delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action in an Indiana court against the plaintiff in error upon a judgment against it in a Pennsylvania court. The decisive questions in the case have reference to the clause of the Constitution of the United States, requiring full faith and credit to be. given in each State to the public 'acts, records' and judicial proceedings of other States, and, also, to the clause forbidding the deprivation by a State of. life, liberty or property, without due process-of law. There was a judgment for the plaintiffs, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State.
The questions before us arise out of the facts now to be stated.
On the twenty-second day of February, 1900, the defendants in error brought an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Süsquehanna County, Pennsylvania, against the Old Wayne. Mutual Life Association of Indianapolis, an Indiana cor.poration, upon a certificate or policy of life insurance dated December 3, .1897, whereby that association agreed to pay to Winnifred Herrity and Sarah McDonough of Scranton, Pennsylvania, .or their legal representatives, the sum of $5,000 upon the condition, among others, that if the person whose life was -insured — Patrick McNally, of Scranton, Pennsylvania — should die within. one year from the date of the certificate, then Herrity and McDonough should not receive more than one-fourth of'the above, sum. McNally died on the fourteenth-day of November, 1898.
A summons, addressed to the sheriff of Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, was'sued out and the following return thereof was.made: “Served the Old Wayne Mutual Life Association
Subsequently, the plaintiff filed a declaration or statement in the Pennsylvania case, which contained, among other things, the following: “That the said The Old Wayne Mutual Life Association of Indianapolis, Indiana, defendant, is a mutual life insurance association, foreign to the State of Pennsylvania, to-wit: of the State of Indiana, as aforesaid, and as such has been doing business of life insurance in the State of Pennsylvania, more particularly in the counties of Susquehanna and Lackawanna, in said State of Pennsylvania, issuing policies of life insurance to numerous and divers residents of' said counties and State for many years, upon application therefor taken in said counties of Susquehanna and Lackawanna, and was transacting such business of life insurance in said State and counties on the third day of December, 1897, and before and since till July 5, 1900, and after. That the said The Old Wayne Mutual Life Association has no duly appointed agent in said county of Susquehanna, State of Pennsylvania, for the acceptance of service of process other than the Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Pennsylvania. The writ of summons in this action, duly issued by the Court of Common Pleas of Susquehanna County, directing the said defendant, The Old Wayne Mutual Life Association of Indianapolis, Indiana, to appear and answer, was legally and duly served on the Commissioner of Insurance’ of the State of Pennsylvania on the twenty-sixth day of September, 1900, the said Commissioner of Insurance for the State of Pennsylvania being the proper person for service in this case.”
The present action was brought on that judgment. The complaint in tins case, filed June 21, 1900, alleged that the defendant association was on the third day of December, 1897, and long prior and subsequent thereto engaged in the trans-" action of business in Pennsylvania. After setting out the provisions of the statute of Pennsylvania (to be' presently referred to), the issuing of the policy, the death of McNally, and the making of the requisite proofs of loss, the complaint' alleged that process in the Pennsylvania case was served upon the Insurance' Commissioner for Pennsylvania, “the said defendant having no -other agent or attorney upon whom process could be served in said State of Pennsylvania.”
The defendant demurred to the complaint as insufficient in law, but the demurrer was overruled. It then filed its answer, denying “each and every material allegation” in the complaint. In a separate paragraph it alleged that its only offices for the transaction of business were, and at all times had been, at Indianapolis, Indiana, where its officers had always resided; that it had never been admitted to do business in Pennsylvania, and never had an office or agency there for the transaction of business; that no one of its officers or agents was in that Commonwealth at the' -ate of the alleged suit, nor had been there since; that no summons was ever served upon it at any time, and that it did not appear in that action; that no one ever appeared for it there who had authority to do. so; and that the first notice or knowledge it ever had of the alleged .judgment against it was long after the day when.it appears to have been rendered.
