Lucini v. Mayhew

324 A.2d 663, 113 R.I. 641
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 25, 1974
Docket1866-M. P
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 324 A.2d 663 (Lucini v. Mayhew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucini v. Mayhew, 324 A.2d 663, 113 R.I. 641 (R.I. 1974).

Opinion

*642 Paolino, J.

This is a petition for a writ of certiorari to review the ruling of a justice of the Superior ( Court denying the defendant’s Super. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(2) motion to dismiss the'-plaintiff’s complaint for lack of jurisdiction over the person.

The pertinent facts are as follows. On April 27, 1968, plaintiff and defendant were involved in an automobile accident in Mansfield, Massachusetts. At the time of the accident, both parties were owner-operators and residents of Rhode Island. The plaintiff was returning to his home in Rhode Island and defendant had driven to the place of the accident from her home' in Rhode Island. Her *643 automobile was registered in this state and she was operating the same under a Rhode Island license.

After the accident plaintiff contacted defendant’s insurance company. Efforts at a settlement were unsuccessful. On March 30, 1970 plaintiff filed a complaint in the Superior 'Court in Providence. The plaintiff then attempted to serve defendant with the complaint and summons at the address on her license and registration. However, plaintiff could not effectuate service on defendant at that time because defendant had moved to another address. After additional unsucessful attempts by the sheriff to locate defendant in the state, plaintiff obtained an order of notice from the Superior Court on March 16, 1971, allowing service by mail on defendant at her last two known addresses in this state and on her insurance carrier at its offices in Pawtucket, Rhode Island and Fall River, Massachusetts. Process was served in compliance with the order of notice, but it is undisputed that defendant was never personally served with process at any time.

The defendant’s insurance company answered the case on March 31, 1971. In her first defense she alleges that “[t]he court lacks personal jurisdiction of the defendant, she not having been served with process in accordance with the law.” Subsequently, defendant also filed a motion to dismiss on like grounds, arguing that although defendant resided in this state until September 1970, on the date of the substituted service in 1971, she was a resident and domiciliary of Massachusetts. At that time she moved to her parents’ home in Westport, Massachusetts.

As noted above, the trial justice dénied defendant’s motion to dismiss. He held that our long-arm statute, G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §9-5-33 was applicable and that the Superior Court had jurisdiction over the person of defendant. He said that the statute “* * * provides for substituted service in cases where persons *644 subject to the jurisdiction leave the state.” Section 9-5-33, in pertinent part, reads as follows:

“* * * every individual not a resident of this state * * * that shall have the necessary minimum contacts with the state of Rhode Island, shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the state of Rhode Island, and the courts of this state shall hold such * * * nonresident individuals * * * amenable to suit in Rhode Island in every case not contrary to the provisions of the constitution or laws of the United States.
“Service of process may be made on any such * * * nonresident individual * * * within or without the state in the manner provided by any applicable procedural rule or in the manner prescribed by. order of the court in which such action is brought.
“Nothing herein shall limit or affect the right to serve process upon such nonresident individual or his executor or administrator, or such partnership or association, or a foreign corporation within this state or without this state in any manner now or hereafter permitted iby law.”

Initially we address ourselves to -plaintiff’s contention that certiorari is not a proper remedy in this case because there are no “unusual circumstances.” We disagree. In oúr judgment the peculiar circumstances of this case are unusual and exceptional and raise a question of first impression in this state. In such circumstances, certiorari is appropriate. See Conn v. ITT Aetna Finance Co., 105 R. I. 397, 404-05, 252 A.2d 184, 188 (1969).

The issue before us is whether a court of this state can exercise in personam jurisdiction in a case sounding in tort with the locus of the tort being in another state, if, at the time of the alleged tortious conduct and at the time of the filing of the civil action, the defendant was a resident and domiciliary of the state of Rhode Island, but at the time of the service by mail has become a resident and domiciliary of another state.

*645 In considering this issue, we must first distinguish the factual circumstances of this case from those in which the defendant has fled the jurisdiction but has retained a domicile at his or her usual place of abode in the forum state, 1 where in personam jurisdiction would be proper. Although the record here indicates that defendant had frequently moved or changed her place of residence while living in this state, it does not appear that she intentionally evaded service during the time she was a resident here, nor does plaintiff argue that her moving to Massachusetts in September 1970 was for the purpose of evading service in this action.

The question remains whether the substituted service can be sustained under the unusual circumstances in the case at bar. We hold that it cannot.

Traditionally, before a court may enter a valid judgment adjudicating the rights of an individual, that individual must in some fashion either submit himself to the jurisdiction of the court or be subjected to that jurisdiction by service of process. Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714, 24 L.Ed. 565 (1877). Historically, the jurisdiction of the courts was grounded on the de facto power over the defendant’s person of possessions. No natural person could be made subject to the jurisdiction of a state court unless he was found and served within the state or had attachable property therein. Pennoyer, supra at 720, 24 L.Ed. at 567-68.

These relatively jigid jurisdictional standards, however, *646 have undergone considerable relaxation since the days of Pennoyer, primarily as a direct result of the increase in interstate contacts which has occurred since that time. Thus the contemporary “minimum contacts” approach to the issue of jurisdiction allows a court to subject a defendant to a judgment in personam if the latter’s contacts with the forum state are such that the suit does not offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310, 66 S.Ct. 154, 90 L.Ed. 95 (1945); McGee v. Int’l Life Ins. Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
324 A.2d 663, 113 R.I. 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucini-v-mayhew-ri-1974.