Greb v. Diamond International Corp. , 56 Cal. 4th 243 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 2/21/13
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
    WALTER GREB et al.,                   )
    )                            S183365
    Plaintiffs and Appellants, )
    )
    v.                         )                      Ct.App. 1/1 A125472
    )
    DIAMOND INTERNATIONAL                 )
    CORPORATION,                          )                      San Francisco City
    )                          and County
    Defendant and Respondent. )                 Super. Ct. No. CGC-08-274989
    ___________________________________ )
    We granted review to resolve a conflict in the Courts of Appeal concerning
    interpretation of Corporations Code section 2010,1 which governs the winding-up and
    survival of dissolved corporations. We consider whether the statute applies to foreign
    corporations — those formed in states other than California — and conclude, consistently
    with the appellate court below, that it does not.
    I. Facts and procedure
    In December 2008, plaintiffs Walter Greb (now deceased) and his wife Karen
    Greb filed a complaint for personal injuries and loss of consortium against defendant
    Diamond International Corporation (defendant) and several other entities. Plaintiffs‟
    complaint alleged injuries from exposure to asbestos. Although defendant has been
    dissolved for many years, plaintiffs sought recovery from unexhausted liability insurance
    that covered defendant during the decades when it did business in California. (See
    1       All further statutory references are to this code unless otherwise noted.
    1
    § 2011, subd. (a)(1)(A) [permitting recovery against dissolved corporations from
    “undistributed assets, including . . . any insurance assets”].)
    Defendant demurred to plaintiffs‟ complaint, alleging that more than three years
    earlier, in July 2005, it had obtained a corporate dissolution pursuant to the laws of
    Delaware, defendant‟s state of incorporation. Accordingly, defendant argued, pursuant to
    Delaware‟s three-year survival statute,2 when plaintiffs filed their complaint in December
    2008, defendant lacked the capacity to be sued. Plaintiffs opposed the motion, arguing
    their action was permitted under California‟s own survival statute, section 2010, which
    they asserted takes precedence over Delaware law in this setting.
    The trial court ruled that California‟s survival statute did not apply to foreign
    corporations, and hence that Delaware‟s corresponding statute applied to defendant.
    Accordingly, the trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, and dismissed
    plaintiffs‟ complaint with prejudice. On review, the Court of Appeal affirmed. It
    followed the interpretation of section 2010 set out in dicta in two prior appellate court
    decisions — North American Asbestos Corp. v. Superior Court (1982) 
    128 Cal.App.3d 2
          Delaware General Corporation Law section 278 provides, in part: “All
    corporations, whether they expire by their own limitation or are otherwise dissolved, shall
    nevertheless be continued, for the term of 3 years from such expiration or dissolution or
    for such longer period as the Court of Chancery shall in its discretion direct, bodies
    corporate for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits, whether civil, criminal or
    administrative, by or against them, and of enabling them gradually to settle and close
    their business, to dispose of and convey their property, to discharge their liabilities and to
    distribute to their stockholders any remaining assets, but not for the purpose of continuing
    the business for which the corporation was organized. With respect to any action, suit or
    proceeding begun by or against the corporation either prior to or within 3 years after the
    date of its expiration or dissolution, the action shall not abate by reason of the dissolution
    of the corporation; the corporation shall, solely for the purpose of such action, suit or
    proceeding, be continued as a body corporate beyond the 3-year period and until any
    judgments, orders or decrees therein shall be fully executed, without the necessity for any
    special direction to that effect by the Court of Chancery.” (
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 278
    .)
    2
    138 (North American I), and Riley v. Fitzgerald (1986) 
    178 Cal.App.3d 871
     (Riley) —
    and disagreed with the holding concerning that statute set out in a third appellate court
    decision, North American Asbestos Corp. v. Superior Court (1986) 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    (North American II). As noted, we granted review to resolve the conflict.3
    II. Discussion
    Section 2010 provides in relevant part: “(a) A corporation which is dissolved
    nevertheless continues to exist for the purpose of winding up its affairs, prosecuting and
    defending actions by or against it and enabling it to collect and discharge obligations,
    dispose of and convey its property and collect and divide its assets, but not for the
    purpose of continuing business except so far as necessary for the winding up thereof.”4
    Like the law in a few other states, the section sets no time limitation for suing a dissolved
    corporation for injuries arising from its predissolution conduct; the sole temporal
    limitation to such a suit is found in the applicable statute of limitations relating to each
    cause of action. As we explained in Penasquitos, Inc. v. Superior Court (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 1180
    , 1190 (Penasquitos): “Under our statutory scheme, the effect of dissolution is not
    so much a change in the corporation‟s status as a change in its permitted scope of
    3      In the Court of Appeal, the parties stipulated to a dismissal of this case, but the
    appellate court elected to proceed with the opinion because the appeal had been fully
    briefed and raised issues warranting an opinion. (See Eisenberg et al., Cal. Practice
    Guide: Civil Appeals and Writs (The Rutter Group 2009) ¶ 5:63, pp. 5-23 to 5-24.) We
    agree with the Court of Appeal‟s conclusion in this regard.
    4      The rest of section 2010 reads in full: “(b) No action or proceeding to which a
    corporation is a party abates by the dissolution of the corporation or by reason of
    proceedings for winding up and dissolution thereof. [¶] (c) Any assets inadvertently or
    otherwise omitted from the winding up continue in the dissolved corporation for the
    benefit of the persons entitled thereto upon dissolution of the corporation and on
    realization shall be distributed accordingly.”
    3
    activity. . . . Thus, a corporation‟s dissolution is best understood not as its death, but
    merely as its retirement from active business.”
    The parties agree that if section 2010 does not apply to a dissolved foreign
    corporation, defendant‟s capacity to be sued would be governed solely by Delaware‟s
    corresponding survival statute — and that law would bar plaintiffs‟ claims against
    defendant. (See, e.g., In re RegO Co. (Del.Ch. 1992) 
    623 A.2d 92
    , 96 [Del.‟s three-year
    survival law precludes suit against a dissolved corporation even when the plaintiff did not
    know of the injury during that period].) If, on the other hand, California‟s section 2010
    applies to a dissolved foreign corporation, a court would then be required to perform a
    choice-of-law analysis in order to determine which state‟s law should apply and govern
    defendant‟s capacity to be sued. (See Kearney v. Salomon Smith Barney, Inc. (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 95
    , 107-108 (Kearney) [describing the traditional three-step choice-of-law
    inquiry].)5
    We proceed to describe the conflict in the appellate decisions concerning whether
    section 2010 applies to dissolved foreign corporations.
    5       As we explained in Kearney: “First, the court determines whether the relevant law
    of each of the potentially affected jurisdictions with regard to the particular issue in
    question is the same or different. Second, if there is a difference, the court examines each
    jurisdiction‟s interest in the application of its own law under the circumstances of the
    particular case to determine whether a true conflict exists. Third, if the court finds that
    there is a true conflict, it carefully evaluates and compares the nature and strength of the
    interest of each jurisdiction in the application of its own law „to determine which state‟s
    interest would be more impaired if its policy were subordinated to the policy of the other
    state‟ [citation], and then ultimately applies „the law of the state whose interest would be
    the more impaired if its law were not applied.‟ [Citation.]” (Kearney, supra, 39 Cal.4th
    at pp. 107-108.) The circumstance that “two states are involved does not in itself indicate
    that there is a „conflict of laws‟ or „choice of laws‟ problem.” (Offshore Rental Co. v.
    Continental Oil Co., Inc. (1978) 
    22 Cal.3d 157
    , 161-162.)
    4
    A. The conflicting appellate court decisions
    1. North American I
    In North American I, the plaintiffs, California residents, sued the defendant, an
    Illinois corporation, in California for asbestos-related personal injuries suffered in
    California. Under the corporate survival law of Illinois, a corporation can be sued for
    two years after it files for dissolution. The suit was filed more than two years after the
    defendant had dissolved. (North American I, supra, 128 Cal.App.3d at p. 141.)
    The defendant moved to quash service of process, arguing it lacked the capacity to
    be sued under Illinois law. The trial court denied the motion, and the Court of Appeal
    denied the defendant‟s writ petition, holding that service was proper and the appropriate
    method for the defendant to assert its lack of capacity to be sued was by demurrer or
    motion for judgment on the pleadings. In dicta, the court stated that should the case go
    forward (and a court be required to determine whether the defendant had the capacity to
    be sued) it was “clear that the California survival law does not apply to suits against
    dissolved foreign corporations.” (North American I, supra, 128 Cal.App.3d at p. 143.)
    The court based this conclusion on section 102, subdivision (a) (hereafter section 102(a)).
    (North American I, supra, at p. 144.)
    Section 102(a) specifies that the provisions of division 1 (the General Corporation
    Law) apply to (1) all “corporations organized under this division”; (2) specified
    “domestic corporations”; and (3) “other” corporations only to the extent the provisions of
    the code “expressly include[]” them.6
    6        Before quoting section 102(a) in full, it is useful to briefly describe the structure of
    the Corporations Code. The code is divided into various titles — title 1 (corporations),
    title 2 (partnerships), title 3 (limited liability companies), etc. Within title 1, there are
    four divisions: division 1 (General Corporation Law), division 1.5 (the Corporate
    Flexibility Act of 2011), division 2 (nonprofit corporations) and division 3 (corporations
    (footnote continued on next page)
    5
    The court in North American I construed section 102(a) as providing that “with
    certain exceptions not applicable here the provisions of the Corporations Code apply only
    to domestic corporations and that application to other corporations is permitted only „to
    the extent expressly included in a particular provision of this division.‟ ” (North
    American I, supra, 128 Cal.App.3d at p. 144, italics added.) The court observed that the
    survival statute, section 2010, “is in chapter 20 of division 1, which is entitled „General
    Provisions Relating to Dissolution.‟ Nowhere is there any mention that the provisions of
    that chapter or of section 2010 apply to foreign corporations. Foreign corporations are
    the subject of the entire next chapter, chapter 21.” (North American I, supra, at p. 144.)
