181 Ind. 153 | Ind. | 1914
Appellants sued appellee June 17, 1907, for an alleged breach of a contract executed in Indiana. Summons was served by the sheriff of Marion County on one Willys, as the agent appointed by appellee, a nonresident corporation on whom service of summons might be made. Appellee pleaded to the jurisdiction by plea in abatement. A demurrer for want of facts to abate the action was overruled; appellants declined to plead further and judgment was rendered abating the action. The ruling on the demurrer is the sole question presented.
The question presented by the plea is, Gan a foreign corporation which, on coming into this State to transact business, has complied with the statutes of this State, under §§4086, 4089 Burns 1908, Acts 1907 p. 286, upon discontinuing that business and removing all its property from the State, and having no agency, agent or representative of any kind, or property, moneys or credits in the State, revoke the agency created on its entry into the State, by filing such attempted revocation in the office of the Secretary of State before suit is brought, when the agent has removed from the State, and service is made on him while in the State, not on any business of the corporation, he being at the time neither an officer nor stockholder in the corporation, and having no connection therewith, where also there has been no attempt at substitution of another agent to receive service, where the cause of action arises out of a contract made in this State, with the corporation whilst it was engaged in the exercise of its franchises and the transaction of business
"We can look only to the pleading itself, as a demurrer to a plea in abatement does not reach the complaint, and must be considered independently of the allegations of the complaint. If fraud in the attempted withdrawal of the agent was material, it should have been replied, and an issue of fact presented. State v. Roberts (1906), 166 Ind. 585, 77 N. E. 1093; Rush v. Foos Mfg. Co. (1898), 20 Ind. App. 515, 51 N. E. 143. As a plea in abatement requires the utmost certainty and particularity leaving nothing to be supplied by intendment and no supposable answer unmet, we are bound to assume that the cause of action grew out of the transaction of business by appellee in Indiana. Nor can we assume from the fact of the statement in the affidavit filed with the Secretary of State as to withdrawal, that appellee had no money, property, credits or effects, belonging to or due it in the State, if that is material in the case. Brown-Ketcham Iron Works v. George B. Swift Co. (1913), 53 Ind. App. 630, 100 N. E. 584, 860.
That the state may punish by fine, for infraction of the agreement, is wholly aside from the interest of the citizens of the State for whose benefit the statute and contract exist (Diamond Plate Glass Co. v. Minneapolis, etc., Ins. Co. [1892], 55 Fed. 27), in addition to the fact that as a penal statute, it may be restricted to failures arising while business is being transacted. If on discontinuing its business, it may revoke the agreement and authority, and escape its contractual agreements, it may as consistently do so while engaged in business, and in either event be subject to a fine, but in one case it would be immaterial to the citizen, for he could obtain service otherwise, while in the other it would be very material.
An instructive review of cases is found in Hunter v. Mutual, etc., Ins. Co., supra. That the agency continues irrespective of whether the agent is an officer, or a private person, is held in the following cases, and on the better reason. Hill v. Empire State, etc., Co. (1907), 156 Fed. 797; Johnson v. Mutual, etc., Ins. Co. (1904), 90 N. Y. Supp. 539, 45 Misc. 316; Fisher v. Insurance Co. (1904), 136 N. C. 217, 48 S. E. 667, and cases cited; Gibson v. Manufacturers Fire, etc., Co. (1887), 144 Mass. 81, 10 N. E. 729; Woodward v. Mutual, etc., Ins. Co. (1904), 178 N. Y. 485, 102 Am. St. 519; Pervangher v. Union Casualty, etc., Co. (1902), 81 Miss. 32, 32 South. 909; Michael v. Mutual Ins. Co. (1855), 10 La. Ann. 737; Ben Franklin Ins. Co. v. Gillett (1880), 54 Md. 212; Equity Life Ins. Assn. v. Gammon (1903), 119 Ga. 271, 46 S. E. 100; see note to Reeves v. Southern R. Co. (1905), 70 L. R. A. 513. In Brown-Ketcham Iron Works v. George B. Swift Co., supra, it was held that so long as a liability exists by reason of a contract made while the foreign corporation is transacting business in this State, the agency may not be revoked under the act of 1907, so as to defeat jurisdiction of the local courts. In that case, many
The judgment is .reversed, with instructions to the court below to sustain the demurrer to the plea in abatement, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Note. — Reported in 103 N. E. 1071. See, also, under (1) 31 Cyc. 343; (2) 31 Cyc. 241; (3) 31 Cyc. 179; (4) 32 Cyc. 561; (6) 36 Cyc. 1173; (8) 19 Cyc. 1346. As to jurisdiction over foreign corporations, see 85 Am. St. 905. As to the liability to suit within a state of a foreign corporation which has revoked the designation of an agent for the service of process and has ceased to do business within the State, see 6 Ann. Cas. 295.