49 S.E. 173 | N.C. | 1904
This action was heard upon a case agreed as follows: The action was commenced before a justice of the peace by Goodwin, a resident of the *177 State of Virginia, against Claytor, also a resident of the State of Virginia, for the recovery of $109.67, with interest on $96.01 from 14 January, 1903, due by judgment. The indebtedness of Claytor (226) to Goodwin is admitted. Service of summons was duly had by publication and by garnishment of a debt due from the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company to Claytor. Claytor is an employee of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in the capacity of traveling salesman, and the money which was attached in the hands of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company was the earnings of Claytor for his personal services, and said earnings accrued within sixty days next preceding the institution of this action, service of garnishment, filing of answer, and the order of the justice. These earnings were used for the support of a family dependent upon him. It is admitted that the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company is a corporation duly chartered and created under and by virtue of the laws of the State of New Jersey and is engaged in the manufacture of tobacco, with its principal place of business and bulk of its property in Winston, N.C. it having no property in New Jersey, save that such office as is required by the laws of New Jersey is located there. The said company has complied with the laws of North Carolina in reference to foreign corporations of the nature and character of this company. The contract between Claytor and the company was signed by Claytor in Virginia and returned to Winston by mail. The preliminary arrangements, however, and the principal points involved in the contract were agreed upon at the office of the company in Winston. The salary of Claytor is usually paid him by check upon a bank in New York, which is sent to him by mail in Virginia, but occasionally a check is drawn on a bank in Winston and mailed to him in Virginia. These checks are sent from the office of the company in Winston. The contract between the company and Claytor does not fix where or how his salary shall be paid. All services performed and done, under and by virtue of this contract, are performed and done in the States of Virginia and West Virginia, and no part of said work is done in North Carolina. At the date of the service of the (227) writ of garnishment on the company it was indebted to Claytor by reason of the contract in the sum of $16.55 for salary and $17.58 expense money, and likewise since the service of the writ of garnishment has become indebted to Claytor up to the date of filing the answer in the sum of $86 for salary and blank dollars for expense money, the expense money being advanced by Claytor and the company reimbursing him for the same upon receiving statement thereof.
The laws of Virginia upon the question of exemptions are as follows: "Section 3630 of The Code of 1887 — Every householder residing in this State shall be entitled to hold exempt from levy, seizure, garnishment, *178 or sale under any execution, order, or process issued on any demand for any debt or liability on contract, his personal and real estate, or either, to be selected by him, including money and debts due him, to the value of not exceeding $2,000. Section 3652 — Wages owing to a laboring man, being a householder, not exceeding $50 per month, shall also be exempt from distress, liability, or garnishment. Section 3656 — An injunction may be awarded to enjoin the sale of any property exempt under the provisions of this chapter, and to prevent the wages exempted by section 3652 from being garnisheed or otherwise collected by an execution creditor." It is admitted that Claytor is a householder, or head of a family within the meaning of the exemption law of the State of Virginia, and it is likewise admitted that he has never had allotted to him any exemption under and by virtue of the laws of that State. This agreed statement of facts is made and signed without prejudice to any rights of either of the interested parties to make any motion or enter any special appearance as in its or his judgment may be deemed advisable.
The court, upon the case agreed, rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against both defendant and garnishee for the full amount of his debt and the costs. Defendant and the garnishee excepted (228) and appealed. After stating the facts: The counsel of the defendant and of the garnishee, in their able and exhaustive brief, rely on several grounds to defeat the plaintiff's recovery. For convenience, we will change somewhat the order in which they are stated in the brief. It is contended (1) that the debt garnisheed is exempt by the laws of Virginia from garnishment; (2) that if the debt was subject to garnishment at all, any lien acquired by the service of the writ was waived and the garnishee released by taking a general and personal judgment against the defendant and the garnishee, instead of taking an order condemning the debt to the payment of the plaintiff's claim; (3) that the judgment is erroneous, as it condemning the debt due after the service of the writ; (4) that the court was without jurisdiction to proceed against the garnishee for the purpose of condemning the debt due by him, because it is necessary to the possession and rightful exercise of such jurisdiction that three things should concur: (a) the corporation who is the garnishee in this case must have such a residence and agency within the State as renders it amenable to the process of the court; (b) the principal defendant, who is the plaintiff's debtor, must himself have the right to sue the garnishee, his debtor, in this State for the recovery *179 of the debt; (c) it must appear that the situs of the debt is in this State; (5) and lastly, they insist that the earnings of a debtor are exempted from condemnation by the laws of this State. We will consider these contentions in the order thus presented.
