49 Md. 366 | Md. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Act of 1868, ch, 471, sec. 211, provides that suits against foreign corporations exercising franchises in this State, may be brought in any of the Courts of this State, “by a resident of this State for any cause of action; and by a plaintiff not a resident of this State, when the cause of action has arisen, or the subject of the action shall be situated, in this State.’-’ In the case of Myer vs. the Liverpool, London, and Globe Ins. Co., Garnishee of Bitlinger & Bro., 40 Md., 595, it was decided that to bring a case within the first clause of this provision the liability sought to be enforced must be a direct liability of the corporation to the resident plaintiff, and that a resident plaintiff in an attachment against a non-resident debtor, cannot, under the second clause, subject the corporation to the process of garnishment in a Maryland Court, to affect a debt due by the corporation to the non-resident debtor on
In the present case, the appellants, citizens of this State, having a claim against Patrick Foley, who resided in Washington City, in the District of Columbia, sued out of Baltimore City Court an attachment on warrant against him as a non-resident, and caused the same to be laid in the hands of The Royal Canadian Insurance Company as garnishee, a corporation created by the laws of Canada, exercising franchises in this State, and having a branch office in the City of Baltimore. The purpose of the appellants was to attach a debt due by the Company to Foley for a loss, by fire, on goods of the latter in a store in Washington, under a policy of insurance issued by the company. It is conceded the case in its facts is identical with that of Myer’s, in 40 Md., 595, unless this policy of insurance is to be considered and treated as a Maryland contract. Can it beso regarded? The printed heading of the instrument is—“ Baltimore Branch—The Royal Canadian Insurance Company—Capital $6,000,000—Fire and Marine—Montreal.” In the body of it the Company, in the usual form, professes to insure “ P. Foley, Esq., of Washington, D. C.,’’ toan amount not exceeding $5000 on his stock of goods kept for sale in a certain described store in Washington, for one year from the 4th of September, 1875, at noon, and concludes, “In witness whereof, we, two of the directors of the said company, by our attorney, have hereunto set our hands, and have caused the common seal of said company to he hereunto affixed. Dated at Baltimore, this fourth day of September, 1875." Here follows the engraved names of two Directors, and below them:—“By their attorney, J. A. Rigby, manager Baltimore Branch." Below this is the following:—“not valid unless countersigned by the duly authorized agent of this company at Washington, D. C.," and this is signed, “ B. F. Steiger, agent.” It might, perhaps, be inferred
It has been most earnestly and confidently argued that the defence made by the motion to quash the attachment is not of the same nature as a defect in the affidavit or voucher, hut is a mere personal privilege to the garnishee corporation, which it alone can rely on or waive at pleasure, and that having once appeared and submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the Court, it could not afterwards question that jurisdiction. The record shows that the attachment was issued on the 22nd of August, 1876, returnable on the second Monday of September following. On the day of its issue, it was laid in the hands of the company by service on its agent, and on the 17th of October, 1876, the defendant, Eoley, and the garnishee, both appeared, and the former moved to quash the writ because the contract of insurance, on which the attachment was laid, was not made in Maryland, while the latter confessed it had in hand the sum of $975, due to Foley, under this policy, and expressed its willingness to do and abide by such order as the Court may see fit in the exercise of its discretion to pass in the premises. Nothing further appears to have
Judgment affirmed.