Stewart v. Heisler

32 F.2d 519, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1210
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedMay 6, 1929
DocketNo. 330
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 519 (Stewart v. Heisler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Heisler, 32 F.2d 519, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1210 (N.D. Iowa 1929).

Opinion

SCOTT, District Judge.

Plaintiff, as trustee for Beaver Valley State Bank of Parkersburg, Iowa, brought this action at law against the defendants Lewis A. Heisler and Nebraska Tire & Rubber Company, in the district court of Iowa for Butler county, to recover a sum of money upon a promissory note executed by Nebraska Tire & Rubber Company to Lewis A. Heisler, and by the payee indorsed and transferred to Beaver Valley State Bank of Parkersburg. Nebraska Tire & Rubber Company is a corporation organized under tbe laws of Nebraska, with its principal place of business in the city of Omaha in that state. Serviee of the original notice in the action was made upon said corporate defendant by serving in regular form upon its president and secretary in the city of Council Bluffs, Iowa. Nebraska Tire & Rubber Company filed a timely petition for removal of the case to the District Court of the United States for tbe Northern District of Iowa, upon the ground of separable controversy, and in due course said cause was removed. Thereupon Nebraska Tire & Rubber Company, through counsel, entered a special appearance for tbe purpose of attacking tbe jurisdiction of the court, and; moved to quash the service of the original notice, which under the Iowa practice is equivalent to summons, and as grounds therefor alleged under the oaths of its president and secretary that said defendant was a corporation organized under the laws of Nebraska, and had been doing business in that state continuously for 10 years; that the nature of its business was the manufacture of automobile tires and accessories, with its factory located in the city of Omaha, Neb.; that it never had any place of business in the state of Iowa, nor any agent authorized to act for it in the transaction of business in that state, and never had done or transacted any business in that state; that it had filed no copy of its articles of incorporation in the state of Iowa, nor sought to receive any permit to do business in that state; that on the day of the service of original notice upon its president and secretary, said officers were not in the state of Iowa transacting any business for defendant, but were present as individuals in Council Bluffs in said state, as the guests of one Malloney, who* had invited them to luncheon; that said pretended serviee was [520]*520fraudulent for the reason that neither said defendant nor its officers were at the time in the state of Iowa doing business on behalf of said corporation, but were enticed and inveigled to come from the state of Nebraska to the state of Iowa on the invitation of said Malloney to dine, when the real purpose of said invitation was to furnish opportunity to serve the corporate defendant with notice of suit.

Issue was joined upon the allegations of said motion to quash service, and testimony was taken, and the matter fully argued and submitted.

Upon the subject of fraudulent service, while there are many facts and circumstances calculated to arouse suspicion, a full examination of the testimony leads me to conclude that the defendant corporation has not sustained the issue by a sufficient degree of proof. I therefore pass directly to the question of the sufficiency of the service, and the involved question whether at the time of the service the corporate defendant was doing business within the state of Iowa in the sense required to subject it to service of process.

The defendant -is a Nebraska corporation, doing a manufacturing and jobbing business at Omaha. Defendant manufactures and sells automobile tires, and has been doing so for a considerable number of years. Defendant has never been authorized to do business in the state of Iowa or complied with the foreign corporation laws of that state. Back of 1925, defendant manufactured and sold its tires generally to the trade throughout quite a large territory, and had one or two traveling salesmen in Western Iowa territory. These salesmen solicited the sales of tires and either transmitted or brought in their orders to the home office at Omaha. About 1925, the defendant company adopted a new policy of business, viz., that of obtaining contracts and manufacturing tires for jobbers or wholesalers or other manufacturers, making the tires in the molds and under the private brand of such wholesaler or other manufacturer. Business under the new policy progressed, until in 1928 the defendant company was devoting about 80'per cent, of its capacity to the private brand tires, and 20 per cent, to the general manufacture and merchandising of tires on their own account, practically all of which capacity was disposed of in the city of Omaha. In 1928, or immediately following, the defendant company withdrew or ceased to employ their traveling men in the state of Iowa, and since that time have had neither agents nor'agencies in that state. The testimony shows, however, that defendant company has a retail branch store or shop in Omaha, operating under a trade-name of the Nebraska Tire Sales Company; that this branch shop gives tire service and sells tires at retail in Omaha, and employs a service man who drives about delivering tires in Omaha and presumably installing them on automobiles, and selling tires if opportunity presents in the course of his activities. The testimony shows that occasionally old customers in the state of Iowa still send in by mail orders for tires, which are filled in the usual course of interstate traffic. The testimony further shows that customers in Council Bluffs, Iowa, which is immediately across the Missouri river and practically joins Omaha, go over to Omaha occasionally and buy tires at the retail store, and that the service man employed by the defendant’s retail branch shop since 1925 has occasionally gone over to Council Bluffs and delivered a tire or tires, and that while there on a few occasions called on old customers and asked if they wanted any tires. But the evidence discloses no sales made by him on such occasions. Had it done so, he would simply have taken the order and turned it in for approval and execution.

After 1925, defendant’s executive officers, knowing that there existed at Shenandoah, Iowa, two large mail order department houses that maintain radio broadcasting stations, went to Shenandoah for the purpose and with the hopes of interesting those merchants, entering into arrangements with them to manufacture their special brand of tires. Two different trips were made to Shenandoah for ■ this purpose, but nothing came of it. The Shenandoah merchants neither appeared to take much interest, and no headway seems to have been made toward establishing any relations. The effort did not seem to have left open any negotiations, and there was no existing or continuing character or element to the action upon the part of the defendant.

In the summer of 1928, a party residing in Council Bluffs named Malloney called at defendant’s place of business in Omaha, and interviews were had looking to future business relations. It seems that Malloney and a friend residing in Chicago, 111., were interested in the so-called developing of a considerable tract of land in Mississippi; that one of the principal national highways traverses this tract of land; that Malloney had conceived the idea of opening an oil station and tire and automobile accessory shop at a point on this highway on the land in Mississippi. His interview was with a view to have defendant furnish him tires for his eontem-[521]*521plated Mississippi shop. No definite proposition or arrangements were arrived at, Mal-loney stating that his partner in Chicago would have to be consulted and participate in any arrangements made.

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Related

Stewart v. Nebraska Tire & Rubber Co.
39 F.2d 309 (Eighth Circuit, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
32 F.2d 519, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-heisler-iand-1929.