98 F. 190 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana | 1899
On the 8th day of July, 1899, the plaintiff filed her complaint in the circuit court of Jennings county, Ind., in two paragraphs, for the purpose of recovering damages for a personal injury alleged to have been received through the carelessness and negligence of the receivers, their servants, agents, and employés, while the plaintiff was riding as a passenger in one of the cars of the defendant receivers. On the same day a summons was duly issued by the clerk of the Jennings circuit court to the sheriff of that county, commanding the defendants, receivers of said railway company, to appear before the circuit court of Jennings county on the 3d day of October, 1899, that being the next ensuing term of that court. The return of the sheriff to the summons is as follows:
“Came to hand July 8, 1899, and is now returned served as commanded by reading to H. J. Berkshire, the general agent of the above-named Judson Harmon and Joseph Robinson, receivers of said Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railway Company, at its station at North Vernon, Indiana (said receivers were not found in my bailiwick), and by delivering to said Berkshire a true copy of this summons, this July 8, 1899. Charles Tripp, Sheriff.”
The defendants, on the 16th day of August, 1899, filed their petition and bond for the removal of said cause into the circuit court of the United States for the district of Indiana, and said cause was removed, and a transcript of the record was filed in this court, on September 14,1899. On the 7th day of November, 1899, the defendants filed their motion in writing in this court to set aside the sheriff’s return of service of the summons herein, and to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction over the defendants, because this court has not acquired jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants, or either
The statute of this state provides (2 Burns’ Rev. St. 1894, § 5334) that: '
“Every railroad corporation owning any railroad or the franchises thereof, created under any law of this slate, and having no office, director, or fixed place of business in this state, and the vendee, lessee, or other person owning, running, controlling or operating any railroad into or through this state, shall appoint and keep an agent in each and every county in this state into or through which such railroad may run, on whom process may be served in any action brought in the proper comity against any of the parties therein named, and service on him shall be held to be a legal service on the defendant the same as if service had been made on the president and directors thereof.”
The next section provides that:
“Each and every party mentioned in the preceding section shall file a written instrument in the clerk’s office of each and every county in this state into or through which such railroad may run, under the seal of such corporation, vendee, lessee, or other party owning, running, controlling or operating any railroad into or through this state, signed by the president and secretary, if any, authorizing the service of such process, and consenting that the service thereof upon such agent shall be held to he valid in law, and waiving the benefit of error on appeal, by reason of service having been made on such agent.”
This statute made it the duty of the receivers to appoint an agent in each county of this state through which the railroad operated by them ran, upon whom service of process might be bad in any casé properly brought therein. These statutory provisions imposed upon the receivers the obligation and duty to file the written instrument required by the statute. The law deduces the agreement on the part of the receivers to answer in the courts of the state on service made upon their agents from the fact oí their operating and controlling a railroad running into or through the state, and the presumption from that fact of assent to such service is conclusive. No averment or evidence to the effect that they had not intended to come under the law of the state is admissible to defeat the jurisdiction. The reason of this rule is that the obligation to file the stipulation is imposed upon them for the protection of the citizens of this state dealing with the receivers; and when, by their own act, their obligation to file the
The return of the sheriff affirmatively shows that the receivers-did have a general agent in the county of Jennings empowered to represent them in the conduct of the business of tire receivership- in that county, and, as it was the duty of the receivers to file an instrument in the clerk’s office of that county authorizing service upon such agent, the legal presumption is that they had performed their duty, and had conferred such authority upon the agent. But whether they had executed such an instrument conferring such authority is immaterial, for they will not be heard to aver their own failure to perform a legal duty imposed upon them, in order to defeat the jurisdiction of the courts of the state. Ehrman v. Insurance Co. (D. C.) 1 Fed. 471; Berry v. Indemnity Co. (C. C.) 46 Fed. 439; Diamond Plate-Glass Co. v. Minneapolis Mut. Fire Ins. Co. (C. C.) 55 Fed. 27. The motion to dismiss is overruled.