Marie MINICHIELLO, as Executrix of the Estate of Thomas
Minichiello, and Marie Minichiello, Appellees,
v.
Oliver ROSENBERG, Appellant.
Elwin W. STEVENS, on behalf of his son, Dennis J. Stevens,
an infant overfourteen years of age, and Elwin W.
Stevens, individually, Appellees,
v.
Stephen H. TYNG, Sr. and Stephen H. Tyng, Jr., Appellants.
Nos. 137, 202-203 Dockets 32534, 32838-32839.
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.
Argued Oct. 9, 1968.
Decided Dec. 12, 1968, On Rehearing In Banc April 2, 1969.
James M. Marsh, Philadelphia, Pa. (James M. Marsh, Philadelphia, Pa., D. Bruce Crew, III, Elmira, N.Y., La Brum & Doak, Philadelphia, Pa., and Donovan, Graner, Davidson & Burns, Elmira, N.Y., of counsel), for appellant Oliver Rosenberg.
Henry Valent (Valent, Callanan & Ruger, Watkins Glen, N.Y.), for appellees Marie Minichiello, as Executrix etc. and Marie Minichiello.
Bender, Hesson, Ford & Grogan, Albany, N.Y., submitted brief for appellants Stephen H. Tyng, Sr. and Stephen H. Tyng, Jr.
Irving I. Waxman, Albany, N.Y., submitted brief for appellees Elwin W. Stevens, on behalf of his son etc. and Elwin W. Stevens.
Before FRIENDLY, ANDERSON and FEINBERG, Circuit Judges.
FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge:
These two appeals are from orders denying motions to dismiss complaints of New York residents in automobile accident actions against nonresident defendants wherein jurisdiction was predicated on attachment of the defendants' interests in liability insurance policies issued by companies doing business in New York, CPLR 5201, 6202. They require us to consider the constitutionality of the procedure sanctioned by the New York Court of Appeals in the much discussed case of Seider v. Roth,
Marie Minichiello, a resident of New York, brought suit in the Supreme Court of New York for Schuyler County, in her own right and as executrix of her husband Thomas, to recover $205,050 for injuries to Thomas, for his death, for injuries to herself, and for damage to their car in an accident near Harrisburg, Pa., allegedly caused by the negligence of the defendant Rosenberg, a resident of Pennsylvania. An order of attachment was served at an office in New York on Allstate Insurance Co., which had issued to Rosenberg in Pennsylvania a policy insuring against liability in an amount less than the recovery sought. Rosenberg removed the action to the District Court for the Western District of New York and there sought an order dismissing the complaint on the ground that the procedure sanctioned by Seider v. Roth violated the Federal Constitution. Judge Burke denied the motion1 but later made the certificate required by 28 U.S.C. 1292(b). Since the problem was of obvious importance and the decision ran counter to Judge Croake's in Podolsky v. Devinney,
Elwin W. Stevens, a resident of New York, brought suit in the Supreme Court for Rensselaer County on his own behalf and as guardian for his son Dennis against Stephen Tyng, Sr., and Stephen Tyng, Jr., residents of Massachusetts, to recover $200,350 for injury to Dennis, loss of Dennis' services, and damage to a motor scooter sustained at Orleans, Massachusetts, as a result of the alleged negligence of Tyng, Jr., in driving a car owned by his father. Plaintiff attached a policy insuring against liability in the amount of $100,000 for any person and $300,000 for any accident issued outside New York by American Motorists Insurance Co., which does business in New York. Defendants removed the action to the District Court for the Northern District of New York and moved, inter alia, to dismiss the complaint for want of jurisdiction. Judge Ryan, sitting in the Northern District by designation, denied the motion2 but, recognizing the contrary decision in Podolsky, made the certificate specified in 28 U.S.C. 1292(b). Since the issue was identical with that already argued in Minichiello v. Rosenberg, we granted leave to appeal, with the case to be submitted on briefs.