    In addition, the court in North American I relied on a then decades-old law review
    note, Foreign Corporations: Continuance of Existence After Dissolution (1947) 35 Cal.
    L.Rev. 306. The note addressed the common law‟s treatment of dissolved corporations,7
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    for specific purposes). Each division is subdivided into chapters and articles; divisions 2
    and 3 are further divided into designated parts.
    Chapter 1 (general provisions and definitions) of title 1, division 1, includes
    section 102(a), which provides in full: “Subject to Chapter 23 (commencing with Section
    2300) (transition provisions), this division applies to corporations organized under this
    division and to domestic corporations that are not subject to Division 1.5 (commencing
    with Section 2500), and to domestic corporations that are not subject to Division 2
    (commencing with Section 5000) or Part 1 (commencing with Section 12000), 2
    (commencing with Section 12200), 3 (commencing with Section 13200), or 5
    (commencing with Section 14000) of Division 3 on December 31, 1976, and that are not
    organized or existing under any statute of this state other than this code; this division
    applies to any other corporation only to the extent expressly included in a particular
    provision of this division.” (Italics added.)
    7       Under the common law, as with a deceased person, a dissolved corporation could
    not sue or be sued. (Crossman v. Vivienda Water Co. (1907) 
    150 Cal. 575
    , 580; see
    Comment, Corporations — Dissolution — Directors as Trustees (1913) 1 Cal. L.Rev.
    266 [describing the common law rule and the practical problems it caused, and proposing
    a statute like those then in other states, “forfeiting the right of [a dissolved] corporation to
    (footnote continued on next page)
    6
    and California‟s then relatively new survival statue, enacted in 1929 — Civil Code
    former section 399, the direct predecessor of current Corporations Code section 2010.
    The note observed that “some courts, relying on the general policy of their corporation
    statutes, have held that the [survival] law of the forum applies to foreign as well as
    domestic corporations” and that in view of high court authority “[i]t is settled that such an
    extension is valid.” (35 Cal. L.Rev. at pp. 308-309, fns. omitted.) After analyzing the
    existing California statutes — including Civil Code former section 278, which provided a
    narrow definition of the term “corporation” that expressly excluded foreign entities — the
    note author concluded that because California‟s survival statue did not expressly provide
    that foreign corporations were included within its scope, the statute “could hardly be
    applied to foreign corporations.” (35 Cal. L.Rev. at p. 309; see id., fn. 23.) The author
    proposed that “for the protection of the corporation, the public, and creditors” the statute
    should be amended to apply as well to foreign corporations. (35 Cal. L.Rev. at p. 309.)
    But, as the court in North American I observed, “[n]o such amendment has taken place.”
    (North American I, supra, 128 Cal.App.3d at p. 144.)
    The court in North American I reasoned that these statutory provisions and this
    history led to the conclusion that “the California survival law does not apply to suits
    against dissolved foreign corporations.” (North American I, supra, 128 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 143.)
    2. Riley
    In Riley, supra, 
    178 Cal.App.3d 871
    , the plaintiffs, who were the sole shareholders
    of a dissolved Texas corporation and assignees of its assets, sued on behalf of themselves
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    do business, but preserving its existence for two years at least, for the sole purpose of
    suing and being sued”].)
    7
    and the dissolved corporation, seeking to recover damages sustained by the Texas
    corporation prior to its dissolution. The plaintiffs charged the defendants, California and
    Texas residents, with fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. Prior to the action, the parties
    had stipulated that the plaintiffs‟ capacity to sue would be the same as that of the Texas
    corporation under that state‟s corporate survival law. Texas law provides that a
    corporation continues to exist for three years after dissolution for the purpose of winding
    up its affairs, suing, and being sued. The suit was filed more than three years after the
    Texas corporation dissolved. (Id., at p. 874.)
    The defendants in Riley moved for judgment on the pleadings, asserting that the
    plaintiffs lacked capacity to sue under Texas law. The trial court granted the motion.
    The Court of Appeal affirmed, finding that the plaintiffs had agreed to be bound by Texas
    law, which applied and barred suit. (Riley, supra, 178 Cal.App.3d at pp. 877-883.) And
    in any event, the court stated in dicta, California‟s survival statute, section 2010, did not
    apply to foreign corporations. (Riley, supra, at pp. 875-877.)
    Addressing that latter question, the court first cited case law from both California
    and Texas standing for the proposition that “the effect of corporate dissolution or
    expiration depends upon the law of [the corporation‟s] domicile.” (Riley, supra, 178
    Cal.App.3d at p. 876.)8 The court found that “[n]othing in the California Corporations
    8       The court cited three appellate court decisions, Fidelity Metals Corp. v. Risley
    (1946) 
    77 Cal.App.2d 377
    , 381, J.C. Peacock, Inc. v. Hasko (1960) 
    184 Cal.App.2d 142
    ,
    150, and Lewis v. LeBaron (1967) 
    254 Cal.App.2d 270
    , 278-279. It further signaled,
    “[s]ee also” two older decisions of this court, Anderson v. Derrick (1934) 
    220 Cal. 770
    ,
    775, and Crossman v. Vivienda Water Co., 
    supra,
     150 Cal. at page 580. All of these
    cases reflect the common law rule, which in turn is generally echoed in the Restatement
    Second of Conflict of Laws (1971), section 299 (“(1) Whether the existence of a
    corporation has been terminated or suspended is determined by the local law of the state
    of incorporation. [¶] (2) The termination or suspension of a corporation‟s existence by
    the state of incorporation will be recognized for most purposes by other states.”). But as
    (footnote continued on next page)
    8
    Code indicates that this long-held principle has been overruled or superseded by statute.”
    (Riley, at p. 876.) In reaching its conclusion the court relied substantially on section
    2115, located in chapter 21 (foreign corporations) of division 1, the General Corporation
    Law.
    Section 2115 was enacted as part of a comprehensive revision of the Corporations
    Code in the mid-1970s. The section addressed so-called pseudo-foreign corporations —
    entities incorporated outside California, but that meet two tests: (1) the corporation
    transacts more than half of its business (as measured by various objective criteria) in
    California, and (2) a majority of the voting securities are held by California residents.
    (See § 2115, subd. (a)(1) & (2).) Such foreign corporations must abide by numerous
    specified statutes within division 1, the General Corporation Law — provisions that
    govern corporate “internal affairs” and would not otherwise apply to foreign entities.9
    This statute, which survived multiple challenges to its constitutionality in Wilson v.
    Louisiana-Pacific Resources, Inc. (1982) 
    138 Cal.App.3d 216
    ,10 further mandates
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    we will see, this deferential approach has been eroded by statutes and judicial
    construction.
    9       Section 2115, subdivision (b) subjects such foreign corporations to governance by
    the following provisions of division 1, the General Corporation Law. Chapter 1 “(general
    provisions and definitions), to the extent applicable to the following provisions”:
    portions of chapters 3 (directors and management), 5 (dividends and reacquisitions of
    shares), 6 (shareholders‟ meetings and consents), 7 (voting of shares), 10 (sales of assets),
    and 11 (merger); all of chapters 12 (reorganizations) and 13 (dissenters‟ rights); portions
    of chapter 15 (records and reports); and all of chapter 16 (rights of inspection).
    10      The court considered and rejected federal and state constitutional challenges to the
    statute based on claims including the full faith and credit clause, the commerce clause,
    the due process clauses, the contract clauses, and the equal protection clauses. (Wilson v.
    Louisiana-Pacific Resources, Inc., supra, 138 Cal.App.3d at pp. 222-231.)
    9
    adherence to these provisions “to the exclusion of the law of the jurisdiction in which it is
    incorporated.” (§ 2115, subd. (b).)
    In concluding that the survival statute did not apply to foreign corporations, the
    appellate court in Riley observed that the statute is part of chapter 20, which concerns
    dissolution, and is not listed in section 2115 of chapter 21, setting out the statutes that
    apply to the foreign corporations that have the most extensive contacts with California.
    (Riley, supra, 178 Cal.App.3d at p. 876.) Finally, the court in Riley also found support
    for its conclusion in North American I‟s analysis, described earlier. (Riley, supra, at
    pp. 876-877.)
    3. North American II
    North American II involved the same defendant as North American I. And as in
    that earlier case, the plaintiff, a California resident, filed a personal injury action against
    the dissolved Illinois corporation, seeking compensation for asbestos-related injuries.
    Again, suit was filed more than two years after the defendant had dissolved. The
    defendant moved for summary judgment, asserting it lacked the capacity to be sued under
    the Illinois two-year survival law. The trial court denied the motion, ruling that
    California‟s survival statute, section 2010, applied to the defendant. (North American II,
    supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 905.)
    The Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, Division Three — the same division
    that had decided North American I — affirmed in a two-to-one decision, with Justice
    Scott, the author of North American I, in dissent.
    In concluding that section 2010 applied to foreign corporations, the majority in
    North American II did not address Riley, supra, 
    178 Cal.App.3d 871
    , which had been
    filed almost two months earlier. It acknowledged that its new conclusion “deviates from
    the dicta in [North American I], where this court said that Corporations Code section
    2010 applied only to domestic corporations.” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 908.) The court explained that “[o]n further reflection and examination of some of
    10
    the history behind Corporations Code section 2010 and related provisions of corporation
    law, we have concluded that section 2010 should not be so read under the circumstances
    of the case at bench, but should be read to protect the interests of California.” (Ibid.)
    The majority in North American II observed that in 1929, when the predecessor to
    section 2010 was enacted, the state Constitution contained a since-repealed clause —
    included in the California Constitution of 1879 — providing that “[n]o corporation
    organized outside the limits of this State shall be allowed to transact business within this
    State on more favorable conditions than are prescribed by law to similar corporations
    organized under the laws of this State.” (Cal. Const., art. XII, former § 15 [repealed in
    1972], italics added.) The majority stated that pursuant to this former constitutional
    provision “a statute placing an obligation on a domestic corporation, such as one
    permitting suit against it long after its dissolution, would be read as placing a similar
    burden on a foreign corporation licensed to transact intrastate business in California . . . .”
