Court Opinion

ID: 8301321
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 11:13:11.312241+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:16:19.917058
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Neil
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this case was filed in the chancery court at Nashville on the 25th of September, 1913, by Thomas A- Perry, and his sister Minnie L. Perry, and his sister Betsie Bostick and her husband, W. E. Bostick, against Prank Young and his wife, Mattie Young, and the Mutual Benefit' Life Insurance Company of New Jersey.
The bill alleged, in substance, that complainant-Thomas A. Perry, some time before the occurrence complained of, had caused to be issued to him a policy of life insurance in the sum of $2,000 on his life, payable to himself; that he had assigned this policy to *524liis mother; that the purpose and understanding between him and his mother was that this assignment should be so worded as that the'policy should belong to him in case she died before his death; that by oversight this latter provision was left out; that he had sought recently to borrow money from the insurance company on this policy, but it declined to lend unless all of the distributees of his mother should consent to it; that he endeavored to get the defendants Frank Young and wife to agree, as required by the insurance company, but they declined to do so. The bill alleges, in effect, that the complainants and the defendants represent all of the distributees of the deceased mother. The purpose of the bill is to have the policy reformed so as to conform to the original agreement for the assignment made between the complainant Thomas and his mother. The bill charged that the present interest of Mrs. Young, the gTanddaughter of complainant’s deceased mother, would only be $100, and asked and obtained an attachment, and caused the same to be levied on that interest. A publication was ordered and made for the said Frank Young and wife which indicated the matter in controversy, that is, .the policy of insurance, giving its number and the name of the company that issued it, so that the notice showed the matter about which the litigation was projected. The insurance company accepted service of the bill through its accredited agent, the insurance commissioner. This company then filed a demurrer making the ] joint that the court had not acquired jurisdiction *525of Young and wife, and therefore its decree would not protect the insurance company; the point being this: That those parties could not be made defendants by publication, but that personal service would be required to bind their interest. The bill shows that they are residents of Texas, and, of course, personal service is impossible. They have not entered their appearance, but as to them the bill stands on the order of publication and the publication thereof.
The chancellor sustained the demurrer filed by the insurance company. On appeal to the court of civil appeals that court overruled the chancellor. The case was then brought to this court on the writ of certiorari, and the ground of demurrer before mentioned urged in the chancery court and in the court of civil appeals is urged again here.
Me think the court of civil appeals reached the right conclusion. No personal judgment is sought against Young and wife, and none could be rendered against them oh publication. The court, however, has before it the insurance company that issued the policy, the complainants Thomas and his two sisters, who represent three of the four distributees of the deceased as-signee, and Mrs. Young, the fourth distributee. The court also has within its control the policy of insurance which is the legal evidence of the claim against the insurance company, and the assignment on the back of it, and lias the res itself, the claim against the insurance company through having the latter company before it. The policy is not actually exhibited *526with the bill, but it appears from the allegations of the latter that the property is in the possession of the complainant Thomas A. Perry, and he has■ submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court, and it is within its power at any moment to order the actual filing of the policy in the cause.
The court, thus having control of the res, can settle the status and rights of the parties with respect to the insurance policy, although one of the persons interested therein, under the assignment as it now stands, is a nonresident, and made a defendant only by publication. Our statute (Shan. Code, sec. 6115) provides that suit may be instituted wherever any material defendant is found, unless otherwise provided by law. The insurance company in the present case was a material defendant found in Davidson county. Section 6121, subsec. 4, as to bills against nonresidents, provides that they may be filed in the district or county in which the cause of action arose or the act on which the suit is predicated was to be performed, or in which the subject of the suit or any material part thereof is. Subsection 5 provides that, whenever attachment of property is allowed in lieu of personal service of process, the bill may be filed in the county or district in which the property, or any material part thereof sought to be attached is found at the commencement of the suit. Section 6162 declares that personal service of process on a defendant in a court of chancery is dispensed with when such defendant is a nonresident of the State. The following sections direct how *527the fact of nonresidence is to bé made known, and the order of publication made, .and how long the order shall be published, what it shall contain, etc. No question is made on these technical matters.
The present case belongs to the class of quasi proceedings in rem. Such proceedings are sufficiently described in 23 Cyc. 1410, by the author of Black on Judgments, in the following language:
“Judgments dealing with the status, ownership, or liability of particular property, but which are intended to operate on these questions only as between the particular parties to the proceeding, and not to ascertain or cut off the rights or interests of all possible claimants, are so far in rem that jurisdiction may be acquired by the seizure or control of the court over the res, together with reasonable constructive notice to parties defendant, but, unlike judgments strictly in rem, they are binding only upon the parties joined in the action, and thus notified, and have no effect upon the rights or liabilities of strangers.”
