Alleghany Co. v. Allen
Alleghany Co. v. Allen
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only point that has been considered is that made by counsel for the defendants, viz., that a contract that is unenforceable at the locus contractus is void everywhere. Numerous decisions, domestic and foreign, are cited to the effect that the courts of a state will not lend their aid to carry into effect contracts that contravene the legislative policy of such state. These cases establish the proposition that the plaintiffs contract was unenforceable in the state where it was made, but they do not to any degree tend to establish the proposition -that such contracts are void elsewhere. This hiatus is thus bridged in the brief o-f counsel for - the defendants :
“The notion that a contract attempted to be made in one state, but void by the laws of that state, can be valid elsewhere, is a legal absurdity. The validity of a contract must always be determined by the- lex loci contractus. Dacosta v. Davis, 4 Zab. 319; Columbia Fire Insurance Co. v. Kinyon, 8 Vroom 33; Atwater v. WalKer, 1 C. E. Gr. 42; Manhattan, &c., Association v. Massarelli, 42 Atl. Rep. 284, 285.
Tbe proposition as stated is a petitio principii, and none of the authorities cited support the reasoning of counsel as applied to a statutory requirement of the character under consideration.
The actual state of the law in this respect is that wherever extra-territorial effect is given to state interdicts of this sort it is upon principles of comity and not because contracts made in contravention of such interdicts are, ipso facto, void. This is peculiarly so with respect to legislative restrictions upon the business of foreign corporations. A corporation strictissimi juris has no life beyond the boundaries of the state that created it. Its existence elsewhere is due solely to comity. As an abstract proposition' every state determines for itself whether it will recognize any corporate bodies but those of its own creation, and as a practical question it decides the terms upon which foreign corporations shall be permitted to invade its territory. In aid of the legislative policy so declared the courts of a state will refuse to entertain suits to enforce obligations that have arisen in the course of transactions thus reprobated. To this extent such obligations lack the sanction of law, but to designate them as void in the sense that immoral or prohibited acts are void is an inexact use of terms. State policies differ in nothing more widely than in their attitude toward corporate affairs, each government having plenary power to enforce its own policy within its own borders, and having no power to impose such policy upon others. Whether comity as a branch of private international law should be-extended to this class of regulations, either by enforcing the penalties attached to their violation or by taking note of the local unenforceability of the contracts resulting therefrom, is not now decided. A forcible illustration against such a doctrine is found in our own reports in the case of Fries v. Hendrickson, 16 Vroom 555. In that case a warrant for confessing judgment was included in the body of a promissory note made in this state and hence by our stat
The point that upon principles of comity we should refuse to enforce the contract set up by the plaintiff’s declaration being unequivocally disclaimed by counsel of defendant, is not passed upon.
Plaintiff is entitled to judgment upon its demurrer.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.