Myatt v. Ponca City Land and Improvement Co.

68 L.R.A. 810, 1904 OK 15, 78 P. 185, 14 Okla. 189, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 68 L.R.A. 810 (Myatt v. Ponca City Land and Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myatt v. Ponca City Land and Improvement Co., 68 L.R.A. 810, 1904 OK 15, 78 P. 185, 14 Okla. 189, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 73 (Okla. 1903).

Opinions

Opinion of the court by

Gillette, J.:

The foregoing is as near a statement of the origin of this corporation as we are able to evolve from the 400 and more pages of record before us.

The various proceedings and transactions of this assumed corporation since the filing of its articles of incorporation are not disclosed by the record, and in the view we have taken of *199 the ease it becomes unnecessary to unravel all its mysterious manipulations and proceedings.

If anything were needed to add to or confirm our impressions of the chief object and purpose of its creation, it would be furnished by the end sought to be attained by defendant in error in this action. One commendable thing on the part of its promoters and officers in their indivdiual capacity stands out above all question, and that is they seem to have honestly attempted to keep good faith with this plaintiff, and to have performed the contract they entered into with him at the time he settled upon the townsite of Ponca City.

The plaintiff's title is derived by a straight chain from the Government to'himself and, unless tainted with some fraud upon his part, must be sustained.

There is nowhere in the case any conflict in reference to the syndicate or corporation, its object and purpose, and the persons composing it, from about the 16th of September, 1893, to the time of the organization of the defendant corporation. Neither does it seem to be anywhere disputed that the corporation was organized or attempted to be, foT the express purpose of more easily and readily transacting the business of said pre-existing syndicate.

It is urged by the plaintiff in error that the court erred in quieting the title to the lot in question in the Ponca City Land and Improvement Company, for the reason that under its charter it could not acquire and hold real estate in Oklahoma Territory.

It will be observed that the charter of this corporation did not authorize it to transact any business, or have any vitality iff the state of Kansas. In short, the announced and *200 sole and only purpose and object of its incorporation was to carry on and transact the business specified in its charter in the Territory of Oklahoma.

It is admitted upon all hands, and is now too well settled to be disputed, that the several states of this Union-are sovereign within their territorial limits, and it therefore necessarily results that their sovereignty and power to legislate, stops at their boundary lines. Kansas could not pass any act of legislation to take effect as such beyond its boundary lines. Any right, power or authority of one of the states of this Union, to he exercised and enforced beyond its borders, would have no binding force or effect as a statute of such state in the jurisdiction where such power is sought to be exercised, whatever force or effect it might have in a foreign jurisdiction would be given it by the comity of nations existing between the several states, and not proprio vigore as a statute law.

Comity is defined by Webster as, "Courtesy between equals: friendly civility,” and he gives as sjmonyms, "civility, good breeding, good will.” And comity of nations is defined as: “The courtesy by which nations recognize within their own territory, or in their own courts, the peculiar institutions of another nation; or the rights and privileges acquired by its citizens in their own landBouvier defines it as: “The most appropriate phrase to express the true foundation and extent of the obligation of the laws of one nation within the territory of another. It is derived altogether from the voluntary consent of the latter, and it is inadmissible when it is contrary to its known policy or prejudicial to its. interests. In the silence of any positive rule affirming or denying- or restraining the operation of foreign laws, courts *201 of justice presume the tacit adoption of them by their own government, unless.repugnant to its policy or prejudicial to its interest. It is not the comity of the courts, but the comity of the nation which is administered and ascertained in the same way and guided by the same reasoning, by which aLl principles of the municipal law are ascertained and guided.” (Bouvier’s L. D. p. 254; Story, ConfL. Laws, 38).

With this definition and 'exposition of the word comity it is manifest that when one sovereignty attempts to legislate for, and to create legal rights and obligations in another, comity is not consulted or invoked.

It is undoubtedly true that where, under the authority of a state, an incorporation is authorized for a purpose peculiar to that state, which is not authorized by the laws of another state, and, in the conduct of the business of such corporation, the acquisition of title to land, or the purchase and ownership of property, in such other state becomes necessary, such property may be purchased and owned, as the purchase and ownership is only ancillary to the organization of and conduct of the business in the state where such corporation was organized, and for the conduct of which the corporation is formed. But this is a distinct proposition from that by which it is contended that one state may authorize an incorporation, the primary object of which is the purchase of and speculation in lands of such other state. We cannot find an authority which goes to this extent, and upon reason we think the proposition must be denied.

Comity can only arise when a citizen, whether natural or artificial, of one state, having certain powers, rights or privileges in the state of his domicil, passes into another state and *202 there desires or attempts to exercise these same privileges or powers.

Thus viewed and understood it is indisputable that the party seeking to invoke the doctrine of comity, must first be possessed of some right, power or privilege in, the country of' his domicil, and unless he has both existence and some right or power there, he cannot through the medium of comity be awarded any in the foreign state.

Corporations are created for some purpose other than the-mere exercise of, creative power, and consequently when a corporation is attémpted to be created without giving to it any power to act in the state of its creation, it can exercise none in any foreign country.

Where one state attempts to legislate for the exercise of power solely in another state, there is no opportunity for the application of the doctrine of comity, and to recognize the binding force of such enactment upon the ground of comity would be a recognition of a legal right to exercise sovereignty beyond its territorial limits, and a surrender of sovereignty and legislative authority by the state whose limits and jurisdiction have thus been invaded and usurped. In this instance if the State of Kansas may rightfully legislate into existence a corporation with no power to act, except in Oklahoma, then it must be conceded that the legislature of Kansas has jurisdiction over Oklahoma, which by comity the courts of Oklahoma must acknowledge and enforce. No such result can be deduced from the authorities on this subject.

See.'2 of the charter of this supposed corporation reads:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 L.R.A. 810, 1904 OK 15, 78 P. 185, 14 Okla. 189, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myatt-v-ponca-city-land-and-improvement-co-okla-1903.