10 F. 696 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia | 1882
This case is before mo now on the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication. Avoiding technicalities, the plaintiff’s contention is that the defendant was properly sued and brought into court in Louisiana by service of process upon such an agent of the defendant, John W. Taber, as could be served with the process under the laws of that state; that, besides, the defendant appeared to the suit there, pleaded defective service of process, claimed that it was not in court, and was overruled on that issue thus raised by itself, by a court of general and competent jurisdiction, and is therefore estopped from pleading the same matters here.
The contention of the defendant, technically alleged by its plea and sot out argumentatively in the very able and learned brief of counsel, is that the citation served on Taber was insufficient to bring it into court; that its appearance there was only for the purpose of suggesting to the court its want of jurisdiction because of the matters alleged in its “exception” filed there; that it is not bound by the judgment of the court on that or any other question; and that the judgment is a nullity, and would be treated as sucb in Louisiana, and should be so treated here.
The first question presented to me, though it is not the pivotal one in this case, is whether the “exception,” the “peremptory exception,” used in the practice of Louisiana, is to be treated in common-law courts as a plea by which the defendant sets out matters of law and fact in defence of the action, and submits himself to the judgment of the court upon them, or is a mere suggestion or protest of record by which the defendant commits himself to nothing at all; as to which it matters not at all to him whether the court considers and passes upon it or not, and which, when entered of record, is a matter of futile surplusage.
I consider that such was the matter of law formally submitted for decision on the twelfth of April, 1879, by defendant’s counsel in the exception set out in the record; and though the court, in its judgment rendered on that day, probably after argument on the exception, does not expressly declare that the exception was formally overruled, yet that it was overruled is a necessarylmplication from the tenor of the judgment.
The court of Louisiana having decided that the defendant was before it by force of the service of citation on its 'agent, Taber, and not merely by its appearance “alone to file” the exception, it may not be competent for me to pass upon the propriety of that decision; but I feel bound by the earnestness.of defendant’s contention to look behind the judgment of the court a quo, into the validity of the process by which the defendant was held to have been brought into court.
That a corporation doing business in a state other than that from which its charter is derived, and in which its principal office is held and its chief business is conducted, — doing business there and everywhere else, as corporations must of neeesity do, through the agency of natural persons, — may be sued and brought into court in that state by the service of process on its agent there, independently of any statute law or warrant of attorney expressly authorizing such service, has been very authoritatively decided.
The case of Moulin v. Ins. Co. 1 Dutcher, 57, was similar to the one at bar in its essential features, except that there, there was no
“ If a corporation may sue within a foreign jurisdiction it should seem consistent with sound principle that it should also be liable to be sued within such jurisdiction. The difficulty is this: that process against a corporation at common law must be served upon its principal oilicer within the jurisdiction of that sovereignty by which it was created. The rule is founded upon the principle that the artificial, invisible, and intangible corporate body is exclusively the creature of the law; that it has no existence except by operation of law; and that, consequently, it has no existence without the limits of that sovereignity, and beyond the operation of those laws by which it was created and by whose power it exists. The rule rests upon a highly artificial reason, and, however technically just, is confined at this day, in its application, within exceedingly narrow limits. A corporation may own property, may transact business, may contract debts; it may bring suits, it may use its common seal, nay, it may be sued within a foreign jurisdiction, provided a voluntary appearance is entered to the action. It 1ms, then, existence, vitality, efficiency, beyond the jurisdiction of the sovereignty which created it, provided it be voluntarily exorcised. If it be said that all these acts are performed by its agents, as they may be in the case of a private individual, and that the corporation itself is not present, the answer is that a corporation acts nowhere except by its officers and agents. It has no tangible existence except through its officers. For ail practical purposes its existence is as real, as vital, and efficient elsewhere as within the jurisdiction that created it. It may perform every act without the jurisdiction of the sovereignty which created it, that it may within it. Its existence anywhere and everywhere is but ideal. It has no actual personal identity and existence as a natural person has; no body which may exist in one place and be served with process, while its agents and officers are in another. Process can only be served upon the officers of a corporation within its own jurisdiction, not upon the corporation itself.
