60 P. 720 | Ariz. | 1900
On the seventh day of June, 1897, the appellee, Daniel H. Ming, obtained a policy of insurance from the appellant, the National Fire Insurance Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Connecticut, and doing a general fire-insurance business in Arizona, on a certain store-building situate in Fort Thomas, Graham County, Arizona, in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars. On the ninth day of June, 1897, the building insured was totally destroyed by fire. The amount due on said loss not having been paid to Ming, he brought suit in the district court of Graham County against the insurance company to recover upon the policy the amount of the insurance. The company set up as a defense that at the time the policy was issued, and ever since, it was engaged in a general fire-insurance business in Arizona and the several states pn the Pacific Coast; that it had a general agent and office in San Francisco for the management of its Pacific Coast business, and that George D. Dornin was such general agent; that the scope of Dornin’s agency included the entire control, management, and transaction of the business of defendant within said territorial limits ; that the funds for the payment of losses within said territory were kept by him in San Francisco, and disbursed by him, in the conduct and management of defendant’s business, as occasion might require; that the defendant has local agents in the several states and territories to receive applications and
In was essential to the jurisdiction of the California courts that personal service within the state was had on Ming, or that property belonging to him was seized and brought under the control of those courts by attachment or garnishment. Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714, 24 L. Ed. 565. A debt is such
Street, C. J., and Davis, J., concur.