delivered the opinion of the Court.
The present case requires this Court to determine whether, in line with the controversial procedure first announced in 1966 by the New York Court of Appeals in
Seider v. Roth,
Not surprisingly, the action which has prompted our consideration of the propriety of permitting such an attachment is based on factual circumstances not unlike those which were present in Seider and which have caused other courts to consider the correctness of that ruling. In mid-July of 1975 petitioner Warren Belcher was driving an automobile which was involved in a three-car chain reaction collision at an intersection in Langley Park, Maryland. The accident occurred when an automobile driven by Roger Norman Hall collided with the rear end of a second vehicle which was in turn propelled into the back end of Mr. Belcher’s car. When settlement negotiations with Roger Hall’s automobile insurance carrier — GEICO — failed, Mr. Belcher and his wife filed suit against Hall in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County claiming $150,000 in damages. The Belchers, acting pursuant to the Maryland Rules, sought to *720 оbtain personal service of process upon Roger Hall, but the summons was returned non est. Subsequent attempts to find Mr. Hall by way of a locator service and to gain his new address from GEICO were also unsuccessful. As a result, and concededly somewhat in desperation, the petitioners resorted to thе use of the attachment procedures which have become the central concern of this appellate litigation.
After amending their declaration to reduce the amount of the ad damnum clause to $20,000, the statutory minimum required for automobile insurance in Maryland, Md. Code (1977), § 17-103 (b) of the Transpоrtation Article, the petitioners, acting pursuant to Maryland Rule G40, obtained the issuance of an attachment on original process directed toward Mr. Hall’s policy with GEICO. When the circuit court by order quashed the attachment writ and ordered judgment entered in favor of GEICO, the petitioners appeаled. We issued the requested writ of certiorari before consideration of the matter by the Court of Special Appeals.
Attachment proceedings, which find their roots in this State’s right to subject all property within its borders to its laws,
Coward v. Dillinger,
A court of law including the District Court, within the limits of its jurisdiction, may issue an attachment *721 or original рrocess against any property or credits, whether matured or unmatured, belonging to the debtor upon the application of a person who has the right to become a plaintiff in an action in the state.
For similar provisions, see Maryland Rule G40; see also Md. Code (1974), § 3-305 of the Courts Article.
The pеtitioners here seek to establish that GEICO possesses “property or credits” belonging to the absent Mr. Hall which are evidenced by certain provisions of the standard automobile insurance policy issued to him by GEICO; those provisions, they assert, create attachable obligations running from the insurancе company to its insured. 1 More specifically, they contend that “the obligation *722 of the garnishee [GEICO] to indemnify its assured for any judgment [petitioners] obtain, and [GEICO’s] obligation to provide a defense to the claim against the assured sufficiently constitute an asset within the definition of § 302 as to permit this attachment____” As support for this proposition, they direct our attention to the decision of the New York Court of Appeals in Seider v. Roth, supra, the reasoning of which, they contend, requires a similar result m the case we now consider.
In
Seider,
in order to obtain damages for injuries sustained in a three-car accident in Vermont, two New York residents sought to use a theory identical to that of the petitiоners here to attach the automobile insurance policy of one of the other drivers, a Canadian, with an insurer doing business in New York.
*723
Appeals for the Second Circuit has twice upheld its constitutionality.
Minichiello v. Rosenberg,
Just as the decision in
Seider
dеpended on an interpretation of New York’s attachment statute, so does our disposition of this case depend on a proper construction of the Maryland enactment. Determinative of our conclusion in this case that GEICO’s obligation to the absent defendant under its contract of insurаnce may not be attached is the long-established principle that where an interest is uncertain and contingent —• in that it may never become due and payable — it is not subject to attachment as not within the scope of Maryland’s attachment statute.
See Fairfax v. Savings Bank
By the plain language of the declaration of trust the interest of the husband in the corpus of the trust is contingent upon his survival of his wife.. So, the-interest is uncertain and contingent in the sense that none of the deposit or trust may ever become due and payable to the husband. Such an interest is not subject to attachment as it is not within the scope of [the attachment statute, Code (1924), Art. 9, § 10]. The language of the court in Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Independent Brewing Assn.,127 Md. 463 , [468,96 A. 617 , 619], is particularly applicable and may be quoted:
“While the language of Code [1912], art. 9, sec. 10, is very broad, and provides that any kind of property or credits belonging to the defendant, in the plaintiff’s own hands, or in the hands of any one else, may be attached, it has never been held that it would apply or cover a contingent or uncertain interest in a trust estate such as the one here in dispute.” [175 Md. at 141 ,199 A. at 875 .]
