Robbins v. Benjamin Air Rifle Co.

Citation209 F.2d 173
Decision Date06 January 1954
Docket NumberNo. 14504.,14504.
PartiesROBBINS v. BENJAMIN AIR RIFLE CO.
CourtUnited States Courts of Appeals. United States Court of Appeals (5th Circuit)

Jesse E. Martin, Elvin E. Tackett, Ft. Worth, Tex., Martin & Moore, Fort Worth, Tex., for appellant.

Royal H. Brin, Jr., Dallas, Tex. (Strasburger, Price, Kelton, Miller & Martin, Dallas, Tex., of counsel), for appellee.

Before HUTCHESON, Chief Judge, and BORAH and RIVES, Circuit Judges.

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment sustaining defendant's motion to quash, as insufficient, service of citation upon one H. V. Greer, manufacturer's representative of defendant, a Missouri corporation, in Texas and seven other states, and to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction of the defendant.

It presents for decision the single question whether, under the undisputed facts,1 the defendant is to be regarded as doing business and, therefore, present in Texas so as to be subject to service and suit therein.

As appellant states the question, it is, is the defendant present in the State of Texas for jurisdictional purposes.

As appellee states it, it is, was the defendant doing business within the State of Texas so as to subject it to suit there.

Appellant, pointing to increases in defendant's sales2 to jobbers and wholesalers in the State of Texas since defendant entered into contract, in January, 1950, with Greer as manufacturer's representative, seems to think that this increase of business establishes that the defendant is jurisdictionally present in the state.

In addition, it urges upon us that the terms of the contract and the evidence as to what was done under it makes yet more clear that this is so.

Invoking, as fully supporting his claim, the Texas cases of Gray Co. v. Ward, Tex.Civ.App., 145 S.W.2d 650, a service of process case, and Ramsey v. Investors Diversified Services, Tex.Civ.App., 248 S. W.2d 263, a tax case, and the federal cases of Vilter Mfg. Co. v. Rolaff, 8 Cir., 110 F.2d 491; International Harvester Co. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 234 U.S. 579, 34 S.Ct. 944, 58 L.Ed. 1479; Milliken v. Meyer, 311 U.S. 457, 61 S. Ct. 339, 85 L.Ed. 278, and International Shoe Co. v. State of Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 66 S.Ct. 154, 90 L.Ed. 95, appellant insists that in dismissing his suit, the district judge closed his eyes to the plain truth that the cases cited by him required a different ruling.

Appellee, on its part, points with equal, if not greater, confidence to the facts showing that Greer besides representing the defendant as manufacturer's representative in Texas and other states, was also manufacturer's representative in Texas for ten other manufacturers, that he had always acted as such for defendant, and the other companies, and never as defendant's agent in Texas in the sense of giving defendant a local habitation and a name there. So pointing, it cites and invokes in support of its position, that the district judge correctly dismissed the action, the great number of Texas cases3 and others,4 discussing what constitutes doing business in a state, and holding without varying or departure therefrom, that a nonresident corporation which contracts with a manufacturer's agent for representation in the state, and, thereafter without more, sells goods to jobbers and wholesalers as a result of the soliciting activities of the representative does not thereby do business in the state so as to be present and subject to suit therein.

Appellant points to the complete absence from this case of evidence of the doing by Greer or by the defendant in Texas of acts of a local nature, such as were shown to have occurred in Ward's case and as were relied on by the court in that case to take it out of the general rule which that court recognized and followed. So pointing, it urges upon us that to hold upon the facts of record here that the defendant was doing business in Texas and was, therefore, present here for suit and service would be an abandonment and repudiation of the established rule so often laid down and so uniformly adhered to.