Seider v. Roth was an action by New York residents against Lemiux, a Canadian, for injuries suffered in an automobile accident in Vermont.3 Plaintiffs attached in New York a liability policy issued to Lemiux in Canada by Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co., which does business in New York. The Court of Appeals, speaking through Chief Judge Desmond, treated the problem solely as one of statutory construction, namely, whether 'as soon as the accident occurred there was imposed on Hartford a contractual obligation which should be considered a 'debt' within the meaning of CPLR 5201 and 6202.' The court answered this in the affirmative. Neither the majority opinion nor the dissent by Judge Burke, in which Judges Bergan and Scileppi concurred, adverted to constitutional doubts.
Seider v. Roth received a poor press from the commentators. See, e.g., Reese, The Expanding Scope of Jurisdiction over Non-Residents-- New York Goes Wild, 35 Ins. Counsel J. 118 (1968); Comment, Attachment of 'Obligations'-- A New Chapter in Long-Arm Jurisdiction, 16 Buffalo L.Rev. 769 (1967); Comment, Garnishment of Intangibles: Contingent Obligations and the Interstate Corporation, 67 Colum.L.Rev. 550 (1970); Note, Seider v. Roth: The Constitutional Phase, 43 St. John's L.Rev. 58 (1968); Comment, Quasi in Rem Jurisdiction Based on Insurer's Obligations, 19 Stan.L.Rev. 654 (1967); and a number of comments by Professor David Siegel of St. John's University School of Law, one antedating the Court of Appeals' decision, which have appeared in the annual supplements to CPLR 5201 in McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York. In Simpson v. Loehmann, supra,
On the constitutional claims, Chief Judge Fuld, writing for himself and Judge Van Voorhis, summarily disposed of the interstate commerce and impairment of contract obligation arguments,
Although Judge Keating's opinion in Simpson v. Loehmann is more explicit than Chief Judge Fuld's on this score, it is reasonably clear that the Court of Appeals regards Seider v. Roth as in effect a judicially created direct action statute. The insurer doing business in New York is considered the real party in interest and the nonresident insured is viewed simply as a conduit, who has to be named as a defendant in order to provide a conceptual basis for getting at the insurer. See 1968 Commentary to CPLR 5201, paras. 88, 89. It is thus useful to address ourselves in the first instance to Judge Keating's premise that New York could constitutionally provide for a direct action against an insurer doing business in New York by a New York resident with respect to an injury suffered elsewhere. If that premise should fail, Seider would almost certainly fall with it. If it stands we must then examine whether Seider may still be vulnerable because, unlike a true direct action statute, it involves the nonresident insured as a party defendant.
In Watson v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.,
We thus believe that, all things considered, the Supreme Court would sustain the validity of a state statute permitting direct actions against insurers doing business in the state in favor of residents as well as on behalf of persons injured within it. See Note, Direct-Action Statutes: Their Operational and Conflict-of-Law Problems, 74 Harv.L.Rev. 357, 361 (1960). The state's interest in protecting its residents is as great as in the case of nonresidents injured within the state. While the burden on the insurer in trying a case in a state other than the locus of the accident is heavier, there has been, as we have recently noted, "a movement away from the bias favoring the defendant,' in matters of personal jurisdiction 'toward permitting the plaintiff to insist that the defendant come to him' when there is a sufficient basis for doing so,' Buckley v. New York Post Corp.,
With so much established, we turn to the question whether the position of the insured is as nominal as the New York Court of Appeals conceives. Here we proceed from the basis, apparently accepted by everyone, that the mere fact of a nonresident's having taken out liability insurance with a company doing business in New York would not be a sufficient contact to enable New York to render a judgment enforceable against other assets even at the suit of a resident.
