1. A foreign corporation is not amenable, without its consent,
to suit upon a transitory cause of action arising outside of the
state and not connected with any act or business of the corporation
within the state. P.
279 U. S.
324.
2. In the absence of an authoritative state decision giving a
narrower scope to a power of attorney filed by a railroad company,
pursuant to a statute requiring foreign corporations doing business
within the state to designate an agent there to receive service of
"lawful process," the power will be held to operate as a consent by
the company, which was otherwise present and doing business within
the state, to a suit upon a cause of action arising out of the
breach, in another state, of a contract for passenger
transportation, which contract was evidenced by a through coupon
ticket sold within the state to the plaintiff by an initial carrier
under a joint tariff agreement as agent and for account of the
defendant company, and which was accepted by the latter for
transportation over its lines in the state where the breach
occurred. P.
279 U. S.
325.
3. Where a carrier renders service in interstate commerce under
published tariffs, the attendant limitation of liability in the
tariff becomes the lawful condition of the carriage, binding alike
on the carrier and its patron, and is not subject to waiver. P.
279 U.S. 331.
4. In the absence of evidence of joint liability on the part of
connecting carriers, there can be no liability of either for injury
to a through passenger occurring beyond its own line except on the
theory that its own negligence caused or contributed to the injury,
and a charge to the jury authorizing them to find a verdict
inconsistent with such a theory is erroneous. P.
279 U. S.
329.
5. In a suit for personal injuries resulting from a defect in
the condition of a passenger car, the doctrine of
res ipsa
loquitur cannot be invoked against an initial carrier where
the accident out of which the cause of action arose occurred after
the car in which
Page 279 U. S. 321
the plaintiff was injured had passed from its control and that
of an intermediate carrier to the line of a second connecting
carrier. P.
279 U. S.
332.
6. In a suit for personal injuries against connecting carriers,
a charge to the jury authorizing a verdict against both the initial
and the connecting carrier, even though they find that the initial
carrier alone was negligent, is prejudicial to the connecting
carrier, and erroneous. P.
279 U. S. 332.
26 F.2d 403 reversed.
Writs of certiorari, 278 U.S. 590, to the circuit court of
appeals to review a decision affirming a judgment of the district
court on a verdict for respondent against both petitioners in a
suit for personal injuries.
Page 279 U. S. 322
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent, a citizen of Louisiana, brought suit in the District
Court for Eastern Louisiana against the Southern
Page 279 U. S. 323
Railway Company, a Virginia corporation, and the Louisville
& Nashville Railroad Company, a Kentucky corporation, to
recover for personal injuries suffered while traveling in a car of
the Southern Railway in a through train from New Orleans,
Louisiana, to Washington, D.C. At the time of the accident, the
train was being operated by the Southern over its tracks in
Virginia.
Respondent purchased a through coupon ticket for the journey at
the office of the Louisville & Nashville in New Orleans, which
entitled him to passage over the line of the Louisville &
Nashville from Atlanta & West Montgomery, Alabama, over the
Atlanta & West Point Railroad from Montgomery to Atlanta,
Georgia, and thence to Washington over the line of the Southern. He
took passage in New Orleans on a car of the Southern, and proceeded
in it on his journey until, while on the line of the Southern in
Virginia, a window screen, attached to the outside of the car
became loosened and swung backward on its hinges, so as to strike
and break the car window behind it and injure respondent with
pieces of flying glass. The train was made up by the Louisville
& Nashville in New Orleans, and was operated under an agreement
among the three carriers concerned which was not offered in
evidence. But it appeared that the cars composing the train were
furnished by the three carriers on the basis of their respective
mileage, that each furnished locomotive power and train crews over
its own line, and that each, while in possession of the train, was
in exclusive control of it.
Process against both petitioners was served on their respective
agents in Louisiana, designated by them to receive service of
process as required by a state law exacting formal consent by the
corporation that any "lawful process" served on the designated
agent should be "valid
Page 279 U. S. 324
service" upon the corporation. Act No. 184 of 1924.
