KENTUCKY FINANCE CORPORATION v. PARAMOUNT AUTO EXCHANGE CORPORATION
No. 17
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided June 11, 1923
262 U. S. 544
ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WISCONSIN. Argued October 5, 1922.
We think the Industrial Court Act, in so far as it permits the fixing of wages in plaintiff in error‘s packing house, is in conflict with the
The judgment of the court below must be
Reversed.
Syllabus.
- A corporation which goes into a State other than that of its creation for the lawful purpose of repossessing itself, by a permissible action in her courts, of specific personal property unlawfully taken out of its possession elsewhere and fraudulently carried into that State, is a person within the jurisdiction of that State, within the meaning of the
Fourteenth Amendment , for all the purposes of that undertaking, and entitled to the equal protection of the laws. P. 549. - As applied to such a case, a statute under which the foreign corporation, not domesticated or doing business in the State, or having property there other than that so sought to be recovered, may be compelled, as a condition to the maintenance of its action, to send its officer, with its papers and books bearing on the matter in controversy, from its domicile to the State where the action is brought, in order to submit to an adversary examination before answer, but which does not subject non-resident individuals to such
examination, except when served with notice and subpoena within the State, and then only in the county where service is had, and which limits such examinations, in the case of residents of the State, individual or corporate, to the county of their residence, violates the Equal Protection Clause. Id.
171 Wis. 586, reversed.
ERROR to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, sustaining two orders, one for examination of the plaintiff before answer, and the second striking out its complaint and dismissing its action for failure to comply with the first.
Mr. Albert K. Stebbins, with whom Mr. Jackson B. Kemper was on the brief, for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Walter H. Bender for defendant in error.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, a Kentucky corporation, brought an action of replevin in a state court at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, against the defendant in error, a Wisconsin corporation, to recover an automobile, -the right of recovery asserted in the complaint being put on the ground that the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession of the automobile, that one Allen had unlawfully taken it from the plaintiff‘s possession at Louisville, Kentucky, had fraudulently removed it to Milwaukee and had there wrongfully delivered it to the defendant and that the defendant was unjustly withholding it from the plaintiff under some groundless claim derived from Allen. The defendant appeared and obtained from the court an order requiring the plaintiff‘s secretary, who resided at Louisville and was in the plaintiff‘s service there, to appear in Milwaukee at a fixed time before a designated court commissioner, to bring with him all papers, files and records of the plaintiff which were under his control and relevant
“In case a foreign corporation is a party, the examination of its president, secretary, other principal officer, assignor or agent or employe, or the person who was such, or either of them, at the time of the occurrence of the facts made the subject of the examination, may be had under the provisions of this section in any county of this state. The court may also, upon motion and such terms as may be just, fix a time and place in this state for such examination of any of said persons. Such persons so sought to be examined as aforesaid shall attend at such time and place and submit to the examination, and then and there have with him all papers, books, files, records, things, and matters in the possession of such person by reason of his relation to such corporation, relevant to the controversy. Such person sought to be examined as aforesaid shall attend at such time and place and submit to the examination, and, if required, attend for the purpose of reading and signing such deposition, without service of subpoena.”
“If any officer, agent, or employe, or any person who was such officer, agent or employe of a foreign corporation, at the time of the occurrence of the facts made the subject of the examination, be lawfully required to appear and testify, as provided in this chapter, either within or without the state, shall neglect or refuse so to do; or, if such person, when lawfully required, shall refuse and neglect to have with him any papers, books, files, records, things, and matters in the possession of such party relevant to the controversy, such party may be punished as for a contempt and in the discretion of the court, the pleading of such foreign corporation stricken out, and judgment given against it as upon default or failure of proof.”
When the order for the examination was made other parts of the statute, applicable to all suitors other than foreign corporations, provided, notably subdivisions 3 and 6 of § 4096, that where the party against whom the examination was sought was a resident of the State the examination could be had only in the county of his residence, and where the party was a non-resident the examination could be had in the State only if he could be personally served therein with notice and subpoena and then only in the county where such service was had. In George v. Bode, 170 Wis. 411, the Supreme Court of the State held that an examination within the State could not be ordered against a party, other than a foreign corporation, residing outside and on whom personal service could not be had therein, the court saying in that connection: “The examination may be taken in this State if he can be personally served with notice and subpoena; the inevitable inference is that it is only if he can be so served that he can be so examined. If the provisions of sub. 3 meant that the court might fix a time and place for his examination within this State regardless of the personal service of notice and subpoena, then the pro-
By subdivision 7 of § 4096, before quoted, an exception was made as to foreign corporations whereby examinations within the State might be ordered and compelled against them regardless of their non-residence and of any inability to obtain service on them in the State. Thus they were subjected to a rule much more onerous than that applicable to non-resident individuals in like situations and also more onerous than that applicable to resident suitors, whether individuals or corporations. The Supreme Court justified this difference in legislative treatment and also the order for an examination in this case on the ground that they amounted to no more than a reasonable exercise of the authority of the State over a non-resident corporation coming voluntarily into the State to seek a remedy in her courts against a resident defendant.
We take a different view of the matter. According to the sworn complaint, to the allegations of which due regard must be had, the automobile belonged to the plaintiff. It had been unlawfully taken from the plaintiff‘s possession in Kentucky and put in the defendant‘s possession in Wisconsin. It did not get into the latter State through any act of the plaintiff; nor did the acts by which it got there make it any the less the plaintiff‘s property. Only by going into that State and there instituting an action of replevin against the wrongful possessor could the plaintiff repossess itself of its property. Unless it took that course its property would be lost. The state court whose aid it invoked was one whose jurisdiction was general and adequate for the purpose. In the cir-
We hold that the statute as it was applied in this case was invalid, and the orders made under it were erroneous, as denying to the plaintiff the equal protection of the laws. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the contention made under the due process clause.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS, dissenting, with whom MR. JUSTICE HOLMES concurs.
To sustain the contention that the statute violates the due process clause, it would be necessary to hold that under no conceivable circumstances could the trial court
To sustain the contention that the statute denies to plaintiff equal protection of the laws would seem to require the Court to overrule Blake v. McClung, 172 U. S. 239, 260, 261, and many other cases. The plaintiff, a foreign corporation not doing business within the State
