Thomas Industries, Inc. v. Wells

262 N.W.2d 853, 79 Mich. App. 463, 1977 Mich. App. LEXIS 792
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1977
DocketDocket 31012
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 262 N.W.2d 853 (Thomas Industries, Inc. v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Industries, Inc. v. Wells, 262 N.W.2d 853, 79 Mich. App. 463, 1977 Mich. App. LEXIS 792 (Mich. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

D. C. Riley, P. J.

This is a suit seeking enforcement of a security interest and payment for goods *465 sold on a non-interest-bearing promissory note and on open account. Following plaintiffs opening statement, the trial court on defendants’ motion dismissed the cause with prejudice because plaintiff Thomas Industries, a foreign corporation manufacturing lighting products, had transacted business in Michigan without a certificate of authority. MCLA 450.2011; MSA 21.200(1011), MCLA 600.2021; MSA 27A.2021.

On appeal, plaintiff initially claims that the paucity of facts garnered below prevented the lower court from properly determining whether Thomas had conducted business in Michigan within the meaning of MCLA 450.2012(1); MSA 21.200(1012X1). Although we readily admit that the record might have been better developed, we would not fault the lower court for refusing to conduct an additional evidentiary hearing. The facts before the trial court — deposition testimony of three Thomas employees — provided ample grist for judicial decision. Having been apprised well in advance of trial that defendants would assert plaintiffs noncompliance with the domestication statute, Thomas should have been prepared to offer at trial whatever contrary evidence it may have possessed. Since the extent of Thomas’s operations in Michigan were not facts "peculiarly within the pleader’s [i.e., the defendant’s] knowledge”, GCR 1963, 112.1, plaintiff cannot invoke the cited court rule to forestall resolution of the remaining appellate issues.

Thomas next argues that it had no obligation to obtain a certificate of authority before commencing suit.

Labeling the transactions at bar as wholly involving interstate commerce, Thomas arrays the following facts: 1) the promissory note recited that *466 the same was payable at Hopkinsville, Kentucky; 2) the security agreement was "executed pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted by the state of Kentucky”; and 3) there was no evidence below that Thomas maintained an office or inventory in Michigan, that Thomas’s salesmen had authority to bind it contractually in local acceptance of solicited orders, that Thomas dealt with customers of defendant or of other Michigan retailers, or that Thomas installed its equipment in Michigan.

In response, defendants assemble other facts of record: 1) Thomas engaged in extensive sales in Michigan; 1 2) it employed a territory manager — a resident of Livonia, Michigan — whose responsibilities included representing Thomas’s Residential Lighting Division in northeastern Michigan, a region encompassing not only the "Great Lakes-Metropolitan Detroit area” but also the "upper territory of counties and Upper Peninsula”; 3) it divided Michigan into sales zones and regions; 4) it considered business accounts in Michigan as distributors; 5) it promoted a standard, identifiable concept of storefront and decor image among *467 Michigan distributors; 6) it engaged in programs of cooperative advertising, inventory exchange and defective-goods replacement 2 with Michigan distributors; 7) it imposed regulations coincident with these programs on Michigan distributors; and 8) it extended credit in Michigan, the promissory note having been executed in Mt. Clemens.

Section 1012(1) of the Michigan Business Corporation Act, as amended, 3 defines by exclusion those activities which will and will not be deemed transacting business:

"SEC. 1012. (1) Without excluding other activities which may not constitute transacting business in this state, a foreign corporation is not considered to be transacting business in this state, for the purposes of this act, solely because it is carrying on in this state any 1 or more of the following activities:

(a) Maintaining or defending an action or suit or an administrative or arbitrative proceeding, or effecting the settlement thereof or the settlement of a claim or dispute.

(b) Holding meetings of its directors or shareholders or carrying on any other activities concerning its internal affairs.

(c) Maintaining a bank account.

(d) Maintaining an office or agency for the transfer, exchange, and registration of its securities, or appointing and maintaining a trustee or depository with relation to its securities.

(e) Effecting sales through an independent contractor.

(f) Soliciting or procuring orders, whether by mail or through employees or agents or otherwise, where such *468 orders require acceptance without this state before becoming binding contracts.

(g) Borrowing money, with or without security.

(h) Securing or collecting debts or enforcing any right in property securing the same.

(i) Transacting any business in interstate commerce.

(j) Conducting an isolated transaction not in the course of a number of repeated transactions of like nature.” MCLA 450.2012(1); MSA 21.200(1012X1).

While § 1012(1) has no exact counterpart under prior law, it does embody certain settled principles. Where, for example, a foreign corporation transacts any business in interstate commerce, MCLA 450.2012(l)(i); MSA 21.200(1012)0), or conducts "an isolated transaction not in the course of a number of repeated transactions of like nature”, MCLA 450.2012(l)(j); MSA 21.200(1012X1)0), it is not doing business in Michigan for purposes of the act. See Long Manufacturing Co, Inc v Wright-Way Farm Service, Inc, 391 Mich 82; 214 NW2d 816 (1974).

On the other hand, where the things done are " 'of a character indicative of an intention on the part of the corporation to carry on its business in the state * * * [i.e., evincing] a continuity of act and purpose.’ 17 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations (1960 rev ed), § 8466, pp 554-555”, Long, supra at 88-89, then the foreign corporation can be said to have transacted business in Michigan.

With Long and its forebears as our guiding light, we affirm the lower court’s conclusion that Thomas had transacted business in Michigan within the purview of the present domestication statute. The record discloses not an isolated sale but a continuous and systematic program of fostering intrastate sales. Long, supra at 92. Thomas offered a cooperative advertising program to its *469 Michigan distributors under which each would contribute $1500 semiannually to promote intrastate sales to Michigan tradesmen or residents, cf. Eli Lilly & Co v Sav-On-Drugs, Inc, 366 US 276, 281; 81 S Ct 1316, 1319; 6 L Ed 2d 288, 293 (1961), and Behlen Manufacturing Co v Andries-Butler Inc, 52 Mich App 317, 320; 217 NW2d 125 (1974); it employed a resident salesman, apparently full time, whose established territory covered large portions of the state, cf Long, supra

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Related

Thomas Industries, Inc v. Wells
270 N.W.2d 98 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
262 N.W.2d 853, 79 Mich. App. 463, 1977 Mich. App. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-industries-inc-v-wells-michctapp-1977.