169 Ind. 370 | Ind. | 1907
Appellee brought this action before a justice of the peace upon a demand due him for wages. lie recovered a judgment, from which appellant appealed to the circuit court, wherein a second judgment was recovered. It is charged upon this appeal that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
An action upon account was brought by Roy W: Loucks against appellee and appellant as garnishee defendant before a justice of the peace of Cook county, Illinois, and judgment rendered therein for $18.90, which judgment appellant, as such garnishee, was compelled to pay.' In this action appellant claimed, but was denied, credit for the sum paid by it upon the Illinois judgment. The trial court first received in evidence, but subsequently struck out, the transcript of proceedings before the Cook county justice. Appellant alleged, as reasons for a new trial, that there was error in the assessment of the amount
It appeared from appellee’s testimony that he had resided at Garrett, Indiana, for seventeen years, had been in the employ of appellant continuously for about one year prior to September, 1903, and that the actual amount due him from appellant as wages for the month of September, 1903, was $50.37. He knew his wages for that month had been “stopped” in Chicago, and on October 2, 1903, he executed a paper containing a schedule of his property to be used in any case pending there whereby his wages were attached. He testified that on October 23, 1903, he wrote a letter enclosing such schedule to Pam, Calhoun & Glennon, attorneys in Chicago, asking them to attend to the matter for him, and on October 10, 1903, he wrote a letter to the Light Collection Agency, with reference to the proceedings pending against him in Chicago, from which letter, introduced in evidence, it appears that he had received notice that said agency had garnisheed his wages for the month of September, and claimed that he could defeat the garnishment by appeal, but would pay the amount of the debt without any costs. He further testified that in June, 1904, appellant tendered him a pay voucher for the amount of his wages, less the Chicago garnishment, ■ which he refused solely on the ground that it was not for enough money.
Appellant introduced in evidence numerous statutes of the state of Illinois with reference to the jurisdiction of justices of the peace, and covering the jurisdiction and procedure in cases of attachment and garnishment, and the right of appeal from their judgments to the circuit or
Appellee in rebuttal introduced, the following statute, approved July 1, 1903: “Be it enacted by the people of the state of Illinois represented in the General Assembly: That wages earned out of this state and payable out of this state shall be exempt from attachment or garnishment in all cases where the cause of action arose out of this state, unless the defendant in the attachment or garnishment suit is personally served with process; and if the writ of attachment or garnishment is not personally served on the defendant, the court, justice of the peace or police magistrate issuing the writ of attachment or garnishment shall not entertain jurisdiction of .the cause, but shall dismiss the suit at the cost of the plaintiff.” R. S. Ill. (1905), p. 1122, §34a.
The court below on motion struck out the Illinois transcript from the evidence, for the reason that it did not appear that the justice had jurisdiction over the person of appellee, under the statutes of that state.-
The Illinois statute of 1903 provides that wages earned and payable without the state of Illinois shall be exempt from garnishment in cases where the cause of action sued on also arose outside of that state. It appears from the agreement of parties that appellee’s wages were earned and payable outside the state of Illinois, but there was no evidence that the cause of action upon which the garnishment proceedings were predicated arose without that state. It is manifest, therefore, that upon appellee’s theory want of jurisdiction over his person by the Illinois justice was not apparent, and the court was not justified in striking the transcript from the evidence.
The law of Illinois, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, is presumed to be the same as that of -our own State. Bierhaus v. Western Union Tel. Co. (1893), 8 Ind. App. 246, 263, and eases cited.
The judgment of the court of one state, when sued on, pleaded, or introduced in evidence in another state, is entitled to receive the same faith, credit and respect that is accorded to it in the state where rendered, so, if valid and conclusive there, it is so in all other, states. Davis v. Lane (1851), 2 Ind. *548, 54 Am. Dec. 458; 23 Cyc. Law and Proc., 1546, and cases cited.
Upon the facts shown in evidence, it is manifest that the court below did not give that faith and credit to the proceeding and judgment of the Illinois justice required by §1, article 4, of the Constitution of the United States, and erred in excluding the transcript of such proceedings and judgment from consideration.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.