145 So. 638 | Miss. | 1932
After a careful reconsideration of this cause in the light of the suggestion of error filed therein, we have reached the conclusion that there is error in the former opinion as filed and reported in 142 So. 478, and therefore that opinion is withdrawn, and the judgment entered in pursuance thereof is set aside, and the following is adopted as the opinion of the court:
The appellants, the father, mother, brothers, and sisters of Alphus Arnett, citizens of the state of Alabama, instituted this suit in the circuit court of Lee county, Mississippi, against Carol C. and Fred R. Smith, individually, and Carol C. Fred R. Smith, Inc., an Alabama corporation, for damages for the alleged wrongful death of the said Alphus Arnett, who was killed while he was employed by the said Alabama corporation in the construction of a bridge over the Tombigbee river in Itawamba county, Mississippi.
Carol C. Fred R. Smith, Inc., a foreign corporation having its domicile at Montgomery, in the state of Alabama, secured a contract for the construction of a bridge across the Tombigbee river in Itawamba county, Mississippi, and, while engaged in the construction of said bridge, Alphus Arnett, an employee of said corporation, was killed. During the time the bridge was under construction, Carol C. Smith, vice president of said corporation, who was in charge of the construction of the bridge, resided with his family at Tupelo, in Lee county, Mississippi. The bridge was completed and accepted by the state highway department on September 1, 1931, and on September 12th thereafter the said Carol C. Smith gave up the house he had been renting in Tupelo and moved his family back to his home in Alabama. He then returned to Corinth, Mississippi, near which place the corporation of which he was vice president was engaged in construction work in Shiloh National Park. Just a few *61 days before Carol C. Smith moved from Tupelo, he was sued in the court of a justice of the peace at Tupelo; this suit being returnable on September 18, 1931. On September 15, 1931, the declaration in the case at bar was filed, and summons for the said Carol C. Smith individually, and Carol C. Fred R. Smith, Inc., was issued and delivered to the sheriff of Lee county. On September 18, 1931, in response to the justice court summons which was returnable on that date, and also in response to a notice from his attorney that the suit against him in the justice court would be tried on that date, the said Carol C. Smith returned to Tupelo for the sole purpose of defending the suit against him, and while there summons in the suit which had been previously filed in the circuit court, was served on him individually, and as vice president of Carol C. Fred R. Smith, Inc.
At the following November, 1931, term of the circuit court of Lee county, the defendants filed a combined motion to quash the process and plea in abatement, setting forth in detail the facts in reference to the residence of the parties, the filing of the suits in Lee county, and the circumstances under which service of summons was had on the said Carol C. Smith, individually, and as president of the corporation, and praying that the process be quashed, and the suit dismissed, on the ground that the said Carol C. Smith as an individual, and as vice president of the said corporation, was immune from service of process in said suit while he was attending the justice of the peace court at Tupelo, on September 18, 1931, as a witness and suitor, in response to compulsory process; there being no connection, in so far as the subject-matter was concerned, between the case then before the circuit court and the justice court case. This motion to quash and plea in abatement was sustained, and the cause was finally dismissed; and, from the judgment entered, this appeal was prosecuted. *62
The assignments of error present for decisions two questions, which, as stated by counsel, are as follows: First. "Whether or not Carol C. Smith, as an individual, and as vice-president of Carol C. and Fred R. Smith, Inc., was immune from service of process in the case at bar, while attending justice of the peace court at Tupelo, on September 18, 1931, as a witness and suitor, in response to compulsory process, there being no connection between the two cases (that is, the case at bar and the case, the trial of which he was attending) in so far as subject-matter is concerned?" Second. "Whether or not, by appearing and moving to quash the process in the case at bar and pleading in abatement thereto, he waived, individually, and for the corporation, his and its territorial jurisdiction?"
Upon the first proposition, as stated above, no Mississippi case is cited by counsel, and we have found none which is of any aid in reaching a conclusion; but, in other jurisdictions, there is a great array of authorities upon the point. It is conceded by counsel for the appellant that the great weight of authority supports the rule announced in 50 C.J. 548, that "suitors, in attendance in a court outside of the territorial jurisdiction of their residence, are immune from service of civil process, while attending court, and for a reasonable time before and after, in going to court and in returning to their homes." But it is contended that the minority rule announced in a limited number of jurisdictions, that "nonresident suitors are under no circumstances entitled to immunity from service of civil process," is supported by the better reasoning and should be adopted by this court.
