Hodgens v. Columbia Trust Co.

185 A.D. 555, 173 N.Y.S. 304, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7552
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 20, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 A.D. 555 (Hodgens v. Columbia Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodgens v. Columbia Trust Co., 185 A.D. 555, 173 N.Y.S. 304, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7552 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Page, J.:

The facts in this case as disclosed by the complaint and affidavits are substantially as follows: •

That John Sloan, Chester Glass and Joseph C. Blanch and the plaintiff, being each the owner of 1,000 shares constituting in the aggregate the entire capital stock of the Eastern Metals Corporation, entered into an agreement whereby for ten years they bound themselves and their personal representatives not to pledge, hypothecate or sell any of their shares without first offering the stock so proposed to be pledged, hypothecated or sold to the other parties to the agreement and to each of them or to their representatives, giving them a ten days’ option to purchase such shares or advance money thereon at the same price and terms as may, at any time, be offered in good faith by any person not a party to this contract.

Thereafter John Sloan was declared a lunatic in the courts of the State of Pennsylvania, and the defendant Fidelity Title and Trust Company of Pittsburgh was appointed committee of his property. On or about the 10th day of April, 1914, the Fidelity Title and Trust Company in its own name entered into an executory agreement with the plaintiff, whereby it agreed to sell fifteen months after the said date, and the plaintiff agreed to purchase, 875 shares of the stock of the Eastern Metals Corporation formerly belonging to the said Sloan, and it [557]*557was agreed that the plaintiff would deposit with the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company at the city of New York two promissory notes made by him to the order of the Fidelity Title and Trust Company, one of such notes to be due in twelve months and one in fifteen months and each to be for the sum of $3,500, and as collateral security for the same to deposit with the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company $15,000 par value bonds of the Fairfield Oil Company, and the Fidelity Title and Trust Company agreed to deposit with the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company 750 shares of the stock of the said Eastern Metals Corporation, and further agreed that the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company should hold on deposit, for the purpose of transfer and delivery to the plaintiff in accordance with the said agreement, 125 additional shares of the stock of the Eastern Metals Corporation already on deposit with it, and the Fidelity Title and Trust Company further agreed that upon payment of said notes at their maturity it would transfer to the plaintiff the said 875 shares of the stock with assignments thereof and would also deliver or cause to be delivered to the plaintiff the bonds of the Fairfield Oil Company. It was further agreed that the sale of said stock was in consideration of the said notes, and in order to complete same it was necessary that there should be délivered to the plaintiff written consents of Chester Glass and Joseph C. Blanch.

In pursuance of this agreement the parties deposited the stock, notes and bonds with the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company. Chester Glass and Joseph C. Blanch refused to consent to the sale and transfer of the stock and the performance of the agreement on the part of the Fidelity Title and Trust Company.

On or about the twenty-ninth day of June the plaintiff demanded of the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company that it deliver to him the promissory notes and bonds of the Fairfield Oil Company, and again after the maturity of the notes the plaintiff in like manner demanded of the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company the delivery of such notes and bonds to him, and again, immediately prior to the bringing of this action, made demand for the same and also demanded of the Fidelity Title and Trust Company that it consent to or [558]*558instruct the delivery of the said notes and bonds to the plaintiff.

On the twentieth day of November plaintiff commenced this action by the service of a summons without a complaint upon the defendant Columbia Trust "Company (the successor to the Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company). At that time the notes, stock and a certain deposit receipt which had been substituted for the bonds were in the possession of the Columbia Trust Company. On the seventeenth day of November the attorney for the Fidelity Title and Trust Company demanded that the Columbia Trust Company deliver to him on behalf of the Fidelity Title and Trust Company the notes and securities described in the agreements and offered to furnish such indemnity as might be satisfactory to the said Columbia Trust Company. The Columbia Trust Company desired the advice of counsel, and on the twentieth day of November pursuant to advice of counsel the Columbia Trust Company agreed to deliver the notes and securities on the furnishing of a satisfactory bond of indemnity, and the bond having been given on the twenty-first day of November, in the presence of the plaintiff, the two notes and the deposit receipt and the certificate for 750 shares of the stock of the Eastern Metals Corporation and a check for $747.30, for interest, were delivered to the attorney for the Fidelity Title and Trust Company and he immediately deposited the same in the United States mail addressed to the Fidelity Title and Trust Company at Pittsburgh, Penn.

Thereafter, and on the 9th day of January, 1918, the plaintiff obtained an order for service of the summons in the action by publication or personally in the State of Pennsylvania upon the defendant Fidelity Title and Trust Company of Pittsburgh.

The summons, together with a copy of the complaint, was on the twelfth day of January served on the Fidelity Title and Trust Company of Pittsburgh in the city of Pittsburgh. The Fidelity Title and Trust Company appearing specially for the purpose of the motion only moved to vacate and set aside the order and to set aside the service of the summons and complaint upon it. This motion was denied. The learned justice at Special Term has written a very elaborate opinion [559]*559in which he has worked out a very ingenious theory for upholding the jurisdiction of the court over the moving defendant. Briefly summarized, his theory is this: That the defendant being a foreign corporation the court could only get jurisdiction by substituted service if there was property belonging to it within the State at the time the court asserted jurisdiction; that this action, which was brought to recover .from the depositary specific property and to have canceled a lien upon that property which the defendant, the foreign corporation, had within this State, was an action quasi in rem and that the court obtained jurisdiction when jurisdiction was asserted, which he construed to be when the summons was served upon the Columbia Trust Company, and that the subsequent removal of the property from the State could not divest the court of jurisdiction. (See 103 Misc. Rep. 415.)

Assuming, but not holding, that the service of a summons is such an assertion of jurisdiction as would subject personal property to the jurisdiction of .the court so that a judgment rendered would be operative upon it without the court having in some manner by attachment or otherwise asserted its jurisdiction over the property, it is clear that the property must have been within the State at the time the court made its assertion of jurisdiction over the non-resident defendant and that was at the time that the order for substituted service of the summons was made. (Chesley v. Morton, 9 App. Div. 461; Freeman v. Alderson, 119 U. S. 185, 187.)

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Bluebook (online)
185 A.D. 555, 173 N.Y.S. 304, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodgens-v-columbia-trust-co-nyappdiv-1918.