King v. Cross

175 U.S. 396, 20 S. Ct. 131, 44 L. Ed. 211, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1573
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 11, 1899
Docket28
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 175 U.S. 396 (King v. Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Cross, 175 U.S. 396, 20 S. Ct. 131, 44 L. Ed. 211, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1573 (1899).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is first asserted that the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of Rhode Island was not due process of law, and was in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, because it recognized the right, in a suit brought in Rhode Island against a non-resident defendant, to garnishee the resident debtor of such defendant. It is contended that a judgment rendered by a court against a defendant who is neither within its jurisdiction, by his person or his property, is wholly void, and any attempt to enforce such judgment amounts to a denial of due process of law. The Rhode Island court, it- is claimed, had no jurisdiction over the defendant firm because it was a resident of Massachusetts, and *399 it is asserted that such court had no property of the firm within its control upon which to exercise its jurisdiction. True it is the Lippitt Woolen Company, which alone was charged by the judgment, was made a trustee under the Rhode Island process, and was indebted to the Massachusetts firm; but this fact, it is asserted, did not establish that there was any right in Rhode Island to be subjected to the jurisdiction of the courts of that State, for the following reasons: The situs of movable property is at the domicil of the owner of such property, and therefore the situs of the claim or credit held by the Massachusetts firna against the Lippitt Woolen Company was not in Rhode Island, where the Lippitt Woolen Company was resident, but was in Massachusetts, where the creditor firm was established.' The contention in substance is that any process of foreign attachment predicated upon, the assumed right to levy on debts due to non-residents by persons within the State wherein the process issues is absolutely void, hence a denial of due process of law.

We need not enter into a review of the contentions thus presented, since they were all considered by this court at its last term and held to be untenable. Chicago, Rock Island &c. Railway v. Sturm, 174 U. S. 710.

Conceding, however, as a general rule, that jurisdiction as to a non-resident can be acquired by trustee or garnishment process, against a resident debtor of a non-resident defendant, it is urged that the facts in this case cause it to be an exception to this general principle. The proceedings in involuntary insolvency were begun in Massachusetts before the commencement of the suit in Rhode Island. The legal effect of the insolvency proceedings, it is asserted, was to'vest all . the credits of the insolvent in the court of insolvency of Massa-' chusetts, and therefore there could legally be no debt due to the non-resident insolvent in Rhode Island, because that debt by operation of the Massachusetts insolvent proceedings had ceased to be a debt due the firm, and had become a debt controlled by the Massachusetts insolvent court. The debt in Rhode Island originally due to the firm in Massachusetts can not, it is claimed,, be treated as continuing after the insolvency *400 proceedings to be due to tbe firm without refusing to give effect to the proceedings in Massachusetts, and such refusal is therefore asserted to be the necessary result of the judgment of the court of Rhode Island which' is before us for review.

The contention thus relied upon, it is argued, is not contrary to the settled rule that insolvency proceedings of the several States do not have extra-territorial operation; and it is also asserted that the claim hére relied upon is not contrary to the decision of this court in Security Trust Co. v. Dodd, Mead & Co., 173 U. S. 624. In that case it was held that a'general assignment for the benefit of creditors, made by an insolvent under the, insolvent laws of a State, did not .operate to exempt tangible property, situated at the time of the insolvent assignment in another State, from seizure in the State where the tangible property was actually situated. This decision, it is claimed, was but an exemplification of the general rule limiting insolvency proceedings of one State to the jurisdiction of that State and' depriving them of extra-territorial operation. A mere credit, however, it is asserted, conceding it to be subject to attachment or trustee process at the residence of the debtor, is governed by a different rule from that which controls tangible property. Such credit, the claim is, being at the situs of the domicil of the creditor, passes to the custody of the insolvent court when the insolvent law so provides, and therefore comes under the dominion and control of the insolvent court having jurisdiction of the person of the creditor. As by operation of law the credit from the. date of insolvency proceedings at the residénce of the creditor ceases to be under his dominion, but, on the contrary, is in gremio legis, the power to levy by garnishee or trustee process on the same at the residence of the debtor is destroyed. But the predicate upon which this contention rests is that the Massachusetts insolvent proceedings operated to deprive the insolvent of all control over his assets prior to or at the time when the suit in Rhode Island was commenced and the trustee process there issued. If this premise is unsound the whole contention is without merit, and therefore the legal proposition deduced from it need not be examined.

*401 The statutes of the State of Massachusetts on the subject of insolvency provide: First, for the adjudication by the ‘judge of the court of insolvency upon a voluntary petition; second, for the issue of a warrant for the sequestration of the effects of a petitioning debtor; third, for publication of a notice of the issue of this warrant; fourth, for a meeting of - creditors and the election of an assignee; and, fifth, for an assignment by the judge of the court of insolvency to the assignee so elected. Mass. Pub. Stat. 1882, ch. 157, §§ 16, 17, 24, 40, 44. The forty-sixth section of the act which provides'when proceedings under it shall operate to divest the debtor of control over his property is reproduced in the margin. 1

Now the petition in insolvency on behalf of the firm of Brown, Steese & Clarke was filed in the court of insolvency on August 12, 1889, a day prior to the commencement by Cross of his action in Rhode Island and the service of the trustee process. The warrant, however, addressed by the Massachusetts insolvent court to the sheriff, directing him as messenger, to take possession of the estate of the insolvent, was not issued until August 21, 1889, the first publication of notice of the issue of such warrant was made on August 28, 1889, and *402 the assignment to the assignees elected by the creditors was made by the judge of the insolvency court on September 4,1889.

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Bluebook (online)
175 U.S. 396, 20 S. Ct. 131, 44 L. Ed. 211, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-cross-scotus-1899.