Chase Nat. Bank of City of New York v. Gannon
Chase Nat. Bank of City of New York v. Gannon
Opinion of the Court
Dexter Lumber & Flooring Company is a Delaware corporation. On finding it insolvent, the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Pennsylvania appointed a receiver. Thereupon the Chase National Bank, a creditor of the defendant Corporation which, it should be observed, had done business in New Jersey without qualifying under its Corporation Act, sued out in a court of that state a writ of attaehment and caused a levy to be made upon the corporation’s goods and chattels in Now Jersey as though it were an “absent, fraudulent [or] absconding” debtor. 1 Comp. St. N. J. 1910, p. 132, § 1 et seq. On a hill later filed, the District Court of the United States for the District of New Jersey, adjudging the corporation insolvent within the meaning of the New Jersey Corporation Act, appointed ancillary receivers who, regarding the levy as void, demanded possession of the property so levied upon. On stipulation the property was sold and the fund held to await, and respond to, a decision of the question whether a levy upon the chattels of a foreign corporation doing business in Now Jersey without qualifying to do business is, under New Jersey law, good against the demand of ancillary receivers appointed within four months of the levy, or, stated differently, whether the District Court was right in applying the state statute (New Jersey Corporation Act) to the administration of the assets of a federal ancillary receivership. The District Court," applying the state statute, held the levy void, and the bank appealed.
The pertinent provisions of the New Jersey Corporation Act are, in substance, that every foreign corporation (with certain exceptions), before transacting any business in the state, shall file with the secretary of state a certificate containing particulars of its corporate organization (2 Comp. St. 1910, p. 3 657, § 97); that foreign corporations doing business in the state shall be subject to the provisions of the act, so far as the same can be applied to foreign corporations (2 Comp. St. 1910, p. 1657, § 96); and that all attachments and levies “against a corporation,” if insolvent, “at any time within four monlhs prior to the filing of a bill or petition against it for the appointment of a receiver, under the provisions of the act to which this act is a supplement, shall be deemed null and void.” Comp. St. Supp. 3924, § 47 — 86k.
The creditor bank admits that if the debt- or corporation had qualified to do business in New Jersey and later had been put into primary receivership by a court of that state, that court could have held the attachment and levy void under Comp. St. Supp. § 47 — 86k; but it maintains that as the debtor corporation had not so qualified and as the receivership in this ease is ancillary to one in another state, and is a federal receivership, the District Court of the United States for the District of New Jersey could not apply the New Jersey four months’ law and annul the levy.
It is certain that the District Court in
The language is also broad enough to include foreign corporations doing business within the state. It happens that a state may exclude a foreign corporation from its borders or it may admit it on such terms as it prescribes. New Jersey permits foreign corporations to do business with its people, yet only upon conditions provided by sections 96 and 97 of its Corporation Act. It imposes penalties upon foreign corporations that do business without qualifying. 2 Comp. St. 1910, p-p. .1658, 1659, §§ 9-8, 100'. Foreign corporations that qualify to do business are amenable to the provisions of section 86k in respect to executions prior to receiverships. If a foreign corporation goes into the state and does business without permission or statutory qualification, certainly it cannot by its obtrusive act escape the legal consequences which the state law imposes upon a foreign corporation formally admitted. A corporation that offends the law upon entering the state can scarcely claim to be a favorite of the law. Nor can a creditor of the offending corporation claim a preference because of the corporation’s offense. In declaring that “Foreign corporations doing business in this state shall be subject to the provisions of this [the Corporation] act, so far as the same can be applied to foreign corporations,” (section 96) the state of New Jersey made no distinction between foreign corporations which have qualified by certificate and corporations which have not qualified. When foreign corporations in either class do business there, they are, in respect to that business, subject to the state corporation law, so far as it can be applied. Albert v. Clarendon Land Co., 53 N. J. Eq. 623, 626, 23 A. 8. A section of that law provides, as we have seen, for annulling attachments made within four months of 'the appointment of receivers of insolvent corporations. That provision of the law, plainly intended to protect general or local creditors and not being opposed by higher law, can be applied, as is indicated in Goff v. Goff Electro P. B. Co., 89 N. J. Eq. 258, 259, 104 A. 193; Fox v. Pathe Exchange, 106 N. J. Eq. 522, 524, 151 A. 463; Albert v. Clarendon Land Co., 53 N. J. Eq. 623, 626, 23 A. 8. As no distinction is there made between primary and ancillary receivers, we take it none was intended and none exists. Hence the defendant foreign corporation, having done business in New Jersey, is (with its execution creditors) subject to its law in respect to attachments and receivers which is enforeible by a federal District Court, one of competent jurisdiction, under our interpretation of the applicable provisions of the law.
The decree below is affirmed.
Reference
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- CHASE NAT. BANK OF CITY OF NEW YORK v. GANNON
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