delivered- the opinion of the court.
This case comes up on the single question of the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, which was saved by bill of exceptions and stipulation, and which is certified to this court. The defendant in error, the original plaintiff, and hereafter called plaintiff, is an Illinois corporation; the plaintiff in error is a purely local Indiana corporation, organized for the furnishing of heat, light and power in Indianapolis. The questions aré whether the service of the writ was good,
Board of Trade
v.
Hammond Elevator Co.,
It is tacitly conceded that the provision as to service does not apply unless the foreign corporation was doing business in the State. If it was, then, under the decisions of this court, it would be taken to have assented to the condition upon which alone it lawfully could transact such business there. Old Wayne Mutual Life Association v. McDonough, decided January 7, 1907, ante, p. 8. Whether the purchase of materials for the construction or equipment of its plant, as a preliminary to doing its regular and proper business, which necessarily would be transacted elsewhere in the State of its incorporation, is doing business, within the meaning of the Illinois statute, was argued at length and presents a question upon which the decision's of the lower courts seem not to have agreed. We shall intimate no opinion either way, because it is not necessary for the decision of the case in view of the submission to the jurisdiction which the facts disclose.
We assume that the defendant lost no rights by pleading to the merits, as required, after saving its rights.
Harkness
v.
Hyde,
If, as would seem and as was assumed by the form of pleading, the counterclaim was within the Illinois statute, Charnley v. Sibley, 73 Fed. Rep. 980, 982, the case is still stronger. For by that statute the defendant may get a verdict and a judgment in his favor if it appears that the plaintiff is indebted to him for a balance when the two claims are set against each other; and after the cross claim is set up the plaintiff is not permitted to dismiss his suit without the consent of the defendant or leave of court granted for cause shown. Illinois Rev. Stats., c. 110, §§30, 31; East St. Louis v. Thomas, 102 Illinois, 453, 458; Butler v. Cornell, 148 Illinois, 276, 279.
There is some difference in the decisions as to when a defendant becomes so far an actor as to submit to the'jurisdiction, but we are aware of none as to the proposition that when he does become an actor in a proper sense he submits.
De Lima
v.
Bidwell,
Judgvient affirmed.
