143 Mich. 489 | Mich. | 1906
Plaintiff is a resident of the county of Clinton. Defendant is a mercantile corporation, organized under the laws of this State, whose home office is in. the city of Detroit. This suit was commenced by declaration in the circuit court for the county of Clinton. Service was effected, as shown by the return, by delivering a copy of said declaration, together with a true copy of the-notice to appear and plead, “to Albert D. Chamberlain, who was then and there a traveling salesman and agent of said defendant.” Defendant moved to set aside this, return, upon the ground that it did not comply with the-law. The trial court made an order overruling this motion. We are asked to review and vacate said order; the proceedings having been brought to this court by writ of certiorari.
The first question for our determination is raised by plaintiff’s objection (this objection was made for the first-time in plaintiff’s brief) that defendant had no right to-have this question determined by a writ of certiorari. The validity of this objection depends upon the proper construction of Act No. 310 of the Public Acts of 1905.. That act reads:
“Whenever in any action at law in a circuit court, a motion to quash the writ or declaration upon jurisdictional grounds, or the issues raised on a demurrer, plea to-the jurisdiction or other dilatory plea shall be decided adversely to the party filing such motion, demurrer or plea,, the decision may be reviewed by writ of certiorari forthwith.”
If it be true that defendant’s motion to vacate the return of service is not a motion to quash the declaration, and therefore not reviewable under the foregoing act, it is also true that, had defendant raised the same question (as-it might) by a dilatory plea, the act gave it a right to have an adverse decision reviewed. In other words, plaintiff’s.
Defendant contends that the service made in this case was unauthorized, on the ground that the only provision for service of process on a corporation like defendant, that is, manufacturing and mercantile corporations, organized under Act No. 232 of the Public Acts of 1885, and the acts amendatory thereof, is to be found in section 30 of Act No. 232 of the Public Acts of 1903, and that the only agent upon whom such process can be served is “the agent in charge of any business office of such corporation,” as provided in said section. In Goodrich v. Hackley-Phelps-Bonell Co., 141 Mich. 343, this court decided that, notwithstanding said provision, process might be served in conformity with section 10468 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, “upon the agent of such corporation,” viz., agents who are not, as well as those who are, in charge of the business office of the corporation. Defendant asks us to overrule that decision. It insists that our decision in that case is directly opposed to our decision in Toledo Ice Co. v. Hunger, 124 Mich. 4, and that we must overrule one or the other of these two opposing decisions. The most that can be said of our decision in Toledo Ice Co. v. Hunger is this: That, if this court had there considered and affirmed the proposition decided in the Hackley Case, it would have reached a different conclusion. That proposition was not, however, considered. It was not even presented, and decisions are not binding authorities as precedents, upon propositions which should have been, but which were not, considered. Atwood v. Hayor, etc., of Sault Ste. Marie, 141 Mich. 295; Duff v. Fisher, 15 Cal. 375. The Hackley Case did not therefore overrule
The other arguments of defendant in support of its contention do not raise any question not considered by the court in deciding Goodrich v. Hackley-Phelps-Bonell Co., supra. We decline to overrule our decision in that case.
It is also urged that the agent upon whom the declaration in this case was served, being only a traveling salesman, is not an agent of the character contemplated by the statute. Section 10468, 3 Comp. Laws. In Ryerson v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 114 Mich. 352, this court held that a traveling salesman was “an agent of the corporation,” within the meaning of Act No. 61 of the Public Acts of 1895, an act providing for service of process on foreign corporations. The only distinction between that case and the case at bar is this: That the statute there involved related to a foreign corporation, while the statute involved here relates to a domestic corporation. We think this distinction of no consequence. The Ryerson Case is in point, and is decisive against defendant’s contention now under consideration.
We think that service was properly made, and the order overruling the motion to set aside the return is affirmed.