Moch v. Virginia Fire & Marine Ins.

10 F. 696
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 F. 696 (Moch v. Virginia Fire & Marine Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moch v. Virginia Fire & Marine Ins., 10 F. 696 (circtedva 1882).

Opinion

Hughes, D. J.

This case is before mo now on the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication. Avoiding technicalities, the plaintiff’s contention is that the defendant was properly sued and brought into court in Louisiana by service of process upon such an agent of the defendant, John W. Taber, as could be served with the process under the laws of that state; that, besides, the defendant appeared to the suit there, pleaded defective service of process, claimed that it was not in court, and was overruled on that issue thus raised by itself, by a court of general and competent jurisdiction, and is therefore estopped from pleading the same matters here.

The contention of the defendant, technically alleged by its plea and sot out argumentatively in the very able and learned brief of counsel, is that the citation served on Taber was insufficient to bring it into court; that its appearance there was only for the purpose of suggesting to the court its want of jurisdiction because of the matters alleged in its “exception” filed there; that it is not bound by the judgment of the court on that or any other question; and that the judgment is a nullity, and would be treated as sucb in Louisiana, and should be so treated here.

The first question presented to me, though it is not the pivotal one in this case, is whether the “exception,” the “peremptory exception,” used in the practice of Louisiana, is to be treated in common-law courts as a plea by which the defendant sets out matters of law and fact in defence of the action, and submits himself to the judgment of the court upon them, or is a mere suggestion or protest of record by which the defendant commits himself to nothing at all; as to which it matters not at all to him whether the court considers and passes upon it or not, and which, when entered of record, is a matter of futile surplusage.

[700]*700Without meaning to refer to such “exceptions” in general, I have to say that, for reasons given in the sequel, I cannot take the latter view of the peremptory “exception” which was pleaded in the suit between these parties in Louisiana, the judgment in which is sued upon here. The Code'of Practice in Louisiana defines peremptory exceptions to be “those which tend to the dismissal of the suit;” some of them relating to forms, others arising from the law. The exception in this ease tended to the dismissal of the suit on the ground that, as a matter of law, the defendant could not be brought into court by service of process upon the agent who, as the petition alleged and the exception did not deny, negotiated the insurance, received the premiums, delivered the policy, and was the acting agent of the defendant in the city of Shreveport; could not, for the reason that he was not what the plea calls the “general” agent of the company in Louisiana, appointed in accordance with the law concerning non-resident insurance companies enacted in 1877.

I consider that such was the matter of law formally submitted for decision on the twelfth of April, 1879, by defendant’s counsel in the exception set out in the record; and though the court, in its judgment rendered on that day, probably after argument on the exception, does not expressly declare that the exception was formally overruled, yet that it was overruled is a necessarylmplication from the tenor of the judgment.

The court of Louisiana having decided that the defendant was before it by force of the service of citation on its 'agent, Taber, and not merely by its appearance “alone to file” the exception, it may not be competent for me to pass upon the propriety of that decision; but I feel bound by the earnestness.of defendant’s contention to look behind the judgment of the court a quo, into the validity of the process by which the defendant was held to have been brought into court.

That a corporation doing business in a state other than that from which its charter is derived, and in which its principal office is held and its chief business is conducted, — doing business there and everywhere else, as corporations must of neeesity do, through the agency of natural persons, — may be sued and brought into court in that state by the service of process on its agent there, independently of any statute law or warrant of attorney expressly authorizing such service, has been very authoritatively decided.

The case of Moulin v. Ins. Co. 1 Dutcher, 57, was similar to the one at bar in its essential features, except that there, there was no [701]*701conditional appearance in the original suit by the defendant. The defendant was a corporation chartered in New Jersey, and having its principal office there. It established a branch office in Buffalo, New York, and did business there for awhile, but finally withdrew that office. Suit was afterwards brought against it there, on one of the policies issued from that agency, and process was served on its president, who was a resident of New Jersey and was casually in Buffalo, not on the business of his company. On the judgment obtained in the New York suit thus commenced, suit was brought in New Jersey. The pleadings in this latter suit were substantially identical with those in this, except as to the conditional appearance. The opinion was delivered by Chief Justice Green, who said:

“ If a corporation may sue within a foreign jurisdiction it should seem consistent with sound principle that it should also be liable to be sued within such jurisdiction. The difficulty is this: that process against a corporation at common law must be served upon its principal oilicer within the jurisdiction of that sovereignty by which it was created. The rule is founded upon the principle that the artificial, invisible, and intangible corporate body is exclusively the creature of the law; that it has no existence except by operation of law; and that, consequently, it has no existence without the limits of that sovereignity, and beyond the operation of those laws by which it was created and by whose power it exists. The rule rests upon a highly artificial reason, and, however technically just, is confined at this day, in its application, within exceedingly narrow limits. A corporation may own property, may transact business, may contract debts; it may bring suits, it may use its common seal, nay, it may be sued within a foreign jurisdiction, provided a voluntary appearance is entered to the action. It 1ms, then, existence, vitality, efficiency, beyond the jurisdiction of the sovereignty which created it, provided it be voluntarily exorcised. If it be said that all these acts are performed by its agents, as they may be in the case of a private individual, and that the corporation itself is not present, the answer is that a corporation acts nowhere except by its officers and agents. It has no tangible existence except through its officers. For ail practical purposes its existence is as real, as vital, and efficient elsewhere as within the jurisdiction that created it. It may perform every act without the jurisdiction of the sovereignty which created it, that it may within it. Its existence anywhere and everywhere is but ideal. It has no actual personal identity and existence as a natural person has; no body which may exist in one place and be served with process, while its agents and officers are in another. Process can only be served upon the officers of a corporation within its own jurisdiction, not upon the corporation itself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moch-v-virginia-fire-marine-ins-circtedva-1882.