* The Southern,
appearing specially before answer, excepted to the jurisdiction on
the ground that the cause of action, which was transitory, arose
outside Louisiana, and not out of any business done by the Southern
within that state. After a hearing, in which evidence was
introduced, the exception was overruled. 17 F.2d 305. On the trial,
the district court gave judgment on a verdict for respondent
against both petitioners, which was affirmed by the Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. 26 F.2d 403. This Court granted
certiorari. 278 U.S. 590.
The Southern alone seeks a review of the order overruling its
exception to the jurisdiction. The Louisville & Nashville
assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to give a requested
instruction to the jury. Both petitioners raise for consideration
here exceptions to the charge of the court to the jury and to the
admission of certain testimony.
1. The Southern insists that the case as to it should have been
dismissed on its exception for want of jurisdiction of the person
of the corporation upon a suit in Louisiana on a cause of action
arising outside that state. A foreign corporation is amenable to
suit to enforce a personal liability if it is doing business within
the jurisdiction
Page 279 U. S. 325
in such manner and to such extent as to warrant the inference
that it is present there.
Lafayette Insurance Co. v.
French, 18 How. 404;
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v.
Spratley, 172 U. S. 602;
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. v. Alexander, 227 U.
S. 218. Even when present and amenable to suit, it may
not, unless it has consented (
Pennsylvania Fire Ins. Co. v.
Gold Issue Mining Co., 243 U. S. 93;
Smolik v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal Co., 222 F.
148), be sued on transitory causes of action arising elsewhere
which are unconnected with any corporate action by it within the
jurisdiction (
Old Wayne Mut Life Assn. v. McDonough,
204 U. S. 8;
Simon v. Southern Ry. Co., 236 U.
S. 115).
It is urged by the Southern that compliance with the Louisiana
statute requiring a foreign corporation doing business within the
state to designate an agent to receive service of process is, under
the state decisions, a consent to suit only upon causes of action
arising out of business conducted within the state (
State ex
rel. Watkins v. North American Land & Timber Co., 106 La.
621;
Delatour & Marmouget v. Southern Ry. Co., 4
La.App. 658;
Buscher v. Southern Ry. Co., 4 La.App. 653;
see Missouri P. R. Co. v. Clarendon Boat Oar Co.,
257 U. S. 533),
which it is insisted this is not, and that, in any case, in the
absence of an authoritative decision by the state court, this Court
will give a like effect to the designation under the statute
(
Mitchell Furniture Co. v. Selden Breck Const. Co.,
257 U. S. 213).
For present purposes, we may assume that the effect of the
designation of the statutory agent by the Southern is, as the state
decisions cited seem to show, that a cause of action arising wholly
outside and wholly unconnected with any act or business of the
corporation within the state may not be sued upon there, and we
address ourselves to the question, decisive of this branch of the
case, whether the Southern, being present within the State of
Louisiana, is amenable to suit on this cause
Page 279 U. S. 326
of action as one arising out of business done within the state,
or from such action of the corporation within the state as to
subject it to liability there.
The Southern does not deny that it is carrying on some business
within Louisiana or that it is subject to suit there on some causes
of action. Its relation to the through train service originating in
New Orleans, so far as disclosed, has already been detailed. It
carries on in the state, through an office and agents of its own
there located, continuous solicitation of freight and passenger
traffic.
See International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky,
234 U. S. 579;
International Textbook Co. v. Pigg, 217 U. S.
91,
217 U. S. 103;
Block v. Atchison, Topeka & S.F. R. Co., 21 F. 529;
Walsh v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 256 F. 47.
But
see Green v. C. B. & Q. Ry., 205 U.
S. 530;
People's Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco
Co., 246 U. S. 79. It
maintains its own office there for the sale of tickets for passage
over its own and connecting lines.
Cf. International Harvester
Co. v. Kentucky, supra at p.
234 U. S. 585.
It has designated an agent there to receive service of "lawful
process," which fact, being of significance in determining the
extent of the jurisdiction when the corporation is doing business
within the state (
Pennsylvania Fire Ins. Co. v. Gold Issue
Mining Co., supra), is, we think, also of decisive weight in
determining its presence for purposes of suit when coupled with its
other corporate activities within the state. It is therefore, as
petitioner concedes, so far present in the state as to be amenable
to suit there for some purposes.
