Martin v. Barrett-Cravens Co.

164 Misc. 69, 298 N.Y.S. 101, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1446
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 Misc. 69 (Martin v. Barrett-Cravens Co.) 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
Martin v. Barrett-Cravens Co., 164 Misc. 69, 298 N.Y.S. 101, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1446 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Hallinan, J.

The defendant sold J. A. Melnick & Co. a portable elevator in New York. The plaintiff, in the course of his employment with Melnick, sustained severe injuries as a result of some defects in the machine. This action was subsequently instituted.

A summons and complaint was served by leaving a copy thereof in New York city with John Bebbington, alleged to be the managing agent of the defendant, an Illinois corporation, doing business in New York. The latter, appearing specially, moved to vacate and set aside such service on the ground that no jurisdiction had been obtained since it was not doing business within the State, and that process had not been served upon any of the persons designated in section 229 of the Civil Practice Act.

This matter was duly referred to an official referee to take proof and report with his opinion upon the following matters:

(1) Was John Bebbington a managing agent of Barrett-Cravens Company within the meaning of subdivision 3 of section 229 of the Civil Practice Act?

(2) Was Barrett-Cravens Company at the time of the service of the summons herein doing business within the State of New York in such a sense and in such a degree as to subject it to the jurisdiction of the courts of the State of New York?

The learned official referee handed down an opinion and report resolving the issues submitted to him in the negative.

This report now comes before me for confirmation which involves also the determination of the original motion to vacate the service of process. This motion is strenuously contested by the plaintiff upon the ground that the report is against the weight of evidence.

After reviewing the respective contentions of the parties and some of the testimony adduced, and pointing out certain cases urged by the defendant, the learned official referee concluded in his opinion: I do not wish the plaintiff to feel that I have neglected in any way [71]*71the careful perusal of his two briefs — over a hundred pages in all. I do not deny the force of his authorities, and he has presented authorities with frankness, but I cannot escape from the conclusion that at all times this defendant was endeavoring to live up, so far as it could, to the provisions which freed it from responsibility such as is here sought to be laid upon it. I cannot feel the defendant was in this State as a going concern; I cannot feel that Bebbington, by any act of his that has been brought to my attention, could enlarge the powers that limited his activities in behalf of this defendant. It may be that the learned Justice to whom my report shall go, might consider that this is such a close case that the plaintiff should have the benefit of the doubt and that the service should be deemed good service under the rule. I cannot, however, myself escape from the feeling that this corporation has not been shown as derelict in its endeavor to escape or in its endeavor to carry on its business as a non-resident corporation, represented simply by a sales agent.”

Reports of official referees to whom questions of fact have been referred to take testimony and report are generally adopted almost pro forma, because an experienced trier of facts, seeing and hearing the living witness, is better enabled to determine such issues than the justice to whom the matter is referred for confirmation. In this case, however, the learned official referee has more than once in his opinion specifically invited this court’s review of his findings. Consequently, this court feels impelled to give this case a consideration unprejudiced by the adverse decision of the learned official referee.

Judge Learned Hand, in Hutchinson v. Chase & Gilbert (45 F. [2d] 139, 142), aptly characterized the approach to a problem such as is here presented when he said: “ It is quite impossible to establish any rule from the decided cases; we must step from tuft to tuft across the morass.”

The decisions upon the proposition are without number. Every case is determined upon its particular facts and circumstances. And upon those facts and circumstances the determination is made whether a foreign corporation upon which the jurisdiction of the local courts is sought is present within the State.

As was said by Mr. Justice Davis of the Appellate Division, Second Department, then sitting in the Fourth Department, in the case of Cochran Box & Mfg. Co., Inc., v. Monroe Binder Board Co. (197 App. Div. 221, at p. 223; affd., 232 N. Y. 503): As to what constitutes doing business within the State, each case must depend upon its own facts to show that this essential requirement of jurisdiction exists. (International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. [72]*72579.) There is no precise test of the nature or extent of the business that must be done. All that is requisite is that enough be done to enable us to say that the corporation is here. (Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 220 N. Y. 259.) (See, also, International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. 579; Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 220 N. Y. 259.)

To the learned official referee the defendant’s “ endeavor to carry on its business as a non-resident corporation represented simply by a sales agent ” appeared to be worthy of emphasis. Said he: “I am impressed, as I review the whole case, that the defendant company was strenuously endeavoring to adhere to the rule which would relieve them from the charge of ' doing business in the State of New York.’ ”

That the defendant was strenuously endeavoring to sell its products in the State of New York without becoming amenable to the jurisdiction of its courts is beside the point. The referee’s conclusion that it succeeded in so doing is stating the proposition negatively. The true issue is, irrespective of its endeavors to escape jurisdiction, were the regularly and systematically conducted activities of the defendant in New York of such nature as to warrant the inference that the corporation “ is present ” in the State?

In the words of Judge Cardozo in Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co. (supra): “ We are to say, not whether the business is such that the corporation may be prevented from being here, but whether its business is such that it is here. If in fact it is here, if it is here, not occasionally or casually, but with a fair measure of permanence and continuity, .then, whether its business is interstate or local, it is within the jurisdiction of our courts.”

The defendant is an Illinois corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of “ materials handling equipment ” which term includes portable hand elevators, hand lift trucks, platform skids, material storage racks and hand trucks. It sells its products through sales representatives, to each of whom exclusive territory is assigned with the prohibition against soliciting in another territory unless open.”

To John Bebbington was assigned the territory consisting of the boroughs of Brooklyn, Manhattan, Bronx and Queens and the counties of Nassau and Suffolk, N. Y.

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Related

Dobson v. Maytag Sales Corp.
290 N.W. 346 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
164 Misc. 69, 298 N.Y.S. 101, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-barrett-cravens-co-nysupct-1937.