State ex rel. Warner v. District Court

194 N.W. 876, 156 Minn. 394, 1923 Minn. LEXIS 553
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 10, 1923
DocketNo. 23,660
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 876 (State ex rel. Warner v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Warner v. District Court, 194 N.W. 876, 156 Minn. 394, 1923 Minn. LEXIS 553 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Stone, J.

This is an original proceeding, and is now before us on an order to show cause why a peremptory writ of -mandamus should not issue to the district court of Mahnomen county, requiring the remanding to the county of Beltrami of an action under the Federal Employers Liability Act, wherein the relator is plaintiff and the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Company is defendant. For convenience the relator will be referred to as plaintiff and the railway company as defendant. The plaintiff resides in Mahnomen county. While employed there by defendant in interstate commerce he received injuries, damages for which he is now seeking to recover from defendant. The defendant has a line of road running through Mahnomen county. Its lines run through Beltrami county also, and there it has one or more offices, agents and places of business. Because the plaintiff’s injuries were received, and the defendant has a line of road, in Mahnomen county, it procured by the summary statutory proceeding a change of venue to Mahnomen county. A motion to remand was made and denied, and now it is sought by mandamus from this court to compel the remanding of the case to the district court of Beltrami county.

The motion to remand was denied upon the theory that when a cause of action of this kind arises in a given county, and any of defendant’s lines of railway extends into or through such county, the action must be tried there. The holding was based upon section 7721, G. S. 1913. The proper construction of that statute is the question now before us, presented by a general demurrer to the petition for the writ of mandamus.

Section 7721 is section 4095, R. L. 1905, as amended by chapter 552, p. 799, Laws 1913. That act amended the old section to read [396]*396as follows. (The italics being those used in the law itself to indicate the new matter):

“4095. All actions not enumerated in paragraphs 4089-4094 shall be tried in a county in which one or more of the defendants reside when the, action was begun. If none of the parties shall reside or be found in the state, or the defendant be a foreign corporation, the action may be begun and tried in any county which the plaintiff shall designate. A domestic corporation other than railroad companies, street railway companies and street raib-oad companies, whether the motive power is steam, electricity, or other power used by said corporations or compames, also telephone companies, telegraph companies and all other public service corporations, shall be considered as residing in any county wherein it has an office, resident agent or business place. The above enumerated public service corporations shall be considered as residing in any county wherein the cause of action shall arise and wherein any part, of its lines of railway, railroad, street railway, street railroad, without regard to the motive power of said railroad, street railway or street railroad, telegraph or telephone lines or any other public service corporation shall extend, without regard’ to whether said corporation or company has an office, agent or business place in said county, or not.”

Again, we are called upon to determine from ambiguous language the legislative intent. We should not resort to outside aids, not even to the old act, unless the difficulty of the task, that is, unless the ambiguity of the new statute, compels such resort. We first examine then the new statute. To start with, it provides that transitory actions, “if none of the parties shall reside or be found in the state, or the defendant be a foreign corporation,” may be begun and tried in any county which the plaintiff shall designate. Proceeding, it is provided that a domestic corporation “other than” public service corporations “shall be considered as residing in any county wherein it has an office, resident agent or business place.” If we stop there, we are forced to the conclusion that, by the words “other than,” a public service corporation is excepted from the operation of the language referred to, and should not be considered as residing in any county wherein it has merely an “office, resident [397]*397agent, or business place.” That is the literal construction of the sentence under consideration, the third in order of the new statute. Notwithstanding its literal propriety, it gets us into trouble immediately, because the next sentence provides that public service corporations shall be considered as residing in any county wherein the cause of action shall arise, and wherein any part of its lines shall extend, “without regard to whether said corporation or company has an office, agent or business place in said county, or not.” Why this “without regard” provision, if the preceding sentence is to have its literal interpretation? If public service corporations are not to be considered as residing for purposes of venue, in any county where they have offices, resident agents, or business places, why is it said that they shall be considered as residents of any county wherein the cause of action arises, and any part of their lines extends, regardless of whether they have such office, agent or business place therein? Thus we are brought immediately to realize that the sentence concerning domestic corporations “other than” public service corporations, if it is to be given its exact literal effect, no more and no less, makes surplusage and discards entirely the “without regard” clause at the end of the next sentence. Language in a statute by necessary construction may be rendered surplusage, but it is a result to be avoided wherever possible. Here the “without regard” clause seems to have a very definite purpose, one which we cannot frustrate by construing the language out of the law entirely.

The conflict between the two portions of the statute, and the necessity of giving every portion of it effect, justifies us now in seeking extraneous aids, and we go first to the law as it stood before the amendment. We find there the statement of a rule which has been law7 in Minnesota from very early days, to the effect that “a domestic corporation * * * shall be considered as residing in any county wherein it has an office, agent or business place.” Section 4095, R. L. 1905; section 5185, G. S. 1894; section 40 (section 49) title 4, chapter 66, G. S. 1878.

Was it the intention of the 1913 amendment to modify this rule and provide that for venue purposes a public service corporation should not be considered a resident of any county wherein it had an [398]*398office, agent or business place, but that it could be sued only in the county wherein the cause of action arose, and wherein any-part of its lines extend? If that was the intention, the amendment worked a radical change in the law — a change so great, so out of keeping with a long settled legislative policy, that it cannot be accepted as intentional when we read, as we do, that public service corporations shall be considered as residing in any county wherein the cause of action shall arise and wherein any part of their lines extend “without regard to whether said corporation or company has an office, agent or business place in said county, or not.”

We realize that we must give the “other than” clause something less than the effect of an absolute exception in order to arrive at that result. But it is clear that it was not intended to create an exception to the rule that a domestic corporation shall be considered as residing in any county wherein it has an office, resident agent or business place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 876, 156 Minn. 394, 1923 Minn. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-warner-v-district-court-minn-1923.