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. v.
Alexander, supra. We disregard the fact that the Southern owns
the stock, or most of it, of the New Orleans Railroad Company and
the New Orleans Terminal Company, Louisiana corporations owning
real estate and railroad equipment there, and that its officers and
theirs are the same.
Peterson v. Chicago, R.I. & P. R.
Co., 205 U. S. 364;
Philadelphia & Reading Ry. Co. v. McKibbin,
243 U. S. 264.
Page 279 U. S. 327
The cause of action here asserted is one arising out of a
contract for transportation, evidenced by the through ticket sold
to respondent in New Orleans and accepted by the Southern for
transportation over its line. It purported on its face to be sold
by the Louisville & Nashville as agent, and was sold under a
joint tariff agreed to by the carriers concerned and filed by them
with the Interstate Commerce Commission providing that the carrier
selling the ticket acted as agent of the others. Had the ticket
been sold to respondent by the Southern at its own ticket office in
New Orleans, we may assume that it would not have been seriously
contended that the cause of action did not arise out of the
business of the Southern in Louisiana, or that the present suit
could not have been maintained there, even though the wrongful act
complained of took place elsewhere. But it is said that, as the
ticket was sold by the Louisville & Nashville, that transaction
alone, under the decisions of this Court, would not constitute
doing business within the jurisdiction so as to make the Southern
amenable to suit there.
Peterson v. Chicago, R.I. & P. Ry.
Co., supra; Philadelphia & Reading Ry. Co. v. McKibbin, supra;
General Inv. Co. v. Lake Shore & M. S. Ry. Co., 250 F.
160. From this it is argued that the sale of the ticket cannot be
considered any part of the business carried on within the state by
the Southern, and that the present cause of action is therefore not
within the consent to suit given by its designation of an agent, or
to be implied from its presence and transaction of business within
the state.
But the sale in Louisiana of the ticket for transportation over
the Southern was made by the Louisville & Nashville under the
filed joint tariff as the agent and for account of the Southern. In
its legal effect, it was the act of the Southern within the
jurisdiction by which its obligation to respondent on the contract
of carriage over its own lines became complete. It was out of
this
Page 279 U. S. 328
action within the state that the present obligation of the
Southern arose, although the alleged breach of it occurred
elsewhere.
This was nonetheless the case because such a transaction would
not of itself have been regarded as a doing of business within the
state sufficient to establish the presence of the Southern there
for the purpose of suit.
Cf. Rosenberg Bros. & Co. v.
Curtis Brown Co., 260 U. S. 516.
Since the Southern was present and subject to suit in Louisiana, we
are concerned not with the question whether the sale of the ticket
was sufficient to bring it there, but only with the question
whether, being there, its liability extended to all causes of
action arising out of its corporate acts within the state,
including this one. No case, either in the Louisiana courts or in
this Court, has held that it did not. Where jurisdiction has been
denied, the cause of action not only arose outside the state, but
it was not shown to have arisen out of any business conducted by
the corporation within it, or to have had any relation to any
corporate act there.
Cf. Old Wayne Mutual Life Assn. v.
McDonough, supra; Simon v. Southern Ry. Co., supra; Mitchell
Furniture Co. v. Selden Breck Const. Co., supra. In such a
case, whether the jurisdiction invoked be deemed to depend upon the
presence of the corporation within the state through the doing of
business there or on its consent by the designation of an agent,
the implication is that the liability to suit does not extend to
causes of action which have nothing to do with any act of the
corporation within the state.
Mitchell Furniture Co. v. Selden
Breck Const. Co., at p.
257 U. S. 216. But
where the cause of action does arise out of a corporate act within
the jurisdiction, the presumption would seem necessarily to be the
other way.
