Southern Discount Co. v. Rose

290 S.W. 861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1926
DocketNo. 7649.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 861 (Southern Discount Co. v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Discount Co. v. Rose, 290 S.W. 861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The Johnson Acetelyne Gas Company is a foreign corporation, domiciled in the state of Indiana, and is engaged in the sale of acetelyne gas plants. Through a soliciting agent in Texas it sold and warranted one of its plants to J. W. Rose of Pleasanton, Atascosa county, Tex., and took the latter’s note for the amount of the purchase price. The plant was sold f. o. b. the *862 car at Crawfordsville, Ind., and Rose, in accordance with the contract of purchase, paid the freight on the shipment as well as the wages of the “service man” who installed the plant in Rose’s home.

Shortly after the execution and delivery of the note, and before its maturity, the gas company,, as payee, sold, indorsed, and assigned the note to the Southern Discount Company, another Indiana corporation. Rose refused to pay the note at maturity, and the discount company brought this suit thereon.

Rose sought to defeat payment of the note upon the ground that the plant was not performing in accordance with the gas company’s warranty, and to abate the suit upon the ground that the gas company was engaged in business in Texas without having obtained a permit thereto, as required by the statutes of the state, and that the discount company, to whom the note had been assigned, was but a collecting agency for the gas company, and was incorporated as a subterfuge for the purpose of enabling the gas company to evade its responsibilities under the laws of Texas. The discount company, in reply, asserted that it was an innocent purchaser of the note for value and without notice of the facts constituting Rose’s defense.

Upon a trial the court below dismissed the suit upon findings that the gas company was engaged in the transaction of business in this' state without having obtained a permit therefor, and that the discount company was not an innocent purchaser of the note. The discount company brings this appeal.

It was provided by statutes in force at the time of this transaction that any foreign corporation desiring to transact or solicit business in this state, or to establish a general. or special office in this state, is required to file its articles of incorporation with the secretary of state and obtain from him a formal permit to transact such business. Article 1314, R. S. 1911. And it was further provided, in article 1318, that:

“No such corporation can maintain any suit or action, either legal or equitable, in any of the courts of this state upon any demand, whether arising out of contract or tort, unless at the time such contract was made, or tort committed, the corporation had filed its articles of incorporation under the provisions of this chapter in the office of the secretary of state for the purpose of procuring its permit.”

It is conceded that appellant, the discount company, is not engaged in the transaction of business within this state, and that its rights are not affected by its failure to obtain the permit required by the statute.

It becomes necessary at the outset to determine whether the transaction between the gas company and Rose was one in interstate commerce, or in intrastate commerce. The question is shrouded in doubt growing out of the confusion and inconsistencies in the decisions of the courts upon the subject. A commendable tendency is discernible among the decisions, however, to get away from an earlier inclination to resolve these cases strictly in favor of interstate commerce. This tendency is evidenced not only by the state courts,, but by the federal courts as well. It is noticeably present in the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Browning v. City of Waycross, 233 U. S. 16, 34 S. Ct. 578, 58 L. Ed. 828, and in the able and elaborate opinion of Judge Moursund, then of this court, in the case of York Mfg. Co. v. Colley, 172 S. W. 206.

Of course, the mere sale and shipment of an article of commerce into this state from another constitutes interstate commerce, even though the sale is effectuated through soliciting agents operating in this state for the nonresident dealer, and the delivery is made by the latter at the destination. The sale and delivery of a sewing machine offers a fair example of such transaction. Ordinarily, a sewing machine is complete within itself and is shipped as a distinct and complete article, so that, when delivered at destination, nothing remains to be done to make the transaction complete except payment, ■which the seller, although a foreign corporation operating without a permit to do business in the state, may enforce through our courts.

But the courts draw a distinction between that simple transaction wholly in interstate commerce and a transaction which embraces not only the shipment of articles from another state, but includes other acts done and other articles obtained in this state, which are joine'd by the seller to the interstate article, and both erected into one whole plant or machine or other object, in which case the transaction loses its interstate character and assumes that of a local nature. To state it differently, if the complete product of the transaction is made up of different units or parts, some of which are shipped into the state from without and others are obtained from local sources, and both are unit-ted by the seller into the finished product in order to complete the sale, then the transaction, as a whole, is without the protection of interstate commerce and becomes a subject of regulation by the state. The protection of interstate commerce is extended to those transactions only which consist of acts concerning interstate commerce goods, “dissociated from any attempt to connect them with or make them a part in the state of property which had not and could not have been the subject of interstate commerce.” Browning v. City of Waycross, supra; York Mfg. Co. v. Colley, supra.

Some confusion exists in the reported cases as to the effect upon the question under consideration of an executed obligation of the seller, as a part of the transaction, to assemble the units of the product sold from *863 another state,' and complete and Install the plant in this state. In our opinion, this act of installing an article sold in interstate commerce does not, within itself, deprive the transaction of its interstate character, although the Supreme Court of Texas appears, so far, to have declined to decide the effect of such contractual obligation upon a transaction otherwise wholly interstate in character. Smythe Co. v. Fort Worth, etc., Co., 105 Tex. 8, 142 S. W. 1157. That question is present in this case, but is not deemed of controlling influence.

The nature of the commodity sold is also taken into consideration by some courts in determining the effect upon the transaction of the fact that the seller follows his product into another state for the purpose of installing it for use. The tendency is to hold that this act of installation by the seller does not impair the interstate quality of a transaction when the article sold is of such an intricate or complex nature as to render it necessary that the seller, being familiar with its nature, agrees to follow his product into the state of the buyer’s domicile and in'stall and set it in operation in order to accomplish the interstate transaction.

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141 S.W.2d 469 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1940)
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Southern Discount Co. v. Rose
296 S.W. 482 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-discount-co-v-rose-texapp-1926.