The plaintiff in error insists that the Pennsylvania court had no jurisdiction to proceed against it; consequently, the judgment it rendered was void for the want of the due process of law required by the Fourteenth Amendment. If the defendant had no such actual, legal notice of the Pennsylvania suit as would bring it into court, or if it did not voluntarily appear therein. by an authorized representative, then the Pennsylvania court was without jurisdiction, and the conclusion just stated would follow, even if the judgment would, be deemed conclusive in the courts of that Commonwealth. The constitutional requirement that full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other. State is necessarily to be interpreted in connection- with other provisions of the Constitution, and therefore no State can obtain in the tribunals of other jurisdictions full faith and credit for its judicial proceedings if they are wanting in the due process of law enjoined by the fundamental law. “No judgment of a court is due process of law,,if rendered without jurisdiction in the court* or.without notice to the party.”
Scott
v.
McNeal,
Such is the settled doctrine of- this court. In the leading case of
Thompson
v.
Whitman,
The question of the jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania court being then open, on this record, let us see what presumptions arise from the showing made by it.
The complaint in this case, as we have seen, alleged that on the third day of December, 1897, — the date of the insurance certificate — as well as prior and subsequent thereto, the de-' fendant association engaged in business in Pennsylvania, soliciting applications for insurance and- issuing policies to residents of that Commonwealth. The answer denied each and every material allegation in the complaint, and such‘a
The burden of proof was therefore upon the plaintiffs to show by what authority the Pennsylvania court could legally enter a personal judgment against a corporation which, according to the complaint itself, was a corporation of another State and was not alleged to have appeared in person or by an attorney of its own selection or to have been personally served with process. This burden the plaintiffs met by introducing in evidence a complete transcript of the record of the action in the Pennsylvania court from which it appeared: 1. That the defendant association was sued in the Pennsylvania court as a life, insurance association of Indiana, was alleged to have been engaged in business in Pennsylvania, and was so engaged before and after the certificate of insurance in question was issued. 2. That the summons in that aetion was served on the Commissioner of Insurance for Pennsylvania, the defendant association not having appointed an agent in that Commonwealth upon whom process could be served nor having appeared by an attorney or representative. 3. That the Insurance Commissioner not having appeared in the action, judgment was taken against the defendant; and that is the judgment here in suit.
It was further made to appear in the present action that when the contract of insurance was executed, as well as before and since, it was provided by a statute of Pennsylvania, approved June 20, 1883, P. L. 134, amendatory of a previous statute of that Commonwealth establishing an Insurance Department, as follows: “No insurance company, not of this State, nor its agents, shall do business
in this State
until it has filed with the Insurance Commissioner of this State a written stipulation, duly authenticated by the company, agreeing that any legal process affecting the company served on the Insurance Commissioner, or the party designated by
The defendant association introduced no evidence. If looking alone at the pleadings in the Pennsylvania suit it be taken that at the time of the contract in question the
But even if it be assumed that the insurance company was engaged in
some
business in Pennsylvania at the time the contract in question was made, it cannot be held that the company agreed that service of process upon the Insurance Commissioner of that Commonwealth would alone be sufficient to bring it into court in respect of
all
business transacted^ by it, no matter where, with or for the benefit of citizens, of Pennsylvania. Undoubtedly, it was competent for Pennsylvania to declare that no insurance corporation should transact business within its limits without filing the written stipulation specified in its statute.
Lafayette Ins. Co.
v.
French,
Conceding then that by going into Pennsylvania, without first complying with its statute, the defendant association may be held to have assented to the service upon the Insurance Commissioner of process in a suit brought against it therein respect of business transacted by it in that Commonwealth,; such assent cannot properly be implied where it affirmatively appears, as it does here, that the business was not transacted in Pennsylvania. Indeed, the Pennsylvania statute, upon its face, is only directed against insurance companies who do business in that Commonwealth — “in this State.” While the highest considerations of public policy demand that an insurance corporation, entering a State in defiance of a statute
As the suit in the Pennsylvania court was upon a contract executed in Indiana; as the personal judgment in that court against the Indiana corporation was only upon notice to the Insurance Commissioner, without any legal notice to the defendant association- and without its having appeared in person, or by attorney or by agent in the suit; and as the act of the Pennsylvania court in' rendering the judgment must be deemed that of. the State within, the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, 1 we hold that the judgment in Pennsylvania was not entitled to the faith and credit which by the Constitution is required to be given to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of the several States, and was void as wanting in due process of law.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Indiana must, therefore, be reversed, with directions for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
