264 Mass. 588 | Mass. | 1928
The plaintiffs bring this action of contract as assignees of the Patterson King Corporation, a foreign corporation engaged in the general contracting business in, and organized under the laws of, the State of New York. The purpose of the action is to recover the balance alleged to be due under a contract between that corporation and the defendant, a corporatioii organized under the laws of this Commonwealth, "for the lay out and construction of certain premises and buildings of the defendant” at Long-meadow within this Commonwealth. The defendant filed a plea in abatement to the effect that the assignor of the plaintiffs as a foreign corporation with a usual place of business within this Commonwealth had not complied with the provisions of G. L. c. 181, §§ 3 and 5, and that therefore the action could not be maintained in our courts. It has been found after hearing that the facts thus pleaded are true, and that the assignment was made in good faith upon valuable consideration and not for the purpose of evading the statute. Upon these findings the plea in abatement was overruled, manifestly on the ground that as matter of law the assignees were not barred by the statute from maintaining the action. The correctness of that ruling is the only point for decision.
It is provided in effect by G. L. c. 181, §§ 3 and 5, that a foreign corporation, engaged in this Commonwealth in the
The validity of the statute restricting the right of foreign corporations to sue in the courts of this Commonwealth, if interstate commerce be not burdened, is not open to doubt. No question of interstate commerce is here involved. Interstate Amusement Co. v. Albert, 239 U. S. 560, 568.
Plainly the foreign corporation itself could not maintain the action in its own name. It would be plain also that an assignee taking with notice could not maintain an action. To permit that to be done would in effect nullify the statute.
Whether an innocent assignee for value may maintain the action depends upon further considerations. The contract here in suit is not negotiable. It is not governed by the law of negotiable instruments. Baker v. Davie, 211 Mass. 429, 437. The right to collect money due on the contract is a chose in action. According to the common law of this Commonwealth the assignee of a chose in action, in the absence of a direct promise to himself from the debtor, cannot maintain an action in his own name, but may do so
There is nothing in Thornley v. J. C. Walsh Co. 200 Mass. 179, or in MacKeown v. Lacey, 200 Mass. 437, to support the contention of the plaintiffs.
Exceptions sustained.