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Orient Ins. Co. v. Rudolph

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
May 19, 1905
69 N.J. Eq. 670 (Ch. Div. 1905)

Summary

In Orient Insurance Co. v. Rudolph, 69 N.J. Eq. 570, 61 A. 26, the court held that New York law applied because the insurance contract was a New York contract.

Summary of this case from Old Colony Insurance Company v. Lampert

Opinion

05-19-1905

ORIENT INS. CO. v. RUDOLPH et al.

Jacob L. Newman, for defendant receiver. Crouse & Perkins, for defendant Rudolph.


Interpleader by the Orient Insurance Company against Mary Rudolph and others heard on bill and decree of interpleaders, answer and cross-bill. Rights of the parties determined.

Jacob L. Newman, for defendant receiver. Crouse & Perkins, for defendant Rudolph.

EMERY, V. C. The complainant, a fire insurance company of Connecticut, has paid into court the sum of $955.85 due from it upon a fire insurance policy issued to one George W. Enderline on personal property (household furniture and merchandise) located in a building in North Tarrytown, N. Y. The insured property was destroyed by fire on or about December 27, 1902. The defendant Mary Rudolph claims the money paid into court under an assignment executed March 5, 1903, by which Enderline assigned his interest in the policy and all moneys due or collectible under it. The defendant Seth Bird was, on March 21, 1903, appointed receiver on supplementary proceedings by an order of the judge of the county court of Westchester county, N. Y. The supplementary proceedings were instituted on February 10, 1903, by the filing of an affidavit of the attorney for one William S. Hall, a judgment creditor of Enderline, the insured, upon which an order for discovery was made. The receiver claims that his title to the judgment debtor's personal property, including this debt, related back, under the New York statutes, to the 10th day of February, and thus antedates the assignment to Mrs. Rudolph. The assignment to Mrs. Rudolph was not a purchase of the claim, but was made to secure or pay a pre-existing debt, and her claim to prevail over the receiver is rested upon several grounds:

First, that the receiver's title has not been proved. The receiver has offered in evidence only the record in the supplementary proceedings, commencing with the affidavit upon which the order for discovery was made on March 10, 1903, and including the formal order of his appointment on March 21, 1903. These orders recite all the preliminary proceedings requisite for the making of the order, and, if they are in themselves sufficient evidence of the facts recited, then no further proof is required. These judicial proceedings in the state of New York must, under the federal Constitution and statutes, "have such faith and credit given to them in every court in the United States as they have by law and usage in the courts of the state from which they are taken." Rev. St. U. S. § 905 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 677]. Under our evidence act (P. L. 1900, p. 370, § 2(3), judicial notice may be taken of the decisions of other states, and, independent of statute, the more reasonable view is that judicial notice of the statutes and decisions of other states upon the effect of their judicial proceedings must be taken in order to make the federal provisions effective. 2 Black, Judgm. § 860. It is suggested that these federal provisions apply only to final decrees, and that this order is not such decree; but, as the order is the final decree or judgment in the supplementary proceedings, and vests title to the debtor's property, it is clearly a final decree or judgment within the act. Under the New York laws and decisions, these supplementary proceedings are not considered special proceedings before a court or officer of limited jurisdiction, but as a new remedy in an action in which the court is possessed of general jurisdiction; and the production and proof of an order appointing the receiver, reciting the facts necessary to give the court or judge jurisdiction to act in the proceedings, furnishes conclusive evidence of the regularity of the order when questioned collaterally, and prima facie evidence of the existence of the facts necessary to confer jurisdiction. Wright v. Nostrand (1883) 94 N. Y. 31, 45. That a judgment was recovered, and after personal service in New York upon Enderline, has not been contested; and, giving now to these orders the same effect as would be given to them in the courts of New York, it must be held that the recital in the order of appointment furnishes sufficient proof of the facts recited in it. The New York cases, referred to as giving a different effect to the order appointing a receiver, related to receiverships of a different character, and do not qualify the effect of Wright v. Nostrand. This objection must therefore be overruled.

