Jarrard Motors, Inc. v. Jackson Auto & Supply Co.

115 So. 2d 309, 237 Miss. 660, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 517
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1959
Docket41233
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 115 So. 2d 309 (Jarrard Motors, Inc. v. Jackson Auto & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarrard Motors, Inc. v. Jackson Auto & Supply Co., 115 So. 2d 309, 237 Miss. 660, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 517 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Roberds, P. J.

*664 The question for decision on this appeal is whether the chancery court had jurisdiction of the issues and parties involved in this litigation.

The bill was filed in this cause by Jackson Auto & Supply Co., Inc., a Mississippi corporation, domiciled at Jackson, and A. F. Lott, a resident of said city as an individual. In this opinion, we shall designate them “complainants” unless otherwise described.

Defendants to the bill are Jarrard Motors, Inc., Jarrard Motors, Parts and Service, Inc., and Jarrard Motors Standard Triumph Sales, Inc., all corporations under the laws of Florida, domiciled at Pensacola, and Wendell Jarrard, resident of Pensacola, as an individual. Said defendants are to be called “principal-defendants” when not otherwise described.

The bill charged that the principal-defendants were indebted to the complainants in a large sum as a result of a breach of a contract by the defendants under which the complainants had been constituted the dealers in Mississippi of foreig*n made automobiles of which the principal-defendants were the distributors.

These principal-defendants made special appearance in this cause and moved the court to dismiss the bill for lack of jurisdiction.

Complainants also made defendants in the bill four refinance corporations, all created under the laws of states other than Mississippi and domiciled in such states but doing business in the State of Mississippi.

Three of these finance companies, by their answers as garnishees, asserted that they were not indebted to, and did not have in their possession effects of, the principal-defendants. Complainants did not contest these answers and on complainants motion the bill was dismissed as to said three garnishees. They are out of this case.

Securities Investment Company of St. Louis, one of the garnishee-defendants, in its answer, averred that *665 it was not indebted to nor did it have in its possession the effects of any of the principal-defendants. It did assert, however, that it had purchased and discounted at its Pensacola office numerous conditional sales contracts covering equipment sold to others by Jarrard Motors, Inc., and that in the course of such business the sum of $17,384.51 had come into its possession as a reserve, as security, for the payment by Jarrard Motors, Inc. of all of its obligations which had been pledged to it to secure the prompt payment by Jarrard Motors, Inc. of the obligations connected with such refinance plans of operation. It further asserted that whether it was or would be obligated to pay said Jarrard Motors, Inc. any of said reserve would depend upon whether the amount owing to it, aggregating $370,176.25, should be fully repaid in the future. The answer then stated: “This defendant at the time of the service of the writ on it in this case and since which had no money or effects or property in any amount or of any nature or kind in its hands or under its control belonging to the debtor defendants Jarrard Motors Parts & Service, Inc., Jarrard Motors Standard Triumph Sales, Inc., or Wendell Jarrard, and knows of no person having any such effects of either of said defendants in his possession or under his control during said time.”

Complainants did not contest any answer of a garnishe e-def endant.

The first question presented is whether or not the foreg’oing garnishment proceeding vested in the chancery court jurisdiction in rem over the contingent fund held by Securities Investment Company of St. Louis. The chancellor held that it did. We think this was error for the reason that according to the uncontested answers the only person interested in said contingent fund was Jarrard Motors, Inc., and the chancellor dismissed the bill as to that corporation. He found that that corporation had been dissolved some four or five years prior *666 to the time of the trial of this cause. In his opinion he said: “On the Motion of the defendant, Jarrard Motors, Inc., it is the opinion of this Court that the undisputed proof presented on the Motion shows that this corporation has been dissolved and is not presently doing business, certainly in the State of Mississippi, therefore, said Motion should be and the same will be sustained as to this defendant, Jarrard Motors, Inc. only.” No appeal from the foregoing adjudication was taken by the complainants. Jarrard Motors, Inc. is not before this Court. This renders it unnecessary for us to determine whether the obligation of Securities Investment Company of St. Louis is or is not in its nature such an obligation as can be the subject of garnishment.

We might add at this point that the bill should have been dismissed as to Wendell Jarrard, individually. There is no proof in this record showing that Wendell Jarrard was acting in his individual capacity in any of the matters involved in this litigation. All of the actions were taken in the name and on behalf of one or the other of the corporations.

This leaves for decision the main question in the case and that is whether or not Jarrard Motors, Parts and Service, Inc. and Jarrard Motors Standard Triumph Sales, Inc. were doing business in Mississippi under such circumstances as to vest in the chancery court jurisdiction over them. This involves a statement of the evidence bearing upon the question.

The defendants had no place of business in the State of Mississippi. They were domiciled at Pensacola, Florida. Purchases by complainants were made in Pensacola. The automobiles, parts, etc. were bought and paid for in Pensacola. However, it is shown that some of the automobiles were transported from Pensacola to Jackson in trucks of said defendants. They were bought and paid for and delivered at Pensacola. It is asserted by complainants that they were dealers in these foreign *667 made automobiles for some two months and that they were acting under a contract with these distributors. Jarrard, as a witness, admitted that the contract exhibited at the trial was in all essential respects the contract under which complainants operated at Jackson, and which complainants aver was broken by the Jarrards, causing complainants large damages. This contract is all-important on the,issue now being considered.

We will set out as briefly as we can the provisions of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 2d 309, 237 Miss. 660, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarrard-motors-inc-v-jackson-auto-supply-co-miss-1959.