20 Ind. 492 | Ind. | 1863
Aspinwall and others, assignees of the Ohio and Mississippi railroad company, sued Henry JD. Wheeler on a subscription of stock of the following tenor, viz:
“We, whose names are subscribed hereto, do promise to pay to the President and Directors of the Ohio and Mississippi railroad company, the sum of 50 dollars for every share of stock set opposite our names respectively, in such manner, proportions and' times as shall be determined .by said company in pursuance of the charter thereof; Provided, that the payments on the stock shall only be applicable to the construction of said road from Vincennes' eastwardly, except so much thereof as may be necessary for incidental and necessary expenses.
Henry D. Wheeler, 50 shares: 2500 dollars.”
The charter of the company is a special one, granted under the old Constitution, and the first section of it declares that John Law and certain other persons named, “and their successors in office, duly elected as hereinafter provided, are hereby constituted a body corporate and politic, by the name of The Ohio and Mississippi railroad company,” with perpetual succession, &c., with powers, &e.
The charter, then, constitutes the directors of the company the. corporation.
The complaint avers that the corporation had determined the installments and times in which the stock, subscription
The defendant answered that the corporation, directly after its creation, left the State of Indiana and migrated to Ohio, where it established its office; and where all its subsequent corporate acts had been performed, including those of fixing installments and times of payment of stock, &c.; and that no acts of the corporation, since its first migration, had been performed in Indiana.
The plaintiffs replied that the Legislature of the State of Ohio had recognized and adopted the charter granted in Indiana, a3 authority to the corporation to act in Ohio, in extending the railroad to Cincinnati, in that State.
The object for which the corporation was created in Indiana is thus expressed in the charter, in section 18:
“ That the president and directors of said company shall be and are hereby invested with all • the rights and powers necessary and proper for the survey, location, construction and repairing of a railroad on the most direct and practicable route between Lawrenceburg, on the Ohio river, and Vincennes, on the Wabash river, having in view the interests of the company and the convenience of the citizens of the State of Indiana, and extend eastwardly on the most direct practicable route to the city of Cincinnati, in the State of Ohio, and westwardly on the like most direct practicable route, through the State of Illinois, to the city of St. Louis, in the State of Missouri,” &c.
The Court below sustained a demurrer to the plaintiffs’ reply, and the defendant had judgment.
The point ruled by the Circuit Court was, that the acts of the Indiana corporation, performed in Ohio, were void as to the stockholders in that corporation.
We think these two propositions may safely be asserted:
2. The authority given to the Indiana corporation, by the Legislature of Ohio, to act in thati State, did not confer upon it, in the absence of authority from Indiana, the right to migrate to that State as an Indiana corporation. State laws, as a general proposition, do not operate extra-territorially.
It may be here observed, as a matter of fact, that the Indiana charter of the Ohio and Mississippi railroad company does not, in terms, locate that corporation anywhere; and the question, therefore, comes fairly and directly up, must a corporation, at common law, or upon general principles, have a local habitation as well as a name ? . Or could a banking or trading corporation, created by Indiana, establish itself here for a time, then close its office in this State, and, with its charter and seal and other paraphernalia, if it had any, depart to Ohio, and, resting there for a time, again move further east, locating successively awhile in New York, in England, in Russia, in China, and, at last, settling down permanently in Japan f And, after being settled in Japan, could the corporation make an order that the Indiana stockholders should pay installments, due and to become due, at the office of the company, in Jeddo, give notice of the order in the Jeddo Gazette, and then, on failure of payment, sue for recovery, &c. ?
Turning to Grant on Corporations, an English book, we find it states on side page 14, that “the old law was that every corporation must be constituted [in the charter] of some place. But it is presumed that this rule has long been obsolete, if it ever held good, except in the cases of corporations entrusted with some local jurisdiction, or with powers and privileges, the exercise of which was from their nature connected with some locality.”
And, to side page 147, we find this note:
“But it seems unsettled whether an attorney may be authorized to execute the lease [of real estate] on behalf of the corporation, either by affixing to it his own seal, or the corporation seal, on the land out of England, as it might be convenient to do in some cases, ex. gr., if the corporation held land in the colonies; vide Moore, pi. 191, Dyer, 132, a; Sheph. Touchst. 57. If the name of the lessee were left in blank when the deed was sealed, it would be void, 6 M. & 'W. 214. Also, the presumption appears to be, that the common seal is irremovable from the domicil of the corporation, Jenk. Cent. 10.” So much for the English common law upon the point.
Corporations, in this country, are treated as having domiciles or residences in determining the question of jurisdiction as between the State and United States Courts, and, also, upon general principles. See the cases collected in Peters’ U. S. Dig., and in Curtis’ U. S. Dig., h. t. And we think we may safely assert that, in the United States, where corporations are created by State Legislatures without specifying a locality in their charters, they are regarded as, by implication of law, local to the State in which they are created, and must have their business locations therein. The Bank of Augusta v. Earle is a leading case upon this proposition.' It is there said: “It is very true that a corporation can have no legal existence out of the boundary of the sovereignty by which it is created. It exists only in contemplation of law,- and by force of law; and where that law ceases-to operate, and is no longer obligatory, the corporation can have no existence. It must dwell in the place of its creation, and cannot migrate to an
The State by agent may contract out of the limits of the State; but could the Legislature hold a session out of the State, and at such session legally appoint the agent ?
The case of Wright v. Bundy, supra, accords with the present in principle. The difference is in the facts. In the former the stockholders constituted the corporation, the directors being but its agents. In the present case the directors are constituted the corporation by the charter.
Upon authority, then, we feel constrained to hold the corporate acts in this case, which were performed by the body of the corporation, in a foreign State, of no validity.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.