Chapter 31 of the Acts of Tennessee of 1877, entitled
"An act to declare the terms on which foreign corporations
organized for mining or manufacturing purposes may carry on their
business, and purchase, hold and convey real and personal property
in this state,"
provided that corporations organized under the laws of other
states and countries for purposes named in the act might carry on
within that state the business authorized by their respective
charters, but that
"creditors who may be residents of this state shall have a
priority in the distribution of assets, or subjection of the same,
or any part thereof, to the payment of debts over all simple
contract creditors, being residents of any other country or
countries, and also over mortgage or judgment creditors, for all
debts, engagements and contracts which were made or owing by the
said corporations previous to the filing and registration of such
valid mortgages, or the rendition of such valid judgments."
Held that as the litigation proceeded on the theory
that plaintiffs in error were citizens of Ohio, where they resided,
did business, and had offices, that question could not now be
considered, and as the manifest purpose of the act was to give to
all Tennessee creditors priority over all creditors residing out of
that state, without reference to the question whether they were
citizens or only residents in some other state or country, the act
must be held to infringe rights secured to the plaintiff's in
error, citizens of Ohio, by the provision of Sec. 2 of Art. IV of
the Constitution declaring that the citizens of each state shall be
entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the
several states, although, generally speaking, the state has the
power to prescribe the conditions upon which foreign corporations
may enter its territory for purposes of business.
It is not in the power of one state, when establishing
regulations for the conduct of private business of a particular
kind, to give its own citizens essential privileges connected with
that business which it denies to citizens of other states.
When the general property and assets of a private corporation
lawfully doing business in a state are in course of administration
by the courts
Page 172 U. S. 240
of said state, creditors who are citizens of other states are
entitled, under the Constitution of the United States, to stand
upon the same plane with creditors of like class who are citizens
of such state, and cannot be denied equality of right simply
because they do not reside in that state, but are citizens residing
in other states of the Union.
While the members of a corporation are, for purpose of suit by
or against it in the courts of the United States, to be
conclusively presumed to be citizens of the state creating it, the
corporation itself is not a citizen within the meaning of the
provision of the.Constitution that the citizens of each state shall
be entitled to all privileges, and immunities of citizens in the
several states.
The said statute of Tennessee, so far as it subordinates the
claims of private business corporations not within the jurisdiction
of that state (although such private corporations may be creditors
of a corporation doing business within the state under the
authority of that statute) to the claims against the latter
corporation of creditors residing in Tennessee, is not a denial of
the equal protection of the laws secured by the Fourteenth
Amendment to persons within the jurisdiction of the state, however
unjust such a regulation may be deemed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error brings up for review a final judgment of the
Supreme Court of Tennessee sustaining the validity of certain
provisions of a statute of that state passed March 19, 1877, c.
31.
The chief object of the statute was declared to be to secure the
development of the mineral resources of the state, and to
facilitate the introduction of foreign capital. § 7.
It provides, among other things, that
"corporations chartered or organized under the laws of other
states or countries for the purpose of mining ores or coals, or of
quarrying stones
Page 172 U. S. 241
or minerals, of transporting the same, or erecting, purchasing,
or carrying on works for the manufacture of metals, or of any
articles made of or from metal, timber, cotton, or wool, or of
building dwelling houses for their workmen and others, or gas
works, or water works, or other appliances designed for the
promotion of health, good order, or general utility, in connection
with such mines, manufactories, and dwelling houses, may become
incorporated in this state, and may carry on in this state the
business authorized by their respective charters, or the articles
under which they are or may be organized, and may enjoy the rights
and do the things therein specified, upon the terms and conditions,
and in the manner and under the limitation herein declared."
§ 1.
The second section provides for the filing in the office of the
Secretary of State by
"each and every corporation created or organized under or by
virtue of any government other than that of this state, of the
character named in the first section of this act, desiring to carry
on its business"
in the state, of a copy of its charter or articles of
association, and the recording of an abstract of the same in the
office of the register of each county in which the corporation
proposes to carry on its business or to acquire any lands. § 2.
The third section declares that
"such corporations shall be deemed and taken to be corporations
of this state, and shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the
courts of this state, and may sue and be sued therein in the mode
and manner that is, or may be, by law directed in the case of
corporations created or organized under the laws of this
state."
§ 3.
The fifth section provides:
"§. 5. That the corporations, and the property of all
corporations coming under the provisions of this act, shall be
liable for all the debts, liabilities and engagements of the said
corporations, to be enforced in the manner provided by law, for the
application of the property of natural persons to the payment of
their debts, engagements, and contracts. Nevertheless, creditors
who may be residents of this state shall have a priority in the
distribution of assets, or subjection of the same, or any part
thereof, to the payment of debts over all simple
Page 172 U. S. 242
contract creditors, being residents of any other country or
countries, and also over mortgage or judgment creditors, for all
debts, engagements and contracts which were made or owing by the
said corporations previous to the filing and registration of such
valid mortgages, or the rendition of such valid judgments. But all
such mortgages and judgments shall be valid and shall constitute a
prior lien on the property on which they are or may be charged as
against all debts which may be incurred subsequent to the date of
their registration or rendition. The said corporations shall be
liable to taxation in all respects the same as natural persons
resident in this state, and the property of its citizens is or may
be liable to taxation, but to no higher taxation, nor to any other
mode of valuation, for the purpose of taxation, and the said
corporations shall be entitled to all such exemptions from taxation
which are now or may be hereafter granted to citizens or
corporations for the purpose of encouraging manufacturers in this
state, or otherwise."
Acts of Tennessee 1877, p. 44.
The case made by the record is substantially as follows:
The Embreeville Freehold Land, Iron and Railway Company, Limited
(to be hereafter called the "Embreeville Company"), was a
corporation organized under the laws of Great Britain and Ireland
for mining and manufacturing purposes. In 1890, it registered its
charter under the provisions of the above statute and established a
manager's office in Tennessee. It purchased property and did a
mining and manufacturing business there, transacting its affairs in
this country at and from its Tennessee office.
On the 20th day of June, 1893, C. M. McClung & Co. and
others filed an original general creditors' bill in the Chancery
Court of Washington County, Tennessee against this company and
others, alleging its insolvency and default in meeting and
discharging its current obligations, charging that it had made a
conveyance in trust of certain personal property in fraud of the
rights of its other creditors, and asking the appointment of a
receiver and the administration of its affairs as an insolvent
corporation. The court took jurisdiction of the corporation,
sustained the bill as a general creditors' bill, appointed
Page 172 U. S. 243
a receiver of its property in Tennessee, administered its
affairs in that state, and passed a decree adjudicating the rights
and priorities of certain creditors.
