Pennsylvania Foreign Corporation Law
Corporations - Foreign Corporation - Pennsylvania
STATUTORY REFERENCE
PENNSYLVANIA CONSOLIDATED STATUTES, Chapter 41
(Foreign Business Corporations)
A foreign corporation may not transact business in Pennsylvania until
it has been authorized to do so by the Department of State. A foreign business
corporation may not be denied a certificate of authority by reason of the
fact that the laws of the jurisdiction governing its incorporation and
internal affairs differ from the laws of Pennsylvania.
A foreign insurance corporation is not required to procure a certificate
of authority under Chapter 41.
Without excluding other activities that may not constitute doing business
in Pennsylvania, a foreign business corporation is not considered to be
doing business in Pennsylvania by reason of carrying on any of the following
acts:
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Maintaining or defending any action or administrative or arbitration proceeding
or effecting the settlement thereof or the settlement of claims or disputes.
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Holding meetings of its directors or shareholders or carrying on other
activities concerning its internal affairs.
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Maintaining bank accounts.
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Maintaining offices or agencies for the transfer, exchange and registration
of its securities or appointing and maintaining trustees or depositories
with relation to its securities.
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Effecting sales through independent contractors.
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Soliciting or procuring orders, whether by mail or through employees or
agents or otherwise, and maintaining offices for those purposes, where
the orders require acceptance without Pennsylvania before becoming binding
contracts.
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Creating as borrower or lender, acquiring or incurring, obligations or
mortgages or other security interests in real or personal property.
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Securing or collecting debts or enforcing any rights in property securing
them.
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Transacting any business in interstate or foreign commerce.
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Conducting an isolated transaction completed within a period of 30 days
and not in the course of a number of repeated transactions of like nature.
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Inspecting, appraising and acquiring real estate and mortgages and other
liens thereon and personal property and security interests therein, and
holding, leasing, conveying and transferring them, as fiduciary or otherwise.
The Department of State may not issue a certificate of authority
to any foreign business corporation that has a name that is rendered unavailable
for use by a domestic business corporation.
The provisions relating to duplicate use of names does not prevent the
issuance of a certificate of authority to a foreign business corporation
setting forth a name that is confusingly similar to the name of any other
domestic or foreign corporation for profit or corporation not-for-profit,
or of any domestic or foreign limited partnership that has filed a certificate
or qualified under Chapter 85 or corresponding provisions of prior law,
or of any corporation or other association then registered under 2 P. S.
Chapter 5 or to any name reserved or registered, if the foreign business
corporation applying for a certificate of authority files in the department
one of the following:
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A resolution of its board of directors adopting a fictitious name for use
in transacting business in Pennsylvania, which fictitious name is not confusingly
similar to the name of the other corporation or other association or to
any name reserved or registered and that is otherwise available for use
by a domestic business corporation.
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The written consent of the other corporation or other association or holder
of a reserved or registered name to use the same or confusingly similar
name and one or more words are added to make the name applied for distinguishable
from the other name.
An application for a certificate of authority must be executed by
the foreign business corporation and must set forth:
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The name of the corporation.
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The name of the jurisdiction under the laws of which it is incorporated.
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The address, including street and number, if any, of its principal office
under the laws of the jurisdiction in which it is incorporated.
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The address, including street and number, if any, of its proposed registered
office in Pennsylvania.
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A statement that it is a corporation incorporated for a purpose or purposes
involving pecuniary profit, incidental or otherwise.
A foreign business corporation must publish notice of its intention
to apply or its application for a certificate of authority. The notice
may appear prior to or after the day on which application is made to the
Department of State and must set forth briefly:
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A statement that the corporation will apply or has applied for a certificate
of authority under the provisions of the Business Corporation Law of 1988.
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The name of the corporation and of the jurisdiction under the laws of which
it is incorporated.
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The address, including street and number, if any, of its principal office
under the laws of the jurisdiction in which it is incorporated.
-
The address, including street and number, if any, of its proposed registered
office in Pennsylvania.
An application for a certificate of authority is filed in the Department
of State.
When the application for a certificate of authority is filed, the foreign
business corporation is deemed to hold a certificate of authority to do
business in Pennsylvania.
A qualified foreign business corporation, so long as its certificate
of authority is not revoked, enjoys the same rights and privileges as a
domestic business corporation and is subject to the same liabilities, restrictions,
duties and penalties now in force or hereafter imposed upon domestic business
corporations.
Every qualified foreign business corporation must have and continuously
maintain in Pennsylvania a registered office. The registered office
may but need not be the same as its place of business in Pennsylvania.
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