The power of the state to exact such conditions of outside
corporations precedent to acquisition of land within the state, and
the rule that conveyances are governed by the
lex loci rei
sitae are not affected by delivery of the deeds, etc., in
another state; the transaction does not thus become a matter of
interstate commerce.
Id.
168 Wis. 31 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 252 U. S. 501
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The court below declared null and void two separate deeds
whereby defendants in error undertook to convey to the Realty
Realization Company, a Maine corporation, certain land in Wisconsin
upon the ground that the grantee had failed to comply with the
statute of the state prescribing conditions under which foreign
corporations might acquire title to property therein. The deeds
were dated and delivered in Illinois February 28, 1913. A
subsequent deed from the Realty Company and a mortgage by its
grantee were also declared ineffective, but they need not be
separately considered here.
Wisconsin Trust Co. v. Munday,
168 Wis. 31.
At the time of the transactions in question, the applicable
statutory provisions concerning foreign corporations were
subsections 2 and 10 of § 1770b, Wisconsin Statutes 1911,
which follow:
Sec. 1770b.
"2. No corporation, incorporated or organized otherwise than
under the laws of this state, except railroad corporations,
corporations or associations created solely for religious or
charitable purposes, insurance companies and fraternal or
beneficiary corporations, societies, orders and associations
furnishing life or casualty insurance or indemnity upon the mutual
or assessment plan, shall transact business or acquire, hold, or
dispose of property in this state until such corporation shall have
caused to be filed in the office of the secretary of state a copy
of its charter, articles of association or incorporation and all
amendments thereto duly certified by the secretary of state of the
state wherein the corporation was organized. . . ."
"10. Every contract made by or on behalf of any such foreign
corporation, affecting the personal liability thereof or relating
to property within this state, before it shall have complied with
the provisions
Page 252 U. S. 502
of this section, shall be wholly void on its behalf and on
behalf of its assigns, but shall be enforceable against it or
them."
The original proceeding was instituted March 30, 1913. While it
was pending in the circuit court, the Realty Company complied with
§ 1770b and obtained a license to do business and hold
property in Wisconsin -- October, 1915. On May 11, 1917, the
legislature enacted c. 211, Laws of 1917, which amended subsection
1 of § 1770j of the statute to read:
"Any corporation organized otherwise than under the laws of this
state, having acquired, or attempted to acquire, legal title by
deed, or lease to any real property in this state, before complying
with the terms of § 1770b of the statutes, and which is now
not required to comply with said section or which has thereafter,
and before the passage of this section, complied with said section,
shall be and is hereby relieved from any disability provided in
said statute or prohibition therein contained, so far as said
section relates to the acquisition and holding of the property so
acquired or attempted to be acquired, and the title so acquired or
attempted to be acquired is hereby confirmed."
Plaintiffs in error unsuccessfully challenged the validity of
§ 1770b upon the ground of conflict with the contract clause,
§ 10, Article I, of the federal Constitution and the due
process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. They further insisted
that if § 1770j as amended by c. 211, Laws of 1917, was not so
applied as to validate the deeds in question, rights, privileges,
and immunities guaranteed to them by the Fourteenth Amendment would
be infringed.
Obviously no impairment of any federal right resulted from the
construction placed upon § 1770j as amended in 1917. Whether
that section did or did not validate a contract theretofore
unenforceable was a question for the
Page 252 U. S. 503
state court finally to decide -- it involved no right under the
Constitution or laws of the United States.
Section 1770b was enacted prior to the transactions here in
question, and the settled doctrine is that the contract clause
applies only to legislation subsequent in time to the contract
alleged to have been impaired.
Cross Lake Shooting &
Fishing Club v. Louisiana, 224 U. S. 632,
224 U. S.
639.
In support of the claim that subsection 10, § 1770b as
construed by the court below conflicts with the due process clause,
it is said:
"The contract between the defendants in error and the Realty
Company and the deeds delivered in compliance therewith were all
made in Illinois. They have been declared void in the State of
Wisconsin. So applied, the statute deprives plaintiffs in error of
their property without due process of law."
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U.
S. 578,
165 U. S. 591,
is relied upon as adequate authority to support the point
presented, but we think it is wholly irrelevant.
Where interstate commerce is not directly affected, a state may
forbid foreign corporations from doing business or acquiring
property within her borders except upon such terms as those
prescribed by the Wisconsin statute.
Fritts v. Palmer,
132 U. S. 282,
132 U. S. 288;
Chattanooga National Building & Loan Association v.
Denson, 189 U. S. 408;
Interstate Amusement Co. v. Albert, 239 U.
S. 560,
239 U. S. 568.
No interstate commerce was directly involved in the transactions
here questioned. Moreover, this Court long ago declared: "The title
to land can be acquired and lost only in the manner prescribed by
the law of the place where such land is situate."
United
States v. Crosby, 7 Cranch 115,
11 U. S. 116.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.