“Process cannot be served upon the officer of a corporation in a foreign jurisdiction, because he does not carry his official character and functions with him; and yet the officers and agents of corporations carry their official character and functions with them into foreign jurisdictions for the purpose of making contracts and transacting the business of the corporation. The seal*702 of a corporation, its distinguishing badge, at common law the only evidence of its contracts, may be taken by its officers and used within a foreign jurisdiction.
“Doubts were formerly entertained -whether a corporation could make a contract or maintain an action out of its own jurisdiction. These questions have been long since settled, either by judicial construction or legislative enactment, in accordance with the reason of the thing and usage of the commercial world. Sound principle requires that while the powers of corporations are world-wide, while for all practical purposes they may exist and act everywhere, the technical' rule of the common law, that they exist only within the jurisdiction of the sovereignty which created them, should be applied only within its strictest limits, and not be suffered to defeat the obvious claims of justice. * * *
“ The question now before the court is not upon the validity of the common-law principle; to that we adhere. * * * The utmost that can be said is that [the service in the suit in Hew York] was a deviation from the technical rule of the common law. The defendants were not condemned unheard, and without an opportunity of making defence. The process was served precisely upon the officer, and in the mode that it would have been had the process been served in this state. The corporation, it is true, were drawn into the forum of a foreign sovereignty to litigate, but, having voluntarily entered that jurisdiction and transacted business there; having invoked the comity and the protection of the laws of that sovereignty for their benefit, — can they complain that the contracts there made are enforced within that sovereignty and in accordance with its laws ? Does it involve the violation of any principle of natural justice, or that protection which is due to the citizens of our own state? If the corporation■ were carrying on its business within the state of Hew York at the time of the service of the process, this court has already intimated its opinion that the service would be valid. In 4 Zab. 234, Justice Elmer said: ‘ I think, under such circumstances, natural justice requires that corporations should be subject to the laws of the state whose comity they thus invoke. For the purpose of being sued, they ought to be regarded as voluntarily placing themselves in the situation of citizens of that state. And such, it seems, would be the rule, independently of any express statute authorizing the mode of serving process. Angelí So Ames, Corp. § 402. The fact that the corporation had ceased to transact business, whatever technical difficulty it may seem to create, cannot alter the reason and justice of the proceeding.’ ”
The learned judge distinguishes, of course, between corporations and natural persons, and applies his reasoning only to the former. He treats the existence of the New York statute, authorizing the service of process on the officer of a non-resident corporation casually in that state, as not affecting the decision of the court of New Jersey in the case. See Bushel v. Com. Ins. Co. 15 Serg. & R. 176, and Angell & Ames, § 402.
The doctrine thus ably laid down by Chief Justice Green has been sanctioned by the congress of the United States, as to the District of
And in Railroad Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. 65, Mr. Justice Swayne, speaking for the United States supreme court, said: A corporation “cannot migrate, but may exercise its authority in a foreign territory upon such conditions as may be prescribed by the law of the place. One of these conditions maybe that it shall consent to be sued there. If it do business there, it will be presumed to have consented, and will be boiond accordingly.” This language was cited with approbation and adopted as a correct exposition of the law by the same court in Ry. Co. v. Whitten, 13 Wall. 270, and in Ex parte Schollenberg, 96 U. S. 376.
The case of Michael v. Ins. Co. of Nashville, 10 La. Ann. 737, which was decided in 1855, (before the statute of 1877,) sustains the decision in Moulin v. Ins. Co., rendered in the same year. In it the supreme court of Louisiana not only held that a non-resident corporation could be sued through its resident agent, but that this right could not be destroyed by a revocation of the powers of an agent previously to a suit. The policy sued upon in that case covered the year 1852. The property insured was burned in August of that year. Suit was brought on the fourteenth of October following, and citation served on W. A. Johnson, the agent through whom the policy was taken, in November, 1852. By its exception, the defendant pleaded that the “agency of said insurance company in New Orleans had been some time since withdrawn.” In support of the exception a telegraphic dispatch was proved, dated at Nashville on the twenty-ninth of September, 1852, and received the same day, declaring that the company had withdrawn its agency from New Orleans, and directing that risks should be declined after the first of October ensuing. The court held that the service of process was valid and effective.
