Court Opinion

ID: 7900618
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:55:13.892634+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:14.744235
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mason, J.:
In a petition for rehearing it is urged that notwithstanding the decision in B. & M. R. Rld. Co. v. Thompson, 31 Kan. 180, we should hold that jurisdiction over an indebtedness between nonresidents can not be obtained by serving garnishment process upon the creditor in this state. The argument is made that our present garnishment law, passed in 1889, was adopted from Wisconsin; that prior to its adoption the supreme court of Wisconsin had held that no jurisdic*333tion can be obtained thereunder over personal property situated outside of the state; and that this decision was a construction of the statute which must be presumed to have been adopted by the legislature along with the statute itself.
The Wisconsin case referred to (Bates v. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R’y Co., Garnishee, etc., 60 Wis. 296) had reference to tangible personal property, and a distinction might be made upon that ground. That court has followed the same rule with respect to a debt owing to a garnishee, but in a decision rendered since 1889. (Morawetz v. Sun Insurance Office, 96 Wis. 175.) We prefer, however, to base our judgment upon another proposition. The rule as to the binding effect of a decision rendered prior to the adoption of a statute is not absolute. It does not apply “where other-jurisdictions having the indentical or substantially the same provision had given the language a different construction prior to the adoption in question.” (36 Cyc. 1157; The State v. Campbell, 73 Kan. 688.) This must be especially true where the court of the adopting state itself had already rendered a contrary decision under a statute essentially -similar. The language interpreted by the Wisconsin court was not peculiar to the statute there under consideration. It was, so far as concerns the matter now in hand, substantially the same as that of the earlier Kansas statute, and of garnishment statutes generally. That the Wisconsin court takes a different view of the law from that announced in the early Kansas case is not due to any difference in the statutes considered, but to a different view of the effect of garnishment process generally, and in particular to a conviction that it is-against public policy to allow courts to acquire jurisdiction by garnishment over property in another state, or over a debt owed by one nonresident to another.
*334We adhere to our conclusion that other questions argued at the hearing and in the petition for a rehearing are not so presented by the record, as to require decision.
The petition for á rehearing is denied.