Automatic Merchandising Co. v. Delaware & Hudson Co.

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Brown,

On January 22, 1909, the Delaware & Hudson Company, a common carrier, received, at the city of Scranton, from the Automatic Merchandising Company ten peanut vending machines for shipment to the consignor’s address in the city of Brooklyn, New York. On the same *583day, on what purported to be an attachment issued by an alderman of the city of Scranton, a constable seized these machines and they were surrendered to him by the common carrier. This action, brought for the recovery of their value, for the reason that the common carrier ought not to have surrendered them to .the constable under the admitted facts, resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff in the court below, upon the report of a referee, and from its affirmance by a majority of the Superior Court there has come this appeal.

The common carrier claims that, under the Act of June 13, 1874, P. L. 285, it is not liable to the appellee for the surrender of its goods to the constable, as that act provides that, where goods, wares or merchandise shall be taken from the possession of a common carrier by writ of attachment, replevin or other legal process, such carrier shall not be liable therefor to the owner of such goods, wares or merchandise, or to any holder of any receipt, voucher or bill' of lading for the same. What purported to be legal process in the hands of the constable, under which he seized the goods of the appellee in the possession of the common carrier, was issued by an alderman, whose jurisdiction was purely statutory, and, therefore, strictly limited. He could act only within the jurisdiction conferred upon him and could issue no process not authorized by statute. If he did so, or if he issued process in disregard of the mandatory requirements of the statute under which he attempted to issue it, he placed in the hands of his constable a worthless writ. The paper which the constable in this case regarded as his authority for taking the goods of the appellee from the common carrier, and which it insists protects it from liability for its surrender of them to him, was admittedly issued by the alderman under what he regarded as authority conferred upon him by the fraudulent debtor’s Act of July 12, 1842, P. L. 339. Sec-, tion 28 of that act requires that every writ of attachment issued under it shall be made returnable not less than two' nor more than four days from its date, and the service of *584it — when the defendant is a nonresident,of the county and cannot be found — is to be made by leaving a copy of it and of the inventory of the goods attached with the person in whose possession they may happen to be. The writ in this case was so served upon the common carrier, and, upon the face of the copy of it, the claim of the plaintiff was given as $400. It thus affirmatively appeared to the appellant, from the copy of the writ left with it, that the alderman was without jurisdiction in the premises - and that his process was, therefore, void; and it still further appeared from the copy of the writ that, though it had been issued on January 22, it was returnable on January 29— seven days from its date — in palpable disregard of the peremptory statutory requirement that it must have been made returnable not more than four days from the day it was issued. The proceedings before the aider-man were utterly void on this account, all of which affirmatively appeared from the face of the invalid paper in the hands of the constable.

The question before us is not whether the act of 1874 will protect a common carrier in surrendering goods to a constable on a writ, regular, or apparently so, upon its face, even though the magistrate may have been without jurisdiction to issue it, and, for that reason, it may have been void, as, for instance, an execution in the hands of a constable without a judgment to support it. What we are to determine is whether a common carrier has a right to invoke the protection of the act of 1874 in surrendering goods of one of its-shippers to a constable or sheriff demanding them by virtue of what appears on the face of it to be an invalid writ and utterly void process for want of jurisdiction to issue it. There can be no valid writ if there is no jurisdiction to issue it. In such a case the proceedings are void ab initio, and may be so treated, no matter how or at what time the objection on that ground is brought to the attention of a supervising court. There was no valid writ in this case, for the alderman was without jurisdiction to issue it, and the proceedings before *585him were utterly void: Pantall v. Dickey, 123 Pa. 431.

Legal process, as contemplated by the act of 1874, is process that a court has a right to issue. This is conceded by the learned member of the Superior Court who wrote the dissenting opinion, for his admission is that the act of 1874 would not protect a common carrier in surrendering goods on a writ of replevin issued by an orphans’ court. This admission must include a writ of replevin issued by an alderman, for that officer has no more authority than an orphans’ court to issue such writ. When issued from either it would show upon its face want of jurisdiction; and the writ of attachment in the present case clearly showed this. The alderman had no more right to issue it than he had to place a writ of replevin in the hands of his constable. The only reasonable meaning to be given to the words “writ of attachment” and “legal process,” as used in the act of 1874, is a valid writ of attachment and valid legal process, or process which, upon its face, appears, to be valid, for the legislature surely could not have intended that a common carrier should be protected in surrendering goods on absolutely void process, manifestly so appearing upon its face, and under which the officer would have no right to seize anything belonging to the defendant named in it. This was the correct view entertained by the court of common pleas and a majority of the Superior Court, and the judgment is affirmed.