Standard Sewing Equipment Corp. v. Motor Specialty, Inc.

57 N.W.2d 706, 263 Wis. 467, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 442
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 57 N.W.2d 706 (Standard Sewing Equipment Corp. v. Motor Specialty, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Sewing Equipment Corp. v. Motor Specialty, Inc., 57 N.W.2d 706, 263 Wis. 467, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 442 (Wis. 1953).

Opinion

Currie, J.

The sole ground upon which defendant moved for summary judgment was the alleged invalidity of the contract sued upon because of plaintiff’s failure to be licensed as a foreign corporation to transact business in this state. The contract having been made in 1950, the applicable statute is sec. 226.02, Stats. 1949, and not sec. 180.847, Stats. 1951, by which the former statute has now been replaced. As explained in the revision-committee note to be found immediately following sec. 180.847 in the 1951 Wisconsin statutes, the latter statute abrogates the harsh rule of sec. 226.02 (9).

Subs. (1) and (9) of sec. 226.02, Stats. 1949, provide in part as follows:

“(1) No foreign corporation shall transact business or ácquire, hold, or dispose of property in this state until it shall *470 have filed in the office of the secretary of state a copy of its charter, articles of association or incorporation, and all amendments thereto certified by the proper officer of the state wherein the corporation was organized, and shall have been licensed in this state. ...”
“(9) ... Every contract made by or on behalf of any such foreign corporations, affecting its liability or relating to property within this state, before it shall have complied with the provisions of this section, shall be void on its behalf and on behalf of its assigns, but shall be enforceable against it or them.”

If the transactions in Wisconsin on the part of the plaintiff foreign corporation constituted interstate commerce, the foregoing quoted provisions of sec. 226.02, Stats. 1949, do not apply to them. Charles A. Stickney Co. v. Lynch (1916), 163 Wis. 353, 158 N. W. 85; and Jerome P. Parker-Harris Co. v. Kissel M. C. Co. (1917), 165 Wis. 518, 163 N. W. 141.

With this principle of law in mind we will now examine the facts upon which counsel for defendant base their contention that plaintiff transacted business in this state without a license. On July 26, 1950, a written contract or purchase order was entered into at Racine, Wisconsin, between the parties which was executed in behalf of the plaintiff by its president who was then personally present within the state. The material terms of such contract provided as follows:

“This agreement constitutes an order from Standard Sewing Equipment Corporation for 100,000 Spec. $:192 motors at $2.91 and constitutes an acceptance by Motor Specialty, Inc., of Standard’s order for 100,000 motors at $2.91 with the terms and conditions outlined in this contract.
“ . . . All merchandise to be f.o.b. Racine, Wisconsin.”

Plaintiff’s principal place of business is in the city of New York but it also maintains places of business in the cities of Chicago and Los Angeles, but has no place of business in Wisconsin and has no officer, agent, or employee who is a *471 resident of, or who is located in, Wisconsin. Between August 28, 1950, and May 2, 1951, the defendant, pursuant to the contract, manufactured and shipped approximately 31,000 of said motors f.o.b. Racine consigned to the plaintiff at its place of business in Chicago, these being all of the motors which the defendant supplied under the contract. The only correspondence passing between the parties with reference to the contract which is before us in the record is a letter ■ from plaintiff to defendant dated September 8, 1950, reading as follows:

“Will you please send your invoices to New York in the future, as all these invoices are paid from this office.
“Please continue to ship the motors to Chicago and they will redirect them to either Los Angeles or New York from that point.”

The first point to be considered is the construction of the words “f.o.b. Racine” appearing in the contract. When used with respect to a sale of merchandise “f.o.b.” means “free on board” the vessel, cars, or other conveyance which is to transport it to the buyer. See cases cited in 17 Words and Phrases (perm, ed.), p. 195. The use of “f.o.b.” in a contract of sale of goods evidences a shipment of goods Tustin Fruit Asso. v. Earl Fruit Co. (1898), 6 Cal. Unrep. 37, 46, 53 Pac. 693. Therefore, the use of such term in the contract in the instant case required shipment of the goods by the defendant seller and the movement of the same in commerce. However, the contract itself is silent as to the point of destination.

Counsel for defendant contend that because the contract itself did not specify the point of destination outside of Wisconsin to which the motors were to be shipped, the contract was open to the construction that some of the motors might have been shipped to some other points in Wisconsin, in which case there would be a transaction involving intrastate, and not interstate, commerce. However, in determining *472 whether it was contemplated by the parties that any of the motors were to be shipped to points of destination in Wisconsin, or whether all were to be shipped outside of the state, the trial court was entitled to consider the facts constituting the surrounding circumstances, and the practical interpretation of the contract by the parties themselves, inasmuch as the phrase “f.o.b. Racine” is ambiguous with respect to point of destination. 12 Am. Jur., Contracts, pp. 784, 787, secs. 247, 249.

In the case of Dahnke-Walker Co. v. Bondurant (1921), 257 U. S. 282, 42 Sup. Ct. 106, 66 L. Ed. 239, the United States supreme court had before it an action by a Tennessee corporation to recover damages for the breach of a contract for the sale and delivery of a crop of wheat estimated at 14,000 bushels. The defendant was a resident 'of Kentucky and the contract was made in Kentucky, and, as in the instant case, the contract specified that delivery was to be on board cars of a common carrier. The plaintiff operated a mill in Tennessee. Although no point of destination was specified in the contract, plaintiff had in the past purchased grain from the defendant (at one time 13,000 bushels), all of which had been transported to and used in its mill in Tennessee. The defendant interposed the defense that the contract sued upon was void because of the Kentucky'statute similar to sec. 226.02 (9), Stats. 1949, the plaintiff not being licensed to transact business in Kentucky. The court held that the contract was made in continuance of the prior practice between the parties, which practice clearly established that the wheat was to be shipped from plaintiff’s mill to Tennessee, and said (p. 292) :

“The state court also attached some importance to the fact that after the grain was delivered on the cars the plaintiff might have changed its mind and have sold the grain at the place of delivery or have shipped it to another point in Kentucky. No doubt this was possible, but it also was improbable. With equal basis it could be said that a shipment of *473 merchandise billed to a point beyond the state of its origin might be halted by the shipper in the exercise of the right of stoppage in transitu

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57 N.W.2d 706, 263 Wis. 467, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-sewing-equipment-corp-v-motor-specialty-inc-wis-1953.