Mrs. Nancy K. Steele v. G. D. Searle & Co.

483 F.2d 339
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 1973
Docket73-1308
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 483 F.2d 339 (Mrs. Nancy K. Steele v. G. D. Searle & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mrs. Nancy K. Steele v. G. D. Searle & Co., 483 F.2d 339 (5th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

The debate over the wisdom of the constitutional grant of diversity jurisdiction has much currency, as well as many argumentative antecedents. The reaches and restrictions of the grant are and have been constantly before committees, commissions, and the Congress. While reports, debates, and perhaps legislation géstate, we are forced to decide today a diversity case with many state and federal implications. We cannot wait for tomorrow’s panacea; we cannot delay our decision. This action was originally filed in 1970 in the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, Mississippi and removed, under the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1441, 1 to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. Plaintiff-appellant, Mrs. Nancy K. Steele, sought to obtain jurisdiction over defendant-appellee, G. D. Searle & Co., both by personal service on an employee of appellee resident in Mississippi 2 and by the attachment of debts owed appellee by companies doing business in Mississippi 3 . The district *341 coui’t dismissed the complaint holding that the state laws did not permit the assertion of jurisdiction over appellee on either basis, and that Mississippi could not, consistent with the Due Process Clause, exercise jurisdiction over appellee on the facts of this case. Plaintiff appeals only from the holding that valid jurisdiction was not obtained under the Mississippi attachment statutes, Miss. Code §§ 2729, 2733 (1942). 4 Finding that the law of Mississippi authorizes and the Constitution of the United States permits application of the jurisdictional device of attachment on the facts of this ease, we reverse.

I. THE RECORD AND HOLDING IN THE DISTRICT COURT

.Appellant, a resident of Kansas, alleges in her complaint that she purchased in her home state certain birth control pills manufactured by appellee and that, as a result of her use of appellee’s inadequately tested product, she suffered a serious and debilitating stroke on February 15, 1964, for which she seeks $500,000 in damages. Appellee, a drug company with an extensive distribution network, is incorporated in Delaware and has its principle place of business in Illinois. Although appellee owns no property in Mississippi, it does maintain three full time employees in that state for the purpose of soliciting orders. In answer to interrogatories submitted by appellant, appellee stated that, although it is not licensed to do business in Mississippi, its sales in that state over the three year period prior to the filing of this action amounted to more than $800,000. At the time of the filing of the complaint in state court three drug wholesale firms indebted to appellee were present and doing business in Mississippi, one having been incorporated there. Purporting to act on the basis of Miss.Code § 2729 (1942), appellant served the wholesalers with writs of attachment, the res or subject of the attachment being all monies owed to appellee by the attachment defendants, some $2,458,996.17. 5 Personal service was also made on one of the soliciting agents employed by appellee in Mississippi.

After the removal of this action appel-lee filed consolidated motions for relief under Rule 12, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, alleging, inter alia, that the court lacked jurisdiction of the person. This motion was originally denied. However, following a realignment of the district court docket and the assignment of this ease to another judge, appellee renewed its motions to dismiss and met with more favorable results. The district court granted the motion, finding' that (1) there was no jurisdiction under the Mississippi attachment statute and *342 (2) the Due Process Clause.would bar any attempt by Mississippi to exercise such jurisdiction. Specifically, the district court found that although the Mississippi attachment statute did permit the assertion of jurisdiction through attachment of a debt and appellant had complied with all of the technical requirements of state law, the court lacked jurisdiction because:

“The obvious intention of the statutes is to afford security to a claimant against an absent or absconding debt- or, a status which would presuppose that the resident was a former resident of the state who had removed himself from the process of the state courts. That is not the case here where defendant has never been a resident of the state.”

The court below also found that the Mississippi law permitting attachment for jurisdiction purposes was not meant to apply to a case such as this, in which the state’s only “intei'est” in the litigation would be jurisdictional, since appellant resorted to the Mississippi procedures “purely for the purpose of availing herself of this state’s longer statutory period of limitations for her tort claim.” 6 The court further held that the heavy burden of defending an action on the basis of an out of state attachment could not be imposed, consistent with fair and just procedures and the applicable decisions of the United States Supreme Court, without a “substantial state interest” in the outcome of the controversy. The district court found an insufficient interest in this case, which involves a suit between a non-resident plaintiff and a non-resident defendant on a cause of action arising out of state, and therefore dismissed appellant’s complaint. 7

The jurisdiction of a federal district court in a case removed from the state courts is derivative. It depends largely for its validity on whether the state court had jurisdiction, both as a matter of state and federal law. This rule is applicable even though as an original matter the suit could have been brought in federal court without impediment. Lambert Run Coal Co. v. Baltimore and Ohio R. Co., 1922, 258 U.S. 377, 382, 42 S.Ct. 349, 66 L.Ed. 671. The district court in this case had only that juridiction conferred by the laws of Mississippi on the Chancery Court of Hinds County, no more and no less 8 . By the same token, if the Due Process Clause of the Foui’teenth Amendment prevents Mississippi from obtaining jurisdiction, a federal court is likewise without power to proceed on removal.

II. THE MISSISSIPPI LAW

At first blush the holding of the court below in interpreting the Mississippi chancery statute would appear to be at odds with the plain meaning of the words. Section 2729 is set out in its entirety in Footnote 3, supra, but a few of its aspects merit special consideration. *343

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Bluebook (online)
483 F.2d 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mrs-nancy-k-steele-v-g-d-searle-co-ca5-1973.