State Ex Rel. Fielder v. Kirkwood

138 S.W.2d 1009, 345 Mo. 1089, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 477
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 1009 (State Ex Rel. Fielder v. Kirkwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Fielder v. Kirkwood, 138 S.W.2d 1009, 345 Mo. 1089, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 477 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

DOUGLAS, J.

This is an original action of mandamus to order the Presiding Judge of the Circuit Court for the City of St. Louis to set aside an order of dismissal as to one of two parties defendant and to reinstate the case so that it may proceed on its merits against both defendants.

The ultimate question for decision is whether the commerce clause of the United States Constitution may be considered as a defense to *1092 tbe issue of the availability of attachment and garnishment under our State laws against a non-resident interstate railroad.

The relator is the plaintiff in the case, a suit for $20,000 damages for personal injuries. He is a citizen of Missouri residing in Greene County. He was employed by a concern in Springfield, Missouri, which had ordered some pipe from a company in Chicago. The company received from the Belt Railway Company of Chicago a freight car in which to load the pipe. The car was loaded and consigned to the concern in Springfield. Upon reaching St. Louis it was picked up by the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company and taken to Springfield where it was delivered to the consignee. The relator was unloading the pipe when the floor of the car broke because of decayed floor boards causing the relator to be injured. He brought suit in the Circuit Court of St. Louis against the “Frisco” and the Belt Railways jointly. Service was had upon the Frisco and the cause is still pending against it. As to the Belt Railway, the sheriff’s return showed that it could not be found in the City of St. Louis; subsequently substituted service was had upon it. The plaintiff obtained an attachment against the Belt Railway and in aid of the attachment, writs of garnishment were served on the Alton and the Illinois Central Railroads at their respective offices in the City of St. Louis. In answer to the interrogatories filed in these garnishments the garnishees each admitted owing substantial sums to the Belt Railway. Thereafter, the Belt Railway attacked the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the garnishments constituted an undue burden on interstate commerce and that the debts of the garnishees to it were not lawfully subject to garnishment or attachment.

The plea to the jurisdiction was submitted below on an agreed statement of facts which, briefly, showed that the Belt Railway was an Illinois corporation and did no business in Missouri and that it operated switching and terminal facilities in Chicago. The garnishees were not Missouri corporations. The indebtedness of the garnishees arose from mutual running accounts kept in Chicago where the balances were struck.

The court sustained the plea to the jurisdiction and dismissed plaintiff’s action against the Belt Railway. Thereupon, he applied here for mandamus asking that the order of dismissal be set aside and the cause reinstated against the Belt Railway or, stated differently, that the court below exercise its jurisdiction over the Belt Railway and proceed to try the ease on its merits against both defendants.

A writ of mandamus has lost its prerogative quality and its issuance rests in judicial discretion. The doctrine is settled that in every case such discretion must be reckoned with and applied with judicial self-restraint. [State ex rel. Warde v. McQuillin, 262 Mo. *1093 256, 171 S. W. 72.] We must first determine whether mandamus is the proper remedy in this case.

Mandamus will not issue to an inferior court whenever there is another adequate remedy such as appeal or writ of error; or to review the proceeding's on the ground of error; or to direct the entry of a particular judgment. But mandamus will lie to set an inferior court in motion (State ex rel. Laclede Bank v. Lewis, 76 Mo. 370) to hear and determine a cause or matter in issue in the exercise of its judicial function when its refusal to act is a denial of justice. [State ex rel. Harris v. Laughlin, 75 Mo. 358.]

"We have established the rule that when, upon a preliminary question of jurisdiction depending wholly upon the law and not upon the facts, the court misconceives its jurisdiction of the cause or of the parties and refuses to proceed to a final determination upon the merits then the appellate court will issue its writ of mandamus to compel the lower court to reinstate the matter and proceed to its final determination without attempting to dictate what the result of such determination shall be. [Castello v. St. Louis Circuit Court, 28 Mo. 259; State ex rel. Wright v. McElhinney (Mo. App.), 72 S. W. (2d) 895, and the cases therein cited.] As the facts in the case at bar pertaining to the question of jurisdiction over the Belt Railway are admitted, the question is one purely of law and the above rule applies. [State ex rel. Case v. Seehorn, 283 Mo. 508, 223 S. W. 664.] In such eases no question of fact being involved, we have held that an appeal or writ of error would not furnish an adequate remedy. [State ex rel. General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Brown, 330 Mo. 220, 48 S. W. (2d) 857.] Mandamus is the proper remedy here. We have heretofore decided that mandamus is a proper remedy in a case involving similar facts. [State ex rel. Foraker v. Hoffman, 309 Mo. 625, 274 S. W. 362.]

Now we come to the issue of initial jurisdiction over the party, the Belt Railway, not on the question of compelling it to submit to our jurisdiction under the principal suit but on the question whether the trial court had jurisdiction to issue the attachment and the garnishments in aid thereof. Neither the right nor the propriety of service upon the garnishees is in dispute.

It is first argued that the indebtedness of the garnishees to the Belt Railway could not be attached in this State because the situs of such indebtedness is the domicile of the owner, which is in Illinois. It is true that we have ruled that a debt is deemed attached to the person of the owner so as to have its situs at his domicile. But we have qualified this rule in laws relating to attachments because such laws necessarily assume that the property has a situs distinct from the owner’s domicile. It is well settled that a debt may be attached wherever the creditor might maintain a suit to recover it. [Restat. Conflict of Laws, sec. 108; Harris v. Balk, 198 U. S. 215, 49 L. Ed. *1094 1023; Wyeth Hdw. & Mfg. Co. v. Lang, 127 Mo. 242, 29 S. W. 1010; Western Stoneware Co. v. Pike County Mineral Springs Co., 172 Mo. App. 696, 155 S. W. 1083; State ex rel. Richardson et al. v. Mueller, 230 Mo. App. 962, 90 S. W. (2d) 171; Farrar v. American Express Company (Mo. App.), 219 S. W. 989.] The latter ease relies on the Wyeth case and points out that Green’s Bank v. Wickham, 23 Mo. App. 663, Fielder v. Jessup, 24 Mo. App. 91, and Keating v. American Refrigerator Co., 32 Mo. App. 293, which are cited by the respondents are therein overruled.

It is next argued that the attachment was not authorized under Missouri law because the creditor, the Belt Railway, could not satisfy the above requirement in that it could not maintain a suit here to recover its debt against the debtors, the garnishees. No claim is made that our statutes impose any obstacle to such a suit or that under our statutes the courts of this State would not afford the appropriate forum.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 1009, 345 Mo. 1089, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fielder-v-kirkwood-mo-1940.