Court Opinion

ID: 3238183
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:12:09.890998+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:28.133747
License: Public Domain

Phillips sued Langston, declaring on a promissory note which defendant had given to the Pep-to-Lac Company of America and had been transferred to plaintiff. The defense was that the note was given to the Pep-to-Lac Company for shares of stock in that company, which had been sold to defendant in this state, and that said company, a corporation chartered under the laws of Delaware, had not paid its franchise tax, and had no license to do business in this state during the year in which the sale was made and the note given. Trial was had before the court without a jury on an agreed statement of facts.
All else being agreed upon, the sole issue presented by the pleading, and therefore the sole issue to be decided by the court, was whether, within the meaning of the statute (Code, §§ 3651-3653), denouncing as void all contracts made in this state by foreign corporations without having first procured a *Page 175 
permit by the payment of a franchise tax (Code, § 3647), the issue to be decided was whether the contract for the sale of the stock in question was made in Alabama, or in Delaware, where, of course, the law of this state had no effect.
The agent of the Pep-to-Lac Company, employed for that purpose, negotiated a sale of its stock in this state and took defendant's note therefor, the note in suit. True, the sale was subject to approval by the company at its home office in Delaware, but the contract was negotiated and the note in suit executed and delivered in this state, and we cannot doubt that the negotiation of the contract and the acceptance of the note in this state, though conditional, constituted the business of selling stock in this state within the meaning of the statute, supra, and if by reason of the company's approval of the sale negotiated by its agent, though the determination to approve may have been reached in the state of Delaware, the contract became operative and binding on defendant in this state, notwithstanding there was never any delivery of the note — and the assignment of the note and this action both affirm the note to be binding on defendant — this, in our opinion, constituted a sale of the stock in this state within the meaning of the several pleas filed in this cause. Chattanooga Building  Loan Asso. v. Denson, 189 U.S. 408, 23 Sup. Ct. 630,47 L.Ed. 870, where the court stated the effect of our decisions, saying that a discussion of the situs of contracts and by the law of what place their obligation is determined was not relevant to the consideration of the purpose of the statute, prohibiting the doing of any business in this state in the exercise of corporate functions unless and until the conditions prescribed by the statutes have been fulfilled.
It follows that the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.