Dorr-Oliver, Inc. v. Willett Associates

219 A.2d 718, 153 Conn. 588, 1966 Conn. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 3, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 219 A.2d 718 (Dorr-Oliver, Inc. v. Willett Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorr-Oliver, Inc. v. Willett Associates, 219 A.2d 718, 153 Conn. 588, 1966 Conn. LEXIS 565 (Colo. 1966).

Opinion

King, C. J.

The named defendant, hereinafter referred to as Willett, is a New Jersey corporation having its principal place of business in Maplewood, New Jersey. The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation duly qualified to do business in Connecticut and having an office in Stamford. The garnishee, Continental Casualty Company, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Continental, is an Illinois insurance company authorized to do business in Connecticut, and it owns an office building and personal property in Connecticut. It has appointed the insurance commissioner of Connecticut its attorney for the service of process upon it. General Statutes § 38-23; see Restatement, Conflict of Laws § 91.

In the first count the plaintiff seeks to recover *590 on a promissory note made by Willett and payable to tbe plaintiff’s order. In tbe second count tbe individual defendants, Sam Levinstein and Melvin L. Tobias, both of whom are residents of New Jersey, are alleged to have guaranteed the payment of the Willett note, and recovery is sought from them as such guarantors. Since all the defendants were nonresidents, and none appeared or was personally served with process within Connecticut, this state’s jurisdiction over the defendants was quasi in rem, and judgment could be satisfied only to the extent that property belonging to the defendants was brought within the jurisdiction of the court. Gimbel v. Gimbel, 147 Conn. 561, 565, 163 A.2d 451; Parker, Peebles & Knox v. El Saieh, 107 Conn. 545, 554, 141 A. 884; Veeder Mfg. Co. v. Marshall-Sanders Co., 79 Conn. 15, 17, 63 A. 641; Stephenson, Conn. Civ. Proc. §§ 24 (a), 28 (d).

As incident to the original process, the plaintiff garnisheed Continental, as being the “agent, trustee and debtor of said defendants” and having “concealed in its hands the goods, effects, estate and moneys of said defendants” and as being “indebted to them.” It was conceded that valid personal service of process had been made on Continental, as garnishee, in Connecticut. Thus there was definitely in personam jurisdiction over the garnishee. In the court below no distinction was drawn, or differentiation made, among the three defendants, and they were treated as a unit. In oral argument in this court, counsel requested and agreed that the same course be pursued here. This we have done. See cases such as McAdam v. Sheldon, 153 Conn. 278, 279, 216 A.2d 193.

Continental, in its plea in abatement, which was actually, in essence, a plea to the jurisdiction under *591 Practice Book § 93, alleged certain facts which did not appear of record and which were denied by the plaintiff. Insofar as these facts were essential elements of Continental’s claim of lack of jurisdiction over the defendants, Continental assumed the burden of proving them. The basic claim of Continental in its plea to the jurisdiction was twofold: (1) that no goods or effects, i.e., items of tangible personal property, of the nonresident defendants were now, or at the time of garnishment had been, in Continental’s hands in Connecticut; and (2) that there was no indebtedness, either at the time of garnishment or now, owing to the defendants “through the acts of any agent or agents of the garnishee [Continental] in the State of Connecticut.”

It is to be noted that Continental did not allege or claim that it was not indebted to the defendants at the time of the garnishment. Rather, it alleged and claimed that it was not indebted to the defendants “through the acts of any agent or agents of the garnishee in the State of Connecticut.” If tangible personal property of the defendants in the hands of the garnishee, or any indebtedness owing by the garnishee to the defendants, was seized by the garnishment process and thus brought within the quasi in rem jurisdiction of the court, the jurisdictional plea in abatement was erroneously sustained. Veeder Mfg. Co. v. Marshall-Sanders Co., supra.

For reasons hereinafter set forth, there was error in the court’s action in sustaining the jurisdictional plea in abatement on the second ground, i.e., the alleged lack of garnishable indebtedness in Connecticut. It therefore becomes unnecessary to consider the first ground, which is that there was no garnish- *592 able tangible personal property in Connecticut.

The court found, inter alia, that the garnishee “has done no business in . . . Connecticut with [the] defendants, no debts to [the] defendants have been incurred by [the] garnishee in . . . [Connecticut], and no property of the defendants is held in . . . [Connecticut] by [the] garnishee.” The court further found that the garnishee made no claim that it “was not indebted to the defendants in connection with some transaction which did not arise in Connecticut” and that the garnishee introduced no evidence “to prove that there was no debt owing from the garnishee to the defendants other than in Connecticut.”

The memorandum of decision correctly held that the proceeding was a quasi in rem action and that judgment against the defendants, as nonresidents of Connecticut, could be satisfied only to the extent that assets in Connecticut had been brought under the jurisdiction of our courts. Parker, Peebles & Knox v. El Saieh, 107 Conn. 545, 554, 141 A. 884; Stephenson, Conn. Civ. Proc. §§ 24 (a), 28 (d).

On the foregoing subordinate facts, the court found, as a conclusion, that at the time of the garnishment there was no indebtedness owing to the defendants by the garnishee.

This conclusion is attacked as being without support in the subordinate facts of the finding, since the finding did not indicate, and the plea did not allege, that there was no indebtedness owing to the defendants from Continental, as garnishee. The court. merely found, and the plea in abatement merely alleged, that there was no such indebtedness which arose out of any acts of any agent of the garnishee in Connecticut. We turn to the memorandum, of decision for a better understanding of the find *593 ing. Molk v. Micklewright, 15.1. Conn. 606, 609, 201 A.2d 183. It becomes clear that the court held that the situs of any indebtedness from Continental to the defendants was at Continental’s domicil, which was in Illinois, and that no indebtedness of Continental could be reached by our garnishee process in Connecticut except an indebtedness contracted by an agent of Continental in this state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 A.2d 718, 153 Conn. 588, 1966 Conn. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorr-oliver-inc-v-willett-associates-conn-1966.