Denying that the International Shoe Co. case, on which appellant so greatly relies, marks any departure, in cases presenting facts like those in this case, from the federal rule long prevailing and still adhered to, and urging upon us that in fact and in law the contrary is true, for which see Partin v. Michaels Art Bronze Co., 3 Cir., 202 F.2d 541 and Woodworkers Tool Works v. Byrne, 9 Cir., 191 F.2d 667, appellee insists that there has been no change in either the federal or state decisions, but that the rule is as it has always been, that each case stands upon its own facts, and that the International Shoe Co. case is just another application of the same rule laid down in the International Harvester case, that where assertions of state power are concerned, jurisdiction is more easily found, just as it is in respect of causes of action arising out of matters occurring in the state as a result of activities carried on there.5

Insisting that no Texas case supports the assertion of jurisdiction here, they urge upon us that, without inquiring into, or otherwise undertaking to determine whether the limiting effect on asserted state jurisdiction of constitutional limitations, as these are set down in the federal decisions, has or has not been relaxed, the judgment must be affirmed as in accordance with the law as the courts in Texas have laid it down.

We agree that this is so. What is in question here, is whether under the statutes of Texas, as construed by its courts, the service of a citation upon H. V. Greer as agent was sufficient and effective under the undisputed facts in this case to subject defendant, a nonresident of Texas, to the jurisdiction of the court out of which the citation issued.6

While the decisions, including those from Texas, are generally in agreement that there is "no precise test of the nature or extent of the business that must be done; all that is requisite is that enough be done to enable us to say that the corporation is here".7 It has been considered settled in Texas and generally elsewhere that mere solicitation of orders in a state, followed by shipment of goods into the state, does not constitute the doing of business which subjects the corporation to the service of process therein.

Reference to and brief quotations from a note in 146 A.L.R., "Sec. 111, Under statute providing for service of process," will show that this is so. There the editor, stating at page 948:

"The proposition, stated in the earlier annotations, that the mere soliciting and obtaining of orders within a state by the agent of a foreign corporation, for goods to be shipped into the state to the purchasers, does not amount to doing business within the state, so as to render the corporation amenable to service of process therein, is supported by the following later cases: * * *"

followed this with citations from the federal and state courts including therein from Texas the case of Gray Co. v. Ward, Tex.Civ.App., 145 S.W.2d 650, 653,8 on which appellant mainly relies.

Among the local acts, none of which are present in this case, the court in the Gray case pointed out that Sampson serviced the equipment,9 made inspections, adjustments, and repairs, and recommendations, as to the replacement of parts, to the intervenor company. In fact Sampson had been schooled by the intervenor company for the purpose of familiarizing himself with the equipment, that he might be better able to eliminate and overcome complaints and troubles.

Further, the opinion pointed out that since 1930 the company had been maintaining service of the equipment it sold in Texas, that Sampson carried with him equipment, replacement parts, and tools for the purpose of servicing defective equipment formerly owned by the company and sold by it to Garvis; that he did take the matter of servicing the defective equipment up with the Gray Co., and it did send Sampson to service it; that Sampson made adjustments of accounts of merchandise sold; that Gray Co. had on two different occasions maintained exhibits in the State of Texas, during the first part of the year 1939, at which time an executive officer of the company was present; that it had a great amount of its merchandise and equipment on exhibit; and that said company was soliciting business and taking orders with the jobbers handling its merchandise.

Upon the basis of these highly significant facts, the Court of Civil Appeals correctly held that the Gray Company was doing business in Texas and that Ward was its agent for service.

It has also been held that keeping the accounts of the customers, making collections and adjusting complaints for damaged goods under the direction of the company are local acts, and it has been uniformly held that, while soliciting orders for machinery to be shipped into the state, is not doing business there, supervision of installation and servicing which employ local help when necessary are local acts. In short, every case which has passed upon the question, including the International Shoe Co. case and the Gray case, on which appellant relies, has declared that something more than the mere solicitation of orders for goods to be shipped into a state is necessary in order to make a foreign corporation amenable to service of process in the state and "It is this extra quantum of activity which constitutes doing business so as to render it so amenable."

Considering the facts of this case, in the light of these principles as laid down and applied in the authorities, including particularly Gray v. Ward, we think it perfectly clear that on the record in this case Greer...

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