In Podolsky v. Devinney, supra,
These difficulties were largely swept away by what has been termed 'a miraculous per curiam opinion,' see Commentary on CPLR 5201, at 15 (McKinney Supp. 1968), denying reargument in Simpson v. Loehmann,
'This, it is hardly necessary to add, means that there may not be any recovery against the defendant in this sort of case in an amount greater than the face value of such insurance policy even though he proceeds with the defense on the merits. Consideration of CPLR 320 (subd. (c)) and its effect in other types of action begun by attachment must, of course, await future cases.'7
Appellants respond that while this unexpected construction of CPLR 320(c) protects the defendant in the New York Seider action, it does not fully meet the problem where as here the demands exceed the policy limits. Their fear is that if the plaintiff sues later for the unmet balance in a state where he has acquired jurisdiction in personam, a plaintiff's judgment in the New York Seider action will be taken to have adjudicated the defendant's liability. It is plain that the New York judgment could not be given effect as such beyond the amount of the insurance; the troubling issue is whether a state could deem it effective as a collateral estoppel. Commentators have indicated that the due process clause prevents a state from giving a quasi in rem judgment such effect. Carrington, Collateral Estoppel and Foreign Judgments, 24 Ohio State L.J. 381, 384 (1963); Cramton & D. Currie, Conflict of Laws, 645-646 (1968); Developments in the Law-- Res judicata, 65 Harv.L.Rev. 818, 835 (1952). Accord, Combs v. Combs,
We can foresee that application of Seider may produce other problems of due process. One may arise from CPLR 3110, subd. 1, which provides that a party must appear in New York for the taking of his deposition. This has been held to apply to a nonresident defendant over whom jurisdiction has been obtained only by the Seider route, Gazerwitz v. Adrian,
Appellants' argument based on the clause of the Constitution, Art, I, 10, clause 1, forbidding impairment of the obligation of contracts does not require extended answer. The argument is that a Seider attachment compels the insured to breach his pledge of cooperation by making the assertion of a defense too hazardous and thus jeopardizes his insurance coverage. But this contention has been drained of force by the per curiam opinion denying reargument in Simpson,
Affirmed.
On rehearing in banc
Before LUMBARD, Chief Judge, and WATERMAN, MOORE, FRIENDLY, SMITH, KAUFMAN, HAYS, ANDERSON and FEINBERG, Circuit Judges.
FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge, with whom WATERMAN, SMITH, KAUFMAN, HAYS and FEINBERG, Circuit Judges, concur:
After reconsideration in banc on the original and supplemental briefs, the court adheres to the affirmance of these orders.
The burden of the petitions for rehearing is that the previous majority opinion was overly preoccupied with a conception of Seider v. Roth,
We find this argument unpersuasive so long as Harris v. Balk,
Appellants claim they are worse off than Balk in one respect, namely, that the cooperation condition of the policies forces them to come to New York and participate in the defense of the personal-injury actions, and that this is a serious inconvenience even though they are reimbursed for their expenses and, as we have concluded, will suffer no untoward consequences in the form of liability. We have previously noted that so far as judicially compelled attendance in New York is concerned, appellants are amply protected against undue inconvenience by F.R.Civ.P. 45(d) and (e). We are not required to determine whether refusal by the insured to attend a trial in a foreign state, when such attendance is not required by the applicable procedural law and he is willing to be deposed elsewhere, would constitute a material breach of the duty of cooperation even if a policy literally required him to appear in person. See Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice 4773, 4784 (1962). For, as we understand Simpson v. Loehmann, supra,
We note a further point which at least mitigates some of the many undesirable practical consequences of Seider.11 By their very definition actions of the Seider type will generally be removable to the federal courts,12 or indeed can be brought there. Once in federal court, they become subject to the salutary provision of 28 U.S.C. 1404(a) that 'for the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.' Either the district of the defendant's residence or that of the accident, or both, will qualify for transfer. Whenever a trial in New York would cause true hardship to the defendant, a remedy thus will almost always be at hand. See Farrell v. Wyatt,
We add in conclusion that in these cases, where the accidents gave rise to what from a practical standpoint were single claims, we are not required to decide whether Seider might produce constitutionally impermissible results if applied so as to prefer one claimant over another in cases of multiple claims where the damages exceed the policy limits and the insured is without funds to pay the excess. We would hope that realization of the complexities of such problems and the considerations urged in our brother ANDERSON'S dissents might stimulate the reexamination of Seider intimated in Simpson v. Loehmann, supra,
