38 Mich. 765 | Mich. | 1878
This was an action upon a judgment purporting to have been rendered by the county court of county Essex, in the province of Ontario, Dominion of Canada, in favor of McEwan against Zimmer. The only question which the record presents is one of jurisdiction in the county court of Essex to render the judgment, and this arises upon the service which was made on the defendant. Zimmer, it appears, was proceeded against as a non-resident under certain provisions of the statutes known as the Consolidated Statutes of Upper Canada, of which the sections which bear upon the casé are the following:
' “43. In case any defendant being a British subject, •is residing out of Upper Canada, the plaintiff may issue a writ of summons in the form (A) No. 3, which writ shall bear the indorsement contained in the said form, purporting that such writ is for service out of Upper Canada, and the time for appearance by the defendant shall be regulated by the distance from Upper Canada of the place where the defendant is residing, having due regard to the means of, and necessary time for postal or other communication. (19 V., c. 43, s. 35.)
“44. Upon the court or judge being satisfied that there is a cause of action which arose in Upper Canada, or in respect of the breach of a contract made therein, ■and that the writ has been personally served upon the defendant, or that reasonable efforts have been made to effect personal service thereof upon the defendant, and that it came to his knowledge, and either that the defendant willfully neglects to appear to such writ, or that he is living out of Upper Canada, in order to defeat or delay his creditors, such court or judge may from time to time direct that the plaintiff shall be at liberty to proceed in the action in such manner and subject to such conditions as to such court or judge (having regard to the time allowed to the defendant to appear being reasonable and to the other circumstances of the case) may seem fit; but the plaintiff, before obtaining judgment, shall prove the amount of the debt or damages claimed by him in such action, either before a jury on an assessment in the usual mode, or by reference in the manner hereinafter provided, according to the nature of the case, as such court or judge may direct. (19 V., c. 43, s. 35.)
“45. In any action against a person residing out of Upper Canada and not being a British subject, the like*768 proceedings may be taken as against a British subject resident out of Upper Canada, except that the plaintiff shall, instead of the summons mentioned in the forty-third section, issue a writ of summons according to the form (A) No. 4, and shall in manner aforesaid serve a notice of such last mentioned writ upon the defendant, which notice shall be in the form also contained in the said form No. 4; and such service or reasonable efforts to effect the same, shall be of the same force and effect as the service or reasonable efforts to effect the service of a writ of summons in any action against a British subject resident abroad, and by leave of the court or a judge, upon their or his being satisfied by affidavit as aforesaid, the like proceedings may be had and taken thereupon.” (19 V., c. 43, s. 36.)
Zimmer, it was conceded, was not a British subject, and the record of the judgment in the county co.urt shows that the only service made upon him was made at the city of Detroit in this State. It also shows that he did not in any manner respond to the service, and that judgment was taken against him by default. No property appears to have been attached in the province, and no jurisdiction to render the judgment is claimed unless the service in Detroit conferred it. The only question the record presents may therefore be stated as follows: Whether it is competent for a foreign court to make service of its process in this State, and on the authority of such service to proceed to judgment against a party who refuses to recognize the jurisdiction.
We had , not supposed until this suit was brought to our attention that such a jurisdiction could seriously be contended for. The rule laid down by Judge Story in his Conflict of Laws has been supposed to be of universal acceptance, that “no sovereignty can extend its process beyond its own territorial limits, to subject either persons or property to its judicial decisions. Every exertion of authority of this sort beyond this limit is a mere nullity, and incapable of binding such persons or property in any other tribunals.” Confl. of Laws, § 539. Mr. Wharton repeats this rule as one not questioned, Confl. of Laws, § 712; and it is believed to have been reeog
It is urged, however, that the rule in Great Britain and the British provinces is otherwise, and that comity requires that we recognize and accept the rule of jurisdiction that prevails where the judgment was rendered. The obligations of international comity, we trust, will never be questioned in this State, especially when they are invoked in behalf of our neighbors of the Dominion, with whom our relations are so intimate, and it may be added, so friendly and cordial. We should certainly never have the assurance to demand from them more than we would freely and voluntarily concede to them. True comity is equality; we should demand nothing more and concede nothing less.
