Murphy v. Albany Pecan Development Co.

169 Iowa 542
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 169 Iowa 542 (Murphy v. Albany Pecan Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Albany Pecan Development Co., 169 Iowa 542 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Preston, J.

1. Pkocess: service: nonresident: foreign corporation : jurisdiction over: “agency.” — The three defendants named in the caption, other than John L. Wright, are non-residents of Iowa. Two of them are corporations. Service was had upon them by serving John L. Wright as their agent. The issues were as to whether proper service was made upon John L. Wright as agent to acquire jurisdiction of the appellees. Appellees’ motion was supported by affidavits, as was plaintiff’s resistance thereto, and both parties offered evidence of witnesses in court.

The grounds of the' motion are, in substance, that the first two named defendants are non-resident corporations and the other defendant is a non-resident; that they neither individually nor collectively have any officer or agent within the county of Polk and state of Iowa, and that no agency is maintained by any of them in said county; that John L. Wright is not in the employ of any of the' defendants; that he is, so far as is known to the defendants, an independent broker and has acted as such in all transactions which are referred to in the petition. The affidavit of John L. Wright, made a part of the motion, states that he is not the agent of any of his co-defendants; that he is not in the employ of any of said co-defendants, and that he has been given no authority to represent them or their business within the state of Iowa; that they do not contribute to any of his office' expenses; and [544]*544that the only transaction he has ever had with them is that of an independent broker. He testified as a witness:

“I know Mr. Murphy. My individual transactions with him, I can’t remember. I don’t know what my personal transactions were. I talked with him a little I know, but what transactions there were I can’t say. I took application Exhibit ‘A,’ a contract, and forwarded it to the Company. As compensation for taking these applications they paid me a commission. ¥e had a verbal arrangement, if I obtained any contract for development or procured a prospect of sale of any of this Pecan Development Company in Florida I was to receive a commission. I received the application and forwarded it to them. I did not make any endorsement on the application at all in the way of approving it. I received nothing as a contribution of any kind from any of these defendants 'towards the expenses of my office or by way of salary. I never received any. compensation on this deal whatever. I do not know whether or not Mr. Murphy has paid any of the payments except the first annual payment; he has not to me. Sometimes some of them have brought checks payable to the company to me to send down. In those instances, payments were made out in the company’s name and I received no compensation whatever for sending down this Murphy contract. That arrangement was had at the time the Murphy contract was obtained by the Girardeau Company.
“I was down there the last time in August, this year. My arrangement with the Albany Pecan Development Company is an oral one, somewhat different in detail and compensation than the one with the Girardeau Company; it is all verbal. I never saw, nor had in my possession, the original of an agreement signed by Mr. Murphy on May 28, 1913, and I never saw this copy of it. The Albany Pecan Development Company, and the Girardeau Company, and J. H. Girardeau, Jr., were all non-residents of the state of Iowa. I know M. R. Kennedy. He never left any application with [545]*545me for any of these defendant companies. He called on me, but I do not know whether it was with reference to an application or not. I did not send any telegram down there for him and did not receive one. He never bought any land or stock in the development company through me.
Cross-examination.
“I know Mr. Kennedy and have had a conversation with him. He eame and asked me if I was agent for the Albany Pecan Company and I told him yes. I probably did fill out this application, I couldn’t say whether I did or not, for the chances are I did.
Re-direct-examination.
“Mr. Kennedy asked me whether I was agent, and I told him I was in the sense that I sold the land on commission. I might say both of those transactions through this land business was by putting the buyer in touch with the company direct. I handled some, very little went through my personal hands in any way. I told Mr. Kennedy I was agent for this company in the sense I have testified to. ”
Re-cross-examination.
Q. ‘ ‘You just told him you was agent ? ’’
A. “I told him I was agent — I can’t recall the exact detail.”
Q. “You did go into detail?”
A. “We said something in reference to the sale of land. I was agent in the sense of selling the land. ’ ’
Q. “Mr. Kennedy was in your office twice, he went out and came back with Mr. Murphy; and you told him the second time he was in ? ”
A. “Héasked me about the agency first time, and didn’t stay iñ and he came'back with Mr. Murphy, and I attempted to'explain. ”

[546]*546Plaintiff’s application, Exbibit “A”, referred to by the witness Wright, is as follows:

APPLICATION FOR DEVELOPMENT.
For five acres, purchased from Columbia Florida Land Company and described as Pt. of S. W. Q. farm No. 66 in Columbia County, State of Florida.
I, the undersigned do hereby apply for the development of five acres of land in Columbia County, State of Florida, which was purchased from Columbia Florida Land Company of St. Louis, Mo., and described as part of the southwest-quarter of farm No. 66 of Lake City Farms.
For a contract to fence this property with a stock proof wire fence, clear this land suitable for the best growth of Pecan trees, and to sot this orchard with Pecan trees not later than the fall following this application. Trees to be not less than three feet tall and roots not less than two years old. Tó be of the most approved of the finer paper-shell varieties of budded and grafted pecans and to be set twenty trees to the acre.
The trees to be carefully and thoroughly fertilized, cultivated, pruned, and eared for, according to the best scientific judgment and experience of pecan culture, for a period of sixty months after the trees are set. Any trees that may die at any time from any cause whatever are to be replaced within twelve months with trees of a proportionate larger grade as will keep the grove as near uniform as is practical at all times.
For and in consideration of such services I agree to pay Six Hundred Dollars, $600.00 as follows: One Hundred Dollars, $100.00 down and which accompanies this application and One Hundred, $100.00 on the first of each succeeding year hereafter till this full amount has been paid.
This property and grove is to be held as security for any defaults in payments as above mentioned and any such de-. ferre'd payments shall bear interest from default at the rate [547]*547of ten per centum per annum till paid and the contractor is at liberty to stop all developments after three consecutive defaults in monthly payments by the applicant.

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Bluebook (online)
169 Iowa 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-albany-pecan-development-co-iowa-1915.