No question is made in respect of the amount due to any one of
the creditors whose claims were presented.
The company maintained its home office in London, its managing
director resided there, and, after this suit was instituted,
liquidation under the Companies' Acts of Great Britain was there
ordered and begun.
There were holders of debentures executed by the British company
whose claims were not specifically adjudicated in the decree below.
The original debenture issue amounted to $500,000, and another
issue, subsequent in time, and in respect of which priority in
right was claimed, amounted to $125,000. All the holders of those
issues are nonresidents of Tennessee and of the United States.
There was also a general trade indebtedness, aggregating about
$90,000, due by the company to residents of Great Britain. Those
claims were specifically adjudicated by the decree.
Among the creditors of the company at the time this suit was
instituted were the plaintiffs in error, namely, C. G. Blake, whose
residence and place of business was in Ohio, Rogers, Brown &
Co., the members of which also resided in Ohio, and carried on
business in that state, and the Hull Coal & Coke Company, a
corporation of Virginia. In the intervening petitions filed by
those creditors, it was averred that the plaintiffs in the general
creditors' bill, residents of Tennessee, claimed priority of right
in the distribution of the assets of the insolvent corporation over
other creditors of the corporation, "citizens of the United States,
but not of the State of Tennessee," and that the said statute was
unconstitutional so far as it gave preferences and benefits to the
plaintiffs or other citizens of Tennessee over the petitioners or
other citizens of the United States.
By the final decree of the Chancery Court of Washington County,
it was, among other things, adjudged that the act of 1877 was
constitutional; that all of the creditors of the Embreeville
Company residing in Tennessee were entitled to
priority
Page 172 U. S. 244
of satisfaction out of its assets (after the payment out of the
proceeds of the real estate of the claim of the Pittsburgh Iron
& Steel Engineering Company) as against its other creditors,
who were "residents and
citizens of other states of the
United States or other countries;" that the creditors who were
"
citizens of other states of the United States, and who
contracted with the company as located and doing business in
Tennessee, are entitled to share ratably in its assets, being
administered in this cause, next after the payment of the
Pittsburgh Iron & Steel Engineering Company
and the
Tennessee creditors."
Upon appeal to the Chancery Court of Appeals, the decree of the
Chancery Court was reversed in certain particulars. In the findings
of the Chancery Court of Appeals, it was stated that the Chancery
Court of Washington County adjudged, among other things, that,
"under the act of 1877 (which was adjudged constitutional), all
the creditors of said Embreeville Company residing in Tennessee are
entitled to priority of satisfaction out of the assets of the
Embreeville Company (after the payment out of the proceeds of the
real estate of the claim of the Pittsburgh Iron & Steel
Engineering Company) as against the other creditors of said company
who are nonresidents and citizens of other states of the United
States or other countries; that the other creditors of the
Embreeville Company who are
citizens of other states of
the United States, and who contracted with the said Embreeville
Company as located and doing business in the State of Tennessee,
are entitled to share ratably in the assets of the defendant
Embreeville Company being administered in this cause after the
payment of the Pittsburgh Iron & Steel Engineering Company and
the Tennessee creditors (except the coke stopped
in
transitu)."
And the decree in the Chancery Court of Appeals contained, among
other provisions, the following:
"That all of the holders and owners of the debenture bonds of
the company are simple contract creditors of said company, and
stand upon the same footing in reference to the distribution of the
assets of the company as all other of its creditors residing out of
the State of Tennessee,"
and that the
"portion of the Chancellor's decree giving priority of payment
to such of the creditors of
Page 172 U. S. 245
said company who reside in the United States of America, but not
in the State of Tennessee, and to such creditors now residents of
Tennessee who dealt with the company in relation to its Tennessee
office, over all alien creditors of said company, be, and the same
is hereby, reversed, it being here adjudged that all the creditors
of said company residing out of the State of Tennessee must share
equally and ratably in the distribution of the funds of said
company
after the Tennessee creditors shall have been paid in
full."
The cause was carried to the Supreme Court of Tennessee, and, so
far as the plaintiffs in error are concerned, was heard in that
court upon appeal from the Court of Chancery Appeals, as well as
upon writs of error to the Chancery Court.
It was adjudged by the supreme court of the state that the Act
of March 19, 1877, was in all respects a valid enactment, and not
in contravention of paragraph 2 of Article IV or of the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, nor in
contravention of any other provision of the national Constitution;
that all of the holders and owners of the debenture bonds of the
Embreeville Company were simple contract creditors of the company,
and stood upon the same footing with reference to the distribution
of its assets as all of its other creditors who reside out of the
State of Tennessee, whether they be residents of other states or of
the kingdom of Great Britain; that all of the creditors of the
Embreeville Company who reside in the State of Tennessee are
entitled to priority of payment out of all of the assets of said
company, both real and personal, over all of the other creditors of
said company who do not reside in the State of Tennessee, whether
they be residents of other states of the United States or of the
Kingdom of Great Britain; that all of the creditors of the
Embreeville Freehold Land, Iron, and Railway Company who reside out
of the State of Tennessee, whether they reside in other states of
the United States or in the Kingdom of Great Britain, have the
right and must share equally and ratably in the distribution of
said funds of the said company after the residents of the State of
Tennessee shall have been first paid in full.
Page 172 U. S. 246
The plaintiffs in error contend that the judgment of the state
court, based upon the statute, denies to them rights secured by the
second section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the
United States, providing that "the citizens of each state shall be
entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the
several states," as well as by the first section of the Fourteenth
Amendment, declaring that no state shall "deprive any person of
life, liberty, or property without due process of law," nor "deny
to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws."
We have seen that, by the third section of the Tennessee
statute, corporations organized under the laws of other states or
countries, and which complied with the provisions of the statute,
were to be deemed and taken to be corporations of that state, and
by the fifth section it is declared, in respect of the property of
corporations doing business in Tennessee under the provisions of
the statute that creditors who are residents of that state shall
have a priority in the distribution of assets, or the subjection of
the same, or any part thereof, to the payment of debts, over all
simple contract creditors, being residents of any other country or
countries.
The suggestion is made that, as the statute refers only to
"residents," there is no occasion to consider whether it is
repugnant to the provision of the national Constitution relating to
citizens. We cannot accede to this view. The record shows that the
litigation proceeded throughout upon the theory that the plaintiffs
in error Blake and the persons composing the firm of Rogers, Brown
& Co. were citizens of Ohio, in which state they resided,
transacted business, and had their offices, and that the plaintiff
in error the Hull Coal & Coke Company was a corporation of
Virginia. The intervening petition of the individual plaintiffs in
error, as we have seen, states that they were residents of Ohio,
engaged in business in that state, their residence, offices, and
places of business being at the City of Cincinnati, and that they
were citizens of the United States, and not citizens of Tennessee.
