State Ex Rel. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. Updegraff

141 P.2d 251, 172 Or. 246, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 92
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 141 P.2d 251 (State Ex Rel. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. Updegraff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. Updegraff, 141 P.2d 251, 172 Or. 246, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 92 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

HAY, J.

This is an original proceeding in mandamus. The relator is an insurance company, a Massachusetts corporation, duly authorized to do business in this state. The respondent, George G. Updegraff, is the circuit court judge for Wheeler county.

In compliance with the laws of Oregon, the relator appointed John Lichty as its statutory attorney for service of process. Mr. Lichty resides in Portland, Multnomah county, Oregon. The only office or place of business maintained by the relator within the state of Oregon is in Portland, and it owns no property within the state of Oregon except in Multnomah county. None of its officers reside in Oregon, and it has no employees or agents except in Multnomah county.

On January 21, 1943, George R. Reed commenced an action at law against the relator in the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Wheeler county. Summons and complaint were served, within Multnomah county, on relator’s statutory agent for service. Relator made special appearance in the action by moving to quash *250 the service, on the ground that the court did not have jurisdiction over it. The respondent, as judge of the court, denied the motion to quash, and relator thereupon instituted this proceeding in mandamus, seeking to have this court command the respondent to vacate his order denying such motion. An alternative writ issued in due course, and the cause is now before us upon respondent’s demurrer thereto.

Need’s action was based upon a policy of health and accident insurance, which was issued by the relator to him in Wheeler county, Oregon. The record before us fails to disclose where the cause of action arose.

The respondent’s demurrer has the effect of admitting the truth of the material recitals of the alternative writ of mandmus. Mandamus is an appropriate remedy in this case. State ex rel. v. Latourette, 168 Or. 584, 125 P. (2d) 750; State ex rel. v. Kanzler, 129 Or. 85, 276 P. 273; State ex rel. v. Dobson, 171 Or. 492, 135 P. (2d) 794.

At common law, a corporation could be sued - only in the courts of the sovereignty of its origin. This was the rule of the early American decisions. Desper v. Continental Water Meter Co., (1884) 137 Mass. 252; McQueen v. Middletown Mfg. Co., (1819) 16 Johns. (N. Y.) 5; Robb v. Chicago & A. R. Co., (1871) 47 Mo. 540. Chief Justice Taney, in Bank of Augusta v. Earle, (1839) 13 Pet. (U. S.) 519, 10 L. Ed. 274, said that a corporation “must dwell in the place of its creation, and cannot migrate to another sovereignty.” Practical considerations, however, caused the courts to relax the common-law rule, and it is now generally held that the corporate franchise granted to a corporation by the state of its origin may be recognized in another state, and the corporation be permitted to do business therein, subject *251 to such terms and conditions as the legislature of that state may lawfully impose. 28 Am. Jur., Foreign Corporations, section 17; In re Pantlind Hotel Company, 232 Mich. 330, 205 N. W. 99, 49 A. L. R. 1291. See Aldrich v. Anchor Coal Co., 24 Or. 32, 32 P. 756, 41 Am. St. Rep. 831.

Venue statutes which discriminate unreasonably against foreign corporations, as, for example, those which subject them to suit in any county in the state, while providing that domestic corporations shall be sued only in the counties where are “found” or do business or have a representative, are generally held to be unconstitutional. 23 Am. Jur., Foreign Corporations, section 503, p. 523. The relator confidently asserts that, in a cause of action such as is involved herein, a domestic corporation can be sued only in the county wherein it maintains its principal place of business. It maintains that a foreign corporation may not lawfully be laid under a more stringent rule as to venue, and that its subjection to suit in Wheeler county, under the circumstances, unreasonably discriminates against it, in violation of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The Oregon law fixing the venue of transitory actions is section 1-403, O. C. L. A., which reads as follows:

“In all other cases the action shall be commenced and tried in the county in which the defendants, or either of them, reside or may be found at the commencement of the action; provided, that in any action founded on an alleged tort, the same may be commenced either in the county where the cause of action arose or in the county where the defendants, or one of them, resides or may be found at the commencement of the action; provided further, that if *252 none of the defendants resides in this state the action may be tried in any connty which plaintiff may designate in his complaint. ’ ’

Section 1-605, subd. (1), O. C. L. A., providing the manner in which summons is to be served upon private corporations, reads:

“If the action be against a private corporation, to the president or other head of the corporation, vice president, secretary, cashier, assistant cashier or managing agent, or, in case none of the officers of the corporation above named shall reside or have an office in the county where the cause of ■ action arose, then to any clerk or agent of such corporation who may reside ox be found in the county, ox, if no such officer be found, then by leaving a copy thereof at the residence or usual place of abode of such clerk or agent.” • ■

Construing these two sections together, this court has established the rule that transitory actions against domestic corporations may be brought either- in the county where the corporation maintains its principal place of business or in that in which the cause of action arose. Holgate v. O. P. R. R. Co., 16 Or. 123, 17 P. 859; Bailey v. Malheur Irrigation Co., 36 Or. 54, 57 P. 910; Winter v. Union Packing Co., 51 Or. 97, 93 P. 930; Davies v. Oregon P. & P. Co., 61 Or. 594, 598, 123 P. 906; Cunningham v. Klamath Lake R. Co., 54 Or. 13, 101 P. 213, 1099.

The proviso which appears in section 1-403, O. C. L. A., to the effect that any action founded on alleged tort may be commenced either in the county where-the cause of action arose or in that where the defendants, or one of them, reside or may be., found at the commencement of the action, was not present in the original *253 statute, which was enacted in 1862 (B. & C. Code, section 44), and was as follows:

“In all other cases, the action shall be commenced and tried in the county in which the defendants or either of them reside or may be found at the commencement of the action; or, if none of the parties reside in this state, the same may be tried in any county which the plaintiff may designate in his complaint.”

Holgate v. O. P. R. R. Co.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P.2d 251, 172 Or. 246, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-massachusetts-bonding-insurance-v-updegraff-or-1943.