17 Mo. App. 277 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is not necessary to state the facts of this case at any length, because we regret to find at the outset that the
We must hold on the authority of Fenton v. Block (10 Mo. App. 536), that the proceeding by garnishment will not lie in such a case. It is not questioned that a judgment creditor may proceed by garnishment, even where there has been a. fraudulent conveyance by the judgment debtor to the garnishee, as this court lately held in the case of St. Louis Brokerage Co. v. Cronin (14 Mo. App. 586). But this proceeds upon the idea that the fraudulent conveyance is merely void as to a judgment creditor of the vendor or grantor; that the case stands just as though it had not been made, except that the fraudulent transferee occupies the position of a bailee or trustee of the property of the transferor. But the proceeding by garnishment is, nevertheless, a legal proceeding; and, as we held in the case of Fenton v. Block (supra), it cannot be resorted to where, in addition to setting aside a fraudulent conveyance, it is necessary to take and state a partnership account. That is this case, and, in this respect, this case is exactly like that case. The position
It is evident from the foregoing that the plaintiff has-mistaken her remedy, and cannot succeed in this proceeding. The judgment therefore must be reversed and' the garnishment proceeding dismissed.