South Carolina Rail Road v. McDonald

5 Ga. 531
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1848
DocketNo. 61
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Ga. 531 (South Carolina Rail Road v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Carolina Rail Road v. McDonald, 5 Ga. 531 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] The single question made in this case, is whether the property of a foreign corporation, within the limits of this State, is subject to our attachment laws? The Circuit Judge determined that itis subject; the Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the city of Augusta, held that it is not. Whilst .upon this question, it is conceded that there is some conflict of authority, upon principle, and also upon the preponderance of authority, as well as upon a fair construction of our attachment laws, wo [534]*534think that such property may be attached in Georgia. The jurisdiction of the Courts of Georgia is co-extensive with its sovereignty, and.that embraces the persons and things within its territorial limits. The Courts of no independent State have any extra-territorial jurisdiction. This general proposition applies to the States of our Union, as well as to other sovereign States. Yet, it is unquestionably true, that the property of a citizen or inhabitant of a foreign State, within the limits of Georgia, is subject to the jurisdiction of our Courts.. By the general law, and by the comity of States, the Courts of one State may seize and apply the property of a non-resident debtor, to the payment of his debts;. May proceed against the property, and conclude the citizen of a foreign State, by a judgment in rem. See these points discussed at length, in Dearing vs. the Bank of Charleston, determined at Milledgeville, in November of this year. Supra, P.497. The question;' however, now before me, do.es not dependupon these general principles. The present question is, whether a creditor is entitled to the remedy at Law,by attachment, againsta foreign corporation, which our Statutes give him against anaturalperson, who is his debtor. It will depend very much upon a construction of the attachment laws of .our own State. The remedies afforded in Georgia, for applying the property of such persons as"fall within their provisions, to the paymen. of debts, by process of attachment, are createdby the Acts of our own Legislature. It is not, therefore, necessary to discuss at all, the force and effect of any principles, upon which is based the process of foreign attachment, by the custom of London. Persons, by non residence, and by placing themselves in any one of the several predicaments described in the Statute, are not amenable to the jurisdiction of the Courts, by the ordinary process of the law. In such cases, before the passage of the attachment laws, there was no legal remedy by which the payment of debts could be enforced. That was the mischief to be remedied. These laws supplied the remedy. The remedy, now, is to attach the property or estate, as the law has it, of the debtor, or so much thereof, as will satisfy the creditor’s demand and costs, wherever it may be found, whether in the hands of any one indebted to, or having effects of such debtor in his hands. The object of the law, as well as the condition upon which the remedy is to be used, is declared in the title of the Act of 1799. “Whereas, (says the title to the Act of ’99,) it is just and proper that provision should [535]*535be made for the recovery of debts, when the same cannot be done by the ordinary process of-the law, therefore, &e.” The object is, to providefor the collection of debts; the condition upon which the remedy to collect may be used, is inability to collect them by the ordinary process of the law. The attachment laws are then remedial Statutes, and are to be so construed as to advance the remedy and to suppress the mischief. There is no necessity, in this case, to apply with very labored and subtle discrimination, the rules of construction. It requires no such effort to bring corporations within the provisions of the Act of ’99. It is unquestionably to be liberally construed, as to the liability which it imposes upon debtors, and as to the rights, or rather remedies which it confers upon creditors; but strictly, as to all the terms andconditionsuponwhichtheremedy may be used, and the obligations enforced. We disclaim the power of this Court to subject corporations to the operation of this Act, upon the score of policy, if they are not within its provisions, fairly, reasonably, and liberally construed. We are not the Legislature, but the servants of the Legislature, to enforce its will, 'as- declared according to the usual canons of interpretation, in the Statute, unlessthat will is in conflict with the State or Federal Constitution, or with the fundamental principles of the social compact. We are but the ministers of the law; We think that corporations are embraced within the .provisions of the Act of ’99, because the terms used in the Act, which describe the persons made subject to its operation, are descriptive of corporations. Those words are “person,” “ party,” “ defendant,’’ “ debtor.” Either 'of these words describe a corporation. It is a person under the law — an artificial person, created by the Legislature. It has a name — a local habita, tion too. It is not a citizen in every sense of the word, but it is an inhabitant — it dwells where by law it is located. 2 How. S. C. Reps. 497. A corporation is a “judicial person” — a legal entity. For many purposes, it has a legal being, It can contract, own property, grant acquittances, convey titles, become the obligee of a bond, prosecute suits, appear, answer, and defend. Now where the law-making power uses the' word person — where it is found in.the Statute book, it is to be presumed that the legal meaning is intended, and not the social or' ’ ordinary meaning. The word is descriptive of all who are, in professional par[536]*536lance, person?. So party and, defendant, are words as applicable to corporations as to natural persons ; because they may be, equally with natural persons, parties and defendants. The word, however, used in the act with most significance, and used most frequently, is debtor. . It would seem that the General Assembly, by using that term, intended to' guard against the very construction I am now combatting, to wit, that the act applies only to natural persons. That is a generic term, and embraces all who owe debts, whether natural persons, partnerships, or corporations. These are not merely verbal criticisms. These words constitute material parts of the enacting clauses of the Statute, and give to them significance. They define the class of persons- which the Act makes liable to the process. If .their meaning is ascertained, then is the meaning of the provisions of the Act'of ’99 ascertained. Upon complaint made upon oath by a creditor, that his debtor resides out of the State, &c. so that the ordinary process of the law cannot be served upon him, -it is made the duty of judges and magistrates to grant an attachment against such debt- or. Now, iu these provisions are found the grant of the remedy —the designation of those who are liable to its use, and the conditions upon which its use depends. They contain the soul of the -Statute. They create the remedy and impose the liability. "Judged by them alone, it is impossible to,believe that the Legislature, by debtors, meant natural persons alone. It is said, however, that the moaning of the general terms employed in the Act, is controlled and limited by other clauses and provisions. We shall see.

. Again, it is clear that a corporation may occupy one of the positions, to-wit: the position of a non-resident, in which a debtor must be placed before the attachment can .issue.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ga. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-carolina-rail-road-v-mcdonald-ga-1848.