Although these allegations might not be sufficient to show that
those parties were citizens of Ohio within the meaning of the
statute
Page 172 U. S. 247
regulating the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United
States (
Robertson v. Cease, 97 U. S.
646), they may be accepted as sufficient for that
purpose in the present case, no question having been made in the
state court that the individual plaintiffs in error were not
citizens, but only residents, of Ohio. Looking at the purpose and
scope of the Tennessee statute, it is plain that the words
"residents of this state" refer to those whose residence in
Tennessee was such as indicated that their permanent home or
habitation was there, without any present intention of removing
therefrom, and having the intention, when absent from that state,
to return thereto,-such residence as appertained to or inhered in
citizenship. And the words, in the same statute "residents of any
other country or countries" refer to those whose respective
habitations were not in Tennessee, but who were citizens, not
simply residents, of some other state or country. It is impossible
to believe that the statute was intended to apply to creditors of
whom it could be said that they were only residents of other
states, but not to creditors who were citizens of such states. The
state did not intend to place creditors, citizens of other states,
upon an equality with creditors, citizens of Tennessee, and to give
priority only to Tennessee creditors over creditors who resided in,
but were not citizens of, other states. The manifest purpose was to
give to all Tennessee creditors priority over all creditors
residing out of that state, whether the latter were citizens or
only residents of some other state or country. Any other
interpretation of the statute would defeat the object for which it
was enacted. We must therefore consider whether the statute
infringes rights secured to the plaintiffs in error, citizens of
Ohio, by the provision of the second section of Article IV of the
Constitution of the United States declaring that the citizens of
each state shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of
citizens in the several states.
Beyond question, a state may, through judicial proceedings, take
possession of the assets of an insolvent foreign corporation within
its limits and distribute such assets or their proceeds among
creditors according to their respective rights. But may it exclude
citizens of other states from such distribution
Page 172 U. S. 248
until the claims of its own citizens shall have been first
satisfied? In the administration of the property of an insolvent
foreign corporation by the courts of the state in which it is doing
business, will the Constitution of the United States permit
discrimination against individual creditors of such corporation
because of their being citizens of other states, and not citizens
of the state in which such administration occurs?
These questions are presented for our determination. Let us see
how far they have been answered by the former decisions of this
Court.
This Court has never undertaken to give any exact or
comprehensive definition of the words "privileges and immunities,"
in Article IV of the Constitution of the United States. Referring
to this clause, Mr. Justice Curtis, speaking for the Court in
Conner v.
Elliott, 18 How. 591,
59 U. S. 593,
said:
"We do not deem it needful to attempt to define the meaning of
the word 'privileges' in this clause of the Constitution. It is
safer, and more in accordance with the duty of a judicial tribunal,
to leave its meaning to be determined, in each case, upon a view of
the particular rights asserted and denied therein. And especially
is this true when we are dealing with so broad a provision,
involving matters not only of great delicacy and importance, but
which are of such a character that any merely abstract definition
could scarcely be correct, and a failure to make it so would
certainly produce mischief."
Nevertheless, what has been said by this and other courts upon
the general subject will assist us in determining the particular
questions now pressed upon our attention.
One of the leading cases in which the general question has been
examined is
Corfield v. Coryell, 4 Wash. C.C. 371, 380,
decided by Mr. Justice Washington at the circuit. He said:
"The inquiry is what are the privileges and immunities of
citizens in the several states? We feel no hesitation in confining
these expressions to those privileges and immunities which are, in
their nature, fundamental, which belong, of right, to the citizens
of all free governments, and which have at all times been enjoyed
by the citizens of the several states which compose this Union from
the time of their becoming free, independent, and sovereign.
Page 172 U. S. 249
What these fundamental principles are it would perhaps be more
tedious than difficult to enumerate. They may, however, be
comprehended under the following general heads: protection by the
government; the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the right to
acquire and possess property of every kind, and to pursue and
obtain happiness and safety -- subject nevertheless to such
restraints as the government may justly prescribe for the general
good of the whole. The right of a citizen of one state to pass
through or to reside in any other state for the purposes of trade,
agriculture, professional pursuits, or otherwise; to claim the
benefit of the writ of habeas corpus; to institute and maintain
actions of any kind in the courts of the state; to take, hold, and
dispose of property, either real or personal, and an exemption from
higher taxes or impositions than are paid by the other citizens of
the state, may be mentioned as some of the particular privileges
and immunities of citizens, which are clearly embraced by the
general description of privileges deemed to be fundamental, to
which may be added the elective franchise, as regulated and
established by the laws or constitution of the state in which it is
to be exercised. These, and many others which might be mentioned,
are, strictly speaking, privileges and immunities, and the
enjoyment of them by the citizens of each state in every other
state was manifestly calculated (to use the expression of the
preamble to the corresponding provision in the old articles of
confederation) 'the better to secure and perpetuate mutual
friendship and intercourse among the people of the different states
of the Union.'"
These observations of Mr. Justice Washington were made in a case
involving the validity of a statute of New Jersey regulating the
taking of oysters and shells on banks or beds within that state,
and which excluded inhabitants and residents of other states from
the privilege of taking or gathering clams, oysters, or shells on
any of the rivers, bays, or waters in New Jersey not wholly owned
by some person residing in the state. The statute was sustained
upon the ground that it only regulated the use of the common
property
Page 172 U. S. 250
of the citizens of New Jersey, which could not be enjoyed by
others without the tacit consent or the express permission of the
sovereign having the power to regulate its use. The court said:
"The oyster beds belonging to a state may be abundantly
sufficient for the use of the citizens of that state, but might be
totally exhausted and destroyed if the legislature could not so
regulate the use of them as to exclude the citizens of the other
states from taking them except under such limitations and
restrictions as the laws may prescribe."
Upon these grounds rests the decision in
McCready v.
Virginia, 94 U. S. 391,
94 U. S. 395,
sustaining a statute of Virginia prohibiting the citizens of other
states from planting oysters in a river in that state where the
tide ebbed and flowed. Chief Justice Waite, speaking for the Court
in that case, said:
"These [the fisheries of the state] remain under the exclusive
control of the state, which has consequently the right, in its
discretion, to appropriate its tide waters and their beds to be
used by its people as a common for taking and cultivating fish, so
far as it may be done without obstructing navigation. Such an
appropriation is, in effect, nothing more than a regulation of the
use by the people of their common property. The right which the
people of the state thus acquire comes not from their citizenship
alone, but from their citizenship and property combined. It is in
fact a property right, and not a mere privilege or immunity of
citizenship."
Consequently, the decision was that the citizens of one state
were not invested by the Constitution of the United States "with
any interest in the common property of the citizens of another
state."