One case in our Reports bearing a pretty close analogy to the present one is that of Wilcox v. Morrison, 9 Lea (77 Tenn.), 700. In that case it appeared that Wilcox had executed a trust deed in the State of Virginia conveying real and personal property in that State, and also including therein a judgment which he had in Hawkins county, Tennessee, on one Netherland. After litigation had progressed for considerable time in Virginia, Wilcox came to Tennessee and filed his bill against Netherland, a resident of Tennessee, who *528was the debtor in the judgment, and also certain of his creditors who resided in Virginia, and the trustee under the Virginia mortgage who likewise resided there. The bill charged that the debts had been practically settled in Virginia, and that the Tennessee judgment belonged to the complainant Wilcox. The trustee and one of the creditors, residents of Virginia, demurred because the trustee and effects were in Virginia, and the cause was being administered in that state. The demurrer was overruled. Here the court had control of the'res, the judgment, by having before it the plaintiff in the judgment, and also the defendant, and proceeded to settle the rights of the parties thereunder. It seems from the report of the case that the parties subsequently answered the bill, and so submitted themselves to the jurisdiction, but the overruling of the demurrer indicated the view the court had as to its right to settle the status of tlie parties with respect to the judgment, even against nonresidents.
The case of Amparo Mining Co. v. Fidelity Trust Co., 74 N. J. Eq., 197, 71 Atl., 605, is nearer in point. There it appears that a bill was filed in the chancery court of New Jersey by the complainant corporation against the defendant corporation, the latter a resident of Pennsylvania, for the purpose of having declared the ownership of the complainant as against the defendant of certain treasury stock in the complainant company. It appears from the report of the case that some of the certificates were in Pennsylvania, but the complainant company, which had issued the shares, resided in New *529Jersey. The court held that, the res being thus situated in New Jersey, it had control thereof, and could settle the rights of the respective parties in respect, thereto, although the defendant was a nonresident, and had notice only by publication and other substitution-ary process directed by the court. It was held that the court, having control of the complainant whose treasury stock was in controversy, had control of the stock or res, since it could order the same into actual custody at any time. The court said:
“In the case at bar no receivership is prayed for, and no party having the custody of the res is brought in as a defendant in order to subject the res to the control of the court. The situation seems to be analogous to one where a complainant in New Jersey, holding the possession of chattels, filed a bill in this court to obtain equitable relief against a defendant not resident in New Jersey in respect to such chattels. . . . The authorities which control this court indicate, I think, the following as the essential elements of an action quasi in rem: (1) A res located within the territorial limits of tlie State in such a way that the State can, if it see fit to do so, exercise absolute power to control and dispose of it. (2) A course of judicial procedure, the object and result of which are to subject the res to the power of the State, directly by the judgment or decree which is entered as distinguished from a course of procedure which only affects or disposes of the res by compelling a party to the action to con*530trol or dispose of the res in accordance with the mandate of the judgment or decree. (3) A conrse of judicial procedure on its face directed specifically toward the res so as to disclose this res to the defendant when reasonably notified of the action.”
Further the court said:
'‘The origin of the jurisdiction of our courts in actions quasi in rem is to be found in the power of the sovereign State to exercise control over all objects to which tliat power can be directly applied. The State must control all property within its territorial limits. Parties interested in that property and residing within the State, or voluntarily coming into the State in order to have their rights in respect of the property in question enforced or protected, have a right to be heard in the courts of the State, and the utmost that can "be demanded on the part of nonresident defendants is that they shall be fairly notified of the action so as to have an ample opportunity to appear and be heard therein. When these conditions exist, the rights of all parties interested in the res are determined by due process of law. ... Of course, it must be conceded that in any action to recover stock, if the relief prayed for includes the surrender of a certificate, or the execution of an assignment or power of attorney, such relief can only be obtained by compelling the defendant to act, and, if such relief is the whole relief prayed for, the action, as we have seen, may be strictly in personam. In the present case, while the bill prays that the defendant may be decreed to *531assign and transfer the shares of stock in dispute, the main relief prayed for is the establishment of the com- . plainant’s equitable title. ■ The jurisdiction of the court is sustained by the existence of a trust — a trust in respect of a res situate within the jurisdiction of the court and in the custody of a party to the suit. If the complainant shall obtain a decree in this case establishing its right in respect of the res, and then shall desire to secure the surrender of the outstanding certificates representing the res, it may be obliged to bring a suit in the State of Pennsylvania in order to secure such surrender. . . . The last matter to be considered is whether it is necessary, where the res is personal property, to have the res actually placed within the custody of the court through the instrumentality of a receiver, in order to give to the action the quality of an action quasi in rem. I can find no warrant in reason, and'none-in the authorities, disregarding a few dicta, which makes the actual seizure of the res by an officer of the court essential to the status of the action as one quasi in rem. The. fundamental essential, of course, must be that the personal property, which is the res, is so situated within the State that it may be seized; in other words, the res must be within the control of the State. . . . It is not the actual seizure of the res which is the essential element of an action quasi in rem, but the power to seize the res and to seize it in the action. If the res is within the jurisdiction of the court, it may be entirely unnecessary to take possession of it through a *532receiver in order to secure its presence when the decree of the court is to he enforced. ... So long as the res is situate within the jurisdiction of the court, and the custodian of the res is made a party to the suit, the requirements of an action quasi in rem under consideration seems to me tó he complied with. . I think it follows from the principles enunciated in a number of recent federal cases, and in the New Jersey cases above cited, that an action like the present one, brought by the complainant to establish a trust in shares of stock in a New Jersey corporation, is an action quasi in rem, provided the corporation the stock of which is in litigation is made a party to the suit, and is lawfully subjected to the jurisdiction of the court in which the suit is brought by service of process within the State or by voluntary appearance” ■ — -citing Arndt v. Griggs, 134 U. S., 316, 10 Sup. Ct., 557, 33 L. Ed., 918; Jellenik v. Huron Copper Mining Co., 177 IT. S., 1, 20 Sup. Ct., 559, 44 L. Ed., 647; Roller v. Holly, 176 U. S., 398, 20 Sup. Ct., 41.0, 44 L. Ed., 520; Citizens’ Savings & Trust Co. v. III. Central R. R. Co., 205 U. S., 46, 27 Sup. Ct., 425, 51 L. Ed., 703.
