United States Coal & Coke Co. v. Kitts

27 S.E.2d 65, 126 W. Va. 13, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 58
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1943
Docket9511
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 65 (United States Coal & Coke Co. v. Kitts) 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
United States Coal & Coke Co. v. Kitts, 27 S.E.2d 65, 126 W. Va. 13, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 58 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

This is an original jurisdiction proceeding in prohibition, on the part of United States Coal and Coke Company, hereinafter called “petitioner”, against H. B. Kitts, a Justice of the Peace of Mercer County, West Virginia, and George H. Carroll, trading and doing business in the name of Carroll Motor Sales, hereinafter referred to as “respondents”.

On January 12, 1937, Carroll, in the name of Carroll Motor Sales, recovered a judgment for $50.50 and $10.50 costs, against one E. P. Terry, before respondent, H. B. Kitts, justice of Mercer County. On March 4, 1943, the said justice issued a suggestee execution, under the provisions of Chapter 67 of the Acts of the Legislature, 1939, directed to “ ...., or any Constable of said [Mercer] County”, and this process was on March 10, 1943, served on1 the Auditor of the State of West Virginia, as statutory attorney-in-fact for the petitioner, such service being had at the official residence of. said auditor in Kanawha County in said State. According to the allegations of the petition, the judgment debtor, at the date of such service, was in the employ of the petitioner at its works in McDowell County, West Virginia, his contract of employment was entered into in that county, and any wages due him thereunder were payable therein. The further allegation is that the petitioner was and is a domestic corporation, having its principal place of business and chief works at Gary, in McDowell County; that it had no officer, member of its board of directors, stockholder, agent or employee *15 of any kind whatsoever resident in Mercer County; and that it had not appeared generally of specially to the process issued as aforesaid.

On these allegations, not denied, the petitioner seeks a writ of prohibition against respondents, prohibiting them “from proceeding further upon said suggestee execution, and from proceeding further in said civil action insofar as any proceedings therein relate to your petitioner, and from taking any action to enforce the said suggestee execution and from seeking otherwise to proceed against, or levy upon, any credits or sums of money that have been, or may become, due from this petitioner to the said E. P. Terry, and that the said suggestee execution and the service thereof be held irregular and void and of no effect whatsoever”. On June 5, 1943, we awarded a rule requiring respondents to show cause why the writ prayed for should not issue. To this rule there has been no appearance on the part of the respondents, or either of them.

The position of the petitioner, as stated in its petition, is that the suggestee execution, issued as aforesaid, is void for the following reasons:

(a) That a Justice of the Jeace has no jurisdiction to issue any writ, including a suggestee execution, operative beyond the geographical boundary of his County, and the said H. B. Kitts accordingly had no jurisdiction to issue a sug-gestee execution operative beyond the bounds of Mercer County.
“ (b) A Justice of the Peace has no jurisdiction to cause the service of any writ issued by him to be served beyond the geographical bounds of his County.
“ (c). This petitioner, being a corporation as aforesaid, and having its principal place of business and chief works in McDowell County, West Virginia, and having no officer, stockholder, member of its board of directors, or agent in Mercer County, was beyond the jurisdiction of the said H. B. Kitts as a Justice of the Peace of Mercer County.
*16 “ (d) No Court or Justice of the Peace of Mercer County, West Virginia, would have had jurisdiction of an action by the said E. P. Terry to recover any sums of money due him from this petitioner, but such action would have been solely within the jurisdiction of McDowell County, and in which County any cause of action between them, with respect of wages and salary, would have arisen, and, accordingly, the said H. B. Kitts, as Justice of the Peace of Mercer County, has no jurisdiction to issue said suggestee execution so far as this petitioner is concerned”.

These contentions, and each of them, must be sustained. Our Constitution, Section 28 of Article VIII provides:

“The civil jurisdiction of a justice of the peace shall extend to actions of assumpsit, debt, detinue and trover, if the amount claimed, exclusive of interest, does not exceed three hundred dollars. The jurisdiction of justices of the peace shall extend throughout their county; * * *. And the Legislature may give to justices such additional civil jurisdiction and powers within their respective counties as may be deemed expedient, under such regulations and restrictions as may be prescribed by general law, except that in suits to recover money or damages, their jurisdiction and powers shall in no case exceed three hundred dollars. * *

The plain intent and meaning of this provision was to limit the jurisdiction of justices to the counties in which they were elected and hold office, and the power conferred upon the legislature to give them additional civil jurisdiction is expressly limited to their respective counties. Therefore, the legislature has no power to extend such jurisdiction beyond the limits of the county in which the justice was elected, and has not, in our opinion, attempted to do so. On the contrary, it has restricted such jurisdiction in accordance with the constitutional limitation when by statute, Code 50-2-1, it provided that, “A justice of the peace, within and coextensive with the *17 county in which the district is for which he was elected, shall have civil jurisdiction and authority”, following by a specific 'grant of jurisdiction in certain enumerated civil actions. In the face of these plain provisions, we see no ground for differences of opinion, but this Court has been more than once called upon to restrain justices of the peace from extending their jurisdiction beyond the county in which they were elected. One of the first, if not the first, of such cases to reach this Court was Roberts v. Hickory Camp Coal & Coke Co., 58 W. Va. 276, 52 S. E. 182. That was a case affecting an attachment and,garnishee proceeding in the justice’s own county, but the judgment on which such proceeding was based had been obtained by service of summons on the defendant in a county other than that in which the justice held office, and the holding of the Court was:

“A justice is without jurisdiction in an action brought by him against a defendant who is a resi-" dent of this state, but not of the county in which the action is brought, the cause of action having arisen in the county of defendant’s residence.”,

followed by a holding that the justice being without jurisdiction his judgment in the principal action, as well as that upon the attachment and garnishment, was void.

The next case was that of Bank of Gassaway v. Stalnaker, 69 W. Va. 85, 71 S. E. 183. In that case the plaintiff recovered a judgment before a justice of the peace of Clay County, and on'that judgment the justice issued a summons in a garnishee proceeding against the Bank of Gassaway, a domestic corporation, having its principal place of business in Braxton County.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 65, 126 W. Va. 13, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-coal-coke-co-v-kitts-wva-1943.