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, Circuit Judge (dissenting):
I dissent. As the analysis of Seider v. Roth,
May a state, which has in personam jurisdiction over an insurer and is the residence of the injured plaintiff, exercise jurisdiction in a tort case involving an accident which took place in a foreign jurisdiction and which was allegedly caused by a resident of that jurisdiction, to secure the proceeds of a liability policy issued in that foreign jurisdiction?1
The case which must provide the cue for the resolution of the issue is Watson v. Employers Liability Insurance Corp.,
'Louisiana's direct action statute is not a mere intermeddling in affairs beyond her boundaries which are no concern of hers. Persons injured or killed in Louisiana are most likely to be Louisiana residents, and even if not, Louisiana may have to care for them. Serious injuries may require treatment in Louisiana homes or hospitals by Louisiana doctors. The injured may be destitute. They may be compelled to call upon friends, relatives, or the public for help. Louisiana has manifested its natural interest in the injured by providing remedies for recovery of damages. It has a similar interest in policies of insurance which are designed to assure ultimate payment of such damages. Moreover, Louisiana courts in most instances provide the most convenient forum for the trial of these cases. But modern transportation and business methods have made it more difficult to serve process on wrongdoers who live or do business in other states. In this case efforts to serve the Gillette Company were answered by a motion to dismiss on the ground that Gillette had no Louisiana agent on whom process could be served. If this motion is granted, Mrs. Watson, but for the direct action law, could not get her case tried without going to Massachusetts or Illinois although she lives in Louisiana and her claim is for injuries from a product bought and usud there. What has been said is enough to show Louisiana's legitimate interest in safeguarding the rights of persons injured there. In view of that interest, the direct action provisions here challenged do not violate due process.'2
The majority compares the above quoted language with the Seider procedure and concludes that Louisiana's interest in protecting its medical creditors and in preventing the expenditure of public funds in the case of the injury of one of its residents in an out-of-state accident is as great as in the case of an accident occurring in Louisiana. This might be true if the plaintiff is hardy enough to reach Louisiana before requiring medical aid or public assistance; otherwise the state where the accident occurred would be required to pick up the tab. But I read this portion of Mr. Justice Black's opinion as stating certain pertinent examples of the interests which the state of the accident has, rather than as an exhaustive catalogue of those interests. It seems to me that there are other substantial interests of the accident state which do not coincide with those of the residence state. For example, one such traditional and significant interest, which the accident state may have in enacting a direct action statute, is to deter tortious conduct within the state.3 Another is the fact that the accident state is often in a very real sense the center of the controversy with at least a greater statistical probability that its residents will be more directly affected by any resolution of disputes arising from an accident within its territorial limits than the residents of any other state.
Moreover, as commentators have noted,4 the second major argument of Mr. Justice Black also emphasizes the occurrence of the accident in Louisiana: 'Louisiana courts in most instances provide the most convenient forum for trial of these cases.' The opinion places great stress upon considerations of convenience in litigation, which point to the accident state, e.g., the availability of witnesses, the availability of police and medical records, the possibility of affording a jury an opportunity to view the scene of the accident, the ease of ascertaining the governing law, etc. By comparison, the convenience in carrying on the litigation which the majority ascribes to the residence state, is to say the least, a very one-sided accommodation. It would only be in the very small minority of these tort actions, transferred to the United States District Courts, as most of them will be, that the defendant could subpoena witnesses who were within one hundred miles of the New York courthouse, and he would, in most cases be forced to prove his defenses through depositions.
Recognizing inconvenience of trial in New York courts as a vulnerable point in its argument, the majority seeks to offset it by the following a fortiori argument:
'But the Justice's final consideration-- the plaintiff's difficulty in bringing the defendant before the forum-- applies with even greater force to the state of plaintiff's residence than to that of injury in light of the development of long-arm statutes that will generally allow the state of injury to obtain personal jurisdiction of the insured and so avoid the need for a direct action against the insurer.'
