Opinion
January Term, 1898.
W.W. MacFarland, for the relator.
T.E. Hancock, Attorney-General, and G.D.B. Hasbrouck, Deputy Attorney-General, for the respondent.
The relator is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey, and has its principal place of business at Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania. The tax in question was for the year ending November 1, 1893. During that year the relator was engaged in the manufacture of cotton seed oil and other products of cotton seed, all its factories being situated outside of the State of New York. Prior to September, 1892, the relator had an office in this State, but it was then discontinued and an arrangement made by it with Whitman Brothers, a firm of commission merchants and general merchandise brokers, who had a place of business in New York city. By this arrangement, Whitman Brothers had the selling agency of the relator in New York and the eastern markets for crude and refined oil, and also for the sale of oil for foreign markets, and for compensation had a commission of a certain per cent on the amount of sales. Under this arrangement Whitman Brothers obtained orders for goods and sent them to the relator for approval. If approved, they were filled, in the majority of cases, by shipment direct from the manufacturing establishment to the place of consumption. The relator also consigned to Whitman Brothers some of its goods for sale if a named price could be obtained. These consignments averaged 400 or 500 barrels of oil a month, of the value of from $17 to $20 a barrel. Some of the sales of these consigned goods were for consumption in New York State. All were made in the original packages. It may be inferred that some of the orders that were sent to the home office for approval were, if approved and a speedy delivery desired, filled from the goods consigned. The title of the consigned goods remained in the relator until delivered to the buyer. The relator had a bank account in New York made up of deposits of proceeds of sales by Whitman Brothers, or from money borrowed at the bank. The drafts on this bank account were from the Philadelphia office, and the money was all used by the relator in its business outside of the State, except that Whitman Brothers were paid their charges by check out of the proceeds of sales, such check being drawn by the home office. The average amount of deposits between January 9, 1893, and January 8, 1894, was about $38,900. The business through Whitman Brothers was chiefly exports. The relator had no office or place of business in this State. The sales were for cash. The capital of the relator is $4,000,000.
The claim of the relator is, that it is not doing business in this State within the meaning of the statute. The solution of this question depends upon the construction to be given to the dealings between the relator and Whitman Brothers.
It is quite clear that the obtaining by Whitman Brothers of orders for goods, sending such orders to the relator for approval, and the filling of the approved orders by transmission of goods direct from the relator's factories, is not, within the adjudications on that subject, doing business within this State within the purview of the statute. ( People ex rel. Washington Mills Co. v. Roberts, 8 App. Div. 201; affd., 151 N.Y. 619; Tallapoosa Lumber Co. v. Holbert, 5 App. Div. 559; People ex rel. Lembeck B.E. Brewing Co. v. Roberts, 22 id. 282, and cases cited.)
There is, however, in this case something further to be considered. The relator consigns a portion of its goods to its agent, the commission merchant, for sale. Sales are here made from such goods, either directly at a price as directed by the relator, or in fulfillment of orders approved by the relator. The proceeds are deposited to the credit of the relator in a bank here. Do these additional facts authorize the conclusion that the relator is doing business within the State?
The goods consigned to the commission merchants were in their possession and control, and their disposition in accordance with the directions of the relator was a part of their business, not the business of the relator. A commission merchant has ordinarily a right to sell in his own name. (Story's Agency, §§ 33, 34.) As to the public he is the dealer.
It should not, I think, be held that the consignment of goods by a non-resident manufacturer to a resident commission merchant for cash sale constitutes a doing of business by the manufacturer within this State within the meaning of the statute. ( Bertha Zinc Mineral Co. v. Clute, 7 Misc. Rep. 124.) The method adopted here for the transmission of the proceeds does not materially change the situation. Nor does the fact that the charges of the commission merchants or agents were paid by check after the deposit instead of being deducted before the deposit.
In this view of the character and effect of the dealings between the relator and Whitman Brothers, coupled with the fact that the relator has here no office or place of business, the conclusion is reached that the relator was not subject to the tax in question.
All concurred.
Determination of the Comptroller reversed, with costs.