International Textbook Co. v. Pigg

217 U.S. 91, 30 S. Ct. 481, 54 L. Ed. 678, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1946, 3 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 2817
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 4, 1910
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by360 cases

This text of 217 U.S. 91 (International Textbook Co. v. Pigg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Textbook Co. v. Pigg, 217 U.S. 91, 30 S. Ct. 481, 54 L. Ed. 678, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1946, 3 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 2817 (1910).

Opinion

Mu. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the International Textbook Company in one of the courts of Kansas — the court of Topeka — to recover from Pigg, the defendant in error, the sum of $79.60 with interest as due the plaintiff under a written contract between him and that company made in 1905. The case was tried upon agreed facts and judgment was rendered in favor.of the defendant for his costs. That judgment was affirmed in a state District Court, which held that the plaintiff was not entitled to maintain the' action, and the latter judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Kansas.

It is assigned for error that the final judgment — based upon certain provision's of the statutes of Kansas, to be presently referred to — was in violation of the company’s rights under the Constitution of the United States.

The facts agreed to — using substantially the language of the parties — make substantially the following case:

The International Textbook Company is a Pennsylvania corporation, and the proprietor of what is known as the International Correspondence Schools at Scranton in that Commonwealth. Those Schools have courses in Architepture, Chemistry, Civil, Mechanical, Electrical and Steam Engineering, English Branches, French, German, Mathematics and Mechanics, Pedagogy, Plumbing, Heating, Telegraphy and many other subjects. It has a capital stock, and the profits arising from its business are distributed in dividends or applied otherwise as the company may elect. The executive officers of the company, as well as the teachers and instructors employed by it, reside and exercise their respective functions at Scranton. *100 Its business is conducted by preparing and publishing instruction papers, textbooks and illustrative apparatus for courses of study to be pursued by means of correspondence, and the forwarding,, from time to time, of such publications and apparatus to students. In the conduct of its business the company employs local or traveling “agents, called Solicitor-Collectors,' whose duties are to procure and forward to the company at-Scranton, from persons in a specified territory, on blanks furnished by it, applications for .scholarships in its Correspondence Schools, and also to collect and forward to the company deferred payments on scholarships. In order that applicants may adopt applications to their needs each Solicitor-Collector is kept informed by correspondence with the company of the fees to be collected for the various scholarships offered and of the contract charges to be made for cash or deferred payments, as well.as the terms of payment acceptable to the company. In conformity with the contract between the company and its scholars, the scholarship and instruction papers, text-books and illustrative apparatus called for under each accepted application are sent by the company from Scranton directly to the applicant and instruction is imparted by means of correspondence through the mails between the company at its office in that, city and. the annlicant at.his residence in another State.

During the period covered by the present transaction the company had a Solicitor-Collector for the territory that included Topeka, Kansas, and he solicited students to take correspondence courses in the plaintiffs schools. His office in Kansas was procured and maintained at his own expense, for the purpose of furthering the procuring of applications for scholarships and the collection of fees therefor. The company had no office of its own in that State. The Solicitor-Collector was paid a fixed salary by the company and a commission on the number of applications obtained and the collections made. He sent daily reports to the company for his territory, those reports showing that for March, ,1906, the aggregate collections *101 on scholarships and deferred payments on subscriptions approached $500.

At the date of the agreement sued on, and .at the time this suit was brought, numerous persons in Topeka were taking the plaintiff’s course of instruction by correspondence through the mails. The contracts for those courses were procured by its Solicitor-Collector assigned to duty in Kansas, and, as stated, payments thereon-were collected and remitted by him to the plaintiff at Scranton.

The written contract in question, signed by the defendant at Topeka, Kansas, and accepted by the company at Scranton showed that he had subscribed for a scholarship covering.a course of instruction by correspondence in Commercial Law, and had agreed to pay therefor $84, in installments. When this suit was brought there remained unpaid on the principal of that subscription the sum of $79.60.

The present action was brought to recover-that sum, with-interest, as due the company-under the defendant’s contract with it. The defendant did not deny making the contract nor that he was indebted to the company in the amount for which he was sued. But it was adjudged, in conformity with his contention, that by reason of the company’s failure to comply with certain provision^ of the statutes of Kansas, it was not entitled to maintain this action in a court of Kansas.

We will now refer to the provisidns of the Kansas statute under which the Textbook Company was held not to be entitled to maintain the present action in the courts of the State. The statute, the plaintiff alleges, cannot be applied to it without1 violating its rights under the Constitution of the United States.

By § 1260 of the Kansas Genéral Statutes of 1901 it is provided, -among other things, that a corporation organized-under the laws of any other State, Territory or foreign country and seeking to do business in Kansas, may make application to the State Charter Board, composed of the Attorney General, the Secretary, of State and the State Bank Commissioner, for“ per *102 mission” to engage in business in that State as a foreign corporation. It is necessary that the application should bé accompanied by a fee of $25, and as a condition precedent to obtaining authority to transact business in the State, a corporation of another State was required to file in the office of the Secretary of State its written consent, irrevocable, that process against it might be served upon that officer. §1261. In passing upon the application the Charter Board is authorized to make special inquiry in reference to the solvency of the corporation, and if they determined that such corporation was properly organized in accordance with the l,aws under which jt was incorporated, “that its capital is unimpaired and that it is organized for a purpose for which a domestic corporation may be organized” in Kansas, then its application is to be granted, and a certificate issued, setting forth the fact that “the application has been granted and that such foreign corporation may engage in business in this State.” Before filing its charter, or a certified copy thereof, with the Secretary of State the corporation is required to pay to the State Treasurer for. the benefit of the “permanent school fund” a specified per cent of its.capital stock. §§1263, 1-264-. The last-named section was the subject of extended examination in Western Union Tel. Co. v. Kansas, recently decided (216 U. S. 1

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217 U.S. 91, 30 S. Ct. 481, 54 L. Ed. 678, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1946, 3 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 2817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-textbook-co-v-pigg-scotus-1910.