Allison Hill Trust Co. v. Sarandrea

134 Misc. 566, 236 N.Y.S. 265, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1200
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 134 Misc. 566 (Allison Hill Trust Co. v. Sarandrea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison Hill Trust Co. v. Sarandrea, 134 Misc. 566, 236 N.Y.S. 265, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1200 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Senn, J.

This is an action on a draft or trade acceptance of seventy-two dollars dated March 2, 1926, discounted by the plaintiff, a banking corporation, before maturity, and alleged to be held by it in due course. It was drawn on the defendant, who accepted it, by -the Walter S. Schell Co., Inc., a foreign stock corporation, hereafter, for brevity, called the Schell. Co., and was for the purchase price of an onion setter sold by the drawer to the drawee. The setter was sold to the defendant through one Patsy Ausilio, as agent of the Schell Co., and who sold its goods, consisting of onion setters and screens, seeds and onion sets, in the onion growing district in and about Canastota, N. Y. The goods were shipped from out of the State and delivered at Canastota, where the order for the onion setter in question and the trade acceptance were signed. The trade acceptance was made and payable within this State.

The answer alleged that at the time when the transactions took place the Schell Co. was doing business in this State without having first procured the certificate required by section 15 of the General Corporation Law (as added by Laws of 1927, chap. 425), and that, therefore, this action cannot be maintained by the plaintiff claiming under said corporation. It is conceded that the certificate had not been obtained and the only issue of fact is whether the Schell Co. was doing business in this State within the meaning of that section.

[568]*568There was evidence to the effect that Ausilio was the Schell Co.’s agent in and about Canastota; that he sold goods as orders were received by him, he sending the orders to his principal where, if accepted, they were filled and sent to Ausilio for delivery to the purchasers. He paid the freight and the Schell Co. paid him. The onion setters and screens were kept in his father’s barn. Some of them were left over and at the time of the trial (May, 1928) had not been delivered and were still at the barn. On at least one occasion he sold one of them to a party who had not ordered it (Mr. Sgroi). The machines were set up by him after being received. He hired help in setting them up and once purchased material needed in setting them up, for which the Schell Co. repaid him.

The onion seeds and onion sets were sent to Ausilio in carload lots and delivered by him from the car. There were nine or ten such carloads with 700 or 800 bushels to a carload. While he claimed that he only received such seeds and sets as were ordered by customers, it does not appear that they were in separate parcels or segregated according to the respective orders, except that the seeds other than onion seeds were sent direct to the purchasers. Sometimes consignees wanted more than they had ordered and were furnished as much additional as they desired from the car. For instance, Carl Torredor had given his written order for 200 bushels of onion sets, but when they came he wanted 50 bushels more and they were sold to him by Ausilio out of the same car at twenty-five cents advance in price over those ordered. James Goiffre had ordered 60 bushels and was sold 50 bushels additional from the car. Antonio Lenardi had ordered 100 bushels and was sold 125 bushels additional from the car. Dominick Ausilio, father of Patsy Ausilio, also appears to have purchased of his son onion sets additional to those for which he had given written orders. Evidently the Schell Co. sent enough onion sets in these carloads to not only fill the orders given, but enough additional to supply those who wanted more.

At the close of the evidence plaintiff’s counsel asked for a directed verdict for the plaintiff. This was denied and the case sent to the jury on the single question of whether the Schell Co. had been doing business in the State within the meaning of the prohibitive statute.

It is well settled that the statute in question is not to be taken literally. A foreign corporation may transact some kinds of business within the State without procuring a certificate or submitting to control. If its business be interstate, it is beyond State interference. To come within this section, the foreign corporation must do more [569]*569than make a single contract, engage in an isolated piece of business or an occasional undertaking; it must maintain and carry on business with some continuity of act and purpose, that is, a corporate continuity of conduct, such as might be evidenced by the investment of capital here, with the maintenance of an office for the transaction of its business and those incidental circumstances which attest the corporate intent to avail itself of the privilege to carry on a business. In short, it should appear that it intended to establish a continuous business in the State and not one of a temporary character. (Penn Collieries Co. v. McKeever, 183 N. Y. 98, 103; International Fuel & Iron Corp. v. Donner Steel Co., 242 id. 224.)

A single act cannot constitute doing business. (New York Architectural Terra-Cotta Co. v. Williams, 102 App. Div. 1.) Neither would-two sales. The statute is a rigorous measure and should receive a reasonable interpretation. (Ozark Cooperage Co. v. Quaker City Co., 112 App. Div. 62.) There must be more than an occasional transaction. (Brown Seed Co. v. Richardson, 53 Misc. 517.) Having a selling agent in the State who is paid a monthly commission and who at his own cost maintains an office with the corporation’s name on the door, is not doing business within the meaning of the statute. (Schwarz v. Sargent, 197 N. Y. Supp. 216.)

Sales by a commission agent of a foreign corporation, partly on commission where the orders had to be approved by his principal and partly from stock consigned to him by it for the benefit of purchasers who desired a speedy delivery, no approval of such sales being necessary, the principal having otherwise no capital invested in the State, was held not to be doing business in the State within the meaning of the statute in question; that the agent and not the plaintiff was doing the business. (Lederwerke v. Capitelli, 92 Misc. 260.)

Consignments to ' commission merchants are not within the statute. (Brookford Mills v. Baldwin, 154 App. Div. 553.)

A foreign .corporation is not doing business in the State when it has no place of business, no office and no stock of goods in the State, which simply consigns goods to merchants for sale under contracts subject to the approval of the vendor corporation. (Chase-Hackley Piano Co. v. Griffen, 149 N. Y. Supp. 998.)

From the foregoing and many other authorities of the same general tenor it will be seen that under the most favorable view of the evidence for the defendant, it is doubtful, to say the least, whether the Schell Co. was engaged in business in this State within the meaning of section 15 of the General Corporation Law (as added [570]*570by Laws of 1927, chap. 425),

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Bluebook (online)
134 Misc. 566, 236 N.Y.S. 265, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-hill-trust-co-v-sarandrea-nysupct-1929.