271 P. 747 | Cal. | 1928
Mandamus against the Railroad Commission to compel it to issue its permit for the issuance of certain stock. Petitioner, a Wyoming corporation, is now, and since November, 1911, has been engaged in generating, transmitting, and distributing electrical energy in this state. It is a public utility electrical corporation as defined by section 23 of article XII of the constitution and section 2 of the Public Utilities Act of the state of California (Stats. 1911 [Ex. Sess.], p. 18, as amended). Although a foreign corporation, it is operating lawfully in this state, since it has been engaged in doing business therein prior to March 23, 1912, the date when the Public Utilities Act became effective. Petitioner is authorized by its certificate of incorporation obtained from the state of Wyoming to issue $5,000,000 common stock, and also a like amount of seven per cent preferred stock. The common stock was all issued prior to the effective date of the Public Utilities Act. The company being desirous of issuing $2,000,000 of its preferred stock for the refunding or payment of its outstanding indebtedness applied to the Railroad Commission to authorize such issue under section 52 of the Public Utilities Act. The application was in due form and included all the necessary facts required by law and the rules and regulations of the Commission. That body declined its permit upon the ground that it possessed no jurisdiction over the issuance of stock by a foreign corporation. An application for rehearing was asked for and denied and the writ of mandate here applied for is sought to compel the Railroad Commission to exercise its alleged jurisdiction and to hear and determine petitioner's application. The sole question here involved, therefore, is whether or not the Railroad Commission has authority to authorize a foreign corporation, operating a public utility, to issue its capital stock. Petitioner claims that section 52 of the Public Utilities Act, making the authorization of the Commission a prerequisite to the issuance of stock by a public utility, is applicable to foreign and domestic corporations alike. [1] It is respondents' position that the issuance of stock in a corporation is essentially an internal function thereof, cognizable and regulatable only under the laws of the state or nation creating the corporation. We are of a like opinion. Section 52 of the Public Utilities Act (amended, Stats. 1925, p. 817) provides, in *482
part, that the power of public utilities to issue stocks and stock certificates or other evidence of interest or ownership, and bonds, notes, and other evidence of indebtedness, and to create liens on their property, situated within the state, is a special privilege, the right of supervision and regulation over which is vested in the state to be exercised by the Railroad Commission under such rules and regulations as it may prescribe. The purposes for which said securities may be issued are definitely set forth, and it is declared that all such securities issued without the authority of the Railroad Commission shall be void, and penalties are provided for violations of its provisions. While the language employed in the section is broad and comprehensive and makes no distinction in express terms between foreign and domestic corporations, it was never intended thereby to subject foreign corporations to regulation concerning the exercise of the inherent corporate powers conferred upon them by the legislative power of the incorporating state. Whether or not the term "corporation," when used in a statute, applies to foreign corporations operating within the state depends largely upon the subject matter of the statute, its policy, and the context in which the terms are employed. [2] A statute of a state granting powers and privileges to corporations must, in the absence of plain indications to the contrary, be held to apply only to corporations created by the state and over which it has the power of visitation and control. (14a C.J., p. 1241.) While the legislature has the power to dictate under what terms and conditions foreign corporations may transact business in this state, this power does not extend so far as to give the legislature the power to regulate or control the intra vires
acts of such corporations concerning their internal affairs. Over such matters it has no power of control. (Miles v. Woodward,
It is so ordered.
Waste, C.J., Richards, J., Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Seawell, J., and Preston, J., concurred.