182 Mo. App. 309 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is a suit, originating in a justice court, to recover the unpaid rent for the months of July, August and September, 1912, aggregating $300 due from defendant for the basement floor of the seven story building at the southwest córner of Eighth and Broadway, Kansas City. Defendant admits that it has not paid the rent sued for, and denies plaintiff’s right to recover solely upon the ground that plaintiff is a foreign corporation with no authority to do business in this State and for that reason cannot maintain this suit or recover upon it in the courts of Missouri.
Upon appeal from the justice to the circuit court, the cause was submitted to the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the rent sought to be recovered, and defendant has appealed presenting the sole point above mentioned.
On January 1, 1909', the building in question was owned by a Missouri corporation called the Isaacs
The firm of Isaacs Brothers is a wholesale clothing firm doing business in New York under said name. This firm had five members, and for the purpose of holding title to real estate acquired by the firm, they place the title to their real estate in the. name of the Broadway Bond Street Company. This is a New York corporation chartered, among other objects, “to own, buy, sell, lease and deal in real estate in the city of New York and elsewhere,” and all its capital stock is controlled by Isaacs Brothers.
The Missouri corporation, The Isaacs Clothing Company, owner of the building in question, became indebted to the firm of Isaacs Brothers in about the sum of $75,000. The Isaacs Clothing Company of Kansas City was otherwise not successful as a business enterprise, and the firm of' Isaacs Brothers, not wanting a failure to occur in their family, paid all of its debts as well as the individual debts of Isaac Isaacs, the president of the Isaacs Clothing Company. To secure the firm of Isaacs Brothers for the money advanced, the Isaacs Clothing Company conveyed its said building to the Broadway Bond Street Company at the request of Isaacs Brothers. This was done January 25, 1911, and the deed was recorded March 8', 1911. Shortly after the building was conveyed to plaintiff, the lease to defendant was. assigned to plaintiff also.
Although the title to the building thereafter stood in the name of the corporation, the Broadway Bond
After the building was transferred to plaintiff, defendant paid its rent, up to July 1, 1912, to Isaacs Brothers sometimes by check to their agent, Bombeck, sometimes by check drawn by defendant itself direct to Isaacs Brothers.
Plaintiff has never bought nor sold real estate in Missouri. It will neither gain profit nor suffer loss by the transaction. It doesn’t own any real estate in Missouri, not even the building in question, since the deed from the Isaacs Clothing Company is nothing more than a mortgage, for the benefit of Isaacs Brothers to secure their debt, made to plaintiff at Isaacs Brothers request. The bare naked title is in plaintiff for the benefit of Isaacs Brothers and the Isaacs Clothing Company, nothing more.
A foreign corporation is not, merely because it is foreign, prevented from owning real estate or from enforcing and protecting its rights in reference to property owned in this State. And the courts of this State are open to it for this purpose. [Prick Co. v. W. G-. Marshall, 86 Mo. App. 463; Missouri Coal and Mining Co. v. Ladd, 160 Mo. 435-; Meddis v. Kenney, 176 Mo. 200.] It is only when the corporation is attempting to do business in this State that its contracts in furtherance of such business will not be enforced unless it has been authorized to do business here.
The mere holding of title to real estate and transmitting same, without more, is generally held not to be the doing of business within the meaning of statutes such as the one in question. [19 Cyc. 1309; People ex rel. v. Miller, 71 N. E. 463.]
But, it is contended, the very object and purpose of plaintiff’s incorporation is “to own, buy, sell, lease and deal in real estate in the city of New York and elsewhere” and hence when it owns this particular piece in Kansas City, Missouri, this is “doing business” in the State within the meaning of our statute. But the proof shows that is doesn’t even own this piece, nor has it sought to collect the rents or to deal in real estate here. Its title is a mere naked, dry, trust, holding the title for the benefit of Isaacs Brothers, mortgagees in equity, and the Isaacs > Clothing Company, the equitable mortgagor. Isaacs Brothers had a right to take the building as security for the debt owed it by the Isaacs Clothing Company; and simply because the firm, for convenience, caused the security to be placed in the name of plaintiff, a foreign corporation which did nothing except to hold the mere legal title but did not own or have an interest in the property, would not make the latter be “doing business” in this State in the sense our statute contemplates.'
The contention by defendant hereinabove stated was made in the case of Louisville Property Co. v. Mayor, etc. of Nashville, 84 S. W. 810. In that case
In the case of Tristate Amusement Co. v. Forest Park, etc. Amusement Co., 192 Mo. 404, the foreign corporation was transacting business in this State and the contract declared on was for the purpose of enabling it to do so. In Chicago Mill Co. v. Sims, 197 Mo. 507, the foreign corporation maintained an agent in this State and was carrying on a part of its business here, i. e., the obtaining of its supply of raw materials for the manufacture of boxes. Plaintiff’s brief in that case admitted it was doing business in this State (p. 511), In the case of Amalgamated Zinc and Lead Company v. Bay State Zinc Mining Co., 221 Mo. 7, plaintiff, a foreign corporation had been doing business in Missouri, i. e., mining on the property since 1902 (p. 11). And in Parke Davis & Co. v. Mullet, 245 Mo. 168, plaintiff, a Machigan corporation, alleged in its reply that it was doing business in Missouri but not in the particular department in charge of the matter in controversy (p. 171). These cases do not affect the case at bar since in all of them the foreign corporation was actually doing business in'
In onr opinion the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.