The English decisions having direct bearing on the question are not very numerous. Douglas v. Forrest, 4 Bing., 686, was an action in England upon a Scotch judgment, obtained without personal service, and after notice to the defendant by the process called “ horning,” which may or may not have ever come to his knowledge.1 The validity of the judgment was recognized, and the action sustained. But an inspection of the case and a reading of the opinion of Chief Justice Best will disclose the fact that the rule as laid down by Mr. Justice Story in his treatise on the Conflict of Laws is in no manner assailed or questioned. The defendant was executor of a Scotch estate, and it was in that capacity that he was sued; and the jurisdiction was supported on the express ground that the estate was within the jurisdiction of the Scotch court, and that the defendant himself owed allegiance to that country. “To be sure,” says the Chief Justice, “ if attachments issued against persons who never were within the jurisdiction of the court issuing them, could be supported and enforced in the country in which the person attached resided, the legislature of any country might authorize their courts to decide on the rights
In Becquet v. MacCarthy, 2 B. & Ad., 951, the judgment in question was rendered in one of the British colonies, and by the law of the colony if the defendant was absent and could not be personally served, the service was permitted to be made on the King’s Attorney General for the colony. It was so made in that case — the defendant, who was an official lately domiciled in the colony, being then absent. The substituted service was sustained as sufficient. It was made within the jurisdiction of the court, and the case is therefore not analogous to the present, and we have no occasion either to approve or question it. Our laws provide in some cases for a substitute for personal service, where the party is within the jurisdiction or only temporarily absent; and where the substitute is such as with reasonable certainty will bring the proceeding to the knowledge of the respondent, it is perhaps competent to give to give to such service the full effect of that made upon a person. But no such question is now before us.
In Bank of Australasia v. Nias, 16 Q. B., 717, the defendant, who was a stockholder in a joint stock company in New South Wales, was sued in England on a liability as such stockholder which it was claimed was established by a judgment against the chairman of the company in New South Wales, under a statute which permitted the chairman to be sued as representative .of the company. The statute was sustained and the .action was supported. Lord Campbell in his opinion
A case more important to the present discussion is that of Schibsby v. Westenholz, L. R. 6 Q. B., 155. The action in that case was upon a French judgment, obtained without personal service of process, under a statute not differing essentially from the statute of Upper Canada which is supposed to sustain the judgment now in question. The only difference of moment between that case and the present is, that there the contract on which the French court gave judgment was an English contract, while in this case the judgment was given for services performed by the plaintiff in Canada, and possibly it may be claimed that the implied contract to pay for these services was a Canada contract, though the defendant was not in Canada at the time. Whether this difference has any legal significance will be considered further on. Putting this circumstance aside, the two cases are strictly analogous, and it is fortunate that in passing upon the force that should be given to a Canadian judgment undei: the circumstances we are afforded the light of a decision by one of the courts at Westminster on the very point in dispute.
It should be stated here that the statute of Upper Canada was a substantial reproduction in that province of the provisions of the English common law procedure act (1852), which in terms permit judgment to be taken against persons out of the realm on a service of process made abroad. Thé case was therefore one in which it
But for a single remark in this opinion by Mr. Justice Blackburn, it should as it seems to us, be accepted on all sides as covering completely the present case. The remark referred to is in the nature of a suggestion, that if at the time when the obligation was contracted the defendants were within the foreign country, but left it before the suit was instituted, perhaps the laws of the foreign country ought to bind them. The remark was not relevant to any facts then before the court, nor in our opinion does the present case require us to consider how far the suggestion has force. This defendant was not in Canada when the demand accrued, and in no manner has he submitted himself to its laws unless he can be said to have done so in employing the services of the plaintiff in that country. If we might assume — which we cannot under the circumstances — that the supposed contract was a Canada contract, it is not by any means clear to our minds that the fact should affect the decision. If the obligation on the courts of one country to enforce the judgments of another be grounded in comity, it ought to appear that under corresponding circumstances it would be expected in this
Now the service of process is for the purpose of notifying the defendant, and giving him a fair opportunity to defend. But the service of process in Michigan, which requires one to appear and answer to a demand in a foreign country would in general be of no value whatever, because a defense abroad would either be practically
We refer, as supporting these general views, to Bischoff v. Wethered, 9 Wall., 812, and Wood v. Parsons, 27 Mich., 159; also to People v. Dawell, 25 Mich., 267, where the general subject received some attention.
We find no error in the judgment and it must be affirmed with costs.