MARION PHOSPHATE CO. t'. PERRY.
425
claim, or connected with the subject of the action." In this case a counterclaim, according to the pleadings, does arise out of the transaction set forth in the complaint, and according to the Code it is a proper subject of counterclaim. Section 3228 provides that, "if the defendant omits to set up a counterclaim in the cases mentioned in the first subdivision of the last section, neither he nor his assigns can afterward maintain an action against the plaintiff therefor." There is a contradiction of opinion, independent of such legislation as is found in section 3228, supra, with respect to the question whether the amount involved in an asserted counterclaim against a cause of action shall or may be considered, in determining the jurisdiction of federal courts. Opinions of very eminent judges and courts are found on either side of the question, and, as a new question, it would be somewhat difficult to determine it, based simply on the decided cases. However, my inclination is to adopt the conclusion that the amount involved in a counterclaim is a part of the SUbject-matter in dispute, within the meaning of the act of congress conferring jurisdiction upon the federal court, and that inclination is strongly fortified in the case at bar by the terms of the Utah statute, supra. This requires the defendant, in a case like that at bar, to present his counterclaim in the suit in which the original action is brought, or be forever barred from doing so. "The matter in dispute," to use the phraseology of the act of congress in question, is not only the $1,000 which the plaintiff sues for, but it is that which, of necessity, under the statute in question, must be litigated in connection with it. Especially is this so in a case like that at bar, where the defendant has exercised his option to assert his counterclaim prior to the transfer of this suit to this court. The motion to remand must therefore be denied.
MARION PHOSPHATE CO. v. PERRY. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit. No. 433. FOREIGN CORPORATIONS-PROLONGING EXISTENCE FOR PURPOSES OF SUIT.
February 17, 1896.)
State statutes which provide that corporations shall continue to exist for a certain time after the time fixed for dissolution, for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits, and that no body or persons acting as a corporation shall set up the want of a legal organization as a defense to a suit against them as a corporation (McClel. Dig. Fla. p. 234, §§ 27, 28), do not control or affect foreign corporations merely doing business in the state; and a suit against such a corporation abates upon its dissolution, so that, if a judgment be thereafter entered against it, the same is void.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Florida. A. R. Lawton and T. M. Cunningham, Jr., for appellant. Circuit Judges, and BOARBefore PARDEE and MAN, District Judge.
426
74
FFJDERAL REPORTER.
. PARDEE, Circuit Judge. The appellee, Rachel Perry, a citizen of the state of Florida, brought her bill in the chancery court of Marion county, state of ,Florida, against the Marion Phosphate Company, a Georgia corporation, and therein alleged that ,on the 16th dlly of December, 1892, she obtained a judgment on the common-law side of that court, for the sum of $2,158.38, against the Chatham Investment Company, a body corporate created under the laws of the state of Georgia; that the Chatham Investment Company was the .owner of large bodies of land in the state of Florida, some of them lying in Marion countY,which were in 1891, by divers deeds, conveyedby the said Chatham Investment Company, for the consideration of $5,000,000, to the Marion Phosphate Company; that soon after such conveyances,and before the aforesaid judgment was obtained, the Chatham Investment CompanY dissolved, and sHrr'endered its charter; that both of the above-named corporations were organized and chllrtered by the same stockholders, the said Chatham InCoblpany being organized for the purpose of purchasing said larids,andholding them in trust the Marion Phosphate COlllpany; ,tlia,t·,the consideration paid by the·· Marion Phosphate Company to 'the sa'i'd Chatham Investment Company was the defendant's certificates of capital Stock, based upon said lands, thepersons holding .stock In said Chatham Investment Company surrendering their certificates in that corporation for certificates of defendant's capital at the ratio of ten shares of defendant's stock to one in said Chatham Investment Company; that in reality the organization of the defendant company was only the reorganization of said Chatham InV' stment Company, with the same capital, same stockholdrs, Mme hmd, and ;about the same officers; that the defendant compitny'to()}{ the lands and property of the Chatham Investment Company subject to all claims, debts, liens, and obligations then existing against it; and that defendant is not a bona fide purchaser of the lands of the said dissolved company, as against complainant's judgment. Certain are described in the bill, lying in Marion county, Fla., to which complainant asserted that she had an equitable ,lien for the satisfaction of the above judgment, wherefore she prayed, etc. To the NIl 'Yas attached an exhibit showing that on the 16th day of December, 1892, the said Rachel Perry, in the circUr.t cpu!:t of Marion county, Fla., recovered a judgment hy against'the Chatham Investment Company, a bodycorporate under the laws of the state of Georgia, for the sum of $2,154, principal)lndtnterest, and $4,38, costs of court. The Marion Phobp1J.ate' CQ1I1pany' I,'emoved the case tothe circuit court for the South.ern district of. the state of, Florilla, 0:0. .the ground of diverse citizenship. Inthecircuit court the Marion Phosphate Company filed a demurrer to the said bill, for want of equity, particularly charging that the bill, upon its face, discloses that the judgment against the Chatham Investment Company was recovered December 16, 1892, and thfj,t the said Chatham I.nvestment Company was a corporation created under the laws of Georgia, and that the said COl'poratioti 'b'edatnedissolved,and surrendered its charter, in 1891,long prior to the rendition of said judgment. This demurrer was
MAIUON PHOSPHATE CO. V. PERRY.