    (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 908.)
    The majority in North American II reasoned, “Article XII, section 15, was in
    effect when the original version of Corporations Code section 2010, applying survival
    law to „[all] corporations,‟ was adopted . . . . [A]t that time Civil Code section 283 . . .
    stated that the provisos of its title were applicable to „every private corporation,‟ ” and
    “[m]any other sections [of the statutory scheme as originally adopted in 1929] specified
    „domestic corporation‟ or „foreign corporation‟ when such a limitation was intended
    [citations]. Thus, in 1929 it was clear that California’s survival law applied to both
    foreign and domestic corporations.” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 908, italics added.)
    The appellate court majority acknowledged that very soon after enactment of the
    survival statute in 1929, the Legislature in 1931 narrowly defined the term “corporation”
    as meaning — unless expressly provided otherwise — “only a domestic corporation.”
    (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 908 [referring to Civ. Code, former
    11
    § 278, as added by Stats. 1931, ch. 862, § 2, p. 1764, & amended by Stats. 1933, ch. 533,
    § 1, p. 1358].) This definition continued in force until 1977, when the existing
    Corporations Code was repealed and replaced with the current code, which included
    corresponding new sections 102(a) (quoted ante, fn. 6) and 16211 — each of which
    similarly limits the applicability of the various statutes set out in division 1 of the new
    Corporations Code, and the term “corporation” as used in that new code. The majority in
    North American II conceded that in light of these various provisions, “the term
    „corporation‟ used in [the survival statute,] . . . section 2010 could arguably have come to
    mean only a domestic corporation.” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 908, italics added.) The appellate court found, however, that the “circumstances of the
    repeal of article XII, section 15, show that no such change in the law was intended and
    that ‘corporation’ as used in section 2010 [and its predecessors] still has its original
    meaning, covering both domestic and foreign corporations to the extent that foreign
    corporations will not receive more favorable treatment than domestic corporations.” (Id.,
    at pp. 908-909, italics added.)12
    11      Section 162 defines the term “corporation,” “unless otherwise expressly
    provided,” to mean “only . . . a corporation organized under this division or a corporation
    subject to this division under the provisions of subdivision (a) of Section 102.” Section
    167 provides, “ „Domestic corporation‟ means a corporation formed under the laws of
    this state”; correspondingly, section 171 provides, “ „Foreign corporation‟ means any
    corporation other than a domestic corporation” but does “not include a corporation . . .
    chartered under the laws of the United States.”
    12     The majority in North American II explained the basis for this conclusion:
    “Repeal of article XII, section 15, was first proposed in 1967 by the Article XII
    Committee of the Constitution Revision Commission (Minutes of the Meeting of the
    Constitution Revision Commission, February 16, 1967 [at p. 2]). The committee
    suggested deletion of section 15 because „[t]he section can be dealt with by statute. The
    committee recommended deletion of the entire section.‟ (Ibid.) The report of the
    California Constitution Revision Commission, dated 1968, page 92, proposed repeal of
    section 15 with the following comment: „Equal treatment of foreign and domestic
    (footnote continued on next page)
    12
    The majority in North American II continued: “Because the electorate did not
    intend to change the law by repeal of article XII, section 15, we read the term
    „corporation‟ in Corporations Code section 2010 to have its original meaning when we
    are dealing with the question of whether a foreign corporation will receive more
    favorable treatment than a domestic corporation, that is, to include both domestic and
    foreign corporations. Though the Legislature added definitional sections in 1931
    [citation] and took other steps to tighten up the language of the corporation laws, it never
    took deliberate action to abrogate the original policy of treating foreign corporations no
    more favorably than domestic corporations with respect to their capacity to be sued. Nor
    did the electorate take action intended to exempt foreign corporations from the California
    survival law. We read section 2010 in accordance with the intentions of both the
    Legislature and the electorate.” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 909,
    italics added.)
    The majority in North American II next addressed and rejected the suggestion that
    section 2115 — which, as observed earlier, had been relied upon by the court in Riley —
    should lead to a different conclusion. (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 909-910.)13 In closing, the majority observed that there is no constitutional
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    corporations is assured by other provisions of the California and Federal Constitutions.
    The transaction of business in California by foreign corporations also is governed by
    extensive statutes. This Section therefore is deleted as unnecessary.‟ After being
    defeated twice at the polls, the proposal to repeal article XII, section 15 (along with
    several other provisions), was approved at the primary election held June 6, 1972. The
    ballot argument supporting repeal stated only that the proposition approved was
    „basically a housekeeping measure to eliminate obsolete and unnecessary words from the
    Constitution. No new material is added to the Constitution, and there is no change in law
    or policy.‟ ” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 909.)
    13     The majority reasoned: “Section 2115 subjects certain foreign corporations with
    extensive property, payroll, sales, and shareholders in California to a panoply of
    (footnote continued on next page)
    13
    impediment to a state‟s subjecting foreign corporations to the burdens of its own survival
    statue. (North American II, at p. 910.)14
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    provisions of the California Corporations Code. Missing from the list is Corporations
    Code section 2010. Petitioner contends that this omission mandates a finding that section
    2010 applies only to domestic corporations and not to either purely foreign corporations
    or to the „quasi-foreign‟ corporations targeted by Corporations Code section 2115.
    However, petitioner[‟]s reasoning is flawed, and we read no significance from section
    2115‟s silence about section 2010. It is evident from scrutiny of the list of provisions
    applied to „quasi-foreign‟ corporations that they cover the mechanics of corporate life” —
    so-called “internal affairs” — “which would ordinarily be directed just to domestic
    corporations. Stated in general terms, section 2115 merely provides that when a foreign
    corporation conducts more than one-half of its business in California and has more than
    one-half of its shareholders in the state, it will be subject to certain statutory provisions
    usually reserved for domestic corporations. There is no indication that in enacting
    section 2115 the Legislature even considered the question of whether a foreign
    corporation should survive for purposes of suit. It is apparent that the Legislature felt that
    the provisions encompassed in section 2115 should only apply to foreign corporations if
    the specified percentages for business and share holdings in our state were reached, but
    this does not indicate any intention on the part of our lawmakers that other provisions of
    the law may not be applicable to foreign corporations. There are a myriad of statutory
    provisions that apply to foreign corporations that are not included in section 2115. And
    the absence of these statutory provisions from section 2115 is for a good reason, because
    they apply to all foreign corporations, not just to corporations which meet the percentage
    figures prescribed in section 2115.” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 909-910.)
    14      The court stated: “This question was answered by the United States Supreme
    Court in Clark v. Williard [(1934)] 
    292 U.S. 112
    . In circumstances similar to these, the
    court considered an argument that the corporation‟s capacity for suit should be
    determined by application of the law of its domicile. The court found, however, that the
    cited cases expressed a rule that was „to be applied when there is no statute or public
    policy to the contrary in the state where the foreign corporation has been licensed to do
    business. They do not delimit the capacity of a state, when granting such a license, to
    subject it to conditions.‟ (Id., at p. 119.)” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 910.) The majority observed that the foreign corporation in the matter before it had
    been licensed to conduct business in California when its activities within the state gave
    rise to the lawsuit, and concluded that section 2010, as construed, could properly govern
    suits against the foreign corporation. (North American II, supra, at p. 910.)
    14
    Justice Scott, who authored the unanimous opinion in North American I, dissented,
    maintaining that section 2010 did not apply to dissolved foreign corporations. Justice
    Scott relied on the reasoning set out in North American I, supra, 
    128 Cal.App.3d 138
    , and
    he rejected the majority‟s analysis concerning the pseudo-foreign corporation statute,
    section 2115. (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at pp. 911-913 (dis. opn. of
    Scott, J.).)
    Specifically disagreeing with the majority‟s analysis regarding the repealed
    constitutional provision (Cal. Const., art. XII, former § 15), Justice Scott wrote: “The
    only significant change since the decision in North American I is the majority‟s discovery
    of reports showing that the Constitution Revision Commission and the electorate may not
    have realized the full impact of the decision to repeal article XII, section 15 of the
    California Constitution. But no amount of electoral error in repealing article XII, section
    15, can supply a missing word to Corporations Code section 2110. Whether the
    electorate realized it or not, repeal of article XII, section 15, removed the only bar to
    treating foreign corporations more favorably than domestic corporations with regard to
    corporate survival as the Legislature most clearly has done.” (North American II, supra,
    180 Cal.App.3d at p. 913 (dis. opn. of Scott, J.).)
    B. The decision below
    The Court of Appeal below agreed generally with North American I, supra, 
    128 Cal.App.3d 138
    , and Riley, supra, 
    178 Cal.App.3d 871
     — and disagreed with North
    American II, supra,
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
     — concluding that section 2010 does not apply
    to a dissolved foreign corporation. In reaching that determination, the appellate court
    relied on three provisions of the Corporations Code described earlier: section 102(a),
    which, the court found, limits the application of the provisions of the code solely to
    certain domestic corporations, unless a provision expressly provides otherwise; section
    162, which, considered with section 102(a), the court found, evinces “a clear intent to
    limit the Corporations Code‟s general application to domestic corporations”; and section
    15
    2115, which, the court noted, “identifies all of the chapters and sections of the
    Corporations Code that apply to foreign corporations meeting certain threshold
    requirements, [but] does not mention section 2010.”
