Jones v. Rutherford

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

As already stated, the appellant, William L. Jones, and the Eureka Insurance Company are nonresidents of the District of Columbia and residents of the State of Pennsylvania; and the question sought to be raised on the present appeal is whether they have any rights of property in the District of Columbia, or within the jurisdiction of the courts of this District, so as to subject them, under our Code, to be cited to appear here by notice of publication.

Section 105 of the Code of Law of this District [31 Stat. at L. 1206, chap. 854], which in the main is the same as section 787 of the previously existing Revised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia, itself taken from the act of Congress of February 22, 1867 (14 Stat. at L. 403, chap. 64), provides as follows: “Publication may be substituted for personal service of process upon any defendant who cannot be found, and who is shown by affidavit to be a nonresident, or to have been absent from the District for at least six months, or against the unknown heirs or devisees of deceased persons, in Suits for partition, divorce by attachment, foreclosure of morí*119gages and deeds of trust; the establishment of title to real estate by possession, the enforcement of mechanics’ liens and all other liens against real or personal property within the District, and in all actions at law and 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.”

Under the contract between the appellant, William L. Jones, and the deceased, Allan Rutherford, the compensation to be paid to the latter for his professional services was in express terms made a lien upon the claim, and upon any draft, money, or evidence of indebtedness which might be issued therefor; and the purpose of the present suit is to enforce this lien and the lawful claim of Rutherford, if the same can be established, against such draft or evidence of indebtedness. It is very clear, therefore, that this suit falls within the class of suits wherein notice by way of publication is authorized, provided that the draft drawn in favor of the appellant can be regarded as personal property within the District of Columbia, or within the jurisdiction of the courts of the District. Now, why should it not be regarded as such personal property? It is drawn here by the Treasurer of the United States; it is physically present here; it is deliverable here; it has no other situs. It is true it may be made payable elsewhere, in New York, or New Orleans, or San Francisco, or at any other place where it may suit the claimant and the officers of the government; but it is not apparent how any such circumstance as that can effect the character of the paper as personal property in this District, while it is physically present here. It could become the subject of larceny in this District by being stolen here. It could become the subject of forgery by being fraudulently altered within the limits of the District. If it were improperly withheld by the Treasurer, the courts of this District would constitute the proper forum wherein its delivery cou],d be enforced. Mandamus would lie to compel its delivery to the person entitled to receive it; injunction would lie to prevent its delivery to a person not entitled to receive it

*120Let us assume the conditions to be changed in the present instance, and that the Treasurer had announced to the appellant his intention to deliver the draft to the appellee. Wherein would lie the remedy of the appellant, upon the assumption that he regarded such proposed action of the Treasurer as unjust and without warrant of law? Undoubtedly the remedy would be by just such a suit as the present in the courts of the District of Columbia,—not merely because the Treasurer is here, where he may be personally served with process, but because the draft, the subject-matter of controversy, is also here, and is capable of being delivered here to the person lawfully entitled to receive it. Why should not the same remedy lie in favor of the appellee, or of any person similarly situated ?

The ease before us, reduced to its ultimate analysis, is this: Two persons are claiming the same draft in the hands of the Treasurer, in which .the United States have no longer any interest. The Treasurer, we may presume, is ready and willing to deliver it to the proper person. One of the two demands it because it is drawn in his favor, and he is the person ultimately entitled to receive the money. The other person demands it because, by reason of the convention between him and the other party, he is entitled to a lien upon it,—which means that he is entitled to receive and to hold it until a specified claim of his for compensation has been paid and satisfied. Both have the right of possession, but the right of the lien holder is for the time being the paramount right.

The right of the appellee to her lien, it may be remarked, is not contested at this stage of the proceedings, if the draft is properly subject to a lien. Such right is not affected by section 3477 of the Devised Statutes of the United States [U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 2320], forbidding' the assignment of claims against the United States, or of any interest therein, for here there has been no such assignment. The agreement between the parties was that while the draft, as usual in all such cases, should-be drawn in favor of the claimant, it should be delivered to the attorney for its prosecution and held by him until his fee *121or charge thereon should be paid. There is nothing in the statute to forbid such an arrangement as this.

But the contention of the appellant is that “a claim against the United States has no locality, and the debt, if it exists, is not property of the creditor within the District of Columbia; and, in support of this contention, he relies upon various decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, which are supposed to establish it.' We are of opinion that the proposition put forward by the appellant has no application to the present case,, and that the decisions in question have no reference to such a condition as exists here. There is no question here of any claim against the United States by anyone, or of any indebtedness due by the United States to anyone. The claim and the indebtedness have been fully settled. The United States have drawn their draft for the payment of the indebtedness, which is the usual mode of payment, and they are ready to deliver that draft. It is not a question whether a claim against the United States, or an indebtedness by the United States, is property here or elsewhere. The question is as to the right to the manual possession of a draft drawn by the United States, and ready to be delivered to the person lawfully entitled to its possession. The question is whether that draft is property within the District of Columbia as between two rival claimants for the possession of it. The possession of this draft is the matter in controversy between the parties, and we are of opinion that it is property in this District. It certainly has no other situs, and if it is property at all it is property in the District of Columbia.

