43 Misc. 251 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1904
By a stipulation entered into between counsel, eleven actions involving substantially the same question of fact and law were heard at the same time before the court without a jury. These actions are brought by assignees of judgments which were recovered against the defendant in the State of North Carolina. The defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York. The original actions commenced in North Carolina were to recover damages for alleged breach of contracts of insurance entered into between citizens of that State and the defendant. All of these actions resulted in judgments against the defendant, the validity of which was sustained by the Supreme Court of North Carolina. Briggs v. Mutual Res. Fund Life Assn., 128 N. C. 5; Moore v. Mutual Res. Fund Life Assn., 129 id. 31. The judgments now sued upon were recovered in the Superior Court of North Carolina, which is a court of superior and general jurisdiction. The ground upon which these actions are defended is that the court of North Carolina, in which these judgments were recovered, did not have jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. Proper copies of the judgment records being produced and the court in which they were recovered being one of general jurisdiction, the law presumes that it had jurisdiction of the
The answer of the defendant impugned the jurisdiction of the North Carolina court, and the.defendant subsequently proved its alleged revocation of the authority of the person upon whom service of process was made. Under these circumstances it is perfectly clear that no injury was done to the defendant by permitting the plaintiff to go outside of the record and to offer evidence tending to sustain the recitals therein contained. The jurisdiction of the North Carolina court was the fact to be proved, and in view of the assault which the defendant made upon it, all evidence tending to prove the plaintiff’s contention that the court had jurisdiction was competent. The facts proven outside of the record were not by law a requisite part of the judgment-roll, but this fact did not make them incompetent as evidence. Thus Judge Folger, in Bosworth v. Yandewalker, supra, said: “ There was no error in receiving in evidence papers as to the appointment of a guardian. The sole objection made to them was that they formed no part of the record. * * * That they were not by law a requisite part of the judgment-roll did not make them incompetent as evidence.”
The defendant’s objection relates to the order of proof rather than to the competency of the evidence received. This was a matter within the discretion of the trial court and the defendant was in no way prejudiced by taking the proof when it was offered rather than at a later stage of the
Before deciding the question as to whether the Eorth Carolina court had jurisdiction of the' person of the defendant it becomes necessary, therefore, to determine the following questions:
First. Was the defendant doing business within the State of Eorth Carolina at the time service was made?
Second. Was the service of process made within the State upon an agent of the defendant duly authorized to accept service?
I. Service in all the cases involved in all the actions now before the court was made after the 13th day of April, 1899, on the insurance commissioner of Eorth Carolina. On or about the 18th day of May, 1899, the defendant withdrew all of its agents, through whom it had theretofore done business, from the State of Eorth Carolina. But the evidence established that, notwithstanding this withdrawal, the defendant nevertheless transacted business after this date in that State. A review of the evidence upon this point will, I think, establish this fact beyond question. Policies remained in force after the date of the alleged withdrawal, and premiums and assessments upon these policies were paid by persons living in Eorth Carolina by remitting the premiums to the home office of the defendant in Eew York city.
II. In determining whether service of process within the State of North Carolina was made upon an agent duly authorized to accept service, it is necessary to review the legislation of that State in reference to insurance corpora
In 1883, the Secretary of State was authorized to issue licenses to do insurance business, provided that before the issue of any license the applicant therefor should appoint a general agent, who shall be a citizen and resident of the State, and file a certificate of such appointment, which certificate should “ contain a stipulation agreeing that so long as there may be any liability, on the part of the applicant under any contract entered into in pursuance of any law concerning insurance, any legal process affecting the applicant may be served in his absence upon such general agent, or upon the Secretary of State, and when so served, shall have the same effect as if served personally on such applicant in this State; provided, when such service is made upon the
Judgments for plaintiffs, with interest and costs.