after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The only questions passed upon bv the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, which can be considered by us, are those which *184 arise upon its ruling against the contention of the plaintiff in error that the statute of the Commonwealth is in.conflict with clauses of the Federal Constitution. Its ruling upon the conformity of the statute with the constitution of the Commonwealth does not come under our jurisdiction.
. The clauses of the Federal Constitution, -with which it was urged in the state Supreme Court that the statute conflicts, are the one vesting in Congress the power-to regulateuforeign and interstate commerce, the one declaring that the citizens of each State are entitled to the privileges and immunities of 'citizens •in the several States, and the one embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment declaring that no State shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the law’s.
1. It is not perceived in what way the statute impinges upon the commercial clause of the Federal Constitution. It imposes no prohibition upon the transportation into Pennsylvania of’ the pi'oducts of the corporation, or- upon their sale in the Commonwealth. It only exacts a license tax from the corporation when it has an office in the Commonwealth for-the use of its officers, stockholders, agents, or employés. - The tax is not for their office, but for the office of the corporation, and the use to which it is put is presumably for the latter’s business and interest. For no other purpose can it be supposed that the .office Avould be hired by the corporation.
The exaction of a license fee to enable the corporation to have an office for that purpose within the Commonwealth is clearly, within the competency of its .legislature. It was decided long ago, and the doctrine has been often affirmed since, that a corporation created by one State cannot, with some exceptions, to which we shall presently refer, do business in another State without the latter’s consent, express or implied. In.
Paul
v. Virginia,
These exceptions do not touch the general doctrine declared as to corporations not carrying -on .foreign or interstate commerce, or not employed by the government. As to these corporations, the doctrine of
Paul v. Virginia
applies. The Colorado corporation does not come- within any of the exceptions. Therefore, -the recognition of its existence in Pennsylvania, even to the limited extent of allowing.ifc to have an office within its limits for the use of its officers, stockholders, agents, and employes, was a matter dependent on the will of the State. It could make the grant of the privilege conditional upon the payment of a license tax, and fix the sum according to. the amount of the authorized capital of .the corporation. The absolute power of exclusion includes the right to allow a conditional and restricted exercise of its corporate powers within the State.
Bank of Augusta
v.
Earle,
We do not perceive the pertinency of the position advanced by counsel that the'tax in question is void as an attempt by the State to tax a franchise not granted by her, and property or business not within her jurisdiction, The fact is otherwise. No tax“npon the franchise of the foreign corporation is levied, nor upon its business or property without the State. A license tax only is exacted as a condition of its keeping .an office within the State, for the use of its officers, stockholders, agents, and employés; nothing more and nothing less; and *187 in what way this can be considered as a regulation of interstate commerce is not apparent.
2. Nor does the clause of the Constitution declaring that the “ citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States” have any bearing'upon the question of the validity of the license tax in question. Corporations are not citizens within the meaning of that clause. This was expressly held in
Paul
v.
Virginia.
In that case it appeared that a statute of Virginia, passed in February, 1866, declared that no insurance company not incorporated under the laws of the State should carry on business -within her limits without previously obtaining a license for that purpose, and that no license should be received by the corporation until it had deposited -with the treasurer of the State bonds of a designated character and amount, the latter varying according to the extent of the capital employed. No such deposit was required of insurance companies incorporated by the State for carrying on their business within her limits. A subsequent statute of Yirginia made it a penal offence for a person to act in the State as an agent of a foreign insurance company without such license. One Samuel Paul, having acted in the State as an agent for a New York insurance company without a license, was indicted and convicted'in a Circuit Court of Yirginia, and sentenced to pay a fine of $50. ■ On error to the Court or Appeals of the State the judgment was affirmed, and to review that judgment the case was brought to this court. Here it -was contended, as in the present case, that the statute of Yirginia was invalid by reason of its discriminating provisions between her corporations and corporations of other States ; that in this particular it was in conflict with the clause of the Constitution mentioned, that the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in .the several States. But the court answered, that corporations are not citizens within the meaning of the clause; that the term citizens, as used in the clause, applies only to natural persons, members of the body politic owing allegiance to the State, not to artificial persons created by the legislature, and possessing only
*188
such attributes as the legislature has prescribed; that the privileges and immunities secured to citizens of each State in the several States by the clause' in question are those privileges and immunities which are common to the citizens in the latter States under their constitution and laws by virtue of their citizenship; that special privileges enjoyed by citizens in their own States are not secured in other States by that provision; that it was not intended that the laws of one State should thereby have any operation in other Stales ;• that • mey can have such operation only by the permission, express or implied, of those States; that special privileges which are conferred must be enjoyed at home, unless the assent of other States to their enjoyment therein be given; and that a grant of corporate existence was a grant of special privileges to the corporators, enabling them to act for certain specified purposes as a single individual, and exempting them, unless otherwise provided, from individual liability, which could therefore be enjoyed in other States only by their. assent. In the subsequent case of
Ducat
v. Chicago,
3. The application of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution to the statute imposing the license tax in question is not more apparent than the application of the clause of the Constitution to the rights of citizens of one State to the privileges and immunities of citizens in other States. The inhibition of the amendment that no State shall deprive any person within its jurisdiction o'f the equal protection of the laws was designed to prevent any person or class of persons from being singled out as a special subject for discriminating
*189
and hostile legislation. Under the designation of person there is no doubt that a private corporation is included. Such corporations are merely associations of individuals united for a special purpose, and permitted to do business under a particular name, and have a succession of members without dissolution. As said by Chief Justice Marshall, “The great object of a corporation is to bestow the character and properties of individuality on a collective and changing body of men.”
Providence Bank
v.
Billings,
The only limitation upon this power of the State to exclude a foreign corporation from doing business within its limits, or hiring offices for that purpose, or to exact conditions for allowing the corporation to do business or hire offices there, arises where the corporation is in the employ of the -federal government, or where its business is strictly commerce, interstate or foreign. The control of such commerce, being in the federal government, is not to be restricted by state authority'.
Judgment affirmed.
