18 N.Y.S. 259 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
By the demurrer the plaintiff admits all the allegations of fact, if any, in the answer demurred to; and the first question to be examined on this appeal seems to be whether that part of the answer interposed as an affirmative defense was sufficient upon its face to show that the attachment alleged to have been issued in Massachusetts in favor of creditors of the plaintiff residing "there was a valid and effectual lien on the debt due the plaintiff from the defendant on this insurance policy, so that, if the defendant should pay the plaintiff, it would still be liable to the attaching creditors. It is quite clear that, if this foreign attachment had so far levied upon this claim as to suspend the plaintiff’s control over it, and transfer the same to the custody of the law, in trust for the payment of the claim of the attaching creditors of the plaintiff, that fact, properly alleged, would constitute a defense to this action, either in abatement, if the attachment proceedings were still pending, or in bar, if the attachment creditors had recovered the money of the defendant, provided the plaintiff had been properly before the court in the attachment proceedings. Ember v. Hanna, 5 Johns. 101; Donovan v. Hunt, 7 Abb. Pr. 29; Martin v. Railroad Co., (Sup.) 3 N. Y. Supp. 82. But the defendant, in order to avail itself of such a defense, must, in its answer, allege facts showing that the foreign attachment has by its operation divested the plaintiff of his right to the control of the property or rights in action upon which it is levied or claimed to have operated, and that under it jurisdiction has been acquired of the person of the plaintiff and of the property, or at least of the property which is within the jurisdiction and control of the attaching tribunal. The answer does not allege that the attachment was served on the plaintiff, and it in effect admits that the plaintiff is a nonresident of the state of Massachusetts, and that the domicile of the defendant is in the state of New York, and that the policy was issued in this state to the plaintiff on property in this state, where the loss occurred; but it alleges that by reason of certain provisions of the laws of Massachusetts the defendant was, by complying with the laws of that state, authorized to do business therein; that the defendant had complied with such laws, and had an agency in that state, on whom legal process could be served; and that the process of attachment was served on the agent of the defendant in the state of Massachusetts. No other service is alleged in the answer, and no allegation is contained in the same that any actual seizure under the attachment was made of the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant, or that such claim was in that state; nor does the answer allege as a fact that the plaintiff’s claim on which the attachment is claimed to operate had any existence in the state of Massachusetts.
Under the allegations of fact in the answer we do think that the attachment could be held to operate on the amount due on this policy. It cannot be claimed that the courts of Massachusetts have extraterritorial jurisdiction. It seems to be the settled rule that the state courts are confined in the exercise of their jurisdiction to the limits of their own state, and jurisdiction between citizens of different states is by the federal constitution conferred on the federal courts. In Plimpton v. Bigelow, 93 N. Y. 592, the court says: “In the case of tangible property, capable of actual manucaption, it must have
But it is insisted by the appellant that the answer alleged the jurisdiction of the Massachusetts court, and the full and complete control of the property under the attachment. The difficulty of that contention is that the allegations of this character in the answer are conclusions, and not allegations of fact. While the demurrer admits all the allegations of facts in the pleadings to which it is interposed, it does not admit the conclusions, either of fact or law, set out in the pleading. In Angell v. Van Schaick, (Sup.) 9 N. Y. Supp. 571, the court, in discussing the manner of pleading foreign statutes, uses this language: “After setting forth the foreign statutes, and averring that they were the whole of the law of the state of Pennsylvania relating to the subject, the pleader alleges that by such statutes the plaintiff was absolutely prohibited from exercising his trade without a license, and that he was prohibited by such statutes from recovering in this action. But these averments
All concur.