96 P. 742 | Okla. | 1908
The sole question raised in this record is the right of the plaintiff in error to bring a suit in Grant county to have a cloud removed from lands located in said county, and serve the summons on the designated agent of a foreign corporation in another county. That is, whether or not a foreign corporation that has complied with section 1227, Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903, as to designating an agent upon whom service could have been had within that territory is in conflict with the provisions of section 10 of the organic act, providing that actions shall be brought in the county in which the defendants or one of them resides or may be found.
In the case of Burke v. Malaby et al.,
"No corporation created or organized under the laws of any other state or territory shall transact any business within this territory, or acquire, hold, and dispose of property, real, personal, *613 or mixed, within this territory, until such corporation shall have filed in the office of the Secretary of the Territory, a duly authenticated copy of its charter or articles of corporation, and shall have complied with the provisions of this article: Provided, That the provisions of this act shall not apply to corporations or associations created for religious or charitable purposes solely."
Section 1227, Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903, provides:
"Such corporation shall appoint an agent, who shall reside at some accessible point in the territory, in the county where the principal business of said corporation shall be carried on, or at some place in said territory, if such corporation has no. principal place of business therein, duly authorized to accept service of process and upon whom service of process may be made in any action in which said corporation may be a party; and that any such action may be brought in the county in which the business, or any part of it, out of which said action arose, was transacted; and service upon such agent shall be taken and held as due service upon such corporation."
The agent upon whom service was had is not the defendant in this suit. The section of the statute which authorizes the defendant to do business in the territory of Oklahoma provides how service should be obtained upon it without regard to any residence. At common law there is no way in which process can be served upon a foreign corporation, and, as a rule, it is only by statutory provision that service can be had on such corporation. Clark v. New Jersey Steam Nav. Co., 1 Story (U.S.) 531, Fed. Cas. No. 2,859; Desaper v. Continental Water MeterCo.,
In the case of Van Dresser v. Oregon R. R., etc., Co. (C. C.) 48 Fed. 202, the court says:
"By numerous decisions it is established as a part of the common law of this country that where a state makes conditions upon which a foreign corporation may do business, and provides *614 a method whereby the courts of the state may acquire jurisdiction over them by a service of process designating agents within the state, a foreign corporation subsequently doing business in the state is deemed to consent to the conditions and to be bound by the service of process in the manner specified by the statute."
In the case of Reyer v. Odd Fellow Accident Ass'n,
"It therefore sufficiently appeared that the defendant was so served with process as to give the court of Indiana jurisdiction, unless it was beyond the power of the Legislature of Indiana to enact the statutes quoted. Of this power there can be no question. Corporations are not entitled under article 4, § 2, Const. U.S., 'to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states.' Any state may, within limitations not material to the present case, prescribe the terms and conditions on which foreign corporations may act therein; and this power undoubtedly allows the state to prescribe the mode of service of process of its courts upon a foreign corporation doing business there. Lafayette Ins. Co. v.French, 18 How. (U.S.) 404, 15 L.Ed. 451; Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. (U.S.) 168, 19 L.Ed. 357; Doyle v. Continental Ins. Co.,
Merchants' Mfg. Co. v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 63 How. Prac. (N.Y.) 459; Railroad Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. (U.S.) 65, 20 *615
L.Ed. 354; Railroad Co. v. Whitton, 13 Wall. (U.S.) 270, 20 L.Ed. 571; Bawknight v. Liverpool, London Globe Ins. Co.,
The appointment of an agent or attorney to receive service of process in accordance with the requirements of a statute amounts to consenting to the statute, and binds the corporation. Capen v. Pac. Mut. Ins. Co., 25 N.J. Law, 67, 64 Am. Dec. 415; Carstairs v. Mechanics' Traders' Ins. Co. (C. C.) 13 Fed. 823; Kentucky Mutual Soc. Fund Co. v. Logan'sAdm'r,
In the case of Hawn v. Pennsylvania Canal Co.,
In the case of Central Loan Trust Co. v. Campbell,
"It is insisted that under the organic act of the territory [Oklahoma] the court could not acquire jurisdiction of the person *616
of the defendant by constructive service by foreign attachment without his consent. The section of the organic act referred to requires that all civil actions shall be brought in a county where the defendant resides, or can be found. In a proceeding by attachment of property, which is in the nature of an actionin rem, it is elementary that the defendant is found, to the extent of the property levied upon, where the property is attached. It would be an extremely strained construction to the language of this act to hold that Congress intended to prohibit a remedy universally pursued, that of proceeding against the property of nonresidents in the place of the territory where the property of such nonresident is found." (
In the case of Cal. Southern Ry. Co. v. Southern Pac. (Cal.) 4 P. 345, the court says:
"There is no law, statutory or common, in this state which defines the place of residence of a corporation. The fact that the residence of the officers and agents of a corporation is in a particular county does not in our judgment make such county the place of residence of the corporation. If such residence of officers in a particular county makes such county the place of residence of the corporation, how will it be when some of the officers reside in one county and some in another? We are referred to no law making the county where the principal place of business of a corporation is situated the place of its residence; and under these circumstances we have no authority to hold such to be its place of residence."
We conclude that the court committed error when it sustained the motion of the defendant to quash the service of the alias summons. The defendant in this case being a nonresident corporation, this action can be maintained not only in the county in which the defendant's agent resides, but also in the county in which the business, or any part of it out of which this action arose is transacted.
Therefore the judgment of the lower court is reversed, with instructions to overrule defendant's motion to quash, and to require defendant to plead to plaintiff's petition.
All the Justices concur. *617