This appeal is ruled in favor of respondent by Finney v. Guy, 106 Wis. 256, 82 N. W. 595, and Eau Claire Nat. Bank v. Benson, 106 Wis. 624, 82 N. W. 604, particularly the former. Every vital question involved here was so thoroughly discussed and the policy of this state in respect thereto so plainly declared in Finney v. Guy, and *38that policy so unqualifiedly sustained by the federal supreme-court in the same case in 189 U. S. 335, 23 Sup. Ct. 558, that it seems no useful purpose would he served by going-over the matter again.
Our attention is called to Parker v. Stoughton M. Co. 91 Wis. 174, 64 N. W. 751, as analogous to the case before us. To our minds the two cases are widely different. The claim-in the former was upon an assessment note belonging to the-receiver as the representative of the corporation. It was a corporate asset strictly so called. The liability did not depend upon any statute, nor did the remedy to enforce it. Here the liability is contractual; to be sure, but it is so only by force of the statute. The liability is statutory, the remedy to enforce it is statutory, and appellant’s title is a creature of the statute. The former is strictly transitory; the latter, as regards whether an absolute right or not, is confined to the-state of its creation. These views, thus expressed, have the distinct support .of the supreme court of the United States in Hale v. Allinson, 188 U. S. 56, 67, 23 Sup. Ct. 244, where-it is plainly indicated that in applying decisions to the two classes of claims, those treating of one class should not be confused with those treating of the other. True, the Massachusetts court, in Howarth v. Lombard, 175 Mass. 570, 56 N. E. 888, held, in effect, that since both classes of liabilities are to be worked out as parts of a common trust fund for the benefit of creditors they should be treated alike as regards the-facilities furnished by courts of a state foreign to that of the debtor corporation for the enforcement thereof; that no difference should be made between common-law and statutory liabilities. However, it should be noted that such court plainly there recognized that there is this important distinction between mere statutory rights and others; that the cn-forcibility of the latter in a state foreign to that of their creation depends upon the law of comity, and that in such field each state is free to establish its own policy unhampered *39by any outside law, state or national, as indicated in Finney v. Guy, 189 U. S. 335, 345, 23 Sup. Ct. 558.
“If,” said the Massachusetts ^court, “the statute creating the right is against the policy of the law of the neighboring state, that is a sufficient reason for refusing to enforce the right there. In the neighboring state, in such a case, it will not be considered a right. If the enforcement of the statutory right in a neighboring state in the manner proposed will work injustice to its citizens, considerations of comity do not require the recognition of it by the courts of that state.”
That is the precise ground upon which, in the main, it was held in Finney v. Guy that our courts should not be used to coerce our citizens to perform Minnesota obligations in the manner attempted, particular reasons therefor being pointed out, all of which are. present in the case before us, with others of an influential character. Then the way was open for the establishment here of precedent facts to the enforcibility of the stockholder’s super added obligation. No judgment, even in form, had been rendered in the Minnesota court, binding upon persons not parties to the litigation, — none which, in terms or by any statute, created an obligation for its recognition in the courts of this state under the “good faith and credit” clause of the federal constitution, as regards the force to be given to a judgment rendered in the court of one state in the courts of another. It was held here and affirmed by the federal court, that such clause cannot be successfully invoked to bar a resident of this state, who is a stockholder of a Minnesota corporation, the affairs of which are in process of settlement in an administration suit for the benefit of its cred-ors in a Minnesota court, to which he is not a party, from litigating in the courts of this state all questions respecting the enforcibility of his extraordinary stockholder’s liability -where it is sought in such courts to recover thereon by'the representative of the creditors appointed by the home court; that such a stockholder is not a party to the original suit as to such extraordinary liability merely because the corpora*40tion is, since such liability is in no sense an asset of the corporation. Now we face a Minnesota legislative enactment to the effect that the court in such original snit may, in a summary proceeding to which such a stockholder is not a party, fix the amount for which be must respond upon such extraordinary liability, and the time when and the person to whom the same must be paid, and that the determination shall be regarded as a bar to every defense to such liability in any court anywhere. It is bard to conceive of anything more drastic than that. The literal effect thereof is to make the Wisconsin court in this case a mere instrument to execute the commands of a foreign court against one of its citizens in a proceeding to which be was not a party and may not even have bad notice of. It is useless to discuss such an unreasonable proposition as that a mere legislative enactment of a state has such extraterritorial force that it can so supplement the authority of its courts as to make their judgments and orders as to persons over which they have no jurisdiction and who reside in another state, binding upon such persons in the courts of such other state, when otherwise they would not be.
