delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was commenced in an Illinois1 court by Mrs. Harry, a citizen of that State, against Dickinson, a citizen of Texas, and James-Dickinson Farm Mortgage Company, a Missouri corporation. The defendants removed the case to the federal court on the ground of diversity of citizenship. Dickinson, who bad been served personally within Illinois, pleaded to the merits. The Company, upon whom service had been made by reading and delivering the summons to Dickinson, “ as its president/’ while he was temporarily in Illinois, challenged the jurisdiction of the court over it. This objection was overruled; and it also filed pleas to the mеrits. The case was then tried, as against both defendants, before a *121 jury; the plaintiff got a verdict; and judgment was entered thereon. Because of a claim that rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment had bеen denied them, a direct writ of error was allowed under § 238 of. the Judicial Code, before the amendment of February 13, 1925.
The action is in tort to recover damages resulting from false representations by whiсh the plaintiff was induced to purchase while in Texas a tract of land located there. The declaration contains two counts, the first based on the common law liability, the second on a statute of that State. Act of March 11, 1919, c. 43, General Laws, p. 77; Compl. Stat. Tex. 1920, Title 62, Articles 3973, a, b, c, p. 639. Dickinson was vice-president and treasurer of the defendant corporation and also of two other allied corporations. He together with James, the president of the corporations, owned 90 per cent, of their stock. It was charged that these corporations were the instruments through which the fraudulent scheme was carried out. The device employed in effecting the sale was the taking of the plaintiff and other alleged victims from the North in mid-winter by a special Pullman from Kansas City to Brownsville, near which the land lies, and securing signatures from all on the spot. There was evidence to show that the people in charge of the party made materially false statements concerning the quality of the land sold. Dickinson did not then talk personally with the plaintiff. But he was present on the occasion; heard the false statements then made; took direct part in sales then made; and later pеrsonally induced the plaintiff to anticipate the payment on notes given as part of the purchase price.
In the course of the trial a multitude of requests for rulings made by the defendants were dеnied. Many other rulings to which they objected were given. .Exceptions were.duly taken. As the case is properly here on constitutional grounds, the jurisdiction of this Court extends
*122
to a review óf all questions.
Chaloner
v.
Sherman,
First.
The objection to the jurisdiction over the corporation was taken by a plea in abatement. The decision thereon was made upon a demurrer to the replicatiоn. By these pleadings it was admitted that the residence and principal place of business of the corporation was in Missouri; that it had never been a resident of Illinois; that Dickinson, its president, was in Illinois on business of the corporation at the time of the service; but that it had not engaged in, or carried on, business within the State. Jurisdiction over a corporation of one State cannot be acquirеd in another State or district in which it has no place of business and is not found, merely by serving process upon an executive officer temporarily therein, even if he is there on business of the company.
Philadelphia & Reading Ry. Co.
v.
McKibbin,
Second.
It is contended, on several grounds, that the statute violates the due process clause. One ground is that the statute includes among the persons jointly and severally liable for the actual damages “ all persons deriving the benefit of said fraud.” This provision is said to be unconstitutional. The argument is that thereby the State undertakes to fix a'liability for damages regardless of participation in the wrong, so that where a corporation
*123
has received the money arising from a fraudulent sale, every stockholder béeomes liable for the tort; and that by making the liability joint and several, the statute makes one person liable for the wrong of another, although there was neither participation in nor ratification of it, nor even knowledge. At common law every member of a partnership is subject to such a liability,
Strang
v.
Bradner,
Another contention is that the statute violatеs the due process clause in providing that actionable fraud shall exist not only when there is “ a false representation of a past or existing material fact,” but also if there is a “ false
*124
promisе to do some act' in the future which is made as a material inducement to another party to. enter into a contract and but for which promise said party would not have entered into said contract, . . The contention is groundless. To modify the substantive and procedural law so that recovery may be had in tort for a breach of contract, is well within the power of a State. An action for deceit was long the sole remedy for a breach of.warranty, and it still lies in some jurisdictions. See
F. L. Grant Shoe Co.
v.
Laird,
It is also contended that the statute violates the due process clause by providing that whenever a promise thus made has not been complied with by the party making it within a reasonable time, “it shall be presumed that it was falsely and fraudulently made, and the burden shall be on the party making it to show that it was made in good faith but was рrevented from complying therewith by the Act of God, the public enemy or by some equitable reason.” This contention also is groundless. It is well settled that a State may consider proof of one fact presumptive evidence of another, if there is a rational connection. between them,
Hawes v. Georgia,
Third.
It is claimed that the Texas statute violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because it applies only to fraud in transactions involving the purchase of real estate or of stock in a corporation or joint stock company. The contention is clearly unfounded. A statute does not violate' the equal protection clause merely because it is not all-embracing.
Zucht
v.
King,
Fourth.
It is urged that a federal court for Illinois should not enforce the liability under the Texas statute, because Illinois has not enacted a statute of similar import. The general rule is that one State will enforce a cause of action arising under the laws of another; that a federal-court of any district will enforce a cause of action arising under the .law of any State; but that ordinarily the courts of one government will not enforce the penal laws of another. Thé argument is that the Texas statute is a penal law, because it provides: “All persons knowingly
*126
аnd willfully making such false representations or promises or knowingly taking advantage of said fraud shall be liable in exemplary damages to the person defrauded in such amount as shall be assessed by the' jury not tо exceed double the amount of the actual damages suffered.” Exemplary damages are recoverable at common law in many States. A statute providing for their recovery by and for the injured party is not a penal law.
Huntington
v.
Attrill,
Reversed as to Javies-Dickinson Farm Mortgage Co.
Affirmed as to A. D. Dickinson.
Notes
See
Pritchard
v.
Norton,
