4 Colo. App. 509 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Louella H. Walker was indebted to William R. Everett on a promis'sory note executed by her in 1889, jointly with her husband. When the present suit was started in September, 1890, to recover the amount due on the note, her husband Avas dead, she had removed from Colorado and was a nonresident. The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company Avas a Connecticut corporation, haAdng its domicile and general offices Avithin that state. Some claim was asserted by Mrs. Walker against the Insurance Company on account of the death of her husband, which the Insurance Company admitted and forwarded to her through their agent in Denver. So far as is disclosed by the record, there was no tangible property in the state capable of seizure. The Insurance Company was without an agent in the state on whom service could be had other than the superintendent of insurance, who
Two questions are presented by the record which are so closely inter-dependent, that while either being resolved against the plaintiff in error must affirm the judgment, the determination of both seems essential to a satisfactory settlement of either inquiry.
The necessity to obtain a judgment against the principal defendant in order to charge the garnishee — 2 Wade on Attachments, § 399 — -compelled the plaintiff to publish the summons. He attempted by a levy of the garnishee process to bring the case within the exception to the general rule, that no judgment can be rendered against a nonresident in an action on a money demand without the service of process within the state. Whether he was successful in this attempt will be considered in the discussion of the other question. To procure the order to publish in a case of attachment, it
The plaintiff did not make the affidavit. It was made by an attorney, and it did not warrant the subsequent order-to publish the summons. But the judgment was entered so that upon the record it would appear there had been a recovery against the principal defendant. This would be enough, all other conditions being satisfied, to justify the procedure against the garnishee. The well settled rule that the garnishee is bound to assert all jurisdictional defenses in order to protect himself in case suit is brought against him by the original debtor, required the Insurance Company to insist on the invalidity of the judgment against Mrs. Walker, as well as upon their own personal defense that they were not legally charged by the service of process of garnishment on the superintendent of insurance. Their contention that there was no valid judgment against Mrs. Walker is well based. They are equally well supported in their claim that the debt which they owed to Mrs. Walker was not impounded by the service of the writ upon the superintendent of insurance. The effect of the service of a writ of garnishment upon the agent of a corporation in a jurisdiction other than that of its domicile has been the subject of much judicial consideration. There are two conditions of fact under which such writs have been thus served. One is where the creditor of the corporation resides in the forum out of which the
The principle underlying all these cases is identical. It is universally true that so far as concerns tangible property
Upon either consideration the judgment is right. The affidavit did not justify the substituted service, and the writ did not impound the debt which the Insurance Company owed to Mrs. Walker.
Since the judgment below accords with these conclusions, it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.