115 N.W. 844 | N.D. | 1908
The plaintiff, a foreign corporation, with its place of business and only office at Belleville, in the state of Illinois, brought this action in the district court of Benson county to recover a balance due as the purchase price of certain drills theretofore sold and delivered by ft to defendants. Plaintiff recovered in the court ■below, and the sole question raised on this appeal involves the validity of the contract under which the drills were sold; it being appellants’ contention that such contract is void because plaintiff had not complied with the laws of this state prescribing the conditions upon which foreign corporations may do business within its borders. This contention is based upon sections 4695 to 4699 of our Civil Code of 1905. Section 4695 provides: “No foreign corporation * * * shall transact any business within this state or acquire, hold, or dispose of any property, real or personal within this state until such corporation shall have filed in the office of the secretary of state a duly authenticated copy of its charter or articles of incorporation, and shall have complied with the provisions of this chapter. ****’’ Section 4697 requires such foreign corporation before doing business in this state to file a power, of attorney in the office of the secretary of state, constituting such officer its attorney, upon whom process may be served with the same force and effect as if served personally upon the corporation in this state. Section 4699 declares that “every contract made by or on behalf of any corporation * * * doing business in this state without first having complied with the provisions * * * of sections 4695 and 4697 * * * shall be wholly void on behalf of such corporation. * *” It is an admitted fact in the case that plaintiff was an Illinois corporation, and that it never complied with section 4697, above referred to.
We come, now, to a consideration of the transaction in suit. Did respondent violate the state statute above cited by “transacting”' or “doing” business within the state within the meaning of such statute, or was such business merely interstate commerce? This is the crucial test. Appellant’s assumption that, even if the transaction in question constituted interstate commerce, the statute would bár plaintiff’s recovery, is clearly untenable, as the above authorities clearly demonstrate. Plaintiff’s cause of action arose out of a written contract, the substance of which is that plaintiff for a stipulated consideration sold to defendants the- drills in question, together with certain repairs, one carload to be delivered f. o. b. Grand Forks, N. D., and one car f. o. b. Minneapolis, Minn. The-goods were subsequently delivered pursuant to the contract. With the exception of the carload shipment from Grand Forks, it is not seriously contended, and, indeed, could not be, that -the transaction in question was other than interstate commerce. The contract constituted a sale, and not a bailment of the goods, but this fact is immaterial. Butler Shoe Co. v. U. S. Rubber Co., supra, and cases cited. Did this single shipment from Grand Forks, or, in other-
We have no hesitancy in holding, as we do, that the contract in this case was valid and is enforceable, and that under the facts disclosed in the record the trial court properly denied defendants’ motion for a directed verdict. The judgment appealed from'is accordingly affirmed.