Granting the existence of a cause of action, it is not every
service upon an officer of a corporation which will give a state
court jurisdiction of a foreign corporation. The residence of an
officer of a corporation does not necessarily give the corporation
a domicil in the state. He must be there officially, representing
the corporation in its business.
Goldey v. Morning News,
156 U. S. 518.
Service in New York of a summons upon a director of a foreign
corporation who resides in New York is not sufficient to bring the
corporation into court where, at the time of service, the
corporation was not doing business in the New York.
See also Geer v. Mathieson Alkali Works, post, p.
190 U. S. 428.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff is a citizen of the State of New York, and the
defendant was incorporated in the State of Virginia. The
plaintiff,
Page 190 U. S. 407
as assignee of T. T. Mathieson, brought this action in the
Supreme Court of New York County, State of New York, against the
defendant for moneys alleged to be due on a contract made and
entered into by Mathieson and defendant. The complaint alleged that
the contract was made in the City of New York on the 15th of
August, 1893. The articles of agreement show that Mathieson's
employment was as general superintendent for the term of eight
years, in the erection and general management of the works of the
corporation, "and also of their operation after the same shall have
been erected." The defendant had designated no agent upon whom
service could have been made, and summons was served on R. T.
Wilson and John G. Agar, two members of the board of directors of
the corporation, both residents of the City of New York. They were
not officers of the company. Before the time for answer had
expired, on defendant's motion, the cause was transferred to the
United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York.
A motion was made in that court to set aside the summons and
service as null and void. Affidavits were presented by both
parties, and, ruling on them, the court said that if the facts
stated by the affidavits of the defendant were true, that at the
time of the service of the summons and for some months before,
defendant corporation had ceased to do business in the state, the
motion should be granted. But is was said that
"the affidavits of complainant are mainly on information and
belief, but annexed to them is a letter, the genuineness of which
is not questioned, which bears date March 15, 1901 (two months and
a half after the alleged cessation of business at Niagara Falls),
and signed by the treasurer of the defendant corporation, in which
he speaks of the plant at Niagara Falls as still being operated by
the defendant. Under these circumstances, the court would not be
warranted in granting this motion, in view of the conflict of fact.
If, however, the defendant feels assured that the apparent
discrepancy can be explained, and is willing to pay the expenses of
a reference, it may be sent to a master to take testimony and
report to the court whether or not, at the time of the service of
the summons, the defendant corporation was doing business within
this state. "
Page 190 U. S. 408
A reference to the master was made. After taking testimony
(which occupies sixty-two pages of the record), the master reported
that, beside its plant at Saltville, the defendant, prior to
December 31, 1900, owned and operated a plant for the manufacture
of caustic soda and bleaching powder by electricity, located at
Niagara Falls, under a patented process known as the Castner
electrolytic process; that, on the 31st of December, 1900, it
conveyed this plant and all of the property of the defendant, of
every kind and description, to the Castner Electrolytic Alkali
Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Virginia; that
the consideration expressed for the conveyance was one dollar and
other valuable considerations, but that the substantial
consideration was the entire capital stock of the Castner
Electrolytic Alkali Company; that the selling agent for the
products manufactured at Niagara Falls, before and after the
transfer, was Arnold Hoffman & Co., a corporation organized
under the laws of Rhode Island, and had and has its principal place
of business in Providence, in that state; that said company was and
is the selling agent for the Saltville products, with some
exceptions, and that said corporation has a branch office in the
City of New York, but the business dealings of the defendant
corporation and of the Castner Company with Arnold Hoffman &
Co. are carried on through its Providence office; that the
defendant, since a period prior to the 31st day of December, 1900,
had, and still has, its principal place of business in the City of
Providence, and that its books and records are kept there, and it
has also an office force consisting of several employees, that its
bank account is also kept in said city, and that it has no office
in the State of New York -- none of its books, records, or accounts
are kept there, nor has it, since January 1, 1901, sold any of its
products there; that a bylaw of the company, adopted in 1896,
provided that the directors should hold monthly meetings in the
City of New York on the second Wednesday of each and every month in
each year, but that it did not appear, however, that meetings had
been held in compliance with the bylaws, the fact being that they
were held sometimes in Saltville and sometimes in Providence, and,
during the year 1901, at least, were held not more than two or
Page 190 U. S. 409
three times in New York City, and then at the branch office of
Arnold Hoffman & Co., or at the office of R. T. Wilson &
Co., bankers, in Wall street, a member of which firm was a director
of the defendant company, and one of its principal stockholders;
that the admissions in a letter of the treasurer of the company,
March 15, 1901,
"are fully explained by the fact that it followed earlier
correspondence in which the plan of disposing of the plant at
Niagara Falls for the stock of a new company was brought to the
attention of Mr. Pell,"
the president, to whom the letter was addressed. The master's
report concluded as follows:
"Upon the facts thus outlined, it does not appear that the
defendant corporation was at the time of the service of the summons
herein,
viz., April 18, 1901, doing business within this
state."
"The fact that it held the entire capital stock of the Castner
Electrolytic Alkali Company, and that the operations of that
company were carried on under the same management as before
December 31, 1900, is not material. The new corporation was a
separate legal entity, and whatever may have been the motives
leading to its creation, it can only be regarded as such for the
purposes of legal proceedings."