Second. It is claimed that the entire proceeding in New York for seizure or garnishment of the debt due from the Connecticut company was void, because the debt was not due and had no situs in New York, and its seizure or garnishment by any proceedings was therefore beyond the jurisdiction of the New York courts. It is not claimed that this view of the scope and effect of proceedings of this character is the one adopted by our courts, and under the decision of V. C. Pitney, in National Fire Insurance Co. v. Chambers, 53 N. J. Eq. 468, 32 Atl. 603, the contention certainly cannot be supported. In this ease the debtor, who resided in New Jersey, held an insurance policy made by a Connecticutcompany on property in New Jersey. The company did business also in Pennsylvania, and a creditor of the insured, residing in Massachusetts, attached in Pennsylvania the moneys due on the policy, by proceedings taken under the laws of Pennsylvania against the insured as a nonresident debtor. Subsequent to the attachment, the debtor assigned the policy to another resident of New Jersey, who sued the company in a New Jersey court, after which the company paid the sum into court, and the attaching creditor and the assignee interpleaded. Vice Chancellor Pitney, after a most learned and thorough examination of the authorities, decided in favor of the validity of the attachment. He concluded that, as the debtor himself could under the laws of Pennsylvania have sued the insurance company in that state for the debt, the laws of Pennsylvania, making debts due from such foreign corporations attachable in Pennsylvania, were not contrary to fundamental principles of justice, but were valid. He held that the jurisdiction to fasten choses in action by attachment or garnishee process depended, not on a supposed situs of the debt, but upon the ability to serve process of garnishment upon the debtor of the absent defendant within the territorial jurisdiction of the court; and he also concluded that, for the purpose of attaching or garnishing debts, a foreign corporation lawfully doing business in more than one state might be served with process under the laws of any of the states in which it did business, and that such garnishment would be effective against the debtor or those claiming under him. One question specially considered was whether the principles of situs governing the attachment or seizure of tangible property were applicable to debts due or choses in action, so as to make the residence of the creditor the situs of the debt and the only place for its seizure or garnishment, and he concluded that these rules were not applicable. His decision is in line with the almost unanimous opinion, both in this country and in England, and has since been cited with approval by the Supreme Court of the United States. Chicago, etc., Ry. Co. v. Sturm (1800) 174 U. S. 710, 10 Sup. Ct. 707, 43 L. Ed. 1144. The decision, it must be observed, goes much farther than is necessary to support the receiver's title in the present case; for in this case a judgment was regularly obtained in New York against the judgment debtor, after personal service of the summons in New York, where he was at the time of service carrying on business on the premises containing the insured property and daily attending there. The evidence in this case that he still retained his residence in Jersey City is not conclusive. The property insured was located in New York, and the contract of insurance first took effect there; for the policy contained the express provision, "it shall not be valid until countersigned by the duly authorized agent of the company at Manuet, New York," and it was so countersigned and then mailed to the insured at Jersey City. Under the decisions, this insurance contract was therefore a New York contract, and governed by its laws, both as to validity, construction, and discharge. Insurance Co. v. Meyer (U. S. Sup. Ct. Oct. Term, 1904) 197 U. S. 407, 25 Sup. Ct. 483, 486, 49 L. Ed. 810.

