Knox Bros. v. E. W. Wagner & Co.

141 Tenn. 348 | Tenn. | 1918

Mb. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the court.

An action brought in the circuit court of Davidson county by W. C. Knox" and I. L. Knox, composing the firm of Knox Bros., against E. W. Wagner & Co., to recover the sum of $3,000, alleged to have been deposited by the plaintiffs in error with E. W. Wagner & Co. as margins on alleged wagering contracts on the future price of wheat, which sum, it is alleged, was lost by the plaintiffs in error to the said E. W. Wagner & Co. in said wagering transactions. -

*350Summons was issued to the sheriff of Davidson county, directing him to summon E. W. Wagner & Co. to answer the complaint of the plaintiffs below. . The sheriff executed said summons by serving it on one T. M. Pritchett, the local manager of E. W. Wagner & Co. in Davidson county.

Pleas in abatement to the jurisdiction of the court were filed by E. W. Wagner and Ernest Tietgens, averring that E. W. Wagner & Co. was not a corporation, but was a partnership composed of E. W. Wagner and Ernest Tietgens; that E. W. Wagner and Ernest Tiet-gens were nonresidents of the State of Tennessee, and were citizens and residents of the State of Illinois, at the time said suit was instituted, and at the time process in the same was issued and served .on T. M. Pritchett, and were still such nonresidents of Tennessee and residents of the State of Illinois, and had so been for a long time prior to the institution of said suit.

Said pleas in abatement further averred that the attempted service of process on them in said cause was made under chapter 89 of the Acts of 1859-60 of the General Assembly of Tennessee, and that such service was void because the statute authorizing this mode of service violates article 1, section 8, of the Constitution of the State of Tennessee, which provides:

“That no man shall be taken or imprisoned, or dis-seized of his freehold, liberties of privileges, or outlawed, or exiled, or in any manner destroyed or deprived of his life, liberty or property, but by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land.”

That said statute is also violative of section 1, article 14, of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States,.which provides:

*351“No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

These pleas in abatement were demurred to by the plaintiffs in error, and the case coming on to be heard before the circuit judge upon said pleas in abatement and demurrers, the demurrers were overruled, and plaintiffs in error electing to stand on their demurrers, and refusing to plead further to said pleas in abatement, a judgment was entered dismissing their suit. From this judgment they have appealed to this court, and have assigned the action of the circuit judge for error.

It is a well-established rule of practice in this State that, when the sufficiency of a pleading is tested by demurrer, the averments of the pleading must be taken as true. It must be, therefore, held, in accordance with the averments contained in said pleas in ábatement-, that E. W. Wagner & Co. is not a corporation, but is a partnership, composed of E. W. Wagner and Ernest Tietgens, and was such at the time the process was issued and served upon T. M. Pritchett, their local manager in Davidson county; further, that E. W. Wagner and Ernest Tietgens, at the time of the issuance of the summons, and at the time of its service, were nonresidents of the State of Tennessee, and residents of the State of Illinois; that service of said summons was not had upon either E. W. Wagner or Ernest Tietgens, but alone upon T. M. Pritchett, their agent or local manager in Davidson county.

*352It is insisted by the plaintiffs in error that service of process upon T. M. Pritchett, the local manager of defendants in error, was binding upon them, and gave the court jurisdiction of their persons, for the purposes of said suit, under chapter 89 of the Acts of 1859-60 (Thompson’s-Shannon’s Code, section 4542). This statute reads as follows:

“When a corporation, company, or individual has an office or agency, or resident director, in any county other than that in which the chief officer or principal resides, the service of process may be made on any agent or clerk employed therein in all actions brought in such county against said company growing out of the business of, or connected with, said company or principal’s business; but this section shall apply only to eases where the suit is brought in such counties in which such agency, resident director, or office is located. ’ ’

It is insisted by defendants in error that this statute, in so far as it applies to nonresident individuals, violates the federal Constitution as to due process of law.