The case of Wright v. Liverpool, L. & G. Ins. Co. 30 La. Ann. 1186, is an authority only apparently contrary to this principle. It arose before the statute of 1877. It decided that a foreign corporation, represented by a general agent and local board of directors residing in New Orleans, could not be brought into court by a citation served on a local agent domiciled in one of the county towns of Louisiana, who was only authorized to receive applications for insurance and give binding receipts for the same, and who had not exorcised or rep
On the general principles so ably enforced by Chief Justice Green, I would not feel justified in treating as a nullity the judgment of the court of Louisiana virtually establishing the validity of the service of process on the business agent of a non-resident insurance company, issued to commence a suit founded on a transaction with that agent, even if there were no statute in Louisiana authorizing such service. But the statute of that state, passed in 1877, comes in aid of the general principle, and seems to have expressly rendered such an agent as Taber was, amenable to the process which was served on him. Though the last clause of the first section of that act seems to imply that some one agent of every non-resident insurance company shall be the person empowered to-be served with and to accept service of process for the whole state, yet the act speaks nowhere of a “general” agent, as the defendant’s plea does; and the first clause of section 1 and the whole tenor of section 4 unite in providing that every agent who does business for a non-resident insurance company in the state, either in taking risks, or receiving premiums, or transacting any business, shall first have been appointed and empowered respecting process, as provided in the first section. If so, then Taber must be presumed to have been so empowered, and the defendant would not be heard to deny that it has, in respect to him, complied with the requirements of the statute. For a corporation to seek to avoid its own contract by reason of a misnomer is reprehended by Lord Coke as a pernicious novelty, which “till this generation of late times was never read of in any of our books.” Sir Moyle Finch’s Case, 6 Rep. 65a. Surely a corporation’s neglect to produce a certificate necessary to vindicate itself and its agent from crime, should not be allowed to exempt it from liability for that agent’s acts.
There is abundant authority to show that a suit may be maintained upon a foreign judgment recovered in a country of which the defendant, even though a natural person, was a citizen or resident, according to the laws of that country, though process was never in fact served upon him at all; and that such a judgment will not be deemed void as repugnant to natural justice.
In Bank of Australia v. Nias, 16 Ad. & Ell. 717, it appeared that the statute of a British colony authorized suits against members of a corporation individually for liabilities of the corporation collectively, in a manner unknown to the laws of England, and seemingly repugnant to natural justice. But in an action in England, brought on a foreign judgment against one corporator, founded on such a liability, it was held that a plea setting out such a.fact is insufficient.
In Becquet v. McCarthy’s Ex’r, 2 Barn. & Ad. 951, it appeared that the statute law of a British colony authorized that in suits against absent parties to contracts made in the colony, process might be served on the attorney general of the colony. In a suit in England upon a colonial judgment obtained after such service of process, it was held that such a law did not render void the judgment.
In Godard v. Gray, L. R. 6 Q. B. 139, decided in 1870, where the contract sued upon abroad was made in England, and the foreign judgment obtained upon it was rendered on a misconstruction of the contract; yet, in a suit in England upon this judgment, the court held that the facts could not be gone into. See, also, Schibsby v. Westenholz, L. R. 6 Q. B. 155.
The defendants in these several cases were held to be estopped by the judgments of courts of competent jurisdiction abroad.
The whole subject of foreign judgments in personam, in their relation to the question of estoppel, has been so fully discussed in Bige-low on Estoppel that I need not do more than refer to the many cases cited below and in that work. The author concludes his review of the subject by the remark that although parties to a foreign judgment are not ordinarily estopped to deny the jurisdiction of a foreign court, yet if, in any case, there had been an issue made in the foreign suit between the parties, on this particular point, (as was done in Louisiana between the parties to this suit,) and this issue was decided in favor
I admit that the law on the power of a court to inquire into the jurisdiction of a foreign court over parties defendant is very unsettled. This question and those of res judicata and estoppel have been considered or passed upon, severally or together, in 1 Kent, Comm. 261, 262, and notes; Story, Confl. Laws, § 608, references and note; 1 Kob. Pr. 219; 6 Kob. Pr. 437; 7 Kob. Pr. 109; 1 Smith, Lead. Cas. 1118-1146; 2 Smith, Lead Cas. 828; Judge Moncure’s opinion in Bowler v. Huston, 30 Gratt. 266; note to Shuman v. Stillman (from 6 Wend. 447) in 15 Am. Dec. 378; note to Pixley v. Winchell (7 Cow. 366) in 17 Am. Dec. 525; note to Messier v. Goddard (7 Yeates, 533) in 1 Am. Dec. 325; Benton v. Burgot, 10 Serg. & R. at 241; Rocco v. Hackett, 2 Bosw. 579; Imrie v. Castrique, 8 Com. B. (N. S.) 405; S. C. in error, L. R. 4 H. of. L. 414.