In
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S. 180,
the Court observed that
"it was undoubtedly the object of the clause in question to
place the citizens of each state upon the same footing with
citizens of other states, so far as the advantages resulting from
citizenship in those states are concerned. It relieves them from
the disabilities of alienage in other states; it inhibits
discriminating legislation against them by other states; it gives
them the right of free ingress into other states, and egress from
them; it insures to them in other states the same
Page 172 U. S. 251
freedom possessed by the citizens of those states in the
acquisition and enjoyment of property, and in the pursuit of
happiness, and it secures to them in other states the equal
protection of their laws. It has been justly said that no provision
in the Constitution has tended so strongly to constitute the
citizens of the United States one people as this.
Lemon v.
People, 20 N.Y. 607. Indeed, without some provision of the
kind, removing from the citizens of each state the disabilities of
alienage in the other states, and giving them equality of privilege
with citizens of those states, the republic would have constituted
little more than a league of states; it would not have constituted
the Union which now exists."
Ward v.
Maryland, 12 Wall. 418,
79 U. S. 430,
involved the validity of a statute of Maryland requiring all
traders, not being permanent residents of the state, to take out
licenses for the sale of goods, wares, or merchandise in Maryland,
other than agricultural products and articles there manufactured.
This Court said:
"Attempt will not be made to define the words 'privileges and
immunities,' or to specify the rights which they are intended to
secure and protect, beyond what may be necessary to the decision of
the case before the court. Beyond doubt, those words are words of
very comprehensive meaning, but it will be sufficient to say that
the clause plainly and unmistakably secures and protects the right
of a citizen of one state to pass into any other State of the
Union, for the purpose of engaging in lawful commerce, trade, or
business, without molestation, to acquire personal property, to
take and hold real estate, to maintain actions in the courts of the
states, and to be exempt from any higher taxes or excises than are
imposed by the state upon its own citizens. Comprehensive as the
power of the states is to lay and collect taxes and excises, it is
nevertheless clear, in the judgment of the Court, that the power
cannot be exercised to any extent in a manner forbidden by the
Constitution; and inasmuch as the Constitution provides that the
citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several states, it follows that the
defendant might lawfully sell or offer or expose for sale within
the district described in the
Page 172 U. S. 252
indictment, any goods which the permanent residents of the state
might sell or offer or expose for sale in that district, without
being subjected to any higher tax or excise than that exacted by
law of such permanent residents."
In the
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 77, the
Court, referring to what was said in
Paul v. Virginia,
above cited, in reference to the scope and meaning of Section 2 of
Article IV of the Constitution, said:
"The constitutional provision there alluded to did not create
those rights which it called privileges and immunities of citizens
of the several states. It threw around them in that clause no
security for the citizen of the state in which they were claimed or
exercised. Nor did it profess to control the power of the state
government over the rights of its own citizens. Its sole purpose
was to declare to the several states that, whatever those rights,
as you grant or establish them to your own citizens, or as you
limit or qualify, or impose restrictions on their exercise the
same, neither more nor less shall be the measure of the rights of
citizens of other states within your jurisdiction."
In
Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U.
S. 107,
133 U. S.
113-114, this Court cited with approval the language of
Justice Story, in his Commentaries on the Constitution, to the
effect that the object of the constitutional guaranty was to confer
on the citizens of the several states
"a general citizenship, and to communicate all the privileges
and immunities which the citizens of the same state would be
entitled to under like circumstances, and this includes the right
to institute actions."
These principles have not been modified by any subsequent
decision of this Court.
The foundation upon which the above cases rest cannot, however,
stand if it be adjudged to be in the power of one state, when
establishing regulations for the conduct of private business of a
particular kind, to give its own citizens essential privileges
connected with that business which it denies to citizens of other
states. By the statute in question, the British company was to be
deemed and taken to be a corporation of Tennessee, with authority
to carry on its business in that state. It was the right of
citizens of Tennessee to deal with
Page 172 U. S. 253
it, as it was their right to deal with corporations created by
Tennessee. And it was equally the right of citizens of other states
to deal with that corporation. The state did not assume to declare,
even if it could legally have declared, that that company, being
admitted to do business in Tennessee, should transact business only
with citizens of Tennessee or should not transact business with
citizens of other states. No one would question the right of the
individual plaintiffs in error, although not residents of
Tennessee, to sell their goods to that corporation upon such terms
in respect of payment as might be agreed upon, and to ship them to
the corporation at its place of business in that state. But the
enjoyment of these rights is materially obstructed by the statute
in question; for that statute, by its necessary operation, excludes
citizens of other states from transacting business with that
corporation upon terms of equality with citizens of Tennessee. By
force of the statute alone, citizens of other states, if they
contracted at all with the British corporation, must have done so
subject to the onerous condition that, if the corporation became
insolvent, its assets in Tennessee should first be applied to meet
its obligations to residents of that state, although liability for
its debts and engagements was
"to be enforced in the manner provided by law for the
application of the property of natural persons to the payment of
their debts, engagements, and contracts."
But clearly the state could not in that mode secure exclusive
privileges to its own citizens in matters of business. If a state
should attempt, by statute regulating the distribution of the
property of insolvent individuals among their creditors, to give
priority to the claims of such individual creditors as were
citizens of that state over the claims of individual creditors
citizens of other states, such legislation would be repugnant to
the Constitution upon the ground that it withheld from citizens of
other states, as such, and because they were such, privileges
granted to citizens of the state enacting it. Can a different
principle apply as between individual citizens of the several
states when the assets to be distributed are the assets of an
insolvent private corporation lawfully engaged in business, and
having the
Page 172 U. S. 254
power to contract with citizens residing in states other that
the one in which it is located?
It is an established rule of equity that when a corporation
becomes insolvent, it is so far civilly dead that its property may
be administered as a trust fund for the benefit of its stockholders
and creditors (
Graham v. Railroad Co., 102 U.
S. 148,
102 U. S. 161) --
not simply of stockholders and creditors residing in a particular
state, but all stockholders and creditors, of whatever state they
may be citizens. In
Wabash, St. Louis &c. Railway Co. v.
Ham, 114 U. S. 587,
114 U. S. 594,
it was said that the property of a corporation was a trust fund for
the payment of its debts, in the sense that, when the corporation
was lawfully dissolved, and all its business wound up, or when it
was insolvent, all its creditors were entitled, in equity, to have
their debts paid out of the corporate property before any
distribution thereof among the stockholders. In
Hollins v.
Brierfield Coal & Iron Co., 150 U.
