Angerhoefer v. Bradstreet Co.

22 F. 305, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2522
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 F. 305 (Angerhoefer v. Bradstreet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angerhoefer v. Bradstreet Co., 22 F. 305, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2522 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

SabiN, J.

This is a suit for damages for libel on business reputation, commenced by petition filed by plaintiff, October 13, 1884, in Harris county district court, alleging that the plaintiff “is a resident citizen of Harris county, Texas, and complaining of the Bradstreet Company, a corporation created by an act of the legislature, and existing by and under the laws of the stale of Connecticut, but who has its principal office in the city and state of New York. Plaintiff alleges that the defendant is, and is commonly known and called, a commercial agency, and the business is to furnish true, correct, and reliable information to commercial houses throughout the United States, including the cities and towns in the states of Texas, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Missouri; and in the execution of said business, as aforesaid, defendant has established agencies in the city of Houston, and other cities and towns in said state of Texas. Plaintiff also alleges that one Charles Dexter is the local agent in the city of Houston, Harris county, Texas, of defendant, and is recognized by them as such in the conduct of their said business.” The petition then proceeds to state the cause of action, and concludes by praying “for process to said defendant according to law, and, after a final hearing hereof,for judgment for his said damages as set out,"etc. Citation was issued on the same day, October .L3, 1884, to the sheriff or any constable of Harris county, commanding them to summon the Bradstreet Company, through Charles Dexter local agent, if to be found in said county, to answer said petition, etc., and was returned as follows, viz.: “Deceived this writ at 10 o’clock a. ar., October 13, 1884, and executed the same, October 16, 1884, by delivering to Charles Dexter, local agent of the Bradstreet Company, the within-named defendant, in person, a true copy of this writ.”

The defendant, the Bradstreet Company, filed its answer to said suit, October 31, 1884, interposing in the first instance a protest to the jurisdiction of the court, and invokes its privilege of being sued in the state of its domicile; and, for plea in that behalf, says that at the times, etc., alleged it was and is a foreign corporation, under the laws of the state of Connecticut, and not under the laws of the state of Texas, and a resident of the county of Hartford, in said state of [306]*306Connecticut, and so domiciled, and bad no domicile in the state of Texas, and never has had, and has done business in said last-mentioned state (Texas) through its agent alone, and only so far as interstate comity permitted; and has never surrendered to the state of Texas or otherwise its privilege of being sued in the state of its residence and domicile; and that it has never been an inhabitant of the state of Texas. Wherefore, defendant prays judgment whether this court will take further cognizance of this suit, subject to the rulings upon .which other defenses were also filed. The suit was removed to this court, October 31, 1884, by petition, bond, and order of that date, and it is now submitted to me upon the plea of jurisdiction, and this court is called upon to determine whether the district court of Harris county, Texas, had jurisdiction of this cause. It is clear to my mind that .it had. Article 1181, Eev. St. Tex., provides that “all civil suits in the district and county courts shall be commenced by petition filed in the,office of the clerk of such court.”

This suit was so filed and commenced in the county where plaintiff had his residence, and where defendant also had its local agent, as alleged by plaintiff’s petition, and not denied by the plea to the jurisdiction. As it has been claimed that under the Eevised Statutes of Texas of 1879 a foreign corporation cannot be sued in Texas, it may, perhaps, be well to examine its provisions upon the subject. Article 1198 provides as follows, viz.: “No person who is an inhabitant of this state shall be sued out of the county in which he has his domicile, except in the following cases, to-wit.” Then follow some 23 exceptions, the third of which is as follows, viz.: “When the defendant, or several of the defendants, reside without the state, or when the residence of the defendants is unknown, in which case the- suit may be brought in the county in which the plaintiff resides.” Of course, this exception gives to that article, which purports only to affect inhabitants of the state, an incongruity of expression; but it is plain to be seen that the evident intention of the law was to authorize the venue to be laid, in the case of a non-resident defendant, in the county of the residence of the plaintiff. When article 1198 was first passed as section 1 of an act to regulate proceedings in the district court, in 1846, it was expressed in the same language as is used in the present Eevised Statutes, except that it said, “where he had his domicile,” instead of, “in which he has his domicile.” It was practically the same, so far as the main section was concerned; but it then only had 11 exceptions, and those exceptions were all consonant, as exceptions, with the fact that the defendant was an inhabitant of this state. This section of the act of 1846 was amended in some slight particulars in 1863; but the body of the article was kept the same as the original, and the original 11 exceptions remained, although slightly modified, but in nowise inconsistent with the original provision in behalf of “a person who is an inhabitant of this state.” It did not embrace exception third to article 1198, above quoted, nor did [307]*307it embrace exception 21 to such article in the Ee vised Statutes of Texas, which reads as follows, viz.:

“21. Suits against any private corporation, association, or joint-stock company may be commenced in any county in wiiicti the cause of action or apart thereof arose, or in which such corporation, association, or company has an agency or representative, or in which its principal ofiiee is situated; and suits against a railroad corporation, or against any assignee, trustee, or receiver operating its railway, may also be brought in any county through or into which the railroad oí such corporation extends or is operated. ”

It is evident that while the original 11 exceptions are in the main retained in the provision of law embraced in article 1198, that these various so-called 23 exceptions to article 1198 can and ought more properly to be considered and treated, in many instances, as provisions concerning venue, rat Inn* than as exceptions to the general provision of the article. But, however this may be, it is clearly the law of Texas that a non-resident defendant can be sued in the county where the plaintiff resides, as is provided in exception or provision 3 above quoted. Neither exception 3 nor 21 constituted any portion of the original 11 exceptions to the law expressed in article 1198. In my judgment, however, the venue in this suit was provided for by exception or provision No. 21, as well as it would have been provided for by provision No. 3, in case defendant had no local agent in the state.

It is urged that in 1874 there was passed a law which remained in force down to the passage of the Eevised Statutes of 1879, which law7 is as follows, viz.:

“Section 1. That hereafter any public or private corporation, including railroad companies, created under the laws oft this state, or any other state or county, may be sued in any court in this state having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and in any county where the cause of action or

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 F. 305, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angerhoefer-v-bradstreet-co-uscirct-1884.