31 N.Y.S. 1107 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
Lead Opinion
It appeared in the affidavit on which the attachment was obtained that the plaintiff was a foreign corporation, but was doing business in this state, and that the transaction out of which the action arose occurred in this state. The motion to vacate was upon the ground that there was no evidence that the plaintiff had obtained the certificate required by section 15 of chapter 087 of the Laws of 1802, and that, therefore, the warrant of attachment should not have been issued. This section provides:
“No foreign stock corporation other than a monied corporation shall do business in this state without having first procured from the secretary of state a certificate that it has complied with all the requirements of law to authorize it to do business in this state. * * * No foreign stock corporation doing business in this state without such certificate shall maintain any action in this state upon any contract made by it in this state until it shall have procured such certificate.”
Upon this ground the special term granted the motion to vacate the attachment, and from the order granting such motion this appeal is taken.
The proposition of law thus presented for our consideration is: Must the papers upon which a foreign corporation, doing business in this state, in relation to a transaction arising in this state, procures an attachment, show, for the purposes of the attachment, that the corporation has complied with section 15 of said act? and, in case such
Apart, therefore, from the question of whether or not the complaint would be bad on demurrer, if it failed to allege the procuring of a certificate, we have held in regard to attachments that all facts going to the jurisdiction of the court, or to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action, must be affirmatively set forth in the motion papers, and a defect in this respect is fatal to the attachment. The more numerous and recent instances of such rule in this court relate to cases where attachments have been issued against foreign corpora: tions when the plaintiff has failed to state the facts necessary to give the court jurisdiction of the cause of action. In Oliver v. Manufacturing Co. (Sup.) 10 N. Y. Supp. 771, it is said:
“The power of the court to reach by its process the property of a foreign corporation within the limits of this state depends entirely upon statutory enactments, and does not proceed from any inherent or general jurisdiction which the court possesses. Therefore, where such right is created by statute, the conditions thereunder attached to its exercise must be fulfilled, and they must appear.before the court obtains jurisdiction.”
In the case at bar the plaintiff is a foreign corporation, and an attachment was issued for a cause of action which arose in this state; and therefore it was necessary, in order that the court should acquire jurisdiction, for it to appear that the plaintiff was a resident of the state. The papers are silent upon this point. Where the statute^ as a preliminary to jurisdiction, requires facts to exist, they cannot be presumed. To the same effect is the case of Smith v. Milk Co., 70 Hun, 848, 24 N. Y. Supp. 79.
These cases are authority for the proposition urged by the respondent that, for the purpose of obtaining a warrant of attachment, it is
We think, therefore, that the order is right, and should be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements.
VAN BRUNT, P. J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
The prevailing opinion concedes that the omission by a foreign corporation to allege in its complaint that it has obtained from the secretary of state the certificate required by section 15, c. 687, Laws 1892, does not constitute a ground for demurrer, and therefore the papers on which plaintiff applied for the attachment stated a good cause of action. Having complied with the provisions of section 636 of the Code of Civil Procedure in that respect, it was entitled to an attachment, unless the moving papers failed to meet the other requirements of that section; and it is not pretended that they did. I advise a reversal of the order.