National Fire Insurance v. Chambers

53 N.J. Eq. 468
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 N.J. Eq. 468 (National Fire Insurance v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Fire Insurance v. Chambers, 53 N.J. Eq. 468 (N.J. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The only question here involved is this, Did Harding, Whitman & Company, by their proceeding in attachment in the Philadelphia common pleas, obtain a lien upon the debí due from the complainant to Chambers, now represented by the fund in court in this cause? or, as it may be otherwise expressed, Did the proceeding effect an involuntary assignment of the debt from Chambers to Harding, Whitman & Company ? If such was the result of their proceeding, it seems to me to follow conclusively [475]*475that they must prevail in the present contest upon the familiar principle that he who is first in time is best in right.

A faint attempt was made to show, by proofs, that Mr. Crandall’s interest in the claim antedated the attachment of Harding, Whitman & Company. I think this attempt failed. He put himself, both in his petition and in his answer, wholly upon his assignment of January, 1894, and at the argument he relied wholly upon the ground, as I interpret his argument, that the Pennsylvania court had no jurisdiction, no power to seize this debt, and that the proceedings for that purpose should not be recognized as valid by this court.

The proceedings in the Datz Case show clearly enough that the Pennsylvania courts, if properly sued by Harding, Whitman & Company, will proceed to render judgment against the complainant, as garnishee of Chambers, in fhvor of Harding, Whitman & Company. The only difference between the case of Harding, Whitman & Company and the Datz Case is that Harding, Whitman & Company are non-residents 'of Pennsylvania. But the Pennsylvania statute, with regard to foreign attachments, makes no distinction between domestic and foreign creditors in this behalf, and I can find no trace of any such distinction having been taken in any of the decided cases. Franklin Fire Insurance Co. v. West, 8 Watts & S. 350; Girard Fire Insurance Co. v. Field, 45 Pa. St. 129; Appeal of Jaffray & Co., 101 Pa. St. 583; Chase v. Ninth National Dank of New York, 56 Pa. St. 355. Oral proof was given in this case, by a member of the Philadelphia bar, that there was no such distinction ; that non-resident creditors had the same rights to sue out writs of attachment against non-resident debtors as have resident creditors of that state. And such is the rule in our own and in most, if not all, the other states of the union. I am, therefore, forced to the conclusion that if Harding, Whitman & Company had not submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of this court, but had proceeded in their attachment suit with the ordinary proceedings against complainant as garnishee, they would have recovered judgment against complainant which would have bound it in all jurisdictions.

[476]*476It follows that it is thoroughly established that, according to the system of jurisprudence administered by the courts of Pennsylvania, Harding, Whitman & Company did acquire a lien upon this debt due from complainant to Chambers by their proceedings in the Pennsylvania courts.

Is there anything in that system, as manifested in this case, which is contrary to international law, or to the fundamental principles of natural justice recognized by all civilized nations?

First. Does it result in rendering judgment against a party without having acquired jurisdiction of his person by notice served upon him within the territorial jurisdiction? The language of the Pennsylvania act is

“ that any legal process affecting the insurance company, served on the agent specified by the company to receive service of process for said company, shall have the same effect as if served personally on the company within this state.”

Clearly, the meaning of the language “ served personally on the company within this state,” is served personally on a company domiciled within this state. Such has been the construction put upon it by the courts of Pennsylvania. And that the term “process shall be construed to mean and include any and every writ, rule, order, notice or decree, including any process of execution that may issue in or upon any action, suit or legal proceedings to which said company may be a party by themselves or jointly with others, whether the same shall arise upon a policy of insurance or otherwise, * * * and every such service shall have the same force and effect, to all intents and purposes, as personal service on the company in the county where said process shall issue.”

It is difficult to conceive language more comprehensive than this. It clearly includes process of garnishment. And the consent filed with the insurance commissioner, and the appointment of Bradway as its agent for tljat purpose in Philadelphia, was a voluntary consent to subject itself to that jurisdiction. Clearly, the complainant cannot object to the validity of the law.

Second. Can its creditors object? It is difficult to see how they can be injured by it. Take the present case. If Mr. Cham[477]*477bers had desired to apply this debt due him from complainant to a particular purpose — for example, the payment in whole or in part of a particular creditor of his — he could have done so by prompt action for that purpose, or he could, by a proper assignment, have divided it equally among all his creditors, and his bona fide assignee, whether he held for himself individually or in trust for the several creditors of Chambers, if, in fact, prior in time, would have been first in right. But Chambers took no such action for over six months, with the result that two of his creditors did take prompt action, through the courts of Pennsylvania, to forcibly apply the amount due Chambers from complainant to the payment of'their debts against Chambers.

Now I can find no injustice in such proceeding. It is the ordinary process of attachment and garnishment in use in all jurisdictions deriving their laws from England. And it is difficult to perceive what difference it makes to Chambers, or his subsequent assignee, whether it be instituted in Pennsylvania as the conventional domicile of the garnishee, or in Connecticut, its actual domicile. "Wherever instituted, the result is the same, viz., to forcibly apply a debt due from complainant to Chambers to the payment, pro tanto, of a debt due from Chambers to a third party who is the actor in the suit. The possible hardship and injustice to Chambers in such exercise of power arises out of the proceeding against him, as an absent debtor, by publication and without personal notice served within the territorial jurisdiction. But this is a source of hardship and injustice common to all proceedings by foreign attachment wherever taken. It was no greater hardship or injustice to him to compel him to go-to Pennsylvania than to Connecticut to defend unjust or unfounded claims, if any, set up against him. No question can possibly be raised as to the right of the legislature of Connecticut, complainant’s domicile of origin, to authorize its court to entertain such jurisdiction.

In every case the means of notice to the defendant in attachment of such claims' is the same, viz., either by inquiry — in this case — of his debtor (the garnishee) why he does not pay his debt to him (Chambers); or, if tangible chattels be seized, then by visual observation of such seizure. This mode of notice, of [478]*478course, is in addition to the usual statutory notice by publication in use by all jurisdictions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.J. Eq. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-fire-insurance-v-chambers-njch-1895.