It is apparent that this principle is dispositive of the petitioners’ contentions, since both contractual obligations which are the subject of the attachment — the duty to indemnify the insured for any judgment rendered against him and the obligation to defend him in any suit seeking damages payable under the policy — are mere contingencies. 3
*725
Looking to the first of these obligations — GEICO’s duty to indemnify its insured — we find that the contract of insurance between the parties specifically provides that the obligation to indemnify arises only
after
a judgment is rendered against the insured. The petitioners’ theory, however, would permit a court to assert jurisdiction and attach the purported obligation
before
any judgment — in order to enable the court to then render a judgment which is in fact the only event which can create the obligation in the first place. To recognize this duty of indemnification as anything other than contingent, and hence not attachable, would surely be to turn logic on its head. This bootstrap approach also underlies the petitioners’ contention that GEICO’s duty to defend its insured is attachable, even though clearly the obligation does not arise unless and until litigation is properly instituted against the insured with service of process upon him requiring him to respond. Thus “[t]he existence of the policy is used as a sufficient basis for jurisdiction to start the very action necessary to activate the insurer’s obligation under the policy. In other words, the promise to defend the insured is assumed to furnish the jurisdiction for a civil suit which must be validly commenced before the obligation to defend can possibly accrue.”
Seider v. Roth,
Our decision today is not rendered without cognizance of the petitioners’ strong public policy arguments in favor of allowing suits against insurers in situations similar to the one presented in this case. There is more than a modicum of appeal in their contention that the General Assembly’s action in setting up a system of compulsory automobile insurance, Md. Code (1977), §§ 17-101 to -301 of the Transportation Article, indicates its growing belief that all those injured while using the highways of this State should be properly recompensed. Furthermore, citizens of Maryland will have to bear the brunt of the expense when the injured are forced to rely on public aid for support due to their loss of employment and concomitant inability to pay medical bills incurred as a result of their injuries — even though the insurer has collected his fees to pay for just such occurrences and very likely has set up a reserve fund containing all the money necessary to reimburse the injured parties. Persuasive as these arguments may be, however, they do not give us leave to misconstrue .this State’s attachment statute to allow what, in fact, would be a direct action against insurers which the General Assembly has not seen fit to permit.
See State v. Arundel Park Corp.,
Judgment affirmed.
Costs to be paid by petitioners.
Notes
. The pertinent рarts of the insurance policy in question here provide:
PART I — LIABILITY
To pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of:
A. bodily injury, sickness or disease, including death resulting therefrom, hereinafter called “bodily injury”, sustained by any person;
B. injury to or destruction of property, including loss of use thereof, hereinafter called “property damage”;
arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the owned automobile or any non-owned automobile, and the company shall defend any suit alleging such bodily injury or property damage and seeking damages which are payable under the terms of this policy, even if any of the allegations of the suit are groundless, false or fraudulent; but the company may make such investigation and settlement of any claim or suit as it deems expedient.
CONDITIONS
6. Action Against Company — Part I: No action shall lie against the company unless, as a condition precedent thereto, the insured shall have fully complied with all the terms of this policy, nor until the amount of the insured’s obligation to рay shall have been finally determ ined either by judgment against the insured after actual trial or by written agreement of the insured, the claimant and the company.
*722 Any person or organization or the legal representative thereof who has secured such judgment or written agreement shall thereafter bе entitled to recover under this policy to the extent of the insurance afforded by this policy. No person or organization shall have any right under this policy to join the company as a party to any action against the insured to determine the insurer's liability, nor shall the company be impleadеd by the insured or his legal representative. rEmphasis supplied.!
.
Rg.,
Kirchman v. Mikula,
. Perhaps the clearest way to illustrate the nature of a contingent interest is to examine the distinction between such an interest and one which is simply unmatured but nevertheless is subject to attachment. In the case of an interest of the latter type, while it is true that the amount of the garnishee’s liability may be somewnat uncertain, there is no question about the fact of liability. A contingent interest, on the other hand, is one in which liability is not certain and absolute, but depends on some independent event.
See
Javorek v. Superior Court of Monterey County,
. Even if we were to accept the petitioners’ contention that the duty of GEICO to defend is sufficiently certain to permit that obligation to be attachеd, other reasons exist 'which bar attachment here. Under the insurance policy GEICO is only required to provide the services incident to Mr. Hall’s legal defense and need not provide him with separate funds to conduct his defense independently. The policy creates an obligation to provide personal services; that obligation, being personal, is not transferable and consequently not attachable. Javorek v. Superior Court of Monterey County,
