Miller v. Boyle Construction Co.

17 S.E.2d 312, 198 S.C. 166, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 10, 1941
Docket15325
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 17 S.E.2d 312 (Miller v. Boyle Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Boyle Construction Co., 17 S.E.2d 312, 198 S.C. 166, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 76 (S.C. 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Associate Justice Eisitburne.

These two cases — one for death by wrongful act, and the other under the survival statute for conscious pain and suffering — were commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Lexington County by the service of a summons (without complaint) on the fifth day of September, 1940, on A. D. McCoy, the representative and agent of the defendant, Boyle Construction Company, at its offices in Bates-burg, in said county. Mr. McCoy was the office manager of the defendant.

Before answering, the appellant served notice of a motion to change the place of trial from Lexington County to Sumter County, basing such motion upon the ground that it is a South Carolina Corporation with its principal place of business in the City of Sumter, and that it makes no contracts and carries on no business in the County of Lexington other than an occasional contract to do road or bridge work. The appellant admits that it engaged in the performance of certain work in connection with the construction of *169 a highway in the County of Lexington between the 29th day of February, 1940, and the fifth day of September, 1940, but since said latter date has had no agent and has done no work in said county.

The Circuit Court refused the motion to change the venue, and the appeal comes here from that order. The identical question is involved in both cases, and this opinion will be decisive as to each.

The complaint alleged, among other things, that the defendant is engaged in the business of general contractors, constructing highways, roads, and bridges throughout this State under contract with the State Highway Department, owning and operating for such purposes valuable and extensive property, road machinery, motor trucks, and other facilities in the Counties of Sumter and Lexington, South Carolina, and having and maintaining offices and agents in the Town of Batesburg, in Lexington County.

The Circuit Court, Judge Sease presiding, held: “The evidence adduced before me at the hearing clearly shows that the defendant, Boyle Construction Company, at the time of service of process upon it, and for many months prior thereto, had rented and maintained an office and an agent in the Town of Batesburg, in Lexington County, South Carolina, for the transaction of its corporate business. That the summons in each of these cases was duly served by the sheriff of Lexington County on the defendant’s said agent, namely, one A. D. McCoy, who, as the evidence shows, was the manager of the said Batesburg office, and through whom and by whom the defendant transacted considerable of its corporate business from time to time, e. g., with the Standard Oil Company, the Town of Batesburg, the State Highway Department, and possibly others.”

And the Circuit Court found as a fact that the defendant at the commencement of the two actions in tort, and for sometime prior thereto, had and maintained a place of business in the County of Lexington as well as an agent *170 therein, engaged in conducting and carrying on the. corporate business for which the defendant exists.

Section 422 of our Code provides that “the action shall be tried in the county in which the defendant resides at the time of the commencement of the action.”

We said in Morris v. Peoples Baking Company, 191 S. C., 501, 5 S. E. (2d), 286, 287: “The residence of domestic corporation has been declared to be, and such corporation may be sued (1) in the county where its principal place of business is fixed by its charter, and (2) in any county where it has and maintains a place of business, or an agent engaged in conducting and carrying on the business for which it exists. McGrath v. Insurance Company, 74 S. C., 69, 54 S. E., 218; Elms v. Power Company, 78 S. C., 323, 58 S. E., 809; Dennis v. [Atlantic, etc.] R. R. Company, 86 S. C., 258, 68 S. E., 465; Patterson v. Orangeburg Fertilizer Company, 120 S. C., 478, 113 S. E., 318.”

It was held in Tucker v. Ingram, 187 S. C., 525, 198 S. E., 25, 28: “There is no doubt of the proposition that a corporation chartered under the laws of this State, that is to say, a domestic corporation, is a resident of any County in the State where it maintains an agent and conducts its corporate business, and suit may be brought against it in any such County.”

The lower Court has found as a fact that at the time of the service of the summons in these two actions the defendant had an agent, maintained an office, and conducted its corporate business in Lexington County. In a law case, this Court has no power to review such finding of fact unless wholly unsupported by evidence or manifestly influenced or controlled by error of law. Morris v. Peoples Baking Company, supra; Bass v. American Products Export & Import Corporation, 124 S. C., 346, 117 S. E., 594, 30 A. L. R., 168.

Upon reviewing the record before the lower Court, we think there can be no doubt that the Circuit Court was justified in finding that the defendant at the time of the service *171 of the summons, not only maintained a place of business at Batesburg, in Lexington County, but also had an agent located there who was engaged in conducting and carrying on its corporate business.

The appellant suggests' that a distinction may be drawn for purposes of venue, between the maintenance of a permament office at its principal place of business at Sumter, South Carolina, and the maintenance of a transitory office in Lexington County which was maintained and operated there merely for the purpose of doing temporary work on a highway construction contract. It is said that the residence of a corporation from the standpoint of venue must be sufficient to warrant the inference that the corporation has made itself a resident of the particular locality so as to make it amenable to process in the particular jurisdiction, and to have waived its substantial right of being sued only in the county where it has its principal place of business. The position is urged that this intention must be exemplified by something more than a mere isolated temporary residence within such other county.

Appellant seeks support for this argument by drawing an analogy between a domestic corporation and a foreign corporation when sued under somewhat similar circumstances. It is argued that, the mere presence of a foreign corporation in some state other than that of its origin, while engaged in an isolated transaction has uniformly been held not to make such corporation amenable to process in the foreign jurisdiction. We do not think the analogy is helpful.

The subject of the amenability of a foreign corporation< to the jurisdiction of our Courts was very recently discussed in the case of Jones v. General Motors Corporation, 197 S. C., 129, 14 S. E. (2d), 628. In that case we passed upon the question of agency, and what constituted “doing business” in the State. A reading of that decision plainly shows that the agent of a foreign corporation engaged in this State in a single corporate transaction may be served with proc *172

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E.2d 312, 198 S.C. 166, 1941 S.C. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-boyle-construction-co-sc-1941.