Every plaintiff, however, is not entitled to a legal remedy in the form of a device to bring the defendant into the forum most convenient to the plaintiff and commensurate with the degree of difficulty which that effort entails, regardless of all other considerations. Certainly it must first be determined whether the plaintiff has the right to require defendant's presence in plaintiff's forum and the resolution of this question depends upon the fairness and reasonableness of the device as it affects all of the parties involved, the functioning of the courts, and the administration of justice in such an action. Watson and the long-arm statutes are plainly grounded in fairness because the nonresident defendant has of his own volition brought himself within the bounds and jurisdiction of the state where the accident occurred. But, for example, for a resident of Alaska, as the accident state, who had never resided elsewhere and who had never entered the State of New York or had any business there, suddenly to discover that he is under the jurisdiction of the State of New York and must go there to defend himself is quite a different matter. It is apparent from the Supreme Court's opinion in Watson, that 'plaintiff's difficulty in bringing the defendant before the forum' is manifestly unjust only because the forum in question is 'the most convenient forum.' To repeat the passage under discussion:
'Moreover, Louisiana courts in most instances provide the most convenient forum for the trial of these cases. But modern transportation and business methods have made it more difficult to serve process on wrongdoers who live or do business in other states.'
The legislatures which have enacted long-arm statutes and courts which have interpreted them have been motivated and restrained by considerations of fairness and reasonableness. In deciding the due process issue,5 as it relates to the Seider procedure, 'traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice,' International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
The Seider procedure potentially subjects to liability to out-of-state process, a defendant whose activities, as noted above, may have been entirely local. It, therefore, may come as something of a shock to such a defendant, untutored in New York law, to discover that he is exposed to the traditionally high verdicts returned by New York juries. In Watson, on the other hand, the defendant was engaged in activity across state lines, and it was foreseeable to him that he should insure himself against potential liability in Louisiana. True, recovery in New York could not exceed the insurance proceeds, but if the actual verdict or judgment were in excess of the policy limits, would the defendant be equitably estopped from asserting that the damages were less than those found by the New York court, where the plaintiff sued on the judgment in a court outside of the State of New York?
In terms of fairness to the plaintiff, Seider involves by definition a plaintiff who is able to foresee that he may be injured in a foreign jurisdiction and compelled to litigate there. In Watson, however, the plaintiff's activity was local, and it was certainly much less foreseeable to her that she might be forced to go to Massachusetts or Illinois in order to recover for her local injuries.
A balancing of considerations of fairness to the parties, of litigational convenience, and of the interests of the state (which is to say the interest of its citizens) (1) in compensating the injured party, both for his own sake and to prevent him from becoming a public charge, (2) in compensating its medical and other creditors, and (3) in deterring tortious conduct, leads, on the one hand to a finding that a direct action statute in the state where an accident occurs is fair and reasonable in the due process sense. On the other hand, a similar weighing of interests leads to the conclusion that a direct action statute purporting to provide a New York forum for a New York plaintiff, regardless of other local contacts or considerations, is unreasonable and parochial in the due process sense. It is one thing to require a resident of Alaska to make trips to New York to respond to an action arising out of an accident with a resident of New York in New York state to which the Alaskan had gone, and quite another to make him do so for an accident which occurred in Alaska when the New Yorker elected to go to Alaska and use its highways.
The present case in its application deals only with a New York plaintiff, following the Seider procedure and its impact on a defendant in any of the other forty-nine states which happened to be the accident state. If its constitutionality is upheld, it is quite likely that all fifty states will be compelled to enact like measures. As a result each party will commence suit as quickly as possible in an endeavor to have the litigation in the state where he resides. It would also appear to be a natural and logical consequence of the approval of the Seider procedure that retaliatory laws will be adopted by other states to impose certain conditions upon residents from Seider-procedure states to protect the states' own residents from being subject to the jurisdiction of the foreign state. This is likely to impose a serious burden on iterstate travel and commerce. It is also reasonably certain that the adoption of this procedure will work a substantial increase in the cost of insurance, which is not in the public interest.
It is my opinion that the Seider procedure violates due process and is, therefore, unconstitutional.
HAYS, Circuit Judge (concurring):
I Concur in the result and in Judge FRIENDLY'S opinion.
I wish to add a word simply to emphasize a point which is taken for granted in both Judge FRIENDLY'S and Judge ANDERSON'S opinions.
