Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corp. v. Zimmerman

121 N.W.2d 586, 265 Minn. 303, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 26, 1963
Docket39,057
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 121 N.W.2d 586 (Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corp. v. Zimmerman) 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
Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corp. v. Zimmerman, 121 N.W.2d 586, 265 Minn. 303, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 666 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Alternative writ of mandamus issued from this court to the District Courts of Ramsey and Otter Tail Counties to compel remand of two actions commenced in the former and removed by affidavit and demand to the latter.

The facts essential to understanding the issue are these: Relator is assignee of the rights of General Motors Corporation under a conditional sales contract by the terms of which John C. Zimmerman, respondent, acquired possession of two scrapers and agreed to make certain monthly payments beginning June 15, 1962. Upon default, the seller was empowered to retake possession and demand payment of the unpaid balance of the purchase price. In June, July, and August of that year payments in the amounts specified by the contract were made. Installments due on September 15 and October 15 were not paid. The two actions here involved were then commenced by relator in Ramsey County — one to foreclose its lien, and the other to replevin the scrapers *305 “for the purpose of foreclosing plaintiff’s vendor’s lien on said property.”

Within the time prescribed by law 1 defendant, who is respondent here, filed a demand for change of venue to Otter Tail County, the demand being supported in each case by an affidavit of residence there. Plaintiff countered with motions filed in the District Court of Ramsey County for orders directing the clerk of that court to refrain from transmitting its files “to any other county.” The motions were denied. Plaintiff then moved the District Court of Otter Tail County to remand the actions to Ramsey County where commenced. These motions were also denied. The writ issued by this court raises the question of whether plaintiff is entitled as a matter of right to have either or both of the proceedings returned to Ramsey County for trial.

Unless venue is hereafter changed pursuant to Minn. St. 542.11 (4), 2 the foreclosure action should be tried in Otter Tail County where defendant resides. It is the general policy of the law that actions be brought and tried in the county in which defendant resides and this right is not to be denied a defendant except where the legislature has clearly and unequivocally manifested a contrary intent. See, State ex rel. Schmitt v. Hoffmann, 233 Minn. 186, 46 N. W. (2d) 468. A party seeking to bring an action against a defendant in some county other than the latter’s residence must establish his right to do so and the burden of establishing such an exception is on the party depending upon it. Plath v. Reed, 254 Minn. 364, 95 N. W. (2d) 169.

Plaintiff seeks to meet the burden of establishing that the fore *306 closure action is an exception to the general rule by claiming that its cause of action arose in whole or in part in Ramsey County within the meaning of § 542.09. 3 The factual support for this theory appears in the affidavit of Frank Vader, branch manager of Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corporation, who avers:

“2. That plaintiff, Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corporation, resides in the County of Ramsey; that its only office within the State of Minnesota is located at 2400 University Avenue, St. Paul 14, Minnesota.
H: Hí ❖ H* H*
“5. That said conditional sales contract specifically provides that payments were—
“ ‘Payable at the office of Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corporation in Detroit, Michigan, (or at such other address as may be hereafter designated in writing by Seller) * * *’
“6. That following the execution of said conditional sales contract, the defendant was provided with a payment envelope booklet which notified him, in writing, to make his payments under said contract to the St. Paul office of Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corporation, at 2400 University Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota; that included in said payment envelope booklet were coupons which were to be enclosed by defendant with his monthly payments; that defendant did enclose such coupons with his June, July and August payments; * * * and that a photo copy of the coupon which was mailed by defendant to plaintiff with his June payment is attached hereto as Exhibit A.” (Italics supplied.)

In support of the contention that the facts appearing in the foregoing affidavit show a contractual duty on the part of defendant to make payment in the city of St. Paul, in Ramsey County, the breach of which gave rise to plaintiff’s cause of action, we are cited to Donovan v. Dixon, *307 257 Minn. 4, 99 N. W. (2d) 783; Halliwill v. Mutual Service Cas. Ins. Co. 257 Minn. 252, 100 N. W. (2d) 817; and Anderson v. Farmers Mutual Auto. Ins. Co. 259 Minn. 118, 106 N. W. (2d) 369. Of these, the Halliwill case is most relevant. It was there held that the duty to pay a loss covered by a policy of insurance is performable at the residence of the insured, there being no other place of performance fixed by the contract, and that a cause of action for the breach of an obligation to pay under such circumstances arises in the county of the insured’s residence. That decision is distinguishable from our problem because here the contract does fix a place for payment by defendant, i. e., “at the office of Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corporation in Detroit, Michigan, (or at such other address as may be hereafter designated in writing by Seller) * * *."

Absent a designation in writing, the alleged failure of defendant to make payment did not occur in Ramsey County. With a specific provision in the contract, there could be no presumption that payment was to be made in St. Paul. The averments appearing in the affidavit of Vader are not adequate to sustain plaintiff’s burden of proving that the seller designated in writing that the place of payment was to be St. Paul. Although paragraph 6 of the affidavit states that defendant was provided with a payment envelope booklet which notified him “in writing” to make his payments to the St. Paul office, the exact language of the notification or direction is not made to appear. The further averments that coupons were included in the payment envelope booklet which were to be “enclosed by defendant with his monthly payments,” and that the June payment was “mailed by defendant” to plaintiff, suggest that defendant was directed to make payments by mail and that this direction was followed in the subsequent course of dealings between the parties. Upon this state of the record the situation is one where the place of payment may or may not have been in Ramsey County, depending upon whether the designated mode of payment was in fact incorporated into the contract by reference and, if so, whether defendant was directed to make payment at the St. Paul office or by mail from a place other than Ramsey County. Although we find no Minnesota case which has passed on this point directly, the general rule is that *308

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.W.2d 586, 265 Minn. 303, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yellow-manufacturing-acceptance-corp-v-zimmerman-minn-1963.