Chesapeake, Railroad v. Cowherd

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

deliyebed the opinion op the court.

The appellee, a citizen of Shelby county, Kentucky, was injured in the State of West Virginia through the negligence of the appellant, a non-resident corporation and common carrier. He brought his action for damages arising out of the injury in the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas, and process was executed on a ticket agent of the corporation stationed at Louisville. The carrier has no chief office or place of business in this State, and no chief officer or agent residing in this State. It does not pass into or through the counties of Jefferson or Shelby, but does run from Lexington eastwardly through a number of counties in this State. The question of jurisdiction, as well as of the sufficiency of the service of process, was made by appropriate plea and motion to quash, and both plea and motion having been determined adversely to the appellant, a trial was had resulting in a verdict for the appellee for the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars.

*116Tlie appellant’s chief contention is that the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas had no jurisdiction of the action, and this is the first question we will consider.

It is argued by appellant’s counsel, and such is the -view adopted by the majority of the Superior Court, that while actions of this kind are transitory in their nature, and were so at the common law, they have been made local and not transitory actions by the provisions of our Civil Code, section 73 of which is relied on to sustain this contention. This section is as follows:

“Excepting the actions mentioned in section 75”— which section relates solely to actions against persons constructively summoned — “an action against a common carrier, whether a corporation or not, * * and for an injury to a passenger, or to other person or his property, must be brought in the county in which the defendant, or either of several defendants, resides ; or in which the plaintiff or his property is injured; or in which he resides, if he. reside in a county into which the carrier passes.”

Applying this section to the case at hand, the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas had no jurisdiction, because Jefferson county was not the county of the defendant’s residence, or that in which the plaintiff was injured, or that in which he resided and into which the carrier passed. Moreover, if- this section is to control, the plaintiff is wholly without remedy so far as the courts of his State are concerned. The corporation has established itself in business within the jurisdiction of the courts of the State, but because the injury was inflicted beyond her territorial limits, the *117plaintiff is not allowed to sne in any of lier courts. And, so long as the carrier fails to ran its road through. Shelby county, or fails to establish its chief office or place of business in Kentucky, the complainant is without remedy, so far as this statute gives him relief, even though the managing agents of the carrier might be found doing business in every county in the State. We do not believe this construction of the law to be sound. No attempt was made to localize actions where the jurisdictional facts contemplated in the statute were wholly wanting. In the very nature of things, it would seem impossible to localize any action for a personal injury inflicted by a non-resident beyond the limits of the State.

The existence of the localizing facts can be only accidental, and in most cases would be wanting as they are here. It seems to us the law was intended to apply only in cases where the defendant, or one of them, resides in the State, or where the plaintiff is injured in the State, or resides in a county in the State into which the carrier passes. In the absence of these jurisdictional facts in any given. case, we must conclude not that the plaintiff is without remedy, but that the localizing statute is not applicable. The state of fact which would limit or confine the plaintiff to certain designated counties in the institution of his action does not; exist in the case at hand. It was impossible for the plaintiff to bring his action in any of the counties designated in the section relied on to localize the action; hence, section 78 of the Code applies, and this provides that “an action, which is not required by the foregoing sections *118•of this article to be brought in some other county, may be brought iu the county in which the defendant, or in which one of several defendants, who may be properly joined as such in the action, resides or is summoned.”

It seems to us that the application of this section to this case is entirely free from objection. The nonresident common carrier is thus put on the same footing with other non-resident litigants. When found doing business in the State, it is presumably with the consent of the State, and that, consent must be assumed to have been on the condition that it subject itself to the same legal environments that encompass other litigants, and it may, therefore, be sued as other litigants when properly summoned.

It may be true, indeed is true, that formerly a corporation could not be sued in an action for the recovery óf a personal demand-outside of the State by which it was created, the old principle being that the corporation must dwell in the place of its creation, and that it could not migrate to another sovereignty. Under this legal fiction, it may be true that the corporation could not be sued away from its sovereignty without its permission. But when it comes within another sovereignty to transact business, it comes, as we have said, as other litgants.

But the question recurs, was the corporation properly summoned? Subsection 3 of section 51 of the Civil Code provides that, “in an action against a private corporation the summons may be served, in any county, upon the defendant’s chief officer or agent, who may be found in this State ; or it may be served *119in the county wherein the action is brought, upon the ■defendant’s chief officer or agent who may be found therein.” And the chief officer or agent of a corporation is defined to be: ‘ 1, its president; 2, its vice-president ; 3, its secretary or librarian; 4, its cashier •or treasurer ; 5, its clerk ; 6, its managing agent.”

Here the summons was served on the ticket or passenger agent, and that he was the highest officer and agent of the corporation in the county where the action was brought, is shown by the return on the summons. He was the only agent of the carrier in the county, and was the chief and managing agent in the department of which- he had control. We think he was the chief officer or agent of the corporation within the meaning of the law. Formerly, in an action against a railroad company, brought pursuant to section 73, and now in all actions against such company, the summons may be served upon the defendant’s passenger or freight agent stationed at or nearest to the county seat of the county in which the action is brought. Bacon, the .agent served in this case, says he was not the general agent of the corporation, nor does the statute require Mm to be such in order to enforce the appearance of his principal by service of process on him. He does not say he is not the managing agent or chief agent in the county; he styles himself “the local ticket agent, stationed at Louisville, for the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company” — a position, we must .assume, involving the chief superintendency and management of the affairs of the company in this department of its service.

We perceive no abuse of discretion on the part of *120the court below in holding the jury together after they had declared a number of times that they could not agree; nor was there any error in the instructions which could have possibly affected or prejudiced the substantial rights of the defendant.

Judgment affirmed.