Alexander Film Co. v. Ligon

36 S.W.2d 313
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 3553.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 S.W.2d 313 (Alexander Film Co. v. Ligon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander Film Co. v. Ligon, 36 S.W.2d 313 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

Appellant brought this suit in the county court of Lubbock county against H. L. Ligón, L. B. Rankin, and B. F. Foster for the sum of $455.40 based upon a written contract.

The defendant H. L. Ligón filed his plea in abatement and answer. On hearing of the plea in abatement, the court -rendered judgment sustaining same and dismissing the plaintiff’s suit and also dismissing defendant H. L. Ligon’s cross-action against his code-fendants. From this judgment the plaintiff film company has appealed.

The question presented by the appeal is: The plaintiff being a foreign corporation and not having obtained from the proper authorities of the state of Texas a permit to transact its business in this statq, was the transaction sued on intrastate or interstate business? If the contract involved in this litigation was interstate business, the action of the court in sustaining the defendant Lig-on’s plea in abatement was erroneous.

The written contract sued on was dated at Lubbock, Tex., 2 — 18—1929 and which was signed by H. L. Ligón, provides for film advertising, and authorizes the plaintiff to display catalog films for him for a period of fifty-two weeks in two picture shows in Lubbock, Tex., and the film company agrees to produce one N. C. full screen trailer (each ten words or less), with all of the necessary prints of same and to ship to the theaters in the following manner: Two shipments per month to the Palace Theater. Receipt of $36 is acknowledged and the advertiser agrees to pay the balance in installments of $36 per month for eleven months. The first installment to be due in thirty days after the first shipment of service from the film company’s studio. There are provisions for additional service and a reservation of the right to display national or sectional service. Also providing if any payment shall be delinquent for more than one month, all remaining installments shall become due and payable and' the advertiser agrees to pay collection charges, including attorney’s fees. Delinquent payments to draw the legal rate of interest.

Printed on the back of this contract is the following:

“In order that full benefits may be received from this movie playlet service, subscribers are advised to watch carefully the screening of same and to notify theater manager of any irregularity. Also see that all films are returned promptly, parcel post, by the theater at the end of their rental periods. Otherwise shipments can not be made according to schedule.”

It will be observed that while the appellant had an agent in Lubbock county, who negotiated the contracts between the parties, it did not have an office for the transaction of its business in this state. Its domicile was in the state of Colorado, where it was incorporated.

The fact that the record does not include an actual sale of a definite piece of property is not conclusive of whether or not it was transacting intrastate commerce and does not change the rule to be applied to such transactions. The selling of property and the authority to sell carries with it the power to mortgage or lease.

The Supreme Court of Texas, in the case of Red River National Bank v. Ferguson, 109 Tex. 287, 206 S. W. 928, in discussing the powers of the wife to sell her separate property without the joinder of her husband, holds that such power to convey includes necessarily the power to mortgage. If that be true, and such powers of sale includes the power to mortgage, and the plaintiff having such power to sell property or merchandise in the transaction of its business, it necessarily follows that it has the lesser power to lease such property. Hence, the fact that an outright sale was not contemplated by the parties, but that the property was leased for a term, does not and cannot give the transaction the status of intrastate business. In *315 terstate business has a wider definition that a mere sale of physical property, and whether or not a given transaction is a sale and delivery of property is not the sole test hy which the transaction is judged.

In the case at bar, as above stated, the domicile of the plaintiff was in the state of Colorado; the manufacturing of the films leased to Ligón occurred in that state; the contract before it could be binding had to have the approval of the plaintiff corporation) through its officers, and the contract expressly provides that the films, after the service1, was rendered in Lubbock, would be returned to the home office in the state of Colorado.

The appellee contends that the contract was essentially one for continued local personal service through Texas labor and with Texas facilities. It is true that the record shows that the plaintiff corporation had entered into another contract with the picture,' shows to run the advertising films, advertising the business of defendant Ligón. This contention is answered by the Commission of Appeals with the express approval of the Supreme Court in the case of Southwest General Electric Co. v. Nunn Electric Company, 283 S. W. 781. In that case the contract between the appellant and appellee contained the following provisions:

“The agent shall sell or otherwise distribute lamps from the manufacturer’s store only in packages or wrappers supplied by the manufacturer, which among other things, will contain a notice substantially in the following form: ‘The lamp (s) contained herein is (are) manufactured by the Edison Lamp Works of the General Electric Company, which sells its Mazda and Gem Lamps exclusively through its own branches and agents direct to the consumer.’ ”

The further provision as follows:

“(a) To distribute lamps from the manufacturer’s store in the custody of the agent to those agents holding agency appointments from the manufacturer whom this agent may be given by the manufacturer written authority to serve; (to) to sell to any consumer, within domestic territory ⅞ * ⅜ lamps for immediate delivery froni said store in broken package quantities, * ⅜ * and to sell from said store to any purchaser under written contract with the manufacturer for the Edison brand of lamps on the manufacturer’s standard form, and to whom the agent may be given by the manufacturer written authority to deliver lamps at the prices set forth in said contract.”

In passing upon this question, the Commission of Appeals says:

“But the question remains, Does the incorporation in the contract of the provisions above quoted compel a different conclusion in this case; that is, that the contract on the whole shows that the General Electric Company was transacting business in Texas? We do not think so. Of course the execution of .the contract itself was the transaction of business, but it was not a transaction of business in Texas. It was interstate in* its character, and therefore not within the prescription of the statute. It is, so far as this case is concerned, only the transaction of business in Texas that is forbidden except upon the state’s permit. Now, clearly it seems to us, the only business to be transacted or that was transacted in Texas, so far as the General Electric Company is concerned, was the sale of the lamps, and the accounting therefor. It is true in the nature of things there are stipulated many regulations and limitations upon the manner of doing this business. This is to be expected. The title to the goods was retained in the manufacturer until they were actually sold.

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Related

Ligon v. Alexander Film Co.
55 S.W.2d 1030 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W.2d 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-film-co-v-ligon-texapp-1931.