Court Opinion

ID: 8185757
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:08:12.229934+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:24.571551
License: Public Domain

PiNNET, J.
1. The principal question presented by these appeals is as to the construction, validity, and effect of the law" *216of Wisconsin requiring foreign mutual building and loan associations to make a deposit of securities of the value of $100,000 with the state treasurer as a condition upon which such corporations may receive a license from and transact business in this state. The statute (secs. 2014a, 20145, S. & B. Ann. Stats.) provides that “ no foreign building and loan association . . . shall issue its shares, receive moneys or transact any business in this state unless such association shall Have and keep on deposit with the state treasurer of Wisconsin, in trust, for the benefit and security of all its members in this state, the securities of the actual cash value of $100,000 of the kind mentioned in section 2 of this act;, to be approved and accepted by said state treasure?’, and held in trust as aforesaid, until all shares of such association held by residents of this state shall have been fully redeemed and paid off by such association, and until its contracts and obligations to persons and members residing in this state shall have been fully performed and discharged.” The deposit is required at all times to be kept good and of the value of $100,000. The defendant corporation, in order to be allowed to enter the state and transact its proper business as a building and loan association therein, and to obtain a license to that end, as it did May 10, 1889 (which was renewed from time to time, and continued in force during the ' entire period it transacted business in said state), deposited with the state treasurer of Wisconsin, as it appears, its mortgage securities taken in the course of its business, to the required amount.
The defendant corporation was a foreign corporation, created and existing under the laws of the state of Minnesota, located and having its principal office in Minneapolis. ■ The general nature of its business was “ to assist its members in saving and investing money, in buying real estate, and in procui’ing money for other purposes, by loaning or advancing under the mutual building society plan.” By ar-*217tide 6 of its arfides of association, the government of thf corporation and the management of its affairs were vested in a board of seven directors, chosen from and by the stockholders. By its amended articles of association, adopted July 31, 1888 (article 19), it was provided that “the board of directors may sell and dispose of the mortgages held by this corporation whenever they may deem best, and as provided by the by-laws;” but no by-laws on the subject were adopted. Article 16 of the same date provided that “the directors of this corporation may enter into such contracts and agreements and appoint such agents as they may deem for the interest best of its affairs.” Article 19 was amended July 11, 1888, so as to read as follows: “The board of directors shall not sell or dispose of any of the mortgages owned by this corporation.”
The Minnesota statute (chapter 236 of the General Laws for 1889, which became a law April 22d of that year, before the defendant corporation was licensed to do business in Wisconsin, as amended June 1, 1891, and embodied in Gen. Stats, of Minn. 1894, see. 2860) provided, in substance, that every building and loan association governed by the act should deposit and keep with the state auditor or a trust companj’ all mortgages or other securities received by it in the usual course of business, and that, whenever required by the laws of any other state, territory, or nation, its securities sufficient to allow such association to enter and do business in such state, territory, or nation might be deposited with some officer authorized to receive the same in such state, territory, or nation, under the laws thereof, for the benefit of its members and creditors. Provisions were made regulating the transfer accordingly, which are so extended as not to admit of convenient quotation; but they seem to plainly recognize as lawful a deposit in another state of securities of the association, in order to entitle it to a license to enter such state and transact its business therein. Suffice-*218it to say that the provisions of the Minnesota statute seem designed to facilitate the convenient using and tracing of its securities deposited for the purpose indicated, and its provisions appear to be in the main directory. Compliance with it appears to be a matter of local administration, and not a condition precedent to the right to use and deposit its securities for the purpose of entering and transacting business in such other state.
Within twenty days after the enactment of the Wisconsin statute, the corporation had constituted the state treasurer of Wisconsin “a depository for temporary convenience in complying with the laws of Wisconsin in regard to deposit of securities, $100,000,” and resolved that it would “ comply with the Wisconsin law as soon as possible.” A license was issued to it pursuant to the statute, and it was renewed or continued in force until January 1, 1894.
