Judges: Becker, Hostetter, McCullen, Sutton
Filed Date: 2/4/1936
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The relators, James K. Richardson and Robert B. Richardson, on May 10, 1935, filed in this court their petition praying the issuance of a writ of prohibition, restraining respondents, the Honorable Fred E. Mueller, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, C. Kenneth Thies, and Jacob M. Lashly, from taking any further action or asserting any jurisdiction, in so far as relators or their property is concerned, in a suit brought by respondents C. Kenneth Thies and Jacob M. Lashly, as plaintiffs, against the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, Stanley P. Richardson, James K. Richardson, and Robert B. Richardson, as defendants, in said circuit court, before said respondent the Honorable Fred E. Mueller. Upon the filing of said petition a preliminary rule in prohibition issued. The parties have submitted the case here as upon a demurrer to the petition on the ground that the petition fails to state facts sufficient to show that the relators are entitled to prohibition.
The facts as disclosed by the petition are substantially as follows:
The relators, James K. Richardson and Robert B. Richardson, who are nonresidents of the State of Missouri, and one Stanley P. Richardson, who is a brother of relators and a resident of St. Louis County, Missouri, upon the death of their father, asserted a claim against the Sun Life Assurance Company for the proceeds of certain insurance policies covering the life of the Richardsons' father. In addition to the Richardsons' claim, there was another claim made against the Assurance Company for the proceeds of the insurance, the nature of which is not relevant to the questions raised in this proceeding. The Assurance Company, which is a Canadian corporation, duly licensed to carry on business in Missouri as a foreign insurance corporation, refused to recognize the Richardsons' claim.
Thereafter, the relators, James K. Richardson and Robert B. Richardson, and their brother, Stanley P. Richardson, employed respondents C. Kenneth Thies and Jacob M. Lashly, attorneys at law, and residents of the City of St. Louis, Missouri, pursuant to a written contract signed and executed in the State of Missouri, to perform such legal services as might be necessary to obtain a satisfactory recognition of their claim. This written contract provided that respondents Thies and Lashly, hereinafter referred to as respondents, should have twelve and one-half per cent of said proceeds of insurance in the possession of said Assurance Company in the event of recovery by suit, settlement, or otherwise, in consideration for legal services performed and to be performed by respondents. The Assurance Company was duly notified of the lien claimed by respondents in accordance *Page 967 with the provisions of section 11717, Revised Statutes 1929, Mo. St. Ann., sec. 11717, P. 633, relating to liens of attorneys.
Respondents duly performed the obligations imposed upon them in said written contract by performing the legal services therein provided for, and as a result thereof the Richardsons adjusted and settled with the Assurance Company the claim which they asserted against it. The Assurance Company, in settlement and adjustment of said claim, executed and issued to Stanley P. Richardson and relators deposit agreements which provided for the payment of $10,000 to Stanley P. Richardson, $15,000 to James K. Richardson, and $10,000 to Robert B. Richardson, upon their attaining a certain designated age. The Richardsons refused to compensate respondents for their legal services rendered as provided for in said written contract, and the Assurance Company refused to recognize respondents' lien upon the fund held by it for the relators.
Thereafter, respondents instituted in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County an action against the said Assurance Company and the said Stanley P. Richardson, James K. Richardson, and Robert B. Richardson, to obtain a decree of said court adjudging a subsisting attorney's lien in favor of respondents on said fund in the hands of said Assurance Company.
The Assurance Company was duly served with process pursuant to the provisions of section 5894, Revised Statutes 1929, Mo. St. Ann., sec. 5894, p. 4495, and made a general appearance to said suit. Service of process in said suit was obtained upon the relators in the State of Michigan pursuant to the provisions of sections 739 and 748, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1929, Mo. St. Ann., secs. 739 and 748, pp. 959 and 971.
It is to prohibit further proceedings in that suit so far as concerns relators or their property that the present action is brought.
Sections 739 and 748 provide for service on nonresident defendants by publication or by delivery of a copy of the petition and summons to each nonresident defendant in suits "in partition, divorce, attachments, suits for the foreclosure of mortgages and deeds of trust, and for the enforcement of mechanics' liens, and all other liens against real or personal property, and in all actions at law or in equity, which have for their immediate object the enforcement or establishment of any lawful right, claim or demand to or against any real or personal property within the jurisdiction of the court."
Relators in support of their petition for prohibition insist that the circuit court has acquired and can acquire no jurisdiction of relators, by service under the provisions of said sections 739 and 748, because the property — the fund in the hands of the Assurance Company — on which a lien is sought to be enforced, is not "within the jurisdiction of the court." *Page 968
We are thus confronted with a question of first impression in this State.
Relators liken the suit in the circuit court to a garnishment proceeding in attachment, and cite Douglas v. Phenix Insurance Co.,
However, the view announced in those cases appears to be out of accord with the decisions in this State.
