174 N.W. 742 | S.D. | 1919
This appeal is from an order refusing" to quash the alleged constructive service of summons upon defendant Tudor, who, it is conceded, is a nonresident of this state. No personal service was had in this state, but service -was made in •another state in strict compliance with 'our statutes providing method of constructive service 'upon nonresident defendants.
(a) That the alleged wrongdoers be removed as voting trustees ;
(b) That the court provide for election or appointment of other voting- trustees; or
(c) That the court declare the trust void; and
(d) That the said wrongdoers be enjoined and restrained from voting the stock which they hold as trustees.
“His general denial that the property is located here is the mere statement of an erroneous legal conclusion. If the company is a New Jersey company, then the situs of its stock is in New Jersey, and any question relating to it may be determined here.”
Whether its assets were in this state or somewhere else is entirely immaterial. The fact remains that its stock is property, whatever its value may be, and the situs of such property is in this state. This is so conclusively settled by authority as to be beyond quibble. The leading authority on the proposition that the situs of corporate stock is in the state that creates the •corporation, and also on the proposition that an action to determine rights in such stock may be based on constructive service of process- on nonresident defendants, is the case of Jellenik vs. Huron Copper Mining Co., 177 U. S. 1, 20 Sup. Ct. 559, 44 L. Ed. 647. The reasoning in that case is unanswer
“As the habitation or domicil of the company is and must be in the state that created it, the property represented by its certificates of stock may be deemed to be held by the company within the state whose creature it is, whenever it is sought * * * to determine who is its real owner.”
As supporting the above propositions, see Gamble vs. Dawson, 67 Wash. 72, 120 Pac. 1060, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 501; Lockwood v. Brantly, 31 Hun (N. Y.) 155; Patterson v. Farmington St. Ry. Co., 76 Conn. 628, 57 Atl. 853; People’s National Bank v. Cleveland, 117 Ga. 908, 44 S. E. 20; Fahrig v. Milwaukee & Chicago Breweries, 113 Ill. App. 525; Andrews v. Guayaquil & Q. Ry. Co., supra; Sohege v. Singer Mfg. Co., 73 N. J. Eq. 567, 68 Atl. 64; Cook on Corporations (4th Ed.) § 485; Fletcher’s Cyclopedia on Corporations, vol. 5, § 3434.
In the Patterson case the court said:
“The capital stock of the defendant corporation is property which exists only by virtue of the laws of this state; * * * this is true notwithstanding certificates of shares of stock in many business corporations have some of the qualities of negotiable instruments, and are treated for some purposes as property.”
The order appealed from is affirmed.