    Having found the statutory scheme sufficiently clear on its face, the appellate
    court below dismissed as “somewhat convoluted” — and in any event irrelevant — the
    constitutional analysis that influenced the majority in North American II. The court
    viewed plaintiffs‟ argument in this regard as a facet of the statutory construction issue,
    and wrote: “Repeating the reasoning of North American II, plaintiffs here contend the
    1972 repeal of article XII, section 15, of the California Constitution shows a legislative
    intent that California Corporations Code section 2010 apply to foreign corporations. It is
    well established, however, that legislative intent should not be resorted to where a statute
    is clear on its face. „In determining legislative intent, courts look first to the words of the
    statute itself: if those words have a well-established meaning, as we hold they do here,
    there is no need for construction and courts should not indulge in it.‟ [Citation.]” The
    appellate court below did not otherwise address the constitutional arguments raised by the
    majority in North American II, or by plaintiffs in this case.
    C. Contentions and analysis
    Plaintiffs advance alternative arguments in support of their assertion that the
    survival statute, section 2010, applies to dissolved foreign corporations. First, they assert
    that the Corporations Code, properly construed, renders foreign corporations like
    defendant subject to the statute — and they also argue that such an interpretation would
    promote sound policy objectives. Second, plaintiffs assert that even if the code does not
    make foreign corporations subject to California‟s survival statute, California‟s
    Constitution mandates that same result. We address these arguments in turn.
    16
    1. Do section 102(a) and related provisions render foreign corporations like
    defendant subject to section 2010, the survival statute?
    As alluded to earlier, the statutes governing the formation, conduct, and existence
    of business (for profit) corporations in California are found in the many chapters and
    scores of sections of title 1, division 1, the General Corporation Law, sections 1-2319.15
    Plaintiffs rely primarily on section 102(a) (quoted in full ante, fn. 6), which as noted
    earlier defines the application of the General Corporation Law, and its numerous
    statutory provisions, including section 2010. Reduced to its essence as relevant here,
    section 102(a) specifies that the General Corporation Law, division 1, applies to (1)
    “corporations organized under this division,” to (2) certain “domestic corporations” and
    to (3) “any other corporation only to the extent expressly included in a particular
    provision of this division.” (Italics added.)16
    Plaintiffs assert that section 102(a) and related provisions disclose legislative
    intent to apply the survival statute, section 2010, to foreign corporations like defendant
    that transact business in California. As explained below, we disagree.
    The parties concur that the second and third categories of corporations subject to
    the General Corporation Law under section 102(a) are not implicated in the present case.
    The second category was adopted to make it clear that the comprehensive mid-1970s
    amendments to the General Corporation Law applied not only to future entities
    “organized under” it, but also to the many existing domestic corporations organized under
    15    Other types of corporations — nonprofit, “flexible,” and those for specific
    purposes — are addressed in title 1, division 1.5 (§§ 2500-3500), division 2 (§§ 5002-
    10840) and division 3 (§§ 12000-14550).
    16     Correspondingly, as observed ante, footnote 11, section 162 defines the term
    “corporation” — “unless otherwise expressly provided” — to mean “only . . . a
    corporation organized under this division or a corporation subject to this division under
    the provisions of subdivision (a) of Section 102.” (Italics added.)
    17
    prior California laws.17 But defendant is not a domestic corporation, and hence does not
    fall within that category. And unlike some other sections within division 1 that expressly
    apply to “other” (including foreign) corporations,18 section 2010, the survival statute,
    does not.
    This leaves the first category set out in section 102(a) — “corporations organized
    under this division.” Based on this language, it would appear to be doubtful that
    defendant is a corporation within that category. The phrase “organized under,” given its
    ordinary usage, would seem to relate to the fundamental creation and structuring of a
    corporation — matters governed by division 1, chapter 2 (organization and bylaws),
    sections 200-213. Defendant, incorporated in Delaware, clearly was not formed or
    created under division 1, the General Corporation Law.
    Plaintiffs nevertheless insist that defendant was indeed “organized under division
    1.” They reason as follows: (i) The code defines the term “domestic corporation” as “a
    corporation formed under the laws of this state” (§ 167, italics added); (ii) by using the
    different phrase “organized under this division” in section 102(a), the Legislature must
    have intended to draw a distinction between “domestic” corporations and those
    “organized under” division 1 — and hence to include within the category of corporations
    subject to division 1, the General Corporation Law, those foreign corporations that
    17      See, e.g., the legislative committee comments to division 1, chapter 23 (transition
    provisions): “Section 102 provides that the new law is applicable to any corporation
    organized under it or to any business or private corporation organized under predecessor
    laws . . . .” (Legis. Com. com., 2 Deering‟s Ann. Corp. Code (2009 ed.) p. 599.)
    18     For examples of provisions expressly applying to foreign corporations, see
    sections 208 (authorization of and limitations on contracts by corporations),
    1108, subdivisions (a)-(f) (merger of corporations), 1157, subdivisions (a)-(f) (conversion
    of other entities into corporations), 1501, subdivision (g) (annual report to shareholders),
    1600, subdivision (d) (shareholders‟ rights of inspection), 1602 (director‟s right of
    inspection), and 2260 (penalty provisions).
    18
    transact business in the this state; (iii) defendant qualifies as being “organized under this
    division” because under division 1, chapter 21 (foreign corporations) defendant was
    subject to various requirements, which plaintiffs characterize as “organizational mandates
    for transacting intrastate business” in California.
    Specifically, as plaintiffs observe, pursuant to chapter 21 of division 1 all “foreign
    corporations transacting intrastate business” in California (§ 2100)19 must not only obtain
    a certificate of qualification to do so (§ 2105, subd. (a)) but must also set up and consent
    to a California agent for service of process, pay state fees, select a permissible corporate
    name for use in California, and continually update and amend their filings here.
    (§§ 2105, subd. (a)(4) & (5)(A) [accepting service of process], 2106, subds. (a) [paying
    “fees required by law”] & (b) [using a corporate name that does not conflict with a Cal.
    business], 2107 [duty to update and amend all required filings].) These requirements of
    chapter 21, plaintiffs assert, constitute “organizational mandates” that, in turn, render
    each foreign corporation that complies with them “organized under” division 1.
    Defendant observes in its answer brief that nothing in these statutes governing
    qualification to transact business in California refers to such requirements as
    “organization,” or as plaintiffs characterize them, “organizational mandates.” Nor,
    defendant asserts, does the code contemplate that a foreign corporation is “ „organized‟
    under California law simply by virtue of qualifying to transact interstate business.”
    Neither, defendant argues, did the Legislature contemplate that a corporation could be
    “organized” under the laws of more than one state.20 And yet, defendant asserts, under
    19     The Corporations Code defines “transact[ing] intrastate business” as “entering into
    repeated and successive transactions of its business in this state.” (§ 191, italics added.)
    20     When referring to where a corporation is organized, the code uniformly speaks of
    “the jurisdiction” or “the state” in the singular. (See §§ 317, subd. (i), 1108, subd. (d),
    1109, 1113, subd. (j)(4), 1152, subd. (a)(5), 1155, subd. (b)(3), 1156, subd. (a), 2101,
    subd. (b), 2105, subd. (a)(1), 2112, subd. (a)(1).)
    19
    plaintiffs‟ theory a corporation would be “organized” under the laws of every state where
    it qualifies to conduct business — with profound consequences.
    As defendant observes, under plaintiffs‟ reading of section 102(a), “every foreign
    corporation that qualified to do business in California would be governed by all of
    division 1”21 — including all of California‟s myriad provisions in division 1 relating to
    organization and bylaws (ch. 2, §§ 200-213), directors and management (ch. 3, §§ 300-
    318), shares and share certificates (ch. 4, §§ 400-423), dividends and reacquisitions of
    shares (ch. 5, §§ 500-508), shareholders‟ meetings and consents (ch. 6, §§ 600-605),
    voting of shares (ch. 7, §§ 700-711), shareholder derivative actions (ch. 8, § 800),
    amendment of articles (ch. 9, §§ 900-911), sale of assets (ch. 10, §§ 1000-1002), merger
    (ch. 11, §§ 1100-1113), dissenters‟ rights (ch. 13, §§ 1300-1313), records and reports
    (ch. 15, §§ 1500-1511), rights of inspection (ch. 16, §§ 1600-1605), dissolution (chs. 18-
    20, §§ 1800-1809, 1900-1907, 2000-2011), and crimes and penalties (ch. 22, §§ 2200-
    2260). Defendant asserts that plaintiffs “provide no basis to pluck out particular sections,
    such as [the survival provision, section] 2010, and hold that the particular section applies
    but the rest of division 1 does not.”
    Under plaintiffs‟ view, if a foreign corporation were to challenge the application
    of any such California provision, a choice-of-law inquiry (see ante, fn. 5) would be
    triggered concerning each of the various ways in which California corporate law differs
    from that of other jurisdictions. Defendant contends that such a system would be
    unworkable,22 and asserts that the Legislature could not have intended such a “radical
    change” and “bizarre regime.”
    21     Here and elsewhere we have, for consistency, altered the capitalization of
    “division” and related terms from that set out in the briefs.
    22    Defendant argues that under such scheme, “foreign corporations would find
    themselves having to follow a litany of requirements regarding various corporate
    (footnote continued on next page)
    20
    Additionally, defendant asserts, plaintiffs‟ interpretation of this key language
    “would render almost completely irrelevant the other provisions of chapters 1 through 20
    that expressly apply to foreign corporations. (See [statutes cited ante, fn. 18].) For
    example, [section] 1501[, subdivision] (g), which pertains to annual reports to
    shareholders, states that the requirements apply to a certain subset of foreign corporations
    — those with their principal executive office in this state or that customarily hold board
    meetings in the state. The intended scope of [section] 1501 would be significantly altered
    by plaintiffs‟ interpretation of the code, again because all foreign corporations qualified
    to do business in California would fall within the ambit of division 1, including chapter
    15, not just those foreign corporations with their principal office in this state or that
    customarily hold board meetings in this state.” (Italics added.)
