142 P. 625 | Nev. | 1914
By the Court,
Respondent brought an action in the Fourth judicial district court in and for the county of Lincoln against appellant to quiet title to a certain mining claim in the Bristol mining district, Lincoln County, known as the “Twenty-Eight-Thirty Lode,” and to perpetually enjoin appellant from asserting any claim or title whatever in or to said property adverse to the respondent or in any manner interfering with respondent’s possession thereof.
The complaint alleges that the defendant, appellant
The complaint was filed June 13,1913, and on the same day summons was duly issued thereon. On the 17th day of June following the sheriff of Lincoln County made due return of service of said summons as made on the 14th day of June, 1913, by delivering to George E. Bent, general manager of the defendant corporation, personally, in the county of Lincoln, a true copy of said summons attached to a copy of the complaint in said action. On the 21st day of June following the defendant corporation appeared In the action by its attorneys, 'P. R. McNamee and Leo A. McNamee, by filing a demurrer to the complaint. Thereafter, on the 20th day of January, 1914, as appears from the minutes of the court of that day, the case came on regularly for disposing of the demurrer.
In the reply brief of counsel for the appellant the statement is made that a few days prior to filing such brief the defendant corporation filed a copy of its articles of incorporation with the secretary of state and paid to that officer the statutory fee of one thousand dollars upon its capitalization of $10,000,000. The statement in the brief as to the recent qualification of the defendant to transact business in this state is not controverted.
The question discussed in the briefs is a very important one, and we find little, if any, direct authority to aid us in its determination. The legislature of 1907 passed an act entitled: “An act to require foreign corporations to qualify before carrying on business in this state, regulating and prescribing the manner thereof, and other matters pertaining thereto, repealing all other acts in conflict therewith.”
Section 1 provides: “Every corporation organized under the laws of another state, *■ * * which shall hereafter enter this state for the purpose of doing business therein, must, before commencing or doing any business in this state, file in the office of the secretary of state of the State of Nevada a certified copy of said articles of incorporation * * * or other instrument of authority by which it was created, and a certified copy thereof, duly certified by the secretary of state, * * * in the office of the county clerk of the county where its principal place of business in this state is located.”
Section 2 of the act prescribes the same fees to be paid as required in the case of domestic corporations.
Section 3 provides: “Every such corporation which shall fail or neglect to comply with the provisions of this act * * * shall not be allowed to commence, maintain, or defend any action or proceeding in any court of this state, until it shall have fully complied with the provisions of this act. * * * ” (Rev. Laws, secs. 1348-1350.)
As a general proposition, subject possibly to some exceptions in cases of corporations engaged in interstate commerce, it may be conceded that a' state, through its
The statutes of many of the states contain provisions denying such delinquent corporations the right to maintain actions in the courts until there has been a compliance with the law, and there are numerous decisions supporting such provisions of the statute. A very few states, as our state has done, have denied to such corporations the right of defense to an action.
It is contended by counsel for appellant that a provision of a statute denying to a defendant, even though it be a delinquent foreign corporation, the right of defense is a denial to a citizen of another state of due process of law, and of the equal protection of the law, and hence that such a provision is unconstitutional.
We think it unnecessary to consider this constitutional question in order to determine this case. We think the court ought not to have entertained the motion to strike, for the reason that when the plaintiff sued the defendant in its corporate capacity, sought and obtained the process of the court to compel it to appear and answer, which it did in pursuance of such process, the plaintiff waived the right to question its capacity to defend.
It has been held in cases brought by foreign corporations, which had not complied with statutory provisions and were, for that reason, incapacitated from maintaining an action, that the defendant in the action must plead the incapacity of the plaintiff to sue, and that defendant could not, after the case had gone to trial, raise the question for the first time, but would be deemed to have waived the same. (Bernheim Co. v. Elmore, 12 Cal. App. 85, 106 Pac. 720; Cal. S. & L. Soc. v. Harris, 111 Cal. 133, 43 Pac. 525; Leonard v. Am. S. & W. Co., 73 Kan. 79, 84 Pac. 553, 9 Ann. Cas. 491; White S. M. Co. v. Peterson, 23 Okl. 361, 100 Pac. 513; Lougee v. Wilson, 24 Colo. App. 70, 131 Pac. 777; 19 Cyc. 1321.) See, also, Rowe v. Stevens, 25 Idaho, 237, 137 Pac. 159.
We think it a proper rule to apply in this case that, the plaintiff having sued the defendant as a corporation, praying for a judgment against it eo nomine, he is deemed to have waived any question of its capacity to defend, and that such waiver continues as long as the plaintiff seeks such judgment directly against such a party defendant.
The order striking the demurrer and the j udgment are reversed, and the cause remanded.