111 N.E. 1075 | NY | 1916
The plaintiff is a resident of this state; the defendant, a Pennsylvania corporation; and the cause of action, a breach of contract. The plaintiff, while working for the defendant in Pennsylvania, was injured through the defendant's negligence. A contract was then made to compensate him for his injuries. The plaintiff complains that this contract has been broken. He has served the summons on an agent designated by the defendant as "a person upon whom process against the corporation may be served within the state" (Gen. Corp. L. § 16; Consol. Laws, ch. 23). The defendant concedes that it is engaged in business in New York. It concedes that its appointment of an agent has never been revoked: It insists, however, that his agency must be limited to actions which arise out of the business transacted *434 in New York. It says that any other construction would do violence to its rights under the Federal Constitution. But the plaintiff's cause of action has no relation to business transacted in New York. His cause of action owes its origin to business transacted in Pennsylvania. The defendant says that for this reason the service is invalid; and both at the Special Term and at the Appellate Division its position has been sustained.
Two cases in the Supreme Court of the United States are said to be authority for that conclusion. They are Old Wayne Mut. LifeAssn. v. McDonough (
Old Wayne Mut. Life Assn. v. McDonough was followed inSimon v. Southern Ry. Co. (
The question now before us is not the one that was decided inSimon v. Southern Ry. Co. It is the exact question which the court refused to decide. We are not required to consider how service could be made if the defendant had declined to file a stipulation. We are to ascertain the meaning and define the effect of a stipulation which it has filed. That is a question of the construction of a contract, and it must be answered in the light of the laws of the state where the contract was made. The state of New York has said that a foreign stock corporation, other than a moneyed corporation, shall not do business here until it has obtained a certificate from the secretary of state. The penalty is that it may not maintain any action in our courts "upon any contract made by it in this state, unless before the making of the contract it has procured such certificate" (Gen. Corp. L. § 15; Cons. Laws, ch. 23). The business, though unlicensed, is not illegal; the contract is not void; it may be enforced in other jurisdictions; all that is lost is the right to sue in the courts of the state (Lupton's Sons Co. v. Auto Clubof America,
The line of division between this case on the one side andSimon v. Southern Ry. Co. on the other is, therefore, a clear one. It was marked with discrimination in the opinion of Judge LEARNED HAND, sitting in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in a case against this same defendant (Smolik v. Philadelphia Reading Coal Iron Co., 222 Fed. Rep. 148). The distinction is between a true consent and an imputed or implied consent, between a fact and a fiction. The defendant in Simon v. Southern Ry. Co., had never consented to be bound by service on a public officer. "Actually it might have refused to appoint, and yet its refusal would make no difference" (HAND, J., in Smolik v. P. R.C. I. Co.,supra). If consent is withheld, but the privilege of doing business is exercised, the courts must say to what extent the corporation shall be charged with the same consequences as if it had consented. In marking the limits of this estoppel, they are not construing a contract, but defining a duty imposed and implied by law irrespective of contract. Two views are conceivable. On the one hand, we may say that the estoppel extends to causes of action of every nature, to causes of action which would have arisen even though the corporation had never gone beyond the state of its domicile. On the other hand, we may say that the estoppel should be limited to causes of action which owe their origin to the transaction of business in defiance of the statutory restrictions. It is this latter and narrower *438 view of the limits of the estoppel which has prevailed. A very different problem is the one before us. The statute is different; the conduct of the corporation subject to it is different. The statute makes no provision for service on a public officer if a designation is not filed; the corporation may withhold its stipulation and carry on business legally; all that it forfeits is the right to enforce its contracts in our courts. In return for that privilege, it has made a voluntary appointment of an agent selected by itself. We are not imposing or implying a legal duty. We are construing a contract.
When the nature of the problem is thus defined, the answer is no longer doubtful. The service of the summons on the defendant's designated agent had, we think, the same effect as if it had been made on the defendant's president (Code Civ. Pro. § 432). The purpose of the stipulation was to insure the presence in this state of some one with authority equal to the president's in respect of the service of process. It is true that even the president of a foreign corporation may be here without bringing the corporation itself within this jurisdiction. He must be here "officially, representing the corporation in its business" (Conley v. Mathieson Alkali Works,
The order should be reversed, with costs in all courts, and the question certified answered in the negative.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, SEABURY and POUND, JJ., concur.
Order reversed.