A petition for rehearing has been filed in this case in which it is contended that the failure of the corporation to comply with the provisions of Chapter 14677 of the Acts of 1931 was not properly presented to the court below; that it could only have been presented by answer and not by the method of motion to dismiss. Reference is made to the case of Jarvis v. Chapman Properties, Inc., 110 Fla. 17, 147 So. 860. It is true that in that case the matter was brought to the attention of the Court in the answer, and the corporation filed its report and paid its tax seven days later. No motion to dismiss the cause had been made by the defendant. It is said in the opinion in that case that:
"There is no law or rule of court which required the dismissal of the cause by the court of its own motion, and no *Page 400 motion was made to dismiss on this ground. In the absence of such a motion made during the pendency of the suspension of charter privileges, we are not here called upon to determine what the rights of the parties would be in a case where such a motion for such cause is so made."
It is also contended that a motion to dismiss is the method provided by the Chancery Practice Act to raise a defense in point of law, not point of fact; that an answer is the proper method of asserting a defense in point of fact, and that a motion to dismiss, which under Section 33 of the 1931 Chancery Act supplants a general demurrer, cannot be used to present a matter of fact. Reference to the cited section of the Chancery Act shows that it provides that every defense in point of law arising upon the face of the bill, which might heretofore have been made by demurrer, shall be made by motion to dismiss; but the context shows that this section refers to a motion to dismiss the bill by reason of insufficiency to constitute a valid cause of action in equity, whereas the motion involved in this case was not a motion to dismiss the bill, but, as stated in our original opinion, was a motion to dismiss the cause on the ground that the complainant was a foreign corporation and could not maintain the suit because it had not complied with the provision of Chapter 14677 of the Laws of 1931. It can hardly be said that by providing for testing the sufficiency of a bill by motion to dismiss, Section 33 of the Chancery Act was designed to prohibit the use of all other varieties of motions in chancery causes. There are many kinds of motions, available for use for many purposes, both in chancery and law actions. See 42 C. J. 463-464, et seq., wherein it is said that, "As usually defined, a motion is an application for an order." And again it is said: "Primarily a motion means an application for a rule or order made viva voce to a court or judge, but the term is now generally employed *Page 401 with reference to all such applications, whether written or oral."
In the recent case of Diaz v. Parkland Estates, 154 So. 199, the opinion in which was written by Mr. Chief Justice DAVIS, this Court said:
Failure of a defendant to plead the suspension of the corporation plaintiff's right to sue prior to entry of judgment in its favor, is immaterial, since the statute imposes a duty on the courts to recognize and enforce its terms and provisions whenever it is called to the court's attention that the right of a corporation attempting to maintain proceedings before it has become suspended through the default in compliance with provisions of the law whose non-observance ex proprio vigore has that effect. This is so despite the fact that until the point is raised on the record, the right of a corporation to maintain a suit in the courts of this State will be presumed so long as the contrary is not made to appear."
This recent decision, just quoted from, is strongly persuasive of the correctness of our original opinion in this case, in that it holds that the statute imposes a duty on the courts to recognize and enforce its terms and provisions whenever it is called to the court's attention that a corporation attempting to maintain proceedings has not complied with the provisions of the law; and that this is so in spite of the fact that, until the point is raised, the right of the corporation to maintain the suit will be presumed "so long as the contrary is not made to appear."
This case is not in conflict with the case of Christie v. Highland Waterfront Company, 153 So. 784, as to the point involved in this case. In that case, the defendant, more than twenty days after the final decree for complainant, a domestic corporation, on the merits, moved the court to vacate the final decree and declare null and void all proceedings *Page 402 in the cause since January 1, 1932, on the ground that complainant corporation had not filed the report and paid the tax required by the statute. The motion to vacate was denied, and this ruling was upheld on appeal, it appearing that the corporation complainant complied with the statute before motion to vacate was heard by the court below. In the opinion, this Court called attention to the fact that to open up a final decree, after twenty days, in order to let in a defense, it must be shown that there was deceit, surprise or irregularity in obtaining the decree, etc.
In this case, the bill of the foreign corporation complainant was filed on February 21, 1933, long after Chapter 14677 of the laws of 1931 had gone into effect. The motion to dismiss the cause for failure of the complainant corporation to comply with said statute was interposed on April 3, and heard and denied by the court on April 25, 1933, and in that order the defendant was required to answer the bill of complaint. According to the record, the complainant corporation did not comply with the statute until after the answer was filed. It therefore appears that at the time the motion was made to dismiss the case for non-compliance with the statute and at the time such motion was heard and denied, the complainant had not complied with the provisions of the statute.