The cases of Vaughan v. Northup, 15 Pet. 1, 10 L. ed. 639 ; United States use of Mackey v. Coxe, 18 How. 100, 15 L. ed. 299; and Wyman v. Halstead (Wyman v. United States) 109 U. S. 654, 27 L. ed. 1068, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 417, cited on behalf of the appellant, are readily distinguishable from the present case. In the case of Vaughan v. Northup, suit was sought to' be maintained in the District of Columbia by local creditors of a deceased person, an inhabitant of Kentucky during his lifetime, against an administrator duly appointed in that State, who had received from the United States a sum of money due *122to the deceased for military services. The contention on behalf of the local creditors was that the money due to the deceased from the United States was local assets at the seat of government. This contention was repudiated; and it was held that the local creditors could not maintain suit against the foreign administrator outside of the jurisdiction of the court which appointed him.

In the case of United States use of Mackey v. Coxe, supra, the suit was against the surety on an administration bond by persons entitled to distributive shares of the estate of a deceased person. Administration had been duly granted in the Cherokee nation. The deceased had a claim against the United States. An agent of the administration came to Washington to collect the claim. It was suggested to him by the officials of the Treasury Department to take out letters of administration in this District. He did so; and the amount of this claim was paid to him. As administrator in the District, he immediately turned over the fund to himself as agent for the administrator in the Cherokee country. The fund was lost in some way; and suit was instituted upon the administration bond given in this District. It was held that the suit could not be maintained.

In the ease of Wyman v. Halstead, supra, it was sought, by proceedings in mandamus in the District of Columbia, to compel the Treasurer of the United States to pay an administrator appointed in the District of Columbia the amount of some drafts drawn to the orders of certain persons, deceased at the time of the suit, who were at the time of their death residents of the State of Tennessee, wherein administration was also had on their estates at the same time. The Treasurer refused to pay the drafts without the indorsement of the administrators in Tennessee, and he was sustained in his action by the Supreme Court of the United States.

These are all plainly cases of rival administrations, wherein it was held that administration at the place of death of the deceased person was the proper and paramount administration which the Treasury officials should recognize, and that, in antagonism to such administration, there was no room at the seat *123of government for a rival, or a different, administration by-reason of any supposed situs of assets in this District. Plainly (there is no case of this kind before us here.

It was said by Mr. Justice Story in the ease of Vaughan v. Northup and quoted by Mr. Justice McLean in the case of United States use of Mackey v. Coxe, each delivering the judgment of the court: “The debts due from the government of the United States have no locality at the seat of government. The United States, in their sovereign capacity, have no particular place of domicil, but possess, in contemplation of law, an ubiquity throughout the Union, and the debts due by them are not to be treated like the debts of a private debtor, which constitute local assets in his own domicil. On the contrary, the administrator of a creditor of the government, duly appointed in the State where he was domiciled at his death, has full authority to receive payment and give a full discharge of the debt due to his intestate in any place where the government may choose to pay it. * * * If any other doctrine were to be recognized, the consequence would be that, before the personal representative of any deceased creditor, belonging to any state in the Union, would be entitled to receive payment of any debt due by the government, he would be compellable to take out letters of administration in this District for the due administration of such assets. Such a doctrine has never yet been sanctioned by any practice of the government, and would be full of public, as well as private, inconvenience. It has not, in our judgment, any just foundation in the principles of law.”

A careful consideration of this enunciation of the Supreme Court will show that it holds merely that an indebtedness by the United States to a deceased person does not create such a status of assets at the seat of the Federal government as to require the issue of letters of administration here to procure its collection, and that payment of such indebtedness is properly made to the administrator at the place of domicil of the deceased. In our opinion it does not at all affect the question now before us. Here there is no question of different administrations, or of principal and ancillary administration, or of any administra*124tion whatever. There is question simply of the right to the present possession of a draft, and of the right to hold it as security until a certain obligation or liability is discharged. The adverse claimants are both sui juris and may sue and be sued anywhere, wherever they are found, and the present custodian of the draft, the Treasurer of the United States, can properly be made amenable for the disposition of it only to the courts of the District of Columbia.

The appellant, by giving a lien upon the draft, authorized Rutherford to receive it and to hold it, and to take all the necessary and proper steps, by suit or otherwise, to reduce it into his possession. He thereby gave to the instrument, even if it did not otherwise have it, a status and a situs in the District of Columbia, which it is proper to enforce by suit. He cannot be permitted to nullify that lien by requiring the present delivery of the draft to himself.

We are of opinion that the court below was right in issuing the notice of publication in this case, and that its order to that effect should be affirmed with costs. And it is so ordered.

Affirmed.