
    The Singer Manufacturing Company, Plaintiff, v. The Granite Spring Water Company, Defendant.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    March, 1910.)
    Foreign corporations — Recognition, regulation and status — What is carrying on business — Investment of corporate funds. |
    The provision of section 15 of the General Corporation Law, requiring every foreign stock corporation doing business in this State to obtain a certificate, has relation to the regular and customary business for which the corporation was organized, and not to investment in real estate that is leased, unless the company is organized for the immediate purpose of taking title to or leasing land.
    It cannot be presumed that every foreign stock corporation which sues on a contract made here is doing business in the State, since holding real estate for investment is not carrying on business within the meaning of our laws.
    Motion for judgment on the pleadings in an action for rent.
    Ver Planck, Prince & Flanders, for motion.
    Putney, Twombly & Putney, opposed.
   Gerard, J.

Action is for rent of premises in this city. Defendant demurs in effect on the ground that it appears on the face of the complaint that plaintiff is a foreign corporation doing business in this State and suing on a contract made in this State without having obtained the certificate required by section 15 of the General Corporation Law. Plaintiff moves for judgment on the pleadings. The only fact pleaded from which it might be inferred that the plaintiff is doing business in this State is the statement that plaintiff leased to defendant certain premises in this city. I think the statute intended'to refer only to the doing of the regular and customary business for which the corporation was organized. Union Trust Co. v. Sickels, 125 App. Div. 105; Commercial. Coal & Iron Co. v. Polhemus, 128 id. 247. Investment in real estate in the State which is leased is an independent investment, in no sense employed within the State in the transaction of ordinary business. People ex rel. Singer Co. v. Wemple, 150 N. Y. 46; People ex rel. Niagara River H. Co. v. Roberts, 157 id. 676. Of course, if the foreign company is organized for the immediate purpose of taking title or leasing land a different question would be presented (People ex rel. Wall & Hanover St. R. Co. v. Miller, 181 N. Y. 328), but in this case such fact does not appear on the face of the complaint. The foreign corporation may be presumed to be a stock corporation (Portland Co. v. Hall & Grant Const. Co., 123 App. Div. 495), but it cannot be presumed that because it is a foreign stock corporation it is doing business in this State. The statute in question reads not only foreign stock corporation ” but “ foreign stock corporation doing business in this State,” and, as above stated, the mere owning and leasing of real estate in this State held for investment is not necessarily doing business in this State, and that is the only fact which can be inferred from the complaint. The recent cases in the Court of Appeals (Wood & Sellick v. Ball, 190 N. Y. 217; South Bay Co. v. Howey, Id. 240, etc.) all refer to corporations actually doing business in this State. I do not think that every foreign stock corporation which sues on a contract made here must be presumed to be doing business in the State, especially when it has been held that the holding of real estate for investment does not mean that it is carrying on business within the meaning of our laws.

Motion granted with costs.  