6 Ga. App. 299 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Booth sued Lyon to the December, 1906, term of one of the justice’s courts in Atlanta, and thereupon caused summons of garnishment to issue to Jones, requiring him to answer whether he was indebted to Lyon. On January 14, 1907, judgment was rendered in the principal action in favor of Booth against Lyon. On January 21 Jones answered the summons of garnishment under oath, stating that he owed Lyon, at the date of the service of the summons of garnishment, a sum in excess of that recovered by Booth against Lyon in the principal suit. On January 26 Brooke & Company filed what purported to be a claim to the fund, reciting that the indebtedness of Lyon against Jones, which consisted of an open account, had been transferred to them before the institution of the suit and the service of the summons of garnishment. This paper, however, hardly operated as a sta
Under the Civil Code, §4734, the money -raised by the process of garnishment is, after final judgment, subject to distribution among the creditors of the main defendant, just as if it had been raised by the levy and sale of his property under execution. But the would-be claimant in this case can gain no comfort from this section, nor from the- decisions which have been rendered under- it; for he does not claim to be a creditor of the defendant, but claims as creditor of the garnishee. Judgment reversed.