National Sign Co. v. MacCar Cleveland Sales Co.

168 N.E. 758, 33 Ohio App. 89, 7 Ohio Law. Abs. 585, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 559
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 168 N.E. 758 (National Sign Co. v. MacCar Cleveland Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Sign Co. v. MacCar Cleveland Sales Co., 168 N.E. 758, 33 Ohio App. 89, 7 Ohio Law. Abs. 585, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 559 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Vickery, P. J.

This cause comes into this court on a petition in error to the municipal court of the city of Cleveland. In the court below the plaintiff in error was plaintiff, and brought its action against the defendant to recover the balance due upon a contract. After hearing the evidence on both sides, and the arguments of counsel, the court found for the defendant, dismissing the petition and rendering judgment against the plaintiff for costs, to reverse which judgment error is prosecuted here.

Prom the record and arguments of counsel, we learn that the plaintiff in error is an Indiana corporation, formed for doing business in Indiana, and *90 that op or about the 9th day of October, 1925, it entered into a written contract with the defendant, whereby it agreed, for a stipulated price, to erect fifteen signs for the defendant company along public roads leading into Cleveland, which contract was to last for the full period of three years; that by virtue of this contract, the plaintiff was to lease land, erect the signs, and keep them in order by proper inspection and otherwise, for the full period of three years, and, if necessary, to refurbish by painting and varnishing. It seems that these signs were delivered and placed, so far as we know, in accordance with the contract, along proper highways leading into Cleveland, the plaintiff furnishing the location; that is, leasing the land upon which these signs were placed, and the property in the signs remaining in the plaintiff company.

It seems that a part of the contract price had been paid, but not all of it, there being a balance of $979, which the defendant company, defendant in error here, refused to pay — for what reason, so far as this suit is concerned, becomes immaterial — whereupon the plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, brought its action in the municipal court to recover the above sum which it alleged to be due it on this contract, and upon the trial of the action, as already stated, a judgment was rendered for the defendant below.

Now the only question that is urged in this court is one of much importance — whether, in brief, this was merely a sale of goods to be delivered into Ohio, and simply a matter of interstate commerce, or whether it involved the.carrying on of business in Ohio by the defendant company.

It is admitted in this record that the plaintiff com *91 pany had not complied with Section 5508 of the Ohio statutes, in that, before it could do business in Ohio, if it came within the statute, it must comply with the law and procure a license, and that was tbe reason the trial court gave why the judgment was rendered for the defendant. Now the record shows that this contract was made in Indiana, at least it was not binding upon either party until it had been approved in the Indiana office at Kokomo, Indiana. It is perfectly manifest that it was within the contemplation of both parties that the performance of the contract was to take place in Ohio, but in our judgment it does not make much difference where the contract was made, whether in Ohio or in Indiana, for it is conceded that the plaintiff company is a foreign corporation, and has no office or place to do business, nor has it complied with the above-cited statute in procuring a license to do business in Ohio, and so, as already stated, the sole question to be determined is: Was the business or work contemplated by this contract upon the part of the plaintiff company for the defendant doing business or performing work in Ohio ?

At first blush one would think it was simply the selling of material by a foreign corporation to be delivered in Ohio, and, if so, it would be only interstate commerce and would not be subject to tbe statutes of Ohio; but upon examination is that the fact? Here, as a matter of fact, there was no sale whatever. There was a contract for service, for advertising the products or the business of the defendant company, and all of that was to be performed in Ohio. Now the method of doing that was, of course, first the exercise of interstate commerce, *92 or rather the use of interstate commerce in transr porting the goods into Ohio, and, if the matter had stopped there, and the plaintiff had simply sold the goods, to be taken care of by the consignee in Ohio, there would be no question but that it would be interstate commerce only, and the question involved here could not arise. It makes no difference whore the contract was made, it would still be interstate commerce, and the contract could be enforced wherever service could be obtained upon the parties. Here it contemplated upon the part of the plaintiff below, plaintiff in error here, the keeping of a crew of men, and it makes no difference whether they were imported from Indiana, or whether they were residents in Ohio. They were on the pay roll of the foreign corporation and performed work for the foreign corporation, and, so far as this contract is concerned, the entire work was to be and was performed in Ohio, and I have spoken of a sale, and I have likewise spoken of the fact that in the instant case there was no sale; the contract being one to perform service in erecting these signs and keeping them in order for the full period of the contract, to wit, .three years.

It is amazing to find how many decisions there are upon this question. In Browning v. City of Waycross, 233 U. S., 16, 34 S. Ct., 578, 580, 58 L. Ed., 828 (1914), a foreign corporation of St. Louis, through its agent, made a contract whereby it sold a certain number of lightning rods to be erected in the city of Waycross, Georgia, which it was to erect upon buildings in Georgia, and the entire price was fixed in the sale price. ■ The United States court held that the affixing of the lightning rods “con *93 cerned merely the doing of a local act after interstate commerce had completely terminated.” Now that case is not anywhere nearly so strong as the instant case.

In Phoenix Nursery Co. v. Trostel, 166 Wis., 215, 164 N. W., 995, L. R. A., 1918B, 311 (1917), a foreign corporation sold to a person in Wisconsin a quantity of trees and shrubs, and as a part of the contract it agreed to plant those trees and to replant them by replacing any that died. The trees were not paid for, a suit was brought, and the court in that case, interpreting the Wisconsin statute (1915), Section 1770b, which is practically identical with Section 5508, General Code of Ohio, held that this was not interstate commerce, but was the doing of work and the performing of business in the state of Wisconsin, and was within the statute, and held that the contract was absolutely void.

We recognize the fact that nursery stock might be sold from New York state, we will say, and shipped into Ohio, and the fact that it was shipped into Ohio would not constitute doing work or business in Ohio. That would still be interstate commerce, but when, as in the Wisconsin case, they undertake to perform services and work in relation thereto, which would run over quite a period of time in replanting the trees and seeing that they had a successful growth, the transaction becomes more than a mere sale from one state into another.

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Bluebook (online)
168 N.E. 758, 33 Ohio App. 89, 7 Ohio Law. Abs. 585, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-sign-co-v-maccar-cleveland-sales-co-ohioctapp-1929.