The complaint alleged that the plaintiff was a foreign corporation. The answer admitted this allegation and set forth that plaintiff had not complied with the provisions óf sec. 1770&, Stats. (1898). The defendant designates its pleading an “answer and counterclaim,” without undertaking to separate the defensive portion of it from that upon which affirmative relief is asked. The reply again alleged that the plaintiff was a foreign corporation and admitted that it had not “obtained from the secretary of state a license to do business in the state of Wisconsin.” It contained a general denial of matters not admitted. No proof was offered to show whether or not the plaintiff had complied with the provisions of sec. 1770& on its part. On its face the admission of the reply is only to the effect that the secretary of state has not issued the license provided for by sec. 1770c, Stats. (1898). It is not an express admission that plaintiff had not done the necessary acts to entitle it to a license. Sec. 1770a¡, Stats. (1898), makes it unlawful for a foreign corporation to transact business in the state until it has actually procured a license, but does not provide any penalty for violation of the statute. The penalty in sec. 1770& is fixed for the failure of the corporation to perform the affirmative acts required by that section as a prerequisite to the issuance of the license.
The admission of the reply goes further than the plaintiff
If the machinery sold was manufactured in this state or was kept here for the purpose of sale, the contract was void and there can be no recovery. Duluth M. Co. v. Clancy,
Yery little in the way of evidence was offered on the trial to show that the contract of sale involved in the action covered a transaction of interstate commerce. This fact, vital to the plaintiff’s cause of action, would seem to have been assumed rather than proved. Some facts were incidentally shown which we think would warrant the court in finding that the transaction did involve interstate commerce, and, if so, we must presume a finding to that effect in support of the judgment. Sec. 2858m, Stats. (Laws of 1907, ch. 346). The machinery was to be delivered f. o. b. cars “at Cham-bersburg, Pa., or at factory where made.” The freight was to be equalized “with Milwaukee rate.” The contract was not to be effective until approved by the vendor “at its main-
Under the contract there was a conditional sale of the machinery, good as to all the world if properly recorded, and good between the parties and as to all persons having notice thereof whether recorded or not. Sec. 2317, Stats. (1898); Hunter v. Warner,
The fact that plaintiff agreed to furnish a millwright to
Under the contract between the parties we entertain no doubt that the articles of machinery had. not become fixtures when the action was commenced. The machinery had been placed on the different floors in the mill and some of the openings in the floors through which it was elevated had been boarded up, hut most of the machinery had not been set up. The parties in substance and effect contract'd that the machinery sold should he treated as personal property, and as between them it remained personal property. Smith v. Waggoner,
The foregoing disposes of all the substantial contentions made by the appellant. The plaintiff having the right to maintain its action of replevin under the original contract, it is immaterial whether the subsequent contract found by the jury was valid or not. If valid, the plaintiff was entitled to recover thereunder; if void, it did not affect the original contract.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