S. 371,
150 U. S. 385,
it was observed that a private corporation, when it becomes
insolvent, holds its assets subject to somewhat the same kind of
equitable lien and trust in favor of its creditors that exist in
favor of the creditors of a partnership after becoming insolvent,
and that in such case a lien and trust will be enforced by a court
of equity in favor of creditors. These principles obtain, no doubt,
in Tennessee, and will be applied by its courts in all appropriate
cases between citizens of that state, without making any
distinction between them. Yet the courts of that state are
forbidden by the statute in question to recognize the right in
equity of citizens residing in other states to participate upon
terms of equality with citizens of Tennessee in the distribution of
the assets of an insolvent foreign corporation lawfully doing
business in that state.
We hold such discrimination against citizens of other states to
be repugnant to the second section of the fourth article of the
Constitution of the United States, although generally speaking the
state has the power to prescribe the conditions upon which foreign
corporations may enter its territory for purposes of business. Such
a power cannot be exerted with the effect of defeating or impairing
rights secured to citizens
Page 172 U. S. 255
of the several states by the supreme law of the land. Indeed,
all the powers possessed by a state must be exercised consistently
with the privileges and immunities granted or protected by the
Constitution of the United States.
In
Lafayette Ins. Co. v.
French, 18 How. 404,
59 U. S. 407,
Mr. Justice Curtis, speaking for this Court, said:
"A corporation created by Indiana can transact business in Ohio
only with the consent, express or implied, of the latter state.
This consent may be accompanied by such conditions as Ohio may
think fit to impose, and these conditions must be deemed valid and
effectual by other states, and by this Court, provided they are not
repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the United States, or
inconsistent with those rules of public law which secure the
jurisdiction and authority of each state from encroachment by all
others, or that principle of natural justice which forbids
condemnation without opportunity for defense."
It was accordingly adjudged in
Barron v. Burnside,
121 U. S. 186,
121 U. S. 200,
that an Iowa statute requiring every foreign corporation named in
it, as a condition of obtaining a license or permit to transact
business in that state, to stipulate that it would not remove into
the federal courts suits that were removable from the state courts
under the laws of the United States was void because it made the
right to do business under a license or permit dependent upon the
surrender by the corporation of a privilege secured to it by the
Constitution. This principle was recognized in
Barrow Steamship
Co. v. Kane, 170 U. S. 100,
170 U. S. 111,
in which, after referring to the constitutional and statutory
provisions defining the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the
United States, this Court said:
"The jurisdiction so conferred upon the national courts cannot
be abridged or impaired by any statute of a state.
Hyde v.
Stone, 20 How. 170,
61 U. S.
175;
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S.
466,
169 U. S. 516. It has
therefore been decided that a statute which requires all actions
against a county to be brought in a county court does not prevent
the circuit court of the United States from taking jurisdiction of
such an action, Chief Justice Chase saying that 'no statute
limitation of suability can defeat a jurisdiction given by the
Constitution.'
Cowles v. Mercer
Page 172 U. S. 256
County, 7 Wall. 118,
74 U. S.
122;
Lincoln County v. Luning, 133 U. S.
529;
Chicot County v. Sherwood, 148 U. S.
529. So statutes requiring foreign corporations, as a
condition of being permitted to do business within the state, to
stipulate not to remove into the courts of the United States suits
brought against them in the courts of the state have been adjudged
to be unconstitutional and void.
Home Ins. Co. v.
Morse, 20 Wall. 445;
Barron v. Burnside,
121 U. S.
186;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Denton,
146 U. S.
202."
See Ducat v.
Chicago, 10 Wall. 410,
77 U. S.
415.
We must not be understood as saying that a citizen of one state
is entitled to enjoy in another state every privilege that may be
given in the latter to its own citizens. There are privileges that
may be accorded by a state to its own people in which citizens of
other states may not participate except in conformity to such
reasonable regulations as may be established by the state. For
instance, a state cannot forbid citizens of other states from suing
in its courts, that right being enjoyed by its own people; but it
may require a nonresident, although a citizen of another state, to
give bond for costs, although such bond be not required of a
resident. Such a regulation of the internal affairs of a state
cannot reasonably be characterized as hostile to the fundamental
rights of citizens of other states. So a state may, by rule uniform
in its operation as to citizens of the several states, require
residence within its limits for a given time before a citizen of
another state, who becomes a resident thereof, shall exercise the
right of suffrage or become eligible to office. It has never been
supposed that regulations of that character materially interfered
with the enjoyment by citizens of each State of the privileges and
immunities secured by the Constitution to citizens of the several
states. The Constitution forbids only such legislation affecting
citizens of the respective states as will substantially or
practically put a citizen of one state in a condition of alienage
when he is within or when he removes to another state, or when
asserting in another state the rights that commonly appertain to
those who are part of the political community known as the the
United States, by and
Page 172 U. S. 257
for whom the government of the Union was ordained and
established.
Nor must we be understood as saying that a state may not, by its
courts, retain within its limits the assets of a foreign
corporation in order that justice may be done to its own citizens,
nor, by appropriate action of its judicial tribunals, see to it
that its own citizens are not unjustly discriminated against by
reason of the administration in other states of the assets there of
an insolvent corporation doing business within its limits. For
instance, if the Embreeville Company had property in Virginia at
the time of its insolvency, the Tennessee court administering its
assets in that state could take into account what a Virginia
creditor, seeking to participate in the distribution of the
company's assets in Tennessee, had received or would receive from
the company's assets in Virginia, and make such order touching the
assets of the company in Tennessee as would protect Tennessee
creditors against wrongful discrimination arising from the
particular action taken in Virginia for the benefit of creditors
residing in that commonwealth.
It may be appropriate to observe that the objections to the
statute of Tennessee do not necessarily embrace enactments that are
found in some of the states requiring foreign insurance
corporations, as a condition of their coming into the state for
purposes of business, to deposit with the state treasurer funds
sufficient to secure policy holders in its midst. Legislation of
that character does not present any question of discrimination
against citizens forbidden by the Constitution. Insurance funds set
apart in advance for the benefit of home policy holders of a
foreign insurance company doing business in the state are a trust
fund of a specific kind, to be administered for the exclusive
benefit of certain persons. Policy holders in other states know
that those particular funds are segregated from the mass of
property owned by the company, and that they cannot look to them to
the prejudice of those for whose special benefit they were
deposited. The present case is not one of that kind. The statute of
Tennessee did not make it a condition of the right of the British
corporation
Page 172 U. S. 258
to come into Tennessee for purposes of business that it should
at the outset, deposit with the state a fixed amount, to stand
exclusively or primarily for the protection of its Tennessee
creditors. It allowed that corporation, after complying with the
terms of the statute, to conduct its business in Tennessee as it
saw fit, and did not attempt to impose any restriction upon its
making contracts with, or incurring liabilities to, citizens of
other states. It permitted that corporation to contract with
citizens of other states, and then, in effect, provided that all
such contracts should be subject to the condition (in case the
corporation became insolvent) that creditors residing in other
states should stand aside, in the distribution by the Tennessee
courts of the assets of the corporation, until creditors residing
in Tennessee were fully paid not out of any funds or property
specifically set aside as a trust fund, and at the outset put into
the custody of the state, for the exclusive benefit, or for the
benefit primarily, of Tennessee creditors, but out of whatever
assets of any kind the corporation might have in that state when
insolvency occurred. In other words, so far as Tennessee
legislation is concerned, while this corporation could lawfully
have contracted with citizens of other states, those citizens
cannot share in its general assets upon terms of equality with
citizens of that state. If such legislation does not deny to
citizens of other states, in respect of matters growing out of the
ordinary transactions of business, privileges that are accorded by
it to citizens of Tennessee, it is difficult to perceive what
legislation would effect that result.
