37 Neb. 849 | Neb. | 1893
This action was brought in the district court of Saline county by the defendant against the plaintiff to recover $500 for loss upon a policy of insurance issued by the plaintiff. To this the plaintiff in error answered, setting up that it had been garnished in the state of Illinois and the answer of the garnishees sustained. The service in that case on Hettler was by publication. A copy of the opinion of Gary, P. J., is set out in the record. The cause was submitted to the court below on the following
“F. I. Foss,
“Attorney for Plaintiff.
“Abbott & Abbott,
“Attorneys for Defendant
On the trial of the cause in court below, judgment was rendered in favor of Hettler. The question presented to this court is the jurisdiction of the Illinois court to render judgment against the company. Garnishment is an attachment by means of which money or property of a debtor in the hands of third parties, which cannot be levied upon, may be subjected to the payment of the creditor’s claim. To subject the property to attachment it must be within the jurisdiction of the court; otherwise, it would be powerless to ■condemn it, order a sale, and apply the proceeds to the payment of the judgment in favor of the creditor. This question was fully considered in Mathews v. Smith, 13 Neb., 178, and Wright v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 19 Id., 175. In the latter case it was held, that a foreign corporation, having no property of the debtor in this state, nor owing money payable to him therein, was not subject to garnishment in this state. The same doctrine was approved in Turner v. Sioux City & P. R. Co., 19 Neb., 241. • It nowhere appears in the record that the insurance company had any money or effects of the defendant in error in Chicago. It is true it was indebted to him in the sum of $500 for losses sustained by fire, but the losses had occurred in -this state and the money was payable here. An officer with a writ of attachment and notice of garnishment in Saline county could receive the money. This an officer in Chicago could not do. Gary, P. J., says “ that the construction of the law given by that court might subject the plaintiff to the payment of the debt twice.” With due re
Affirmed.