The fact that personal injuries sued for occurred while
plaintiff was employed on work which defendant was performing under
contract with the United States does not prevent a state court from
entertaining the action.
An Indiana corporation, in constructing a canal for the United
States on a federal reservation in Kentucky, carried the excavated
materials over a railroad it had built for the purpose to land
belonging to another and dumped them there with such owner's
consent. The dump and, in part, the railroad were within Kentucky
and outside the reservation.
Held that, without regard to
whether the jurisdiction over the reservation was exclusively
federal, the transport and deposit of the materials beyond its
limits was such a doing of business in Kentucky as subjected the
corporation to the jurisdiction of the courts of that state in a
transitory action.
Page 244 U. S. 69
The corporation was sued in a Kentucky court for injuries
suffered by an employee while engaged upon the work within the
reservation, a summons being served in the reservation on an agent
whom it had designated under the Kentucky law for receiving service
of process in case of suit, and an alias summons being served on
the agent while off the reservation at his home in Kentucky.
Held that if the first service was void upon the ground
that jurisdiction over the reservation was exclusively in the
United States, the second was good, since the corporation did
business in the state outside the reservation.
All action for personal injuries suffered on a reservation under
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, being transitory, may
be maintained in a state court which has personal jurisdiction of
the defendant.
170 Ky. 412 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the court:
In July, 1914, one Haines sued the Ohio River Contract Company,
the plaintiff in error, and Swisher, one of its employees, in the
Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Kentucky, to recover damages
resulting from personal injuries alleged to have been occasioned by
the negligence of the defendants while Haines was in the employ of
the company. The defendant company, by appropriate pleadings,
challenged the power of the court to entertain the suit both
because of the want of jurisdiction over the corporation and over
the subject matter of the suit. Briefly, the facts were these:
The Contract Company was a corporation organized
Page 244 U. S. 70
under the laws of Indiana, and had its principal place of
business in that state. At the time in question, it was engaged
within the geographical limits of the State of Kentucky in
constructing, under a contract with the United States government, a
canal with locks and dam on the Ohio River on a piece of land known
as the Canal Reservation, acquired by the United States by purchase
or condemnation from the State of Kentucky with the consent of its
legislature. While most of the work under the contract was
performed on the land thus acquired, the earth and rocks excavated
in the construction of the canal were hauled over railroad tracks
laid by the defendant company on land outside of the Canal
Reservation, and, through an arrangement with the Kentucky &
Indiana Terminal Railway Company, were dumped on its property in
the State of Kentucky. The accident which gave rise to the injuries
complained of occurred in the course of the work on the Canal
Reservation. In conformity with a statute of Kentucky, the company
had designated an agent in the state upon whom process might be
served in the event suits were brought against it in the state. The
summons issued in the cause was served on the designated agent when
he was on the land of the United States, but subsequently, an alias
summons was served on him at his home in Louisville.
Under these facts, it was insisted the court was without
jurisdiction (a) because when the accident occurred the company and
the plaintiff were engaged in work under a contract with the United
States government; (b) because the cause of action arose on land
acquired by the United States by purchase or condemnation with the
consent of the Legislature of Kentucky, and therefore, under
Article I, § 8, clause 17, of the Constitution of the United
States, the jurisdiction of the Federal government was exclusive;
(c) because the service of the original summons was void, since it
was made upon the land of the United States,
Page 244 U. S. 71
where, it was insisted, state process cannot run, and (d)
because the service of the alias summons was also void, since the
company transacted no business in the state, and the person served
was not its agent for any purpose in the state, but represented the
company only in its work on the reservation. The objections of the
company to the jurisdiction were overruled, and the case was set
down for trial. Thereupon, the company, desiring a review of the
jurisdictional questions, and in order to avoid the consequences of
the rule under the Kentucky practice that the appearance of a party
on appeal operates as a waiver of a claim of want of jurisdiction
over his person (
Western Life Indemnity Co. v. Rupp,
235 U. S. 261),
applied to the court below for a writ of prohibition directed to
the trial judge to restrain him from proceeding further in the
cause. A temporary restraining order was granted, but, on final
hearing, the petition was overruled and the writ of prohibition
denied, and, upon the theory, which was adequately presented below,
that to subject the defendant corporation to the jurisdiction of
the state court under the circumstances stated would be a violation
of due process, in conflict with the 14th Amendment, this writ of
error was prosecuted.
At the present term, on application of the plaintiff in error,
an order was issued to restrain further proceedings in the cause in
the courts below pending the decision of the case here.
We at once put out of view the contention that the trial court
was without jurisdiction because the parties, at the time of the
accident, were engaged in work under a contract with the United
States government, since the want of merit in the proposition has
been previously established.
Gromer v. Standard Dredging
Co., 224 U. S. 362,
224 U. S.
371.
The remaining contentions are also, we think, without merit.
Conceding, for the sake of the argument only, that
Page 244 U. S. 72
the Canal Reservation was within the exclusive legislative
jurisdiction of Congress, it is clear from the facts we have stated
that the business carried on by the corporation was not confined to
the land owned by the United States, since it is admitted that, in
order to dispose of the material excavated in the construction of
the canal, a line of railway was built which extended beyond the
reservation and connected with the tracks of the Kentucky &
Indiana Terminal Railway, upon whose property all of the earth and
rocks were dumped. This clearly constituted the doing of business
within the state, and subjected the corporation to the jurisdiction
of the Kentucky courts. Assuming also, for argument's sake only,
that the original summons was void because served on the agent
designated by the company while he was on the reservation, the
subsequent service of the alias summons on the agent at his home in
Louisville was valid, since, as we have seen, the company was doing
business in the state. And finally, an action for personal injuries
being in its nature transitory and susceptible of being brought in
any jurisdiction in which the defendant may be impleaded, there is
no foundation for the contention that the court had no jurisdiction
over the subject matter of the suit.
Affirmed.