Question.—Under New Jersey laws a New York corporation doing business in New Jersey must register in Trenton. We did a large amount of business before we were aware of this, but ultimately registered. In suing one of our customers we were nonsuited because we were not registered at the time the goods were sold, but this was in an inferior court. Does the fact that we were not registered in Trenton at the time the goods were sold completely shut us off from recovering in the State of New Jersey? Reply: We believe that our correspondents will not be allowed to maintain this suit; they are prevented from maintaining it as much by the laws of their own State of New York as by those of New Jersey. The law of the case stands thus: The New Jersey statute requires all foreign corporations to file certain documents with the Secretary of State and to take out a certificate authorizing them to do business in New Jersey. It is further provided that “until such corporation so transacting business in this State shall have obtained said certificate of the Secretary of State, it shall not maintain any action in this State, upon any contract made by it in this State.” If this were all our correspondents could take out a certificate any time and then sue; this section only forbids them to sue before taking out a certificate. It is further provided, however, that when another State imposes any greater penalties on New Jersey corporations than the laws of New Jersey impose upon corporations of that State, the same penalties shall be imposed on corporations of such other State Opinion No. 64. |