Louisville N. R. Co. v. Webb Furniture Co.

108 So. 765, 214 Ala. 654, 46 A.L.R. 928, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 27, 1926
Docket1 Div. 409.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 So. 765 (Louisville N. R. Co. v. Webb Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville N. R. Co. v. Webb Furniture Co., 108 So. 765, 214 Ala. 654, 46 A.L.R. 928, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 157 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

GARDNER, J.

The Webb Furniture Company instituted this suit by process of attachment against Mrs. Frank S. Hanna on the ground that the defendant was a nonresident of the state, seeking a recovery of an alleged indebtedness on account of $135.50. There was no personal service on the defendant, and no personal appearance by her, nor was there any actual levy of any property of the defendant, but the attachment writ was executed by service of process of garnishment on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, a common carrier.

The answer of the garnishee (sworn to and uncontroverted) discloses that, as a common carrier of freight for hire, and engaged in interstate commerce, there was delivered to it by Mrs. Frank S. Hanna at its freight depot at Mobile a shipment of boxes of household goods and other articles not necessary to enumerate, all of which was to be transported to the city of New York, and there delivered to said Mrs. Frank Hanna, who was both consignee and consignor, and that the freight charges thereon were prepaid; that these goods were placed in a car which left Mobile in a train at 7:11 o’clock p. m., May 23, 1922, on its interstate journey to New York City; that the writ of garnishment was served at 5:45 o’clock p. m., May 24, 1922, at which time none of the goods were in Mobile or the Thirteenth judicial circuit of Alabama, but all of said goods were at the time of the service of said writ in the city of Birmingham, Ala. The motion of the garnishee to be discharged on its answer was overruled, and judgment rendered against the defendant and the garnishee; the said garnishee being ordered to deliver said goods, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy the judgment, to the sheriff of Mobile county, for recovery of which writ of distringas was ordered to issue.

The answer shows that the garnishee had no claim or interest in the property, and merely had possession thereof for the purpose of shipment to the owner, and comes within the character of garnishment referred to in section 8073, Code of 1923, as distinguished from those embraced in section 8072, Code of 1923. Murdock v. Collins, 146 Ala. 604, 40 So. 96.

The plaintiff in the case of Kress v. Porter, 132 Ala. 577, 31 So. 377, sought to maintain an action for damages in the Clarke circuit court against the defendant nonresident, and to acquire jurisdiction thereof in said court by the levy of an attachment oh property of the defendant in Mobile county. It was held that the Clarke county court was without jurisdiction; the court saying:

“For jurisdictional purposes, therefore, the property of a nonresident defendant, who has not been served, or who has not appeared, it seems that the property itself levied on stands in the place of service, to the extent of the levy, for its condemnation to sale, and no further. Being in the nature of a proceeding in rem, it would appear that the situs of the property would determine the jurisdiction of the court to entertain attachment proceedings for its condemnation, there being nothing in the statutes of the state to the contrary. * * * ‘In actions in which attachments are issued, or other proceedings, where the property of the defendant, who is a nonresident is sequestered, the proceeding should be brought where the property is seized.’ * * * ‘And being an action in rem, the seizure must be made on a writ issuing from a court having jurisdiction of the res. Where there is no personal service, it must be prosecuted where the property is situate on which the action is founded.’ * * * When our statute prescribes that an attachment of the class this one is, may be issued ‘only by a judge of the circuit court, judge of probate, or chancellor, returnable to any county,’ it does not mean that it may bd returnable to any county according to the arbitrary will or caprice of the officer issuing it. Jurisdiction in such case would be made to depend upon the vacillating discretion of judicial officers, whereas, if determined by the situs of the property levied on, it becomes fixed, reasonable and just.”
“In attachment proceedings, * * * the res must be within the jurisdiction of the court is *656 suing tile process, in order to confer jurisdiction.” Brown, v. McCullough, 194 Ala. 638, 69 So. 924.

It therefore follows, that had the effort in the instant case been to levy upon the property itself, the court at Mobile would not have acquired jurisdiction. But, as said in Western R. R. v. Thornton, 60 Ga. 300:

The “garnishment directed to a bailee and duly served, is a species of legal seizure of the property which is the- subject of the bailment.”

And in A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Ohumley, 92 Ala. 317, 9 So. 286, the court said:

“Garnishment is a species of proceeding in rem, in the nature of a sequestration of the debt- or’s efforts] Unless the property is within the jurisdiction of the court issuing the garnishment, so that it may be seized, jurisdiction neither of the res, nor the person can be acquired.”

The holding of the court in the last-cited case is succinctly stated in the headnote as follows:

“In an action by an employee of an Alabama railroad corporation, whose road was also partly operated in Tennessee, to recover wages or compensation for work done here, plaintiff being then and still a resident of Alabama, a judgment rendered against the company in Tennessee, un,der a garnishment issued on a judgment there rendered against plaintiff on personal service, and payment thereof by the garnishee, constitute no defense, in the absence of evidence showing that, by the statutes of Tennessee, the court there had acquired jurisdiction of the debt 'sought to be reached and subjected.” '

Jurisdiction, of the nonresident is here sought to be obtained by virtue only of the attachment proceedings, and we are of the opinion our garnishment statutes are not to be construed as giving jurisdiction in cases of this character by mere service of process on the garnishee; the property itself of which the garnishee is mere bailee being in a distant part of the state, and not within the jurisdiction of the court. There is no sound reason for a distinction as to jurisdiction when the property itself is levied upon, and when the attachment is served by way of writ -of garnishment, for the “garnishment is a species of legal seizure of the property.” As previously noted, we are here dealing with a garnishment proceeding against a bailee, one without interest in the property and of the class within section 8073, Code of 1923. -

In such a case the garnishment stands in lieu of the seizure of the property, and the same rule as to the court’s jurisdiction should obtain as when the levy is upon the property itself. The hardship and injustice of a contrary construction of such statutes have been the subject of discussion in courts of other jurisdictions.

The case, from the Iowa Supreme Court of Dart Mfg. Co. v. Carr, 174 Iowa, 471, 156 N. W. 714, L. R. A. 1916E, p. 449, is very much in point as to facts, and the statute there considered very similar to that in this state. In discussing the question, the court refers to one of its former decisions where the property had been transported beyond the borders of the state, and wherein the following language was used:

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 765, 214 Ala. 654, 46 A.L.R. 928, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-co-v-webb-furniture-co-ala-1926.