R. Jackson & Co. v. Republic Iron & Steel Co.

141 Ill. App. 453, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 706
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 11, 1908
DocketGen. No. 13,881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 141 Ill. App. 453 (R. Jackson & Co. v. Republic Iron & Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. Jackson & Co. v. Republic Iron & Steel Co., 141 Ill. App. 453, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 706 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in attachment instituted in the Municipal Court of Chicago against James Arney, the debtor of plaintiff. The right to the attachment is grounded on the fact that Arney was a non-resident of the State of Illinois and resided in the city of East Chicago in the adjoining State of Indiana. Appellant was summoned as garnishee.

In this opinion the parties will be referred to as plaintiff, defendant and garnishee, respectively.

The jurisdiction of the court of a defendant is a primary, indispensable requisite to support a judgment against the garnishee. No intendments are to be indulged in favor of the jurisdiction of a domestic court over a resident of a sister state. The genius and spirit of our laws are such that a party is never to be sued out of the jurisdiction of his residence except by special statutory provision to the contrary, and in that event the law compels' every material condition of the statute to be complied with in letter and in spirit before assuming jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the rights of such non-resident.

The garnishee is a corporation existing in virtue of the laws of the State of New Jersey. It operates steel mills in the city of the residence of defendant, and. maintains an office within the limits of the first judicial district of the Municipal Court in Chicago. This proceeding was commenced and tried and judgment rendered in the second district.

Defendant was an employe of the garnishee, and at the time of the service of garnishee process was indebted to the (defendant) in the sum of $107. The trial proceeded before the court without the intervention of a jury, and a statement of such proceedings had and the evidence heard appear in the record. From such statement it appears that the charter of the garnishee was granted by the State of New Jersey; that it was served with garnishee process at its office in the first district, and that it had neither office, representative, property nor effects in the second district. The answer of the garnishee disclosed the following facts: That defendant was employed by it at its works in East Chicago, Indiana; that his wages were earned and payable at said East Chicago; that he was the head of a family, residing with such family, within the State of Indiana, and that as the head of a family he was entitled to an exemption under the Indiana statutes in the sum of six hundred dollars; that the garnishee in its answer claimed the exemption allowed by the Indiana statute for the defendant; that when garnishee process was served it owed defendant $107; that no demand in garnishment was made either upon defendant or the garnishee, prior to the commencement of the attachment suit.

The garnishee upon the trial objected to the jurisdiction' of the court on the grounds above recited and for the additional reason that no property, moneys or effects of any kind or nature belonging to defendant were attached in the second district of the Municipal Court. It further objected because no demand was made on either defendant or garnishee before instituting suit. On the foregoing grounds the garnishee moved the court to dismiss the suit, but the trial judge refused so to do. Thereupon the garnishee claimed for the defendant the benefit of the exemption law of the State of Indiana, which the court refused to allow and proceeded to enter a finding against the garnishee for the sum of $98.50, and after overruling motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment gave judgment upon the finding, and the garnishee prosecutes this writ of error in an effort to reverse such judgment as being contrary to law.

A reversal is predicated upon three reasons urged upon us in argument: First, that no demand was made either upon defendant or the garnishee prior to the commencement of the attachment suit, as provided by section 11, chapter 32, R. S.; second, that the defendant was entitled to the exemption allowed by the statutes of the State of Indiana; and third, that the Municipal Court had jurisdiction of neither the defendant nor the garnishee, and that its judgment is therefore void.

It is our opinion that the provisions of the garnishee statute have no application to the case of a non-resident defendant, and we think it equally clear that the measure of exemptions allowed by our statute to the heads of families residing with them within this state is restricted in its operation to the domestic jurisdiction, and has no extra-territorial force. This we think is apparent from the provision of the Illinois statute hereinafter referred to. It is quite evident that the law-making power of this state anticipated a condition which we find obtaining in this record, viz: That the workingman in a foreign jurisdiction, with a resident master doing business or found within the State of Illinois, might be confronted with a garnishment of his wages by process of onr courts, and that the exemption statute as drawn being confined in its beneficient operation to the heads of families residing with the same within this jurisdiction, such non-resident workingman might be without the right to claim any exemption. The legislature, in its wisdom, provided against such condition by enacting section 22, chapter 52, R. S., by which the exemptions allowed by the statutes of the state of the non-resident workingman was made operative when invoked in the jurisdiction in which he-might be made to appear against his will. Section 22 reads:

“And whenever in any proceedings in any court of this State, to subject the wages due to any person to garnishment, it shall appear that such person is a non-resident of the State of Illinois,- that the wages earned by him were earned and payable outside of the State of Illinois, the said person whose wages are so sought to be subjected to garnishment shall be allowed the same exemption as is at the time allowed to hirn by the laws of the State in which he so resides.”

The answer of the garnishee was neither traversed nor its statements denied, consequently the truth of such statements stands admitted for the purposes of onr review. The Illinois statutes supra make it encumbent upon the court, upon claim made and proof in support of such claim tendered, to allow to the defendant workingman the exemptions provided by the laws of the state of his residence, and to protect his wages from being diverted from him to the payment of a domestic judgment. We find this Indiana exemption statute in section 715, Burns’ B. S. Indiana of 1894. It provides: “An amount of property, not exceeding in value $600, owned by any resident householder, shall not be liable to sale on execution or any other final process from a court, from any debt growing out of or founded upon a contract, express or implied, after the taking effect of this Act.” This Act has been in force since May 81, 1879. By section 714 it is provided:

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Bluebook (online)
141 Ill. App. 453, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-jackson-co-v-republic-iron-steel-co-illappct-1908.