In support of the majority rule as announced in Corpus Juris, supra, there are cited many cases from the supreme court of the United States and other federal courts, and also cases from twenty-six state courts, while cases from other jurisdictions are cited which adopt this general rule in part. *63
The rule is based upon considerations of public policy and the due administration of justice, and the reasons therefor are fully and well stated in many decisions of courts of other jurisdictions, from some of which we quote. In Stewart v. Ramsay,
In Diamond v. Earle,
The reasons for the rule are well stated in the case of Sofge v. Lowe,
In Long v. Hawken,
Upon reason and authority, the same rule applies where a resident of a state attends court as a litigant in a county other than that of his residence. In 50 C.J. 550, it is said that, "In jurisdictions where the majority rule respecting immunity of suitors in attendance in a court outside of the territorial jurisdiction of their residence prevails, it has generally been held that a resident of a state who attends court as a litigant in a county other than that of his residence is privileged from the service of summons in an action brought in that county."
In Hicks v. Besuchet,
In the case of Powers v. Arkadelphia Lumber Co.,
It appears to us that the reasoning of this vast array of cases, which announce the rule that suitors in attendance in a court outside of the territorial jurisdiction of their residence are immune from service of civil process, is sound, and should prevail in this state, and therefore we hold that the process served on the appellee was invalid.
The appellant, however, contends that, "regardless of whether or not the process served upon Carol C. Smith, and Carol C. and Fred R. Smith, Inc., was defective or void, nevertheless the said Carol C. Smith and Carol C. and Fred R. Smith, Inc., are now within the jurisdiction of the circuit court of Lee county by virtue of the fact that they have entered their appearance in said court by filing the motion to quash the process." This contention is based upon section 2999, Code of 1930, which provides that, "where the summons or citation, or the service *68 thereof, is quashed on motion of the defendant, the case may be continued for the term, but defendant shall be deemed to have entered his appearance to the succeeding term of the court." In the former opinion filed in this cause we upheld this contention on the theory that the circuit court of Lee county had territorial jurisdiction of the suit, and in so holding we failed to give proper consideration to certain provisions of our statutes fixing the venue of causes of action, and particularly section 4166, Code of 1930. This section provides that: "Any corporation claiming existence under the laws of any other state or of any other country foreign to the United States, found doing business in this state, shall be subject to suit here to the same extent that corporations of this state are, whether the cause of action accrued in this state or not."
The injury complained of in this suit occurred in Itawamba county, in this state, but at the time the suit was filed in Lee county the corporation was not "found doing business in this state." By virtue of the said section 4166, foreign corporations are subject to suit in this state only when "found doing business in the state," and therefore as against the appellant corporation the circuit court of Lee county was without territorial jurisdiction of the cause of action. This being true, it did not, by pleading the want of jurisdiction in abatement of the cause, waive such want of jurisdiction. In the case of Turner v. Williams,
In the case of Batson Hatten Lbr. Co. v. McDowell,
Since a foreign corporation is only suable in this state when it is "found doing business" in this state, the circuit court of Lee county had no territorial jurisdiction of the cause of action, and by its appearance to quash the process and abate the action the appellee corporation did not waive the lack of jurisdiction. Upon another ground we have reached the conclusion that the corporation, by its appearance to assert its immunity from suit in Lee county, did not waive its immunity, and this ground likewise entitled the appellee Carol C. Smith, upon whom, as an individual, the process was served, to have the suit abated as to him.
Suitors' immunity from service of civil process while in attendance in a court outside of the territorial jurisdiction of their residence is a personal one, and will be waived if not claimed at the proper time; it is based upon sound public policy and the furtherance of the due administration of justice, and is, in a sense, the privilege of the court, and, if it should be held that by virtue of the provisions of section 2999, Code of 1930, an appearance to assert the privilege is a waiver thereof, the privilege would be destroyed entirely. The immunity from service of process while attending court outside of the territorial jurisdiction of the residence of suitors is of common-law origin, and is well established, both in England and in most jurisdictions in this country, and it could only be repealed by the express provisions of a statute. Section 2999 does not expressly repeal the exemption. It relates to the acquisition of jurisdiction of the person, and not to what shall be done with him after jurisdiction is obtained. The immunity, when asserted, extends further than mere exemption from service of process; it *71 shields one from being sued and litigating the controversy in the jurisdiction where he is exempt from service, and in effect deprives the court of jurisdiction to proceed with the cause. In enacting the above statute, we do not think the legislature intended, by the general language used, to abolish a rule founded in the necessities of due administration of justice, and, when such immunity exists and is properly asserted in a cause, the benefit of the exemption should be preserved by abating the suit. In considering a similar statute, the court so held in the case of Murray v. Wilcox, 122 Iowa, 188, 97 N.W. 1087, 64 L.R.A. 534, 101 Am. St. Rep. 263.
It follows from the views herein expressed that the suggestion of error will be sustained, and the judgment of the court below affirmed.
Affirmed.