It is conceded that the analysis made here in Finney v. Guy, of the judicial situation in Minnesota, after the decision in Hanson v. Davison, 73 Minn. 454, 76 N. W. 254, was fully sustained by the federal supreme court; but it is said that Hale v. Allinson, 188 U. S. 56, 23 Sup. Ct. 244, where the court spoke most, decidedly on the subject, does not govern because of the enactment above mentioned. As evidence thereof it is pointed out that, while the federal supreme court in Hale v. Allinson allowed a writ of certiorari to the circuit court of appeals of Pennsylvania and sustained the latter in bolding that a Minnesota receiver could not, in a court outside its boundaries, enforce the superadded liability of stockholders, the Minnesota law of 1899 not being involved, — in Burget v. Robinson, 123 Eed. 262, decided in the circuit court of appeals for the district of Massachusetts, precisely *41the same kind of a case, where snob law was involved, a writ applied for to review a judgment of the court of appeals of Massachusetts where the receiver’s suit was successfully entertained, was refused. The difficulty with that is this: Hale v. Allinson went on the ground that a Minnesota receiver, as the mere arm of the court, unaided by legislative authority, has no title to the claims of creditors of a corporation against its stockholders on account of the latter’s extraordinary liability, and therefore cannot sue in a foreign jurisdiction to enforce the same. Having thus effectually disposed of the case, the court proceeded to consider whether a receiver should be permitted to pursue a foreign stockholder in the manner attempted, even if he possessed title to the claim against the latter, on the ground of its preventing a multiplicity of suits, and held to the contrary because no such prevention could thereby be accomplished, all parties concerned not being before the court; that the judgment of the Minnesota court was not binding upon the foreign stockholder as to any question concerning his extraordinary liability, because he was not a party to the litigation in such court; that the rule that a stockholder of a corporation is bound by a judgment against it, as in such cases as Parker v. Stoughton M. Co. 91 Wis. 174, 64 N. W. 751, does not apply to proceedings to enforce such extraordinary liability, the latter not being an asset of the corporation; that the suit in a foreign court to enforce the same pursuant to the judgment of the home court is not, properly speaking, ancillary to the main suit, an order or judgment in the latter not being binding upon the foreign stockholder as to such liability who is not a party thereto. Thus it will be seen that the law of comity was not there involved. The real defect in the cause of action was in that the receiver had no title to the liability sought to be enforced. That having been changed by the Minnesota law of 1899 prior to Burget v. Robinson, supra, the federal supreme court refused to interfere with the decision of. the circuit court of *42appeals of Massachusetts in. that case, entertaining the receiver’s suit against the foreign stockholder. This court, in Finney v. Guy, 106 Wis. 256, 82 N. W. 595, did not ground its decision on the fact that the receiver did not possess a sufficient title to the claim sought to be enforced to entitle him to the remedy invoked. If it had, the new law of Minnesota might well be said to present a new question. The decision here was grounded on the idea that it is contrary .to the policy of our laws to allow our citizens to be pursued in the manner there proposed, and that to permit our courts to be used as desired would inflict injustice upon our people, the protection of whom is the primary duty of such courts. As above indicated, the federal supreme court held this court to be supreme in its own jurisdiction in that field. The 'new situation, if one is created by the law of 1899, adds force to what was formerly said as regards the law of comity, liberally applied, not requiring the use of Wisconsin judicial facilities in the manner proposed.
A comparison of the complaint in Finney v. Guy with that before us shows very clearly that no claim is made in the latter not insisted upon in the former. While the law of 1899 is pleaded in the one and not in the other, in both the plea is made that, by the construction put upon the law of Minnesota and by its judicial policy independently of the new legislation, an ancillary action will lie against a stockholder not brought into the main action by service of process on him, to enforce his extraordinary liability, in which second action the determination in the main suit as to the necessity to enforce such liability, and the extent thereof, is deemed binding upon the theory that the corporation defendant in such main suit stands therein for absent stockholders. The act of the legislature under consideration is grounded wholly on that doctrine. Of course, such an enactment can have no greater extraterritorial force than the judgment of a court as to a person over whom it has no jurisdiction. That the *43purpose of the law of 1899 was merely to accomplish, by a somewhat different way, what was held to he within the power of the courts of Minnesota to accomplish before, to merely change the procedure for the enforcement of the extraordinary liability of corporate stockholders within the lines theretofore set by the judicial policy of the state and the construction of existing statutes, not giving any new right, strictly so called, or varying any old one, is plainly declared in Straw & E. Mfg. Co. v. Kilbourne B. & S. Co. 80 Minn. 125, 83 N. W. 36. It is there said, in effect, that the new law is a mere remedial measure. Obviously, such a measure adopted in one state can add nothing to nor take anything from a right as regards the use of the judicial instru-mentalities of another state to enforce it.
By the Court. — The order is affirmed.
Dodge, J., dissents.