An objection to the jurisdiction of the district court based on
the defendant's being a corporation not doing business in the state
and upon want of representative capacity in the person served is
not waived by answering to the merits after a motion to quash the
service is overruled where the answer reasserts the jurisdictional
point also, where the defendant participates in the trial only by
reiterating the objection, and where the judge presiding treats the
ruling on the motion as conclusive because made by an
associate.
Provision made by a corporation for payment of its bonds and
coupons at an office in a particular state and payment of coupons
accordingly does not constitute such a doing of business in that
state as renders the corporation liable to be sued there. So
held where the action was upon some of the bonds.
Page 244 U. S. 50
There is no merit in the proposition that, as a basis for
determining jurisdiction, the property of a corporation must be
regarded as translated from its home state to another state when
mortgaged to a trust company of the latter to secure bonds made
payable there.
Reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE White delivered the opinion of the court:
Averring themselves to be citizens of the United States, the one
residing in the City of New York and the other in Boston,
Massachusetts, the defendants in error, in April, 1914, sued in the
Supreme Court of the State of New York to recover from the
plaintiff in error the principal and interest of certain bonds
issued by the plaintiff in error, alleged to be a corporation
created by the laws of Ohio. The summons was served upon a director
and vice-president of the corporation, residing in the City of New
York. The corporation, appearing specially for that purpose, on the
ground of diversity of citizenship, removed the cause to the
District Court of the United States for the Southern District of
New York, and, on the filing of the record in that court, again
solely appearing for such purpose, moved to vacate the service of
summons on the ground that the corporation was created by the laws
of the State of Ohio, and was solely engaged in carrying on its
business at Toledo in that state -- that is, in the operation of
street railways and the furnishing of electrical energy for light
and other purposes. The motion to vacate expressly alleged that the
corporation was prosecuting no
Page 244 U. S. 51
business in the State of New York, and that the person upon whom
the summons was served, although concededly an officer of the
corporation, had no authority whatever to transact business for or
represent the corporation in the State of New York. On the papers,
affidavits, and documents submitted, the motion to vacate was
refused, and an answer was subsequently filed by the corporation
setting up various defenses to the merits, and besides reasserting
the challenge to the jurisdiction. At the trial, presided over by a
different judge from the one who had heard and adversely disposed
of the challenge to the jurisdiction, the court, treating the
ruling on that subject as conclusive, declined therefore to
entertain the request of the corporation to consider the matter as
urged in the answer. After this ruling, the corporation refused to
take part in the trial on the merits except to the extent that, by
way of objections to evidence, requests for rulings, and
instructions to the jury, it restated and reurged its previous
contention as to jurisdiction. There was a verdict and judgment for
the plaintiffs, and this direct writ of error to review alone the
ruling as to jurisdiction was prosecuted, the record containing the
certificate of the trial judge, as required by the statute.
Upon the theory that, as there was diversity of citizenship, the
challenge to the jurisdiction involved merely authority over the
person, it is insisted that, even if the objection be conceded to
have been well taken, it was subject to be waived, and was waived
below, and therefore is not open. This must be first disposed of.
The contention rests upon the proposition that because, after the
motion to vacate had been overruled, an answer to the merits was
filed, therefore the right to assail the jurisdiction was waived.
But this disregards the fact that the answer did not waive, but in
terms reiterated, the plea to the jurisdiction. It further
disregards the fact that the court treated the subject as not open
for consideration
Page 244 U. S. 52
because of the previous ruling on the motion to vacate.
Moreover, as it has been settled that the right to review by direct
writ of error a question of jurisdiction may not be availed of
until after final judgment (
McLish v. Roff, 141 U.
S. 661), it follows that the contention must be either
that there is no right to review at all or that it can only be
enjoyed by waiving all defense as to the merits and submitting to
an adverse judgment. The contention, however, has been conclusively
adversely disposed of.
St. Louis Southwestern R. Co. v.
Alexander, 227 U. S. 218.
Leaving aside the capacity of the person upon whom the summons
was served, which we shall hereafter consider, the facts upon which
the question of jurisdiction depends are briefly these: the
corporation was created by the laws of the State of Ohio, had its
principal establishment and business at Toledo, and carried on no
business in the State of New York unless the contrary conclusion
results from the following statement: in 1901, the corporation
issued its bonds and secured the same by mortgage. The trustee
under the mortgage was the United States Mortgage & Trust
Company of the City of New York, and the bonds were delivered to
that company, to be certified in accordance with the provisions of
the deed. The bonds were subject to registry, and became due and
were payable on July 1, 1909, "at the fiscal office of said company
in the city of New York," and the semiannual interest coupons were
also payable "at the fiscal office of said company in the City of
New York." Prior to 1909, when the company defaulted in the payment
of the principal and interest on its bonds, the interest coupons
were paid at the office of a commercial firm in New York
representing the company for such purpose, but that representation
wholly ceased after the default, and from that date until this suit
was brought, about five years later, the company had no office for
any purpose in the State of New York, and transacted no business
therein.
Page 244 U. S. 53
The reason which controlled the court below, and the sole
contention here relied upon, therefore, was and is that the
provision for the payment of the bonds and coupons at an office in
the City of New York constituted a doing of business in New York,
so as to afford jurisdiction there, and that such result continued
to operate years after the office for such purpose had ceased to
exist, upon the ground that, for the purpose of jurisdiction over
the corporation, it must be conclusively presumed to have continued
to maintain an office in the City of New York for the purpose
stated. But we think, from either point of view, the contention is
without merit -- the first, because the mere provision for a place
of payment in the City of New York of the bonds and the coupons
annexed to them at their maturity, and their payment at such place,
was in no true sense the carrying on by the corporation in New York
of the business which it was chartered to carry on, however much it
may have been an agreement by the corporation to pay in New York an
obligation resulting from the carrying on by it of its business in
the State of Ohio. And this view necessarily disposes of the
proposition in the second aspect, since the indulging in the
fiction of the existence of an office for the payment of coupons
could not produce an effect greater than that which could be
produced by the real existence of the office.
So far as concerns the capacity of the person upon whom the
summons was served, irrespective of the doing of business by the
corporation in the state, we do not expressly notice the various
contentions by which, under such a view, jurisdiction is sought to
be supported, but content ourselves with saying that we think they
are all plainly without merit.
Although what we have said in substance meets and disposes of
all the contentions relied upon to sustain the jurisdiction, we
have not expressly noticed them all, because of their obvious want
of merit -- a situation which
Page 244 U. S. 54
is illustrated by the mere statement of a contention made that,
as the trustee under the mortgage was a New York corporation in
whom the title to the mortgaged property for the purposes of the
trust was vested, therefore all the property of the corporation
must be metaphysically considered to have been translated from the
State of Ohio to the State of New York, and used as a basis of
jurisdiction in such latter state.
Reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss the
complaint for want of jurisdiction.