The act of congress of May 26, 1790, c.ll, (1 St. at Large, p.122,) provides that the records and proceedings of the courts, of the several states, properly authenticated, shall have such faith and credit given to them in every court within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the state from whence the said records are taken. It was passed in pursuance of section 1 of article 4 of the constitution of the United States. It not only provides that such records shall be received as evidence, but, if in the state where judgment was rendered, it was evidence of the highest nature, namely, record evidence. This act of congress in declaring it to be the highest evidence, declared the effect which the judgment was to have in all the courts of the United States. The principal federal authorities on this subject are Mills v. Duryea, 7 Cranch, 383-4; Hampton v. McConnell, 8 Wheat. 234; Knowles v. Gas-light & Coke Co. 19 Wall. 58; Thompson v. Whitman, 18 Wall. 457; Hill v. Mendenhall, 21 Wall. 453; Lafayette Ins. Co. v. French, 18 How. 404; Williamson v. Berry, 8 How. 496, 540; Glass v. Sloop Betsey, 3 Dal. 7; Rose v. Himely, 4 Cranch, 241; Elliott v. Piersol, 1 Pet. 328; Schriver’s Lessee v. Lynn, 2 How. 59; D’Arcy v. Ketchum, 11 How. 165; Webster v. Reid, 11 How. 437; Nations v. Johnson, 24 How. 195; Christmas v. Russell, 5 Wall. 291, 305; Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714. And on the subject of service of process on a corporation chartered in another sovereignty, see Railroad Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. 65; Railroad Co. v. Whitton, 13 Wall. 270; and Ex parte Schollenberger, 96 U. S. 369.
Now, it is not denied that the court whose judgment I am considering was one of general jurisdiction, and, as such, competent to pass upon Lie validity of process issued by its clerk to bring a defendant before it; and there is very high authority, both in Louisiana and Virginia, holding that when such a court passes upon a question within its competency, in a litigation between two parties, those parties are concluded in every other court but an appellate one on that question.
In the case of Verneuil v. Harper, 28 La. Ann. 893, there had been a proceeding by Feitel against Verneuil to revive a judgment obtained nine years before, to which an exception had been filed by Verneuil, denying his identity with the original defendant. After a hearing upon the proofs taken upon this issue, there had been judgment overruling the exception and reviving the original judgment. Upon this second judgment execution was issued and property about to be sold in satisfaction by Harper; the sheriff. Whereupon Ver-neuil filed a petition for an injunction, and got a rule to. show cause why it should not be granted, to stay the sheriff’s sale. The petition denied the identity of petitioner with the defendant in the original judgment; that is to say, set up the same defence in the last proceeding which had been made in the second. Feitel filed an exception in the nature of a plea of res judicata, which the court a quo sustained. The cause went up to the supreme court of Louisiana, which, in the opinion delivered, among other things, said:
*708 ' “The question [of identity] was litigated at the instance of Yerneuil himself; it was solemnly determined against his pretensions; and he took no appeal. * * * We are bound to assume that the decision was right. The presumption in such cases is in favor of the probity of witnesses and the intelligence of the judge. Res judicata pro veritate aceipitur.”