There is nothing in the character of attachment or of resulting in rem jurisdiction which would require that the procedure be available only to plaintiffs who are residents in the forum state. While in both Seider and Simpson the plaintiffs were residents of New York, nothing was decided in either of those cases which would deny to residents of states other than New York the procedure approved in the cases. In Judge Breitel's concurrence in Simpson,
Although I read Judge FRIENDLY'S opinion as finding the Seider procedure acceptable only when plaintiffs are residents of New York, I believe that it is worthwhile to put additional stress on this point and to make it completely clear that our opinion refers only to the situation where plaintiffs are New York residents.
On rehearing in banc
ANDERSON, Circuit Judge, with whom LUMBARD, Chief Judge, and MOORE, Circuit Judge, concur (dissenting):
In view of the majority's strong reliance on Harris v. Balk,
Assuming the continued constitutional viability of the Harris rule,1 that the obligation of a debtor to pay clings to and accompanies him wherever he goes and that the debt is subject to garnishment in any state in which the debtor is subject to in personam jurisdiction,2 nevertheless that case is clearly distinguishable from the procedure sanctioned by Seider, Simpson, et al. In the first place, the Supreme Court in Harris was considering 'ordinary debts,'3 whereas the complex package of rights and duties which derive from an automobile liability insurance policy is something quite different. The debt in Harris was fixed in amount, and concededly currently owed, but the Seider 'debt,' consisting of the obligations to defend and indemnify, is indefinite, not readily ascertainable in amount, and contingent, i.e. with respect to the obligation to defend, upon the obtaining of jurisdiction over and the commencement of suit against the insured, and also, with respect to the obligation to indemnify, upon the security by the plaintiff of a judgment against the defendant insured. Moreover, as Judge Croake noted in Podolsky v. Devinney,
There is another distinction between Harris and Seider.4 In Harris the debtor-garnishee, as a natural person, could be physically present in only one state at a time; therefore, although the situs of the debt might change, there could never exist more than one quasi in rem jurisdictional situs at any given time. In Seider the garnishee is an interstate corporation subject to jurisdiction in the state of incorporation as well as in the states where it is doing business. If Seider stands, other states will be compelled to follow New York's example by engrafting a Seider procedure onto their attachment statutes. The inevitable result will be a rash of contrary and inconsistent adjudications, particularly in multi-party cases, well described by Professor Siegel as 'jurisdictional chaos.' He says:
'Balk at least enabled a single state to be isolated as the situs of the intangible. Under Seider, that is not possible; all of the states in which the insurer does business could seize the policy; and if they were to do so (i.e. adopt Seider) there would be a kind of jurisdictional chaos awaiting in major accident cases. Suppose the other states do adopt it? If all of them can then lay claim to being the 'situs' of the policy to the same extent that New York makes that claim under Seider, it is not difficult to contemplate a race-to-attach (or seize or sequester or secure 'trustee process' or whatever else a state may call the quasi in rem process that goes under the name of 'attachment' in New York) in multi-party accidents.'5
The rule of Harris, which in effect sanctions the mere presence of the garnishee as a sufficient jurisdictional base, 'cannot be justified in terms of fairness.' Developments in the Law-State Court Jurisdiction, 73 Harv.L.Rev. 909, 960 (1960). In other words, the relevant contact with the forum state which establishes a jurisdictional base is not attuned to the modern jurisdictional search to attain substantial justice by balancing interests.
The majority opinion is quite correct in observing that the Harris rule imposed a substantial burden on Mr. Balk in forcing him to litigate, if he should elect to contest, wherever his debtor's pereginations might take him. It does not follow that if Balk was treated unfairly, then appellants can be treated with a much greater degree of unfairness. The unstated assumption that Harris controls the case at bar should be rejected. In view of the age of that case, the revolution in jurisdictional thinking since 1905 and the criticism of its potential unfairness in modern terms,6 the rule of that case should be confined to its facts, and applied only in cases where there is a fixed obligation, when the amount may be determined with fair certainty and any contingency concerns nothing more than time of maturity.
Exception must also be taken to the majority's view that the availability of removal under 1404(a) 'bears strongly' on the decision of the constitutional issue. The constitutionality of this procedure should not rest on the dubious assumption that discretion will always be exercised as the Constitution demands. In addition, 28 U.S.C. 1441(b) provides that where diversity is the claimed basis of federal jurisdiction, a civil action
'* * * shall be removable only if none of the parties in interest properly joined and served as defendants is a citizen of the State in which such action is brought.'
