Tbe Southern Sand & Gravel Company, Inc., is a Delaware corporation, with its borne office at Wilmington, Del. It filed with tbe secretary of state of North Carobna its application to do business in this state as required by tbe provisions of section 1181, C. S. N. C. In its application it designated Sanford, N. C.; as its principal place of business in tbe state. Tbe corporation’s chief business was tbe mining and selling of sand and gravel, and its plant was located in Harnett county, N. C. Sanford is in Lee county.
Tbe said Southern Sand & Gravel Company gave a written order and executed a conditional sales contract to tbe Tbew Shovel Company for a steam shovel which was to be shipped from Lorain, Ohio, to tbe plant in Harnett county, at Luart Siding. Tbe contract was made at Sanford, and tbe representative of tbe Tbew Shovel Company was led to believe that Sanford was tbe borne office of tbe company.
Section 3312 of tbe Consolidated Statutes N. C., requires all conditional sales of personal property to be registered in tbe same manner and with tbe same legal effect as is provided for chattel mortgages in tbe county where tbe purchaser resides, or in case tbe purchaser shall reside out of tbe state, then in tbe county where tbe personal estate or some part thereof is situated. Tbe Tbew Shovel Company registered tbe contract in Lee county but did not register it in Harnett county, where tbe property was situated, until long after it came into tbe custody of tbe court through tbe receivers, who were directed to convert tbe assets of tbe company into cash for distribution among the creditors.
C. S. N. C. § 3311, deals with tbe registration of chattel mortgages, and reads as follows: “No deed of trust or mortgage for
The- Thew Shovel Company filed its petition asking for the release of this property on the ground that its contract was registered in Lee county, the home office of the Southern S'and & Gravel Company. The receivers contend that the sand and gravel company is a foreign corporation and resides out of the state and that the conditional sale contract is not valid because it was not recorded in Harnett county.
The Supreme Court of North Carolina has held that an unregistered conditional.sale is invalid as against an assignment for the benefit of creditors duly registered. Coble & Starr v. Wharton,
Since the Legislature, in C. S. § 3311, designates the principal place of business of a domestic corporation as its residence for the purposes of this section, but makes no reference to a- foreign corporation licensed to do business in this state, the reasonable inference is that the Legislature treated such corporations as nonresidents. It is presumed that the Legislature enacted its laws with a knowledge of the interpretation of existing laws by the Supreme Court of the state. The Supreme Court of North Carolina has held that a domestic corporation of the state has no residence. Cline v. Manufacturing Co.,
If. a domestic corporation is without a residence in any one county without legislative enactment fixing a residence, how could it be contended that a foreign corporation is a resident of any particular county in this state? The only inference deducible from the decisions of the highest court of the state and from the statutes is that foreign corporations are treated as nonresidents in this state, and that the proper place for the recordation of mortgages executed by a foreign corporation is in the county where the personal property or some part thereof is situated.
The compliance by a foreign corporation with the requirements of C. S. § 1181, does not make the foreign corporation a resident of the state, or of the county where its principal office is located for the purposes 'of C. S. § § 3311 and 3312. This statute is nothing
A corporation can have no legal existence outside of the boundaries of the sovereign by which it is created. It has its domicile in the state which created it, and it cannot acquire a domicile in another state, although it may have an office and do business there. Lafayette Ins. Co. v. French,
The facts in our ease are practically the same as those in the case of Whitney v. Browne,
The representations by the officials of the Southern Sand •& Gravel Company that its principal office or its home office was located in Sanford, N. C., cannot take the place of the registration of the mortgage as against the creditors of the corporation. Equity follows the law. The laws of the state of North Carolina require chattel mortgages or conditional sales to be recorded in the county where the property or some part of it is situated, if the bargainor resides out of the state. Failure to so record it deprives the seller of any lien as against the creditors. See Fairbanks Steam Shovel Co. v. Wills, Trustee,
The petition for the release of the property is therefore denied.
