I. J. Cooper Rubber Co. v. Johnson

133 Tenn. 562
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 Tenn. 562 (I. J. Cooper Rubber Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
I. J. Cooper Rubber Co. v. Johnson, 133 Tenn. 562 (Tenn. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted by the Cooper Rubber Company, an Ohio corporation, to recover of Johnson and Tinsley, as sureties on a bond executed by the Standard Vulcanizing & Tire Company (called the tire company in this opinion), as principal.

The tire company was engaged in handling automobile accessories in Nashville, and entered into a contract with the rubber company by the terms of which the latter agreed to consign to the former tires, etc.., for a designated period. On account of its lack of financial ability or standing, the tire company was required to execute a bond to save harmless the rubber company in respect of a breach of the contract by the tire company.

The first and main defense of the sureties is that the complainant rubber company had not complied with our foreign corporation acts, and was doing business in this State through the agency of the tire company; therefore that it may not maintain the suit because of the failure to so comply. This defense was sustained by the chancellor.

The contract between the two companies is in character one of consignment of merchandise for sale, unless one or more of its provisions later to be set out, relied [565]*565on by appellee as so doing, mark it as one governing the parties as principal and agent — the tire company as agent through which the rubber company did business in this State. ^

A contract quite similar as to the main provisions was involved in the case of Butler Bros. Shoe Co. v. U. S. Rubber Co., 156 Fed., 1, 84 C. C. A., 167, writ denied 212 U. S. 557, 29 Sup. Ct., 686, 53 L. Ed., 658, in the court of appeals of the eighth circuit. In reply to the same defense that is here interposed — that the plaintiff rubber company had never qualified to do business in the state of Colorado, and that it could not therefore maintain suit in that State — the court said:

“It (the foreign corporation) agreed to ship the goods from its warehouse, or its mill, upon the orders of the appellee, to that company in Denver; and it did so. It contracted to do, and it did nothing more. It never had any office or place of business in Colorado. It never received, stored, handled, or sold any goods, or collected any money for the sales of any goods, in that State under this contract. It never incurred, assumed, or paid any expenses of doing all these things, or of conducting any of the business. The shoe company had and maintained a place of business in Colorado, it rented or owned the place in which the business in Colorado was done, and it agreed to bear all the expenses and losses of receiving, storing, and selling the goods, and it did so. The purchasers of the goods were purchasers from it, solicited and secured by it. They were [566]*566its customers, and liable to it for the purchase price of the goods. . . . The rubber company did not agree to do, and did not actually do, any of the business of receiving, storing, and selling the goods in Colorado. The shoe company did agree to do, and did do, that business. These facts have driven our minds with compelling force, to the conclusion that, within the true intent and meaning of the Constitution and statutes of Colorado, the rubber company was not doing business in that State, and the contracts between these litigants are valid and enforceable. ’ ’

Among other cases cited on the point in the opinion just quoted from are Allen v. Tyson-Jones Buggy Co., 91 Tex., 22, 40 S. W., 393, 714, and Gunn v. White Sewing Machine Co., 57 Ark., 24, 20 S. W., 591, 18 L. R. A., 206, 38 Am. St. Rep., 223, and cited for disapproval is the contrary ruling in Com v. Parlin, 118 Ky., 168, 80 S. W., 791. See, also, the later cases of Hessig-Ellis Drug Co. v. Sly, 83 Kan., 60, 109 Pac., 770, Ann. Cas., 1912A, 551; Stein Double Cushion Tire Co. v. Wm. Fulton Co. (Tex. Civ. App.), 159 S. W., 1013; Sucker State Drill Co. v. Wirtz, 17 N. D., 313, 115 N. W., 844, 18 L. R. A. (N. S), 135, and note; and note to Harrell v. Peters Cartridge Co., 44 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1094.

In Allen v. Tyson-Jones Buggy Co., supra, in speaking of such a foreign corporation’s status to maintain suit, it was said:

‘ ‘ The business which it transacted, as shown by the allegations, was to enter into a contract with the commission merchants to sell its buggies and phaetons on [567]*567commission. . . . The selling of the buggies and phaetons, which was to he done by the commission merchants, was not a business done or carried on by the corporation. It was the business of the commission merchants themselves.”

The terms “factor” and “commission merchants” are said to be nearly or quite synonymous; the former expression being more common in the'language of the law, and the latter in the language of commerce. A “factor” is one whose business it is to receive and sell goods for a commission, being intrusted with the possession of the goods to be sold, and usually selling in his own name. 1 Mechem on Agency, secs. 74, 2497, et seq.

While in one sense a factor or commission merchant is the agent of the consigning dealer or manufacturer, he does not conduct an agency or business for the latter' at the place of business of the former, where the sales of the consigned merchandise are made to customers chosen by the local dealer, at his own risk, and the proceeds of the sale do not become the exclusive property of the consigning company. A business so conducted'is truly said to be that of the factor or commission merchant.

A provision of the contract pointed to by appellee sureties as showing a doing of business in the State is one which makes it the duty of the tire company to insure the goods in its hands, as follows:

‘ ‘ Third. It is mutually agreed that the second party shall at all times cause the said merchandise in its [568]*568possession to be, to the satisfaction of the first party, insured against fire in the name of the first party, to an amount not less than eighty per cent, of the value of said merchandise. It is further understood that the policies covering such insurance shall be made payable to, and deposited with, the first party, and that the cost of this insurance shall be borne by the second party. ’ ’

The incorporation of similar clauses in contracts of consignment is not unusual, and it has been held that it does not have the effect claimed by appellee, to constitute the local dealer a business agency of the foreign corporation; the latter therefore to be treated as doing business in the State. Wasey v. Whitcomb, 167 Mich., 58, 132 N. W., 572; Three States Buggy etc., Co. v. Com., 32 Ky. Law Rep., 385, 105 S. W., 971; Sturm v. Boker, 150 U. S., 312, 14 Sup. Ct., 99, 37 L. Ed., 1093.

The power to insure the goods placed in his hands is one of the ordinary powers of a factor or of one selling on commission, imposable by contract or usage on the factor as such. 1 Mechem on Agency (2d Ed.), sec. 2521; 12 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d Ed.), 656; Wasey v. Whitcomb, supra. Manifestly the provision had relation to and was in furtherance of the duty to care for, and in certain circumstances to return, the goods.

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