In other words, if any of the defendants in a multi-party action is a New York resident, the non-resident co-defendants would be barred from the benefit of 1404(a). (The majority opinion conveniently notes other 'exceptions' in footnote 4.) Nor should the constitutionality of this procedure turn on whether the matter in controversy exceeds $10,000.
For these reasons and for those set forth in the prior dissenting opinion I reassert my disagreement with the majority decision.
Notes
Defendant also moved to dismiss the wrongful death claim as barred by the Pennsylvania statute of limitations. This motion was denied without prejudice to defendant's raising the point at trial, and we have not been asked to pass upon that ruling
We have taken note of a similar decision by Judge McLean in the Southern District of New York in Jarvik v. Magic Mountain Corp.,
Roth, whose name will go down in legal history, is identified only as 'the driver of a third car involved in the collision,'
Judge Breitel filled the vacancy created by Chief Judge Desmond's retirement. Subsequently Judge Van Voorhis, who was in the majority in both Seider and Simpson, retired and has been succeeded by Judge Jasen
In Victor v. Lyon Associates, Inc., Hanover Ins. Co., Appellant,
It would be a serious misreading of Hughes v. Fetter,
Although Professor Siegel is doubtless right in saying that 'not even a prophet would have guessed at this result if the statement had not been added,' Commentary on CPLR 5201, at 17 (McKinney Supp.1968), the 'miracle' may not really have been so great. The Court of Appeals may have entertained qualms about the constitutionality of CPLR 320(c) both in the Seider situation and, as indicated by the last sentence of the quotation, in other instances of quasi in rem jurisdiction. There is substantial authority that where the presence of property within the state is the sole basis for jurisdiction, it is unfair to require the defendant to choose between forfeiting this and subjecting himself to liability for a larger claim. See Cheshire Nat'l Bank v. Jaynes,
See Parker v. Marco,
The only new point made with respect to the situation of the insurer is that in Watson v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.,
While Harris could be in only one place at a time, this would not be true in cases where the debtor was a corporation. Indeed, even in the case of natural persons, the debt might be subject to garnishment at the same time both in the state of their residence and in that of their presence
These have recently been catalogued again at some length. See Stein, Jurisdiction by Attachment of Liability Insurance, 43 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 1075 (1968)
Exceptions would be where the amount claimed did not exceed $10,000; cases, doubtless quite rare, where a New Yorker was joined as a defendant; and perhaps cases where a citizen of the state of defendant's residence was appointed as a representative of a decedent or minor on whose behalf the action was brought. See Mecom v. Fitzsimmons Drilling Co.,
Siegel, Supplementary Practice Commentary to N.Y.C.P.L.R., 5201, McKinney's Const.Laws of N.Y., Book 7B at 41-42 (1968 Cum.Supp.)
Cf. Schmidt v. Driscoll Hotel,
In Watson, the interests which were identified as significant in the Driscoll Hotel case (the interest of the accident state in affording a remedy to those injured and the interest of the state where the tortious conduct occurred in deterring such conduct) coincided in Louisiana.
Although Driscoll Hotel involved a choice of law determination rather than the exercise of legislative power over the limits of judicial in-personam jurisdiction, its 'interest' analysis is relevant to both issues because of their focus on 'contacts', which is to say, the relation of the controversy to the community. See von Mehren and Trautman, Jurisdiction to Adjudicate: A Suggested Analysis, 79 Harv.L.Rev. 1121, 1166-1167 (1966). The degree of interest necessary to validate a legislative determination of judicial in-personam jurisdiction is greater, however, than the degree of interest required to support a decision concerning choice of law.
Compare, Hanson v. Denckla,
'For the purpose of applying its rule that the validity of a trust is determined by the law of the State of its creation, Florida ruled that the appointment amounted to a 'republication' of the original trust instrument in Florida. For choice of law purposes such a ruling may be justified, but we think it is an insubstantial connection with the trust agreement for purposes of determining the question of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant. The unilateral activity of those who claim some relationship with a nonresident defendant cannot satisfy the requirement of contact with the forum State.'