We adjudge that when the general property and assets of a
private corporation lawfully doing business in a state are in
course of administration by the courts of such state, creditors who
are citizens of other states are entitled under the Constitution of
the United States to stand upon the same plane with creditors of
like class who are citizens of such state, and cannot be denied
equality of right simply because they do not reside in that state,
but are citizens residing in other states of the Union. The
individual plaintiffs in error were entitled to contract with this
British corporation, lawfully doing business in Tennessee, and
deemed and taken to be a corporation
Page 172 U. S. 259
of that state, and no rule in the distribution of its assets
among creditors could be applied to them as resident citizens of
Ohio, and because they were not residents of Tennessee, that was
not applied by the courts of Tennessee to creditors of like
character who were citizens of Tennessee.
As to the plaintiff in error, the Hull Coal & Coke Company
of Virginia, different considerations must govern our decision. It
has long been settled that for purposes of suit by or against it in
the courts of the United States, the members of a corporation are
to be conclusively presumed to be citizens of the state creating
such corporation,
Louisville, Cincinnati &
Charleston Railroad Co. v. Letson, 2 How. 497;
Covington Drawbridge Co. v.
Shepherd, 20 How. 227,
61 U. S. 232;
Ohio & Miss. Railroad Co.
v. Wheeler, 1 Black 286,
66 U. S. 296;
Steamship Co. v. Tugman, 106 U. S. 118,
106 U. S. 120;
Barrow Steamship Co. v. Kane, 170 U.
S. 100, and therefore it has been said that a
corporation is to be deemed for such purposes a citizen of the
state under whose laws it was organized. But it is equally well
settled, and we now hold, that a corporation is not a citizen
within the meaning of the constitutional provision that "the
citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several states."
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S.
178-179;
Ducat v.
Chicago, 10 Wall. 410,
77 U. S. 415;
Liverpool Ins. Co. v.
Massachusetts, 10 Wall. 566,
77 U. S. 573.
The Virginia corporation, therefore, cannot invoke that provision
for protection against the decree of the state court denying its
right to participate upon terms of equality with Tennessee
creditors in the distribution of the assets of the British
corporation in the hands of the Tennessee court.
Since, however, a corporation is a "person," within the meaning
of the Fourteenth Amendment (
Santa Clara County v. Southern
Pacific Railroad Co., 118 U. S. 394,
118 U. S. 396;
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
169 U. S.
522), may not the Virginia corporation invoke for its
protection the clause of the amendment declaring that no state
shall deprive any person of property without due process, nor deny
to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws?
We are of opinion that this question must receive a negative
Page 172 U. S. 260
answer. Although this Court has adjudged that the prohibitions
of the Fourteenth Amendment refer to all the instrumentalities of
the state, to its legislative, executive, and judicial authorities
(
Ex Parte Virginia, 100 U. S. 339,
100 U. S.
346-347;
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.
S. 356,
118 U. S. 373;
Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S. 34,
154 U. S. 45,
and
Chicago, Burlington &c. Railroad v. Chicago,
166 U. S. 226,
166 U. S.
233), it does not follow that, within the meaning of
that amendment, the judgment below deprived the Virginia
corporation of property without due process of law simply because
its claim was subordinated to the claims of the Tennessee
creditors. That corporation was not, in any legal sense, deprived
of its claim, nor was its right to reach the assets of the British
corporation in other states or countries disputed. It was only
denied the right to participate upon terms of equality with
Tennessee creditors in the distribution of particular assets of
another corporation doing business in that state. It had notice of
the proceedings in the state court, became a party to those
proceedings, and the rights asserted by it were adjudicated. If the
Virginia corporation cannot invoke the protection of the second
section of Article IV of the Constitution of the United States,
relating to the privileges and immunities of citizens in the
several states, as its co-plaintiffs in error have done, it is
because it is not a citizen within the meaning of that section, and
if the state court erred in its decree in reference to that
corporation, the latter cannot be said to have been thereby
deprived of its property without due process of law within the
meaning of the Constitution.
It is equally clear that the Virginia corporation cannot rely
upon the clause declaring that no state shall "deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." That
prohibition manifestly relates only to the denial by the State of
equal protection to persons "within its jurisdiction." Observe that
the prohibition against the deprivation of property without due
process of law is not qualified by the words "within its
jurisdiction," while those words are found in the succeeding clause
relating to the equal protection of the laws. The Court cannot
assume that those words were inserted
Page 172 U. S. 261
without any object, nor is it at liberty to eliminate them from
the Constitution and to interpret the clause in question as if they
were not to be found in that instrument. Without attempting to
state what is the full import of the words "within its
jurisdiction," it is safe to say that a corporation not created by
Tennessee nor doing business there under conditions that subjected
it to process issuing from the courts of Tennessee at the instance
of suitors is not, under the above clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, within the jurisdiction of that state. Certainly when
the statute in question was enacted, the Virginia corporation was
not within the jurisdiction of Tennessee. So far as the record
discloses, its claim against the Embreeville Company was on account
of coke sold and shipped from Virginia to the latter corporation at
its place of business in Tennessee. It does not appear to have been
doing business in Tennessee under the statute here involved, or
under any statute that would bring it directly under the
jurisdiction of the courts of Tennessee by service of process on
its officers or agents. Nor do we think it came within the
jurisdiction of Tennessee, within the meaning of the amendment,
simply by presenting its claim in the state court, and thereby
becoming a party to this cause. Under any other interpretation, the
Fourteenth Amendment would be given a scope not contemplated by its
framers or by the people, nor justified by its language. We adjudge
that the statute, so far as it subordinates the claims of private
business corporations not within the jurisdiction of the State of
Tennessee (although such private corporations may be creditors of a
corporation doing business in the state under the authority of that
statute) to the claims against the latter corporation of creditors
residing in Tennessee, is not a denial of the "equal protection of
the laws" secured by the Fourteenth Amendment to persons within the
jurisdiction of the state, however unjust such a regulation may be
deemed.