The right of a receiver, appointed in supplementary proceedings in another state, to recover in this state debts due to the judgment debtor from a corporation of this state, which did business in such other state, where the debt was attached by proceedings in such foreign state, was also recognized in Elizabethtown Savings Inst. v. Gerber (Err. & App. 1882) 35 N. J. Eq. 153, 156, and Chief Justice Beasley disapproved the view of Vice Chancellor Van Fleet in the court below (34 N. J. Eq. 130), that the proceeding to attach was invalid and void, because the situs of the entire personal property of the corporation was in New Jersey, and its disposition could not be subject to an order of a New York court, requiring it to pay to the New York creditor from its money the debt the company owed to the judgment debtor. As, however, on the facts appearing in the bill, the order in that case directed the agent, and not the corporation, to pay the money, and the order for payment was made without notice to the corporation, it was held (page 158) to appear affirmatively on the record that the judgment was rendered without jurisdiction over the person or cause of action. Where tangible property belonging to a resident or corporation of this state is garnished in a foreign state by proceedings taken in that state, the title of the receiver based on these proceedings can be asserted in New Jersey. Falk v. Janes, 49 N. J. Eq. 484, 23 Atl. 813, reversed on appeal 50 N. J. Eq. 468, 26 Atl. 138, 35 Am. St. Rep. 783, but affirmed on this point. But, on the assumption that the receiver's title is valid, if our own decisions control the case, the contention is that, under the law as laid down in the New York decisions, such proceedings for garnishment in a foreign state are void against its residents, and therefore should be held void here. The New York decision referred to as sustaining this view is Douglass v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 138 N. Y. 209, 219, 33 N. E. 938, 20 L. R. A. 118, 34 Am. St. Rep. 448. In this case, under an attachment issued in Massachusetts against a nonresident debtor, a debt due from a corporation of New York, doing business in Massachusetts and suable there, had been attached. The debtor in the attachment suit was a resident of New York, and the plaintiff in the attachment suit was not a resident of New York. After the attachment the debtor in that suit sued the New York corporation in New York for the debt, and it was held that the attachment of the debt in Massachusetts was no defense. The decisionwas put mainly upon the ground that, in contemplation of law, the corporation debtor and the debt, as belonging to the New York creditor, were in contemplation of law both in the state of New York at the time of issuing the attachment, and not in the state of Massachusetts. The legal theory of situs was applied to a debt under the attachment laws. In the Chambers Case, supra, Vice Chancellor Pitney discussed this decision exhaustively, and repudiated its doctrine of applying the theory of situs to debts and other choses in action under attachment and garnishment laws. His decision has never been questioned in this state, and the view that a debt is attachable wherever it can be sued on, and that the strict theory of situs is not applicable, has since been approved by the Supreme Court of the United States, not only on principle, but on the authority of the best considered cases. Chicago Ry. Co. v. Sturm, 174 IT. S. 710, 19 Sup. Ct. 797, 43 L. Ed. 1144 (1899) and cases cited page 717 of 174 U. S., page 800 of 19 Sup. Ct. . In this situation of the authorities there can be no question that the decision in the Douglass Case should not be followed in New Jersey, even if it were certainly applicable. But, on examining the decision in the Douglass Case, it will appear, I think, that the circumstance that the Massachusetts courts had no jurisdiction of the person of the debtor in attachment was relied on. In the present case the judgment was rendered after personal service of process, and the supplementary proceedings are merely continuations of that suit for the purpose of realizing the judgment. I have not been referred to any decision in New York which holds that garnishment or attachment proceedings taken in a foreign state to realize on a judgment obtained there upon a cause of action which arose in New York are void as without jurisdiction. The only other New York decision relied on which relates to the title of a receiver in supplementary proceedings was O'Callaghan v. Eraser, 37 Hun, 483 (1885); but in this case the question related to tangible property actually located in another state at the time of the appointment of the receiver in New York, and manifestly, as to such property, the recognized theory and rules as to situs prevail. And if the New York decisions do in these cases in fact establish a rule different from our own, and a rule which, according to our view, is contrary to the principles of justice and sound legal theory, then the New York rule should not be followed by our courts merely because the protection of our rule is invoked by a citizen of a state which would not or might not give a like protection to citizens of our own state in their courts. Each state by its courts settles for itself, in cases like the present, the principles upon which it bases its comity toward those who claim rights arising in other states, and settles them for itself upon what it considered fundamental principles of justice and right, not upon the basis of retaliation or compensation, as if the proceeding was in the nature of a purely political action. The application of these principles, therefore, cannot vary with the residence of the suitor invoking them, nor should the suitor from another state be held responsible or punishable in his individual person or property for the establishment of what we consider an erroneous rule by the courts of his own state. Our own laws and rules in cases of this kind, and not the laws of other states, should be administered, and they should be applied evenly for the protection of suitors from any state, without distinction.

