Pfeifer v. Sheehan Saddlery Co.

189 N.W. 310, 45 S.D. 528, 1922 S.D. LEXIS 101
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1922
DocketFile No. 5024
StatusPublished

This text of 189 N.W. 310 (Pfeifer v. Sheehan Saddlery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pfeifer v. Sheehan Saddlery Co., 189 N.W. 310, 45 S.D. 528, 1922 S.D. LEXIS 101 (S.D. 1922).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

Appeal from an order refusing to vacate an attachment. The attachment was issued upon an affidavit alleging that defendant was “not a resident of this state.” The defendant, J. J. Sheehan, who is appellant here, carried on a retail business in the city of Milbank, in this state, under the name of “Sheehan Saddlery Company,” and his contention is that he was and is a resident of Milbank and not a nonresident and for that reason the attachment was wrongfully issued. In support of his motion to' dissolve the attachment, appellant filed numerous affidavits. His own affidavit states that he is a single man about forty years of age, that he is, and has -been for some eight years, engaged in the busines of a traveling salesman; that his parents reside at Milbank; that he has always made and claimed his home to be with them and that he has been absent therefrom only to the extent necessitated by the transaction of his business as a traveling salesman; that his personal effects, except such as he used in the course of his travels, are left at the residence of his parents and that he intends to remain and maintain his residence in [530]*530Milbank and that he has no permanent business at any other place. Appellant’s parents also made affidavits substantially the same.

One Nelson, manager of the North .Dakota Harness Company of Fargo, N. D1., states that defendant has been employed by his company, as a traveling- salesman for more than five years last past, and that his territory is the southeast part of North Dakota, the east half of South Dakota, the southwest part of Minnesota, and the northwest part of Iowa, but that the defendant “has always maintained his home and domicile at Milbank, S'. D.,” and that the company pays his expenses while away from Milbank; that on one occasion he asked defendant to become a resident of Fargo, N. D., but that he refused to change his place of abode. He also states that the checks of the company covering defendant’s salary and expenses were always deposited in the First National Bank of Fargo, N. D., 'but that his post office address has been, and still is, .known to be at Milbank. An officer of the hirst National Bank of Fargo states that defendant had had a checking account at that bank for some five or six years, but has no safety deposit box with said bank, but that checks made to defendant by the North Dakota Harness Company are deposited in, his bank. One Hart, a traveling salesman, testifies that he is acquainted with the defendant and has driven with him on several occasions to Milbank during the past year, and has been in.his company at Milbank about once a month at dates specified during the year 1921, and that defendant told him his home and place of abode was with his parents at Milbank, but that he traveled out of Fargo, N. D., as a matter of convenience. One Bran-non testified that he had seen defendant at Milbank on two of the dates referred to in Hart’s affidavit, and the assistant cashier of the Farmers’ & Merchants! National Bank of Milbank testified that defendant had left- Liberty bonds and had collected his interest thereon at that bank, and has stated his post office address :to be Milbank. An officer of the First National Bank of Milbank •testified that the defendant had carried a checking account in that bank for several years, and ■ that she saw him in Milbank on one of the dates specified in the affidavit of Hart, and that the post office address left with the bank was Milbank.

Defendant himself also presented another affidavit stating [531]*531that any kind of legal process could be served upon -him at Mil-bank, 'by delivering to, and leaving the same with, his father or mother; that he never voted at any other place than Milbank; that he was at his father’s home on the last day of June and the ist day of July, 1921, and the 24th and 25th days of August, 1921, and transacted business at the bank and other places; that, as a matter of convenience, he makes his headquarters at Fargo, so he may be more readily reached by letter or telegram, Fargo being the most accessible place, and that his business address at Fargo is for convenience; that when he registered at Fargo for service in the army it was because that was the most accessible place that he could be reached,, but that he always maintained his place of abode at Milbank.

His father, J. D. ’Sheehan, testified that he conducted the business of the ’Sheehan Saddlery Company at Milbank as agent for defendant, and that taxes upon the stock of goods were paid by defendant. One Johnson, postmaster of Milbank, testified that he received from the government letters of persons subject -to income tax, and that defendant is so listed and has paid income taxes at Milbank. The county treasurer of Grant county corroborates the statements as to payment of taxes on the stock of the Sheehan Saddlery 'Company. The cashier of the First National Bank of Milbank testifies that defendant has been a depositor in the said bank for seven or eight years and transacts business with said bank and has a safety deposit box wherein he keeps papers afid other records.

J. D. Sheehan testified that he had in his possession a certificate of stock in the Northern States P’ower Company, date of May 13, 1921, running to appellant, in which the address of J. J. Sheehan is given as Milbank.

■On the contrary, one Cahill, deputy county auditor of Grant county, in which Milbank is situated, testified that she is deputy auditor of Grant county, and has in her possession and under her control -the assessor’s books and tax lists for the years 1920- and 1921, and also the military list of said county for the years 1920 and 1921, that on the 30th of September, 1921, she made an examination of said records, and that said defendant was not assessed or taxed for school or poll tax, for either of said’ years, arid that his name was not on the military lists nor on the poll list of [532]*532said county, and that the assessor’s 'books and tax lists contain a list of all the taxable residents of, said city.

One Blumquist testified that he is acting city auditor for Milbank and has been for more than two years last past, and has in his possession the poll list and registered list of the electors of said city, that defendant was not a registered elector of said city, and that he did' not vote at any election held in said city in the years 1920 and 1921. O. A. Pfeifer testified that in a trial in the circuit court of Grant county at the January, 1921, terms, J. D. Sheehan, father of defendant, testified that J. J. Sheehan lived at Fargo, N. D., where he was employed as a salesman; that affiiant resides and is engaged in business in the city of Milbank; that defendant has not resided at Milbank, and has only been in said city on infrequent occasions for a short time. Robert D. Jones testified that he resides in the city of Milbank; that the defendant has been in said city only infrequently and for short periods of time, and has only made occasional visits with his parents. Dwight Campbell testified he had examined the hotel register at Aberdeen, where defendant stopped, on his travels as a salesman, and knows the signature of said defendant on the hotel register; that the place of residence in said register was sometimes not filled out, but that, when filled out, his residence was given as Fargo.

Discussing attachments on the ground of nonresidence, the law is thus stated in 6 Corpus Juris, 49:

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Bluebook (online)
189 N.W. 310, 45 S.D. 528, 1922 S.D. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfeifer-v-sheehan-saddlery-co-sd-1922.