Court Opinion

ID: 8809077
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:57:15.142992+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:12.994273
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Thompson delivered the opinion of the court. Each replication attempted to answer all the pleas of the defendant; and the third and fifth replications set out sections of the statutes of Texas relied upon and the proceedings in the Texas court in foaec verba, with appropriate averments. If any of the replications was a legal answer to all the pleas then this judgment must he affirmed. Two questions are raised by counsel for appellant in their brief and argument. It is first contended that this suit could only be maintained so far as Ida May Wright is concerned in the name of Ida Wright by her guardian, and not by E. A. Wright guardian. There is nothing in the pleadings which properly raises the question as to whether this suit could be maintained for the interest of Ida May Wright in the name of E. A. Wright, guardian of the estate of Ida May Wright, a minor. The suit is between the same parties as it was in the state of Texas. Appellant should have raised the question in the Circuit Court so that appellees might have had an opportunity to reply the statute law of Texas, section 1,197 of which provides, that a suit may be brought and maintained by a guardian, either by a guardian for the ward or by the ward in the name of the guardian, and a suit either way gives the court jurisdiction. Roberts v. Sacra, 38 Texas 580. By section 8 of chapter 47 of the Statutes of Illinois of 1845, a “guardian shall have power to demand, sue for and receive all moneys belonging to their wards.” By section 17 of chapter 64 of the present Statutes of Illinois, it is provided “the guardian shall settle all accounts of his ward and demand and sue for, and receive in his own name as guardian, all personal property of and demands due the ward * * *” This statute was construed in Muller v. Benner, Guardian, 69 Ill. 108, where it was held that in matters affecting real estate the suit must be in the name of the ward, but where the suit was concerning* the personal estate, the proper form of the action is for the guardian as such to maintain the action in his own name as guardian. The language of the statute is plain and unambiguous and the legislature must be held to have intended to mean what it has plainly expressed. The second question raised is, do the replications answer the pleas and in legal form aver that there was such service of process or such appearance by the defendant in the state of Texas that the District Court of Texas acquired jurisdiction over the defendant. The first and second replications aver that the defendant was transacting business in the state of Texas by one J. B. Biggs upon whom service of summons was had. The third replication pleads a statute of Texas, which provides that service of process may be made upon a corporation by serving any local agent of the corporation within the state, and pleads another section of the statute which provides that any person who shall collect and transmit any premiums of insurance, other than for himself for any insurance company, shall be held to be an agent of such" company, and then averred that J. B. Biggs with the knowledge and consent of defendant collected premiums for the defendant and that service was had on him. The fifth replication pleads section 1,243 of the statutes of Texas which provides that if a defendant appear specially for the purpose of quashing the writ of summons such appearance shall be deemed a general appearance to the succeeding term although the writ be quashed, and that the defendant did appear in the Texas court and move to quash the writ of summons and that the case was continued to the next term, when by virtue of the statute the special appearance became a general appearance. The appellant contends that the provision of the Texas statutes pleaded in the fifth replication is null and void, and that the state of Texas could not pass a law which made a special appearance at one term a general appearance to another term; that such statute deprives the defendant of property without due process of law. The courts of. Illinois hold and are committed to the doctrine of accepting the rulings of courts of a foreign state in construing and applying the statutes of such foreign state. Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Thompson, 155 Ill. 204; Britton v. Chamberlain, 234 Ill. 246. The Supreme Court of Texas (York v. State, 73 Texas 651; Pace v. Potter, 85 Texas 473; Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Hanna, 81 Texas 487) has sustained and construed section 1,243 of the statutes of Texas, and holds that a special appearance merely for the purpose of quashing a service of summons is made, by the laws of Texas, a general appearance for the succeeding term of court, whether the motion is sustained or overruled. The York case was taken to the Supreme Court of the U. S. (York v. State of Texas, 137 U. S. 15) where it was affirmed, the court holding that legislation by a state simply forbidding the defendant to come into court and challenge the validity of service upon him in a personal action without surrendering himself to the jurisdiction of the court, does not deprive him of liberty or property within the prohibition of the Fourteenth Constitutional Amendment. This court must adopt and enforce the construction of the Texas statute given to it by the Texas courts, and hold that by the entering of a special appearance to question the service there was a general appearance of defendant at the succeeding term, and that the Texas court had jurisdiction over the defendant to render the judgment which was the cause of action sued upon in this suit. The defendant was under no obligation to have appeared by counsel in the Texas court to question the service, if it in fact was not doing business there and had no agent in that state, but when it went into a court of that state to test the question of service of summons under a statute of that state it made itself subject to the law of that state. The demurrer was properly overruled to the fifth replication.. The plaintiff having a single good replication to all the pleas was entitled to judgment. We do not deem it necessary to discuss the remaining replications, although we are satisfied the demurrer to the second and third was properly overruled. Affirmed.