427
overruled by the court, and thereafter the Phosphate Company was driven to answer, and other proceedings were had, resulting in a decree in favor of Rachel Perry against the Marion Phosphate Company to the effect thilt the jndgment obtained by the complainant in the circuit conrt of Marion county against the Chatham Investment Company was a valid judgment; that the Marion Phosphate Company held the lands of the Chatham Investment Company in trust for the payment of the complainant's debt; that the complainant had an equitable lien on the said lands,-and condemning the )Iarion Phosphate Company to pay the amount of said judgment, in default whereof the lands mentioned in the bill should be sold to pay the same. The proceedings had after overruling the demurrer are not necessary to recapitulate, except to notice that it was fully shown in the answer, and established by undisputed evidence, that more than six months prior to the institution of the suit at law by Rachel Perry against the Chatham Investment Company in the circuit court of Marion county, Fla., the Chatham investment Company, under and in accordance with the laws of Georgia, had, as a corporation, surrendered its charter, and had been legally dissolved as a corporation. The appellant makes nine specific assignments of error, the last one being that the court erred in overruling the demurrer of the defendant to the complainant's bilI. The vital question in the case is whether the judgment at law rendered against the Chatham Investment Company, a corporation which at the time was legally dissolved, and which judgment is the base of this suit, is a valid judgment. We think this question is sufficiently presented by the demurrer to the bill. That a dissolution of a corporation abates all suits against it is familiar law of the text-books. Mor. Priv. Corp. § 1031, thus declares: "The dissolution of a corporation. at common law, not only means that the company has lost its franchises, and can no longer act in a corporate capacity, but it implies that the corporation has wholly ceased to exist in legal contemplation, and will not be recognized as a corporate body for any purpose. It follows that suits brought by or against a corporation are abated by its dissolution, and a judgment purporting to be rendered against a corporation which is not in existence is a nullity."
Any number of cases can be cited to support the text. In Bonaffe v. Fowler, 7 Paige, 576, it was held that a judgment recov' ered against a corporation after it has been dissolved is not even prima facie evidence of a debt due from the corporation at the time of its dissolution; and this decision is amply supported by adjudged cases. In Thornton v. Railway Co., ·123 Mass. 32, it is held that a court has no jurisdiction in equity over a bill by a creditor against a corporation to apply to the payment of a judgment property of the debtor in the hands of a third party, if the judgment was invalid at the time it was recovered, and the corporation had ceased to exist. We do not find in the transcript any opinion ,of the trial judge, and therefore we do not know how he viewed the general law relating to abatement of suits against corporations on dissolution; but we gather from the record that, in his opinion,
428
FEDERAL REPORTER,
sections 35 and 36 of the act of the legislature of Florida of August 8, 1868 (McClel. Dig. Fla. p. 234, §§ 27, 28; Rev. St. Fla. §§ 2155, 2159), applied to the Chatham Investment Company, a corporation of the state of Georgia, and thus controlled the case. Those sectioDs are as follows: "Sec. 27. corporations shall continue bodies corporate for the term of three years after the time of dissolution from any cause, for the purpose of prosecuting or defending suits by or against them, and enabling them gradually to settle their concerns, to dispose. of and convey their property, and to divide their capital stock, but for no other purpose. "Sec. 28. No body or persons acting as a corporation under this chapter, shall bl! permitted to set up the want of a legal organization as a defence to an action against them as a corporation; nor shall any person sued upon a contract made with such a corporation, or sued for an injury to its property, or a wrong done to its Interest, be permitted to set up a want of such legal organization In his defense."
e do fiot find in these sections, nor, in fact, In any part of the act of 1868, any intention. on the part of the lawmaking power of the state of Florida to control or regulate the corporations of other states. Under the statute, it is only by inference that foreign corporations were permitted to do business in the state. Section 24 was as follows: "Suits against corporations shall be commenced only in the county where such corporation shall have, or usually keep, an office for the transaction of its customary business; and in the case of companies Incorporated by other states and doing lawful business in this 'State, suits shall be commenced in the county, wherein such company may have an agent or other representative." McOle!. Dig. Fla. p. 231, § 17.
