Mixer, Inc. v. SMITH
This text of 323 A.2d 794 (Mixer, Inc. v. SMITH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Opinion by
Plaintiff, Mixer, Inc., commenced this suit on September 13, 1973, by filing a complaint in assumpsit against several individual and corporate defendants including Select Associates, an appellee herein. Shortly thereafter Select filed preliminary objections to the complaint citing the arbitration clause in the contract as a bar to the lower court’s exercising jurisdiction. The court sustained the preliminary objections and dismissed the complaint as to Select.
The plaintiff also petitioned the court for writs of foreign attachment against two unregistered California corporations, Parliament News, Inc. and All American Distributing Co., both of which did business in Pennsylvania and allegedly were indebted to one or more of the defendants. Unable to achieve service on the corporations in Pennsylvania, the court at the plaintiff’s request employed the provisions of the Act of November 15, 1972, P. L. 1063, No. 271, 42 Pa. S. §§8302, 8307 (Supp. 1974), 1 and directed the sheriff to serve the *276 Secretary of the Commonwealth as attorney for the corporations. The California corporate garnishees thereafter argued that the garnishment should be dissolved because venue was improper in Philadelphia County. The court also sustained that objection and dissolved the garnishment. From these two adverse determinations of the court below, the plaintiff has appealed.
I.
The plaintiff first argues that the lower court erred when it sustained Select’s jurisdictional objection based on the arbitration clause in the contract. While such clauses are statutorily favored, 2 we agree with the plaintiff that a long line of Pennsylvania case law holds that arbitration clauses, nevertheless, do not affect the jurisdiction of the courts in Pennsylvania.
In the leading case of Central Contracting Co. v. C. E. Youngdahl & Co., 418 Pa. 122 (1965), the court was confronted with a contract in which the parties agreed to arbitrate disputes arising thereunder. The court, having noted that parties “cannot change by contract the rules of jurisdiction or venue embodied in the various laws of this Commonwealth,” concluded that “an arbitration provision in a contract — irrespective of *277 whether it is common law or statutory arbitration— does not affect the jurisdiction of the lower court.” Id. at 133, 135. See also University Sq. No. 1, Inc. v. Marhoefer, 407 Pa. 257, 259-60 (1962). As the Supreme Court has stated and restated: “[Ejven though a plaintiff have no standing to bring his action, even though his complaint be demurrable, even though he fail to establish its allegations, even though the court should finally conclude that the relief he seeks should not be granted, not any or all of these circumstances would enter into, much less determine, the question of jurisdiction of the litigation.” Zerbe Twp. School Dist. v. Thomas, 353 Pa. 162, 165 (1945). See also Studio Theaters, Inc. v. Washington, 418 Pa. 73 (1965); University Sq. No. 1, Inc. v. Marhoefer, supra; Witney v. Lebanon City, 369 Pa. 308 (1952).
We therefore find that the lower court erred in dismissing the complaint with respect to Select Associates, and we will reverse that order. “But how the lower court should give effect to the arbitration clause of the contract is a separate matter,” upon which the lower court may pass when we remand. Central Contracting Co. v. C. E. Youngdahl & Co., 418 Pa. at 135.
II.
The court was on firmer ground when it dissolved the writ of foreign attachment with respect to Parliament News, Inc. and All American Distributing Co. The venue rule here in question, Pa. R. C. P. 1254, requires that the plaintiff originate its attachment proceeding “in and only in a county in which ... a garnishee may be served.” 3 The plaintiff argues that that *278 phrase should be read to mean “a county by which the garmshee may be servedThe plaintiff is arguing, therefore, that any county which could serve the garnishees, if they were defendants in an assumpsit case, is also a county of proper venue where a writ of foreign attachment is concerned. We disagree.
First, it is instructive to compare the garnishment provision for pending assumpsit actions under Rule 1254, with the rule pertaining to garnishment after a money judgment has been obtained, Pa. R. C. P. 3112. Rule 3112 expressly provides that the sheriff of the county where the writ was issued may deputize the sheriff of any other county where service may be had. Furthermore, subsection c of that rule provides that a registered or certified mailing may be used if the other preferred methods listed in Rule 3112 fail. The plaintiff would have us read these provisions into Rule 1254 despite the express limitation that venue thereunder is only proper if the attachment issues “in and only in a county in which ... a garnishee may be served.” If the drafters of Rule 1254 had intended to authorize deputized service, they would have clearly expressed that intention as they did in Rule 3112. 4
Second, even assuming that the long-arm statute, which authorizes the Secretary of the Commonwealth to receive service for unregistered, out-of-state corporations, may be applied to garnishments, it does not affect the venue question. We still must determine whether, under Rule 1254, venue is proper in Philadelphia when the Secretary is served in Harrisburg. Hence, *279 the question is precisely the same as it would be if the garnishees themselves were served in Harrisburg. Service by registered mail is aldn to service by deputization; and, both are designed to empower a court in one county to get in personam jurisdiction over a person present in another county. Registered mail is simply a more flexible and economical method to achieve that result. In this regard, however, the courts of this Commonwealth and the commentators are of one mind — if a rule limits venue to a “county in which the garnishee (or defendant) may be served,” it does not authorize deputized service. See Abolishment of Livermore School Dist., 7 Pa. D. & C. 2d 154 (1955); Kepner v. Pennsylvania Threshermen Farmers’ Mut. Cas Co., 70 Pa. D. & C. 398 (1949); National Foundry Co. v. Willioff Co., 27 Dist. Rep. 329 (1917); 1 Goodrich-Amram §§1008 (a)-1, 1254-1 (1962); 2 Anderson, Pennsylvania Practice, Rule 1006.1 (1960); I Standard Pennsylvania Practice 701 (Rev. Ed. 1960). See also Dunn v. Printing Corp. of America, 245 F. Supp. 875 (E.D. Pa. 1965).
Prior to the 1967 and 1969 Amendments, Rule 1006 (a) read as follows: “Except as otherwise provided . . .
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
323 A.2d 794, 229 Pa. Super. 273, 1974 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mixer-inc-v-smith-pasuperct-1974.