This Court has been quite liberal in its construction of the foreign corporation statute of 1907 as amended in 1915 (Sections 6026, et seq., Comp. Gen. Laws of 1927) as well as the later Act of 1931 (Chapter 14677 of the Acts of 1931). The first statute required a foreign corporation to file with the Secretary of State a copy of its articles of incorporation, the payment of certain fees and the securing of a permit, as a condition precedent to the right to transact business or to acquire or hold property in this State, and also made a failure to comply therewith a penal offense. *Page 403 The amendment of 1915 provided that a failure to comply should not affect the validity of any contract with such foreign corporation, but that "no action shall be maintained or recovery had in any of the courts of this State by such corporation * * * so long as such corporation fails to comply with the provisions of" the statute. The second, the statute of 1931, Chapter 14677, applies to both foreign and domestic corporations, and requires the filing of annual reports and the annual payment of a stock tax. It does not impose any penalties, such as fine and imprisonment, to enforce compliance, as does the foreign corporation statute above mentioned, but it does provide that non-compliance shall result in a forfeiture of the corporate and charter privileges, and, further that such non-complying corporation "shall not be permitted to maintain any action in any court in the State until such reports are filed and all fees due hereunder paid."
This Court has held that the foreign corporation statute of 1907 did not expressly prohibit the bringing of a suit before compliance therewith, and that where a defendant wished to question the plaintiff's right to sue on that ground, the defense should be specifically made, but without stating any particular method of interposing such defense. Farrell v. Forest Investment Co., 73 Fla. 191, 74 So. 216. In that case, the bill had alleged that the corporation complainant was authorized to do business in this State, and the answer had not denied it. No proof was offered by either side. The language of the opinion is that: "The rule seems to be that when the defendant wishes to raise the question of the corporation's right to maintain a suit in this State, he should make the defense specially. See 12 R. C. L. 98-101." See also Ronnoc Grove Co. v. Coe-Mortimer Co., 83 Fla. 370, 91 So. 265. And in Brecht v. Bur-Ne Co., 91 Fla. 345, 108 So. 173, we held that the statute did not *Page 404 prevent a non-complying corporation from defending a suit brought against it. Nor does the statute prevent a foreign corporation from enforcing payment for goods sold in interstate commerce (Circular Advertising Co. v. Am. Mercantile Co.,66 Fla. 96, 63 So. 3; Blackshear Mfg. Co. v. Sorey, 97 Fla. 437,121 So. 103) nor from acquiring title to property in this State and executing notes and mortgages as a part of the transaction by which the property was acquired in view of the amendment of 1915 (Pape v. Finch, 102 Fla. 425, 136 So. 496; Harris v. Zeuch, 103 Fla. 183, 137 So. 135). Such non-compliance does not affect the title to property acquired, held and disposed of in violation of the statute of 1907, nor the validity of any contract with such non-complying foreign corporation, and such foreign corporation may even acquire a statutory mechanics or material man's lien for performing labor and furnishing material for the construction of a building in this State, which lien is subsequently enforceable by it in the courts of this State after it has qualified under the statute. Hogue v. D. N. Morrison Construction Company, 156 So. 377. See also McMullen v. Inland Realty Co., 113 Fla. 476, 152 So. 740.
In the opinion upholding the constitutionality of Chapter 14677 of the Laws of 1931, it was said, in regard to Section 5 of the Act, that the statute "does not declare a forfeiture, but merely suspends the charter privileges until the tax is paid," but the opinion did not deal with the exact question here presented. Gray v. Central Florida Lumber Co., 104 Fla. 446, 140 So. 320.
As we have seen, Section 14677 imposes no criminal penalties for non-compliance, and no other sanctions for its enforcement except the forfeiture of its corporate and charter privileges, which, according to the last cited case, is not effective until such forfeiture is judicially determined *Page 405 and declared, and the one other provision that such corporation shall not be permitted to maintain any action in any court in this State until it has complied with the statute by filing the required reports and paying the required fees. We adhere to our original decision that this latter provision of the statute should be enforced by the courts, if the statute is to be given any practical force or effect whatever, and that, therefore, in the instant case the court below erred in denying the motion to dismiss the cause, which motion was based upon non-compliance with the requirements of the statute as set forth in our original opinion.
It is not necessary for us to determine in this case whether a corporation which has not complied with the statute has the right to institute a suit, as distinguished from maintaining one, because, in the case at bar, the question raised by the defendant was the right of such corporation to maintain a suit without having complied with the statute. Undoubtedly, the statute, by clear language, denies this right. But, to the writer's mind, a corporation which has no right to maintain a suit in any of the courts of this State by reason of its non-compliance with our laws, has no right to institute the suit in the first instance, although it may not be possible for the defendant to raise the question until after the suit is instituted. The institution of a suit is the beginning of its maintenance. However, this question is not before us, and is not here decided.
Petition for rehearing denied.
DAVIS, C. J., and TERRELL, J., concur.
*Page 406WHITFIELD and BUFORD, J. J., dissent.