In the absence of express language limiting the authority of the
designated agent, there would certainly be no
Page 279 U. S. 329
ground for assuming that the consent extends to causes of action
growing out of some of its acts within the jurisdiction and not
others -- that respondent here might maintain an action if the
ticket had been sold at the office of the Southern, but not if sold
at the office of its authorized agent in the same city. Once
established that the foreign corporation is within the state for
purposes of suit, its presence for that purpose would seem to be
coextensive with its presence for the purpose of carrying on any
corporate transaction within the jurisdiction and, granted the
former, its liability to suit on causes of action growing out of
the latter should follow. To say that not every corporate act
within the jurisdiction is sufficient to establish its presence
there for the purpose of suit is very different from saying that a
suit founded upon such an act may not be maintained there, once its
presence and consent to suit are established.
We decide only that, in the absence of an authoritative state
decision giving a narrower scope to the power of attorney filed
under the state statute, it operates as a consent to suit upon a
cause of action like the present arising out of an obligation
incurred within the state although the breach occurred without.
See Pennsylvania Fire Ins. Co. v. Gold Issue Mining Co.,
supra.
2. The requested instruction to the jury of the Louisville &
Nashville, which was refused, and the actual charge complained of
related to the alleged joint liability of the petitioners. The
complaint contained no allegation that respondent's injury was due
to the negligence of the Louisville & Nashville. He contented
himself with alleging and proving at the trial the accident and
injury while he was traveling over the line of the Southern on a
through ticket purchased of the Louisville & Nashville. As
already indicated, it appeared that the Louisville & Nashville
had no control of the train after
Page 279 U. S. 330
it left its own tracks and each carrier furnished its own
locomotive power and train crew. Each inspected, cleaned, washed,
and repaired the equipment of the train. It also appeared that the
ticket sold by the Louisville & Nashville contained a clause
reading: "In selling this ticket and checking baggage thereon, the
selling carrier acts only as agent, and is not responsible beyond
its own line." The through tariff filed by petitioners with the
Interstate Commerce Commission under § 6 of the Interstate
Commerce Act Feb. 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379, 380, as amended by
Act Feb. 28, 1920, c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 483, contained a similar
provision.
At the close of the whole case, the Louisville & Nashville
moved for a directed verdict, which was denied. The trial judge
also denied its request for an instruction that, if the jury found
the ticket contained the clause referred to, the accident did not
occur on the line of the Louisville & Nashville, and its
negligence did not cause or contribute to the accident, the verdict
should be for that carrier. The court also charged in a variety of
ways that the liability for petitioners for the safe delivery of
the respondent at his destination was joint, and that, if
petitioners
"failed to satisfactorily explain the accident, then negligence
will be presumed, and they will therefore be liable to the
passenger for whatever damage he sustained."
But there was no basis, either in pleading or proof, for a joint
liability of both petitioners for the negligence of one. Neither of
them, as a common carrier, was under any duty, either by the common
law or statute, to transport or assume any responsibility for the
transportation of respondent beyond its own line.
St. Louis
Ins. Co. v. St. Louis v. T.H. & I. Railroad Co.,
104 U. S. 146,
104 U. S. 157;
See Michigan Central R. Co. v.
Mineral Springs Mfg. Co., 16 Wall. 318,
83 U. S. 324.
The Louisville & Nashville therefore might, by stipulation on
the through ticket, provide that it should not be so responsible,
Missouri
Page 279 U. S. 331
P. R. Co. v. Prude, 265 U. S. 99;
cf. Western Union Tel. Co. v. Czizek, 264 U.
S. 281, and, in any case, the transportation service to
be performed was that of a common carrier in interstate commerce
under published tariffs, and the attendant limitation of liability
in the tariff became the lawful condition upon which the service
was rendered, binding alike on the carrier and its patron,
cf.
American Ry. Express Co. v. Daniel, 269 U. S.
40;
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Priester,
276 U. S. 252,
276 U. S. 259;
Chicago & Alton R. Co. v. Kirby, 225 U.
S. 155;
Davis v. Cornwell, 264 U.
S. 560, and was not subject to waiver.
Cf. Davis v.
Henderson, 266 U. S. 92.