“All parties, whether resident in New Jersey or residing in other States, may be lawfully brought into the suit by serving process upon the New Jersey residents, and giving the reasonable notice provided by law to the defendants residing in other States. I discover no basis for the proposition that the whole fabric of the action quasi in rem falls to the ground unless the court of chancery, through a receiver, at*533tempts in some way to take possession of the res and actually obtains snch possession. The question remains whether, when the custodian of the res, the New Jersey corporation, whose stock constitutes the res, comes into court as a party complainant, the case is essentially different from that which is presented where the custodian is made a party defendant. In each case the res is subjected to the power of the court, in the one case by the control over the res, which the court acquires when the custodian of the res is brought into court by service of process, and in the other by the" voluntary action of complainant in coming into court and presenting to the court for adjudication his claims in respect of the res. No doubt, the court, at the instance of the defendant, may preserve the res to meet the decree of the court by an injunction or by a receiver. ’ ’
This method of deciding rights has been often recognized by the supreme court of the United States. In Goodman v. Niblack, 102 U. S., 556, 563, 26 L. Ed., 229, the court said:
“This is a proceeding in equity to enforce a lien on the fund which is within reach of the court, and, as the trustees and complainant have the requisite citizenship,. section 738 of the Eevised Statutes provides a remedy for inability to serve process by an order of publication. If they appear, the suit will proceed as usual. If they do not appear, the decree, so far as it affects the fund in the hands of Niblack, will bind them; and this is all that is necessary to give the court *534jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for by the complainant. ’ ’
In Bryan v. Kennett, 113 U. S., 179, 195, 199, 5 Sup. Ct., 407, 28 L. Ed., 908, the supreme court recognized the right of the court to pass title to land within jurisdiction of the court as against minors, although the latter had been made defendants only by publication. So it has been held that the land of one made defendant by publication only may be subjected to a condemnation proceedings for the benefit of a public improvement. Huling v. Kaw Valley R. & Improvement Co., 130 U. S., 559, 9 Sup. Ct., 603, 32 L. Ed., 1045. It has also been held that a court having under its control a corporation for winding-up purposes may make an assessment on the stockholders pursuant to law for the payment of corporate debts, and that persons who are defendants only by publication will be bound by the assessment if they were, in fact, stockholders subject to the law under which the assessment was made, and that they would not be suffered in a collateral proceeding to question the propriety of the assessment itself, although such persons would be permitted to show in such collateral proceedings that they had transferred their stock and might litigate any matter bearing upon the extent or duration of their stock-holding. Selig v. Hamilton, 234 U. S., 652, 34 Sup. Ct., 926, 58 L. Ed., 1518.
Under the foregoing authorities, and many others that might be cited, we are of the opinion that the defendants Young and wife are properly before the *535court under the publication ordered and made, and that they will he bound by whatever decree may be finally made in the cause.
It is proper to say that we do not consider important the attachment that was issued and served on the supposed interest of Mrs. Young in the policy, inasmuch as the complainant asserted no debt against Young and wife, nor any right by which they could subject such interest to sale. The jurisdiction of the court over the res depends on other principles which have been fully stated. The publication, however, made under the attachment, served the useful purpose of not only notifying Young and wife of the existence of the suit, and of their duty to appear and defend, but also that the controversy was over a policy of insurance in the defendant company, stating the number of that policy. Thus on reading the notice they will be sufficiently informed of the necessity of appearing and defending any rights that they may wish to-assert.
■ The result is that the decree of the court of civil appeals is affirmed and the cause is remanded to the chancery court for further proceedings.