Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad v. Crane

102 Ill. 249, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 21
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 102 Ill. 249 (Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad v. Crane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad v. Crane, 102 Ill. 249, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 21 (Ill. 1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action by attachment,' brought before a justice of the peace of Adams county, by Chauncey Ladd, a resident of this State, against one Crane, a resident of the State of Missouri. No property of Crane being found, the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad Company was summoned as a garnishee. The company filed an answer on the return day of the writ of attachment. The justice of the peace issued a scire facias against the company, and on the return day the company filed-a second answer, and the justice of the peace thereupon rendered a judgment against the company, in favor of Crane, for the use of Ladd, for $17.72. From that judgment the company appealed to the circuit court, where the judgment of the justice of the peace was affirmed. An appeal was prosecuted to the Appellate Court, and the judgment being affirmed, the case is, on a certificate of the judges of that court, under the statute, appealed to this court.

The material facts of the ease are, that the Hannibal and St. Joseph Eailroad Company is a- company organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, and has its general office and principal place of business in that State, as required by law, and its railway tracks are wholly in the State of Missouri. The railway company, before and at the time of suing out the attachment, and the service of the garnishee summons, ran its trains regularly into the city of Quincy, in Adams county, over and across the bridge at that place. The company then, and previous to that time, kept an agent in the city, and received freight and passengers for transportation over its road, and the company then had personal property in the city, to-wit: engines and ears. The company, by its answer, admits an indebtedness to Crane, but denies it held any property of his in possession or under its control.

These are the conceded facts, and the object of this appeal is, to determine whether a corporation of another State, doing-business and having property in this State, may be garnisheed for a debt it owes to a resident of the State of its domicil, in the courts of this State. The question is presented for the first time in tips court.

It is familiar law that when a corporation is created it becomes an artificial person, and may perform all acts and claim all rights with which it is empowered and endowed by its charter, and it may, within the scope of the powers thus conferred and duties imposed, like a natural person, acquire rights and incur liabilities precisely as a natural person. If so empowered, it may contract debts, purchase, sell and enjoy property; and it is not denied in this case that this company, was empowered to contract the debt, and that it owed the money to Crane. It, then, for the purposes of this suit, must be regarded as a person capable of owning property, and of being indebted, and liable to be sued for its indebtedness. If this be true, it must be treated the same, in all respects, as a natural person placed in the same situation. This, we think, will not be contested, as we are aware of no law giving such bodies preeminence or special privileges over natural persons. Suppose a merchant in Missouri, transacting his principal business there, had located a branch in Quincy, in this State, and the agent of that branch had been garnisheed for a debt his principal owed his chief clerk or book-keeper in the principal place of business, could the garnishee process be sustained in such a case ? If so, then it must lie against this railroad company.

In this and the supposed case, the artificial and the natural persons are both non-residents, both owe an employé who is indebted to a non-resident of the State of their domicil, are both doing a branch or collateral business at the place of the residence of the creditor of their employés, and we will suppose that in both cases that creditor sues out an attachment against their several employés, and garnishee summons is served on then* several agents. Can any person, without extreme refinement and impalpable distinctions, say that the one proceeding should be sustained and the other defeated ? It would seem,' on principle, that no reasonable or justifiable distinction could be made. Then, would a natural person be liable to this process under these circumstances ? We feel confident that he would, on a fair construction of our Attachment law, if not on precedents giving construction to substantially the same kind of statutes in other States.

It can not be contested that had the attachment been against the railroad company, its property in the county might have been levied on- under the writ, and all persons owing the road, or having property, effects and choses in action belonging to the road in their hands or possession, might have been garnisheed; and there can scarcely be a doubt that the road might have been sued, and the service had on the agent- at Quincy, so as to have given the court jurisdiction. Such a service on such an agent of a domestic corporation, we presume, none would have questioned as being sufficient.

In the case of Mineral Point R. R. Co. v. Keep, 22 Ill. 9, it was held, the act providing for service of process on corporations was not confined to domestic corporations,—that it was passed to embrace corporations having property in this State and their officers and places of business. in another State,—and this has been the received construction ever since.

In Peoria Ins. Co. v. Warner, 28 Ill. 429, it was held this was a remedial statute, and should be most liberally construed. It does not require a liberal construction to bring foreign corporations within the act. The provision is, that “in all cases where suit has been or may hereafter be brought against an incorporated company, process shall be served. ” Language more comprehensive could scarcely have been employed. It says any corporation, without the slightest reservation or limitation. A thing may be embraced in the provisions of a statute by being specifically named, or by being embraced in a class that is named. Here the class named is "all corporations, and when the statute says any corporation, appellant being an individual corporation, it comes within the provision as fully as had its name been employed specifically in the statute. It would have been no more comprehensive had it said all corporations of every kind, whether domestic or foreign, doing business in this State.

In Mineral Point R. R. Co. v. Keep, supra, and in Midland Pacific Ry. Co. v. McDermid, 91 Ill. 170, it was expressly said that the section applied to and embraced foreign, as well as domestic corporate bodies doing business in this State. In the latter of these cases the plea was that the railroad was a Nebraska company, doing business alone in that State, and the plea averred that the company had no property, nor did they transact any business or have an agent, in Illinois. It was on this last averment the case was decided in favor of' the railroad company. Nor is this rule lacking the support of precedent. It has been held in other tribunals that a foreign corporation, by establishing an agency in another State, thereby so far becomes an inhabitant of the latter State as to become subject to the process of its courts, (Fithian v. New York and Erie R. R. Co. 31 Pa. St. 114, McAllister v. Penn Ins. Co. 28 Mo. 214, and Branson v. N. E. T. Ins. Co. 21 Wis. 516,) and the doctrine is reasonable and just.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 Ill. 249, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannibal-st-joseph-railroad-v-crane-ill-1882.