York Manufacturing Co. v. Colley

247 U.S. 21, 38 S. Ct. 430, 62 L. Ed. 963, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 1954
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 20, 1918
Docket200
StatusPublished
Cited by136 cases

This text of 247 U.S. 21 (York Manufacturing Co. v. Colley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
York Manufacturing Co. v. Colley, 247 U.S. 21, 38 S. Ct. 430, 62 L. Ed. 963, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 1954 (1918).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The York Manufacturing Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, sued for the amount due upon a contract for the purchase-of ice manufacturing machinery and to foreclose a lien upon the same. By answer the defendants alleged that the plaintiff was a foreign corporation, that *22 it maintained an office and transacted business in Texas without having obtained a permit therefor and was hence under Texas statutes not authorized to prosecute the suit in the courts of the State, aád a dismissal was prayed. In reply the plaintiff averred that the contract sued on was interstate commerce and that the state statute if held to apply was repugnant to the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States. At the trial at was shown without dispute that the contract covered an ice plant guaranteed to produce'threp tons of ice a day, consisting of gas compression pumps, a compressor, ammonia condensers, freezing tank and cans,, evaporating coils, a brine agitator and other machinery and accessories including apparatus for utilizing exhaust steam for making distilled water for filling the ice cans. These parts of machinery, it was provided, were to be shipped from Pennsylvania to the point of delivery in Texas and were there to be erected and connected. This work, it was stipulated, was to be done under the supervision of an engineer to be sent by the York Manufacturing Company for whose services a fixed per diem charge of $6.00 was to be paid by the purchasers and who should have the assistance of mechanics furnished by the purchasers, the supervision to include not only the erection but the submitting of the machinery to a practical test in operation before the obligation to finally receive it would arise. It was moreover undisputed that these provisions were carried out, that about three weeks were consumed in erecting the machinery and about a week in practically testing it, when after a demonstration of its successful oDeration.it was accepted by the purchasers.

The trial court, not doubting that the contract, of sale was interstate commerce, nevertheless concluding that the stipulation as to supervision by an engineer to be sent by the seller was intrastate commerce and wholly separable from the interstate transaction, held that the seller by car *23 rying out that provision had engaged in local business in the State and as the permit required by the state statutes had not been secured, gave effect to the statutes and dismissed the suit. The case is here to review the action of the court below sustaining such conclusion, its judgment being that of the court of last resort of the State in conse-’ quence of the refusal of the Supreme Court of the State to allow a writ of error.

Referring to a previous ruling (Leschen & Sons Rope Co. v. Moser, 159 S. W. Rep. 1018) in which it had held that the performance by a contractor of the. duty of supervising the construction of a complex system of tramways did not constitute a doing of business within the. State because it was relevant to and a part of the main contract for the material from which the road was to be constructed which was interstate commerce, the court below concluded that that case had been by it mistakenly decided and therefore should be overruled and not applied in this. The conclusion as to previous error committed, the court said, was persuasively the result of the'ruling in Browning v. Waycross, 233 U. S. 16, which it treated as here conclusively determining that the performance of the contract for the supervision by the engineer was purely intrastate commerce and subject to be treated as such although it formed a part of the stipulations of the principal contract of sale conceded to be interstate commerce.

But we are of opinion this decision was erroneous whether it be examined from the point of view of what was assumed to be the controlling effect of the ruling in the Waycross Case or whether it be tested by the elementary doctrines as' to what constitutes interstate commerce. In the first place the Waycross Case concerned merely the right of the City of Waycross to collect a charge against a person who was carrying on a business of erecting lightning rods as the agent of one who had sold the rods in another State and shipped them to Waycross' under an *24 agreement after their arrival to erect them. ’The. case turned exclusively upon the nature and character of the business of erecting lightning rods and the relevant-or appropriate. relation to interstate commerce óf a stipulation in an interstate contract of sale of such rods providing for their erection when delivery under the sale was made. As it was determined' that the business of erecting lightning' rods bore m> relevant or appropriate relation to the contract made for the sale of such rods, it was decided that the contract for thé erection of the rods did not lose its . local character simply because it was made a part of an interstate- commerce contract for the sale of the rods any r more than would a contract for materials with which to' build a house cause the building of the house to be a transaction of interstate commerce and not local business. But the broad distinction which is established by the statement just made between, what was decided in the Way--, cross Case and the question here presented does not rest alone upon the implication resulting from what was under consideration in that case but moreover expressly results from the fact that in the Waycross Case through abundance of precaution attention was directed to the fact that the ruling there made was not. controlling as to a casé where-the service tó be done in a. State as the result of an interstate commerce sale was essentially connected with the subject-matter of the sale, that is, might be made to appropriately inhere in the duty of performance.. 233 TJ. S. p. 23.

As, in the second place, since the ruling in McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, there has been no doubt that the interstate commerce power embraced that which is relevant or. reasonably appropriate to the power granted, so also from such doctrine there can be no doubt that the right to make an interstate commerce contract includes ip its very terms the right to incorporate into such contract provisions which are relevant and appropriate to the con *25 tract made. The only possible question open therefore is, was the particular provision of the contract for the service of an engineer to.assemble and'erect the machinery in question at the point of destination and to practically test its efficiency before complete delivery relevant arid appropriate to the interstate sale of the machinery? When the controversy is thus brought in last analysis to this issue there would seem to be no room for any but an affirma-. tive answer. Generically this must be unless it can be said that an agreement to direct the assembling and supervision of machinery whose intrinsic value largely depends upon its being united and made operative as a whole is not appropriate to its sale.

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Bluebook (online)
247 U.S. 21, 38 S. Ct. 430, 62 L. Ed. 963, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 1954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/york-manufacturing-co-v-colley-scotus-1918.