A state law for securing jurisdiction over foreign corporations
in proceedings in the state courts by requiring appointment of
agents upon whom process may be served, applicable alike to actions
by residents or nonresidents, clearly does not violate due process
in not applying to transitory actions arising outside the state; a
contention to the contrary made by plaintiff foreign corporation is
frivolous, and will not support a writ of error. P.
257 U. S.
534.
Writ of error dismissed.
Error to review a judgment of the Court of Appeals of Louisiana
affirming a judgment of a district court of the state and
dismissing for want of jurisdiction an action for breach of
contract brought by the railroad against the Boat Oar Company.
Page 257 U. S. 534
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the judgment of the highest court of
the State of Louisiana to which the case could be taken. The
plaintiff, the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, a Missouri
corporation, sued the defendant company, the Clarendon Boat Oar
Company, a New York company, for damages in the District Court of
Richland Parish, for the breach of an affreightment contract
entered into in the State of Arkansas and to be performed in that
state. The defendant appeared solely to except to the jurisdiction.
The district court sustained the exception, and, on appeal to the
Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit, this ruling was affirmed and
the cause dismissed. The supreme court of the state refused to
entertain an appeal.
Act 243 of 1912, p. 543, and Act 267 of 1914, p. 532, of the
Annual Laws of Louisiana provide that service on foreign
corporations may be made on any agent which the corporation has
designated, and require that every foreign corporation doing
business in the state shall file a written declaration with the
Secretary of the state, showing its domicile and the place or
places where it is to do business and designating its agent,
resident in the parish where its business is to be done, and that
service on said agent, whether personal or domiciliary, shall be a
valid service on it. The Court of Appeal in this case held,
following what it deemed to be the holding by the Louisiana Supreme
Court in the case of
Watkins v. North American Land &
Timber Co., 106 La. 621, that the Louisiana statute was not
intended to give the state courts jurisdiction over foreign
corporations by service on agents appointed thereunder in
transitory actions arising in another state. The action of the
supreme court in refusing to entertain an appeal in this cause
shows this to be the
Page 257 U. S. 535
authoritative construction of the statute by the state
courts.
This writ of error is based on the theory that the statute of
Louisiana, thus construed denies the plaintiff in error due process
of law and the equal protection of the laws in contravention of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution. In the
Watkins case,
supra, the supreme court of the
state held that the provisions of the foreign corporation law
furnished equal opportunity to residents and nonresidents to sue
foreign corporations. The contention comes down to this, therefore,
that it is a lack of due process for a state statute of procedure
to fail to furnish a person, within the limits of the state, power
to sue a nonresident corporation and take judgment for a cause of
action arising in another state. Under § 2 of Article IV of
the federal Constitution, the citizens of each state are entitled
to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states.
This secures citizens of one state the right to resort to the
courts of another equally with the citizens of the latter state,
but where the citizens of the latter state are not given a process
for reaching foreign corporations, it is not apparent how
noncitizens can claim it. Provisions for making foreign
corporations subject to service in the state is a matter of
legislative discretion, and a failure to provide for such service
is not a denial of due process. Still less is it incumbent upon a
state in furnishing such process to make the jurisdiction over the
foreign corporation wide enough to include the adjudication of
transitory actions not arising in the state. Indeed, so clear is
this that, in dealing with statutes providing for service upon
foreign corporations doing business in the state upon agents whose
designation as such is especially required, this Court has
indicated a leaning toward a construction, where possible, that
would exclude from their operation causes of action not arising in
the business done by them in the state.
Mitchell
Furniture
Page 257 U. S. 536
Co. v. Selden Breck Construction Co., ante,
257 U. S. 213;
Old Wayne Mutual Life Association v. McDonough,
204 U. S. 22;
Simon v. Southern Railway, 236 U.
S. 115,
236 U. S. 130.
The latter case was a Louisiana case under this same law. In these
circumstances and this state of the authorities in this Court, it
is frivolous to claim that a statute of procedure by its failure to
give jurisdiction over foreign corporations, in transitory actions
arising in another state, constitutes a lack of due process of
which plaintiff in error can complain. In such a case, the writ
must be dismissed.
Farrell v. O'Brien, 199 U. S.
89,
199 U. S. 100;
Empire state-Idaho Mining Co. v. Hanley, 205 U.
S. 225,
205 U. S. 232;
Goodrich v. Ferris, 214 U. S. 71,
214 U. S. 79;
Toop v. Ulysses Land Co., 237 U.
S. 580,
237 U. S. 583;
Piedmont Power & Light Co. v. Town of Graham,
253 U. S. 193,
253 U. S. 195.
The writ of error is dismissed.