2. In view of the action of the defendant through its board of directors, and the fact that it is conceded that the securities of the kind and character mentioned were held by the state treasurer of Wisconsin when the action was commenced to the amount of $145,234, we must conclude and hold that the mortgages in dispute were deposited with the state treasurer by the defendant corporation, or by its authority, in a liona fide attempt “ to comply with Wisconsin law,” as it had airead}? résolved to do and it had made the state treasurer of that state its depository for that purpose. The Wisconsin law required the deposit of securities under the act to be made with the state treasurer. The defendant corporation obtained the prescribed license. It was required and it was its duty to deposit the securities mentioned to the amount of $100,000. This, it would seem, had been agreed should be done; and, upon the facts disclosed by the record, we think that it is a reasonable presumption that what was agreed to be done was done in the manner and for the purposes prescribed by the act. In Sparks v. Nat. M. Acc. *219Asso. (Iowa), 69 N. W. Rep. 678, it was held that when a foreign insurance company is shown to have transacted business in a state where, by the statute, certain acts were to be done by that company before it had a right to transact business therein, a conclusive presumption arises that the company has complied with the law in that respect. It is alleged in the counterclaim, in substance, that the provisions of the Minnesota statute were not complied with by the corporation defendant in making the deposits with the state treasurer of "Wisconsin. The state authorities of "Wisconsin, in receiving these securities as provided by the statute, were not bound to investigate the question of local administration or compliance with the law of Minnesota by the corporation and state authorities. The allegations that the possession of the securities by the state treasurer was wrongful, and that they were delivered to him by officers and employees of the corporation without lawful authority, are legal conclusions. It was enough that the securities were, as it is conceded, the property of the corporation; and that its directors, who deposited them for the purpose indicated, had power “to enter into such contracts and agreements as they might deem for the best interest of its affairs; ” and that the directors, in the exercise of their discretion, desired to obtain a license to prosecute and carry on the business of the corporation in "Wisconsin in order to realize the profits and advantages consequent upon such extension of its business, which it appears has been extended to thirty-four states. Heath v. Silverthorn L. M. & S. Co. 39 Wis. 146.
3. It was within the power of the directors to determine upon and make the intended extension of the business of the corporation; and it was their duty and within their power as well to make the necessary deposit of its securities as required by the "Wisconsin law, which was a condition precedent to the right of the corporation to obtain the desired license and transact its business in Wisconsin. In any view *220that may be taken of the case, we think that the transaction was within the undoubted power of the corporation. The deposit was made accordingly. The license was issued. The defendant entered the state, and carried on its business therein, and for a period of five years derived the benefits and advantages expected to result from such extension of its business, and the protection and authority of the state. It ■was well understood by the corporation, its directors, officers, and members, that these securities had been deposited, and had so remained, with the state treasurer, under the pledge specified in the Wisconsin statute, and until financial disaster and insolvency overtook the corporation. It could enter the state of Wisconsin, and carry on its business, only on-complying with the terms and conditions of the Wisconsin statute. Having the right to extend its business, it seems clear that it was not ultra vires the corporation to comply with the conditions upon which alone it could lawfully obtain a license to so enter the state and carry on its business, the prosecution of which was for the common advantage and profit of the corporation and of all fits members and shareholders.
4. It is familiar law that the recognition of the exists ence of a corporation by any other than the state of its creation, and the enforcement of its contracts made therein, depend purely upon the comity of such other state or states, — ■ “ a comity which is never extended where the existence of the corporation or the exercise of its powers are prejudicial to their interests or repugnant to their policy.” “Having no absolute right of recognition in other states, but depending for such recognition and the enforcement of its contracts upon their assent, it follows, as a matter of course, that such assent may he granted upon such terms and conditions as those states may think proper to impose. They may exclude the foreign corporation entirely; they may restrict its business to particular localities; or they may exact such security *221for the performance of its contraéis with their citizens as in ■their judgment will T>est promote the pxiblic interest. The whole matter rests in their discretion.” This was so held by the supreme court of the United States, nearly thirty years ago, in Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, 181, affirmed in that court by many subsequent cases, and as well by other •courts of the highest respectability and authority. Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 618, and cases cited; Relfe v. Rundle, 103 U. S. 222, 225; Hartford F. Ins. Co. v. Raymond, 70 Mich. 485; Morse v. Home Ins. Co. 30 Wis. 496; State ex rel. Drake v. Doyle, 40 Wis. 175, 197; State ex rel. Covenant M. B. Asso. v. Root, S3 Wis. 667, 680; Wyman v. Kimberly-Clark Co. 93 Wis. 554.