    Finally, defendant argues that “[b]y making all of division 1 applicable to any
    foreign corporation qualified to do business in California, plaintiffs‟ proposal would
    render [section] 2115 [imposing certain California requirements, described ante, fn. 9, on
    pseudo-foreign corporations] largely superfluous.” Defendant asserts: “[U]nder
    plaintiffs‟ interpretation . . . all the sections [covered by section 2115] would already
    apply to these foreign corporations because all such corporations would be considered
    „organized under‟ division 1.”
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    activities that their home state already regulates, creating innumerable, treacherous
    conflicts of law that the corporation would find impossible to navigate. For example, if a
    Delaware corporation wanted to amend its charter, engage in a merger, or declare a
    dividend, matters governed by both Delaware and California law, and the provisions of
    the two states differed as to these matters, the foreign corporation would have to engage
    in its own choice-of-law analysis to determine which states‟ law it needed to follow.”
    (Citing § 500 and Del. Code Ann., tit. 8, § 170, setting forth different financial tests that
    must be satisfied for a corporation to be able to pay a dividend.)
    21
    Plaintiffs respond to these various points — and specifically, to defendant‟s
    overarching argument that the scheme envisioned by plaintiffs would subject every
    foreign corporation that qualified to do business in California to governance by all of
    division 1 and hence would be unworkable and could not have been contemplated by the
    Legislature — by contending that the code can be harmonized in a way that diminishes
    the problems identified by defendants. According to plaintiffs, the Legislature has
    created “three classes of foreign corporations that do business in California”: (1)
    Corporations that engage in only occasional business in California, and hence are not
    subject to the “qualification” requirements of division 1, chapter 21 (§§ 2105-2107); (2)
    corporations that engage in successive and repeated business in California, and hence are
    subject to these statutory qualification requirements; and (3) so-called pseudo-foreign
    corporations that conduct the majority of their business, etc., in California, and are hence
    subject not only to these statutory qualification requirements, but also to the additional
    requirements imposed by section 2115. Plaintiffs assert: Corporations that fall into
    category (1) do not qualify as being “organized under” division 1, and hence they are not
    subject to its requirements. On the other hand, plaintiffs argue, corporations falling into
    categories (2) and (3) are indeed “organized under” division 1, and they are hence subject
    to the requirements of division 1, albeit in different ways. Plaintiffs postulate that
    corporations falling within category (2) — like defendant here — are governed by all of
    the requirements of division 1 (including the survival provision, § 2010), subject to the
    outcome of a choice-of-law analysis with regard to each California statutory provision
    that conflicts with a provision governing the corporation in its state of incorporation. By
    contrast, plaintiffs maintain, with regard to category (3), because section 2115‟s
    enumerated requirements apply “to the exclusion of the law of the jurisdiction in which it
    22
    is incorporated” (id., subd. (b)), the various California requirements listed in that section
    (described ante, fn. 9) apply automatically, without being subjected to any choice-of-law
    analysis.23
    As defendant observes, plaintiffs‟ expansive interpretation of section 102(a) would
    appear to render largely superfluous the various statutory provisions within division 1
    that, pursuant to the third clause of section 102(a), specifically subject foreign
    corporations to their requirements. (See, e.g., statutes cited ante, fn. 18.) Under
    plaintiffs‟ interpretation, no “category (1)” corporation would ever be subject to such
    specifically extended requirements — thus nullifying the statutory extensions as to those
    corporations. And also under plaintiffs‟ interpretation, all “category (2)” corporations
    would already be automatically governed by those statutes — subject, of course, to
    choice-of-law analysis — thus rendering such specifically extended requirements
    essentially superfluous as applied to those corporations. And with regard to “category
    (3)” corporations — pseudo-foreign entities that are subject to the additional enumerated
    statutory requirements of section 2115 — they too would already be automatically
    governed by many of those statutes; moreover, as observed, ante, footnote 23, with
    regard to division 1 statutes not specifically enumerated in section 2115, pseudo-foreign
    corporations also would be governed by those additional statutes, subject to choice-of-
    law analysis.
    We discern in the statutes no evidence that the Legislature intended by section
    102(a) to accomplish the dramatic result ascribed to it by plaintiffs — essentially,
    23     Presumably, under plaintiffs‟ theory, with regard to this third category, other
    statutory requirements of division 1 not enumerated in section 2115 would, as with
    “category (2)” matters, be subject to the outcome of a choice-of-law analysis with regard
    to each California statutory provision that conflicts with a provision governing the
    corporation in its state of incorporation.
    23
    imposing on all “category (2)” foreign corporations that are qualified to undertake
    repeated and successive business in California, the burden of complying with all
    provisions of division 1, subject to what would often be a difficult choice-of-law analysis
    with regard to each California statutory provision that conflicts with a provision
    governing the corporation in its state of formation. As defendant suggests, such a scheme
    would require foreign corporations to “follow a litany of requirements regarding various
    corporate activities that their home state already regulates, creating innumerable,
    treacherous conflicts of law that the corporation would find impossible to navigate.” (See
    ante, fn. 22.) We would expect the Legislature to have made its intentions clear had it
    intended to adopt such an elaborate and litigation-intensive scheme.
    For these reasons we disagree with plaintiffs‟ assertion that foreign corporations
    like defendant, that have qualified under sections 2105-2107 to undertake “repeated and
    successive transactions of its business in this state” are thereby rendered “organized
    under” division 1, the General Corporation Law, and hence subject to its myriad
    provisions, including section 2010. Accordingly, we are disposed to reject plaintiffs‟
    interpretation of section 102(a) and related statutes.
    2. The construction of the code by the majority in North American II
    As observed earlier, the majority in North American II, supra, 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    , reached a contrary conclusion based in part on its view of the proper interpretation
    of the statutory predecessor to the survival statute, section 2010 — Civil Code former
    section 399,24 which was enacted in 1929 as part of a corporation law modernization
    24      Civil Code former section 399 read in relevant part: “All corporations, whether
    they expire by their own limitation, by forfeiture of charter by order of court, or are
    otherwise dissolved, shall nevertheless continue to exist for the purpose of winding up
    their affairs, prosecuting and defending actions by or against them, and of enabling them
    to collect and discharge obligations, to dispose of and convey their property, and to
    collect and divide their assets, but not for the purpose of continuing the business for
    (footnote continued on next page)
    24
    project spanning 1929-1933.25 Like section 2010, former section 399 of the Civil Code
    did not explicitly state whether it applied solely to domestic corporations or to both
    domestic and foreign corporations, and there is no indication that the Legislature
    specifically addressed that issue — even though an example for such an expansive
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    which the corporation was established. [¶] Any assets inadvertently or otherwise omitted
    from the winding up shall continue in the dissolved corporation for the benefit of the
    persons who would have been entitled thereto upon dissolution of the corporation, and on
    realization shall be distributed accordingly.” (Stats. 1929, ch. 711, § 29, p. 1277.)
    25      Sparked by an article — Ballantine, Legislative Developments in Corporation Law
    (1927) 15 Cal. L.Rev. 422 — the State Bar in 1928 proposed reform of California‟s
    corporation law, then housed in the Civil Code. The State Bar appointed a Committee on
    Revision of the Corporation Laws (State Bar Committee), which reviewed the statutes of
    other jurisdictions as well as the Uniform Business Corporation Act (1928) and other
    available sources. (See generally Ballantine, Plans for a Modernized Incorporation Law
    (1928) 16 Cal. L.Rev. 425; Ballantine, Changes in California Corporation Laws (1929)
    (1929) 17 Cal. L.Rev. 529; Sterling, Modernizing California’s Corporation Laws (1936)
    12 Wisc. L.Rev. 453, 455-460 (Sterling).)
    From the inception of the project it was understood that, for legal and practical
    reasons, the necessary amendments would have to be accomplished over successive
    legislative sessions — in 1929, 1931, and 1933. Those changes that could be enacted
    early in the process were so enacted. (Stats. 1929, ch. 711, §§ 1-43, pp. 1261-1287.) But
    some of the contemplated amendments could not be enacted by the Legislature until
    certain restrictive and outdated provisions of article XII of the Constitution, governing
    corporations, first were repealed or amended — which was accomplished in November
    1930. (See generally Ballantine, Cal. Corporation Laws (1932) pp. 2-6, quoting the 1930
    amendments and ballot arguments, and summarizing the changes, which did not affect
    art. XII, former § 15, discussed post, pt. II.C.3.) Thereafter, in phase two of the
    corporation law reforms, the bulk of the State Bar Committee‟s substantive changes were
    enacted in 1931. (Stats. 1931, ch. 862, §§ 1-3, pp. 1762-1835.) Finally, in 1933, the
    State Bar Committee proposed and the Legislature enacted “clean up” amendments to
    statutes and recent revisions. (Stats. 1933, ch. 533, §§ 1-96, pp. 1358-1420.) For these
    reasons, it is appropriate to view the corporation law amendments of 1929-1933 as a
    coordinated and synchronized package.
    25
    approach then existed in New Jersey, the state upon which California‟s survival statute
    was primarily modeled.26
    In concluding that the former version of the survival statute should be interpreted
    to apply to both domestic and foreign corporations, the court in North American II relied
    in part on the fact that in 1929, when the section was enacted, former section 283 of the
    Civil Code provided that the provisions within its title applied to “every private
    corporation.” (North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 908, italics added.)
    In order to understand what was meant by the phrase “every private corporation”
    in 1929 when the Legislature enacted former definitional section 283, along with former
    26      According to the contemporaneous article, Ballantine, Questions of Policy in
    Drafting a Modern Corporation Law (1931) 19 Cal. L.Rev. 465, the California survival
    statute, by prolonging corporate life “for an indefinite period,” was based “on the model
    of the New Jersey statutes” — as distinguished from the approach of other jurisdictions
    that placed a limit, typically three years, on the “continuation of a quasi-corporate
    existence” for dissolution and winding up. (Id., at p. 483; see 2 Compiled Stats. N.J.
