The relator, the American Savings Bank & Trust Company, a corporation, was incorporated under the laws of this state in the year 1901; its
In September, 1916, the relator and one Murray, in the usual course of business in King county acquired a promissory note made by one Peterson for $25,000, and interest, together with a mortgage, given to secure the same, upon certain real estate consisting of orchard land situated in Okanogan county.
In August, 1918, the relator and Murray, as owners of the note and mortgage referred to, employed J. Henry Smith, an attorney at law practicing in Okanogan county, to foreclose the $25,000 mortgage, and thereafter, apparently with the knowledge and consent of the relator, P. D. Smith and W. C. Brown, also attorneys practicing in Okanogan county, were associated with J. Henry Smith as attorneys for plaintiff in such foreclosure action. The action to foreclose the mortgage was commenced in Okanogan county and prosecuted to a judgment of foreclosure, from which an appeal was taken, and the judgment of foreclosure was thereafter affirmed by this court in American Sav. Bank & Trust Co. v. Peterson, 112 Wash. 101, 191 Pac. 837. In the meantime, the real estate covered by the $25,000 mortgage, which was so foreclosed, being in part subject to the lien of a prior mortgage for $10,000, the relator and Murray, to protect themselves, acquired this first mortgage, procured it to be fore
In February, 1921, P. D. Smith, J. Henry Smith and W. O. Brown began an action in the superior court for Okanogan county against the relator and Murray to recover a balance of $2,000 claimed to be due them as attorney’s fees earned in the foreclosure proceedings hereinbefore referred to. Summons and complaint were personally served upon the relator in King-county, Washington, on February 7, 1921, and an affidavit in due form was filed setting forth that Murrhy was a non-resident of the state of Washington, and a writ of attachment was sought and issued against him under which the sheriff of Okanogan county levied upon the interest of Murray in the real estate which had been the subject of the foreclosure suits hereinbefore mentioned: and since that time the plaintiffs in
The statute reads: .
“An action against a corporation may be brought in any county where the corporation transacts business or transacted business at the time the cause of action arose; or in any county where the corporation has an office for the transaction of business or any person resides upon whom process may be served against such corporation, unless otherwise provided in this code.” Rem. Code, § 206.
It is not contended that the relator maintained an office or transacted any of its banking or trust business
What is meant by the statutory term “transaction of business ’ ’ is very well defined by the following:
“It is frequently stated that the words ‘doing business ’ and ‘transacting business,’ as used in statutes imposing conditions on foreign corporations, refer only to the transaction of the ordinary or customary business in which a corporation is engaged, and do not include acts not constituting any part of its ordinary business. In other words, the test applied is, Is thePage 127corporation engaged in the transaction of that kind of business, or any part thereof, for which it was created and organized? If so, it ‘does business,’ within the meaning of the constitutions and statutes. If not,—if the act it is doing or has done is not within the purpose of the grant of its general powers and franchises, —it is not the business to which the constitutional or statutory requirement is directed.” 12 E. C. L., §49, P- 71.
And we have already approved and followed this rule. Rich v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. Co., 34 Wash. 14, 74 Pac. 1008; State ex rel. Wells Lumber Co. v. Superior Court, 113 Wash. 77, 193 Pac. 229.
We conclude that relator does not, and did not at the time the causé of action arose, transact business in Okanogan county within the statutory meaning of that term.
It is contended, however, that the superior court of Okanogan county had jurisdiction under the terms of Eem. Code, § 207, which provides:
“In all other cases the action must he tried in the county in which the defendants, or some of them, reside at the time of the commencement of the action, or may be served with process, subject, however, to the power of the court to change the place of trial, as provided in the next two succeeding sections.”
Of course, had Murray resided in Okanogan county, or had he there been personally served with process, there would he no question as to the right to there proceed. But since Murray was a nonresident of the state, the mere fact that he owned property in that county, which it was sought to attach, cannot he permitted to overweigh relator’s rights. While it may he more orderly to proceed against a nonresident defendant in a county in which he has property which is to be attached, the law does not require it, hut expressly directs that writs of attachment may issue to other
Nor was the nonresident defendant Murray served with process in Okanogan county within the meaning of the statute. True, the summons was there being published, but with the intent in law that notice of the pending action should by that means reach Murray at his foreign domicile, where also the statute requires a copy of the summons and complaint to be addressed and mailed to him. The service referred to in § 207 of the code is undoubtedly personal service; but, in any event, when relator raised this issue, the service- by publication had not proceeded to a point where Murray could be said to have been served anywhere or at all, in fact had not then been commenced.
Section 207 is applicable in so far as it provides that actions must be tried in the county in which the defendants, or some of them, reside; and since Murray resides in none of the counties of this state and relator resides in King county, we conclude that the action should have been brought in, or transferred to, King county for trial.
The permanent writ will issue.
Fullerton, Main, Mitchell, Bridges, and Mackintosh, JJ.j concur.