Judges: Spear
Filed Date: 11/17/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The question arising upon the record is whether or not the facts, appearing by petition and answer, bring the case within the operation of the act of May 19,1894,(91 Ohio Laws, 355-6), which provides that no foreign stock corporation other than banking and insurance shall do business in this state without procuring from the secretary .of state a certificate that it has complied'.with all the requirements of law to authorize it to do business in this state. No such foreign stock corporation doing business in this state without such certificate, shall maintain any action in this state
It may be remarked, in passing, that the allegation in the answer that the plaintiff company was doing business in this state cannot aid the pleading, unless it can be shown that the performing of any act in the nature of a business transaction in the state is a doing of business against the terms of the statute. No fact is stated which will assist the court in determining whether the claim was true as applied to the contention of the parties here, and unless every business act in the state is forbidden without such certificate having first been obtained, it is but the statement of a legal conclusion. It is tó be further noted that there is no averment in the answer that the goods were manufactured in the state of Ohio, and, in the absence of such averment, the natural inference would be that they were manufactured in the state of Massachusetts, inasmuch as the petition shows that the plaintiff company is a corporation of that state, having its principal place of business in Boston.
It is contended by plaintiff in error that, as held in Telegraph Co. v. Mayer, 28 Ohio St. 521:’ “Foreign corporations can exercise none of their franchises or powers within this state except by comity or legislative consent. That consent may be upon such terms and conditions as the general assembly under its legislative power may interpose.” And further that, under the facts, there, is no question of interstate commerce involved, because the sales and delivery were at Toledo, Ohio; and a clear case is thus made of a foreign corporation undertaking to maintain, without having complied with the terms of the statute, an action which the statute permits only upon the condition precedent of a compliance with its terms.
The general proposition announced in the Mayer case is established law. But it is there applied to facts which admittedly showed that the telegraph company was the owner of lines of telegraph in Ohio, maintaining offices and transacting as fully as in the state where incorporated (New York), a general telegraph business, and the question involved was whether such a corporation could be required to pay a tax on gross receipts in Ohio of its telegraph lines, which transactions were clearly an exercise of corporate franchises and powers. The decision fails to cover the case before us.
In arriving at the meaning of the statute, it is the duty of the court to avoid, if practicable, giving to it such construction as will render it void or inoperative. •
But if it were determined that the power exists, do the terms of the act bear the construction contended for? The act requires, on the part of a foreign corporation, a showing of its condition, its capital stock, the business it proposes to engage in within the state, and the designation of a place as a principal place of business, and of a person upon whom process against it may be served, and such- person must have an office at the principal place of business. He is given authority to maintain actions in the courts of the state. And where the agent dies or resigns, the corporation is required, within thirty days, to appoint another. For the certificate of the secretary of state, a fee is to be paid, from $15 to $50, according to amount of capital stock
Why should all this machinery be necessary in case of the sale and delivery of. .g-oods ? Of what importance is it to know the amount of capital stock in order to permit the sale? Why is a principal place of business of consequence when the business may be only one sale ? Why require a general agent and an office in a specified place when the sale is to be made by an itinerant agent
The provisions of the law'are not, as it seems to us, consistent with an intent to interfere with the enjoyment by corporations of other states of the ordinary privileges enjoyed, as matter of right, by .citizens of the states generally, and hence the act does not apply to sales and delivery of goods such as are shown by the record in this case.
A point is made that, for all'that appears in the answer, the Glen Company may be a banking or insurance corporation. It is not worth while to take time to discuss this, for it is not pretended that it is such corporation, and an amendment would easily cure that defect, were the answer otherwise sufficient.
An act is found in -the volume of Ohio Laws, heretofore cited, at page 272, relating- to the regulation of foreign corporations doing business in this state. But this act is not relied upon by plaintiff in error, and its bearing upon this case is not, for that reason, here considered.
Judgment affirmed.