In Hooper v. California, supra, the cases in the supreme ■court of the United States on the subject are collected and cited, and it was there stated that: “ The principle that the right of a foreign corporation to engage in business Avithin a state other than that of its creation depends solely upon the will of such other state has been long settled, and many phases of its application hare been illustrated by the decisions of this court. While there are exceptions to this rule, they embrace only cases where a corporation created by one state rests its right to enter another, and to engage in business therein, upon the federal nature of its business; as, for instance, where it has derived its being from an act of Congress, and has become a lawful agency for the performance of governmental or <2"w«si-governmental functions, or where it is necessarily an instrumentality of interstate commerce, or its business constitutes such commerce, and is therefore solely within the paramount authority of Congress. In these cases the exceptional business is protected against interference by state authority.” In the case cited the court said: “The state of California has the power to exclude foreign insurance companies altogether from her territory, whether they were formed for the purpose of doing a fire or a ma*222rine business. She has the power, if she allows any such companies to enter her confines, to determine the conditions on which the entry shall be made. And, as a necessary consequence of her possession of these powers, she has the right to enforce any conditions imposed Toy her laws as preliminary to the transaction of business within her confines by a foreign corporation, whether the business is to be carried on through officers or through ordinary agents of the company; and she has also the further right to prohibit a citizen from contracting within her jurisdiction with any foreign company which has not acquired the privilege of engaging in business therein, either in his own behalf or through an agent empowered to that end. The power to exclude embraces the power to regulate, to enact and enforce all legislation in regard to things done within the territory of the state which may be directly or incidentally requisite in oi’-der to render the enforcement of the conceded power efficacious to the fullest extent, subject always, of course, to the paramount authority of the constitution of the United States.” The doctrine thus established is, in our judgment, conclusive as to the validity of the pledge of the securities here in question, under the Wisconsin statute, and of the trusts therein specified. The defendant association clearly had the power to make the deposit as incident to the accomplishment of the purpose for which it was created.
In North Hudson Mut. B. & L. Asso. v. First Nat. Bank, 19 Wis. 31, 36, this court held that a building and loan association might lawfully do those things reasonably necessary in order to accomplish the objects and purposes of its organization which were not expressly forbidden. In general, in exercising the powers conferred by its charter, a corporation may adopt any proper and convenient means tending directly to their accomplishment, and not amounting to the transaction of a separate unauthorized business. Clark v. Farrington, 11 Wis. 306; State ex rel. Priest v. Regents of *223University, 54 Wis. 159; Madison, W. & M. Plank Road Co. v. Watertown & P. Plank Road Co. 5 Wis. 173. The association defendant bad not been forbidden to make.tbe deposit of its securities taken in the course of its business to enable it to enter the state of Wisconsin or any other state and obtain a license to transact its business therein. It was the absolute owner of these securities, and it might lawfully so use them. It was required by the statute that “if any securities on deposit as provided by this act are wholly or partially extinguished by payments on the same or otherwise, or such securities depreciate in value for any cause, new securities must be added, so that the deposit may at all times be kept good and of the value of $100,000.” [Sec. 20145, S. & E. Ann. Stats.] The association defendant, by accepting its license, was bound to comply with the law; and, in the absence of any allegations to tlpe contrary, it must be presumed that all mortgages deposited at or after the date of the license, May 10, 1889, were deposited for the purpose of complying with the law and keeping its deposit up to the required amount of $100,000. The subsequent amendment to. the articles of incorporation (July 11th), providing that “ the board of directors shall not sell or dispose of any of the mortgages held or owned by the corporation,” is relied on; but this provision must be construed, we think, in connection with the statute of Minnesota, which, as already noticed, quite clearly contemplated that the securities of the association might be used and pledged, if need be, for the purpose of complying with the law under which it could enter to transact business in another state. It ivas not intended by this amendment to deprive the corporation of the power, by the use of its securities, to maintain and keep good its deposit's, in order to transact its business in the thirty-four states which it appears to have entered for that purpose. The more reasonable view would seem to be that the amendment, was intended to prevent an absolute *224sale or traffic in its securities, and not a deposit of such securities for the purpose indicated.
