Suit in replevin was commenced in the Pike Circuit Court by appellant, a foreign book corporation, against appellee, who had purchased certain law books under written contract that the title to them should remain in appellant until the payment of the entire purchase money. At the time of the institution of the suit a balance of $95.25 was due on the books, which appellee refused to pay. The written contract was made the basis of the suit.
The main defense interposed by appellee, and the only one presenting a question for determination on this appeal, was that the contract is void and non-enforceable because made in this State by a foreign corporation, without complying with the laws of the State of Arkansas authorizing them to do business in the State.
The cause was submitted to the court, sitting as a jury, on the pleadings and testimony, which resulted in a judgment in favor of appellee, from which is this appeal.
The facts are undisputed, and, in substance, are as follows: Two sets of law books, the Encyclopedia of Evidence and of Procedure, were sold to one McNeill, a resident of Pike County, upon order secured by appellant’s traveling salesman, subject to approval of appellant at its home office in Los Angeles, Calif., and to be shipped from a point outside of Arkansas to McNeill at Murfreesboro, Arkansas. Volumes 1 to 14 inclusive of the Encyclopedia of Evidence and six volumes of the Encyclopedia of Procedure were shipped to and received by McNeill. Under the written contract, the title of the books was retained in appellant until the purchase money should be paid. Judge T. AV. Rountree obtained the books from McNeill in payment of a law fee. Subsequently the agent of appellant ascertained the whereabouts of the books and claimed them for appellant under the McNeill contract. Judge Rountree examined the contract, and told the agent to take them. The books were at the time in the grand jury room. Judge Rountree was county judge, and had the books in the grand jury room where he could conveniently use them. In about two hours, and before moving the books, the agent returned and proposed to resell the two sets of books complete, with supplements, to appellee under contract similar to the McNeill contract in form. A price was agreed upon, and the proposed contract entered into, subject to the approval of appellant at its home office in Los Angeles. The books in the grand jury room were delivered to appellee, and the remaining books necessary to complete the sets were to be shipped to him upon his order, by appellant. The contract was approved and the undelivered books afterwards shipped to and received by appellee. All of the purchase money except $95.25 was paid by appellee. Appellant made no attempt to comply with the laws of Arkansas so that it might transact business in the State.
Suits cannot be maintained, either in law or equity, by foreign corporations upon their contracts covering intrastate transactions, without complying with the statutory requirements as a prerequisite to doing busmess in this State. Section 1826 and 1832, Crawford & Moses’ Digest.
' The sole question therefore presented by this appeal for determination is, whether the facts relating to this sale made it an intrastate transaction. In the recent case of Coblentz & Logsdon v. L. D. Powell Co., 148 Ark. 151, this court, in considering a contract in which L. D. Powell Company retained title in books until the purchase money was paid, which it sold on order and shipped into this State, said:
“The taking of an order from the appellants by the appellee’s traveling salesman for certain books, which order was transmitted to the appellee and accepted by it and the books shipped to the appellants under a contract by which the title was reserved in the appellee until the purchase money was paid, is not the doing’ of business in this State, in contemplation of act of May 13, 1907, p. 744 (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 1826); see also § 1832.”
The larger part of the books in the instant case were not sold on order to Judge Rountree for future delivery, but were in the, State when sold, and were immediately delivered to him. Appellee contends that the presence of the goods in the State at the time of the sale, and the immediate delivery thereof to the purchaser, made it an intrastate transaction. The case of Hogan v. Intertype Corporation, 136 Ark. 52, is cited in support of the contention. In the Hogan case the machinery had been shipped into the State to shipper’s own order for the purpose of selling same to Hogan after demonstration, and was retained as the sole and independent property of the Intertype Corporation until after demonstration and sale to him. In the instant case the books were not shipped into the State as the sole and independent property of appellant for the purpose of selling them to appellee or any other person. On the contrary, they were shipped into the State by appellant to McNeill on an order for future delivery, obtained by appellant’s traveling agent. The McNeill contract clearly covered an interstate transaction. Coblentz & Logsdon v. L. D. Powell Co., supra. The recovery of the books under the McNeill contract amounted to a collection growing out of an interstate transaction. The collection was made in books instead of money, and we think the resale of them, in order to convert them into money, was a continuation of the interstate transaction. It was the only practical method by which a collection could be completed against one who had defaulted on an interstate contract. Otherwise it would have been necessary to incur the expense of shipping the books out of the State in order to convert them into money. The statutes of this State requiring foreign corporations to comply with certain conditions before doing intrastate business were not intended to place such a burden upon the enforcement of good faith interstate transactions-. We think the doctrine announce 1 in the case of Rose City Bottling Works v. Godchaux Sugars, Inc., 151 Ark. 289, is applicable and controlling in this case.
On account of the error indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the muse is remanded with instructions to render judgment for appellant.