    (1911) Corporations, § 53, pp. 1634-1635, § 59, p. 1637 [P.L. 1896, pp. 295-296]
    [neither provision indicating whether it applied to foreign as well as domestic
    corporations].) In other words, the State Bar Committee drafters focused on whether the
    survival period should be open ended, or fixed by a period of years — but, apparently,
    they did not focus on the specific issue that we face now, whether the new survival
    statute would apply to foreign as well as domestic corporations.
    Another provision of the New Jersey statutes addressed the issue we face now.
    When former section 399 of the Civil Code was enacted in 1929, a separate New Jersey
    statute provided: “Foreign corporations doing business in this state shall be subject to
    the provisions of this act, so far as the same can be applied to foreign corporations.”
    (2 Compiled Stats. N.J., supra, Corporations, § 96, p. 1657 [P.L. 1896, p. 307], italics
    added.) No similar provision was added in California, and the legislative history
    materials do not disclose that any such provision was considered. We also observe that
    New Jersey soon thereafter added a statutory provision expressly providing that a
    dissolved “domestic or foreign corporation . . . shall continue as a body corporate for the
    purpose of defending such suit.” (1934 N.J. Laws ch. 159, p. 400; see 
    N.J. Rev. Stat. § 14:13-14
    ; Dr. Hess & Clark, Inc. v. Metalsalts Corp. (D.N.J. 1954) 
    119 F.Supp. 427
    [so construing the subsequent N.J. statute].) Again, no such provision was added, or
    apparently considered, in California.
    26
    section 399, the predecessor to the survival statute, both as part of the Civil Code, that
    language must be read in the context of the definitions then existing. Former section 284
    of the Civil Code remained unchanged by the 1929 legislation and specified that
    corporations were either “public” or “private”: “Public corporations are formed or
    organized for the government of a portion of the State; all other corporations are private.”
    (As amended by 1873-1874 Code Amdts., p. 197.) Significantly, Civil Code former
    section 285 — also amended in 1929 as part of that year‟s reform legislation package —
    had provided: “Private corporations may be formed by the voluntary association of any
    three or more persons in the manner prescribed in this title [that is, the General
    Corporation Law, Civil Code former section 283 et seq., setting out the conditions of and
    mechanisms for forming a corporation in California]. A majority of such persons must
    be residents of this state.” (Civ. Code, former § 285, as amended by Stats. 1905, ch. 392,
    § 1, p. 502, italics added.)
    From these provisions, all of which derived from substantively identical
    predecessor statutes dating from the early 1870s,27 it appears that the phrase “every
    private corporation,” as employed through 1929 and beyond, referred only to a domestic
    corporation — one formed under California statutes. Legislation passed in 1931, in the
    second phase of the coordinated modernization reforms, confirmed that definition.28
    27     See 1 Annotated Civil Code, sections 284 and 285 (1st ed. 1872, Haymond &
    Burch, commrs.-annotators) pages 83-85; 1 Annotated Civil Code, sections 284 and 285
    (1st ed. 1874, Haymond & Burch, commrs.-annotators) pages 83-85.
    28      During that phase of the State Bar project to reform California‟s corporation
    statutes (see ante, fn. 25), many substantive changes were adopted. (Stats. 1931, ch. 862,
    §§ 1-3, pp. 1762-1835.) The Legislature added section 279 of the Civil Code, retaining
    language from prior statutes dating back to the early 1870s, specifying that the
    “provisions of this title are applicable to every private corporation . . . .” (Stats. 1931,
    ch. 862, § 2, p. 1765, italics added.) Significantly, the Legislature also added a new
    definitional section, Civil Code former section 278, that erased any possible doubt
    (footnote continued on next page)
    27
    Indeed, a different and broader reading of the phrase “every private corporation” would
    have been inconsistent with the interpretation of similar language in other jurisdictions,29
    and with this court‟s application of the internal affairs doctrine, under which our state
    refrained from regulating the inner workings of foreign corporations (see, e.g., post,
    fn. 35).
    Accordingly, contrary to the majority opinion in North American II, supra, 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    , 908, we do not infer that by specifying that the provisions of the General
    Corporation Law were applicable to “ „every private corporation,‟ ” the Legislature in
    1929 must have intended all of the various sections within that title to apply generally to
    both domestic and foreign business corporations. The inference we draw is the opposite
    — that the Legislature intended its general statutes governing domestic corporations
    should apply to foreign corporations only as specifically provided in those statutes.30 It
    would have been unprecedented for the Legislature in 1929 to have intended otherwise.
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    concerning what was meant by the term “corporation”: “ „Corporation,‟ unless otherwise
    expressly provided, refers only to a domestic corporation.” (Stats. 1931, ch. 862, § 2,
    p. 1764, italics added.) The same section also specified: “ „Domestic corporation‟ means
    a corporation formed under the laws of this state, and „foreign corporation‟ means any
    other corporation.” By these amendments, the Legislature further clarified what was
    apparent when it enacted the first phase of corporation reform amendments, including the
    survival statute, in 1929: California‟s General Corporation Law applied to foreign
    corporations only as specifically provided in those statutes.
    29     See, e.g., Comment, Foreign Corporations — State Boundaries for National
    Business (1949-1950) 
    59 Yale L.J. 737
    , 738 (reviewing past decisions and observing that
    “the statutory words „every corporation‟ have often been construed as embracing only
    domestic corporations”).
    30     In the decades prior to 1929 the Legislature had exercised its authority by enacting
    statutes specifically extending certain burdens imposed on domestic corporations to
    foreign corporations. (See, e.g., post, fn. 36.) And in other situations, the Legislature
    apparently exercised its authority to refrain from extending such burdens, even in the face
    (footnote continued on next page)
    28
    Finally, regarding the survival statute in particular, we note that the leading
    treatises stated, and the majority of out-of-state decisions of that era held, that a state‟s
    survival statute did not apply to foreign corporations.31 A statute covering foreign as
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    of a decision by this court pointing out that the “Legislature alone” could make such an
    extension. (South Yuba Water etc. Co. v. Rosa (1889) 
    80 Cal. 333
    , 336-337.) We also
    note that in the course of its 1929-1933 coordinated reforms (see ante, fn. 25), the
    Legislature enacted a number of statutes that it specifically made applicable to foreign as
    well as domestic corporations. (See former provisions of Civ. Code, enacted by
    Stats. 1931, ch. 862, § 2, pp. 1795-1803 [former §§ 329 (allowing action against domestic
    and foreign corporations concerning lost or destroyed bonds), 330.21, subd. (a) (the term
    “shares” under the Stock Transfer Act applied to “shares of stock in a domestic or foreign
    corporation”), & 345 (general provision concerning ultra vires acts “shall extend to
    contracts . . . made by foreign corporations in this state”)]; Stats. 1933, ch. 533, § 23,
    p. 1371 [former § 315 (procedures for determining the validity of election or appointment
    in California of “any director of any domestic corporation, or of any foreign
    corporation”); Stats. 1933, ch. 533, § 26, p. 1372 [former § 320b, subd. (4) (procedures
    for voting of shares in the name of “a corporation, domestic or foreign”)]; Stats. 1933,
    ch. 533, § 33, p. 1377 [former § 328e (granting domestic and foreign corporations
    immunity from liability concerning transfer of shares by minors)]; Stats. 1933, ch. 533,
    § 54, p. 1388 [former § 355 (shareholders‟ inspection of records of domestic and foreign
    corporations)]; Stats. 1933, ch. 533, § 55, p. 1388) [former § 356 (director‟s inspection of
    records of domestic and foreign corporations)]; Stats. 1933, ch. 533, § 58, p. 1390
    [former § 359 (requiring provision of financial statements to shareholders of domestic
    corporations and “foreign corporations having the principal place for the transaction of
    their business in this State or customarily holding meetings of their boards of directors
    therein”)].) As noted, Civil Code former section 399 did not expressly apply to foreign
    corporations.
    31      According to the leading treatise of the day — Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of
    Private Corporations (as updated by then-current supplements) — the clear majority rule
    was that a state‟s survival statute applied only to that state‟s domestic corporations, and
    not to foreign corporations. (See id., vol. 8 (1919) § 5616, p. 9212 [“These statutes
    which prevent abatement [of suits against corporations] upon dissolution do not apply to
    foreign corporations”]; id., §§ 5628, 5629, p. 9221 [even though states‟ survival statutes
    are often applicable to “all” corporations, “such statutes do not apply to foreign
    corporations, it is generally held” (italics added)]; id., § 5819, p. 9719 [“By the weight of
    authority, it is held that such a statute has no application to foreign corporations”]; see
    (footnote continued on next page)
    29
    well as domestic corporations would have placed California outside the clear majority
    rule. In light of the national scope of the comprehensive review that preceded the
    legislation (see ante, fn. 25), if our Legislature had contemplated such a dramatic change
    from the majority approach, we would expect it to have been clear in doing so.32
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    also 3 Cook on Corporations (8th ed. 1923), ch. XXXVIII, § 642, pp. 2402-2403 [“A
    statute that corporations shall continue for a certain time after their dissolution for
    purposes of litigation does not apply to foreign corporations”].)
    The minority view was acknowledged and criticized in Beale, The Law of Foreign
    Corporations (1904) section 828, pages 989-990: “It may be claimed that a statute
    permitting a corporation to sue and be sued for a certain time after dissolution applies to a
    foreign corporation, and that such corporation, though dissolved in its own State, may
    nevertheless be party to a suit by virtue of the statute. In a few jurisdictions the statute is
    interpreted as applying to foreign corporations, though the better view would seem to be
    that it applies to domestic corporations only.” (Fns. omitted, italics added.) The treatise
    acknowledged that a statute adopting the minority view would be constitutional. (Id., at
    p. 990, citing McGoon v. Scales (1869) 
    76 U.S. 23
    .)
