Merchandise Reporting Co. v. L. Oransky & Sons

133 Misc. 890
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 Misc. 890 (Merchandise Reporting Co. v. L. Oransky & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchandise Reporting Co. v. L. Oransky & Sons, 133 Misc. 890 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Keller, J.

The facts as found by the referee are substantially as follows: David Oransky, an officer of the defendant corporation, the owner of a department store in Des Moines, Iowa, was served with a summons in an action in this court while in the city of New York. The action is for breach of a written contract of employment, pursuant to which plaintiff acted as defendant’s representative in the city of New York. The defendant appeared specially and moved to vacate the service of the summons on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction, its contention being that it has not filed a certificate permitting it to do business within the State and that it is not doing business within the State so as to manifest its presence here and make it amenable to the process of the State. David Oransky, the secretary of defendant corporation, came to New York once, twice or three times a year on the business of the corporation, according to seasonal requirements of defendant’s business. There are about ten other buyers of the corporation who came to New York [891]*891on defendant’s business from one to six times a year, according to seasonal requirements. The defendant at the time it was served with the summons had a written contract with Felix Lilienthal & Co., Inc., of the city of New York, to act as its resident New York buyer and to furnish reasonable office facilities to the defendant at its offices in New York city, for which the defendant was to pay $3,000 a year in equal monthly installments for the year 1928. The testimony shows that the duties of the resident buyer were to supply it with market information on styles and sources of supply, to place orders' for defendant when so instructed, and among other things to give it market information when its buyers are in the market. The office facilities that it furnished the defendant were the use of one of a large number of rooms into which its space was divided. It had about 150 firms for which it acted as resident buyer, to each of which one of the rooms was assigned when buyers or representatives came to the New York market. When the defendant came to New York it notified the resident buyer in advance, and one of the rooms was assigned to the defendant which was used by its buyers when in New York for the transaction of such business as a buyer would transact, which included the receipt of mail, the examination of samples and the interviewing of such persons as sought to sell them merchandise. The defendant’s name was printed on a card which was placed in a slot on a board in the main office indicating the room that it occupied. There were five such slots in which names of firms for which Felix Lilienthal & Co., Inc., acted as resident buyer were placed when their buyers or executives were in the market. These names were removed when the buyer or executive left the market. The names on the board were placed there to keep salesmen informed of who was in the New York market. The above is a résumé of the facts found by the learned referee in so far as they are necessary to this decision, and on these facts he has found as a matter of law that the defendant was not doing business in the State of New York with such a fair measure of permanence and. continuity ” as to bring it within the purview of sections 15 and 16 of the General Corporation Law (added by Laws of 1927, chap. 425).

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Related

Halpern v. Pennsylvania Lumber Industries
137 Misc. 688 (New York Supreme Court, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
133 Misc. 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchandise-reporting-co-v-l-oransky-sons-nynyccityct-1929.