Jackson v. Schuylkill Silk Mills

Guy, J.

Plaintiff claimed to have acquired jurisdiction of the defendant, a foreign corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania, by service of the summons herein in this city upon William W. Roach, stated to be a managing agent of the defendant. From the order vacating the service plaintiff appeals.

In support of the motion defendant, whose business is the manufacture of silk gloves and underwear, presented the affidavit of Roach, who swears that he was employed by the defendant with the title “general sales manager,” but at all times under the direction and control of the officers of the silk mills; that his duties are to visit customers, show goods, transmit orders for the same to the home office in Pennsylvania for approval, and subject to the direction and approval of the defendant to hire and discharge traveling salesmen, receive and transmit to the home office their reports of sales, and to act in all respects subject to the control of the defendant. Plaintiff avers that Roach also suggests and selects different designs and patterns for the defendant in the making up of its various articles, and purchases ribbons, laces and silks for the purpose of making up into garments, but this is denied by Roach.

It also appears that defendant had an office at 200 Fifth avenue in this city; that it owned certain property contained therein; that said office was occupied by Roach as sole representative of the company; that defendant had no other place for the transaction of business, or office or factory in the state of New York, and that no person had been designated for the service of process upon the defendant in New York.

The purpose of the statute (Code Civ. Pro., § 432) is to prescribe the manner in which jurisdiction, by personal service of the summons, may be conferred upon courts within this state in actions against foreign *444corporations irrespective of whether or not such corporations are doing business within the state in such way or to such extent as to subject them to certain provisions of the General Corporation Law and Stock Corporation Law, or make them amenable to the Tax Law of the state. Our highest court has held that, while a foreign stock corporation may be actually doing business in this state, it may not be doing business so as to require, as a condition precedent thereto, that it shall obtain a certificate from the secretary of state, or render it necessary for such corporation to keep a stock-book at its New York office. Hovey v. De Long Hook & Eye Co., 211 N. Y. 420. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of said section 432 provide for service upon certain specific officials of the corporation or the person designated in section 16 of the General Corporation Law. Subdivision 3 provides: “If such a designation is not in force, or if neither the person designated, nor an officer specified in subdivision first of this section, can be found with due diligence, and the corporation has property within the State, or the cause of action arose therein,- to the cashier, a director, or a managing agent of the corporation, within the State.” There is no limitation of the provisions of subdivision 3 of the said section to corporations doing or transacting business within the state, the sole requirements being that ‘ the corporation has property within the State, or the cause of action arose therein.” These requirements of subdivision 3 have been met by the plaintiff, it appearing by the affidavit of one Barbev, president of the defendant corporation, that the defendant has property within the state sufficient to meet the requirements of the statute. The only remaining question is whether the person upon whom service was made herein was, at the time of such service, a managing agent of the defendant corporation — whether the incidental agency *445of the defendant in the state of New York vested in its agent, Eoach, constituted him a managing agent for the defendant within the meaning of section 432 of the Code of Civil Procedure for the purpose of conferring jurisdiction upon a state court. “ Managing agent,” as so used in the statute, imports £i some person invested by the corporation with general powers involving the exercise of judgment and discretion.” Taylor v. Granite State Provident Assn., 136 N. Y. 343. The question whether the defendant corporation was doing business within the state is only relevant in this particular case in so far as it is essential to the existence of a managing agent that there shall be business affairs of the corporation within the state which are under the supervision, control or management of such managing agent.

In Tuchband v. Chicago & Alton R. R. Co., 115 N. Y. 437, the court, in determining the validity of service upon an alleged managing agent of a defendant corporation, said: ££ When' the corporation has an office in this state where a substantial portion of its business is transacted by a person designated by itself as a general agent, although followed bywords indicating some one department, it may safely be assumed that the object of the statute will be accomplished. * * * Where a corporation created by the laws of any other state does business in this state, the person who, as its agent, does that business should be considered its managing agent, and more especially should that be so where the foreign corporation has an office or place of business in this State, and when that office is in charge of that person and he there acts for the corporation. He is there doing business for it, and so manages its business. Such person is, in every sense of the words used in the statute £ a managing agent.’ ” See, also, Brayton v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 72 Hun, 602; Barrett v. *446American T. & T. Co., 10 N. Y. Supp. 138; affd. 138 N. Y. 491; Palmer v. Penna Co., 2 How. Pr. (N. S.) 156; Ives v. Metropolitan L. Ins. Co., 78 Hun, 32.

In the case at bar Roach, the general sales manager ’ ’ of the defendant, subject to the direction and control of the home office in Pennsylvania, managed the sales of the defendant in the state of New York, and hired and discharged its traveling salesmen, and had general charge of its business or affairs in this state. This made him “a managing agent” within the meaning of section 432 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That he was subject to the direction and control of the defendant is not material, for it is to be expected that even a managing agent shall be subject to direction and control by the executive officers of his principal. Roach’s duties were much broader in scope than those of the person held not to be a managing agent in Beck v. North Packing & Provision Co., 159 App. Div. 418.

The fact that the summons when delivered to Roach was enclosed in an envelope, contrary to the proper and regular method of service, does not invalidate the service, because immediately upon its receipt Roach examined the envelope and found therein copies of the summons and complaint. In Bulkley v. Bulkley, 6 Abb. Pr. 307, cited by the respondent, the facts are clearly distinguishable, for there the summons, enclosed in a small, closed tin box, covered with paper and the paper sealed, was delivered to the defendant when the ship on which she was a passenger was about to leave the dock in New York city for California, the defendant being informed, when the box was handed to her, that it contained a present for her mother and a note for herself; and the defendant did not open the box and discover its contents until the vessel was at sea, beyond the jurisdiction of the court, so that she had no oppor*447tunity to answer the complaint and prevent the default which was subsequently taken.

Page and Philbin, JJ., concur.

The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to vacate denied, with ten dollars costs.