121 Ga. 561 | Ga. | 1905
■ This was an action in the city court of Atlanta, by a plaintiff, whose place of residence does not appear, against a foreign railroad corporation which is doing business in the city of Atlanta. The defendant was duly served with process accord
The fact that a corporation has no existence except in legal contemplation gave rise to the- conception that its existence could not be legally recognized outside of the territorial jurisdiction of 'the lawmaking power which created it, and that therefore it was impossible for a corporation to migrate beyond the bounds of its creator. Tiffs conception resulted in the courts holding that the corporation could not be sued in a jurisdiction foreign to that which gave it existence. While under this view as a matter of theory the corporation did not migrate, yet as a matter of fact its officers and agents did; and contracts were made in its name, and wrongs committed by its officers and agents, in territory far remote from that in which it was supposed to have its only legal existence. Great hardship and inconvenience resulted oftentimes from the application of this rule, which had the effect of compelling those who sought redress for breaches of contract and other legal wrongs against the corporation to bring their actions in the courts of the jurisdiction creating the corporation; the expenses of the remedy in many cases amounting to more than what would have been the fruits of recovery. The recognition of the hardship resulting from this rule brought about a modification of the rule, to the extent that where a foreign corporation located an agent and actually transacted business in a foreign jurisdiction, it so far acquired a residence in that jurisdiction a.s to make it amenable to the processes of the courts thereof on all causes of action originating within that jurisdiction. The rule was then further modified to the extent that where the corporation had an agent and was doing business in a foreign jurisdiction, it might be sued upon any transitory cause of action by a citizen of the State in which the corporation was thus doing business. ■ And in
Judgment reversed.