Osborne & Woodbury v. Shawmut Insurance

51 Vt. 278
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 Vt. 278 (Osborne & Woodbury v. Shawmut Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne & Woodbury v. Shawmut Insurance, 51 Vt. 278 (Vt. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dunton, J.

This is an action of assumpsit upon a certain insurance policy executed by the defendant, and insuring against loss by fire certain property in Groton, in the County of Caledonia. It appears from the writ and declaration that said policy was procured by the' Groton Lumber Company of this State for the benefit of the plaintiffs, who are both residents of New Hampshire, and that the defendant is a corporation chartered and organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

The defendant filed a motion to dismiss in the County Court, and claimed therein that by reason of the aforesaid facts appearing from the writ, and it also appearing from the officer’s return that no attachment of the defendant’s property was made in _ the State of Vermont, the court had no jurisdiction of the action, and the same should therefore be dismissed. The court denied the motion, and to such denial the defendant excepted.

[281]*281Sec. 8 of No. 1, Sts. 1874, provides that “ no insurance company not organized under the laws of this State shall do business in this State, until it has filed with the Secretary of this State a written stipulation agreeing that any legal process affecting the company, served on either of the insurance commissioners, shall have the same effect as if served personally on the company in this State. So long as any liabilities of the stipulating company to any resident of this State continue, such stipulation cannot be revoked or modified. Service of process according to the stipulation aforesaid shall be sufficient service on the company.”

We assume that such stipulation as is required by this act was duly filed with the Secretary of this State, and that the writ was served upon one of the insurance commissioners according to the provisions of said act, no copy of the return being furnished us.

The contract in question was made in this State, and is one of which our courts have jurisdiction, so that the real question in the case is whether the defendant corporation, by the notice it received of the suit, was so far subject to the jurisdiction and laws of this State that it was bound to appear, or take the consequences of a judgment by default by reason of non-appearance.

By the common law personal actions may be brought in any place or state where the party defendant can be found. But if neither the person nor property of a citizen of another state can be found in this State whereon to serve process, the courts of this State can acquire no jurisdiction over him by notice; and any judgment against him without voluntary appearance is wholly void. See Price v. Hickok, 39 Vt. 292. The defendant corporation is treated in legal proceedings, so far as its residence is concerned, as a citizen of Massachusetts, so that unless service of the writ upon one of the insurance commissioners of this State is to have the sanie force and effect as service of process against a citizen of Massachusetts made upon him in this State, then by such service the County Court acquired no jurisdiction of the defendant. But as is said by Wells, J., in Smith v. Insurance Co. 14 Allen, 339: “ A corporation being a mere creature of local statutes, can of right have no existence nor recognition beyond the limits of the state wherein it is established. By comity such arti[282]*282ficial persons are permitted to contract and sue in other states. If they avail themselves of that comity . . . they may become liable to its jurisdiction to the extent to which they have thus voluntarily subjected themselves.”

A foreign corporation can transact business in this State only by its consent, express or implied ; and the Legislature has the right to say upon what terms or conditions such consent shall be given. The condition imposed upon foreign insurance companies by the Legislature is, that they shall comply with section 8 of No. 1 of the Acts of 1874 — that which requires them to agree that they may be sued in this State, which is equivalent to an agreement that they may be found here for the service of process ; and such agreement, when entered into by them, is valid and binding. See Lafayette Insurance Co. v. French, 18 How. 407; R. R. v. Harris, 12 Wal. 81; ex parte Schollenburger, 6 Otto, 369. The law upon this subject is stated by the Supreme Court of the United States through Mr. Chief Justice Waite in ex parte Schollenburger, supra, thus : “ If the Legislature of a state requires a foreign corporation to consent to be found within its territory for the purpose of the service of process in a suit as a condition to doing business in the state, and the corporation does so consent, the fact that it is found gives the jurisdiction, notwithstanding the finding was procured by consent. The essential fact is the finding, beyond which the court will not ordinarily look.” Therefore the defendant, having consented to be sued or found here, by entering into the contract in question, subjected itself to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State, so far, at least, as said contract is concerned, it having been made in this State concerning property within the same.

This case is clearly distinguishable from Sawyer v. Insurance Co. 46 Vt. 697, Smith v. Insurance Co. 14 Allen, 337, and Mill Co. v. Swede Iron Co. 3 Vroom, 15. In each of these three cases, the contract in suit was made in a state other than the one in which the action was brought. In Sawyer v. Insurance Co. and Smith v. Insurance Co. the plaintiffs were also non-residents; but in Mill Co. v. Swede Iron Co. this was not the case, the plaintiffs being residents of New Jersey, where suit was brought, and [283]*283the defendant a Pennsylvania corporation. The statute of New-Jersey provided that process against a foreign corporation might be served on any officer, director, agent, or engineer of such corporation. Beasley, C. J., who delivers the opinion of the court, says :• “ Upon general principles and in the absence of statutory innovations, it is to be regarded as settled in this State, at least, that if a foreign corporation, at the time of commencement of suit, does not do business and has not any office or place of business in this State, the contract sued on, not having been entered into in this State, such corporation, except by its own consent, cannot be brought within the jurisdiction of this or any court of this State.” And the court held that it had no jurisdiction of the case, and rendered judgment for the defendants on their plea to the jurisdiction, the same having been demurred to by the plaintiff. The case turned upon the fact that the contract in suit was made in a foreign state and the defendant did not do business in the State of New Jersey when suit was brought, and is therefore an authority in favor of sustaining the jurisdiction of the court in the suit at bar.

Although Sawyer v. Insurance Co., supra, occurred under chap. 87 of the General Statutes, so far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned, it does not vary in principle from like cases occurring under the act of 1874.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Vt. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-woodbury-v-shawmut-insurance-vt-1878.