134 Ga. 537 | Ga. | 1910
The Court of Appeals certified to this court the following question: “Does section 2334 of the Civil Code relate to suits against non-resident or foreign corporations? (In connection herewith it is to be noted that counsel for plaintiff in error ask leave to review and question the correctness of Mitchell v. Southern Ry. Co., 118 Ga. 845; Coakley v. Southern Ry. Co., 120 Ga. 960; Hazlehurst v. Seaboard Air-Line Ry., 118 Ga. 858.)”
In Mitchell v. Southern Ry. Co., 118 Ga. 845 (45 S. E. 703), it was held that “Civil Code, § 2334, fixing the venue of suits against railroad companies, applies to foreign as well as domestic corporations.” In Hazlehurst v. Seaboard Air-Line Ry., 118 Ga. 858 (45 S. E. 703), it was held that “For any cause of action arising in this State foreign railroad companies are subject to suit by attachment or in personam, but the trial in every such ease must be in the county designated by the Civil Code, § 2334.” In Coakley v. Southern Ry. Co., 120 Ga. 960 (48 S. E. 372), it was held that “An action for personal injuries, against a railroad company, foreign or domestic . . must be brought in the county in which the cause of action originated, if such company have an agent in that county; and a judgment rendered in any other county is utterly void. Civil Code, § 2334.” Each of these decisions was concurred in by all of the Justices. It is evident, therefore, that unless these decisions are reviewed and reversed, they furnish an answer to the question propounded by the Court of Appeals, as to suits against non-resident mr foreign corporations for injuries committed by them in this State. In Reeves v. Southern Ry. Co., 121 Ga. 561 (49 S. E. 674, 70 L. R. A. 513), it was held that a foreign corporation doing business in this State and having agents located therein for this purpose may be sued and served in the same manner as domestic corporations upon a transitory cause of action, though originating without the State. If suit may be thus brought on account of a cause of action originating in another State, and not in any county in this State, it follows that as to such a case
The real question raised is whether this court will reverse the ruling in the three cases first mentioned. The suit was brought in Bibb county for a tort alleged to have been committed by the agent of the Southern Bailway Company, a Yirginia corporation, in Pulaski county, the defendant operating a line of railroad and having an agent in each county.
Counsel for plaintiff in error urged, that, in the light of the history of the legislation which has now become codified -and embodied in section 2334 of the Civil Code, the- decisions first above cited were erroneous and should be reversed. The same counsel who-presented this argument before us was also counsel for plaintiff in error in the Mitchell case, and it would seem that he then urged the same historical argument. Mr. Justice Turner, in delivering the opinion, said (pp. 847, 848) : “We have read the interesting history which counsel for plaintiff in error gives of this section of the code and the ingenious argument which he bases on that history ; but we think that this section declares the policy, of the State as to suits against all railroad companies, foreign as well as domestic.” It was said that the court saw no reason why the General Assembly could not regulate the venue of such suits, and that if there was any reason why it should be provided that suits against domestic railroads for injuries should be brought in the county in which the cause of action originated, the same reason would seem to apply to all railroads doing business in the State. It was added: “Whatever significance may attach to the reason of the law, the plain words of the statute embrace all railroads. We do not feel at liberty to make an exception where the General Assembly has made none.” It will thus appear that the history of the legislation on the subject and the argument to be derived therefrom were considered by this court in deciding the Mitchell case, and that the conclusion reached was not the result of accident or oversight, but of the fact that the court could not concur in the argument made by counsel or the result at which he arrived. It is true that the members composing the court are now mostly different from those who presided when that decision was made. It is also true that if even a court of last resort determines that it has made a clear and palpable
Under what has been said, we do not deem it necessary to enter at length into a discussion of the common law on the subject of venue or the various acts of the legislature and decisions of this court. But it may be profitable to mention some facts in relation to the origin of the section of the code under consideration. In Davis v. Central Railroad &c. Co., 17 Ga. 323, it was held that the 'act of the 20th of February 1854, “to define the liabilities of the several railroad companies of this State, for injury to or destruction of live stock, killed or injured,” etc., was not in violation of the constitution of the State, or that of the United States. On page 333 Benning, J., said: “It is clear that what shall be the place of residence of a corporation is a question over which the Legislature has power,” referring to the residence for the purpose of venue. That decision was rendered in 1855. By the act of March 5, 1856 (Acts 1855-1856, p. 154), it was declared that “The several railroad companies of this State shall be liable to be sued in any county in which the cause- of action originated, by any one whose person or property has been injured by them, their officers, agents, or employees, in or by the running of their cars or engines,” etc. In Southwestern R. Co. v. Paulk, 24 Ga. 356 (decided in 1858), it was held, that, in a suit for damages for the killing of a person by a railroad, the action should be brought in the county where the .principal office of the corporation was kept, and that the provision of the act of 1856 in regard to an action for a homicide was prospective in character. By the act of December 13, 1859 (Acts 1859, p. 48), which soon followed the decision just cited, it was declared that no suit against a railroad company in this State should thereafter be dismissed for want of jurisdiction of the court in the county in which the suit might be pending or thereafter brought, if the road of the company was located in or ran through such cofinty, and if the cause of action arose, or the contract was made or to be performed in the county where the suit was instituted.
The argument was made that in the original act of 1856 the language employed was “the several railroad companies of this State,” that this referred only to domestic railroad companies, that the language employed in the code was merely an abbreviation of that in the act, and was not intended to change its meaning so as to include foreign railroad corporations, and that the original meaning continued through the various codes. From what has been said above, it will appear that the legislature, both in adopting several of the codes, and in amending the section and re-enacting it as amended, employed the broad language, “all railroad companies.”
The language of Benning J., in Davis v. Central R. &c. Co., 17 Ga. 323, in discussing the act of 1854, may be appropriately quoted. He said: “The principle of this statute is, that in certain suits against the railroads the venue of the suit shall be the venue of the wrongful act. This principle is certainly not a novel one. It is the principle of the common law. It is a principle sanctioned and affirmed by a statute as old as the time of Bichard II. It is á principle which lies at the foundation of the doctrine of venue, as practiced in England up to this day. The principle rests upon the maxim, that vicini vicinorum facta presumuntur scire — a maxim that makes the suit seek the witnesses, rather than the witnesses seek the suit.”
We have carefully considered the argument of counsel for plaintiff in error. But we do not think that the decisions which we have been requested to review should be overruled on the point under consideration.