    Representative cases predating the late 1920s, reflecting the majority rule (that the
    survival statute did not cover foreign corporations), include the following: Life Ass’n of
    America v. Goode (Tex. 1888) 
    8 S.W. 639
    ; Marion Phosphate Co. v. Perry (5th Cir.
    1896) 
    74 F. 425
     (applying Fla. Law); Dundee Mortgage & Trust Investment Co. v.
    Hughes (C.C. Or. 1898) 
    89 F. 182
     (applying Or. law); Fitts v. National Life Ass’n (Ala.
    1900) 
    30 So. 374
    ; Harris-Woodbury Lumber Co. v. Coffin (C.C.W.D.N.C. 1910) 
    179 F. 257
     (applying N.C. law); Riddell v. Rochester German Ins. Co. of New York (R.I. 1912)
    
    85 A. 273
    ; Martyne v. American Union Fire Ins. Co. of Philadelphia (N.Y. 1915) 
    110 N.E. 502
    . Cases predating the late 1920s, reflecting the minority position that a survival
    statute covered foreign corporations, include the following: Stetson v. City Bank of New
    Orleans (1853) 2 Ohio St.Rep. 167; Life Association of America v. Fassett (1882) 
    102 Ill. 315
    ; Hauger v. International Trading Co. (Ky.Ct.App. 1919) 
    214 S.W. 438
    .
    32      That the Legislature did not so intend is further demonstrated by one of the various
    “clean-up” amendments recommended by the State Bar Committee drafters, and adopted
    by the Legislature, in the third phase of modernization reforms in 1933. (Stats. 1933, ch.
    533, pp. 1358-1420; see generally Ballentine, Amendments of the California General
    Corporation Law (1933) 8 State Bar J. 136.) Among those revisions was a slight change
    to the opening words of the survival statute, Civil Code, former section 399. Whereas the
    1929 and 1931 versions commenced by specifying that the provision applied to “All
    (footnote continued on next page)
    30
    3. Even if the statutes do not make foreign corporations subject to California’s
    survival statute, does California’s Constitution mandate that same
    result?
    Plaintiffs insist that if, as above, we reject their statutory construction argument
    that defendant was “organized under” division 1 and for that reason is subject to section
    2010, that statute “still applies to [defendant]” under the compulsion of article XII,
    former section 15 of the California Constitution. As noted earlier, that constitutional
    provision, which was repealed by the electorate in 1972, provided that corporations
    “organized outside the limits of this State” — e.g., foreign corporations — “shall [not] be
    allowed to transact business” in this state “on more favorable conditions than”
    corporations “organized under the laws of this State.” (Cal. Const., art. XII, former § 15;
    hereafter article XII, former section 15.) Plaintiffs concede that their constitutional
    argument, which they present as an “alternative” to their statutory contention, is
    somewhat in tension with it — in that each depends on a different understanding of the
    term “organized” — but they insist that it stands as an independent reason for this court
    to reverse the decision below.
    Underlying plaintiffs‟ argument are two premises: (1) pursuant to article XII,
    former section 15, the “original meaning” of the survival statute in 1929 (and thereafter)
    was that it covered both domestic and foreign corporations (otherwise foreign
    corporations would “be allowed to transact business” in this state “on more favorable
    conditions than” domestic corporations); and (2) accordingly, the repeal of article XII,
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    corporations,” the 1933 version — adopting the language that is still used today in
    section 2010 — changed the opening sentence to read, “A corporation . . . .” In context,
    this change appears to have been intended to further clarify that the survival statute
    applied, not literally to all corporations, but instead to corporations as defined elsewhere
    in the statutes — that is, to domestic corporations only.
    31
    former section 15 in 1972 did not alter that asserted original reach of the survival statute;
    instead, the constitutional provision lives on, at least insofar as the survival statute is
    concerned. In advancing these arguments plaintiffs endorse the position of the appellate
    court majority in North American II, supra, 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    , and fault the decision of
    the appellate court below, and defendant‟s brief, for failing to “analyze, let alone refute,
    North American II‟s constitutional analysis.”
    It is true that the decision below failed to grapple with the North American II
    majority‟s constitutional analysis, and indeed defendant‟s brief addresses that issue only
    cursorily. But having examined that matter ourselves, we conclude that plaintiffs, and the
    majority in North American II, have not properly construed the former constitutional
    provision. As we will explain, North American II misinterpreted article XII, former
    section 15, when it read that section as intending to provide that every statutory
    restriction or requirement that the Legislature imposes upon a domestic corporation also
    must be imposed upon a foreign corporation. Instead, the former constitutional
    provision, properly interpreted, simply prohibited the Legislature from explicitly granting
    a privilege or benefit to a foreign corporation that was withheld from domestic
    corporations — for example by permitting only a foreign corporation, and not domestic
    corporations, to engage in a particular business or in a particular location.
    Article XII, former section 15, was drafted and adopted by the delegates to the
    constitutional convention of 1878-187933 and endorsed by the voters later that year when
    they approved the new Constitution. As noted, the provision read: “No corporation
    organized outside the limits of this State shall be allowed to transact business within this
    33    See 1 Willis & Stockton, Debates and Proceedings of the Constitutional
    Convention of the State of California (1878-79) (1880) pages 250 and 426 (initial
    proposals of provision); 3 Willis & Stockton, supra, at page 1217 (as amended); id., at
    page 1521 (as adopted).
    32
    State on more favorable conditions than are prescribed by law to similar corporations
    organized under the laws of this State.”34
    From an early time our cases construing and applying article XII, former section
    15, concluded that the provision had no application to state statutes that regulated the
    “internal affairs” of corporations. As to those matters, the cases held that, under the
    internal affairs doctrine, a foreign corporation was subject to only the law of its state of
    incorporation.35 In other contexts, cases of that era cited article XII, former section 15
    34      There had been no similar provision in the prior state Constitution of 1849. By
    one contemporaneous account, the provision was inspired by a somewhat similar
    provision of the 1874 Arkansas Constitution. (Desty, The Constitution of the State of
    California Adopted in 1879, With References to Similar Provisions of the Constitutions
    of Other States (1893) p. 328 [copyright 1879; indicating that the provision was related to
    “Ark. XII, 11”].)
    Actually, the Arkansas provision appears to have been considerably broader than
    that enacted by California. Article XII, section 11 of the Arkansas Constitution, as
    adopted in 1874, read: “Foreign corporations may be authorized to do business in this
    State, under such limitations and restrictions as may be prescribed by law; Provided:
    That no such corporation shall do any business in this State, except while it maintains
    therein one or more known places of business, and an authorized agent or agents in the
    same, upon whom process may be served; and, as to the contracts made or business done
    in this State, they shall be subject to the same regulations, limitations and liabilities as
    like corporations of this State: and shall exercise no other or greater powers, privileges
    or franchises than may be exercised by like corporations of this State; nor shall they have
    power to condemn or appropriate private property.” (Italics added.) Although by the late
    1920s a handful of other jurisdictions had constitutional provisions very similar to
    California‟s, they all postdated article XII, former section 15, and appear to have been
    modeled on it.
    35      In Miles v. Woodward (1896) 
    115 Cal. 308
    , this court held that a statute requiring
    filing and posting of weekly reports was not unconstitutional under article XII, former
    section 15, merely because it imposed its burdens on domestic, and not foreign,
    corporations. This court wrote that despite the constitutional provision, “[t]he laws of the
    state do not have extraterritorial force. It would be meaningless for this state to try to
    legislate upon the internal affairs of such foreign corporations, and it has not attempted to
    do so.” (Miles, at p. 311; accord, Western Union Tel. Co. v. Superior Court (1911) 
    15 Cal.App. 679
    , 694 [the formation, organization, stock, and subscriptions requirements
    (footnote continued on next page)
    33
    most often in discussing and applying California statutes that, by their terms, applied
    similar restrictions on both domestic and foreign corporations. For example, a series of
    cases discussed the former constitutional provision when applying a statute imposing a
    “stockholder liability” burden on stockholders of both domestic and foreign
    corporations.36 The court concluded in each case that the statutory burden properly
    applied to stockholders of both types of corporations.37 None of these decisions
    suggested that article XII, former section 15, would by itself render stockholders of
    foreign corporations subject to such a liability burden.
    In Conference Free Baptists v. Berkey (1909) 
    156 Cal. 466
     (Berkey), this court
    held that the constitutional provision did not apply in the case of a one-time business
    transaction. In the course of our analysis we discussed whether article XII, former
    (footnote continued from previous page)
    governing domestic corporations are not, by virtue of art. XII, former § 15, applicable to
    foreign corporations — and this does not amount to allowing foreign corporations to
    transact business on terms more favorable than domestic corporations]; see also Southern
    Sierras Power Co. v. Railroad Commission of California (1928) 
    205 Cal. 479
    [reaffirming a robust application of the internal affairs doctrine without even mentioning
    art. XII, former § 15].)
    36     See Civil Code former section 322 (“Each stockholder of a corporation is
    individually and personally liable for such proportion of all its debts and liabilities
    contracted or incurred during the time he was a stockholder as the amount of stock or
    shares owed by him bears to the whole of the subscribed capital stock or shares of the
    corporation.”). Such statutory liability was compelled by the 1879 California
    Constitution‟s article XII. This constitutional underpinning was among the matters
    repealed by the constitutional amendment of 1930 (see ante, fn. 25; Sterling, supra, 12
    Wisc. L.Rev. 453, 456-457), and the statute itself was repealed in Statutes 1931, chapter
    257, section 1, page 444.
    37   See Pinney v. Nelson (1901) 
    183 U.S. 144
    ; Peck v. Noee (1908) 
    154 Cal. 351
    ;
    Thomas v. Wentworth Hotel Co. (1910) 
    158 Cal. 275
    ; Provident Gold Mining Co. v.
    Haynes (1916) 
    173 Cal. 44
    .
