On Application foh WRIT of ERROR to THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE Fifth District of Texas
This case presents a question of the appropriate scope of a writ of garnishment served on a bank. We hold that a bank served with a writ of garnishment may rely on its deposit agreements when determining to whom it is indebted.
Sunbelt Savings obtained a personal judgment against James C. Bramlett for $15,269.96. Bramlett was sole shareholder, director, officer, and employee of Bramcon General Contractors, Inc. Post-judgment discovery indicated that Bramlett commin *558 gled his personal funds with Bramcon funds in Bramcon accounts. Sunbelt then obtained a writ of garnishment against Bank One to collect the judgment debt. The writ of garnishment named Bramlett but not Bramcon as the judgment debtor. Bramlett did not have any accounts at Bank One. Bank One responded to the writ of garnishment stating that Bank One was not indebted to Bramlett. However, Bramcon did have accounts at Bank One.
Sunbelt pleaded the commingling in its application for writ of garnishment but did not request the court to name Bramcon as a judgment debtor. The writ directed to Bank One incorporated the application by reference but did not name Bramcon as a judgment debtor. After the writ was served on Bank One and Bank One answered that it was not indebted to Bramlett, the funds in the Bramcon accounts were withdrawn.
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Bank One on the ground that Bank One was not indebted to Bram-lett. The court of appeals held that Sunbelt raised a fact issue as to the ownership of the Bramcon account so summary judgment was improper and reversed the judgment of the trial court.
Garnishment is a statutory proceeding whereby the property, money, or credits of a debtor in the possession of another are applied to the payment of the debt.
Beggs v. Fite,
When a creditor wants to challenge title to funds held by a third party, the creditor should seek a writ of garnishment naming the nominal owner not the true owner. The court is then responsible for determining true ownership. Requiring a garnishee bank to determine true ownership of its deposits improperly shifts a judicial responsibility to the garnishee.
In
Thompson v. Fulton Bag & Cotton Mills,
we held that “[t]he scope of the inquiry in a writ of garnishment is broad enough to impound funds of the debtor, held by the garnishee, even though title thereto stands nominally in a third party.”
Therefore, we grant the application for writ of error pursuant to Rule 170 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, and without hearing oral argument, this Court reverses the judgment of the court of appeals and renders judgment for Bank One.
