28 Mo. 214 | Mo. | 1859
delivered the opinion of the court.
These cases involve the same questions. The return of the sheriff to writs of executions against one Beasley stated that by order of the plaintiff in said executions he had summoned the two insurance companies named, by delivering to George K. Budd, their agent, a written copy of the garnishment, &c. The two companies denied their liability to answer such a process thus served and returned, and of this opinion was the court of common pleas and they were consequently discharged. The judgment of the court must have proceeded either on the ground that foreign insurance companies, under our laws, are not subject to garnishment, or that the service of the writ in these particular cases was insufficient and illegal.
The seventh section of the execution law provides that “ no corporation, officer or person exempted from garnishment by the act to provide for suits by attachment shall be summoned as garnishees under the provisions of this law.” The twenty-seventh section of the attachment law specifies the officers and corporations which are exempted from this process, and the present garnishees are certainly not included within the exceptions. The twenty-fifth section of the same embraces, as liable to the process, “ all persons who are named in the writ, and such others as the officer shall find in the possession of goods, money or effects of the defendant not actually seized by the officer, and also such as the plaintiff or his attorney shall direct.” The twenty-sixth section says that “ notice of garnishment shall be served on a corporation in writing, by delivering such notice or a copy thereof to the
When it is considered that the attachment law treats a foreign corporation, having its chief place of business within this state, upon the same footing with domestic corporations and protected from that extraordinary and summary process in the same cases in which our own corporation would be; when, in connection with this, we see the act of December 5, 1855, concerning agencies of foreign insurance companies, recognizing them, when established in conformity to the directions of that law, to all intents as domestic corporations, it would seem to be a reasonable interpretation of the language of the twenty-sixth section of the attachment law that an agent of a foreign insurance company located here and doing business under this law of 1855, should be deemed a “ managing officer” of such corporation for all the purposes of an attachment or garnishment. Such agents do in fact represent the corporation here, although, in the foreign country where the corporation has been chartered and its chief place of business is, there is another chief officer of such corporation.
We are not aware of any principle of public policy which could induce the legislature designedly to discriminate between domestic insurance companies and these agencies of foreign insurance companies, which they have allowed to transact business here with all the privileges of domestic corporations, so as to exempt the latter from liability to a process to which the former is undoubtedly liable. There is no more inconvenience in requiring a debt, confessedly due, to be paid over to a creditor of their creditor in the one case than in the other ; and it could only be by some oversight in the law-makers if any such discrimination had been left in the statutes. But we consider the language of the twenty-sixth section sufficiently comprehensive to cover all cases, the agents of foreign insurance companies as well as the chief officers of those chartered and located here.
The return of the sheriff was, in our opinion, prima facie