131 Misc. 590 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1928
Plaintiff is a resident of the city of New York. Defendant is a Florida corporation. The defendant received authority to
As to (1): On the date when service upon the defendant was made, namely, March 31, 1927, the last revision of the General Corporation Law of the State (Laws pf 1927, chap. 425) had become effective. It provides in section 16-b that in the event of the death, resignation or removal from the State of the person previously designated by the corporation to receive service, and in the absence of any other designation, the Secretary of State becomes the agent of the corporation upon whom all process in any action or proceeding against it may be served in this State. On the other hand, section 229 of the Civil Practice Act (Laws of 1920, chap. 925) provides that in the same event service might be made upon the Secretary of State “ upon any liability incurred within this state.” Appellant contends that the situation is governed by the General Corporation Law and that, therefore, service so far as our statute is concerned in the instant case was good without regard to where the liability of the defendant had arisen. Respondent on the other hand alleges that the provision of the Civil Practice Act must govern, and, therefore, that the service is ineffective unless .it be shown that the liability arose within this State.
It is not necessary to resolve this apparent conflict between the State statutes because in our opinion under the decisions of the United States Supreme Court the services cannot be sustained under either statute unless the liability had been incurred within "this State. Apart from that consideration, there might be some difficulty in determining the present state of the local law. The history of the legislation gives comparatively little aid. Since the amendment by Laws of 1851, chapter 479, of section 134 of the Code of Procedure (Laws of 1848, chap. 379), service on foreign
By the last revision of the General Corporation Law by Laws of 1927, chapter 425, sections 110 to 112 of the Stock Corporation Law were retransferred to sections 15 to 16-i of the General Corporation Law, the provisions of section 111 of the former act being substantially re-enacted in section 15 of the latter. Meanwhile,
We come then to the second branch of the question, namely, the validity of this service under Federal decisions. It will be evident to any one familiar with the cases in the Supreme Court of the United States affecting this subject that the respective draftsmen of our legislation endeavored to keep pace in some degree at least with the progress of the Federal adjudications, beginning as early as Pennoyer v. Neff (95 U. S. 714 [1877]) and continuing through Goldey v. Morning News (156 id. 518 [1894]); Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Spratley (172 id. 602 [1899]) and Mutual Reserve, etc., Association v. Phelps (190 id. 147 [1903]) to the more recent decisions which I shall discuss. The trend of these decisions so far as material to the present controversy since Simon v. Southern Railway Co. (236 U. S. 115 [1915]) has been that service on an agent designated solely by a statute of the State wherein the suit is brought is valid only in respect of a cause of action originating within that State. In Bagdon v. Philadelphia & Reading C. & I. Co. (217 N. Y. 432 [1916]) the distinction was drawn-by our Court of Appeals per Cardozo, J., between a “ true agent ” expressly appointed upon a “ stipulation ” (under the then General Corporation Law, section 16) which is “ a true contract ” importing “ a real consent,” and an “ imputed or implied consent ” to service upon an agent presumed by statute to be the agent of the company for that purpose upon a “ fiction of consent.” In the former case the service is good even as to a transitory cause of action; in the latter as declared in the Simon Case (supra) it is good only as to a cause of action originating within the State. This interpretation of the significance of the Simon case was accepted by the Supreme Court of the United States in Penn. Fire Ins. Co. v. Gold Issue Mining Co. (243 U. S. 93 [1917]). In Tauza v. Susquehanna Coal Co. (220 N. Y. 259 [1917]) our Court of Appeals went further and in an opinion by the same judge held good the service of process in a transitory action where the foreign corporation was actually doing business within this State, without, however, having received
In passing, it may be recalled that the last word from our Legislature on this subject is section 15 of the General Corporation Law of 1927 which requires a foreign corporation licensed to do business within this State, after the enactment of the law, to designate the Secretary of State as its agent for process and provides adequately for his transmission of the process to the foreign corporation itself. This enactment was manifestly designed to meet any question in the future whether the agent to receive process was actually the true appointee of the foreign corporation. In my opinion the service in the instant case upon the Secretary of State as the alternative or substituted agent of the defendant for service of process designated by statute is invalid under the Federal
All concur; present, Bijur, Levy and Crain, JJ.