The right of exemption under the laws of Virginia cannot be enforced here. It is well settled that exemption laws have no extraterritorial effect. They are not, in respect to the question now (229) under discussion, a part of the contract, but relate only to the remedy, and the right to an exemption is therefore subject to the law of the forum. Rood on Garnishment, sec. 100; R. R. v. Sturm,
We do not think that, if the plaintiff acquired any lien on the debt due to the defendant by the tobacco company, he lost it by taking a judgment against the defendant and the garnishee. The judgment against the garnishee seems to be expressly warranted and contemplated by the statute (The Code, sec. 364), and that against the defendant is void as a personal judgment, as the court could acquire no jurisdiction to proceed against him except in so far as it could by its process levy *180
upon or seize his property, and in this respect the suit is to all intents and purposes in the nature of a proceeding in rem and not one in personam.Cooper v. Reynolds, 10 Wall, 308; Pennoyer v. Neff,
We come now to the consideration of the defendant's fourth exception, which involves important questions not at all free from difficulty. For the purpose of determining whether any one of the defendant's contentions under the fourth exception is well founded, we may admit the general rule that a garnishment is in effect a suit by the principal debtor, the defendant in the action, in the name of the plaintiff, and for his use and benefit, against the garnishee to recover the debt due to the plaintiff's debtor and apply it to the satisfaction of the plaintiff's demand. It would appear to be a necessary corollary from the proposition, thus stated, that the plaintiff in the garnishment is in his relation to the garnishee substituted merely to the rights of his own debtor and can enforce no claim against the garnishee which the debtor himself, if suing, would not be entitled to recover. Shinn, sec. 487; Myer v. Ins. Co.,
It having been settled that a foreign corporation exercising (233) its franchises in this State may be subjected to the process of garnishment, when it holds property or credits of the debtor for which the latter can sue in our courts, and that the plaintiff in attachment as against the garnishee is subrogated to the rights, in that respect, of the debtor, and can recover only by the same right and to the *182 same extent as the debtor could recover, if he were suing the garnishee, his debtor (Myer v. Ins. Co., supra), it must follow that the plaintiff may maintain his action and the garnishment proceedings as ancillary to it, unless he is precluded from doing so by section 194. That section provides that an action may be brought against a foreign corporation by a plaintiff not a resident of this State, when the cause of action shall have arisen or the subject of the action shall be situated within this State. It appears in this case that the terms of the contract between Claytor and the tobacco company were agreed upon in this State, and, while the services were performed by Claytor in Virginia, all checks for his salary or wages were drawn at and sent from Winston in this State; and it further appears that the tobacco company has no property in New Jersey, which by courtesy may be called its domicile of origin, and that the bulk of its property is in this State, which is actually its domicile by adoption.
What a curious result would follow if we should hold that Claytor cannot sue the company in this State. We will force him to seek his debtor in New Jersey, but he will find no property there to satisfy his debt, and there is no good reason why he should be required to resort to the courts of any other State than New Jersey where there may happen to be some of the property of his debtor, but where the debtor has no domicile of any kind, and where the same law may exist as we have here; nor should he be required to first obtain judgment in New Jersey and then come here to sue upon it. A construction of our statute, with (234) reference to the special facts of this case, which would produce such an anomaly by requiring him to pursue any one of the courses indicated, should not be accepted as the true one, unless no other is admissible. The transactions out of which the cause of action of Claytor against the company arose occurred in this State, and the debt due to him was as much payable here as it was in Virginia. For some purposes it may be important to determine precisely where a debt is payable or a contract is to be performed, but it is a well established general rule that "all debts are payable everywhere, unless there be some special limitation or provision in respect to the payment, the rule being that debts, as such, have no locus or situs, but accompany the creditor everywhere and authorize a demand upon the debtor everywhere." 2 Parsons Cont. (8 Ed.), 702. The contract between Claytor and the tobacco company contained no "special limitation or provision in respect to payment," and the debt growing out of it, if not, by reason of the special circumstances of its creation, payable here (Perry v.Transfer Co., 19 N.Y. Supp., 239), was payable generally, and could have been sued on by Claytor in this State, and therefore was attachable here. "This is the principle and effect of the best considered *183
cases — the inevitable effect from the nature of transitory actions and the purpose of foreign attachment laws, if we would enforce that purpose." R. R. v. Sturm,
Considering the special facts of this case, we find that the tobacco company obtained a charter in New Jersey for the avowed purpose of establishing its principal office and transacting its business in this State. It was born, it is true, in New Jersey; but it lives, moves, and has its being in this State. It is nominally a corporation of the other State where it was originally created, but in reality has its home, its domicile, here. There is no valid or practical reason why this case should not be held to come substantially within the principle of Sexton v. Ins. Co.,supra, and Boyd v. Ins. Co.,
It was necessary to decide the question we have discussed before considering the defendant's last ground of objection, because a decision for him on any one of those questions would have settled the case entirely in his favor. (236) *184
The defendant further insists that his earnings for personal services at any time within sixty days next preceding the garnishment were exempt under section 493 of The Code. He admits that this exemption is allowed by that section in supplementary proceedings, but his counsel argue that it is intended by the law that such earnings shall in no way be condemned or applied to the payment of debts. The humane and beneficent provisions of the law in regard to exemptions, being remedial in their nature and founded upon a sound public policy, should always receive a liberal construction so as to embrace all persons coming fairly within their scope. Black Interp. of Law, 311. This Court has uniformly held that where property is exempted from seizure under final process it is similarly exempt from levy or seizure under any mesne process issued for the purpose of placing it in the custody of the court and thus preserving it until it can finally be applied to the satisfaction of the plaintiff's debt. Chemical Co. v. Sloan,
The defendant should be allowed his exemption out of his earnings in accordance with the provisions of section 493, and to this extent there was error in the judgment upon the case agreed.
We have discussed the case somewhat at length, as it involves questions of great and increasing importance and, it may be, of far-reaching consequences. It was unusually well presented on both sides by counsel in their briefs.
Error.
Cited: Holshouser v. Copper Co.,