and that whenever requested plaintiff sent its machinists into this State to make repairs. It is also shown that in 1913, some three years after this contract was made, plaintiff procured a license to transact business in this State, one of the witnesses saying this was done to conform to the laws of Missouri. The plaintiff, during the ten years prior to the making of this contract, had machines installed in this State the total value of which was approximately $600,000. . .
“Clause 4 of the lease provides that the plaintiff will furnish, at the expense of the lessees, a competent machinist to erect the machine at the place of business of the lessees and a skilled operator to instruct the les*481 sees in its use.' Clause 7 provides that the lessees will maintain the machine and its belongings in good condition and that they will at their own expense at once replace and repair all parts of the machine that become broken or damaged. The lease also provides that the lessor may inspect the machine at any time during the term of the lease, and the evidence disclosed that plaintiff did have in its employ inspectors who would go over the State inspecting its machines at least once every year.
“The evidence, we think, fails (under the authorities cited in our former opinion .and again cited in appellant’s brief now before us) to show that the acts of the plaintiff in making this lease and in performing the terms thereof subsequent to its execution digressed from carrying on business classified as interstate commerce, and wholly fails to evidence any fact showing that plaintiff had undertaken to carry on any local business, or intrastate commerce, in the State of Missouri.”
The contract made between the Mergenthaler Lino-type Company and Hays and Davis is not set out in the last opinion of the Court of' Appeals, but reference is made therein to the first opinion for the contents and provisions thereof. [182 Mo. App. 113.]
I. Upon these facts the Court of Appeals- ruled that the Mergenthaler Linotype Company was not when it made the contract with Hays and Davis on the 12th day of May, 1910, transacting business in Missouri. If this decision be opposed to what we said, or the conclusion which we reached upon similar facts (if the facts are similar) in the Ramlose case, we ought to quash the judgment of the Court of Appeals. That is the sole question to be determined.
When the matters and things transpired out of which the action between the Mergenthaler Linotype Company and Hays and Davis grew, i. e., when the contract of lease between the' above parties was entered into, section 3037, supra, had been construed as to divers phases and upon divers facts by this court. [Roeder v.
In the Ramlose ease the articles, to-wit, patented shoe making machines, (a) were leased by the United Shoe Machinery Company to Ramlose for seventeen years; in the Mergenthaler case the article, to-wit, á lino-type or type-casting machine was leased to Hays and Davis for six years; (b) in the Ramlose case the rent reserved (called therein royalty) was one cent per pair on each pair of shoes made by the lessee; in the Mergentha'ler case the rent was $632.50 in cash per year, payable in advance; (c) the leased machines in both cases were to be used only in the respective places of business of the lessees; (d) all pieces or parts necessary to replace broken or worn parts were in both cases to be bought from the lessors respectively, at prices fixed by the latter; (e) lessees in both cases were to pay all taxes .levied upon the machines; (f) in the Ramlose case the leased machines were to be operated to their full capacity ; in the Mergenthaler case it was forbidden to operate the machine more than sixteen hours per day; (g) in the Ramlose case the lessor had an agent and a place of business in this State; in the Mergenthaler case lessor had an agent, but no office or place of business of any kind in this State; (h) in both cases the contracts were
Under these facts, conceded, as this court found them to be, it was held in the Ramlose ease that the United Shoe Machinery Company was transacting business in this State. Was the Mergenthaler Linotype Company doing the like when it made the contract with Hays and Davis three years before it took out a license to do business in this State as a foreign corporation? We think this question must be answered in the affirmative.