See Georgia, Fla. & Ala. Ry. v. Blish Milling Co.,
241 U. S. 190,
241 U. S. 197.
There was therefore no evidence of joint liability of the
petitioners in the case, and there could be no liability of either
for injury to respondent occurring beyond its own line except on
the theory that its own negligence caused or contributed to the
injury.
The circuit court of appeals, in commenting on petitioner's
requested charge, to which we have referred, said that such a
charge would not have been proper because it was calculated to
divert the jury from the consideration of the question whether the
accident was attributable to the negligence of the Louisville &
Nashville. Even if for this reason the requested instruction should
have been refused, the charge, to which proper exception was taken,
that petitioners were jointly liable and that, on this theory, the
jury might find a verdict against the Louisville & Nashville
for an accident occurring on the line of the Southern, was plainly
erroneous, as it indicated to the jury that they might find a
verdict for respondent against the Louisville & Nashville, even
though it had exercised due care in the preparation and inspection
of the train while on its own line.
We think also there was no evidence for the jury of negligence
of the Louisville & Nashville, and that the motion
Page 279 U. S. 332
for a directed verdict in favor of that railroad should have
been granted. There was no evidence of the precise cause of the
loosening of the screen which caused the injury. Whether the screw
which fastened it was improperly replaced by the employees of the
Louisville & Nashville after cleaning the window, or whether it
broke or otherwise became loosened on account of some hidden or
unascertainable defect, or was loosened by others than the
employees of either petitioner, does not appear. There was evidence
of an inspection of the car by the Louisville & Nashville
before it left New Orleans. After the car left the line of the
Louisville & Nashville, it came into the custody of the Atlanta
& West Point Railroad Company. The occurrence of the accident
after the car passed beyond the control of the Louisville &
Nashville and that of the intermediate carrier to the tracks of the
Southern does not admit of the application of the doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur so far as concerns the Louisville &
Nashville.
McNamara v. Boston & Maine R. Co., 202
Mass. 491, 499;
L. & N. R. Co. v. Mink, 168 Ky. 394;
cf. Glynn v. Central Railroad, 175 Mass. 510;
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. Co. v. Merrill, 65 Kan.
436. Without resort to this doctrine, the cause of the accident and
the relation of the Louisville & Nashville to it are matters of
mere speculation and conjecture which should have been withdrawn
from the consideration of the jury.
Chicago, Milwaukee &
St. Paul Ry. Co. v. Coogan, 271 U. S. 472,
271 U. S. 478;
St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Mills, 271 U.
S. 344,
271 U. S.
347.
The charge as to the joint liability of petitioners was also
excepted to by the Southern "insofar as it makes the Southern
Railway Company responsible for the negligence of the Louisville
& Nashville." To that extent, it was clearly erroneous, and
prejudicial to the Southern. The jury was, in effect, told to
return a verdict against both petitioners on a finding of
negligence on the part of either.
Page 279 U. S. 333
As there was evidence of repeated inspections of the window
screens by the Southern after the car reached its line and before
the accident, from which the jury might have found that there was
no want of care on the part of the Southern, the jury may have
found that the accident was due to the negligence of the Louisville
& Nashville, and so have returned a verdict against both. Even
though the issue of the Southern's own negligence was for the jury,
it was entitled to have the issue submitted unprejudiced by the
erroneous instruction which authorized a verdict against the
Southern on the theory of joint liability if the jury should
conclude that the Louisville & Nashville alone was
negligent.
3. As there must be a new trial, it is unnecessary to consider
the rulings on the evidence which the court below thought
erroneous, but not prejudicial. The order overruling the Southern's
exception to the jurisdiction is affirmed. The judgment is reversed
and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with
this opinion.
Reversed.
* The scope of the designation is defined by the state statute
as follows:
"Section 2. The appointment of the agent or agents or officer
upon whom service of process may be made shall be contained in a
written power of attorney accompanied by a duly certified copy of
the resolution of the board of directors of said corporation
consenting and agreeing on the part of the said corporation that
any lawful process against the same which is served upon the said
agent or officer shall be a valid service upon said corporation,
and that the authority shall continue in force and be maintained as
long as any liability remains outstanding against said corporation
growing out of or connected with the business done by said
corporation in this state."