Textile Banking Co. v. Colonial Chemical Corporation

285 F. Supp. 824, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10578
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedNovember 9, 1967
DocketCiv. A. 1648
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 285 F. Supp. 824 (Textile Banking Co. v. Colonial Chemical Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Textile Banking Co. v. Colonial Chemical Corporation, 285 F. Supp. 824, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10578 (N.D. Ga. 1967).

Opinion

ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS

SIDNEY O. SMITH, Jr., District Judge.

This is a suit in which plaintiff seeks to recover $17,527.67 plus interest and attorneys fees, upon a certain factoring agreement entered into between the parties. The particular indebtedness at issue in this case comes from accounts receivable created by the sale of defendant’s products to Spenser Rubber Coating Co. of Dalton, Georgia. The accounts receivable were subsequently assigned and sold to plaintiff under the factoring agreement between plaintiff and defendant. Suit was filed on February 26,1965. In an order dated October 4, 1965, this Court characterized this case thusly. “* * * [T]he file indicates a chronology of discovery and counter-discovery running rampant. Apparently sufficient effort has been expended on the preliminary skirmishes to have fought the main battle several times over.” Subsequent developments have shown the latter to be a mild understatement. Defendant now moves that this Court dismiss 1 the Complaint with prejudice on the following grounds: (1) lack of capacity to sue in this Court; (2) failure to file an intangible tax return with the Georgia Revenue Department; (3) failure to obtain a permit to commence business with the Georgia Superintendent of Banks.

The most troublesome of defendant’s arguments in support of this motion to dismiss is the argument that plaintiff lacks the capacity to sue by virtue of its *826 failure to qualify to do business in Georgia.

Rule 17(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that: “The capacity of a corporation to sue or be sued shall be determined by the law under which it was organized.” But there is a rather important qualification of this general rule. In a case involving local law and not federal law, under the rule of Angel v. Bullington, 330 U.S. 183, 67 S.Ct. 657, 91 L.Ed. 832 (1947), the plaintiff must have an enforceable remedy in the state in which the federal court is sitting before the plaintiff is entitled to relief in the federal court. Professor Moore explains the rule in this manner.

While technically the corporation may have capacity to sue in the federal court pursuant to Rule 17(b) it cannot recover where recovery would not be possible in the state court. Any valid state law closing its courts to a foreign corporation which is not qualified to do business in the state, must, therefore, be given effect in the federal courts of such state in a case based solely on diversity or alienage jurisdiction. To this extent Rule 17(b) has been qualified.

3 Moore’s Federal Practice P7.21 at 1397 (2d ed. 1967). The Georgia law 2 applicable in this case is Georgia Code § 22-1501 which provides:

Recognition of foreign corporations. —Corporations created by other States or foreign Governments shall be recognized in the courts of this State only by comity, and so long as the same comity is extended in the courts of such other States or foreign Governments to corporations created by this State. 3

Under this code section the test is not whether a foreign corporation is doing business in this state but rather the test is whether the state in which the corporation was incorporated would allow a Georgia corporation in the same position to bring suit in that state. 4 If such an action could be brought then the Georgia courts will allow the action in its own courts but a negative answer would mean that the Georgia courts would refuse to allow the suit to be entertained.

In order to answer the ultimate question of capacity to sue, it is first necessary to examine with a greater degree of particularity the activities or lack of activities of Textile Banking Company in the state of Georgia. The volume of prior discovery in the instant case makes impossible a complete restatement of all the material on this point. The affidavits of David W. Johnson tendered in support of plaintiff’s position indicate the following:

(1) Textile Banking Company does not and has never maintained an agent, office, or place of doing business in Georgia.

(2) Textile Banking Company has never maintained a bank account in Georgia.

*827 (3) Textile Banking Company has never held title to any real or personal property within Georgia “other than that title necessary to secure an indebtedness such as the title conveyed under the laws of this state by a bill of sale to secure debt or a deed to secure debt or other assignment.”

(4) Textile Banking Company does not maintain any personnel within Georgia to service its loans, “nor does it have any connection with any other corporation, nor is it using any other corporation within the State of Georgia to service any of its loans, all of said loans .being serviced by it at its offices in the City of New York.”

Two other assertions or more precisely conclusions are made in these affidavits which are controverted by defendant.

(5) “As a matter of routine, no periodic visits are made to this state by any officers, directors or employees of Textile Banking Company” to service these loans.

(6) All transactions between Textile Banking Company and Colonial Chemical Corporation were interstate in nature since all contracts were subject to final approval at the New York office and all accounts were serviced in New York.

Plaintiff characterizes its visits to Georgia as “infrequent and occasional,” while defendant would characterize them as “regular and systematic.” Defendant points out that in the two years preceding February 28, 1965, 20 different employees and agents of plaintiff visited in Georgia on 98 separate visits for the following purposes — collateral appraisal, appearance as witnesses, review of credit lines, customer-client relations, collection, appearances as legal counsel, foreclosure, and attendance of creditors’ meetings. See Affidavit of David W. Johnson, dated October 18, 1967. Defendant also stresses the admission that Textile Banking had loaned substantial amounts of money to Georgia corporations, specifically on December 31, 1963, $3,085,800. was owed by Georgia clients to Textile Banking Company, and one year later $1,912,200. was outstanding.

Section 1312 of the New York Business Corporation Law, McKinney’s Consol. Laws, c. 4, provides:

Actions or special proceedings by unauthorized foreign corporations.

(a) A foreign corporation doing business in this state without authority shall not maintain any action or special proceeding in this state unless and until such corporation has been authorized to do business in this state and it has paid to the state all fees, penalties and franchise taxes for the years or parts thereof during which it did business in this state without authority. * * *

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Related

Oldfield v. Alston
77 F.R.D. 735 (N.D. Georgia, 1978)
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384 F. Supp. 1070 (N.D. Georgia, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 F. Supp. 824, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/textile-banking-co-v-colonial-chemical-corporation-gand-1967.