McCabe v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.

13 F. 827
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa
DecidedApril 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 F. 827 (McCabe v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCabe v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 13 F. 827 (circtnia 1882).

Opinion

Love, D. J.

The plaintiff contends that a foreign corporation cannot in any case plead the statuto of limitations in this state because it is a non-resident of the state. It is an artificial person existing only by the law of its creation. It has no existence and can have no existence outside of the state by whose laws it has been created. It cannot change its abode; it is incapable of emigration; its fixed residence is in the state of its creation. It may have agents in other states; it may do business in them; it may, by the laws of such states, sue and be sued therein; hut it can have but one residence, which must bo and is in the state to which it owes its existence.

This is the plaintiff’s argument, but does it not proceed upon an erroneous assumption? Can it he truly said that a corporation has really a residence anywhere ? It is said that a corporation is an artificial person, and by a natural transition of thought a placo of residence is ascribed to this artificial person. But is it not by a mere fiction of law that personality, and residence in place, are ascribed to a corporation? What is a corporation? Would it not be more accu[828]*828rate to call it an artificial being—a mere legal entity—than an artificial person ? Doubtless a corporation is a legal being and has a legal existence in the state of its creation, but it is difficult to conceive the idea of a residence in place for it. If you search for a corporation, how will you find it and do any manner of business with it ? You will find and know the corporation by and through its agents; through them alone will you be able to do any business whatever with the corporation. The agents of the corporation can be seen; it cannot. They can be served with process; it cannot. If you wish to sue the corporation, you must make service of legal process upon the agents of the- corporate body. These agents have residences and can be found, but they are not the corporation. The president and directors are not the corporation. They may all die and none be elected to take their places;- yet the corporation still lives. The president and directors are merely the agents of the corporate body. Neither are the stockholders the corporation. They can as such neither sue nor be sued on account of the corporation. They are not even its agents to make contracts, receive notice, or accept legal service. The corporation is a something—a legal entity—an artificial being or person— entirely distinct from both the stockholders and president and directors. Now, the stockholders and the president and directors have a residence, but the ideal, invisible, legal being called the corporation has none. Indeed, the legal existence of a corporation may be in one state or place, and the residence of every stockholder, as well as the president and directors, in another, unless the law creating the corporation requires their residence in the state or place of its creation. Thus, with respect to a corporation created by the laws of New York or of Iowa, every stockholder and the president and directors might reside in New Jersey or Illinois.

Since, then, a corporation cannot be said, except in legal fiction, to have residence anywhere, non-residence cannot, in a strict sense, be ascribed to it. In construing the word “non-residence,” therefore, as used in section 2533, we must consider, not so much what may or may not be the “residence” of a corporation in the abstract, as what the legislature intended by the use of the word “non-resident” in the connection in which we find it. We must not stick in the bark; not confine our view solely to the meaning of the word “non-resident, ” but take in the whole scope of this legislation. We must consider the matter, not in the abstract, but in the concrete.

Seeing, then, that corporations cannot be said to have literally any residence in a place, and that they cannot be known and dealt with [829]*829and sued except by and through their agents, and seeing that the legislature provided in section 2611 of the same Code that foreign as well as other corporations may be sued in this state by service on the agents whom they have appointed to carry on their business here, can we doubt that the legislature intended that the presence of the agent in this state subject to process should be deemed, as to the legal purposes of a suit, with all its incidents and defenses, the presence of the corporation? Can we suppose the legislature intended that a foreign corporation might he sued in this state in the way prescribed, and yet deprived of one of the essential rights accorded to every other defendant ?

A strict and literal interpretation of section 2533 would, as against foreign corporations, rob it of all reason; for the sole reason for providing that the “time during which the defendant is a non-resident of the state shall not be included in computing any of the periods of limitation,” is to save the rights of the plaintiff, where, by reason of the defendant’s absence, the plaintiff cannot get service upon him. But the facilities for suing foreign corporations doing business in Iowa are greater than those which the law furnishes against individuals residing here. A foreign corporation may be sued in any county where its agent may be found carrying on its business, and it cannot do business without agents. An individual must be sued in the county of bis residence. To say, therefore, that a plaintiff may sue a foreign corporation anywhere in tho state, and at any time after the cause of action accrues and yet that the corporation is to be deemed a nonresident, and may not, therefore, plead the statute of limitations, is to make the statute purely arbitrary. It is equivalent to saying that the corporation shall be deemed resident, or at least present, for the purpose of being sued, but not rosidentVitli respect to this defense of the suit. This construction of the statute, while wholly unnecessary to protect the plaintiff’s rights, would work infinite detriment to foreign corporations doing business in Iowa; for with this construction they might be sued upon stale claims resting in parol, or for. personal injuries 10 or 20 years after the cause of action accrued, and long after the witnesses of such transactions have passed away. Thus would the very policy an'd purpose of the limitation law be subverted by a too literal interpretation of one of its own provisions. The legislature could surely not have intended that the statute of limitations should he so construed as to annul and defeat tho very purpose for which it ■was enacted

[830]*830There is nothing in the decisions of the supreme court of the United States, when properly understood, to impair our conviction of the soundness of the views we have expressed. That court has often laid down the doctrine that a corporation is a legal entity, having no existence beyond the limits of the state of its creation; that it cannot change its abode; that it cannot migrate from one state to another; that it cannot at will transfer itself as a legal being or person from one jurisdiction to another, etc. This doctrine is undoubtedly entirely sound, but what does it decide as to the mere residence of the corporation, and, more especially, as to the meaning of the word “non-resident,” as used in the Iowa statute? Legal existence and residence are by no means the same thing. Indeed, while the artificial being called a corporation has a clearly-defined legal existence, who can safely affirm that, considered in the abstract and apart from its agents, it has any residence whatever ? This abstract being, this incorporeal legal entity, cannot, for manifest reasons, migrate from one state to another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccabe-v-illinois-cent-r-co-circtnia-1882.