Williams v. Dearborn Truck Company

291 S.W. 388, 218 Ky. 271, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 388 (Williams v. Dearborn Truck Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Dearborn Truck Company, 291 S.W. 388, 218 Ky. 271, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 159 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Affirming.

Appellee, Dearborn Truck Company, a corporation, instituted this action in the Fayette circuit court against appellant, W. R. Williams, to recover $947.29, the amount due it from him as evidenced by a bill of exchange which it had drawn directed to him and which he by written endorsement upon its face had accepted and agreed to pay according to its tenor at a time fixed at the Bank of Commerce, Lexington, Kentucky, but which he had refused to pay. By answer appellant admitted the acceptance of the bill of exchange, but pleaded that the amount thereof represented .the balance ¡owing by him to appellee on the purchase price of a truck sold by it to him; that the sale was made in Kentucky; and that appellee was then a foreign corporation and had not complied with the provisions of sec. 571, Kentucky Statute's, by filing a statement with the secretary of state giving the location of a place of business in this state and designating an agent thereat upon whom process might be served. The answer also pleaded a counterclaim. By reply it was denied that the truck was sold to appellant in Kentucky, and it was averred that that transaction was an interstate one. The 'counterclaim was traversed. Upon the issues thus formed, at the conclusion of the evidence the trial court peremptorily instructed the jury to find for *273 appellee on appellant’s counterclaim; and by agreement of tbe parties tbe question as to whether the sale of the truck was an intrastate or interstate transaction was submitted to the trial court. Concluding that it was an interstate transaction the trial court awarded appellee a judgment for the full amount sued for .with interest and cost. Hence the appeal.

The question in controversy, as the appeal is presented by the briefs, is whether the sale of the truck by appellee to appellant was an intrastate or an interstate transaction. The parties are agreed that if it was an interstate transaction, under numerous opinions of this court, the provisions of sec: 571 may not be invoked as. a defense, ánd that if it was an intrastate transaction, under the rule prevailing as declared in Fruin-Colnon Contracting Co. v. Chatterson, 146 Ky. 504, 143 S. W. 6, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 857; Oliver Company v. Louisville Realty Company, 156 Ky. 628, 161 S. W. 570, 51 L. R. A. (N. S.) 293; Ann. Cas. 1915C 565; Bondurant v. Dahnke-Walker Milling Company, 175 Ky. 774, 195 S. W. 139; and Hays v. West Virginia Oil, etc., Company, 183 Ky. 622, 210 S. W. 174, since it appears that the corporation had failed to comply with the provisions of that statute, it has no standing in court and may not maintain an action to enforce any contractual obligation. The question as to whether the transaction here involved was an interstate or intrastate one has been discussed very much at length in the numerous briefs filed herein, and many opinions of this court, and of other courts as well, have been cited in support of the opposing contentions.

This court has had forcibly called.to its attention recently in several cases the consequences of the interpretation and application given to the section, supra, of our statutes in the opinions, supra, as well as the consequences o'f a like interpretation and application of the provisions of section 199b, Kentucky Statutes, requiring persons doing business under fictitious names to file, statements disclosing the names of the' persons interested, so that both statutes and our opinions relating to them have again been given most serious investigation and consideration. The reconsideration of the questions, in so far as they relate to the provisions of section 199b, in the recent case of W. T. Hayes v. Providence Citizens’ Bank & Trust Company, 218 Ky. 128, —, S. W. —, led to the overruling of a number of the previous opinions of *274 the court as to the interpretation and application to be given to that section of our statutes.

The principles there involved are analogous to those involved in a construction of section 571,. Kentucky Statutes, and much that was said in the Hayes opinion may with equal force be said with reference to- a proper construction of section' 571. No case has been presented to this court in which the application of those two sections of our statutes as they have been interpreted has not worked harsh injustice. In the Oliver case, supra, the company, a Tennessee corporation, erected a large and expensive building for the Louisville Realty Company in Louisville, Kentucky. It sued for the balance due it on the contract. The relief it sought was denied solely because the corporation had not complied with the provisions of section 571. Fortunately in that case only a comparatively small portion of the contract price was involved; but under the principles there announced, if the action had been for the recovery of the entire contract price of the building, however much that may have been, the company for whom the house was built would have been excused from paying any part of it because of the failure of the contracting company to file the statement required by section 571. In FruimColnon Contracting Company v. Chatterson, though appellant corporation had been accepted as the lowest and best bidder and contracted with for certain street improvement work, after all the requisite, valid, legal steps had been taken by the municipality so as to impose liability upon the owners of property abutting the streets to be improved, and though in accordance with the specifications it had constructed the street, the property owner was excused from payment because the corporation had not filed the statement required by section 571. Those are not extreme but merely average examples of the grave injustice resulting from the interpretation and effect given to the provisions of that section of our statutes by this court.

With the development of business and industry and the constantly growing tendency upon the part of those promoting and engaging in business enterprises to do so by creating corporations for the purpose, experience taught that vexatious questions whether corporations that had been sued were before the court on the process that had issued and been served should be avoided, and that a method should be provided by which one with a grievance against a corporation might at all times be *275 able to appeal to the courts for redress. These considerations led to the adoption of section 194 of our present Constitution, reading:

“All corporations formed under the laws of this state, or carrying on business in this state, shall, at all times, have one or more known places of business in this state, and an authorized agent or agents there, upon whom process may be executed, and the general assembly shall enact laws to carry into effect the provisions of this section.”

Section 571, Kentucky Statutes, was enacted by the legislature at its first session after the adoption of our present Constitution, and was section 34 of chapter 171 of the Acts of 1893, which became effective April 5, 1893. It was enacted to carry into effect the provisions of the section, supra, of our Constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 388, 218 Ky. 271, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-dearborn-truck-company-kyctapphigh-1927.