99 Mass. 267 | Mass. | 1868
A corporation, being an artificial person, created by local Jaws, has no existence or powers beyond the jurisdiction of the state by whose laws it is created, except so far, and under such restrictions and conditions, as may be recognized and permitted by the laws and comity of other states. In this state, hovyever, as in most others, a foreign corporation may make contracts within the scope of its charter, and may sue and be sued thereon. Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet. 519. Kennebec Co. v. Augusta Insurance & Banking Co. 6 Gray, 208. American Insurance Co. v. Owen, 15 Gray, 491. By the Gen. Sts. c. 68, § 15, corporations created by any other state, having property in this Commonwealth, are liable to be sued and to have their property attached here, by trustee process or otherwise, in like manner as individual debtors residing in other states. Ocean Insurance Co. v. Portsmouth Marine Railway Co. 3 Met. 420. And by the Gen. Sts. c. 58, § 68, every foreign insurance company, before doing business in this Commonwealth, is required to appoint a citizen and resident thereof a general agent upon whom all lawful processes sued out by citizens of this state against the corporation may be served with like effect as if the corporation existed in this state, and to continue such agency while any liability remains outstanding here against the corporation. Smith v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. 14 Allen, 336.
The article of the Constitution of the United States, which requires full faith and credit to be given in each state to the judicial proceedings of every other state, does not preclude the inquiry whether any judgment obtained in another state and relied on in this was rendered by a court having jurisdiction of the cause and of the parties. Hickey v. Stewart, 3 How. 762. D'Arcy v. Ketchum, 11 How. 165. Carleton v. Bickford, 13 Gray, 591. If the court was one of general jurisdiction, the presumption indeed is in favor of the validity of its proceedings. Harvey v. Tyler, 2 Wallace, 328. Knapp v. Abell, 10 Allen, 485. But this presumption is not conclusive ; and it is always competent to show that the court had not jurisdiction of the cause. If it had not, there is no judicial proceeding; as in the case of an appeal of death brought in the English common bench, which is coram non judice. Case of the Marshalsea, 10 Co. 76 b. Especially is this the case when the action of the court is not in the exercise of its inherent general jurisdiction, but under a special' power conferred by statute, its judgments in excess of which are void. Thatcher v. Powell, 6 Wheat. 125. Shriver v. Lynn, 2 How. 60.
It becomes necessary therefore to examine the statutes of New York, which were cited at the argument, in order to ascertain whether the supreme court of that state had jurisdiction to render the decree of dissolution upon which the claimants rely. The statutes in question are contained in the third part, eighth chapter and fourth title of the fifth edition of" the Revised Statutes of that state. By §§ 69-104, provision is made for the voluntary dissolution of a corporation upon the application of the directors, and for the appointment of receivers who shall be vested with all the property of the corporation in trust for the benefit of its creditors and stockholders.
The cases in which the appointment of receivers of the property of a corporation upon an adverse application is authorized by these statutes are of three classes. The first is, after a judgment at law or decree in equity has been obtained against any corporation, and an execution issued thereon and returned unsatisfied ; in which case, upon the application of the judgment creditor, the supreme court may sequestrate the property of the corporation, appoint a receiver thereof, and distribute the same among all its creditors. §§ 44, 45. Secondly, whenever any
We cannot speak with the same confidence of the intention and the policy of the legislature of another state as we might of those of our own. But it is observable that the statutes in question do not in terms authorize a decree of dissolution of a corporation upon proceedings in equity instituted otherwise than by the voluntary application of its officers, except in the instance of a corporation which has failed to pay its debts or transact its business for a whole year, and which may therefore well be deemed to have ceased to exist for any useful purpose ; widely differing from, a mere neglect to pay one judgment debt, a temporary insolvency, or a violation of a single provision of a statute. The remedies afforded by all these sections to creditors or stockholders, by injunction, suspension of corporate powers, sequestration of property, appointment of receivers, and application of the assets of the corporation to the payment of its liabilities, may perhaps be considered as exercised under the general jurisdiction of the court, though modified, enlarged or regulated by statute. Such was the view taken by the court of appeals of New York of the proceedings in cases in which the corporation had failed to pay a judgment debt. Bangs v. Duck-
It is not alleged or stated in the record produced in this case that the Columbian Insurance Company had remained insolvent or suspended its business for a year, as required to maintain an application under the forty-sixth section of the statute; but the suit is based upon the forty-seventh section, alleging a violation of its charter in declaring and paying a dividend out of its capital stock, instead of out of its surplus profits. That part of the decree, therefore, which declares the corporation to be dissolved, was apparently in excess of the jurisdiction of the court, and entitled to no faith and credit as a judicial proceeding. The corporation remained in existence, liable to suit and to attachment of its property or debts in this Commonwealth ; and the right of the attaching creditor, being one of our own citizens, must prevail against the claim of the receivers appointed in New York ; as was adjudged in Taylor v. Columbian Insurance Co above cited.
It is by no means clear that, if the corporation could be held to have been dissolved according to the laws of New York, the eeeivers could maintain their claim in this case. There is a difficulty indeed in sustaining an action at law against an extinct corporation. Mumma v. Potomac Co. 8 Pet. 281. Merrill v. Suffolk Bank, 31 Maine, 57. But the dissolution of a corpo