We arrive, therefore, at the conclusion that the deposit of securities in question, made with the state treasurer for the purpose indicated, was within the lawful power of the corporation as represented by its directors, and that the action of the directors in making it was binding upon the corporation and all its members to the extent and according to the terms of the statute under which it was made.
5. The deposit was, as we have said, within the power conferred upon the corporation, and not in violation of the trust reposed in the board of directors, that the affairs of the corporation should be managed, and its property and funds applied, solely for the purpose of carrying out the objects for which the corporation was created. It is well settled that a corporation cannot avail itself of the defense of ultra vires when the contract in question has been in good faith fully performed by the other party, and the corporation has had the full benefit of the performance of the contract. Much less will the claim that the transaction was tdtra vires be allowed as a ground for rescinding the contract and restoring to the complaining party, on that ground, the property or funds with which he has parted, after he has had the benefit of full performance of the contract by the other party; and, in general,*the plea of ultra vires will not be allowed to prevail, whether interposed for or against a corporation, when it will not advance justice, but, on the contrary, will accomplish a legal wrong. Kadish v. Garden Oity E. B. & L. Asso. 151 Ill. 581; Whitney Arms Co. v. Barlow, 63 N. Y. 62; National Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S. 628, 629. “'Where it is a simple question of capacity or authority to contract, arising either on a question of regularity of organization or of power conferred by the charter, a party who has had the benefit of the agreement cannot be permitted, in an action founded on it, to question its validity. It would *225be in. tbe highest degree inequitable and unjust to permit the defendant to repudiate a contract the fruits of which he retains.” Sedgwick, Construction of Stat. & Const. Law, 73. In 2 Beach, Priv. Corp. § 425, the subject is fully considered, and numerous modern authorities are cited, showing that “where a contract has been in good faith fully performed, either by the corporation or the other party, the one who has received the benefit of it will not be permitted to resist its enforcement by the plea of a mere want of power.” Darst v. Gale, 83 Ill. 136; Carson City Sav. Bank v. Carson City Elevator Co. 90 Mich. 550; Holmes & Griggs Mfg. Co. v. Holmes & Wessell Metal Co. 127 N. Y. 260; Rider Life Raft Co. v. Roach, 97 N. Y. 378; Bradley v. Ballard, 55 Ill. 415; State Board of Agriculture v. Citizens' St. R. Co. 47 Ind. 407; Oil Creek & A. R. Co. v. Pennsylvania Transp. Co. 83 Pa. St. 160, 166.
The result of these views is that the receiver appointed by the circuit court for Dane cgunty, Wisconsin, is entitled to retain the securities in question, and to subject them, under the order of the court, to the fulfillment of the trust upon which they were so deposited; and, to that end, they may be sold or collected, and the proceeds so applied, and any residue that may remain must be turned over to the appellant, the receiver appointed by the district court of Henne-pin county, Minnesota. The corporation defendant, as well as its stockholders and its receiver appointed by the court in Minnesota, are estopped from disputing the validity of the trust upon which the state treasurer had received these securities and held them when the corporation became insolvent arid this action was commenced. The corporation, by its directors, consented to and made the deposit, and their action became binding alike on members and stockholders in other states; and they have thus waived all right, on legal or constitutional grounds, to question the validity of *226the trust on which the securities are held, as expressed in-the statute.
6. We cannot perceive how it can be maintained that the contract clause -of the federal constitution can be invoked to release these securities from the operation and effect of such pledge and estoppel, whatever view may be taken of the rights and relations of the entire body of stockholders as between themselves and the corporation. They have waived their right to insist upon the constitutional objection they urge against the Wisconsin statute, or to question the validity of the trust. Whatever modification or change may have-occurred in the contractual relations existing between these parties is the sole result of their lawful and proper consent,, or of thosó who were chosen and fully empowered in law to represent them, namely, the board of directors, without whose authority the securities could not have been deposited or pledged under the statute. The right to invoke the contract provision of the federal^constitution, we think, has been waived by them; and the case on this point falls strictly within the principle stated by Judge Cooley in his celebrated work on Constitutional Limitations (6th ed., p. 214), where he states that “ there are cases where a law, in its application to a particular case, must be sustained, because the party who makes objection has, by prior action, precluded himself from being heard against it. Where a constitutional provision is designed for the protection solely of the property rights of the citizen, it is competent for him to waive the protection, and to consent to such action as would' be invalid if taken against his will.” And several instances of the application of this principle are given. The learned author states: “ In these and the like cases the statute must be read with an iiwplied proviso that the party to. be affected shall assent thereto; and such consent removes all obstacle, and lets the statute in to operate the same as if it had in terms contained the condition.”