In some aspects the Mergenthaler caSe is far stronger in favor of this view than is the Ramlose ease. The chief point of difference is that the Mergenthaler Company had neither an office nor a warehouse in this State: Whatever argument there may be in the fact of the maintenance of a warehouse by one and not by the other, there is no virtue in the argument of a difference based on the maintenance of an office. This for the reason that the statute itself requires that an office be maintained. Surely, no difference in favor of the Mergenthaler Company can be bottomed on its failure even to partially comply with the statute in question. As to the matter of the warehouse, it may be said that by the plainest inference repair parts and pieces only were kept in.such warehouse for use upon the leased machines of the Shoe Machinery Company. Here in the Mergenthaler case $600,000 worth of personal property, to-wit, type-casting machines, belonging to the latter company, were moved bodily into this State and leased out at an annual rental far in excess of that which the selling price of the machine would seem to warrant. In the one case mere repair parts and pieces were moved into the State; in the other some hundreds of type-casting machines were so moved. Moreover, the business of the United Shoe Machinery Company was not that of selling repair parts; it was that of leasing shoe-making machinery; one was merely a convenient incident to the other, its chief business.
We are of opinion that any foreign corporation, without taking out a license in Missouri -under sections 3037, 3039, 3040 and 3342, Eevised Statutes 1909, can under the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution, unhindered wholly by us or by the laws of this State, sell its typecasting machines or other commodities to citizens of this State under such terms as it sees fit (Kansas City v. McDonald, 175 S. W. 917; Wulfing v. Cork Co., 250 Mo. l. c. 731), that it can likewise sell repair parts to purchasers of its products or machines, and agree to send its skilled workmen and operatives into this State, at the expense of the users of its machines, to erect the same and teach the manner of the operation thereof. [Milan Milling Co. v. Gorten, 93 Tenn. 590; Flint & Walling Mfg. Co. v. McDonald, 21 S. D. 526.] But we do not think that any foreign corporation can through a period of ten years engage in this State in thé business of renting out its property at' an annual rent reserved, and of collecting that rent yearly throughout rental periods of six years, without complying with our statutes licensing foreign corporations. We need not lengthen-these views by a recital of the reasons for requiring a foreign corporation to maintain an office and
Neither docs it make any difference as between the facts in the Mergenthaler case and those in the Ramlose case, that in one a royalty in lieu of fixed rent was taken as compensation for the use of the machine, rather than a certain fixed cash sum payable annually in advance. Both are in effect rent-charges; both are doing business, though getting cash rent in advance may seem to be doing the better business. Interstate commerce, as to the particular phase confronting us, connotes trafficking transactions between citizens of different Statfes, whereby the title of the seller in the commodity sold is transferred to the buyer, or agreed so to be upon the contingency of payment of the purchase price by instalments or otherwise. [Kansas City v. McDonald, 175 S. W. 917.] 'Not one wherein the property of the quasi-seller is moved bodily into this State and leased for a long term of years for an exorbitant annual rental and to be returned to such seller at the end of the rental period.
The fact that in both cases the companies charged with transacting business in this State had resident agents here, proves nothing. Agents, like transportation companies, are mere instumentalities of commerce. Each is a necessity of commerce common to both intrastate and interstate .commerce, and so factors which in nowise differentiate the one sort of commerce from the other. In interstate commerce the delivery of the commodity to the purchasing citizen of another State may be either in the domicile of the vendor or of that of the vendee; it may be for cash,, or on time, by giving credit and taking back security, by payment-in full or by instalments, but if the title to the commodity does not pass, and is not to pass, certainly the business is not traffic; it is not buying and selling. It is but the bringing of the property of the
Concerning the further point urged by relator that there is no proof in the record that he executed the contract of lease, it suffices to say that this point, is so answered by the learned Court of Appeals as to leave nothing further for us to say about it. Théy rule that relator “is in no position to raise this point, as his answer in this ease clearly admits the contract of lease and the trial court was justified in finding that he signed it.” This is unquestionably good law.
We are of the opinion upon the other point, however, that the judgment of the Springfield Court of Appeals is in conflict with the case of United Shoe Machinery Co. v. Ramlose, supra, and that the judgment rendered by that court on the 8th day of January, 1916, in the cáse of Mergenthaler Linotype Co. v. Hays et al., should be quashed and for naught held. Let this be done.