after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
The statute manifestly applies to the Chicago and NorthWestern Railway Company as an Illinois corporation. The first section provides, that a foreign corporation, desiring to continue the -transaction of its business in Iowa, is required, on and after September 1, 1886, “to file with the secretary of state a certified copy of its articles of incorporation duly attested, accompanied by a resolution of its board of directors or stockholders, authorizing the filing thereof, and also authorizing service of process to be made upon any of its officers or agents in this state engaged in- transacting its business, and requesting’ the issuance to such corporation of a permit to transact business in this state} said application to contain a stipulation that said permit shall be subject to each of the provisions of this act;’ and thereupon the secretary of state shall issue to such corporation a' permit in such form as ho may prescribe, for the general transaction of the business of such *196 corporationand, upon the receipt of such permit, such corporation shall be permitted and authorized to conduct and carry on its business in this state.”
■ The initial step required is a resolution authorizing the filing of the copy of the articles of incorporation, and authorizing service of process in the manner specified, and requesting the issue of the permit, the application to be accompanied by a stipulation that the permit shall be subject to each of the provisions of’ the act. This proceeding is a unit. The filing of the articles of incorporation and the provision in regard to service of process are to be authorized by the same resolution which requests the issue of the permit, and this request or application is. to contain the stipulation above mentioned. These various things^ are not separable. They are all indissolubly bound up with the application for a permit, which is to be subject to every provision of the act. The permit ' cannot be issued unless such a stipulation is given, and ■ the corporation is not to be permitted to carry on its business in the State unless the permit is issued to it and received by it.
Section 3 of the act provides, that, if the permit is issued, and the foreign corporation, being thereafter sued in a court of Iowa, upon a contract made or executed in Iowa, or to be performed in Iowa, or for any act or omission, public or private, arising, originating or happening in Iowa, shall remove the suit from the state court into any Federal court in Iowa, because the corporation is a non-resident of Iowa, or a resident of a state other than the state of the adverse party, or because of local prejudice against the corporation, that fact shall forfeit the permit and render ■ it Void, such forfeiture to be determined from the record, of removal, and to date, from the filing of the application on which the removal is effected.
Section 4 imposes a penalty of $100 a day on the corporation for carrying on its business in Iowa without having complied with the statute, and having a valid permit, and provides that any agent, officér or employe who shall knowingly act,- or transact such business, for the corporation, when it has no valid permit, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and for each offence shall be fined not to exceed $100, or be imprisoned ■ *197 in the county jail not to- exceed thirty days, and pay all costs of prosecution.
It is apparent that the entire purpose of this statute is to deprive the foreign corporation, in suits such as those mentioned in § 3, of the right conferred upon it by the Constitution and laws of the United States, to remove a suit from the state court into the Federal court, either on the ground of diversity of citizenship or of local prejudice: The statute is not separable into parts. An affirmative provision requiring the filing by a foreign corporation, with the secretary, of state,' of a copy- of 'its articles of incorporation,' and of an authority for the service of process upon a designated officer or agent in the state,'might not be an unreasonable or objectionable requirement, if standing alone; but the' manner in which,■ in this statute, the provisions on those subjects are coupled with the application for the permit, and with the.stipulation referred to, shows that the real and only object of the statute, and its substantial provision, is the requirement of the stipulation not to remove the suit into the Federal court.
' In view of these considerations, the case falls directly within the decision of this court in
Home Insurance Co. v. Morse,
In regard to the second question, the proposition laid down was, that the jurisdiction of the Federal courts, under Art. 3, § 2, of the Constitution, depends upon and is regulated by the laws of the United States; that state legislation cannot confer jurisdiction upon the Federal courts, nor limit or restrict the authority given to them by Congress in pursuance of the Constitution ; and that a corporation is a citizen of the state by ■which it is created, and in which its principal place of business is situated, so far as its right to sue and be sued in the Federal courts is concerned, and within the clause of the Constitution extending the jurisdiction of the Federal courts to controversies between citizens of different states. The conclusions of the court were summed up thus :• 1st, The Constitution of the United States secures to citizens of another state than that in which suit is brought an absolute right to remove their cases into the Federal court, upon -compliance with the terms of the removal statute; 2d, The statute of Wisconsin is an obstruction to this right, is repugnant to the Constitution of the United States and the laws made in pursuance thereof, and is illegal and void; 3d, The agreement of the insurance company derives no support from an unconstitutional statute, and is void, as it would be had no such, statute been passed. For these reasons the judgment of the Supreme Court. of Wisconsin was reversed, and it was directed that the prayer of the petition for removal should be granted.
*199
The case of
Doyle
v.
Continental Insurance Co.,
In both of the cases referred to, the foreign corporation had made the agreement not to remove into the Federal court suits to be brought against it in the state court. In the present case, no such agreement has been made, .but the locomotive engineer is arrested for acting as such in the employment of the corporation, because it has refused to stipulate that it will not remove into the Federal court suits brought against it in the state court, as a condition of obtaining a permit, and conse *200 quently has not obtained such permit. Its right, equally with any individual citizen, to remove into the Federal court, under the laws of the United States, such suits as are mentioned in the third section of the Iowa statute, is too firmly established by the decisions of this court to be questioned at this day; and the State of Iowa might as well pass a statute to deprive ah individual citizen of another state of his right to.remove such suits.
As the Iowa statute makes the right to a permit dependent .upon the surrender by the foreign corporation-of a privilege secured to it by the Constitution and laws of the United States, the statute requiring the permit must be held to be void.
The question as to the right of a state to impose upon a corporation engaged in. interstate commerce the duty of obtaining a permit from the state, as a condition of its right'to carry on such commerce, is a question which it is not necessary to decide in this cáse. In all the cases in which this, •court has considered the subject of the granting by a state to a foreign corporation of its consent to the transaction of business in the state, it has uniformly asserted that no conditions can be imposed by the state which are repugnant to the Constitution-and laws of the United States.
La Fayette Ins. Co.
v. French,
The judgment of the Supreme Cou/rt of Iowa is reversed, and the case is remanded to that court, with an instruction to enter a judgment discha/rging the plaintiff -in error from custody.
