Grant v. Greene

59 Misc. 1, 111 N.Y.S. 1089
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 Misc. 1 (Grant v. Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Greene, 59 Misc. 1, 111 N.Y.S. 1089 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Leventritt, J.

The plaintiffs, suing on behalf of themselves and of all other stockholders of the Cobre Grande Copper Company, similarly situated, seek to have the defendant Cananea Consolidated Copper Company, a Mexican corporation, adjudged to be the holder, in trust, for the benefit of the Cobre Grande Copper Company, an Arizona corporation, of certain mines and mining properties situated in the Republic of Mexico, and to compel the Cananea company, William C. Greene and the Greene Consolidated Copper Company, a West Virginia corporation, to account to the Cobre Grande Copper Company and to the plaintiffs for the income and profits arising from the work, use and occupation of such mines and mining properties. The complaint alleges in substance that the Greene Consolidated Copper Company was organized as a holding company of the stock of both the Cananea and Cobre Grande companies and to take over and dispose of the ores produced by those companies.

The action was commenced by the personal sendee of a summons within the State on* the defendant Greene, individually, and as president of the three corporations named. The Cananea company appeared specially and moved to vacate the service on the ground of want of jurisdiction. The order entered on the denial of that motion was. affirmed by the Court of Appeals. Grant v. Cananea Consol. Copper Co., 189 N. Y. 241.

The Cobre Grande company also appeared specially and made application to vacate the service upon it on the ground that at the time thereof William C. Greene was neither an officer nor a director of the company, nor authorized to accept service of process on its behalf. That motion was granted. Thereafter the plaintiffs made several unsuccessful attempts to effect personal service upon officers of the Cobre company within the State and to discover the presence within the State of any representative of the company upon [4]*4whom service could be made. They then obtained an order permitting the service of the summons by publication or, in the alternative, personally upon an officer of the company without the State. The Cobre company, again appearing specially, now moves on the papers upon which it was granted to.vacate the order of publication, alleging absence of jurisdiction as a ground of vacatur.

The action is governed by section 1780- of the Code, which provides that an action against a foreign corporation may be maintained by a resident of the State for any cause of action. The substituted service permitted by the order sought to be vacated is controlled by sections 438 and 439 of the Code. Section 438 provides that an order directing the service of a summons without the State or by publication may be made when the defendant to be served is a foreign corporation; and section 439 provides that the order shall • be founded upon a verified complaint showing a sufficient cause of action against the defendant to be served and proof by affidavit, when the defendant is a foreign corporation, that the plaintiff has been or will be unable, with due diligence, to make personal service of the summons.

The first ground of the defendant’s motion is that the failure of the plaintiffs to allege in their complaint the jurisdictional facts of their residence in this State is fatal to the order of publication, since, through the omission of the appropriate allegation, the complaint fails to show the “ sufficient cause of action ” which section 439 of the Code requires. The affidavit of the plaintiff bTettie L. Grant, read in support of the order, contained proof that the plaintiffs were residents of the State; but the defendant contends that such proof does not dispense with the necessity of alleging residence in the complaint.

The provisions of section 1780 are broad and admit of no qualification. The language is: “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.”

Before the Revised Statutes, .the rule was that a foreign corporation could not be sued at law m invitum in the courts of this State. The reason for such a rule was the supposed [5]*5difficulty of serving process, since it had been held that the provisions of the Absent Debtor Act did not apply to the case of foreign corporations, and the reasoning of the court in McQueen v. Middletown Mfg. Co., 16 Johns. 5, had made it clear that in no other way than by attachment could a foreign corporation be compelled to submit to our jurisdiction. Thereupon, the revisers, apparently appreciating the force of that decision, declared that the fair protection of our own citizens required that provision be made to render such corporations amenable to the laws of this State. 5 Edm. Stat. 742. Following out the spirit of this declaration, new sections were incorporated in the Revised Statutes which were drawn along the lines of the statute law relating to absent debtors. These provisions required that suits in the Supreme Court might be commenced by attachment. 2 R. S. 340, §§ 15, 30. In 1842 (Laws 1842, chap. 197, § 5) there was provision made for the publication of a notice that an attachment had issued.

The Code of Procedure, adopted in 1848, contained no mention of the manner of commencing an action against a foreign corporation; and section 427 thereof provided in part that “An action against a corporation, created by or under the laws of any other state, government or country, may be brought in the supreme court, or the court of common pleas for the city and county of Mew York * * *. By a resident of this state, for any cause of action ”. Under the Code of Procedure, the three modes of commencing actions, by capias, summons and declaration, were abandoned and the present summons and complaint were substituted. First Report Comrs. 131.

In 1849, at the same session of the Legislature at which the Code of Procedure was enacted, chapter 107 of the Laws of that year was passed, entitled “An act to extend the remedies at law against foreign insurance companies ”, and providing that suits might be brought in the Supreme and Superior Courts and in the Common Pleas against any foreign corporation, upon any cause of action arising in this State, by summons and complaint “ together with an attachment ” as then provided by laws of 1849,chap. [6]*6107, § 15. This act retained the attachment provided for in the Revised Statutes as a conjoint process by which to commence an action, to be served with the summons and complaint and to be levied as prescribed. But it added a summons and complaint as necessary process and required these to be served, as provided in sections 134 and 135 of the Code, either by delivery of a copy to the president or other named officer, or, where the person to be served could not be found within the State and had property therein, by publication.

The singular title of the act of 1849 led to some confusion (Burns v. Provincial Ins. Co., 35 Barb. 525; Jones v. Norwich Trans. Co., 50 id. 194), and the courts were perplexed in consequence of the almost simultaneous passage of that act and section 427 of the Code of Procedure. The opinion prevailed, however, that both remained in force; and, accordingly, the commissioners to revise the statutes framed the remodelling of both statutes upon that theory and substituted section 1780 of the present Code for both section 427 of the former Code and section 15 of the act of 1849. Throop’s Code, note to § 1780.

I have given this history to show that the provisions of the present Code are to be taken at their full value, unrestricted by constructive qualification.

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Grant v. Greene
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Misc. 1, 111 N.Y.S. 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-greene-nysupct-1908.