Gibbs v. . Queen Insurance Co.

63 N.Y. 114, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 20
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 63 N.Y. 114 (Gibbs v. . Queen Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. . Queen Insurance Co., 63 N.Y. 114, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 20 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Bolger, J.

The questions arising ■ in this case are two : 1. Has the legislature provided a mode in which a citizen of this State, having a cause of action against an insurance company, created by the laws of another country, may bring an action against that conrpany in some of the courts of record of this State ? And this question involves the inquiry, as to what is the process by which the action may be commenced, aud in what manner shall service of it be made.

2. Does the method provided, and the process and mode of service of it prescribed, give some of the courts of record of this State such jurisdiction of the matter and of the defendant, as that they can render a personal judgment which will be valid in this State, and enforceable against any property of the defendant found within it ?

It may be conceded that, before the Revised Statutes, a foreign corporation could not be sued at law in invitum, in our courts. In McQueen v. Middletown Mfg. Co. (16 J. R,, 5), *117 it was held that the provisions of the absent debtor act did not apply to the case of a foreign corporation; and the reasoning of the opinion in that case makes it quite plain, that in no other way could such a corporation be brought compulsorily into our courts of law. So the revisers felt the force of the decision in that case, and they declared that the fair protection of our own citizens required, that some provision should be made to render such corporations amenable to our laws in our courts; (5 Edmonds’ ed. Stats., 742). The sections •of the Revised Statutes which were adopted upon their report, were drawn in analogy with' the provisions of statute law against absent debtors (Id.). They required that suits in the Supreme Court, against a foreign corporation, should be commenced by attachment; (2 R. S., p. 340, §§ 15-30). The phrase is, “may be commenced by attachment.” This, though permissive in form, was, in effect, a requirement. In 1840 (Laws of 1840, chap. 354, p. 296), there was'an amendment of the provisions of the Revised Statutes, but in no particular material to the present inquiry. In 1842 (Laws of 1842, chap. 197, § 5, p. 228), there was provision made, for the publication of a notice that an attachment had issued.

I am not aware of any other statutory alteration of those provisions, before the enactment by the legislature of the •Code of Procedure. That enactment, at its first adoption in 1848, was silent upon the subject of actions against foreign corporations, so far as any special mention of the manner of ■commencing an action; (Laws of 1848, chap. 379, p. 497). The code commissioners meant to provide one process only, for the commencement of civil actions. They say: “At present, as is well known, there are three modes of commencing a suit at law : by a capias against natural persons; a summons against corporations, and a declaration against •either. In equity the suit is commenced by bill and subpoena. We have substituted a summons and complaint in all cases, the service of the summons to be deemed the commencement •of the suit; ” (First Report of Gommrs., p. 131). After providing for the provisional remedies of arrest, injunction *118 and claim and delivery of personal property, they say “There are several other provisional remedies, which we shall define and provide for in the completed Code(Id.,. 176). It was undoubtedly on account of these other provisional remedies not being then provided for, that there was placed in the Code of 1848, a section by which there was retained, as part of the system of practice thereby created, certain portions of the Revised Statutes, and among them, article 1, title 4, chapter 8, part 3 thereof, in which are found the provisions for suits against foreign corporations; (See § 389 of Commrs. Report, § 390 of Code of 1848). That the retaining of these provisions was meant to be but temporary, is evident from the language given above from the first report of the commissioners, and from the introductory words-of this saving section, viz., “ Until the legislature shall otherwise provide, this act shall not affect * * * any proceedings' provided for, etc.” It is apparent that it was-neither the intention of the commissioners nor of the Legislature, to permanently incorporate into the new system those-parts of the old which were saved by this section.

In 1849 the attention of the legislature, was drawn to the-matter of the extension of the remedies at law against foreign, insurance companies, and an act was passed with a title to that effect, though the body of the act professedly amended the-section of the Revised Statutes which provides for suits against foreign corporations; (Laws of 1849, p. 142, chap. 107). It provided that suits might be brought in the-Supreme Court, in the Superior Court and Common Pleas of New York city, against any foreign corporation, upon any cause of action arising therein, by complaint and summons, with an attachment as then provided by law; the summons and complaint to be served as provided by sections 113 and 114 of the Code of Procedure. This act did not render inoperative the introductory words of section 390, above cited, for the legislature did not thereby so far otherwise provide, than was already provided in the Revised Statutes, as to annul all the provisions contained in them as to foreign cor *119 porations. The act retained the attachment of the Revised Statutes, as a conjoint process by which to commence a suit, to be served with the summons and complaint, and -to be-levied as in them prescribed. But it added a summons and complaint, as necessary process together with the attachment to commence a suit, and they were to be served as provided in the Code of 1848, in sections 113 and 114j Those sections provided for service by delivery of a copy, if the suit be against a corporation, to the president or other head of it, secretary, cashier or managing agent (§ 113); and where the person to be served could not be found within the State, and had property therein, the service might be by publication of the summons (§ 114).

It is contended by the appellants that in this act (chap. 107 of Laws of 1849) is the origin of a summons against a foreign corporation, and that it is a process different from the summons of the Codé. This contention may be correct, so far as in this act is the first permission to sue a foreign corporation by summons and complaint, together with an attachment; but there is no solid basis for the contention that the summons there named is not the= summons of the Code. Undoubtedly the name summons, was in the ancient practice given to a process of the higher courts; (2 Sellon’s Pr., 477, 536, 644; 20 Viner Ab., 42; Kerr on Action at Law, *145). And a summons was the appropriate process for the commencement of an action against a domestic corporation; (lynch v. Mech. Bk., 13 J. R., 127 ; and see 2 R. S., p. 458, § 5). But the Code brought in, in modern times, the appellations summons and complaint, for the process by which to commence actions in courts of record, in the place of the names capias, narr., subpoena and bill, of the former practice. (See 1st Report of Commrs. above cited.) And this act (chap. 107, Laws of 1849), when it speaks of a summons and complaint together, does it without description of them, or prescribing the form or substance, as of legal papers already provided for in the law.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.Y. 114, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-queen-insurance-co-ny-1875.