See especially the excellent Comment, Garnishment of Intangibles, 67 Colum.L.Rev. 550, 559: 'It is evident that the Court attached great importance to the occurrence of the accident within the forum state. These same factors-- trial convenience and the forum's interest in protecting parties injured within its bounds-- have been reiterated in more recent decisions concerning direct action statutes.' See also Note, 74 Harv.L.Rev. 357, 389 (1960): 'The occurrence of the accident in Louisiana was stressed by the Court in the Watson case.'
It should be noted that the Seider result could not have been reached under either of the legislatively-created direct action statutes, which permit a direct action only if the accident occurs within the state. Wis.Stat.Ann. 260.11 (Supp. 1966); La.Rev.Stat.Ann. 22.655 (Supp. 1965); Koss v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co.,
See von Mehren and Trautman, op. cit. supra, note 3 at 1166-67:
'We believe that the approach in terms of reason and fairness brought to bear on jurisdiction over corporations and other legal persons by the International Shoe case, whose implications already have begun to be felt in the area of specific jurisdiction over nonresident individuals, will continue to be extended and refined. 'What policies should inform these developments and give content to 'reason' and 'fairness'? We submit that specific jurisdiction-- with its characteristic feature of permitting the plaintiff to require the defendant to come, as it were, to him-- is appropriate in two distinct classes of cases: (1) when the traditional jurisdictional bias in favor of the defendant is not justified; (2) when very strong considerations of convenience, relating not only to the plaintiff but also to the taking of evidence and other litigational considerations, point to a particular community.'
Thus, in Pugh v. Oklahoma Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co.,
'The interest of the state in the safety of her highways, the care and hospitalization of persons injured thereon, the availability within the state of witnesses to the accident, the fact that Louisiana law will determine the liability for damages arising from the accident, * * * all combine to make certain that the maintenance of the suit within the state does not offend 'traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.' Milliken v. Meyer,
'This State, and particularly its chief city, is the mecca for those seeking high verdicts in personal injury cases (see e.g., Gilchrist v. Trans-Canada Air Lines,
In the Gilchrist case the plaintiffs were non-residents.
'Mere presence of the insurer in this State, which is all that Seider appears to require, based as it is on a highly formalistic in rem attachment approach, would not seem sufficient to establish such an interest, 2 (2 Illustrative of the type of case Seider would appear to invite into our courts in the Vaage case (see Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Vaage,
(3 This might pose a problem under the Federal Constitution if Seider's in rem basis were carried to its logical extreme. See Harris v. Balk (
But see Vaage v. Lewis,
Several commentators have noted that Harris v. Balk is, from the point of view of modern jurisdictional thinking, an anachronism. E.g., von Mehren & Trautman, Jurisdiction to Adjudicate: A Suggested Analysis, 79 Harv.L.Rev. 1121, 1178 (1966); Developments in the Law-State Court Jurisdiction, 73 Harv.L.Rev. 909, 957-960 (1960). The following passage suggests that it may have outlived its usefulness:
* * * Harris, in view of modern practice and theory, is not sacrosanct. The decision is from the Pennoyer era when the exercise of personal jurisdiction was severely circumscribed and the garnishment of intangibles served as a valuable substitute for personal jurisdiction. The formalism involved in determining the situs of the debt was necessary to spell out a presence within the forum so that 'power' over the intangible could be exercised. Resort was had to the fiction that the debtor carried the debt with him so that it could be garnished whenever personal jurisdiction could be attained over him. The modern concept of personal jurisdiction leaves little justification for the garnishment of intangibles. Moreover, the formalism of the Harris approach is likely to result, as in Seider, in garnishment in a forum which has no substantial contact with or interest in the litigation. Advanced thinking has called for the abolition of Harris. Note, Seider v. Roth: The Constitutional Phase, 43 St. John's L.Rev. 58, 65, 66 (1968) ('St. John's Note').
'We speak of ordinary debts, such as the one in this case.' Id., at 223,
These distinctions have not escaped other courts and commentators. E.g., Simpson v. Loehmann,
Siegel, loc. cit. col. 4
See n. 1, supra
