Philadelphia Gear Wks. v. Read mach.co., Inc.

12 A.2d 793, 139 Pa. Super. 584, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 87
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1939
DocketAppeal, 352
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 793 (Philadelphia Gear Wks. v. Read mach.co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Gear Wks. v. Read mach.co., Inc., 12 A.2d 793, 139 Pa. Super. 584, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 87 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by Parker, J.,

The defendant, a domestic corporation having its principal place of business in York County, was sued by plaintiff in an action in assumpsit in Philadelphia County and the court below on petition of defendant, after an answer had been filed, depositions had been taken and arguments had been heard, made absolute a rule to show cause why the service and return should not be set aside. The sole question involved in this appeal by the plaintiff is whether the defendant corporation had so conducted its business in respect of quantity and quality that it was amenable to such process in Philadelphia. The defendant followed the proper procedure to have the question determined: Vaughn v. Love, 324 Pa. 276, 188 A. 299.

An .answer to the problem involves a consideration of the precise evidence produced in support of the motion. There is no controversy as to the facts. The defendant is engaged in the manufacture of baking machinery, including ovens and chemical equipment, and has its principal office and manufacturing plant in York County. It rents by written agreement, in its own name, office space or desk room for two,of its salesmen in a building on North Broad Street in Philadelphia. In that office there are a desk, a single file/case and some chairs rented to it by the owner of the building. The directory listing of the building contains the name Read Machinery Company and there is a telephone listed in the same name. The classified section of the Philadelphia Bell Telephone Directory contains this advertisement: “Bakers’ Machinery, Read Machinery *586 Company, 401 North Broad Street. Telephone # Walnut 5696.” The defendant does not have a bank account or -warehouse in ¡Philadelphia. It employs on a commission basis two salesmen who do not give their services exclusively to it but are at liberty to solicit orders for other manufacturers whose business does not interfere with that of the defendant. The territory of the two salesmen embraces New Jersey, Delaware and seven counties in the southeastern part of'Pennsylvania. The company does business throughout the United States and in foreign territory but it does not appear what proportion of its ¡sales originates in Philadelphia.

In connection with and preparatory to the sale of machinery the salesmen are required to take measurements necessary in the installation of equipment. They do not, however, take any part in the installation of the machinery but mechanics are sent directly from the plant for ¡that purpose. The salesmen also assist in the collection of delinquent notes and receive complaints from customers. In the latter case one of them visits the customer at his plant, ascertains what the difficulty is and then advises the home office and any further connection of the defendant with such complaints is conducted from the home office at York. The salesmen are not authorized to close any orders for machinery or equipment or for repairs until the orders are accepted by the home office.

While at common law “a corporation could be sued only in the jurisdiction where it had its legal domicile, that is, its principal place of business”, the rule has been changed by statute. In the late'Case of Walde v. Bowers Bat. Mfg. Co., Inc., 337 Pa. 97, 99, 10 A. 2d 405, Mr. Justice Steen approved the following statement of the present general rule: “Process may be issued against a domestic corporation in any county where corporate property is situated in whole or in part, or where the corporation conducts a substantial part of its business, exercises its franchises and locates *587 the whole or part of its property.” That case also approves the general statement of the rule in Lobb v. Pennsylvania Cement Co., 285 Pa. 45, 47, 131 A. 725: “The guiding principle of the decisions is that a domestic corporation may be served in any county where it habitually carries on a substantial part of its business or exercises its franchises and has property.”

There is nothing in the Act of July 9,1901, P. L. 614 (12 PS §291) to change the common law or the prevailing rule or to affect the jurisdiction of the court, but that act merely prescribes how service may be had: Park Bros. & Co. v. Oil City Boiler Works, 204 Pa. 453, 54 A. 334.

Walde v. Bowers Bat. Mfg. Co., Inc., supra, is also authority for the proposition that the right to bring suit against a corporation; in a county other than that of its principal office is not limited to situations where the corporation has property in the second county. Speaking with reference to the Act of March 17, 1856, P. L. 388 (12 PS §1304) the court said (p. 102): “While the word ‘property’ in ,the Act of 1856 should not be held to refer to property .which is merely stored in a warehouse or otherwise passively located in another county than that where the principal place of business of the corporation is located, it certainly includes property which is actively used in the course of the business operations of the corporation, irrespective of whether such property! consists of fixtures and machinery, or of a stock of merchandise the sale of which is the object of the corporate business. Indeed, when the word ‘property’ is thus construed, there is, from a practical standpoint, no difference between a requirement that a corporation have such property in the county and a requirement that the corporation do business there, so that either of these circumstances becomes, as our cases hold, sufficient justification for the commencement of suit and service of process upon the corporation in such county.”

*588 The plaintiff does not claim that the defendant had any tangible property in Philadelphia, and the depositions show that it had no intangible property, such as a bank account, in that county sufficient to give jurisdiction to the court of common pleas in that county. It relies upon the claim that defendant was habitually transacting a substantial part of its business there. On the other hand, the defendant insists that such acts as were performed by it through its agents and employees in Philadelphia were not of such a character as to constitute “doing business” there and make it amenable to process in that jurisdiction. The plaintiff depends chiefly on the facts that the defendant rented desk room in an office building in Philadelphia and paid for telephone service there; that the office, so-called, was used exclusively as headquarters for its two salesmen who solicited orders and received complaints with reference to the operation of machinery sold by defendant; that defendant frequently sent its mechanics to Philadelphia for the purpose of installing machinery manufactured in its plant in York County and sold by it there and for the purpose of making repairs when such repairs required the service of a mechanic expert in repairing the baking machinery manufactured by defendant; and that the defendant’s employees spent from one day to three months, in the case of one large job, in installing machinery.

The appellate courts of this state have had frequent occasion to pass upon questions involving a consideration of whether a domestic or foreign corporation could be made to answer common law complaints in counties other than the one where its principal office was located.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 793, 139 Pa. Super. 584, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-gear-wks-v-read-machco-inc-pasuperct-1939.