R. Moore & Co. v. Gennett & Co.
R. Moore & Co. v. Gennett & Co.
Opinion of the Court
— The complainants and the defendants Gennett & Co. are creditors of A. A. Spencer, and are
Spencer had assigned his certificate of stock, on the 28th of November, 1870, to Rainey & Co., merchants of the city of New York, as collateral security for a specific debt, and the company were notified of the assignment on the 4th of April, 1872. Gennett & Co. had sued out their attachment on the 9th of May, 1872; Upon a bill of interpleader, filed by the insurance company against Rainey & Co. and Gennett & Co., this court held that the former had the prior right to satisfaction out of the stock, and that the latter were entitled to the residue. State Ins. Co. v. Gennett, 2 Tenn. Ch. 100. The present complainants were no parties to that suit. On the 6th of June, 1871, as shown by a transcript of the record, they filed an affidavit in the supreme court of the city of New York, to the effect that Spencer was indebted to them in a specified amount; that he was a non-resident of that state and a resident of the state of Tennessee, and that he had property within the state of New York, to wit, “ an interest in a considerable quantity of cotton goods now held by Messrs. A. H. Rainey & Co.” The court ordered notice to be given to Spencer by publication. A summons was, however, served upon Spencer at Nashville, in this state, on the 10th of October, 1871, and, upon affidavit of such service, a judgment was rendered against him in favor of the complainants for the amount of their claim. At the time of instituting their suit complainants had sued out, in aid thereof, an attachment against “all the property” of the defendant. On the 7th of June, 1871, the sheriff, by virtue of this warrant of attachment, notified Rainey & Co.
Gennett & Co. demur to the bill so far as it seeks to reach the stock and its dividends by virtue of the proceedings in the state of New York, because the bill shows on its face that the proceedings are void for want of jurisdiction, both of the person of Spencer and of the stock in controversy. They demur, also, to the bill so far as it seeks to reach the dividends declared since their attachment, because such dividends were covered by their attachment.
A judgment in one state, without personal notice to, summons, or appearance of the defendant, even if it be rendered upon an attachment of property, has no extra territorial validity, and would be clearly not binding in any other state. Earthman v. Jones, 2 Yerg. 484. The legislature of a state can only bind the persons and property
If, however, the complainants, by virtue of the attachment proceedings, acquired a lien on the stock in controversy on the 7th of June, 1871, that lien might be good, although the personal judgment were of no avail out of the state of New York. For the lien in.rem might be effectual everywhere, notwithstanding the limited effect of the judgment in personam. The sheriff’s levy was upon “certain bales of cotton,” and “ all debts ” owing by Rainey & Co. to Spencer. Such a levy would not reach Spencer’s interest-in the stock in controversy, being the balance after satisfying the debt for which it was pledged. Rainey & Co. are in no sense indebted to Spencer for such balance, which they have never converted, nor sought to convert. They are creditors of Spencer, not his debtors. Deacon v. Oliver, 14 How. 621. Moreover, there is no judgment of the New York court declaring that the complainants have acquired any lien on the stock by virtue of their proceedings.
The stock in controversy is the stock of an insurance company chartered by, and located in, this state. Rainey & Co. held only a certificate of stock issued to Spencer. If the certificate had been attached, the court would only have had control of the paper, not of the res. It could not acquire a right to the stock, under our laws, as against the creditors of Spencer, except by notice to the company. Clodfelter v. Cox, 1 Sneed, 330. And it would seem to be as contrary to sound principle for the court of one state to
Stock, ex vi termini, implies a right to receive a certain proportion of dividends while the corporation exists. Union Bank v. State, 9 Yerg. 501; Brightly v. Mallory, 10 Yerg. 196. Dividends are as much an incident to the stock as rent is to the reversion of land, or interest to a debt. Besides, the increase or income of property, after the levy of an attachment, is given to the creditor by the Code, § 3536. The complainants take nothing by their bill, and it must be dismissed with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.