delivered the opinion of the Court.
Wells, a citizen and resident of Colorado employed by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, was injured while performing his duties in New Mexico. He sued the company in a state court of Texas, but. could not make personal service upon it within that State.
1
Wells procured from the same court a, writ of garnishment to a Texas railroad company whose line connected with the Santa Fe; which had in its possession Santa Fe rolling stock; and which owed to it large sums on traffic balances. Thereafter, constructive service was made upon the Santa Fe, by serving one of its officers in Kansas and by publication in a Texas newspaper. The Santa Fe did not appear in the action; and judgment in the sum of $4,000 and costs was entered against it by default. Objection by the garnishee to the jurisdiction having been overruled, a judgment was entered that Wells recover from it this sum with interest and costs, in satisfaction of his judgment against the Santa Fe. To enjoin the enforcement of these judgments, suit was brought by the Santa Fe in the federal court for western Texas against Wells, who had meanwhile become a resident of that State, and his counsel. The case was heard on agreed facts; and a decree dismissing the bill was affirmed by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Cir
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cuit.
The rolling stock held by the garnishee was then being used in interstate commerce and the amount due on traffic balances arose out of transactions in such commerce. These facts did not render the property immune from seizure by attachment or garnishment.
Davis
v.
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co.,
Relief against the void judgments entered was properly sought by the Santa Fe in the federal court.
Simon
v.
Southern Ry. Co.,
Reversed.
Notes
See
Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co.
v.
Weeks,
