The necessary effect of that holding was to affirm that section 232 of the Constitution was permissive, and not restrictive, in its provision that:
“Such corporation [i. e., a foreign corporation with a known place of business and an authorized agent, etc.] may be sued in any county where it does business, by service of process upon an agent anywhere in the state.”
Defendant’s plea in abatement, that it is a foreign corporation and was not doing business in Marshall county when the suit was commenced, presents for decision the question whether a foreign corporation may be sued in any county where a cause of action in tort has arisen, though not doing business therein when the suit is filed. Our statute (Code, § 6112) provides that:
“A foreign or domestic corporation may be sued in any county in which it does business by agent.”
“The material changes which the Constitution works are that the corporation becomes liable to suit in any county in which it does business, and the process may be served, compelling it to appear, upon an agent anywhere in the state.” Sullivan v. Sullivan Timber Co.,103 Ala. 371 , 377,15 South. 941 , 25 L. R. A. 543. Such a corporation may be sued in any county where it has a known place of business, “but it must be observed that the essential fact upon which the liability to suit in other counties depends is that it ‘does business’ in such counties.”
We hold that the first plea in abatement is a good plea, and that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer thereto.
Appellee relies on the case of Drennen Car Co. v. Evans,
“It will be necessary for you to send the satisfaction to probate judge at Guntersville in order to have proper release made on records.” •
This was, of course, in no sense a compliance with the mandate of the statute, but defendant conceives that plaintiff is estopped to deny its sufficiency by his failure to object, and, through his silence after its receipt, permitting or leading defendant to believe that plaintiff had accepted the authority and would cause the entry of satisfaction to be made. This defense is presented by two special pleas to each count of the complaint, to which demurrers were sustained.
This question does not seem to have ever been decided or discussed by the courts of this state. The only decision we find on the subject is in Murray v. Brokaw,
“When it is necessary to foreclose, and a decree is rendered for that purpose [italics ours], the mortgage becomes merged in the decree, and a satisfaction of the decree is all that is required.”
In Scott v. Field,
“The purpose of the statute is that there shall be upon the record an acknowledgment of equal publicity with the record itself; that the mortgage is satisfied; that it is not longer an available security, or an incumbrance upon the title of the mortgagor.”
In Seals v. Weldon,
There are, it must be conceded, some forcible arguments in support of the view that the statute in question is applicable to mortgages which have been satisfied by foreclosure. Yet we think that a consideration of the language of the statute itself is conclusive to the contrary. “Such entry,” it declares, “operates a release of the mortgage, or deed of trust, and is a bar to all suits' thereon at law or in equity.” Such a result could not have been intended with respect to a foreclosed mortgage; for it is not only not released, but must of necessity remain as a permanent muniment of title in favor of the purchaser. Very clearly, we think, the statute is not applicable to a mortgage which has been validly foreclosed, but only to one which has been paid or satisfied before its foreclosure, whether by judicial decree, or under a power of sale.
Some other questions, mainly of evidence, are presented by the record, but need not be now considered..
For the error of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to the venue plea, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
