Hammond v. MacKay

21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 473, 29 Ohio Dec. 389, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 10
CourtClark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 473 (Hammond v. MacKay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond v. MacKay, 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 473, 29 Ohio Dec. 389, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 10 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Geiger, J.

The plaintiff, Harris Hammond, is a resident of the state of New York, and claims to be a creditor of the defendant John Freeman MacKay, who is a resident of the state of New Jersey, the claim being based upon an alleged breach of contract.

An affidavit for attachment was filed, and pursuant to the order of attachment, notices were served upon the Springfield National Bank and the Buckeye Incubator Company as garnishees, it being claimed that the Springfield National Bank has money on deposit belonging to the defendant, and that the Buckeye Incubator Company is a debtor of the defendant.

The defendant has filed a motion to set aside the attachment upon several grounds.

First, that the debts sought to be attached are not within the jurisdiction of the court and are not subject to attachment, for [474]*474the reason that the-creditor as well as the defendants herein are not residents of the state of Ohio;

Second, That the affidavit is insufficient in law;

Third, that no proper service was made upon the garnishees.

A motion is also made to set aside the constructive service, for the reason that the affidavit for attachment is insufficient in law, and that there has been no valid attachment of any property herein.

An interesting question is presented by the motion to dismisss the attachment. Broadly, it is based upon the claim upon the part of the defendant, that the debt being due to a non-resident of the state of Ohio the situs of the debt or property attached is not within the jurisdiction of the court.

It must bé conceded that the court acquires no jurisdiction in an attachment ease unless the property taken is within its jurisdiction, the court having no extra territorial power.

It is then to be determined, if possible, what is the correct solution of the question as to the location or situs of a debt due from a debtor within the jurisdiction of the court, to a creditor outside the jurisdiction of the court.

One view sustained by decisions, as well as by text-book writers, is that the situs of the debt is the domicile of the creditor. Another view is, that the situs of the debt is the domicile of the debtor. Still another view taken by courts in attachment cases is that the question of the situs of the debt is not material in determining the power of the court in such cases — that the situs of the debt may be either the domicile of the debtor or the creditor.

The Ohio courts have not been in accord in the determination of this matter, and the Supreme Court of Ohio has apparently not decided the question in a case clearly presenting the issue.

In the case of Owen v. Miller, 10 O. S. 136, the court, in passing upon a case in which a resident of Ohio, taking promissory notes, removed to New Jersey where under a writ of attachment the notes were seized and sold. Held: That the notes were merely evidence of the indebtedness and the seizure of them in New Jer[475]*475sey gave no power to divest the property in the debt secured by the notes and mortgage, which is to be 'regarded as existing where the makers of the notes — the debtor resided. The court, on page 144 says:

“We are brought then to the simple question whether the promissory note given for a debt, being in New Jersey and the makers of the notes, the debtors, residing in Ohio,- the property was in New Jersey or in Ohio ? In substance, there is a sum of money in the hands of one man to which another has title or claim and the evidence of that title or claim is the promise in writing to pay the money. Upon principle, it would seem clear that the subject-matter to which the title or claim relates, is the property and not the evidence showing the title or claim.”

The court in this case reviews a number of cases which support the court’s holding.

In the ease of B. & O. Railroad Company v. May, 25 O. S. 347, it is held:

“In an action to recover money due on contract, it is a sufficient defense to show that the money sought to be recovered has been attached by process of garnishment duly issued by a court of a sister state, in an action there prosecuted against the defendant by his creditors, although it appear that the plaintiff- and such creditors are all residents of this state.”

The action was brought in a county in this state to recover on an account. The defendant set up that the creditors of the plaintiff had sued the plaintiff before a justice of the peace in West Virginia, and had attached the money due from the defendant to the plaintiff, and that an order had been made that the defendant should pay into that court the amount due plaintiff ; that the justice had full jurisdiction, and that the money so attached was the same sought to be recovered by the plaintiff. To this answer the plaintiff demurred. The court says the demurrer to the answer should have been overruled. The facts were a good defense. The justice in West Virginia having jurisdiction of the subject and of the parties, the. order in attachment [476]*476made upon the garnishee was a valid appropriation of the money in his hands to the payment of the attaching creditor’s claims.

This ease is cited to sustain the position that a debt due may be garnished where the debtor is served, even though the- creditor may be without the jurisdiction of the court issuing the attachment.

The court, in the case of Root & McBride Brothers v. Davis et al., 51 O. S. 29, at page 36 says in part:

‘1 It may be conceded, that the credits of a non-resident debtor, without personal service upon him, can not be attached in this state, by simply serving the process of garnishment upon his debtor residing within the jurisdiction of the court issuing the process. That would be, as claimed, to give to the laws of a state an extra territorial effect. In Railroad Company v. May, 25 Ohio St. 347, it was held that the indebtedness of the company to a person residing in this state could be attached in the courts of a sister state, without personal service; but this, in the opinion of the author of a recent work, seems opposed to the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States.” Citing Reno on Non-Residence.
"But as between citizens of the state subject to its laws, the case is wholly different. While the situs of a credit is generally regarded as that of the creditor, it would be quite as reasonable to treat it as that of the debtor; for the debtor is the person from whom the money is derived that makes the credit available as a thing of value. So that there is nothing in the nature of things forbidding the place of the debtor being regarded as the situs of a credit; and hence it is competent to the Legislature to enact, as has been done in this state, that the property and effects of every kind of a resident of one county may be attached by his creditor in another, on the ground of his non-residence therein, by serving the process of garnishment upon a person having possession of his property, or being indebted to him,” etc.

Part of this quotation is clearly obiter dictum, and the implied criticism of the holding in Railroad Company v. May,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 473, 29 Ohio Dec. 389, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-mackay-ohctcomplclark-1919.