What may be the effect of the judgment of this Court in the
present case upon the rights of creditors not residing in the
United States it is not necessary to decide. Those creditors are
not before the Court on this writ of error.
Page 172 U. S. 262
The final judgment of the Supreme Court of Tennessee must be
affirmed as to the Hull Coal & Coke Company, because it did not
deny to that corporation any right, privilege, or immunity secured
to it by the Constitution of the United States. Rev.Stat. § 709. As
to the other plaintiffs in error, citizens of Ohio, the judgment
must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings
not inconsistent with this opinion, and it is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, dissenting.
I am unable to concur in the opinion of the Court in this case.
In my judgment, it misconceives the language of the statute, the
issues presented by the pleadings, and the decision of the state
court. The act does not discriminate between citizens of Tennessee
and those of other states. Its language is, creditors "residents of
this state shall have a priority . . . over all simple contract
creditors being residents of any other country or countries." The
allegation of the amended bill is, "[y]our orators are all
residents of the State of Tennessee, and were such at the time the
various debts sued on in this cause were created," and that, by
virtue of the statute, they are entitled to priority over the
"defendant Rogers, Brown & Co., and all other creditors of
said insolvent corporation who do not reside in the State of
Tennessee, or did not so reside at the time their credits were
given."
The intervening petition of the plaintiffs in error Blake and
Rogers, Brown & Co. alleges
"that they are residents of the State of Ohio, and were at the
times and dates hereinafter named engaged in business in said
state, their residences, offices, and places of business being at
the City of Cincinnati."
The decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals adjudges
"that all of the creditors of said company who resided in the
State of Tennessee are entitled to priority of payment, out of all
of the assets of the company of every kind, over all of the
creditors of said company who do not reside in the State of
Tennessee."
And the decree of the supreme court of the state is in
substantially the
Page 172 U. S. 263
same language, adjudging
"that all of the creditors of the Embreeville Freehold Land,
Iron and Railway Company, Limited, who resided in the State of
Tennessee, are entitled to priority of payment out of all of the
assets of said company, both real and personal, over all of the
other creditors of said company who do not reside in the State of
Tennessee, whether they be residents of other states of the United
States or of the kingdom of Great Britain."
So that neither the statute, the pleadings, nor the decree raise
any question of citizenship, or give any priority of right to
citizens of Tennessee over citizens of other states, but only
discriminate between residents, and give residents of the state a
priority. I think it improper to go outside of a case to find a
question which is not in the record simply because it may be
discussed by counsel for one party who apparently decline to
recognize any difference between residence and citizenship. For all
this record discloses, the plaintiffs in error other than the
corporation may have been citizens of the State of Tennessee,
temporarily residing and doing business in Ohio, and the
controversy one simply between citizens of the same state. It is
not necessary in this Court to refer to the difference between
residence and citizenship. Neither is synonymous with the other,
and neither includes the other. A British subject or a citizen of
Ohio may be a resident of Tennessee, and entitled to the benefit of
this statute. A citizen of Tennessee may, like these plaintiffs in
error, be a resident of and doing business in Ohio, and not
entitled to its benefit. It will be time enough to consider the
question discussed in the opinion when it appears that a state has
attempted to discriminate between its own citizens and citizens of
other states, and the courts of the state have affirmed the
validity of such discrimination.
Taking the statute as it reads, and assuming that the
Legislature of Tennessee meant that which it said, the question is
whether a state, permitting a foreign corporation which is not
engaged in interstate commerce to come into its territory, and
there do business, has the power to protect all persons residing
within its limits who may have dealings with such foreign
corporation by requiring it to give them a prior security on
its
Page 172 U. S. 264
assets within the state. The principle underlying this statute
is that a state, which can have no jurisdiction beyond its
territorial limits, has the power, in reference to foreign
corporations permitted to do business therein, to protect all
persons within those limits, whether citizens or not, in respect to
claims upon the property thereof also within those limits. That a
state may keep such a corporation out of its territory is conceded,
and that, in permitting it to enter, the state may impose such
conditions as it sees fit, is, as a general proposition, also
admitted. In
Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U. S.
47,
141 U. S. 59, it
was said:
"The insurance business, for example, cannot be carried on in a
state by a foreign corporation without complying with all the
conditions imposed by the legislation of that state. So with regard
to manufacturing corporations and all other corporations whose
business is of a local and domestic nature, which would include
express companies whose business is confined to points and places
wholly within the state. The cases to this effect are numerous.
Bank of
Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet. 519;
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168;
Liverpool Insurance
Company v. Massachusetts, 10 Wall. 566;
Cooper
Manufacturing Company v. Ferguson, 113 U. S.
727;
Phila. Fire Association v. New York,
119 U. S.
110."
Everyone dealing with a foreign corporation is bound to take
notice of the statutes of the state imposing conditions upon that
corporation in respect to the transaction of its business within
the state, just as he must take notice of any mortgage or other
encumbrance placed by the corporation upon its property there
situated. A state may, and often does, provide that persons
furnishing supplies to and doing work for a corporation shall have
a lien upon the property of that corporation prior to any mortgage.
The validity of such legislation has always been sustained, and
they who loan their money to the corporation do so with notice of
the limitation, and have no constitutional right of complaint if
their mortgage is thereafter postponed to simple contract
obligations. If, voluntarily, the corporation placed a mortgage
upon all its assets within the state to secure a debt to a single
creditor residing within
Page 172 U. S. 265
the state, and such mortgage was duly recorded, no one would
have the hardihood to say that a resident or citizen of another
state could challenge its validity or its priority over his
unsecured debt, simply because he was a citizen of another state,
or did not, in fact know of its existence. And that which is true
in case of a mortgage to a single creditor would be equally true in
case such foreign corporation placed a mortgage upon its assets to
secure every creditor within the state. The number of creditors
secured does not change the validity of the security, or affect the
matter of notice, or relieve the foreign creditor from the
consequences of notice. If the corporation may voluntarily place a
mortgage upon all its assets within the state to secure its
creditors within the state, why may not the legislature require, as
a condition of its doing business, that it give such a mortgage? Is
the corporation more powerful than the state? Is a voluntarily
executed mortgage more valid than a statute? If in fact, in
pursuance of such a statute, a mortgage to each separate creditor
was given and recorded as fast as the corporation came under
obligation to him, could a nonresident creditor question the
validity of the mortgage or the priority given thereby? And is the
effect of the statute in controversy anything other than the
imposition upon the assets of the corporation within the state of a
single mortgage in favor of home creditors? If written out and
recorded, who could question its validity or its priority? The
statute, in its spirit and effect, does nothing more. That it is
prospective in its operation is immaterial; statutes generally are.