    34
    section 15, in addition to barring the Legislature from enacting statutes that granted
    foreign corporations benefits or privileges not afforded to domestic corporations, also
    was “ „self-executing‟ ” in the sense that it automatically imposed on foreign corporations
    general statutory burdens that were imposed on domestic corporations.38 We stated in
    dictum that whether the provision was self-executing in this sense was “a question which
    may be open to doubt.” (Berkey, supra, at p. 468.) In this regard we cited cases strongly
    supporting such doubt by finding the corresponding provision of the Montana
    Constitution did not automatically impose on foreign corporations the same burdens
    imposed by statute on domestic corporations.39 This prompted a leading commentator to
    38      The court in Berkey recognized that the provision was “ „self-executing‟ ” in the
    first sense described above: Without need for any implementing legislation, the
    provision prohibited “the passing of laws affirmatively giving superior privileges to
    foreign corporations.” (Berkey, supra, 156 Cal. at p. 468.) If the Legislature had enacted
    such a statute, the statute would have been unconstitutional under article XII, former
    section 15, because of the constitutional provision itself and would have been struck
    down by a court if challenged. No statute was needed to implement the constitutional
    prohibition in this respect.
    39      In Uihlein v. Caplice Commercial Co. (Mont. 1909) 
    102 P. 564
    , the Montana
    Supreme Court, construing that state‟s somewhat similar counterpart to our article XII,
    former section 15, concluded that the Montana provision was “[p]rimarily . . . addressed
    to the legislative assembly” and “was intended to prohibit the passage of laws giving to
    foreign corporations the right to exercise or enjoy any greater privileges than those
    possessed or enjoyed by domestic corporations,” not “to bring foreign corporations
    within the provisions of a law intended to apply solely to domestic corporations.”
    (Uihlein v. Caplice Commercial Co., 
    supra, at p. 568
    .) Similarly, in First Nat’l Bank v.
    Weidenbeck (8th Cir. 1899) 
    97 F. 896
    , the court rejected an argument that the Montana
    constitutional provision required foreign corporations to comply with all forum state rules
    applicable to its domestic corporations, stating that such a result would be “untenable”
    and hence “[i]t is never done”: “in the very nature of things, it is impossible to provide
    exactly the same system of laws for foreign as for domestic corporations.” (Id., at
    p. 900.) Instead, the court held, the constitutional provision is simply “an inhibition
    against the grant of powers and privileges to foreign corporations that are not granted to,
    or cannot be enjoyed by, domestic corporations under like conditions.” (Ibid.)
    35
    say that our decision in Berkey “intimated, but [did] not decide[], . . . that this provision
    of the constitution is not self-executing . . . .” (Clarke, Cal. Corporation Law (1916)
    ch. XXXIV, pp. 608-609.)
    Based on this history, we disagree with the implicit assumption of the majority in
    North American II that in 1929, when the survival statute was enacted, the general
    understanding was that article XII, former section 15, meant that all statutory burdens
    imposed on domestic corporations also would apply to foreign corporations — even if the
    particular statute did not specify that it would apply to foreign as well as domestic
    corporations. Berkey, supra, 
    156 Cal. 466
    , decided in 1909, demonstrates that it was not
    at all clear in 1929 that the former constitutional provision had the effect attributed to it in
    1986 by the appellate court in North American II. Accordingly, even if we apply the
    doctrine that ambiguous statutory provisions should be interpreted to avoid constitutional
    problems, we cannot endorse the implicit conclusion of the court in North American II
    that such an interpretation of the 1929 survival statute was or is required.40 In view of
    the language of the current statutory provisions and the deliberate changes made to them
    throughout the years, as well as the legislative and constitutional background against
    which the predecessor of section 2010 was enacted, we conclude that the survival statute
    should properly be interpreted to apply to domestic corporations only.
    D. Dicta in our cases
    Against this conclusion plaintiffs highlight dicta in two of our decisions —
    Penasquitos, supra, 
    53 Cal.3d 1180
    , and McCann v. Foster Wheeler LLC (2010) 48
    40     Having concluded that the court in North American II misinterpreted the meaning
    and effect of article XII, former section 15, we need not address the circumstances
    surrounding the repeal of former constitutional provision in 1972. Because that former
    provision is not a proper basis for interpreting the former or current versions of the
    survival statute as applying to both domestic and foreign corporations, that former
    provision is not relevant to the issue before us — and its repeal is similarly irrelevant.
    
    36 Cal.4th 68
     (McCann) — in which we cited and described the conclusion of North
    American II, supra, 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    , that the survival statute, section 2010, applies to
    foreign corporations. Plaintiffs assert that in doing so we tacitly approved the reasoning
    of North American II.
    In Penasquitos, 
    supra,
     
    53 Cal.3d 1180
    , we held that section 2010 permitted not
    only the continuation of suits against dissolved domestic corporations, but also the
    initiation of suits against dissolved domestic corporations. In support we cited out-of-
    state-cases so construing similar statutes, and we also quoted both prior North American
    decisions for the proposition that under section 2010, “ „there is no time limitation for
    suing a dissolved corporation for injuries arising out of its predisposition activities.‟ ”
    (Penasquitos, 
    supra, at pp. 1187-1188
    , quoting North American I, supra, 128 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 143, and North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at p. 904.) In the course of
    reciting the history of the North American II litigation, we mentioned in passing that the
    appellate court in that latter case had reconsidered its earlier determination that foreign
    corporations were not covered by section 2010, and had concluded instead that they are
    covered by that survival statute. (Penasquitos, supra, at p. 1188.) Because, as noted,
    Penasquitos did not concern a foreign corporation, we did not consider, much less
    resolve, whether section 2010 applies to such corporations, and thus the decision does not
    assist plaintiffs.
    McCann, supra, 
    48 Cal.4th 68
    , which concerned a suit for asbestos-related injuries
    against an existing (not dissolved) foreign corporation, is similarly unhelpful to plaintiffs.
    In that decision we applied traditional choice-of-law principles; the case had nothing to
    do with, and did not even mention, section 2010, the survival statute. Applying the
    “comparative impairment” prong of the three-part governmental interest choice-of-law
    test (see ante, fn. 5) on the facts presented in McCann — involving conduct occurring
    outside California, and a foreign law that limited liability for such conduct engaged in by
    the defendant within the foreign state‟s territory — we concluded that the interest of the
    37
    foreign jurisdiction in enforcing its own liability-limiting law was paramount, and the
    interest of California in enforcing its own law was properly subordinated. (McCann,
    supra, at p. 101.) In reaching this determination, we stressed that on different facts — as
    when a defendant “is responsible for exposing persons to the risks associated with
    asbestos or another toxic substance through its conduct in California,” the conclusion
    under the comparative impairment inquiry would likely be different, and “would allocate
    to California the predominant interest in regulating the conduct.” (Ibid.) In support, we
    cited, as an example, North American II, supra, 180 Cal.App.3d at pages 907-908, and
    described that decision in a parenthetical as “holding California law applicable when the
    plaintiff was exposed to asbestos in California by a company incorporated in another
    state, where plaintiff‟s action against the company would have been barred as untimely
    under the other state‟s law.” (McCann, supra, at p. 101.) Clearly, the import of our
    citation to North American II was to its choice-of-law analysis, which we implicitly
    approved on its own terms; but we did not consider the issue we face today, whether a
    foreign corporation is subject to our state‟s survival statute. Again, this dictum —
    especially when viewed in light of the extensive history discussed ante, part II.C.3. —
    does not assist plaintiffs.
    E. Policy considerations
    Plaintiffs highlight defendant‟s history of transacting business in California from
    the 1930s through the 1980s, when it surrendered its certificate of qualification. They
    assert that defendant, having been dormant for nearly two decades, strategically filed for
    dissolution in Delaware in 2005 in order to cut off its continuing liability (and recovery
    of damages through applicable “undistributed . . . insurance assets” — see § 2011, subd.
    (a)(1)(A)) to asbestos victims. Plaintiffs argue that this course of conduct “directly
    contravenes California policy. When foreign corporations seek and accept the benefits of
    transacting business here, California law should not allow them to use their home state‟s
    corporate-friendly laws to deprive California citizens of their remedies.” (Italics added.)
    38
    The policy question concerning whether the provisions of California‟s survival
    statute should apply to foreign as well as domestic corporations is properly a matter to be
    determined by the Legislature, not this court. Because the Legislature has left the holding
    of North American II, supra, 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    , untouched since 1986, it might be
    argued that section 2010 reflects the Legislature‟s acquiescence concerning what
    California law should provide. But as explained above, the history and language of the
    statutes simply do not support the proposition that section 2010, at its inception or today,
    governed or governs foreign in addition to domestic corporations.
    III. Conclusion
    We conclude that California‟s survival statute, section 2010, does not apply to
    foreign corporations, and we disapprove North American II, supra, 
    180 Cal.App.3d 902
    ,
    to the extent it held otherwise. Having reached this decision, we need not perform a
    choice-of-law comparative-impairment analysis in order to determine which state‟s law
    should apply. (See ante, fn. 5.)
    The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    KENNARD, J.
    BAXTER, J.
    WERDEGAR, J.
    CHIN, J.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    LIU, J.
    39
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion Greb v. Diamond International Corporation
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted XXX 
    184 Cal.App.4th 15
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S183365
    Date Filed: February 21, 2013
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: San Francisco
    Judge: Peter J. Busch
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Law Office of Ted W. Pelletier, Ted W. Pelletier; Clapper, Patti, Schweizer & Mason, Jack K. Clapper, Steven J.
    Patti and Christine A. Renken for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
    Murchison & Cumming, Edmund G. Farrell III, Scott L. Hengesbach and Maria A. Starn for Defendant and
    Respondent.
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Ted W. Pelletier
    Law Office of Ted W. Pelletier
    22 Skyline Road
    San Anselmo, CA 94960
    (415) 454-8783
    Edmund G. Farrell III
    Murchison & Cumming
    801 South Grand Avenue, 9th Floor
    Los Angeles, CA 90017
    (213) 623-7400