In Western Assurance Co. v. Walden Tarr,
In Wyeth Hardware Manufacturing Co. v. H.F. Lang Co.,
But relators insist that a foreign insurance company is not suable in this State by a nonresident creditor of such insurance company on a cause of action arising outside this State, for the reason that under the construction placed upon section 5894, Revised Statutes 1929, Mo. St. Ann., sec. 5894, p. 4495, by our Supreme Court, in State ex rel. American Central Life Insurance Co. v. Landwehr,
However, the suit involved in the instant case is not a garnishment proceeding. It is not a suit against the relators in which it is sought to impound a debt due from the Assurance Company to the relators by the process of garnishment so as to apply it to the payment of what the relators owe the respondents. It is a suit in which the Assurance Company is called upon to answer on a direct obligation of the Assurance Company to the respondents. It is a suit to enforce respondents' lien on the fund arising from the settlement made by the Assurance Company with the relators, to the end that the Assurance Company may be required to pay out of such fund the amount due respondents for their services as attorneys, in discharge of its obligation arising by virtue of such lien. That obligation is a liability "outstanding in this State."
The circuit court has acquired jurisdiction of the Assurance Company both by service on the superintendent of insurance and by a general appearance of the Assurance Company. Relators are necessary parties, as they are entitled to the fund arising from the settlement *Page 970 subject to respondents' lien and are entitled to be heard as to the existence of the lien and respondents' right to enforce it.
There is thus raised, for decision here, the question, Is the fund arising from the settlement "within the jurisdiction of the court," so as to authorize substituted service on relators? Questions such as this, though none such has ever been decided by the courts of this State, have been under decision in the courts of New York.
In Oishei v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.,
"By the service upon the defendant and its appearance in this action the court obtained jurisdiction over the defendant, and could enforce on behalf of the plaintiff, a resident and citizen of this State, his right to the possession of the fund in its hands. The right to attach this fund and adjudicate as to whom it belonged attached when the court obtained jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, and the courts of this State, therefore, had the right to bring in by substituted *Page 971 service all those who had any interest in the fund, the ownership of which was in dispute. Here a defendant over whom the court had jurisdiction concededly had in its hands a fund, the ownership of which was in dispute between a citizen of this State and others who were without its jurisdiction. The defendant who had possession of the fund was before the court, and the court had jurisdiction over him and could enforce a judgment determining the ownership of the fund; and by virtue of the jurisdiction thus acquired over the corporation, in whose possession the fund was, the fund itself was within the jurisdiction of the court. The court, therefore, had power to call in all others interested in the fund by substituted service of process. As the question to be determined was the ownership of a fund subject to the jurisdiction of the court, the proceeding was in rem, and the judgment determining the ownership of the fund was binding upon all the parties to the action properly served by process, either personally or by substituted service as authorized by law."
That case was later affirmed without an opinion by the New York Court of Appeals. [See Oishei v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
In McKennell v. Payne,
"However, I find that, as claimed by the learned counsel for respondent here, it has been held clearly by our courts in this State that under such circumstances and in such an action the defendant company (here the Director General) must conclusively be presumed to have retained in its actual possession enough of the settlement fund to meet and discharge the lien. [Sargent v. McLeod, 209 N.U. 360, at page 365,
"The latter case was precisely like this, except that, while the accident happened in the State of New Jersey, the original action was brought in this State, and presumptively the settlement made therein. I cannot conceive that that makes any difference. This action as brought is clearly one in rem, and no personal judgment against the appellant is asked. It seems to me that, if it must be conclusively presumed that the defendant, the Director General, has actually retained and still has in his possession the identical $5,000, upon which the plaintiff claims a lien, plaintiff may maintain his action in this State to foreclose his lien upon that fund as ``one affecting specific personal property,' ``which is within the jurisdiction and control of the court,' as being in the actual possession of the defendant, the Director General, and that by personal service upon him such property is brought within the jurisdiction and control of this court."
The instant case is a stronger one for respondents than the New York cases, since in the instant case the fund arising from the settlement remains in the actual possession of the Assurance Company and no presumption or fiction need be indulged to bring the fund within the jurisdiction of the court.
Palmer v. Bank of Sturgeon,
Relators, in their reply brief, contend that their cause of action against the Assurance Company, which respondents were employed to enforce, was not within the jurisdiction of the courts of this State, and that therefore the Missouri statute gave respondents no lien thereon for their services. We think the contention is untenable. The contract of employment with which we are here concerned is a Missouri contract. It was made by relators in Missouri with residents of Missouri, retaining them to render services for relators to enforce their cause of action. The provisions of the Missouri statute became a part of the contract and fixed a lien upon the cause of action, as much so as if an express provision for a lien had been written into it. *Page 973
The case of Plummer v. Great Northern R. Co.,
We think the New York cases are soundly ruled, and we can see no difference in principle between those cases and the case at bar.
We are of the opinion that the preliminary rule issued herein should be discharged and a peremptory writ denied. The Commissioner so recommends.