"7
Section 29 of the act put foreign corporations having property in the state on the same footing as individuals, residents of other states, in the matter of attachment. These last-quoted sections indicate that there was no purpose in the act to in any wise treat foreign corporations doing business in the state as Florida corporations. Unless, by legislation, a foreign corporation doing business in the state is made a citizen of Florida, we are unable to see how the dissolution of such corporation can be affected by the laws of Florida. In Pennsylvania R. Co. v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 118 U. S. 290,295,6 Sup. Ct. 1094, the supreme court say: "It does not seem to admit of question that a corporation of one state, owning property and doing business in another state by permission of the latter, does 'Dot thereby become a citizen of this state also."
See, also, Goodlett v. Railroad Co., 122 U. S. 405, 7 Sup. Ct. 1254 "A corporation cannot mlgrllte or change its residence without the consent, express or implied, of its state; but it may transact business wherever Its charter unless pro)1ibited by lo<:al laws." "It must dwell In the place of its creation, and',cannot migrate to another sOvereignty." Bank v. Earle. 13 Pet. 519,520; RaHroad Co. v. Koontz, 104 U. S..5, 12. .
same effecti'and,
Gebhard, 109 U.S. 527, 3 Sup. Ct. 363, is to the tlJ,at: .
"A of one country, doing .business in another, is subject to such control.lnl'espect to its powers and obligations, as the government which created It may properly exercise. Every person who deals with it anywhere lmplledJy subjects himself to such laws of Its own country affecting its pow-
HADDEN V. DOOLEY.
429
ers and obligations as the known and established policy of that government authorizes. Anything done in that country under the authority of such law which discharges it from liability there discharges it everywhere."
The Chatham Investment Company, incorporated under the laws of the state of Georgia, when dissolved according to those laws, became a dissolved corporation everywhere,-dead in Florida as well as Georgia. As the case presents itself to us, we are clearly of opinion that the demurrer to the bill of complaint should have been sustained. As this necessitates the reversal of the judgment, and directs a disrpissal of the bill, it is unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error. Although we have found the judgment at law, which was the basis of complainant's bill, invalid, we are inclined to the opinion, from our examination of the record, that the appellee may have equities which, properly presented, can be recognized and enforced. 'Ve shall therefore reverse the decree appealed from, and remand the cause, with instructions to dismiss the bill, but without prejudice. And it is so ordered.
et al. v. DOOLEY et al. (Circuit Court of Appeals, St'cond Circuit. May 12, 1896.) 1. ApPEAl. FROM OHDER COKTlNUlNG PHELHlINAHY IN.lUNCTIO:,\-DECISION. On an appeal from an order denying a motion to dissolve an injunction pendente lite, restraining an execution sale of personal property, held, that the court of appeals could not determine questions of law which might depend upon undisclosed facts, or questions of fact upon ex parte affidavits of the character of those presented in the record; and that, as the questions arising were proper SUbjects for deliberate examination, the order would be affirmed, under the rule that, where a stay of proceedings will not cause too great injury to defendants, it is proper to preserve the existing state of things until the rights of the parties can be fully investigated. 2. SAME-AFFlRMANCE-RESERVATTON OF RIGHT TO MODIFY. Where an order refusing to dissolve an injunction pendente lite restraining a sheriff from selling certain silks on execution was affirmed, but it appeared to the court that a sale of the goods would be to the pecuniary advantage of both parties, held, that leave would be reserved to the court below to modify its order so that by consent of the parties the silk might be sold under the execution, after ample notice, and the proceeds placed in the registry to await a final decision.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. Edward Winslow Paige, for appellants. H. K. Twombley, for appellees. Before WALLACE and SHIPMAN, Circuit Judges. SHIPMAK, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of the United States for the Southern district of New York, dated December 12, 1895, which denied a motion to dissolve an injunction pendente lite, and continued it until the further order, of the court. The original order restrained, pendente lite, the