285 N.W. 723 | Minn. | 1939
The actions were for rescission of sales of securities within the state by defendants to plaintiffs in violation of the blue sky law of Minnesota (1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 3996-1 to 3996-28) and to *277 recover judgment for the purchase price. The purchases of the Rand Company amounted to $114,600, of which $23,000 was purchased on May 3, 1929, and $91,600 on October 8, 1929. Plaintiff Garber purchased $2,300 of securities on September 23, 1929.
Jurisdiction of appellant is predicated on its having done business in the state. Apparently jurisdiction of the Delaware corporation was conceded, since the service made upon its agent authorized to accept service of process upon it within the state was not questioned. The motion was heard upon the complaint and voluminous affidavits, containing much hearsay to which neither party objected. There was a showing that appellant was doing business in the state through the Delaware corporation from May, 1929, to October, 1931. Although the showing was strongly disputed, we assume without holding that it sustains a finding that appellant during the mentioned period was doing business in the state of Minnesota.
The complaints allege that "on or about October 15, 1931, defendants closed their offices and places of business and discontinued their transaction of business in, and withdrew and departed from, the state of Minnesota, and at all times thereafter up to June 22, 1937, resided outside of the State of Minnesota." The Delaware corporation alone returned to the state in 1937, leased an office from the plaintiff Rand Company, affixing its corporate seal to the lease, and had its employes in charge of such office. There is no showing that after it returned to the state in 1937 it transacted any business here for the appellant or that it acted as appellant's agent. In fact the evidence does not show what business, if any, it transacted. In May, 1937, when it is admitted both corporations were absent from the state, the Delaware corporation took a release in settlement of a lawsuit, which released it and appellant from liability to the plaintiff named therein.
The summons and complaint were served upon the Delaware corporation and its agents as the agents of appellant in the Garber case on February 28, 1938, and in the Rand Company case on March 19, 1938.
Service was attempted under 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9231(3), which provides that service of the summons upon a foreign corporation *278 may be made upon any of its officers or agents "within the state." While there was no evidence that appellant was doing business in the state through the Delaware corporation as its agent after the latter's return to the state in June, 1937, plaintiff claims that it has shown an agency by evidence which was not disputed. Appellant owns all the capital stock of the Delaware corporation. The two corporations have identical names without anything to distinguish one from the other and substantially the same officers and directors. They have their main offices in the same rooms in a building in New York. But each held separate stockholders' and directors' meetings, kept separate books, records, and accounts, transacted its business with its own capital and through its own employes, and maintained its own branch offices.
Appellant contends that the court was without jurisdiction upon the grounds that it was not doing business in the state at the time of the attempted service of the summons upon it. Plaintiffs contend that the evidence permits a finding that appellant was doing business in the state at that time since an agency once shown to have existed is presumed to have continued in view of the parent-subsidiary relationship of the two corporations, which dates back to May, 1929. The agency referred to is the one which we have assumed for purposes of decision to have existed during the period from 1929 to 1931.
1. The question is whether a foreign corporation which did business in the state without having designated an agent for service or consented to jurisdiction is subject to jurisdiction after it has ceased doing business in and has withdrawn from the state. A state, absent consent, may exercise jurisdiction over a foreign corporation only if it is doing business in the state at the time of the service of process. Dahl v. Collette,
Numerous theories have been advanced to justify doing business in the state as the basis of jurisdiction. One line of cases holds that there is implied consent to jurisdiction where a foreign corporation voluntarily does business in a state other than that of its creation: Lafayette Ins. Co. v. French, 18 How. 404,
The problem is to reconcile jurisdiction of the corporation, which is outside the state, with inherent and constitutional limitations of state power. The justification for holding that doing business in the state is a basis for jurisdiction lies in the assumption that state power extends to the foreign corporation by reason of its activity in the state. This view has been adopted as to nonresident individuals who do acts subject to special regulation by the state. Henry L. Doherty
Co. v. Goodman,
Speaking in terms of corporate presence, in Bank of America v. Whitney Cent. Nat. Bank,
Jurisdiction begins, continues, and ceases with doing business in the state, the fact on which it is based. De Castro v. Compagnie Francaise Du Telegraphe (C. C.) 76 F. 425. A foreign corporation, after it has once entered a state, is not bound to remain there, but may withdraw at will. Reliance Motor Co. v. Craig,
Jurisdiction existed during the period from 1929 to 1931 upon the hypothesis that appellant was then doing business here. Such jurisdiction ceased when it withdrew from the state in 1931. There was no jurisdiction thereafter, unless appellant again did business in the state. While it is true that the Delaware corporation reëntered the state in 1937, there is no evidence that it transacted any business here as the appellant's agent.