The validity of an after-acquired property clause in a mortgage has
become settled; nonetheless valid is it in a statute.
It is conceded in the opinion of the Court that a foreign
insurance corporation might be required to make a special deposit
with the state treasurer to secure local policy holders; but if it
is within the constitutional power of the state to require such
special deposit, and, when made, it becomes in fact a security to
the home policy holders, I am unable to appreciate why the state
may not require a general mortgage on all the assets within the
state as like security. Looking at it
Page 172 U. S. 266
simply as a question of power on the part of the state, what
difference can there be between a pledge of a special fund and a
mortgage of the entire fund within the state? And that which is
true in respect to an insurance corporation must also be true of
any other corporation not engaged in interstate commerce
business.
Indeed, aside from the demand made by the statutes of certain
states of deposits by foreign corporations to secure home
creditors, there are frequent illustrations of discrimination based
upon the matter of residence. Often nonresident plaintiffs are
required to give security for costs when none is demanded of
resident suitors. Attachments will lie in the beginning of an
action, authorizing the seizure of property upon the ground that
the defendant is a nonresident, when no such seizure is permitted
in case of resident defendants. These and many similar
illustrations which might be suggested only disclose that it has
been accepted as a general truth that a state may discriminate on
the ground of residence, and that such discrimination is not to be
condemned as one between citizens, and yet, if the doctrine of the
opinion of the Court in this case be correct, I cannot see how
those statutes can be sustained, for surely they discriminate
between nonresident and resident suitors in the matter of
fundamental rights, to-wit, the right of equal entrance into the
courts, and equal security in the possession of property. It may
not be uninteresting to notice the case of
Fritts v.
Palmer, 132 U. S. 282.
That case came from Colorado. The statutes of that state, as quoted
in the opinion of the Court, provided, among other things:
"SEC. 260. Foreign corporations shall, before they are
authorized or permitted to do any business in this state, make and
file a certificate signed by the president and secretary of such
corporation, duly acknowledged, with the Secretary of State, . . .
and no corporation doing business in the state, incorporated under
the laws of any other state, shall be permitted to mortgage, pledge
or otherwise encumber its real or personal property situated in
this state to the injury or exclusion of any citizen, citizens or
corporations of this state
Page 172 U. S. 267
who are creditors of such foreign corporation, and no mortgage
by any foreign corporation, except railroad and telegraph
companies, given to secure any debt created in any other state,
shall take effect as against any citizen or corporation of this
state until all its liabilities due to any person or corporation in
this state at the time of recording such mortgage have been paid
and extinguished."
Commenting upon this section, and others, this Court said (p.
132 U. S.
288):
"No question is made in this case -- indeed, there can be no
doubt -- as to the validity of these constitutional and statutory
provisions, so far at least as they do not directly affect foreign
or interstate commerce. In
Cooper Manufacturing Co. v.
Ferguson, 113 U. S. 727,
113 U. S.
732, this Court said that"
"the right of the people of a state to prescribe generally by
its Constitution and laws the terms upon which a foreign
corporation shall be allowed to carry on its business in the state
has been settled by this Court."
It will be perceived that the statute of Colorado restrained a
foreign corporation from mortgaging, pledging, or otherwise
encumbering its property situate in the state to the injury or
exclusion of any citizen of the state, creditor of such
corporation, and further provided that no mortgage given by such
foreign corporation to secure a debt created in another state
should take effect against any citizen of the state until all
liabilities due to any person or corporation in the state had been
paid and extinguished. But this Court said, and I think correctly,
that there could be no doubt of the validity of these statutory
provisions. It may be said, and said truthfully, that the attention
of the Court was not specially directed to this particular portion
of the statute, and hence that the decision cannot be taken as
authority. Yet the section was spread before the Court, it is
quoted in its opinion, and it was so obviously constitutional that
neither counsel nor court had any doubt thereof. I note this case
in order to suggest the objectionable evolution of the thought that
a state may not protect those persons who are within its
jurisdiction in respect to property also within its jurisdiction,
or impose conditions on
Page 172 U. S. 268
foreign corporations doing business therein, which amount to
such protection. Ten years ago, a statute of Colorado guarantying
priority to citizens of the state over all other creditors, even
those by mortgage, was by all parties, by counsel, and by court
conceded to be free from objection, while today a statute of
Tennessee, in no way discriminating between citizens, but only
between residents and in respect to foreign corporations, is
declared to be so plainly at variance with the Constitution of the
United States that it must be adjudged void.
The doctrine of this opinion is that a state has no power to
secure protection to persons within its jurisdiction, citizens or
noncitizens, in respect to property also within its jurisdiction,
because, forsooth, such protection may in some cases work to the
disadvantage of one who is not only a nonresident, but also not a
citizen, of the state. It seems to me that the practical working
out of this doctrine will be not that the state may not
discriminate in favor of its own residents as against nonresidents,
but that the state must discriminate in favor of nonresidents and
against its own residents. Take this illustration: a corporation
organized and having its home office in New York comes into
California to do business. The State of California attempts to
require that its assets within the state shall be kept as a primary
security for home creditors. This Court declares that such
requisition is unconstitutional. The solvency or insolvency of that
New York corporation will be known in New York by those who are
nearer to its home office sooner than by people in California.
Insolvency is impending. The creditors in New York, near the home
office and familiar therefore with its exact condition,
ascertaining its approaching insolvency, send to California, where
there are assets, and, availing themselves of the ordinary
statutory provisions of that state, seize by attachment all the
assets there situated. The insolvency is thereafter made public,
and the California creditors find that all the assets of the
corporation within their state have been seized by creditors
outside the state, and they are driven to the State of New York,
where the corporation was organized, where its home
Page 172 U. S. 269
office and home assets are, to see what share in the
unappropriated assets they can obtain, while the New York
creditors, by reason of their early information, secure full
payment. Practically, the effect is to compel the state to
discriminate in favor of the New York against the home creditors.
The suggestion that, after the New York creditors have perfected
their liens upon the assets in California, the courts of that state
will stay proceedings until they see that the New York courts have
given full protection to the California creditors in the assets in
New York, is visionary and impracticable. There may be assets in
twenty states, and there is no control by the courts of one state
over proceedings in the courts of other states. Of course, if the
California courts can wait till the New York courts have acted, the
converse is also true, and so a game of seesaw may be established
between the courts of the two states. For these among other
reasons, I am constrained to dissent from this opinion and
judgment.
I am authorized to state that THE CHIEF JUSTICE concurs in this
dissent.