146 Minn. 224 | Minn. | 1920
Plaintiff is a corporation of the province of Manitoba in the Dominion of Canada, and defendant is a citizen and resident of the city of St. Paul in this state. Plaintiff was appointed liquidator of the Colonial Assurance Company, an insolvent Manitoba corporation, by the Court of King’s Bench of the Province of Manitoba in proceedings for winding-
Defendant was never a citizen or resident of Manitoba, and was never served with a summons or other process in the action within Manitoba, and never voluntarily appeared in the action, although plaintiff claims that certain matters-to be mentioned later operated as an appearance therein.
Where an action is brought on a judgment in personam rendered by a foreign court of general jurisdiction, it is the general rule that the foreign court will be presumed to have 'had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action and of the parties thereto, and that the judgment will be given full force and effect as binding and conclusive on such parties, but there are several exceptions to this rule. Of course if the record discloses lack of jurisdiction over the defendant, the judgment is a nullity.
If the defendant was beyond the territorial jurisdiction of the court, and did not voluntarily appear in the action, there is no- presumption of jurisdiction over his person, and the burden of establishing such jurisdiction is east on the party invoking the benefit of the judgment. Galpin v. Page, 85 U. S. 350, 21 L. ed. 959; Rand v. Hanson, 154 Mass. 87, 28 N. E. 6, 12 L. R. A. 574, 26 Am. St. 210; Downer v. Shaw, 22 N. H. 277; Shepard v. Wright, 113 N. Y. 582, 21 N. E. 724.
If thq authority to render the judgment is given by statute, and the
Effect is given to foreign judgments as a matter of comity and reciprocity, and it has become the rule to give no other or greater effect to the judgment of a foreign court than the country or state whose court rendered it gives to a like judgment of our courts. Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U. S. 113, 227, 16 Sup. Ct. 139, 40 L. ed. 95. And we may note in passing that in Manitoba a foreign judgment does not conclude the defendant even as to the merits. International Corporation v. Great North West Cent. Ky. Co. 9 Man. 147; British Linen Co. v. McEwan, 6 Man. 292; British Linen Co. v. McEwan, 8 Man. 99.
As defendant is a resident and citizen of this state, and was not served with process in Manitoba, and the proceedings in question rest wholly on a Manitoba statute and are not according to the course of the common law, the judgment in personam against him is a nullity and of no effect in this state, unless plaintiff has established affirmatively that the Manitoba court acquired jurisdiction over his person, and has also established that the statute authorized the proceedings taken, and that all the essential requirements of the statute were complied with.
Plaintiff contends that defendant appeared in the winding-up proceedings and thereby submitted himself'to the jurisdiction of the Manitoba court. It appears that an appeal on hehalf of the company was taken from the order directing that it be wound up; that the authority of those who assumed to act for the company in taking the appeal was challenged; that the appellate court directed that a meeting of the shareholders be held, "to ascertain if the present appeal was authorized on behalf of the company and if the company desires further prosecution of
The Canadian Winding-Up Act provides that the court,
“If satisfied that * * * the interests of creditors, claimants or .shareholders can be classified, may, after notice by advertisement or otherwise, nominate and appoint a solicitor and counsel to represent each or any class for the purpose of the proceedings, and all the persons composing any such class shall be bound by the acts of the solicitor and counsel so appointed.”
The court made an order that in the wind-up of the company, “W. C. Hamilton of the city of Winnipeg as solicitor and counsel do represent the shareholders thereof,” and plaintiff contends that, by virtue, of this order and the appearance thereunder óf Mr. Hamilton as counsel for the shareholders, the court acquired jurisdiction to render a personal judgment against defendant as a “contributory.” The Canadian Winding-Up Act defines a contributory to be “a person liable to contribute to the assets of a company under this act.”
Conceding that the court could appoint counsel to appear for and represent the shareholders in respect to their rights in the property in the custody of the court, and. to make a personal appearance for those shareholders over whose persons it had acquired jurisdiction, it was beyond the power of the court to give to any one authority to make a personal appearance for a shareholder over whose person it had no jurisdiction.
Plaintiff’s principal contention is that the fact that defendant was a shareholder in the company gave the court power to render a judgment in personam against him for the amount assessed against him as a contributory in the proceedings for winding up the company.
The existence of a foreign law is a fact to be proven the same as any other fact, and we can take notice of none of the laws of Manitoba not proven in this case. The only foreign law put in evidence is chapter 144 of the Eevised Statutes of Canada, known as the “Winding-Up Act,” which apparently applies in the Province of Manitoba. It appears from the record of.the-proceedings in the Manitoba court that those proceedings rest wholly on a Manitoba or Canadian statute and are not according to the course of the common law. Consequently all the facts essential to give that court jurisdiction to render a judgment in personam against defendant must be established affirmatively before the judgment can be given effect here.
Conceding, without deciding, that plaintiff is correct in its contention that the sovereignty which creates a corporation may make the act of becoming a shareholder therein operate as a consent that its courts, by service on the corporation or on some designated public official, may acquire jurisdietion'to render a judgment in personam against such shareholder, plaintiff has wholly failed to provethe existence of any such law in the Province of Manitoba. The Winding-Up Act, the only law put in evidence, contains.no such provision, nor any provision which can be given the effect of authorizing a judgment in personam against a nonresident who did not appear in the action and upon whom no process was served within the jurisdiction of the court. Wilson v. Seligman, 144 U. S. 41, 12 Sup. Ct. 541, 36 L. ed. 338; Shepard v. Wright, 113 N. Y. 582, 21 N. E. 724; Anderson v. Haddon, 33 Hun, 435. Furthermore there is nothing in the record to show that that act was in effect when defendant acquired his stock, as neither the time when the act took effect, nor the time when defendant acquired his stock, is disclosed. Moreover the Winding-Up Act provides that,
“The proceedings under a winding-up order shall be carried on as*230 nearly as may be in the same manner as an ordinary suit, action or proceeding within the jurisdiction of the court,” [section 108], but the manner in which proceedings are carried on in an ordinary action is not shown. The only presumption in which we can indulge is that the proceedings in an ordinary action are according to the course of the common law, and such a presumption will not aid plaintiff in the present case. From the record before us, it appears that the Manitoba court was without jurisdiction to render a judgment in personam against defendant and the judgment appealed from is reversed.