Jurisdiction must exist as of the time the summons is served. That there may have been jurisdiction at some prior time, as there was here, will not suffice. Louis F. Dow Co. v. First Nat. Bank, supra; Paterson v. Shattuck Arizona Copper Co.
2. The fact that appellant's wholly owned subsidiary, the Delaware corporation, was doing business in the state at the time of service of the summons did not establish that appellant was doing business in the state. The use of a subsidiary does not subject the parent to jurisdiction of the state, where, as here, the separate existence of each is recognized and maintained. Consolidated Textile Corp. v. Gregory,
Respondents cite Cutler v. Cutler-Hammer Mfg. Co. (D.C.) 266 F. 388; Mas v. Orange-Crush Co. (4 Cir.)
In the Mas case the local subsidiary was shown to have existed only on the books of the foreign parent, which conducted the business as its own under the name of the subsidiary. The subsidiary had no business headquarters, capital, or employes of its own. It engaged in no corporate activity of its own and had no independent corporate existence. The court was careful to distinguish the case from the Cannon case, saying that the subsidiary [99 F.2d 677] "was a mere name without reality, a device to give the appearance of the transaction of an independent business."
If it had been shown that the subsidiary transacted the parent's business here as its agent — that is, that the relation of principal and agent actually existed as in the case where an individual is employed as agent, or if, there having been no corporate separation in fact, the parent employed the subsidiary to transact the parent's business, the parent would have been doing business in the state. Where, however, the corporate separation is maintained and the subsidiary conducts its own business, the subsidiary, not the parent, is doing the business. In that situation the foreign parent cannot be said to be doing business in the state. See 39 Yale L. J. 193, and 14 Cal. L.Rev. 12.
The Cannon case and the instant one are substantially the same with respect to the controlling facts. In each, plaintiff served process on the foreign corporation subsidiary of a foreign corporation parent, each of which was organized under the laws of different states with identical names, stock ownership of the subsidiary by the parent, common offices, and substantially the same officers and directors. But in each the subsidiary had its own corporate *283
activity, transacted its own business, had its own capital, officers, and employes, kept its own books, records, and accounts, and held its own stockholders' and directors' meetings. In the Cannon case the service was held bad upon the grounds that the parent was not doing business in the state through the subsidiary. The court said [
Erickson v. Minnesota Ontario Power Co.
3. The presumption of the continuance of an agency once shown to have existed does not help plaintiffs. The purpose of the rule is to attribute to a party responsibility for the acts of his alleged agent where another has justifiably acted in reliance on such an agency. There is no basis for invoking the rule here. Furthermore, it is doubtful whether the agency of an officer or agent of a foreign corporation will be presumed to continue after the lapse of six years during which it was absent from the state. Under somewhat different circumstances it was held that the presumption did not obtain after two years in Louis F. Dow Co. v. First Nat. Bank, supra, and after three years in Hunter v. Mutual Res. L. Ins. Co. *284
In Robert Mitchell Furniture Co. v. Selden Breck Const. Co.
4. The appellant prepared and circulated as late as 1937 consolidated balance and earnings statements which showed the stock ownership and the earnings of the two corporations. The separate corporate identity of each was shown with a list of branch offices of each corporation. We do not attach much significance to such statements since they do not show agency or that appellant was *285
doing business in the state. The purpose of such statements was to disclose a true and accurate picture of the parent's financial situation. Berkey v. Third Ave. Ry. Co.
5. If we assume that appellant had a listing in the telephone directory in 1937, as claimed, that would not be important. A listing or advertisement does not constitute doing business. Zimmers v. Dodge Brothers, Inc. (D.C.)
6. No claim is made by plaintiffs that appellant is estopped to deny a statutory appointment of the commissioner of securities or the secretary of state as agent for service of process upon the grounds that it did business here from 1929 to 1931, see Kulberg v. Fraternal Union,
Since there was no jurisdiction of appellant, the service of the summons should have been set aside.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE HILTON, incapacitated by illness, took no part. *286