Western Electrical Co. v. Pickett

51 Colo. 415
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1911
DocketNo. 6552
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 51 Colo. 415 (Western Electrical Co. v. Pickett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Electrical Co. v. Pickett, 51 Colo. 415 (Colo. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hill

delivered the opinion of the court:

This controversy is over the meaning to be given a portion of General Sections 904 and 910, Revised Statutes, 1908; that portion of Section 904 involved reads:

“No such corporation, joint stock company or association shall have or exercise any corporate powers or hold or acquire any real or personal property, franchises, rights or privileges, or be permitted to do any business or prosecute or defend in any suit in this state until the said fee shall have been paid.”

The portion of Section 910 involved, reads:

“No corporation * * * of any foreign state powers or acquire or hold any real or personal prop- or kingdom * * * shall exercise any corporate erty, or any franchises, rights or privileges, or do any business or prosecute or defend in any suit, in this .state until it shall have received from the secretary of this state a certificate setting forth that full payment has been made by such corporation.”

On January 12th, 1906, the plaintiff in error, a non-resident corporation, attempted the institution of this action by filing its complaint and causing a summons to be issued thereon. Thereafter, first by mo[417]*417tion and then by answer, the defendants challenged the right of the plaintiff to prosecute this action, it being a foreign corporation, organized for pecuniary profit, was doing business in the state of Colorado, and the transactions out of which this litigation arose accrued in this state while it was doing business here. Also, the defendants pleaded the statute of limitations. The cause was tried to the court upon April 4th, 1908, upon an agreed statement of facts together with a special demurrer. Judgment was for the defendants for costs. The plaintiff brings the case here for review upon error.

The allegations of the complaint and the admitted facts justify the conclusion, that the plaintiff was a non-resident corporation organized for pecuniary profit; that it was doing business in this state within the meaning of the statute; that all the transactions involved transpired in this state so that no questions of interstate commerce, comity between sister states, or otherwise, are involved.

The record discloses that at the time the original complaint was filed (on January 12, 1906) the action was not then barred by the statute of limitations, but would have been on the 10th day of July, 1906, unless, by some action of the plaintiff, its operation was sus-. pended.

On March 7th, 1906, the defendants, by motion, raised the question of the right of the plaintiff to prosecute this action, it not having then complied with the statute. This motion appears to have been overruled. Thereafter, and on the 16th of July, 1906, the defendants by answer raised the same question. On June 22nd, 1907, which was before final trial, the plaintiff complied with the laws of Colorado in respect to foreign corporations.

This presents three questions for consideration. First, did the plaintiff, it not having then complied [418]*418with our laws, have a right to institute this suit or proceed with any steps in its prosecution after its right to do so was challenged ? Second, did the plaintiff have the right to proceed with the prosecution of its suit after it was challenged, by thereby complying with the laws of this state in respect to foreign corporations? Third, if the plaintiff had the right to proceed with the prosecution of its action by thereafter complying with the laws of this state in respect to foreign corporations, did the attempted institution of its action in January, 1906, have the effect to at that time suspend the operation of the statute of limitations and keep it so suspended until it thereafter complied with the law, or did it continue to run in favor of the defendants until the law in this respect, was complied with by the non-resident corporation?

If the last question is answered in the negative, it makes unnecessary any decision upon the first two. There seems to be an irreconcilable conflict of authorities upon the entire question of such statutes. One line of authorities holds that all such contracts made by foreign corporations’doing business in this state prior to the compliance with the act, are void and cannot thereafter, or at all, be enforced. — Section 7950, Yol. 6, 1st Ed., Thompson on Corporations.

Another line of cases holds that contracts made by such corporation while doing business in this state with citizens of the state, before complying with such conditions, are not absolutely, void, but the statute merely operates to suspend the remedy of the foreign corporation in the courts of the state upon such contracts until it -shall have complied with the statutory conditions. This is upon the theory that until such compliance, an action by the foreign corporation to enforce the contract is prematurely brought, so that an answer setting up the non-compliance by the foreign corporation would be an answer in the nature of a [419]*419plea in abatement, and judgment in favor of the defendant would operate merely to abate the suit. — Section 7956, Thompson on Corporations, Vol. 6, 1st Ed.

This court appears to be committed to this last line of authorities upon the question that such contracts are not' absolutely void. — Utley et al. v. The Clark-Gardner L. M. Co., 4 Colo. 369; Fritts v. Palmer, 132 U. S. 282; The International Trust Co. v. Leschen & Sons Co., 11 Colo. 299.

Other well reasoned cases, under similar statutes, seem to take the view that the plea in abatement is good, and upon account thereof an action instituted prior to a compliance with the act should be dismissed and the plaintiff be compelled to comply with the provisions of the statute, and then to institute a new suit in order to be allowed to prosecute its alleged cause of action.

In the case of Caesar v. Capell, 83 Fed. 403, in commenting upon a somewhat similar statute of the State of Tennessee, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Hammond, quoted with approval from Vol. 6 Thompson on Corporations, as follows:

“A failure to comply with the regulations of the statute does not make the contract absolutely void, but only operates to suspend the remedy until such time as the foreign insurance company shall comply with the statute; that until such compliance should take place any suit brought to enforce the contract would be only prematurely brought, and a plea setting up the defense should be, not a plea in bar because of the invalidity of the contract, but only a plea in abatement to dismiss that particular suit.”

To the same effect is Crefeld Mills v. Goddard, 69 Fed. 141, where it was held that the effect of such a statute is not to ■ invalidate contracts made in the state by a foreign corporation doing business there without a certificate, but only to suspend the remedy [420]*420until such certificate has been procured. The New York act involved in that case states, in substance, that no foreign corporation shall do business in that state without having first procured from the secretary of state a certificate, etc., and further, that no such corporation doing business in that state without such certificate shall maintain an action in the state upon any contract made by it in that state until it shall have .procured such certificate.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Colo. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-electrical-co-v-pickett-colo-1911.