Granite State Provident Ass'n v. Lloyd

145 Ill. 620 | Ill. | 1893

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The judgment of the Appellate Court having conclusively settled all questions of fact in this case, the only point to be decided by us is the naked legal question, had the plaintiff below the right to withdraw, etc., upon complying with the provisions of our statute relating to “Homestead and Loan Associations,” notwithstanding the above condition indorsed on his certificate of stock? Section six of the Homestead Association act of this State (ch. 32, R. S., S. & C., vol. 1, p. 630) provides that, “any stockholder wishing to withdraw from said corporation shall have power to do so, by giving thirty days’ notice of his or her intention to withdraw.” Counsel for appellant contend that, this section does not apply to foreign “Homestead Loan Associations,” where the law under which they are organized provides differently, and as the condition upon the back of said certificate required twenty-four payments, and appellee had only made six, he could not withdraw upon giving thirty days’ notice. In other words, that the provisions of the charter of the corporation, as evidenced by said condition, controlled the right of the shareholder to withdraw, and not the statute of this State regulating similar associations.

Section 26, p. 619, of the chapter of the statute above referred to, provides: “foreign corporations, and the officers and agents thereof, doing business in this State, shall be subjected to all the liabilties, restrictions and duties that are or may be imposed upon corporations of like character organized under the general laws of this State, and shall have no other or greater powers.”

In describing the object and scope of that section, this court, in the case of Stevens v. Pratt et al., 101 Ill. 206, used the following language: “It does not assume to define what foreign corporations shall be allowed to do business in this State, but simply to impose regulations and restrictions upon certain named classes or kinds of foreign corporations doing business in this State, that is, those of like character as it is provided may be formed under that general law. Its exact words are, ‘foreign corporations, and the officers and agents thereof * * * * shall be subject to all the liabilities * * * * and have no other or greater powers.’ The language is entirely that of regulation and restriction, and not that of grant or prohibition. No corporation is granted the right to do business in the State. No corporation is excluded from doing business in this State. Simply, foreign corporations, and the officers and agents thereof, doing business in this State, are placed on an equality to the extent that they shall exercise no greater or different powers, and shall be subject to the same regulations and restrictions, and governed by the same rules of law, in these respects, with corporations of like character, organized or to be organized under the general laws of this State. The meaning will obviously not be changed, but may be placed in a stronger light by a little transposition of language, thus: where the general laws of this State provide for the organization of corporations, foreign corporations of like character doing business in this State, shall exercise no greater or different powers, and shall be subject to the same liabilties, restrictions and duties. The manifest and only purpose was to produce uniformity in the powers, liabilities, duties and restrictions of foreign and domestic corporations of like character, and bring them all under the influence of the same law.”

We think this language clearly shows that under said section 26, when a foreign corporation of any kind comes into this State, to transact business, it must conform to the laws of this State, if such exist, regulating similar corporations organized under the general laws of this State; also that no law of comity between this and other States is thereby violated; it being simply a law of regulation, and in no sense one of prohibition.

But counsel for appellant contend that said section can not be applied to this appellant corporation, because they say “Homestead Loan Associations, in this State, are not organized under the general incorporation laws of this State.” The act entitled: “An act to enable. associations of persons to become a body corporate, to raise funds to be loaned only among the members of such association,” in force July l, 1879, (S. & C., p. 629), is certainly a general law of this State. All “Homestead Loan Associations” in this State must be organized under that general law, and can have no legal existence unless they are so organized. Even if it could be maintained that said act is no part of the general incorporation law of this State, which we do not think can be done, still section 26 would apply. Its language is, “organized under the general laws of this State.”

We can conceive of no line of reasoning, or argument, which can make it clearer that the above mentioned statute is a general law of this State, than is apparent from the reading of the act itself.

We are satisfied with the judgment of the court below, and it will be affirmed.*

Judgment affirmed.

The Granite State Provident Association v. Carrie Sonderman—Per Curriam : For the reason stated in the Granite State Provident Association v. Lloyd, supra, the judgment in this case is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.