In Flexner v. Farson et al., 268 Ill., 435, 109 N. E., 327, Ann. Cas., 1916D, 810, the court, in passing on the validity of a similar statute passed by the legislature of the State of Kentucky said:

“The several States of the Union are not in every sense independent, as many of the rights and powers .which originally belonged to them are now vested in the federal government under the Constitution, but they possess and exercise the authority of independent States, except in so far as limited by that Constitution. Every State possesses exclusive jurisdiction and sov*353ereignty oyer persons and property within its territory, but no State can exercise direct jurisdiction and. authority over persons and property without its territory. To render the jurisdiction of any State court effectual in any case it is necessary that the thing in controversy or the parties interested he subjected to the process of the court. ‘Certain cases are said to proceed in rem because they take notice rather of the thing in controversy than of the persons concerned, and the process is served upon that which is the object of the suit without specially noticing the interested parties, while in other cases the parties themselves are brought before the court by process. . . . Where a party has property in a State and resides elsewhere, his property is justly subject to all valid claims that may exist against him there; but beyond this, due process of law would require appearance or personal service before the defendant could be personally bound by any judgment rendered’ ”—citing Cooley’s Const. Lim. (6th Ed.), 496, 499; 2 Black on Judgments, section 906; 2 Freeman on Judgments (4th Ed.), sections 564-567; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Nash, 118 Ala., 477, 23 South., 825, 41 L. R. A., 331, 72 Am. St. Rep., 181; Weaver v. Boggs, 38 Md., 255; Brooks v. Dun (C. C.), 51 Fed., 138.

The Kentucky statute involved in that suit was section 51 of the Civil Code of that state, and reads as follows:

“In actions against an individual residing, in another State, or a partnership, association, or joint-stock company, the members of which reside in another State, engaged in business in this State, the summons may be served on the manager, or agent of, or person in *354charge of, such business in this State, ... in the county where the cause of action occurred.”

The action was one of debt brought by Flexner in the circuit court of Cook county, Ill., on a judgment rendered by the circuit court of Jefferson county, Ky., again Farson, Son & Go., and in favor of Flexner. Service was had upon William Farson only ; the other members of the partnership not being found.

In the original suit brought in the Kentucky. court the service of process upon William Farson was had by serving it upon the alleged agent of Farson, Son & Co., Washington Flexner; William Farson, Son & Co. being nonresidents of the State. The Illinois court held that the Kentucky statute was invalid, because vidlative of the federal Constitution as to due process of law, and its decision was affirmed by the supreme court of the United States in a written opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Holmes on January 7, 1919, 248 U. S.,—39 Sup. Ct., 97, 63 L. Ed.,--.

To the same effect are the holdings of the courts in the cases of Moredock v. Kirby (C. C.), 118 Fed., 180; Aikmann v. Sanderson, 122 La., 265, 47 South., 600; Coughlin v. Pinkerton, 41 Wash., 500, 84 Pac., 14.

The same principle was announced in the celebrated case of Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S., 714, 24 L. Ed., 565. In that case it was held that a personal judgment was without validity if it were rendered by a State court aganst a nonresident of a State who was served by publication, and no personal service in the State was made, and he did riot appear; that a State, having within its territory the property of a nonresident, may hold it to satisfy claims of its citizens against him; that its tribunals may inquire into its obligations to *355the extent necessary to control the disposition of that property, but, if he has no property in the State, there is nothing upon which its tribunals can adjudicate. It was further held in that case that substituted service by publication, or in other authorized form, is sufficient to inform a nonresident of the object of the proceedings taken, where property is once brought under the control of the court by seizure or some equivalent act, but where suit is brought to determine the rights and obligations of the person — that is, where the suit is merely in personam — such constructive service is ineffectual for any purpose.

It is not insisted that any property of the defendants in error was attached or brought before the court in the suit at bar. The plaintiffs in error merely sought a personal judgment against them.

The cases of Toppins v. Railroad, 5 Lea, 600, and Railroad v. Walker, 9 Lea, 481, which are relied on by counsel for plaintiffs in error, have no application to the case at bar. Those cases- relate tó corporations which occupy a different status from that of nonresident individuals. When a foreign corporation enters the State for the purpose of doing business, it becomes subject to the laws of the State regulating such corporations, and the State may, through its proper representatives, enact a statute authorizing the services of process on its resident officers or agents in any suit which may be brought against it.

In the case of Green v. Snyder, reported in 114 Tenn., 100, 84 S. W., 808, which is cited by plaintiffs in error in support of their contention that the Act of 1859-60 is valid, and authorized the service of process upon the agent of defendants in error, the constitution*356ality of said statute does not seem to have been raised on the bearing, but was raised upon a petition to rehear in the supreme court, which petition was overruled. We think the overruling of the petition was, perhaps, due to the peculiar state of the pleadings in that case; but, however this may be; we feel that the holding of the supreme court of the United States in Flexner v. Farson et al., supra, is controlling.

The judgment of the...court below is_affirmed, with costs. ' ~