The issue to be decided is whether, in an action brought by Elsie Forbes of New Hampshire against Donald *619 S. McChesney of New York to recover for personal injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Maine involving also a car operated by the defendant Brenda Lee Boynton of New Flampshire, quasi-in-rem jurisdiction will be exercised over defendant McChesney as a result of an attachment by trustee process in New Hampshire of the contractual obligations undertaken by his insurer under a liability insurance policy covering this accident.
Defendant McChesney who was served with process in New York filed a motion to dismiss the action as to him for lack of proper service and also moved to vacate the attachment made on his insurer at its office in New Hampshire wherein it is authorized to do business. The parties filed with the Trial Court (Johnson, J.) an agreed statement of facts and memoranda of law. The court made certain findings and rulings, denied McChesney’s motion to dismiss, and reserved and transferred his exception thereto.
The trial court found that “to duplicate the trial of this accident in two States places an unnecessary burden upon the plaintiff under the facts of this case. Two of the three key participants in this accident in Maine are residents of New Hampshire and, for all practical purposes, the real party in interest in the McChesney case is the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, and they too are subject to New Hampshire service .... It is clear. .. that... [the insurer] will control the defense of this case.” The court further found that to require two trials is costly to the plaintiff and to the States and counties involved and creates “the very real possibility of a gross injustice to the plaintiff.... A much more practical and equitable solution from the point of view of the plaintiff, the defendants, and the court system, will be to have this case tried on but one occasion.” The court ruled that it had jurisdiction over McChesney “by virtue of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction created by the attachment of the rights of McChesney against Liberty Mutual Insurance Company” his insurer.
The plaintiff maintains that the trial court properly denied the motion of defendant McChesney to dismiss plaintiff’s action against him by adopting the rule which prevails in his State of residence to govern actions of this nature formulated in
Seider v. Roth,
The defendant recognizes the well established principle of law that a State can exercise quasi-in-rem jurisdiction to affect interests in an intangible thing which is subject to trustee process in that State.
Walsh v. Boulanger,
The plaintiff urges this court to adopt and apply the
Seider
rule in this case on the ground that the historical limitations
*621
on quasi-in-rem jurisdiction with their rigid tests are giving way to a more realistic and reasonable evaluation of the respective rights of plaintiffs, defendants, and the States. “Such an evaluation requires a practical appraisal of the situation of the various parties rather than an emphasis upon somewhat magical and medieval concepts of presence and
power," Simpson v. Loehmann,
We are of the opinion that the basis for exercising quasi-in-rem jurisdiction over the rights of defendant McChesney which arise from his liability insurance policy can be found in
Robinson v. Carroll,
It is well established that the liability of the insurer to indemnify becomes fixed on the happening of an accident within the coverage of the policy, subject to defenses which may arise thereafter.
Milwaukee Ins. Co. v. Morrill,
The
Seider
procedure recognizes that in a case such as the present one the insurer is in full control of the litigation, selects the attorney who is to defend the insured, decides if and when to settle, and makes all procedural decisions in connection with the litigation.
Simpson v. Loehmann,
Permitting attachment of the defendant’s rights in his insurance policy by trustee process on the insurer is not a direct action against it to obtain indemnity which is prohibited by the terms of the policy. The action is one against the insured for damages to which the insurer is not a party but merely a garnishee. Such a proceeding does not fall within the purpose of the no direct action clause which “is intended to protect the insurer from collusive or overly generous or unnecessary settlements by the insured at the expense of the insurer.”
Merchants Mut. Ins. Co. v. Transformer Serv. Inc.,
Our legislature has provided a means by which foreign motorists who have been involved in an accident on our highways can be submitted to the jurisdiction of our courts in actions for damages resulting therefrom. RSA ch. 264 (Supp. 1972). The State of New Hampshire has a similar interest in providing a resident plaintiff the use of our courts to obtain redress for injuries incurred in an accident on an out-of-State highway particularly when the State of residence of the defendant would furnish the defendant a forum if the roles were reversed.
Simpson v. Loehmann,
Adoption of the
Seider
rule does not subject the insured, as argued by the defendant, to the Hobson’s choice of losing coverage for not cooperating with his insurer or subjecting himself to personal liability for a judgment in excess of the policy limits. In
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Martin,
If application of the
Seider
rule in a particular case would cause substantial and undue hardship to the defendant, the trial court could apply the doctrine of inconvenient forum and refuse to take jurisdiction in that case.
Thistle v. Halstead,
We are not holding that the Seider rule is to be applied generally to all cases of foreign motorists insured by a company with an office in this State and licensed to do business in New Hampshire. We are merely holding that under the circumstances of this case in a suit by a resident of New Hampshire against a resident of New York where the Seider rule prevails the trial court properly denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s action.
Exception overruled.
