Job Iron & Steel Co. v. Clark

150 S.W. 367, 150 Ky. 246, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 892
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 367 (Job Iron & Steel Co. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Job Iron & Steel Co. v. Clark, 150 S.W. 367, 150 Ky. 246, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 892 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll —

Reversing-

This appeal is prosecuted to reverse a judgment rendered in the Kenton circuit court in favor of appellee and against the appellant company. The suit ■ was brought by appellee to recover commissions alleged to be due under an oral contract made in 1908 between the parties to this litigation.

In stating the terms of the contract the petition avers that it was agreed that appellee should represent, appellant as its agent in the sale of sheet steel in the cities of Cincinnati, O., and Covington and Newport, Ky., and [247]*247adjacent territory, and receive as compensation for his services fifty cents per ton for every ton of steel shippéd in to either of said cities whether same was sold by appellee or not. It further averred that under this contract appellant sold and shipped into the cities named, a large amount of steel, on all of which appellee was entitled to commission.

The summons on this petition was directed to the sheriff of Kenton County and was returned by him executed “By delivering a copy to E. G. Job, the president of said company, and to A. J. McCullough, the secretary and treasurer of said company, the chief officers of said company found in my county.”

The answer set up several defenses, but as we have reached the conclusion that the only error committed by the trial court was in ruling that the Kenton circuit, court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the case, it will only be necessary to notice this question. The first paragraph in the answer, relied on the want of jurisdiction, and reads as follows: “Now comes the Job Iron & Steel Co., and by way of plea and objection to the jurisdiction of the Kenton circuit court, and without admitting the jurisdiction of the Kenton circuit court, says that it is a corporation under the laws of Kentucky, that its principal office and place of business is Boyd County, in the State of Kentucky, and that’its only chief, officers and agents reside in Boyd County, and that said corporation, in complying with the statutes of Kentucky, has designated agents in Boyd County, Ky., upon whom process may be had, and that defendant has no chief officer or agent upon whom service of process may be had in Kenton County or within the jurisdiction of the court or elsewhere than in Boyd County. This defendant denies that the alleged contract referred to and sued on in the petition was made or to be performed in whole or in part or at all in Kenton County.”

To the answer a reply was filed, but in the reply no mention was made of the paragraph in the answer pleading jurisdiction. Subsequent to this, other pleadings were filed, but we find no order of court or pleading relating to the question of jurisdiction until during the trial of the case, when at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff, the defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor and also to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction, which motions were overruled by [248]*248the court. After these motions had been overruled the plaintiff filed an amended reply, denying that the contract sued on “was not to be performed either wholly or in part in Kenton County,” and averred “that said contract sued on was to be and was performed in this Kenton County, Ky.” After this the trial proceeded to judgment, and subsequently a motion for a new trial was filed, which, among other grounds, pointed out the error of the court in overruling the motion to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction.

The venue of an action like this is fixed by sec. 72 of the Code, providing in part that ‘ ‘ an action against a corporation which has an office or place of business in this State, or a chief officer or agent residing in this State, must be brought in the county in which such office or place of business is situated, or in which such officer or agent resides, or if it be upon a contract, in the above named county or in the county in which the contract is made or to be performed, or if it be for a tort, in the first named county or the county in which the tort is commited.” It will thus be seen that where the corporation has a chief officer or agent residing in this State and an office or place of business in this State, and the contract is made in this State, and is to be performed in this State, the action may be brought against it in the county in which it has an office or place of business, or in the county in which its chief officer or agent resides, or in the county in which the contract is made, or in the county in which the contract is to be performed. But as it is admitted by the pleadings that the contract sued on was not made in Kenton County, and further admitted that the office and place of business of the corporation was in Boyd County where its chief officers resided, the only counties having jurisdiction of the action were Boyd County and the county in which the contract was “to be performed,” if in the meaning of the Code it was '“to be performed” in any county in this State. So that under the admitted facts the questions come down to the point, was the contract sued on “to be performed” in Kenton County within the meaning of the words “to be performed” in the Code. And this involves the inquiry: Does tne Code provision mean that when service or labor under the contract may be performed in many counties or in more than one, the action may be brought in any one of the several counties in which service or labor may [249]*249be performed? Or does it mean that it can only be brought in a county in which the service or labor is “to be performed”- when it is to‘be wholly performed in that county? If the first construction obtains, then an action upon a contract that is to be or that may be partly performed in any one of several counties may be brought in any one of the counties in which it. may have been so performed, although not in its entirety. If the other construction prevails, then a contract that may be partly performed in more than one county and that is not to be entirely performed in any single county, can only be brought in the county where the contract is made or where the chief office or place of business of the corporation is located, or in the county where its chief officer or agent resides. So that whether or not the Kenton circuit court had jurisdiction depends upon which of these constructions is proper. Our construction is that the words “to be performed” have reference to a contract that is to be performed wholly or in all its essential parts in one county, and that when a contract provides that it may be performed in more than one county, the venue of the action is confined' to the other counties mentioned in the section in which the action may be brought.-

Under the Code the venue of actions is local or transitory. In other words, certain actions can only be brought in certain counties, while other actions may be brought in any county in' which the defendant may be served with process. The actions that are local are described in sections 62 to 77 inclusive, and in section 78’ provision is made for transitory actions. In providing that certain actions should only' be brought in specific counties, and in giving the right to bring other actions, in any county’ in which the defendant might be served' with process, it was evidently the intention of the framers of the Code to' confine to the counties' named, the actions the Code localizes' and not to permit these actions .to be brought in any other county.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 367, 150 Ky. 246, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/job-iron-steel-co-v-clark-kyctapp-1912.