Snipes v. Commercial & Industrial Bank

82 So. 2d 895, 83 So. 2d 179, 225 Miss. 345, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 589
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1955
Docket39771
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 So. 2d 895 (Snipes v. Commercial & Industrial Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snipes v. Commercial & Industrial Bank, 82 So. 2d 895, 83 So. 2d 179, 225 Miss. 345, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 589 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

*351 Lee, J.

This litigation originated as an attachment in chancery. Commercial & Industrial Bank, a banking corporation chartered and doing business under the laws of the State of Tennessee, with its principal place of business in the City of Memphis, filed its bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County against Guy G. Snipes and wife, Mrs. Eola Cummings Snipes, residents of the City of 'Memphis, Tennessee, but who operated the partnership firm of Snipes Pontiac Company, in the City of Batesville, Mississippi, as principal defendants, and the Home Insurance Company and seven other insurance companies, chartered under the laws of other states, but doing business in the State of Mississippi.

The controversy arose out of the financing by the Bank of certain wholesale and retail transactions in the nature of floor-planning, and the discount of notes for the balance due the motor company on sales of automobiles and appliances. In addition, the Bank held a note of the company which evidenced a loan of $2,000, and a second mortgage on the company’s place of business. Fire insurance on the company’s building was carried by the eight defendant insurance companies. This building was destroyed by fire on or about July 11, 1953.

The complainant Bank sought an adjudication and decree against the Snipes for the amount of its demand, and to impound the monies due the Snipes in the hands of the insurance companies on account of the fire for the satisfaction of the court’s decree.

The answer of the Snipes challenged the jurisdiction of the court as to the attachment; charged that the Bank could not maintain its suit in the state courts because it *352 was doing business in this State and had not previously complied with the law precedent thereto; that the Bank had dealt unfairly and inequitably with its securities and was itself responsible for whatever loss that it might have sustained; that the claim of the Bank was usurious; and by its cross bill also sought to cancel the second mortgage.

The insurance companies also raised both the question of jurisdiction of the court in the attachment against them and the right of the Bank to sue in the courts of the State because of its failure to qualify therefor, and other points.

The several motions to quash were overruled, and the insurance companies paid the amount for which they were liable into the registry of the court.

On final hearing, the court awarded a decree to the complainant in the aggregate principal sum of $26,811.55, which was ordered to be paid out of the funds in the registry of the court, and dismissed the cross bill.

From the decree entered, the Snipes prosecuted a direct, and the Bank, a cross, appeal.

The appellants contend that the trial court was in error in refusing to quash the attachment. Among other reasons, they say that this extraordinary remedy should not be afforded in a case such as this; that the insurance companies were in Tennessee as much as in Mississippi, and could not be held to be residents under the attachment act; and that the benefit to a nonresident appears to be greater than that which is extended to a citizen of the State.

The action was instituted under Sections 2729 and 2730, Code of 1942, which are as follows:

“Section 2729. Non-residents- — absent or absconding debtors. — The chancery court shall have jurisdiction of attachment suits based upon demands founded upon any indebtedness, whether the same be legal or equitable, or for the recovery of damages for the breach of any con *353 tract, express or implied, or arising ex delicto against any non-resident, absent or absconding debtor, who has lands and tenements within this state, or against any such debtor and persons in this state who have in their hands effects of, or are indebted to, such non-resident, absent or absconding debtor. The court shall give a decree in personam against such non-resident, absent or absconding debtor if summons has been personally served upon him, or if he has entered an appearance. ’ ’
“Section 2730. Attachment against non-residents — how effects or indebtedness bound. — When a bill shall be filed for an attachment of the effects of a non-resident, absent or absconding debtor in the hands of persons in this state, or of the indebtedness of the defendant in this state to such non-resident, absent or absconding debtor, it shall be sufficient to bind such effects or indebtedness, that the summons for the defendant resident in this state shall have stated in or endorsed upon it the nature and object of the suit, and that it is to subject the effects in the hands of the resident defendant, and the indebtedness of such defendant to the non-resident, absent or absconding debtor, to the demand of the complainant; or, instead of such statement on the summons, a copy of the bill may be served with the summons, and shall bind the effects or indebtedness from the time of such service. ’ ’

In the case of Bean v. Bean, 166 Miss. 434, 147 So. 306, Mrs. Jenny Bean, a resident of Illinois, sought an attachment in the Chancery Court of Hinds County against Fred A. Bean, a resident of Alabama, as the principal defendant, and Louisiana Oil Corporation, a. nonresident but authorized to do and doing business in Mississippi, for which Bean worked in Alabama, and which corporate defendant, it was alleged, owed and had in its hands effects of Fred Bean. In the motion to quash, it was contended that Fred Bean’s employment was in Alabama; that the funds for the payment of his salary were never within Mississippi; that the corporation was *354 also doing business in Alabama; that the Mississippi court was without jurisdiction; and that to require an answer in such case was violative both of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and of Section 14, Article 3, Constitution of 1890. Other grounds were also set up. The opinion declined to overrule Southern Pacific Railway Company v. A. J. Lyon & Company, 99 Miss. 186, 54 So. 728, 34 L. R. A. (N.S.) 234, and held that the chancery court had jurisdiction. There is no valid distinction between the Louisiana corporation, a foreign corporation doing business both in Alabama and Mississippi, in that case, and the eight foreign corporations in this case, which were doing business both in Tennessee and Mississippi. In this case, the corporations were persons within the meaning of the attachment statutes, supra. Section 689, Code of 1942. They themselves could sue in the State, and they are “liable to be sued or proceeded against, by attachment or otherwise, as individual nonresident debtors may be sued or proceeded against * * Section 5344, Code of 1942. Cf. Comstock v. Rayford, 1 S & M 423; Freeman v. Malcolm, 2 S & M 53.

Consequently the trial court did not err in overruling the motions to quash.

The appellants again contend here, as they did below, that the appellee was doing business in the State and was therefore without right to bring this suit in the state court by reason of Section 5319, Code of 1942, because it had not qualified to do business in the State.

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Bluebook (online)
82 So. 2d 895, 83 So. 2d 179, 225 Miss. 345, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snipes-v-commercial-industrial-bank-miss-1955.