A recent attorney’s opinion contained some valuable information regarding the filing of certificates in New York State, permitting foreign corporations to transact business in that State and maintain an action. We have been asked for information regarding the requirements of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in this matter and our attorney at Philadelphia, William S. Furst, Stephen Girard Building, has forwarded the following opinion.
Herewith follows an opinion embodying the essential points in re foreign corporations doing business in the State of Pennsylvania.
The Act of Assembly approved April 22, 1874, provides that no foreign corporation (this includes corporations created by other States) shall do any business in this Commonwealth until such corporation shall have established an office and appointed an agent for the transaction of its business therein, and it shall not be lawful for any such corporation to do any business in this Commonwealth until it shall have filed in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth a statement under seal of such corporation, and signed by the President or Secretary thereof, showing the title and object of said corporation and the name of its authorized agent, with a penalty attached thereto for violation, that a person shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, etc.
The words “doing business” do not include a sale in a foreign State, although the goods are delivered in this State, or taking orders, or making sales by salesmen through agents going into Pennsylvania from another for that purpose.
In short, a foreign corporation engaged in strictly interstate commerce, may advertise its goods, send agents to solicit orders, take orders, make contracts of sale respecting the same, and ship them to customers in Pennsylvania, without violating the act, and may sue to recover the price of any merchandise without filing the statement required by the act, although the foreign corporation in question has no office or place of business in Pennsylvania and no part of its capital invested here.
A foreign corporation, which has not complied with the Act above stated, but has an office or place of business in Pennsylvania, or any of its capital invested within the State, cannot enforce contract rights in the courts of Pennsylvania.
It has been recently decided by the Supreme Court of the State of Pennsylvania (the court of last resort) that a foreign corporation which invests most of its capital in the State of Pennsylvania for a period of six months while constructing a railway, employs large numbers of men, but does not file a statement in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, as required by the provisions of the Act until two months after completion of the work, cannot recover for labor and materials furnished in doing such work.
With respect to the taxes imposed upon foreign corporations doing business in the State of Pennsylvania, the Act of May 8th, 1901, provides that all foreign corporations shall pay to the State Treasurer for the use of the Commonwealth a bonus of one-third of one per centum upon the amount of their capital actually employed or to be employed wholly within the State, and a like bonus upon each subsequent increase of capital so employed. This is not an annual tax. It has been defined to be the price paid the Commonwealth for the privilege conferred on such corporation by its charter. It is therefore in no sense a tax, and the payment thereof does not relieve any corporation from any tax to which it is otherwise subject.
Respecting the taxation of foreign corporations, they are taxable like domestic corporations on so much of their capital stock as is invested within the Commonwealth under the provisions of the Act of Assembly approved June 8th, 1898. The tax is imposed annually at the rate of five mills upon each dollar of the actual value of the whole capital stock of all kinds invested or represented by capital invested within the State.
The tax is settled by the accounting officers upon the basis of a report required to be made by all companies subject to the tax, and particularly upon the appraisement of the value of the stock contained in such report. The report is filed between the first and fifteenth of November in each year.