Third. It is claimed that the appointment of the receiver was void under the statutes and decisions of New York, for two reasons: (1) Because the order for examinations or discovery directed the appearance of Temple for examination, and did not direct the appearance of the company itself; (2) because Temple was not an officer of the company such as was indicated by the statutes for service of the third party order, and service upon him of the order was ineffective. The statutes of New York concerning the appointment of a receiver in supplementary proceedings, the vesting of his title, and the time to which it relates, so far as material to the facts in this case, are as follows:

Section 2468, Code Civ. Proc.: "The property of the judgment debtor is vested in a receiver, who has duly qualified, from the time of filing the order appointing him."

Section 2469: "Where the receiver's title to personal property has become vested, as provided in the last section, it also extends back, by relation, for the benefit of the judgment creditor, in whose behalf the special proceeding was instituted, as follows: * * * (2) Where an order or warrant has not been served as specified in the foregoing subdivision, but an order has been made requiring a person to attend and be examined concerning property belonging, or a debt due, to the judgment debtor, the receiver's title extends to the personal property belonging to the judgment debtor, which was in the hands or under the control of the person or corporation thus required to attend, at the time of the service of the order, not to a debt then due to him from that person or corporation."

The provisions of the Code as to an order on a third party to attend, and its service, are as follows:

Section 2444: "Upon an examination under this article, each answer of a party or witness examined must be under oath. A corporation must attend by and answer under the oath of an officer thereof, and the judge may, in his discretion, specify the officer."

Sec. 2452: "An injunction order or an order requiring a person to attend and be examined,made as prescribed in this article, must be served as follows. * * * Service upon a corporation is sufficient, if made upon an officer, to whom a copy of summons must be delivered, where a summons is personally served upon the corporation, unless the officer is specially designated by the judge, as prescribed in section 2444 of this act."

Section 432 of the Code of Civil Procedure designates the officers of a foreign corporation upon whom personal service of a summons must be made, being the president, vice president, and other officers, or the person specially designated for that purpose by writing filed with the Secretary of State.

