Boyd, Higgins & Goforth, Inc. v. Mahone

128 S.E. 259, 142 Va. 690, 1925 Va. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 28, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 128 S.E. 259 (Boyd, Higgins & Goforth, Inc. v. Mahone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd, Higgins & Goforth, Inc. v. Mahone, 128 S.E. 259, 142 Va. 690, 1925 Va. LEXIS 374 (Va. 1925).

Opinion

Christian, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 30, 1921, Boyd, Higgins & Goforth, Incorporated, a North Carolina corporation, was under contract with Geo. P. Coleman, State Highway Commissioner, to build about one mile and a half of concrete ■ road in Pittsylvania county; the road to begin at Sandy river bridge in said county and extend in an easterly direction over Sandy creek bridge (which later bridge-was not in the contract and specifications) to the corporate limits of the city of Danville. The work was-praetically completed, but two or three weeks prior to • December 30,1921, the engineer in charge for the Highway Commissioner, in order to prevent the public from using the road, and as the Sandy creek bridge was no longer necessary for the use of the contractor, had the-fiooring of that bridge removed and both ends of the bridge barricaded.

On the date above mentioned, about 9:30 o’clock at night, the plaintiff, with Miss Brown, both guests of' W. R. Harrison, were coming from Martinsville to Dan-ville in his Ford coupe, which he was driving, and when he came to the Sandy river bridge he saw no detour-signs, nor any barricades or danger signals, so proceeded. [693]*693to take the new concrete road to Danville. When the machine got within a few feet of Sandy creek bridge, there being no barricade at that end of the bridge or red light upon either end of the bridge, the driver discovered that the floor of the bridge had been removed, but too late to-stop his car, and, to prevent plunging into the creek, ran his car into the left girder of the bridge in order to save himself and his guests, but the car turned over and fell down the embankment, pinning the plaintiff under the car and seriously injuring her. Under the contract it was the duty of the defendant to establish and maintain barricades, danger warnings, and detour signs on said, road wherever same were required for the safety of the-public. This duty the defendant claimed to have performed, and further that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in riding in the car without protest while being driven at an illegal rate of speed, which was-the proximate cause of her injury.

There was a sharp conflict in the evidence upon every fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff to maintain the issue upon her part, as well as the defendant’s, allegations of contributory negligence. After the jury had been instructed by the court and the case argued by counsel it retired to its room and after some time returned into court with a verdict for the plaintiff and assessed her damages at $2,000.00. Thereupon the defendant, by counsel, moved the court to set aside said verdict on the following grounds: “That it was contrary to the law and the evidence; was without evidence to support it; because of errors committed by the court upon the trial on admitting certain evidence for the plaintiff and in refusing to admit certain evidence for the defendant; and for errors in giving and refusing instructions.” The court overruled this motion for a new trial and entered up judgment upon the verdict for the-plaintiff.

[694]*694Thereupon the ease was brought before this court by writ of error for errors assigned in its petition, which will be considered in sequence so far as necessary to a .just determination of the law and merits of the ease.

Boyd, Higgins & Goforth, Incorporated, is a North Carolina corporation, and the plaintiff proceeded against it in the Circuit Court of Pittsylvania county by attachment, and made Geo. P. Coleman, State Highway Commissioner, a party defendant, to attach the reserved percentage provided by the contract to be retained until the work was completed according to specifications. 'Coleman filed his answer in which he stated that there was a retained percentage amounting to about $5,000.00 in possession of the Treasurer of Virginia, payable ninety days after the contractor had fulfilled his contract and the work had been accepted. Thereupon the •attachment was amended and the State Treasurer made a party thereto. Upon the maturity of the amended attachment, on motion of the plaintiff and without objection from the defendant, the venue of the proceeding was changed and the ease removed to the Circuit Court -of the city of Richmond as provided by statute.

Upon the calling of this ease for trial (it having been -continued twice previously at the request of the defendant company and with consent of the plaintiff), the •.defendant moved the court to quash the petition and •attachment on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter and that the petition -did not state a case upon which there could be a re-covery. The motion was overruled by the court, to which action of the court the defendant excepted. Hence •the first inquiry is into the court’s jurisdiction or power to determine the rights of the parties.

This was a proceeding in rem against a nonresident -corporation by attachment of a debt due it by the State, [695]*695and if the fund due is not subject to attachment 'the-court’s jurisdiction must fail.

The defendant contends that its reserved fund in the hands of the State Treasurer is a public fund, hence-not subject to attachment, and cites Rollo v. Andes Ins. Co., 25 Gratt. (64 Va.), 509, 14 Am. Rep. 147, as authority to sustain its position. In that case a nonresident creditor of the foreign insurance company undertook to subject by garnishment the bonds deposited by the company with the State Treasurer under the statute for the-protection of the policyholders of this State, and when the claims of the resident policyholders were satisfied then to return the bonds or the balance of the proceeds thereof to the company. The court held the bonds were an express trust created by statute for the benefit of resident policyholders in the possession of the Treasurer and that a State officer could not be sued in regard to the bonds without consent of the sovereign, and permission had not been given to nonresidents to sue the-Treasurer in reference thereto, therefore the garnishment was properly dismissed. This same rule of law was reaffirmed in the case of Buck v. Guarantors’ Co., 97 Va. page 720, 34 S. E. 950. But in the case of the Universal Life Insurance Co. v. Cogbill, 30 Gratt. (71 Va.), 77, which was a suit in chancery to subject the bonds of an insolvent insurance company similarly held under the statute to the repayment of premiums paid on policies by residents of Virginia. The court held that the-Treasurer was a proper party to the suit, and by virtue-of section 7, chapter 44, Code 1873, which is similar to subsection 6, section 6049, Code 1919, that the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond had exclusive jurisdiction for the trial of all cases where by the statute State-officers and boards mentioned therein may be sued.

It is the duty and public policy of the State, as ex[696]*696pressed in the decisions of the Supreme Court and the statute law, to provide appropriate remedies by which home creditors or residents having claims against a nonresident may subject the assets or effects of the nonresidents to the payment of their debts or claims, when held by municipalities, State officers or State boards, when such proceedings do not interfere with the functions of government. Portsmouth Gas Co. v. Sanford, 97 Va. 128, 33 S. E. 516, 45 L. R. A. 246, 75 Am. St. Rep. 778, and Hicks, Trustee v. Roanoke Brick Co., 94 Va. 741, 27 S. E. 596.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.E. 259, 142 Va. 690, 1925 Va. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-higgins-goforth-inc-v-mahone-va-1925.