— On February 28,1887, the act was approved “to give force and effect to section four of article fourteen of the Constitution oí the State of Alabama.” — Sess. Acts, 102. Under that statute, it is required .that “every company, corporation or association not organized under the laws of Alabama,” before engaging in any business in this State, shall have at least one known place of business, and an agent thereat. The statute prescribes in what manner the place of business and the name of the agent shall be made known. The statute then makes it a penal offense for any agent of a foreign corporation, which has not complied with this constitutional and statutory provision, to dó any act of agency for such corporation. Of course, to fall within this statutory inhibition, the act- ol agency must be done within the State of Alabama, for otherwise neither the corporation nor the agent, nor any act done by either, could be amenable to our laws.
The complaint in this case, while it sets forth that the agreement sued on was entered into after February 28, 1887 —the date of the statute — does not state where the alleged agreement was made, nor does it show from whom they undertook to obtain the money, which Davis Brothers engaged them to borrow for them. Neither does it show from whom, or where, they succeeding in obtaining 'the promised loan. There is. nothing in the complaint which gives notice that the constitutional provision and statute, referred to above, exert any influence in the decision of the questions presented in this record.
Flea marked interposed by Davis Brothers, and de*458muri-ers to it interposed by Collier & Pinckard, raise the only question presented. The Circuit Court overruled the demurrer. Plea K sets up in bar of the action that the loan and contract of borrowing were to be made with' a foreign corporation; that such corporation had no known place of business in Alabama, with an agent thereat; that the corporation from which the money was to be obtained was the ‘•American Freehold Mortgage Company of London, Limited,” and that Collier & Pinckard were in fact the agents of the corporation.
If the complaint or plea had averred or shown that the agreement between Collier & Pinckard on the one side and Davis Brothers on the other was entered into in Alabama, then it would have been shown that a foreign corporation through its agent, or the agent of a foreign corporation, h.ad engaged in business, or transacted business in Alabama, without a compliance with our Constitution and statute. This would have made the agreement illegal and non-enforceable. There is nothing, however, to show that such was the case. It is perfectly consistent with every averment of the pleadings that the agreement declared on was executed outside of the State of Alabama. And if Collier & Pinckard were not agents of the corporation, then there is nothing stated that is incompatible with the idea that the loan was to be negotiated outside of Alabama’s limits. The situs of the security offered is not necessarily determinative of that inquiry, although it may be a factor to be considered.
We are referred to the fact that the plea we have pronounced faulty is a copy of the one decided by this court to be •sufficient in Dudley v. Collier & Pinckard, 87 Ala. 431. That suit was on a contract similar to the one declared on in this case. The report of that case does not inform us what were the averments of the complaint. It may have shown on its face that the agreement declared on was executed in Alábame. If it did, the ruling was clearly correct.
With the exception of what we have stated, were-affirm all that was said in Dudley v. Collier.
Reversed and remanded.