3 Kan. App. 357 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On April 25, 1889, Bradley & Metcalf brought an action in the district court of Barber county against the firm of Byerley, Dark & Runyan, and at the same time filed an affidavit in garnishment upon which a summons was issued to James P. Hall, Nannie Runyan, and Andrew Axline, as garnishees.
Counsel for defendants in error urged as a preliminary question that this court cannot review the matters in controversy for the reason that the record does not contain the final judgment in the original action. This position is not well taken. Paragraph 4641, General Statutes of 1889, provides :
“The supreme court may also reverse, vacate or modify ... an order that grants or refuses a continuance; discharges, vacates, or modifies a provisional remedy. ”
Plaintiffs in error urge a number of reasons why the judgment of the trial court should be reversed, and we shall proceed to consider them in the order in which they are presented. The first assignment of error upon which plaintiffs in error rely is, that "the court erred in dismissing the said action as to the defendant Nannie Runyan, and taxing .the cost, including $25 for attorney fees, against the plaintiffs in error.” The record discloses that when the issue had been joined as between the plaintiffs in error and the garnishee defendant Nannie Runyan, and the time had arrived for the trial of said issue, plaintiffs in error moved the court for permission to dismiss said action, and, as a separate request, also moved the court that such dismissal be made without taxation of the attorney’s fee provided by statute. The court granted the motion to dismiss, but very properly held, under the circumstances of this case, that the attorney’s fee must be taxed as against the plaintiffs.
A garnishee defendant can only be held liable where there is either property, money or credits in the hands of such garnishee belonging to the principal defendant, and if the plaintiff excepts to the answer filed by such garnishee it becomes necessary to try the issue thus framed. .This is a separate trial from that which may arise between the plaintiffs and principal defendants, and the garnishee is thereby compelled to
Did the court commit error in discharging the garnishee defendant Hall from liability with regard to the tract of land described as ‘1 the south half of the northwest quarter and the north half of the southwest quarter, section 27, township 31, range 11,” the deed for which was held by Hall at the time he was served with process as garnishee in this case? We have had some difficulty in answering this question, and it is only after an examination of many authorities, not ónly of our own state but of others, that a conclusion has been reached. The evidence is not very clear, but the position of the trial court seems to have been that this piece of property was conveyed to Hall in trust for G. B. Runyan, for the purpose of securing a debt which was due to him for money which had been placed in the business of Byerley, Dark & Runyan, and we think' there is sufficient evidence to sustain this conclusion of the trial court. Such being the case, the real estate sought to be reached had ceased to be the property of the principal defendants, and was held by; the garnishee Hall, not as their property, but in trust for G. B. Runyan, and he would, therefore, not be liable in this action, because he had possession of the deed conveying said real estate.
Perceiving no error in this case, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.