92 Minn. 20 | Minn. | 1904
Appeal from an order denying a motion to vacate a writ of attachment under which one of defendant’s freight cars was seized in an action for an alleged delay in forwarding a consignment of strawberries shipped from a point on defendant’s road in Missouri to be sent through successive railway carriers to Minneapolis.
The complaint alleges a cause of action which, if established, would entitle plaintiff to recover for an alleged negligent delay in transmitting
From the facts established on the hearing of the motion it appears that an agreement existed between the defendant company and the intermediate subsequent common carriers whereby the defendant, instead of unloading and transferring freight at the points ofi connection or at state lines, received the car in question to be hauled to the place of destination without breaking bulk or discharging its contents under an implied agreement to return it as soon as practicable, reloaded, to some point on or near its line in Missouri; that the car in question was used by the carriers bringing it into this state, and delivered to the Minnesota Transfer Company, an independent corporation here, paying- to the first carriers for the use of the same a per diem or mileage; that this method of receiving and returning cars facilitated traffic, which is claimed to be a substantial accommodation to the shipping public, and a compliance with the system of freight transportation adopted universally throughout the United States. Under this custom it appears that the car in question had been used in an interstate shipment of goods therein from St. Louis to points in Minnesota, North Dakota, and Montana, and at the time of the levy was awaiting reloading by the Minnesota Transfer Company in its yard with a return shipment to points in Missouri. While the car was in fact empty when seized, it appears that there was no unreasonable or unnecessary delay in securing its return according to the regular course of business, and that the car was a part of the actual equipment of the foreign railway corporation to which it belonged.
Under our statute, although a cause of action may not have arisen in this state, jurisdiction of a'foreign corporation can be acquired by our courts through service of summons on one of its officers or agents who may be found therein, providing it has property here; otherwise not. G. S. 1894, § 5200. But within the sensible intent of the statute such property must be of a kind and value to justify the reasonable
Strictly speaking, the freight car which was seized in this case was actually property owned by defendant corporation, and under a technical reading of this statute was subject to attachment or garnishment ;' but we do not think this conclusion would absolutely follow in all cases. We have held that the property of a nonresident within the state, while strictly subject to garnishment, as, for instance, in the case of a common carrier receiving goods consigned for transit to a place outside of the state, is not amenable to-such process. Stevenot v. Eastern Ry. Co. of Minn., 61 Minn. 104, 63 N. W. 256; Baldwin v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 81 Minn. 247, 83 N. W. 986.
From the cases above cited from this court it would follow that we should not give such literal interpretation to our statute in securing jurisdictional powers as would overcome by artifice the mere presence of property here which has practically been enforced under exceptional circumstances that required its presence temporarily to meet the necessities of commerce, traffic, or public policy, and is made essential to secure benefits, to our citizens, where its presence is not intended to serve any other purpose. Under the laws of this state common carriers doing business herein are required to establish joint through rates and transfer through carload shipments to their destination without unloading. Laws 1887, p. 50, c. 10, § 3. The federal government has expressly required that the movement of railway cars shall not be stopped or delayed at the point where the lines of such railway companies cross the borders of states, or at the point where the carriers deliver the cars to the next connecting carrier; but that shipments shall go forward from the originating point to their destination in the cars in which they are first loaded. R. S. U. S. § 5258 [3 U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3564]. .
These well-known provisions of law are expressive of a universal condition that exists upon all the railway lines of this country, and without giving them effect and permitting the railway carriers from other states to come into our boundaries with goods which are shipped here, and return without being retarded, or so treated that the carriers to protect themselves against litigation away from home must transfer the contents of such cars to others at the state line, would be provocative of the greatest detriment to the business interest of our citizens, and be violative of the terms and spirit of the enactments to which we have referred.
It follows that we cannot justify a construction of our attachment or garnishee statutes that would effectuate such a result, and, while it was a part of the contract between the nonresident corporation in this state and the connecting carriers that the freight cars should be reloaded, and within reasonable time returned, this custom was but a practical method of securing compensation for bringing the car into and out of the state in the necessary effort for continuous and unbroken transit, which is essential to the purposes of traffic and interstate commerce; hence it should not be treated as property subject to attachment.
This subject has been thoroughly and exhaustively considered in two recent cases, and the reasoning therein within the lines above suggested meets our approval. Michigan v. Chicago, 1 Ill. App. 399, 404; Wall v. Norfolk, 52 W. Va. 485.
The order refusing to vacate the attachment is reversed, and the cause remanded.