19 S.D. 632 | S.D. | 1905
The only question presented by this appeal from
In requiring the filing of corporate articles and the appointment of an agent as a condition precedent to the commencement of an action in any court of this state by a foreign corporation to enforce a claim arising in another state, the Legislature has used the plainest of words in sentences free from ambiguity, and whether an action is maintainable on account of a transaction entered into in this state by such corporation prior to complying with the statute is a question not now presented for determination, and concerning which no opinion is expressed. However, it is noticeable that section 883 of the Revised Civil Code provides generally that no action is maintainable by a foreign corporation until its articles are filed and an agent appointed, while section 885 specifies that no action is maintainable “on any contract, agreement, or transaction made or entered into in this state by such corporation, unless such corporation shall have fully complied with the provisions of this article.” Quite uniformly foreign corporations are expressly prohibited by a constitutional provision or legislative enactment from carrying on business in states where they are not domiciled unless they have first complied with conditions similar to the requirements of our statutes; but a thorough research discloses but few decisions based upon a provision like ours, where in express terms every foreign corporation is required to file its articles and appoint an agent before it can maintain any action at law or otherwise in any of the courts of this state. Inferentially, the suggestion is made by counsel for the corporation that the foregoing statute, literally construed, interferes with interstate commerce by depriving their client of its constitutional right to maintain an action for the enforcement of a contract made beyond the boundaries of this state, and it must be
Without any distinction as to isolated or multifarious corporate transactions it was held in Bradley, Metcalf & Co. v. Armstrong, supra, that a foreign corporation is expressly prohibited from instituting or maintaining any action at law or otherwise until the statutory requirements have been answered, and upon that case and the law here enunciated the order appealed from is affirmed.