"It was that corporation alone which transacted any business in
this state, notwithstanding it may have been for all practical
purposes merely the instrument of the defendant corporation.
People v. Am. Bell Telephone Co., 117 N.Y. 241;
United
States v. The Same, 29 F. 17."
The plaintiff excepted to the report, the rulings of the master
on the admission of testimony, and to his conclusions. The report
was affirmed, and the service of summons set aside and declared
null and void. This ruling is assigned as error.
The fundamental proposition of plaintiff in error is that the
state court had jurisdiction of the defendant in error, and that
therefore the circuit court of the United States had jurisdiction.
To sustain the jurisdiction of the state court, subdivision 3 of
section 432 and section 1780 of the Code of Civil Procedure of the
state are cited. Subdivision 1 of section 432 provides for service
upon certain enumerated officers of a foreign corporation;
Page 190 U. S. 410
subdivision 2 provides for the designation of a person by the
corporation upon whom process may be served. Subdivision 3 is as
follows:
"If such a designation is not in force, or if neither the person
designated nor an officer specified in subdivision 1st of this
section can be found with due diligence, and the corporation has
property within the state, or the cause of action arose therein, to
the cashier, a director, or a managing agent of the corporation
within the state."
Section 1780 is as follows:
"SEC. 1780. An action against a foreign corporation may be
maintained by a resident of the state, or by a domestic
corporation, for any cause of action. An action against a foreign
corporation may be maintained by another foreign corporation, or by
a nonresident, in one of the following cases only:"
"1. Where the action is brought to recover damages for the
breach of a contract, made within the state or relating to property
situated within the state at the time of the making thereof."
"2. Where it is brought to recover real property situated within
the state, or a chattel, which is replevied within the state."
"3. Where the cause of action arose within the state, except
where the object of the action is to affect the title to real
property situated without the state."
These sections, it is insisted, gave the state court
jurisdiction, and it follows that the circuit court had
jurisdiction. But, granting the existence of a cause of action, it
is not every service upon an officer of a corporation which will
give the state court jurisdiction of a foreign corporation. This
was declared in
Goldey v. Morning News, 156 U.
S. 518. The case arose in New York, and the question
presented was
"whether, in a personal action against a corporation which
neither is incorporated nor does business within the state, nor has
any agent or property therein, service of the summons upon its
president, temporarily within the jurisdiction, is sufficient
service upon the corporation."
As there was a difference between the rulings of the state court
of New York and the circuit courts of the United States
Page 190 U. S. 411
on the question, it was elaborately considered "upon principle
and in the light of previous decisions of this Court." The
decisions were examined, and the question was answered in the
negative, and it was announced, as
"an elementary principle of jurisprudence that a court of
justice cannot acquire jurisdiction over the person of one who has
no residence within its territorial jurisdiction except by actual
service of notice within the jurisdiction upon him or upon some one
authorized to accept service in his behalf, or by his waiver, by
general appearance or otherwise, of the want of due service.
Whatever effect a constructive service may be allowed in the courts
of the same government, it cannot be recognized as valid by the
courts of any other government."
It was also held that the defendant, by filing a petition for
removal, did not waive defects in the service of summons, and that
objection could be made of such service in the circuit court of the
United States in the same manner as if the action had been
originally commenced there.
Goldey v. Morning News was
affirmed in
Wabash Western Railway v. Brow, 164 U.
S. 271.
The principle announced in
Goldey v. Morning News
covers the case at bar. The residence of an officer of a
corporation does not necessarily give the corporation a domicil in
the state. He must be there officially -- there representing the
corporation in its business.
St. Clair v. Cox,
106 U. S. 350. In
other words, a corporation must be doing business there, and,
recognizing the necessity of this, the circuit court referred that
issue to a master. The decision upon the issue was adverse to the
contention of the plaintiff, and we cannot say that it was not
sustained by the evidence and the presumptions which must be
conceded to the report of a master and the judgment of the lower
court. The defendant was competent to convey its property to the
Castner Electrolytic Alkali Company, and afterwards make the
locality of its own business Providence and Saltville. Whether the
transfer to the latter company was fraudulent we certainly cannot
decide from this record, and the bylaw, which provided for a
monthly meeting in New York, could not of itself keep the
corporation in New York. The testimony is positive that no business
of the corporation
Page 190 U. S. 412
was done in New York City after the transfer of the Niagara
Falls plant; that all of the business of the corporation was
conducted at Providence, except of a purely manufacturing
character, which was conducted at Saltville.
The following is an extract from the testimony of the secretary
and treasurer:
"The offices of the Mathieson Alkali Works at Providence
conducted all the business of the company except that of a purely
manufacturing character, which was conducted at Saltville. They
keep there the general books of account, the books of record, the
stock books. They had charge of the general course of the company's
affairs and transacted its finances, collected the money and the
bills. In fact, attended to all the business which generally comes
under the conduct of a company's general office. This was done
solely at Providence, and nowhere else."
And he further testified that all of the goods of the
corporation were sold at Providence. The affidavits filed by the
defendants were as positive as the oral testimony. The order of the
Circuit Court is therefore
Affirmed.