Service was not made upon any of the officers or agents mentioned in section 432, but upon one Thomas J. Temple, an officer or person specially designated by the judge in the order for examination. The following facts appearing in the supplementary proceedings record are claimed to bear upon the validity of the service upon Temple: The affidavit on the application stated "that F. M. Crittenden of the city of Syracuse, New York, is the special agent of the Orient Insurance Company in and for the state of New York, and Thomas J. Temple, of No. 624 "William street, in the city of New York, is the special agent of the Orient Insurance Company, in the matter of the adjusting and settlement of the said loss of said judgment debtor," and asked that an order be made requiring that Thomas J. Temple, the agent and adjuster of the company, be examined concerning the indebtedness of the company to the judgment debtor. On this application an order was made by the judge, which, after reciting (inter alia) that it satisfactorily appeared that the company was indebted to the judgment debtor, and that "Thomas J. Temple of No. 62-64 William street, in the city and county of New York, is the agent and adjuster of said Orient Insurance Company, in the matter of the adjustment and settlement of said loss of said judgment debtor," proceeded as follows: "I do hereby order and require the said Thomas J. Temple to appear before Frank Briggs, Esq. (hereby appointed referee), at the office of said Temple, * * * on the 11th day of February, 1903, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, * * * and I order the referee to take and certify to me the examination herein, and the said company, its officers and agents, and said Temple are severally forbidden from making or suffering any transfer or other disposition of or interference with the debt concerning which said Temple is required to attend and be examined, or the property of said judgment debtor, in which he has any interest, legal or equitable, not exempt by law from execution, or in any manner to interfere therewith, until further order in the premises." The order for examination and all subsequent orders and proceedings in the cause were entitled "In the Matter of the Examination of the Orient Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, a Third Party, in Proceedings Supplementary to Execution, upon the Application of Winfield S. Hall, Plaintiff, and George W. Enderline, Defendant." On March 2, 1903, the referee certified to the judge, under that date, the examination in the supplementary proceedings, which was certified to be "the examination of the Orient Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, a third party, through its agent and adjuster, Thomas J. Temple, * * * on February 11, 1903," and the adjourned day. From this certificate it appears that Temple appeared on February 11, 1903, at the place designated, and was sworn, and the examination was adjourned to February 26, 1903, when it was completed, Temple attending and being examined. No proof of service of the order for examination upon either Temple or any other officer or agent of the company actually appears in the record, but it was admitted on the hearing before me that service of the order was made upon Temple, and that he afterwards appeared for examination, and under the Code it seems that, on a voluntary appearance of the debtor for examination and without service of the order, a receiver may be appointed. Youngs v. Klunder (City Ct. 1889) 7 N. Y. Supp. 498. On March 3, 1903, the plaintiff's attorney presented the referee's certificate of examination to the Judge, together with an affidavit setting out the indebtedness of the company for the amount of the loss adjusted and the sources of his information, and asking (under the Code) an order directing the payment by the company to the sheriff of the amount due on the judgment, $132.57, beside the costs. Upon this application (and before any application for appointment of a receiver) the judge, under the Code, made an order directing the company to pay the sheriff, out of their indebtedness to the judgment debtor, the sum of $132.57, with interest from the date of the order, and the fees of the officer. This order of March 3, 1903, recites that it was made "on the affidavit and order for the examination of the Orient Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, a third party, and the evidence taken thereupon, whereby it appears that the Orient Insurance Company of is indebted to George W. Enderline, the judgment debtor, in the sum of $933.73." This order, as appears by the bill of complaint, was served on the company on March 10, 1903, but not until after service on it of notice of the assignment to Rudolph on March 5th. On March 21, 1903, the order was made appointing defendant Bird "receiver of all the debts, property, equitable interests, rights, and things in action of the said judgment debtor, George W. Enderline." The Code requires notice of the application for appointment of the receiver to be given to the third party, and, as appears by the affidavit presented to the judge, such notice was given on March 19, 1903, by service at the office of Withers & Mills, the agents ofthe company in the city of New York. The order appointing the receiver recited that, "Whereas, an order for the examination of the Orient Insurance Company, a third party, in proceedings supplementary to execution, was heretofore duly made by me, * * * and due proof of the service of notice of this motion upon the Orient Insurance Company, and upon reading the affidavit and order of examination herein, and the proceedings thereon had, heretofore filed herein." The receiver qualified and gave bond, as required by the Code, and on March 25, 1903, served on the complainant a copy of the order of his appointment, and demanded payment of the entire amount of the debt. On June 8, 1003, the defendant Rudolph commenced an action in the Supreme Court against the complainant upon the assignment, and this bill of interpleader was thereupon filed. The defendant Bird was subsequently directed by the court which appointed him to appear and defend this suit.