In the case of Cox v. Thomas’ Adm’x, 9 Graft. 323, Thomas had been, a sheriff, and there was a motion in the circuit court of his county, by his administratrix, to recover from Cox, his deputy, and the sureties of Cox, the amount of a judgment which had been recovered against the administratrix for money which had been collected by the deputy on an execution issued out of the county court of that county. It appeared from the face of the judgment that the execution upon which the deputy had collected the money had issued from the county court on a judgment of the circuit court, although section 48, 1 Rev. Code of 1819, p. 542, required the creditor to move in the court whence the execution issued, and the record did not show jurisdiction in the circuit court by removal from the county court. The court of appeals held that removal must be presumed from the fact that the circuit court had given judgment. Judge Allen, in rendering the decision of the court of appeals of Virginia, said:
“ If the jurisdiction of the circuit court extended over that class of cases, it was the province of the court to determine for itself whether the particular case was one within its jurisdiction. The circuit court is one of general jurisdiction. * * * The jurisdiction of the court to take cognizance of all controversies between individuals in proceedings at law need not (as in cases of limited and restricted jurisdiction) appear on the face of the proceedings. Where its jurisdiction is questioned, it must decide the question itself. Nor is it bound to set forth on the record the facts upon which its jurisdiction depends. Wherever the subject-matter is a controversy at law between individuals, the jurisdiction is presumed from the fact that it has pronounced"the judgment; and the correctness of such judgment can be inquired into only by some appellate tribunal.”
And then the learned judge, after showing that the circuit court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter involved, went on to say as to the parties:
“The judgment in this ease must be considered as conclusive for another reason. Both parties appeared, and the defendant either submitted to the jurisdiction or it was decided against him. In such ease, as President Tucker, in Fisher v. Bassett 9 Leigh, 119, observed, the question whether the general jurisdiction of the court over matters of that description embraced the particular ease, having been decided by its judgment, can never be raised again except by proceedings in error.”
The courts of one state will not allow parties to show that a court of another state has made an erroneous decision upon issues between the same parties raised before and decided by it. Nurie v. Castrique, 8 Com. Bench, (N. S.) 405; and S. C. in error, L. R. 4 H. of L. 414. See, also, Drury's Case, 8 Coke, 141b; and Tarlton v. Fisher, Doug. 671.
These decisions are but examples, among many, to show that where a question, even a question of jurisdiction, has been once litigated between two parties by a court of general'jurisdiction, it is to be treated as res judicata between the same parties in every other but an appellate forum; and that where, in a litigation between parties in such a court, the question of jurisdiction over parties must have been considered, another court will presume that the court a quo did consider it, and treat that question as res judicata.
No sound reason can bo given why the principle should not apply in a domestic court against parties to a litigation in another sovereignty, before a court of general jurisdiction there. And, although the authorities show that the home court may look into the jurisdiction of the foreign court, both as to parties and subject-matter, yet they also show that the parties to the other litigation are bound by the principle of res judicata when they come into the domestic court.
While, therefore, this court is not precluded from looking behind the judgment of the court of Louisiana, and judging for itself of the validity of the process by which the defendant is claimed to have been brought into that court, yet that power of the court, which is established by the weight of the authorities, should not be confounded with the very distinct question, whether the •parties to a litigation in a foreign court of general jurisdiction are not bound by its decree, on an issue raised between themselves, whether that issue be on the validity of process there, or on the merits.
Though the principle laid down by Judge Allen does not apply to the prejudice of the power of this court to look behind the Louisiana judgment, it does apply to the plea of the defendant. If the defendant had not appeared by counsel as it did, the simple question here would have been upon the validity of the process that was served there, and of the judgment by default that was rendered there. But, having ap
On the whole case, in conclusion, I concur in the view taken of it by plaintiff’s counsel in Louisiana, expressed in the language quoted in the brief of plaintiff’s counsel here :
“It appears to me that the appearance, called an exception, put at issue the agency of Taber. The plaintiff had broadly averred in her petition that Taber was the agent of the defendant; that her contract was made with Taber as the agent of the defendant; that she paid the premiums to him as agent of the defendant; and that the defendant had ratified and confirmed the contract made by Taber, by accepting and using the premiums paid. These facts alleged by the plaintiff were the material substance of her case; and the paper called an exception was nothing more than an answer and denial of these material facts alleged by the plaintiff. That issue was tried, and proof made, that Taber did make the contract, and no one else did, and the premiums did go to the defendant. It is true that no certificate was shown from the secretary of state, under the statute of 1877; but the defendant is always presumed to have complied with the law, and cannot be heard to say that he violated our laws by taking risks- or transacting business so positively forbidden by law, in order to reap a reward or to avoid an obligation based, upon his own wrong and turpitude.”
The defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication must be overruled.