Mud Control Laboratories v. Covey

269 P.2d 854, 2 Utah 2d 85, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1572, 1954 Utah LEXIS 157
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1954
Docket8025, 8039
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 269 P.2d 854 (Mud Control Laboratories v. Covey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mud Control Laboratories v. Covey, 269 P.2d 854, 2 Utah 2d 85, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1572, 1954 Utah LEXIS 157 (Utah 1954).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

These two actions were brought by plain- ■ tiffs to recover for materials furnished defendants for use in oil drilling operations. Judgment was for plaintiffs, except that Mud Control was not allowed recovery for that portion of its materials which were sold. before it qualified to do business in the state ■of Utah.

Mud Control initiated this appeal, challenging the limitation on its judgment just referred to; the defendants cross appealed in the Mud Control case and appealed against Christensen, assailing the validity of both judgments in favor of the plaintiffs.

We first address the appeal of Mud Control. It is an Oklahoma corporation which sells certain chemicals, referred to in the oil business as “drilling mud.” It sold and delivered to defendants $7,458.10 worth between March 7, 1949, and July 27, 1949. On the latter date it qualified to do business in the state of Utah and thereafter sold an additional $765.54 worth of such material for which latter amount the trial court allowed recovery, but upon the basis of section 16-8-3 U.C.A.1953, which provides that if a corporation does business in this state without qualifying its contracts are void, refused to grant judgment for the amount sold prior to qualifying.

Mud Control contends that its sales were in interstate' commerce and that the application óf section 16-8-3 ' just referred ' to would constitute a burden thereon violative of the Federal Constitution under decisions of the United States Supreme Court construing the following clauses of the United States Constitution: 1

“The Congress shall have Power * * * To regulate Commerce with *88 foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes”. 2
“No State shall, without the Consent of Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection Laws”. 3

Mud Control concedes that unless the sales made before qualifying were sales in interstate commerce, recovery for them was rightly refused, but argues that the sales were in interstate commerce because they were the first sales of goods in the “original package,” and therefore fall within the “original package doctrine.” Generally stated, this doctrine, which was first announced by Justice Marshall in Brown v. Maryland, 4 is that goods imported into a state are in interstate commerce and free from state regulation and control so long as they are in the original package in which they were placed by the shipper; and this protection extends to the first sale of goods by the importer. Speaking broadly, it has been applied in three categories: (1) taxation of foreign commerce (2) taxation of interstate commerce (3) state regulation of such commerce. Under the facts here we are only concerned with the latter.

It seems obvious that the question of “original package” is not the ultimate fact to be determined; it is simply one of the tests to be applied in determining whether goods are actually in interstate commerce. The Supreme Court of the United States so indicated in the case of Baldwin v. G. A. F. Seelig, Inc., 5 wherein it applied the original package test in holding that a New York statute, which regulated the sale of milk, did not apply to milk imported into the state, but stated “The test * * * is not inflexible and final for the transactions in interstate commerce, * *

A case which is closely analogous to the instant one is Walling v. Jacksonville Paper Company, 6 where the Supreme Court was faced with the problem as to whether certain paper products were in interstate commerce. It held that goods shipped into Florida directly to the customer, and those shipped on special order consigned to a branch office designated for delivery to a specific customer, were within interstate commerce, but that goods which were shipped to the branch warehouse, to be held subject to the taking of orders from a fairly stable group of customers, had come to rest, and were thereafter not interstate commerce, but commerce within the state. Similarly in Dalton Adding Machine Sales Company v. Lindquist, 7 the Dalton Company maintained an agent and office in the state of Washington; machines were sent to the agent and were sold by him and his *89 assistants throughout the state. The court characterized such transactions as follows: “It [the company] ships no goods upon the orders- taken by its agents. On the contrary, it ships its machines to its agents before any such orders are taken, * * *. Before any sale is attempted, the machines are within the state. They have come to ■* * * rest, and are a part of the general property within the state, protected by the laws of the state, and subject to the same conditions with respect to their disposition as like property generally within the state”, and held the business so conducted to be intrastate rather than interstate.

The principles in the foregoing -cases are applicable to the fact situation we have here. Mud Control products were trucked into Vernal, Utah, where they were placed on the property of one L. N. Lis■combe and there kept under tarpaulins pending sale. Their Mr. Putnam, who handled sales and customer relations, contacted Baird and Robbins and arranged to sell them drilling mud. Whenever it was required, one of the oil crew went to the Lis■combe premises and obtained the mud by signing a delivery ticket. When such products were deposited for warehousing, subject to distribution upon orders to be taken, their transit in interstate commerce had come to an end. Subsequent sales by Mud •Control were in intrastate commerce and subject to regulation by the laws of Utah. Mud Control having failed to qualify to do business within the state, the trial court properly held its contract void and refused to allow recovery for that portion of its products which were sold before qualifying.

The appeal of the defendants challenges the finding of the trial court that they were partners with Baird and Robbins in drilling an oil well known as Bertie Slaugh No. 1 in which the materials in question were used. They aver that Baird & Robbins Drilling Co., Inc., a corporation, (herein called the Drilling Corporation) drilled the well, and that they bore no partnership relation to either said drilling corporation or to Baird and Robbins.

The essential facts- appear to be that M. E. Baird and H. L. Robbins were in partnership known as Baird and Robbins Drilling Company or simply Baird and Robbins, engaged in exploration and drilling on certain oil leases in Uintah County. For the purpose of raising capital to finance their operations they entered into a “Joint Operating Agreement” with the Defendants by which the latter agreed to advance $16,000 to be used in drilling the first well. It provided that Baird and Robbins would either drill the well themselves or have it done by the Drilling Corporation, which they had previously created and exclusively controlled.

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Bluebook (online)
269 P.2d 854, 2 Utah 2d 85, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1572, 1954 Utah LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mud-control-laboratories-v-covey-utah-1954.