*227There are many well-consiclered cases sustaining the-position that a party may, by his own act or conduct, preclude himself from insisting upon constitutional objections to a statute affecting his rights. The subject is discussed by PaiNe, J., in Burrows v. Bashford, 22 Wis. 104, where the opinion is expressed that it is not unconstitutional for the legislature to provide that a party may voluntarily subject himself to unconstitutional provisions as a condition to the enjoyment of a new advantage given by the act. So, in the present case, in consideration of the benefits derived by the. defendant corporation and its shareholders from the statute under consideration, it being allowed to enter the state and transact business therein, they must be precluded from insisting upon the invalidity of the statute. Bank of Columbia v. Okely, 4 Wheat. 235; People v. Murray, 5 Hill, 468. A party may renounce a constitutional provision made for his benefit (Embury v. Conner, 3 N. Y. 511; Lee v. Tillotson, 24 Wend. 337), and, having waived it, cannot subsequently ask for its protection. The views we have already expressed render the contention of the appellant in respect to the relations which the shareholders of a mutual building-association ordinarily sustain to the corporation and to each other inapplicable, as well as the contention that the' enforcement of the trust specified in the statute in these securities will destroy equality of right between the shareholders in general, rendering, as it is contended, the Wisconsin shareholders preferred shareholders.
7. Whatever the practical result of the enforcement of the trust in favor of Wisconsin shareholders, creditors, and others sustaining contractual relations with the corporation defendant may be, it rests, as we think aqd as we hold, upon the consent of the corporation and of its shareholders lawfully given, as it well might be in the present case, by and through its board of directors, for a valid consideration received by the corporation to the benefit and advantage of those now *228denying its validity. The right of the state of Wisconsin to pass and enforce the act for the better protection of its citizens and residents against irresponsible foreign corporations entering, or desiring to enter, the state and transact business therein with its citizens, cannot, we think, be denied. • We cannot assent to the position that the security afforded by the deposit required by the act, and thus consented to and njade by the corporation through its directors, may be avoided or nullified at the instant when the necessity for retaining and enforcing it becomes imperative. If it was lawful to require and take the security, it is rightful and lawful to insist on it, and enforce it, according to the very terms and true meaning of the act under which it was given; and insolvency of the corporation will not release the trust or discharge it. The language of the Wisconsin statute is free from doubt or ambiguity, and construction has no office to perform in respect to it. Its meaning and purpose are obvious, and it is the manifest duty of the court to give it full effect. This cannot be done without strictly applying the securities or their proceeds to the uses prescribed by the statute. This trust was not created for the benefit or indemnity of members, creditors, and shareholders of the defendant corporation generally, residing out of the state. These were not within its plan, purpose, or policy. The deposit was required and made in pursuance of a wise state policy, solely for the benefit and indemnity of resident shareholders and creditors, and for their protection and advantage- only. Language could not have been readily employed to make the intention plainer than is expressed in the statute. To now turn these securities over to the appellant, to the end that they may be collected and converted, and the proceeds applied ratably in satisfaction of all the claims of shareholders and creditors generally, whether residents of Wisconsin or not, would, we think, be a manifest perversion of the trust, and render the security and indemnity they were deposited *229to furnish resident shareholders, and others indicated in the statute, a mere delusion.
On the distribution of the assets of an insolvent insurance company, see an extensive note to Boston & A. B. Có. v. Mercantile T. & D. Co. (83 Md. 535), in 38 L. E. A. 97. — Eep.
Ve think that the demurrers to the appellant’s answer and counterclaim were properly sustained.
By the Court.— The orders appealed from are affirmed.