195 Mass. 432 | Mass. | 1907
1. The court had a right in the exercise of its discretion to refuse to allow the defendant to file his proposed amendment, and no exception lies to the exercise of that discretion. Hurley v. Donovan, 182 Mass. 64, 71. Graef v. Bernard, 162 Mass. 300. Smith v. Whiting, 100 Mass. 122.
2. The plaintiff is a foreign corporation. It is provided in substance by our statutes that foreign corporations before doing business in this Commonwealth shall appoint the commissioner of corporations to be their attorney for the service of process, shall file with him copies of their charters and by-laws and certain certificates, and shall annually, within a certain fixed period, file with the secretary of the Commonwealth a certificate as to their financial condition ; and that a failure to comply with these requirements “ shall not affect the validity of any contract with such corporation ; but no action shall be maintained or recovery
The defendant contends that the burden was upon the plaintiff to show its right to maintain the action, and that ¿11 the facts necessary to be proved for this purpose were put in issue by his general denial; and that may be granted. Hill v. Crompton, 119 Mass. 376. Cape Ann National Bank v. Burns, 129 Mass. 596. But this means only that a general denial puts in issue those facts which the plaintiff must aver and prove to establish & prima facie case. Amsinck v. American Ins. Co. 129 Mass. 185, 188, and cases cited. It never has been held that a plaintiff must deny or disprove matter merely in abatement, not going to the jurisdiction of the court; whether this would call for a positive or a negative averment. See Lincoln v. Taunton Copper Co. 11 Cush. 440, 441; Bewail v. Lee, 9 Mass. 363; Ainslie v. Martin, 9 Mass. 454.
The statute does not forbid foreign corporations which have not complied with its requirements from making contracts in this State, or declare such contracts invalid; on the contrary it expressly recognizes their validity, but provides that “no action shall be maintained or recovery had in any of the courts of the Commonwealth by any such foreign corporation,” so long as it fails of such compliance. St. 1903, c. 437, § 58. This implies a temporary disability merely, like that of alien enemy at common law or any other personal disability. Hutchinson v. Brock, 11 Mass. 118. Jaha v. Belleg, 105 Mass. 208. This is different from the statutes which were considered in Jones v.
Apart however from any question of pleading, all the decisions in other States, so far as they have been, brought to our attention, agree that compliance with the terms of such statutes as are here in question need neither be averred nor in the first instance proved by a foreign corporation. Nickels v. People’s Building Association, 93 Va. 380. Sprague v. Cutter & Savidge Lumber Co. 106 Ind. 242. Langworthy v. Carding, 74 Minn. 325. Hanson v. Lindstrom, 15 N. D. 584. Parlin Orendorf Co. v. Hord, 78 Mo. App. 279. But if this be so it necessarily follows that under our practice act a defendant who wishes to reply upon the fact that a foreign corporation which has sued him has not complied with the provisions of our statute must set up that fact in his answer. “ Whenever a defendant intends to rest his defence upon any fact which is not included in the allegations necessary to the support of the plaintiff’s case, he must set it out in clear and precise terms in his answer; and as the plaintiff is not bound to aver anything which tends to defeat his action, or which shows that his claim is illegal or void in its inception or otherwise, all such matters must be set out and averred in the answer.” Mulry v. Mohawk Valley Ins. Co. 5 Gray, 541, 543. There is no occasion to refer to the many subsequent decisions which have maintained this doctrine.
It follows that the rulings at the trial were correct; and we need not consider the sufficiency of the offer of proof. Nor
It has not been argued that the decision of this case could be affected by the provisions of St. 1906, c. 372, passed since the action was brought.
Exceptions overruled.