Speidel Co. v. Warder

49 S.E. 534, 56 W. Va. 602, 1904 W. Va. LEXIS 162
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 49 S.E. 534 (Speidel Co. v. Warder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speidel Co. v. Warder, 49 S.E. 534, 56 W. Va. 602, 1904 W. Va. LEXIS 162 (W. Va. 1904).

Opinions

BraNNON, Judge:

Hugh Warder sued The Joseph Speidel Grocery Company, a: West Virginia corporation, before J. O. Jaco, a justice of Tay[603]*603lor county, on a money demand, and on 2d April, 1904, tlie justice rendered a judgment by default against said Grocery Company for $32.20 and $2.25 costs. Warder filed a transcript of bis judgment in the clerk’s office of the circuit court, and caused an execution to issue to the sheriff of Ohio county, where-is the principal office of said corporation, and the said Grocery Company moved the circuit court to quash the execution, but ¡the motion was overruled. The summons in said action was served on an agent of said corporation in said county of Taylor, the return showing that the president, cashier, treasurer or other chief officers were absent and not found in Taylor county, and that the agent resided therein. The said corporation now applies to this Court for a writ of prohibition against said justice, said Warder and the circuit court of Taylor county to-prohibit them from further enforcing said judgment. The theory on which the prohibition is asked is, that there was no-jurisdiction of said action in Taylor county, because the said corporation kept its principal office in the county of Ohio, where alone it can be sued.

As to suits before justices chapter 50 of the Code is the sole-fountain and guide to the exercise of the jurisdiction of their courts. They are courts of limited jurisdiction. They have no jurisdiction save that given by chapter 50. In section 16 we-find the answer to the above question as to justice’s courts. “The civil jurisdiction of a justice shall not extend to any action, unless the cause of action arose in his county, or the defendant, or one of the defendants, reside therein, or being a non-resident of the State, is found, or has property or effects, within the-county.” That section prohibits a civil suit in any county not in it designated. It is that section which designates the county for a civil action before justices. This section covers suits against a domestic corporation, because it has a residence in that county in which it keeps its principal office. It can therefore be sued in the county where it has that office, in transitory actions. “There is, therefore, no difficulty in holding that, for the purposes of jurisdiction, procedure, litigation affecting a corporation, and the taxation of its personal property, it may betaken to reside where its chief office is.” Its residence is where it exercises corporate functions. 1 Thomp., Corp. section 689. I repeat that section 16 points out the place of suit; section 34 does not give place of suit, but is designed only to provide for [604]*604service of process. The heading in the Code above section 33, “Service of process and notices/’ shows that the design is only do provide for service of process, not to give place of jurisdiction. Under section 16 suit may be in either the county of the principal office er of the cause of action.

I cannot see how we can disregard the provision in section 16 that a justice of the county of the cause of action shall have jurisdiction. A corporation is surely included within that section. A natural person is, and so is a corporation. That section would give the Taylor county justice jurisdiction, because the cause of action arose therein. Having thus jurisdiction in 'Taylor county, the next requisite is service of process. That is a different thing from the place of jurisdiction. It is true that a justice’s summons cannot go out of his county for service, but the place of service cannot be said to give jurisdiction, though it must be in the same county. Section 34 of the Code as amended and re-enacted in chapter 9, Acts 1903, tells us as to ■service of process from a justice’s court against corporations. It reads as follows: 'Unless otherwise specially provided such process or order, and any notice against a corporation, may be served upon the president, cashier, treasurer or chief' officer thereof, or if there be no such officer, or if he be absent, on any officer, director, trustee or agent of ,the corporation, at its principal office or place of business, or in any county in which a director or other officer, or any agent, of said corporation may reside, or any officer or agent of said corporation in the county in which the property, land or other thing in controversy may be, or in any county where the cause of action arises. But .service at any time may be made upon any corporation in the manner prescribed for similar proceedings in the circuit court.” It is broad enough to cover a suit either in the county wherein is the principal office, or the county in which the cause of action arose, because it'declares that the process ma3r be served in any county where the cause of action arose by serving it on •certain persons, including an agent of the corporation, as in this case. When that section provides for service not ■only in the county of the principal office on certain officers, or in default of them on certain persons at its principal office, and then adds, in order to widen the scope of service, that it maj1- be served on a director or other officer or agmt -in '“any county where the cause of action arises,” it is difficult io [605]*605see how there can be any donbt of the right to sue in the county where the cause of action arose, as well as in the county of the* principal office. We cannot think that the law makers would •authorize a suit in both counties, as they did in section 16, and then, when making a statute for service of process to effectuate-the Jurisdiction given by that section 16, would fail to make it co-extensive with the demands of section 16. We must look at both, 'and make section 34 of the same scope of section 16, as-its words allow its to do so, in order to carry out the jurisdiction given by section 16. It is suggested that it is only when the-president, cashier, treasurer, chief officer or any other officer,, director, trustee or agent cannot be found in the county of the-principal office, that suit can be brought in the county of the cause of action; but that would put a limitation upon jurisdiction contrary to section 16, which gives the plaintiff choice-to sue either where the cause of action arose.or the defendant resides. We cannot suppose that the legislature designed, after giving the choice in either county, to condition that. choice-upon not finding certain officers in the county of the principal office.

Said section 34 is a remedial statute, designed to facilitate- and further the remedjy not' to narrow the jurisdiction given by the general grant in section 16. Suppose we give to section-34 the construction asked of us, and say that suit must be-brought in Ohio county, if any of the officers named can be-found. This would practically deny all jurisdiction in tlie county where the cause of action arises; never could suit be brought there. That would compel one in Jefferson county having a contract with a corporation, and a cause of action growing out of it, to go to the other end of the State for relief. The corporation has sent its agent to Jefferson county, and made its contract there, and the legislature thought that as the corporation chose to make the contract there, it was nothing-but right that it should be sueable there. The corporation is not permitted to be sued in any county, but only in two counties. To sue it in the county of its act is not harsh. Section 2, chapter 123, Code, allows a corporation to be sued in the circuit court of a county in which the cause of action arises, if you can get service on it; so in a justice’s court. The law in both cases points where and on whom service is to be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.E. 534, 56 W. Va. 602, 1904 W. Va. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speidel-co-v-warder-wva-1904.