The defendant, having removed this cause from the state court in which it was commenced to this court, now insists- upon its motion filed in the state court to quash the service of summons. The case presents squarely the question whether a foreign corporation can be brought into court in this state by service upon a statutory agent of compulsory process, at the suit of a nonresident, to defend its rights in a transitory action based entirely upon transactions in another state.
An action of the class to which this case belongs may be prosecuted, in any jurisdiction in which judicial process can be lawfully served upon the defendant. It is settled law that a corporation created by and organized under the laws of a particular state has its legal home and domicile within the state whose laws give to it legal existence. Shaw v. Quincy Mining Company, 145 U. S. 444, 12 Sup. Ct. 935, 36 L. Ed. 768. It can act elsewhere only through an authorized repre
The section of the statute above cited contains another clause, which reads as follows:
“And such corporation shall have and keep continually some resident agent, empowered as aforesaid during all the time such corporation shall conduct or carry on any business within this state, and service of any process, pleading, notice or other paper, shall be taken and held as due service on such corporation.”
In behalf of the plaintiff it is contended that a proper construction of this statute requires foreign corporations to have an agent upon
“Such corporations shall also constitute and appoint an agent who shall reside at the place in the state where the principal business of the corporation is to be carried on, to be designated as hereinafter required. Such appointment shall be in writing, signed by the president or chief officer of such corporation, and shall be attested by its corporate seal, * * * and shall authorize such agent to accept service of process in any action or suit pertaining to the property, business, or transactions of such corporation within this state in which such corporation shall be a party. * * * And such corporation shall have and keep continually [a] resident agent, empowered as aforesaid during all the time such corporation shall conduct or carry on any business within this state, and service [upon him] of any process, pleading, notice or other paper, shall be taken and held as due service on such corporation [notwithstanding his refusal on any ground to accept service voluntarily]. * * **’
In this reading substituted and additional words are inclosed in brackets. According to what I deem to be the only true construction of the statute, foreign corporations are not obliged to confer authority upon their agents within this state to represent them in litigation which does not pertain to either property situated within this state, or business conducted or carried on in this state, or transactions within this state; and that an agent of a foreign corporation having only the authority which the statute requires foreign corporations to confer is not a representative through whom a foreign corporation can be coerced to submit for adjudication any other controversy, and that the cause of action alleged in the plaintiff’s complaint in this case cannot be litigated within this state so long as the defendant declines to waive its legal objections to the jurisdiction of the courts.
For this reason the motion to quash the service must be granted.