Upon the entire record in the supplementary proceedings, I think it appears that the questions now raised against the validity of the order, viz., whether the order directing Temple to appear for examination was an order for the examination of the company, and whether an agent such as Temple was sworn to be was an officer of the company within the meaning of this statute, were both questions which the court or judge making the order had jurisdiction to decide upon the facts presented, and, further, that both of these questions were decided affirmatively, as well by the order of March 3, 1003, directing payment of the debt 'to the sheriff, as by the order appointing the receiver. If the objections reach only to the regularity of the procedure, under the New York law, they certainly cannot prevail on this collateral attack. And if the New York court had jurisdiction over the rem., i. e., the debt recoverable in that state by the judgment debtor, and notice of the proceedings was actually given to some agent of the company in the state, who was, upon general principles, a proper agent for that purpose, the decision of the New York court, as a court of general jurisdiction, upon the question, that the agent actually served was the officer designated within the New York statutes, cannot be subject to collateral attack elsewhere, even if the character of the agent or officer to be served be considered a jurisdictional fact. In Fairchild v. Pairchild (Err. & App. 1805) 53 N. J. Eq. 678, 34 Atl. 10, 51 Am. St. Rep. 650, and Magowan v. Magowan (Err. & App. 1898) 57 N. J. Eq. 322, 42 Atl. 330, 73 Am. St. Rep. 645, this rule as to the finality of the decision of the courts of a state upon the jurisdictional facts necessary to make a decree was applied to decrees of divorce, settling marital status. As to proceedings strictly in rem, such as seizure for breach of municipal regulation, "the mode of procedure is regulated solely by the sovereign power of the state, and no foreign court can question its correctness, unless the court passing sentence loses jurisdiction by some circumstance which the law of nations can notice." Marshall, C. J., in Hudson v. Guestier (1808) 4 Cranch, 293, 2 L. Ed. 625. And this does not extend to an inquiry whether, after acquiring jurisdiction, judgment is rendered according to the proper forms of procedure of the foreign state. 2 Black on Judgm. §§ 818, 819, citing, inter alia, Bradstreet v. Neptune Ins. Co., 3 Sumn. 600, Fed. Cas. No. 1,793; Story, J., 1839. In cases analogous to proceedings in rem, such as the present case, jurisdiction so far as the third party, or garnishee, is concerned, is obtained by notice to the third party of the attachment or garnishment, and if the notice actually given was a sufficient and reasonable notice for the purpose of the judicial proceedings in question, and was in fact directed in the proceedings to be given as the notice required by the forms of procedure, then manifestly the decision of the foreign court that the notice was according to its forms of procedure should not be reviewed in another court. It is quite clear, I think, that an agent of the company, such as Temple on the records was shown to be, was one upon whom notice could reasonably be served, as sufficiently representative of the company in this matter to give the court jurisdiction over the company in the proceedings by a notice to him, and, if so, the final order or judgment made thereon is valid everywhere, as made upon due process of law. Insurance Co. v. Spratley, 172 U. S. 602, 610, 19 Sup. Ct. 308, 43 L. Ed. 569. As to judgments or decrees in personam, their operation and effect in foreign jurisdictions depend upon the further question whether the foreign corporation was doing business within the state. Id., 172 U. S. 610, 19 Sup. Ct. 308, 43 L. Ed. 569.

It must therefore be held that the decision of the New York court upon the objections now made to the validity under the New York laws of the order appointing the receiver is the law of this case, as between the parties to the supplementary proceedings and those claiming under them, until reversed by direct proceedings. I conclude, therefore, that the title of the receiver under the order of appointment is valid, and must relate back, under the Code, to the time of the service of the third party order. This time must be fixed as the date of the actual appearance for examination, February 11, 1903, inasmuch as the actual date of service does not appear on the record, but is admitted to have been made before the appearance. The assignees' title is therefore subject to that of the receiver. The title of the receiver, however, is only for the purpose of paying the judgment he represents, and the decree directing payment to him of the fund in court(should not go beyond this amount, and such costs as he is entitled to, which will be settled upon hearing parties on this point, if they desire.


Summaries of

Orient Ins. Co. v. Rudolph

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
May 19, 1905
69 N.J. Eq. 670 (Ch. Div. 1905)

In Orient Insurance Co. v. Rudolph, 69 N.J. Eq. 570, 61 A. 26, the court held that New York law applied because the insurance contract was a New York contract.

Summary of this case from Old Colony Insurance Company v. Lampert

In Orient Ins. Co. v. Rudolph, 69 N.J. Eq. 570, 61 A. 26, a Connecticut insurer issued a fire policy covering property in New York, which contained the express provision that it should not be valid until countersigned by the insurer's agent in New York.

Summary of this case from Morrison v. New Hampshire Insurance Company

In Orient Ins. Co. v. Rudolph, 69 N. J. Eq. 570, 61 Atl. 26, it was held that, where property belonging to a resident of New Jersey is garnished in another state by valid proceedings taken in that state, the title of the receiver based thereon may be asserted in this state.

Summary of this case from Harris v. Hibbard
Case details for

Orient Ins. Co. v. Rudolph

Case Details

Full title:ORIENT INS. CO. v. RUDOLPH et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: May 19, 1905

Citations

69 N.J. Eq. 670 (Ch. Div. 1905)
69 N.J. Eq. 670

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